Bike to Work Week, Bike to Everywhere: Olympia

Olympia-BTW-Day-05-16-14_Kris-Harper-IntercityTransit_for-web

Kris Harper of Intercity Transit offered up a cheery smile and a piece of fruit to all who stopped by.

For me, Bike to Work Week 2014 started off in Spokane for the annual Kickoff Breakfast with its pancakes and coffee, bikes and camaraderie, and the new Commute of the Century: 5 20-mile rides over 100 miles of Spokane’s streets. (Watch for our future post on what it took to pull this off, how the data collection will feed into Spokane’s bike master plan implementation, and how to do one in your hometown.)

After a couple of days at a conference in Grand Mound talking about our bike tourism work my week ended in Olympia, where Intercity Transit supports the Bicycle Commuter Challenge. Staff member Duncan Green spends 6 months of each year organizing and running the BCC.

The coffee never stopped pouring at the Olympia energizer station at Ralph's Groceries.

The coffee never stopped pouring at the Olympia energizer station at Ralph’s Groceries.

 

The BCC has taken place continuously for 27 years, coincidentally the same age as our organization. We have a hunch this makes Thurston County’s BCC the longest-running commute challenge in the state. Anyone have one older that has operated every year since its founding?

My hosts and I rode the 6.8 miles into town and stopped at the busy energizer station at Ralph’s Grocery, warming up with coffee and some fruit and chatting with Bike Tech shop owner Dale Plant, Kris Harper of Intercity Transit, and others.

Duncan Green (left) has organized Thurston County's Bicycle Commuter Challenge for years. The boy at left gets ready to put on his reflective slap band with great enthusiasm.

Duncan Green (left) has organized Thurston County’s Bicycle Commuter Challenge for years. The boy at left gets ready to put on his reflective slap band with great enthusiasm.

After the coffee stop Maxine and Ray took off in one direction, I went the other to find my first meeting of the day, taking advantage of Olympia’s bike lanes.

Along the way Andrea Bell stopped me to ask if I knew where to find a good breakfast. She’d ridden from Tacoma to Olympia to check out the regional trail network and it was time for some calories. I don’t know downtown Olympia well so I could only suggest Wagner’s, with its beautiful case full of sinful sugar bombs and great deli salads (a stop every time I’m in the capital).

Andrea Bell, bike commuter, rode the trails from Tacoma to Olympia to enjoy the outdoors (and find some breakfast).

Andrea Bell, bike commuter, rode the trails from Tacoma to Olympia to enjoy the outdoors (and find some breakfast).

We chatted a while and Andrea said something that describes bicycling for many whether you’re riding to meetings, errands, shopping, or the bus stop: “I like my job but when I’m there, that’s work time. This (riding) is my time. It’s my chance to connect with what’s around me and be outdoors.”

At midday I joined 70 or so state employees for the Interagency Bike to Work Day picnic. We rallied in the parking lot of the General Administration (GA) building and biked to Tumwater Historical Park for snacks and a drawing for prizes. Organized by our friends at the Dept. of Transportation along with the Dept. of Revenue, the ride draws people from DSHS, DFW, and other departments and divisions — your healthy state government at work!

Washington state employees gather for the midday Interagency Bike Ride on Bike to Work Day 2014 in Olympia.

Washington state employees gather for the midday Interagency Bike Ride on Bike to Work Day 2014 in Olympia.

After the picnic I rode the trail through the park and around Capital Lake with BTW Coordinator Duncan. We stopped to chat with someone from the local paper there to check out a falcon’s nest high in an old dead snag.

Meanwhile, back in Spokane they were winding up the week with the Wrap-Up Party at River City Red. My commutes to begin and end the week had a beautiful symmetry, with a trail alongside water accessible from city streets to give me some time in Washington’s great outdoors.

Washington State employees at Bike to Work Day picnic, Tumwater Historical Park, May 16, 2014

Washington State employees at Bike to Work Day picnic hosted by WA Bikes, Tumwater Historical Park, May 16, 2014

Olympia-view-of-Capitol-from-Capitol-Lake-Trail_05-16-14_for-web

A different view of Washington’s state capitol: From the trail around Capital Lake, returning from Tumwater Historical Park. What you can’t see: the falcon’s nest in a dead snag just to the right of the tall chimney stack.

