Sylvia Bingham Fund

Promoting Bicycle Safety & Social Justice Causes

The Sylvia Bingham Fund
MENUMENU
  • About Sylvia
    • Sylvia's AmeriCorps Application
    • Photos & Videos of Sylvia
    • Articles About Sylvia's Death
    • Civil & Criminal Trials
    • Memorial Blog
  • News & Activities
    • Recent News
    • Fundraisers
    • Books in Sylvia's Memory
  • Bicycle Rides
    • Memorial Bicycle Rides
    • I Ride For Blog
    • CoupleDudes Blog
  • Bicycle Safety
    • Bicycle Safety Links
    • Bicycle Safety Equipment
    • Bicycle Safety Advocacy
  • Grants Awarded
  • Contact & Donation Info

RECENT NEWS

Long overdue update

April 19, 2021 By Steve Bingham

Sylvia was an Earth-Day baby, born April 22, 1987.  She was the absolute joy of our lives.  Since we lost her over 11 years ago, Francoise and I have taken pleasure in our annual event with our friends and family around the time of her birthday to remember her, sing songs and enjoy fabulous French quiches and tartes lovingly baked by Francoise.  We also raised funds to support SBF.  Sadly we weren’t able to do anything last year, a month into the pandemic shutdown.  We thought of a Zoom event this year but decided it wouldn’t work.  How to choose whom to invite so it wasn’t too cumbersome?

Consequently we decided instead to share essays Sylvia wrote while in high school and college.  As she never got to have a profession, we like to imagine that this first essay suggests that she wanted to return eventually to the Bay Area as an urban planner.   When you’re finished reading it, scroll through the pictures of her on the website and vow to keep her spirit alive as you do your part to make our planet a better place to live for everyone.  Remember, she was born on Earth-Day.

Senior essay, Yale, 2008-9

  1. Why is the city you selected important to you and what contribution would you like to make to that city? (600 words)

                An hour-long commute is murder for most rush-hour drivers, but for middle-schoolers crammed into a short yellow school bus, it is a rollicking adventure.  In 6th grade, I began commuting from Marin County to my new middle school in San Francisco, the Lycée Français La Pérouse on Ashbury Street.  In the back of the bus, the 8th graders hulked around a boombox playing Tupac; this was the soundtrack of the daily scenes of San Francisco flying past the bus windows.  On the Golden Gate Bridge, I would check to see if the Farallon Islands were visible in the glowing new day, and then I would catch a quick glimpse of Baker Beach before we plunged into a tunnel and emerged, gasping from the long held breath, into the asphalt and tumult of the city.  On Nineteenth Avenue, I saw odd collections of people gathered at Muni stops: a Chinese grandmother in tan loafers, grasping bags of groceries; a tall brown-eyed college student, reading a pocket novel; a mother bringing her pimpled and be-speckled daughter to pick out a bat mitzvah dress.  Driving through Golden Gate park, I saw homeless hippies playing with pit bulls and roller bladers stretching out their spandex.  My school was an open campus for the high school students, and they would come back from lunch smelling of burritos and coffee and cigarettes.  The only happiness greater than being asked for a slow at the school dance, I thought then, would be to be free in San Francisco.

                I ended up going to public high school back in Marin, so my opportunities for exploring the city were limited to weekends.  Even so, San Francisco became my adolescent nursery: this is where I took my first steps as an adult, and where my first words were uttered, as an adult.  Going to rock shows and museums  with friends, I learned independence.  Wandering around the Mission, the Castro, North Beach and Van Ness, I learned metropolitanism.  And at political rallies at Dolores Park and the Civic Center, I felt community as a nest we were all weaving together.

                I want to return to the city that raised me not only for these sentimental reasons.  In college I have begun to understand, in a more intellectual sense, what it is exactly that I love about San Francisco.  In his book Left Coast City, Richard DeLeon chronicles how, in the 1970’s and 1980’s, San Franciscans united across ideological and socioeconomic lines to combat the urban renewal projects that were transforming downtown.  I am interested in these moments when politics overcome parochialism and focus on grander common goals.  As DeLeon suggests, city planning offers an opportunity for disparate groups to work together—Chinese grandmas with college boys with Jewish moms, for example.  I would like to help the City Planning Department manage the growth of the city in a way that preserves and enriches the diversity of San Francisco’s streets.

