Our Mission
Encinitas Bike Walk works to enhance the walking and biking environment throughout Encinitas.
Our Vision
Our vision is for walking and biking to serve as a safe, convenient, healthy, and FUN mode of transportation for all ages and abilities.
Blog Feed
- Encinitas FY2025-2026 City Council Annual Workplan – Mobility Elements
On January 21, 2026, the city council will hold a special meeting to receive a report on the FY2025-2026 City Council Annual Workplan and the 2nd Quarter objectives. This is an important meeting because it sets the City Council's priorities for the upcoming year. It will also serve as a precursor to the Budget meetings, scheduled for late February...
- Vulcan Pedestrian Path Progress Report
The North Vulcan Avenue Pedestrian Path project will create a safer, more comfortable decomposed granite pathway for walkers and cyclists between the railroad tracks and Vulcan Avenue, stretching from Leucadia Boulevard to La Costa Avenue. Long used as an informal parking area with no protected space for people on foot or bike, this NCTD-owned corridor was partially improved when curb..
- Safer Streets Act of 2025 (SB 720) – Red-Light Cameras Get a Reboot
In January 2026, California's new red-light automated enforcement bill, SB 720, known as the Safer Streets Act of 2025, went into effect. This new law introduces a new civil enforcement framework through the “Safer Streets Program,” shifting red-light camera violations from criminal to civil penalties and emphasizing equity, transparency, and traffic safety...
- Should We Spend $2 Million to Rip Out the Santa Fe Project?
Unfortunately, the City Council isn’t advocating for tweaking. They’re pushing to spend up to $2 million to potentially rip it out and start over. That would mean a lot of things – More endless construction Less money for fixing the drainage in Leucadia Less money for paving streets And less money to build more parks..
- FAQs about California’s SB 720 – Red-Light Camera Statute
SB 720 is now a California statute that modernizes and reforms the state’s red-light camera laws, originally established in 1995. Enacted in August 2025, it introduces a new civil enforcement framework through the “Safer Streets Program,” shifting red-light camera violations from criminal to civil penalties and emphasizing equity, transparency, and traffic safety...
- FAQs About California’s AB 645 Speed Camera Program
AB 645 is California legislation that created a pilot program for automated speed enforcement (ASE), also known as speed safety cameras. This safety technology utilizes vehicle speed sensors and cameras to capture images of cars traveling at excessive speeds, typically activating when vehicles exceed the speed limit by at least 10 mph and can detect speeding across multiple lanes...