Start to finish, Bike to Work Week educates, celebrates, and inspires. It’s never too late to bike to work or bike to everywhere; the National Bike Challenge keeps rolling through September.

Bikes wait for their riders during the Interagency Bike to Work Day picnic.

Bikes wait for their riders during the Interagency Bike to Work Day picnic.

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Posted in Bike to Work, Events, News, Thurston County | 3 Comments

Bike to Work Week, Bike to Everywhere: Spokane

Around Washington, Bike to Work Week takes on a different spin (ouch! bike pun!) in each town that celebrates it.

Spokane bike rack

One of the 3 racks at Spokane City Hall that filled up for the Bike to Work Kickoff Breakfast.

Of course, we have plenty to celebrate in the #1 Bicycle Friendly State – and plenty of work yet to do (so register for your local Bike to Work effort and the National Bike Challenge to stand up and be counted).

WA Bikes maintains a list of Washington state Bike Month challenges to help people connect with the effort in their town, and we need your help to keep it complete and up to date. Let us know about a challenge we’re missing and we’ll get it on the list.

During Bike to Work Week I participated in events on opposite sides of the state. I’m sharing my snapshots of the fun and camaraderie from Spokane (today’s post) to Olympia (tomorrow’s post).

Spokane Bike to Work Kickoff Breakfast: (L-$) Kate Johnston of WA Bikes, Sen. Andy Billig, Barb Chamberlain of WA Bikes

Spokane Bike to Work Kickoff Breakfast: (L-$) Kate Johnston of WA Bikes, Sen. Andy Billig, Barb Chamberlain of WA Bikes

Monday morning I joined the Spokane Bike to Work Kickoff Breakfast: Pancakes by Mountain Gear (a Silver level Bicycle-Friendly Business), organic direct-trade coffee by Roast House, and for a change, sunshine!

Spokanites know we’d had a 6-year streak of rain on kickoff day—snapped the streak at last in year 7. It did become a point of pride to have 200 or so hardy folks on bikes show up every year despite the forecast, though.

Spokane River Centennial Trail with bike

What a peaceful commute! Spokane River Centennial Trail

Sen. Andy Billig and Spokane City Councilman Jon Snyder, both great champions who “bike the talk,” rode to the event to celebrate the growth in Spokane bicycling. As always, for those who may have a solitary route to work this event provides the chance to hang out with others who bike. They compare gear, routes, and funny stories and build the bicycling community. As the founding chair I felt as if I were attending a hometown reunion with so many familiar faces.

Monday night I rode from downtown along the Spokane River Centennial Trail to meet with members of the Spokane Bicycle Club. They’re working hard to grow membership and to bring in all kinds of riders and it was great to hear their energy and enthusiasm. You may spot a club member at a trailhead somewhere around Spokane sharing their schedule of upcoming rides; they’re adding rides to appeal to people at various skill levels and invite you to check them out.

Senior engineer Brandon Blankenagel (standing, green T-shirt) rallies 2 dozen riders for Tuesday's Commute of the Century short loop up the South Hill.

City engineer Brandon Blankenagel (standing, green T-shirt) rallies 2 dozen riders for Tuesday’s Commute of the Century short loop up the South Hill.

Volunteers from the club laid down 700 bright arrows to mark the routes for the brand-new “Commute of the Century”: 20-mile rides every day during Bike to Work Week at lunchtime around different parts of the city checking out existing and proposed bike routes and providing feedback.

Even though BTW Week is over, you can ride the routes and get the T-shirt that proves you’ve ridden 100 miles of Spokane’s streets; download maps, explore some neighborhoods, and provide feedback to city planners and engineers. The maps provide short and long options to suit your preference or your time constraints.

I got to ride the Commute of the Century with Betsy Lawrence, friend & co-founder of women's riding group Belles and Baskets. (Photo by Hank Greer)

I got to ride the Commute of the Century with Betsy Lawrence, friend & co-founder of women’s riding group Belles and Baskets. (Photo by Hank Greer)

Tuesday I rode with over 2 dozen people in the short loop that took us up the South Hill on Adams and around bike lanes and quiet neighborhood streets to end at Hart Field for fruit and cookies. (Thanks for the treats, Brandon and Sara Blankenagel and SBC members!)