                Over the course of my studies, I have become interested in a school of architecture known as New Urbanism.  Based on the tenets of Jane Jacobs’ Death and Life of Great American Cities, it is no accident that New Urbanism was first developed by San Francisco-based architects.  New Urbanists stress the importance of diversity—of income, age, race, and use.  They imagine streets busy with pedestrians walking to work or local corner stores, and children scootering to school or the nearby parks.  These ideal streets are broken up by parks and community gardens.  The style of the buildings is place-specific, like the Victorians of the Haight and the pastel stuccos of the Sunset.  The diversity of San Francisco is a model for American cities, but it is at a fragile quality that is threatened by untrammeled gentrification.

You can also read a collection of several poems Sylvia wrote as a high school junior, “Summer is a maraschino cherry” posted here.

We invite you to visit the Sylvia Bingham Fund website where you can also contribute to the Fund so that we can continue providing grants to organizations Sylvia would have loved to support or which advocate for street safety.

Francoise continues to teach (online for now) at College of Marin.  Steve actively works on traffic safety issues with Families for Safe Streets, Vision Zero Network, Ride of Silence and California Bicycle Coalition as well as the San Francisco and Marin Bicycle Coalitions

 

Filed Under: Recent News

Celebrate Sylvia’s 28th Birthday

April 1, 2015 By SBF Admin

Celebrate Sylvia’s 28th Birthday and Support the Sylvia Bingham Fund
Share memories, sing songs and learn about SBF’s work

Sunday, April 26, 2-6 p.m. – RSVP to [email protected] for address and directions

Quiche, dessert pies and beverages will be served – This is not a potluck but feel free to bring a home-made dish if you love to cook.

If you’re not able to come, please visit the SBF website and consider a donation so SBF can continue supporting organizations working to make biking safer or whose work Sylvia would love.
To see grants awarded by SBF, click here.

If you knew Sylvia, remember her on her birthday – Earth Day April 22

Filed Under: Events, Recent News

BIKELASH: Pedaling on a Collision Course

March 6, 2015 By SBF Admin

Cyclists report “BIKELASH” around Cleveland as numbers of bike riders increase and motorists must share roads.

Channel 3 in Cleveland (WKYC) did an excellent story in October, 2014 on the dangerous phenomenon of “bikelash”. It begins: “Today’s cyclists still fear for their lives. The number of Cleveland area cyclists commuting on 2 wheels has increased 285% since 2010. As Cleveland grows into a cycling city, it is not without growing pains. Imagine a morning commute with profanities screamed at you, objects thrown your way and drivers intent on running you off the road. Cyclists tell Channel 3, this is what they go through too often….”

Read Complete Story >>

Filed Under: Bicycle Safety, Recent News

Expanding Bicycle Education for Professional Drivers

March 1, 2014 By SBF Admin

The SF Bike Coalition is now giving trainings to the drivers of garbage trucks. Check it out >>

Filed Under: Bicycle Safety, Recent News

Ordinance Passes in San Francisco to Give Unclaimed Bikes to Young People

February 1, 2014 By SBF Admin

The San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance on Feb. 24, 2014 to expand the City’s program to reuse unclaimed bikes. It’s hard to underestimate how dramatically a bicycle can transform the life of a young person. Over the past year, community groups have been working with the Human Services Agency and Police Department to take recovered bikes from the SFPD property room and make them available to low-income youth.

Here’s how these “bike convivios,” or community bike builds work:

  • The City makes available recovered bikes that have not been claimed by their original owner.
  • The Bike Coalition arranges for mechanics from great organizations like the SF Yellow Bike Project, Pedal Revolution and the Bike Kitchen to fix up the bikes.
  • Community groups like PODER, POWER, and the Chinatown Community Development Center recruit low-income youth who need bicycles to participate.
  • At the bike convivios, the youth are shown how to ride safety and do basic maintenance, and then given a bike with lights, a helmet, and a lock.