I had to leave Tuesday night so I missed Wednesday morning’s Energizer Stations. I know from the pictures that, as always, riders warmed up with coffee, juice, and goodies at various locations and thanked the volunteers who got up early to give them a smile and a treat.

And of course, the Wrap-Up Party on Friday provides another fun tradition, this year at the River City Red brewery owned by Gage Stromberg, a fantastic supporter of bicycling in the Lilac City.

Great to see one of our Share the Road jerseys at the start of the Commute of the Century ride!

Great to see one of our Share the Road jerseys at the start of the Commute of the Century ride!

After Spokane it was off to a conference and then to Olympia for Part 2 of Bike to Work, Bike to Everywhere.

Mother and son tackled the Commute of the Century together.

Mother and son tackled the Commute of the Century together.

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Posted in Bike to Work, Events, News, Spokane County | 1 Comment

Seattle Summer Streets are Back

Seattle Summer Streets AlkiSeattle kicked off its Summer Streets events yesterday with the Alki Beach Party. Alki Avenue SW (between 56th Ave SW and 63rd Ave SW) was closed to motorized vehicles and citizens were invited to walk, bike, skate, roll their wheelchairs, and run in the street.

Rain held off long enough for the young and young at heart to stay dry in a bicycle/costume parade organized by the Alki Beach Creeps. There was also a skidding competition, chalk drawing, outdoor chess matches, music and more. Of course, there were plenty of folks biking, strolling, skating, jogging and socializing in the street and adjacent businesses.

Alki is the first of four Seattle Summer Streets events planned in 2014. Events are also lined up for Ballard (May 29). PhinneyWood (August 9), and Rainier Valley (August 16).

Seattle Summer Streets is part of the global open streets movement, or ciclovias. An open streets event temporarily close streets to motor vehicles and transforms them into public places for people to bike, walk, socialize and celebrate their communities. Spokane Summer Parkways is also an open streets event. Tacoma and Vancouver also organized open streets events last year.

Is your community planning an open streets event in 2014? Please use our Event Submission Form to tell us about it and we’ll put it on calendar and spread the word through social media.

Related Posts:

Car-Free in the North Cascades: Washington’s Mountainside Ciclovia

Crater Lake Announces Vehicle Free Weekend on East Rim Drive

We’re Hungry for Good Urban Public Space

 

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Congrats to Sequim for Becoming a Bicycle Friendly Community!

As Washington state’s sole entrant into the latest round of the League of American Bicyclists’ Bicycle Friendly Communities, Sequim joins Port Townsend as an Olympic Peninsula bicycle friendly community that recognizes the importance of making healthy, livable, and economically vibrant places.

Sequim wins a bronze bicycle friendly community ranking from the League of American Bicyclists

Sequim wins a bronze bicycle friendly community ranking from the League of American Bicyclists

Sequim sits along one of the great bicycle destinations in Washington state, the Olympic Discovery Trail. Its rain shadow weather and moderate topography improve bicycling around the community.

“This round of applications overwhelmingly confirms what we heard from local elected officials at the National Bike Summit this year — riding a bike embodies the quality-of-life aspirations of communities across the country,” said League President, Andy Clarke.

With this new ranking, Washington state is the most bicycle friendly state, has 13 bicycle friendly communities, 26 bicycle friendly businesses, and 1 bicycle friendly university.

Washington Bikes looks forward to helping Sequim build on its new bicycle friendly community status via increased investments for safer streets, more connected bikeways, and by passing policies – such as a complete streets ordinance.

Congrats, Sequim!

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Friday is Bike to Work Day

Bike MonthThis Friday is Bike to Work Day and we hope you’re participating in this annual celebration! Many Washington communities are holding Bike to Work Day events–check our Bike Month page to see if there’s one where you live.

Washington Bikes is hosting a Bike to Work Day energizer station at our Seattle office in Pioneer Square. It is part of Cascade Bicycle Club’s Bike to Work Day event in King County. Please drop by our station and say hi if you’re in the vicinity. We are serving Zeitgeist coffee and cookies from Grand Central Bakery. Back Alley Bike Repair will be on hand to perform bike safety checks.

Posted in Bike to Work, Commuting, Encouragement, Events, News | 1 Comment

Join Spokane’s Commute of the Century during Bike to Work Week (May 12-16th)

Have you ever  wondered what it would be like to do a 100-mile bike ride that takes place completely on City of Spokane bike routes?  Brandon Blankenagle , of Spokane is making this dream a reality.

Blankenagle is the City of Spokane’s Capital Projects Engineer who has combined the passion for his work and bike-commuting to create an epic, week-long, bike-commuting adventure in Spokane.

Are you the type to shy away from long bike rides during the work week? Don’t let that stop you from registering for the Commute of the Century– the ride is broken up into six routes (9-17 miles each) that take place on different days of Bike to Work Week. By the end of the week, you will have covered 100 miles of Spokane!

Each group ride begins at 11:30 AM at the Rotary Fountain at Riverfront Park in Spokane during the week of May 12th-16th. Join any or all of the extended lunch-hour group rides to experience Spokane’s bicycle infrastructure over six routes across the city. Each ride will end at the same place they begin: The Rotary Fountain in Riverfront Park.

Don’t have the time at lunch? You can follow the route on your own and still get credit. Register and get more information.

Register for Spokane Bike to Work Week too, if you haven’t already. The two events are great week-long ways to celebrate the Spring riding season in Spokane! Information about both events can be found at www.spokanebikes.net

 

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We’re Back With the National Bike Challenge!

LAB_NBC_offsite-smallheader280x270May is Bike Month and we hope you’re actively participating in your local bike challenge. We want to invite you to double the value of your May bike trips by signing up for the National Bike Challenge too.

Organized by the League of American Bicyclists and hosted locally by Washington Bikes, the National Bike Challenge is a fun, free, summer-long (May through September) event that allows participants to track all bike miles (transportation and recreation) to qualify for monthly prize drawings. Washington residents who join the National Bike Challenge will be assigned to Washington Bikes challenge page as their local host.*

Register your workplace, invite your co-workers to join, and you can track your progress as a unit. This is especially handy if you do not have a local commute challenge in your community. You can also create teams for your workplace. If you are participating in a local Bike Month challenge, signing up for the National Bike Challenge is a way to keep your challenge going beyond the month of May.

Retired, between jobs, work at home, a student, or transit commuter? No problem! You can participate in the National Bike Challenge too. Track your errand miles, your rides with your kids, your recreational rides, training miles, and even your mountain bike miles.

If you ride with a bike club, rally your fellow members and form a team! The Wheatland Wheelers of Walla Walla have done this for several years. Or feel free to ride with the Washington Bikes staff as We Bike WA.

You earn points based on how often you ride (20 points for each day you get on the bike!) and how far (one point per mile). As you accumulate points, you become eligible for different prize levels.

The Detours Coffee Bag is a versatile dry that can be attached almost anywhere on your bike.

The Detours Coffee Bag is a versatile dry that can be attached almost anywhere on your bike.

The National Bike Challenge will hold prize drawings monthly. In addition to the national prizes, Washington Bikes will also conduct a monthly drawing for participants riding with us! Thanks to Detours, one lucky rider each month will win a Detours Coffee Bag. This versatile dry bag is a tribute to the Evergreen State’s favorite brewed beverage and can be secured almost anywhere on your bike. It even fits in your water bottle cage! We’ll give away other assorted prizes as well.

So what are you waiting for? Join us in the National Bike Challenge today!

*Participants from the Tri-Cities will be assigned to the 3 Rivers Bicycle Coalition’s Bike Month Challenge.

Related Post:

May is Bike Month and It’s Huge!

 

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Register for Spokane Bike to Work Week; Participate in the innagural Commute of the Century!

Excitement is building in Spokane for Bike to Work Week  during May 12th- 16th. It’s just four days away!