The new ordinance will ensure that unclaimed bikes continue to be made available for these programs. The ordinance will also expand the program so that larger bikes can be made available to transit-dependent adults, with the goal of providing bikes to entire families. Here are two great videos on the program:

  • Video on PODER’s bike convivios
  • Board of Supervisors hearing on the ordinance (Jump to 12:30 for compelling public comment from people who participated in the bike builds.)

Filed Under: Public Policy, Recent News

California Bicycle Coalition Summit Panel on Investigation and Prosecution of Bicycle Crashes

November 1, 2013 By SBF Admin

Panel Investigation and prosecution of bicycle crashes: Problems and solutions at the statewide Summit of the California Bicycle Coalition 11/9/13 in Oakland.

A well-known issue in creating safer streets is ensuring fair law enforcement and thorough investigations of crashes involving vulnerable users. This panel was organized by Steve Bingham, lawyer and father of Sylvia Bingham, killed in a truck/bicycle in 2009. Joining him as panelists were Miles Cooper, personal injury lawyer; Lois Heaney, President, National Jury Project; Leah Shahum, Exec.Director, San Francisco Bicycle Coalition; Ken Theisen, paralegal at Bay Area Legal Aid. For CBC’s summary of this panel, see Summary

Steve’s motivation to organize this panel arose from the tragic death of Amelie Le Moullac on Folsom St. in San Francisco in August 2013. She was killed in the same way as Sylvia, a right hook by a commercial box truck. The police conducted no serious investigation and concluded there were no security video cameras in the area. Amelie was immediately blamed by police for her own death. Nearly a week later, a SF Bicycle Coalition member found a video tape in ten minutes that conclusively showed the truck driver was to blame. (The video images would have been recorded over and lost the next day). The driver was then prosecuted. For information about the entire two-day CBC Summit, see http://www.calbike.org/ca-by-bike-2013-program-and-presentations-wrap-up

Filed Under: Public Policy, Recent News

Are Lower Fines for Cyclist Offenders Better?

October 1, 2013 By SBF Admin

(Adapted from California Bicycle Coalition website)

Since 1993, cities in California have been free to lower the fines given to bike riders. This past October, the City of Davis became one of the few cities to take advantage of that power. Now, bicycle advocates are watching Davis closely to see how cheaper fines will affect how police officers and people who ride bikes interact — and if that will impact ridership.

Davis has recently chosen to reduce the fines given to bicyclists from $202 to $50 for the first offense, $100 for the second, and $250 for any subsequent tickets. As flat fines, there are no associated court costs.

Some expect that these fines will compel bicyclists to better comply with traffic laws. According to the Davis police department, officers have been hesitant to slap bicyclists with California’s high traffic fines, “fearing a significant level of animosity from the public because of the perception that the fines are excessive.” Many local judges will also dismiss bicycle-related fines for the same reason. Considering the fact that a car crash is so much more destructive than a bicycle crash, penalizing the two activities differently makes sense.

If police officers use these fines sparingly, by penalizing bicyclists who are putting themselves or others at risk, it could increase safety while not decreasing ridership. The way that people ride their bikes is generally different than how they drive a car, because of how bikes are less destructive, more agile, and more dependent on momentum. Police officers won’t be able to change this, but they may be able to decrease the most dangerous behaviors, like riding on the sidewalk and riding in the wrong direction. With that said, police officers need to be educated about which types of bicycling are dangerous.

As Davis’ mayor Joe Krovoza said, “The goal is education and promotion of cycling. Overly onerous penalties don’t meet that goal.” We’ll see if these penalties will.

Filed Under: Public Policy, Recent News

Sylvia Bingham Memorial Advocate for Justice Award

June 1, 2013 By SBF Admin

Sam Goff, a graduating senior at Terra Linda High School where Sylvia graduated in 2005, was the first recipient of the “Sylvia Bingham Memorial Advocate for Justice Award” at his graduation ceremony in June, 2013 and given $750.

This award goes to an intellectually curious student who has worked creatively for economic or social justice on or off campus and who is not afraid to confront authority but always does so with a sense of fair play and fun, confident that small steps can make the world a better place and always trying, in the words of Gandhi, to be the change s/he wants to see in the world.