Stand up and be counted — register today if you haven’t already! As Washington Bike’s first Eastern Washington employee, I’m looking forward to seeing new and long-time bike supporters join me at the Kick-Off breakfast on Monday, May 12th at Riverfront Park. See more information about the kick-off breakfast and register for Spokane Bike to Work Week at  www.spokanebikes.net  I’ll be at the kick-off breakfast on my Cannonade commuter from England. If I’ve met you in person, I have likely told you about this bike. It is my new favorite and it’s the perfect companion for bike to work week.

* For each new person who introduces themselves to me at the Bike to Work Week Kick-off Breakfast, I will give you a handy, Washington Bicycle Law Pocket Reference.  

I will also be doing the Commute of the Century– an organized ride, sponsored by the City of Spokane. Join me by participating in the lunch-time rides during Bike to Work Week: May 12th – May 16th. Or you can complete the event on your own schedule and still get credit for it! The Commute of The Century is the City of Spokane’s fun system to promote bicycling in Spokane and receive feedback from cyclists about the condition of Spokane bike routes. The bonus is that if you participate in all six of the designated bike routes, you will have completed a century by the end of the week!

Register for the Commute of the Century by going to https://beta.spokanecity.org/blog/2014/04/25/registration-for-commute-of-the-century/

* Registration requires filling out a waiver and sending in the form.

Please join me in exploring this great, new event during Spokane Bike to Work Week!

Ride safe, ride smart, ride happy.

Kate

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Car-Free in the North Cascades: Washington’s Mountainside Ciclovia

Every spring, there is a brief window between Washington State Department of Transportation starting to plow Highway 20 and opening it to car traffic during which the road becomes a cyclist’s paradise. For a few sweet weekends at the end of April and beginning of May, you can ride with no cars and barely another soul around from the west-side closure gate nearly 23 miles up to Rainy Pass or the east-side closure gate 8 miles up to Washington Pass and beyond.

The car-free view up the North Cascades Highway

The car-free view up the North Cascades Highway

Riding a car-free North Cascades Highway has been on my cycling bucket list for several years now. A beautiful, challenging ride past raging rivers, expansive lakes, towering mountains, and lush green forests is wildly appealing on its own. To do a mountainside ciclovia without concern for passing cars or a need to stay in the shoulder is the dream. This year I was determined to check the ride off my list.

As early as March, I became a regular on the WSDOT website’s North Cascades plowing progress page and a devotee to their daily email updates. The goal is to do the ride on the last weekend before they open it to cars so that you can ride as much road as possible. I recruited six friends to join me on the ride (not a difficult pitch, it turns out). We decided on Sunday, May 4 and made plans for an early departure from Seattle.

Newhalem

Leaving Newhalem for the North Cascades Ciclovia on future US Bike Route 10

We left the city at 7:30 and headed towards Newhalem, a tiny Seattle City Light company town on the North Cascades Highway, 12 miles west of the highway closure gate. After a quick change of clothing and final survey of gear, we set out from Newhalem under gray, foreboding skies.

The scenery along 20 is stunning from the get go. Leaving Newhalem, the bright-green foothills of the Cascades spanned our field of vision—a preview of the climb that lay ahead. The road takes you past Gorge Lake, then Diablo Lake, then Ross Lake, all man-made reservoirs created by dams on the Skagit River, but nonetheless beautiful, framed by mountains on all sides. Above the lakes, the Skagit was a raging, brown torrent spilling down the pass, unfettered by human interference.

RossLakeCiclovia

Ross Lake – framed by mountains on all sides

As we made our way to the closure gate it seemed as though the forecasted 100 percent chance of rain might not materialize. But just 45 minutes into the ride, the skies opened up and shifted from back and forth from steady drizzle to pounding rain the rest of the day. On the bright side, the downpours buoyed the dozens of snowmelt waterfalls and creeks cascading off of the hillsides along the road.

The ride to Rainy Pass is never terribly steep. If you believe Strava, it is a 2- to 6-percent grade the whole way to the top. There are even several multi-mile sections of downhills and plateaus on the way up. Mostly it’s just a steady, seated grind for hours and hours. I found myself shifting into a harder gear at times just to stand and climb for a little variety (and a little reprieve for my tired butt).