Filed Under: Recent News

SBF Awards First Grant in 2013

February 1, 2013 By SBF Admin

Trips for Kids received the first SBF grant in 2013 to create an informational display that will educate customers and youth participants of the importance of bicycle safety. The display installation was completed in February and is located at TFK’s Re-Cyclery Bike Thrift Shop, 610 4th Street and at the Re-Cyclery Training Center, 125 Larkspur, both in San Rafael. All items are for sale. The Sylvia Bingham Fund will subsidize some items for low-income buyers.

The Bicycle Safety Display features safety equipment such as reflective vests and lights that increase rider visibility as well as some newly developed products. One is the innovative Finnish “swing wing” sold by Cantitoe Road, a creative and simple way to remind cars to leave three feet when passing, as required by a new California law.

See Marin County Bicycle Coalition website post with TFK press release and a photo of the safety wing.

Filed Under: Recent News

SBF Provides Seed Funds for Police Training Project

February 1, 2013 By SBF Admin

SBF provided initial seed funds for a new police training project that grew out of the death of Amelie Le Moullac and botched police investigation (see November 2013 entry). This SFBC asked San Francisco Supervisor Jane Kim, in whose district Amelie was killed, to hold a hearing on police practices when bicycles are involved in crashes. Many bike riders involved in crashes told the Supervisors they had been blamed for crashes that clearly weren’t their fault. The SFBC project will train police officers in how to enforce vehicle code provisions and conduct investigations when bicycles are involved.

Filed Under: Recent News

A New Community-Oriented Store Sylvia Would Have Been Very Proud Of

July 1, 2011 By SBF Admin

On a happier note, our last visit to Cleveland in June coincided with the opening day of the Joy Machines Bike Shop, an exciting community-oriented startup in Ohio City, jointly owned and operated by Alex Nosse, who was Sylvia’s boyfriend, and his friend Renato Pereira-Castillo. The concept for the shop was born in the winter of 2010 and only six months later they’re open for business. These guys are amazing! Beside repairing bicycles and selling new ones, Alex and Renato are interested in doing outreach and education in low-income communities. See their website at http://www.joymachines.net

Here are pictures taken at their store on opening day:

Filed Under: Recent News

Urban Bicycle Safety Classes and Bike to Work Day

April 1, 2011 By SBF Admin

Learn the basics of safe cycling, riding in traffic, equipment, crash avoidance, rights and responsibilities, from a certified bicycle safety instructor with the East Bay Bicycle Coalition.

Wednesday, May 4, 6:00 – 9:30 pm
3701 Broadway, Oakland, CA, Conference Room G101D

One-Hour Brown Bag
Tuesday, May 17, 12:30-1:30pm, Fabiola, Conference Room 445

Bike to Work Day is Thursday, May 12
Energizer Station, 7:00-9:30am, outside Fabiola Building

View Poster >>

Filed Under: Events, Recent News

Recent Posts

  • 2024 Cleveland Memorial Ride
  • Marin Ride of Silence 2023
  • 2022 Ride of Silence

About Sylvia

“In my extracurricular activities, too, I pursued my passion for social justice. I volunteered at National Student Partnerships (NSP) in New Haven, where students help vulnerable clients locate jobs, housing, government benefits and training.”
— Sylvia’s AmeriCorps Application, June 2009

Support SBF

To donate by check, click here. To donate online click the button below.

Pages

  • Sylvia’s AmeriCorps Application
  • Photos & Videos of Sylvia
  • Articles About Sylvia’s Death
  • Fundraisers
  • Books in Sylvia’s Memory
  • Recent News
  • Bicycle Rides
  • Bicycle Safety Links
  • Bicycle Safety Equipment
  • Bicycle Safety Advocacy
  • Grants Awarded
  • Contact & Donation Info
  • SBF Home

Categories

  • Advocacy (4)
  • Articles After Accident (6)
  • Bicycle Rides (16)
  • Bicycle Safety (9)
  • Events (13)
  • Fundraisers (4)
  • Grants Awarded (2)
  • Public Policy (4)
  • Recent News (12)

Links

  • Sylvia Bingham Memorial Blog
  • I Ride For Blog
  • CoupleDudes Blog
  • Ride of Silence
  • Joy Machines Bike Shop
  • Ghost Bike Wiki

Archives

Search

Social

Join us on Facebook!

Copyright © 2025, The Sylvia Bingham Fund · Site by iHappi