A little less than four hours after we’d set out from Newhalem, we’d reached the end of the road. Sadly, the snowline was still about a mile west of Rainy Pass, but I was plenty happy to be done with the climb. We spent a few minutes celebrating, filling up on snacks, and donning jackets, vests and heavy gloves for the ride back down. The sun almost forced its way through a tiny blue patch in the clouds to celebrate with us.

End of the road near Rainy Pass

End of the road near Rainy Pass

Beautiful, challenging, and rewarding, riding the North Cascades Highway is special as it is. But if things go well with the American Association of State and Highway Transportation Officials (AASHTO) this month, Highway 20 could be even more so. The United States Bicycle Route System (USBRS) will comprise a network of roads and highways that will span the entire country. To date there are nearly 6,000 miles of designated routes in the USBRS.

In early April, Washington Bikes and WSDOT submitted an application for Highway 20 to be officially recognized as US Bike Route 10. If selected, official designation increases opportunities for funding infrastructure improvements on the route, increasing signage, creates a connected network for cyclists to follow, and should improve its institutional support. Perhaps most importantly, the designation will likely increase the number of cyclists coming to ride the route and spending their money in restaurants, bars, and shops from Anacortes east to Newport on the border of Idaho.

A 2012 Travel Oregon study of bicycle tourism’s economic impact found that visiting cyclists spend $400 million annually, in part because of the draw of Oregon’s designated Scenic Bikeways. Washington Bikes wants to help bolster this state’s bicycle tourism and the USBRS designation is an important part of the effort. AASHTO should announce their decision in late May or early June of this year.

As we descended back down off the pass, it was nearly impossible not to smile ear to ear. The gentle grades and zero traffic around us (car, bike or otherwise) meant brakes were mostly unnecessary. In this land of punchy climbs and screaming descents, 13 miles of easy downhill cruising is an unadulterated pleasure.

DownhillCiclovia

13 miles of easy downhill cruising

Sadly, all good things come to an end and at mile 54 we reached one of those downhill sections from earlier in the day, now a several mile climb on tired legs. A few more great down hills and few little climbs later, we pulled back into Newhalem. Soaked to the bone, feet numb from the cold, legs tired from the effort, our group of seven was all smiles and high fives in the parking lot.

Riding a car-free Highway 20 was well worth the drive and the effort of the climb. Enjoying a spectacular route free from the noise and danger and stress of traffic is a rarity in road cycling and something every cyclists should experience at some point in their life. The window for riding 20 car free has passed this year—WSDOT opened the gates to cars at noon on May 8—but start planning for next year. With any luck, you could be the first cyclist to ride a car-free section of the new US Bike Route 10.

Josh Cohen is a freelance writer, editor of The Bicycle Story and a contributing author to the newly released Cycling Sojourner: a Guide to the Best Multi-Day Tours in Washington.

USBRS Content Sign-ups

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Your Ale-Liance awaits you!

As every bicycle rider knows May is Bike Month. We’d like to invite you to join us in celebrating it.

For the 3rd year in a row Schooner Exact Brewery has paired up with WA Bikes to produce Ale-liance IPA, a specialty brew in honor of Bike Month and a tribute to our advocacy work.

The next three Fridays, May 9, 16, and 23, there are Happy Hours at Seattle-area pubs featuring Ale-Liance and donating $25 per keg sales to WA Bikes (every pub that carries Ale-Liance donates $25 per keg). We are excited to be there since WA Bikes is the beneficiary and co-sponsor along with Schooner Exact.

Here are the Friday night Happy Hour hosting pubs:

Fri, May 9
Latona Pub, starting at 4:30 pm

6423 Latona Ave NE, Seattle 
WA 98115 (near Greenlake neighborhood)

Fri, May 16
Schooner Exact Brewery, starting at 4:00 pm

3901 First Ave. S., Seattle 98134  (SoDo neighborhood)


Fri, May 23

The Pine Box, starting at 4:30 pm

1600 Melrose Ave, Seattle 98122 (Capitol Hill neighborhood)

Come out and support bike advocacy. Enjoy a pint with friends and supporters of WA Bikes. Celebrate that Washington has once again been named the #1 Bicycle-Friendly State in the Nation. 

While you prepare to lift a pint, please like our Ale-Liance Facebook page at Facebook.com/AleLianceIPA

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