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Steven Faust

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Steven Faust

Birth
Death
29 Mar 2014 (aged 67)
Park Slope, Kings County, New York, USA
Burial
East Farmingdale, Suffolk County, New York, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.7643611, Longitude: -73.4004056
Plot
3B 1707
Memorial ID
View Source
By Jen Benepe–April 1, 2014
Cyclists have been mourning the death this past Saturday of Steve Faust, 67, a long-time bicycle advocate whose voice was heard in many places trumpeting the cause of cyclist safety.
The cause was chronic lymphocytic leukemia which Faust battled for some time, but had been surviving, according to his family.
Mr. Faust, who is survived by his wife Linda, and his children, Nathan and Julie, and their spouses Terry and Tamarah, will be memorialized this Thursday on the upper west side, followed by a funeral to be held in Long Island.
Faust was known for his dedication to the cause even though he was rarely paid for his work, which often included attending the National Bike Summit where he visited elected officials to demand safer streets for New Yorkers.
Cyclists International accompanied Mr. Faust in 2011 to several congressional offices, and heard him tell our elected officials in no uncertain terms, that what we have in cycling infrastructure, is not enough.
"Steve's advocacy extended half a century," said Steve Bauman, a close friend and fellow advocate. "He led a protest against the lack of pedestrian/ bicycle access at the Verrazano Bridge's opening in 1964."
That followed with one of Mr. Faust's biggest contributions to making the city's roads and bridges more accessible, his 1976 proposal to add a bike path to the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge , the connection between Brooklyn and Staten Island.
What makes Faust's study, "A Bicycle/ Pedestrian Path for the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge: A Demand and Feasibility Study," so remarkable is that his idea has been revisited every several years by various mayoral administrations and departments of transportation, yet the bike and pedestrian path has never been built, noted one of his close friends, Roger Herz.
In 1993 the New York City Department of City Planning called for a footpath across the bridge as part of their "Greenway Plan for New York City." That was followed in 1997 by a feasibility study conducted by the city's planning department. Ironically, after many fits and starts, including a promise from Mayor Michael Bloomberg to establish the path in 2003, the project was reborn under a new name, Harbor Ring, and is currently being reviewed under the MTA's 2015-2034 Capital Needs Assessment that would include a feasibility study for a bike path.
But the Verrazano wasn't the only bridge that Faust felt cyclists should be able to cross.
Faust was also well known for his critical contribution to what became informally known as a bicyclists' manifesto, or formally
known as the "Bicycle Blueprint" during the Mayor Edward I. Koch administration, and for his work on the city's Committee on Bicycles and Bicycle Facilities, said Herz who first met Steve and Linda at an American Youth Hostel ride in 1974.
"Koch's election was a big turning point because his administration was willing to meet and listen to the bicycling community. At that time only two East River bridges permitted bicycle access – the Brooklyn and Williamsburg," recounted Bauman.
"The Brooklyn Bridge promenade had 5 flights of stairs that had to be navigated. The fight to get those stairways removed took a 2-plus year effort."
"Steve was in the middle of this fight [and he] spent more hours on it than any of the handful trying to remove those stairs. The Landmarks Preservation Commission's approval was a result of the many hours Steve spent pouring over the Bridge's construction documents."
But the Bicycle Blueprint, and Koch's approach to cycling was later overshadowed in part by Koch's proposed ban on bicycles during weekdays on three major avenues in the city, Park, Madison and Fifth to accommodate the Taxi and Limousine lobby that didn't want cyclists in the way.
But Faust thought differently about the whole thing. In a recent response to a negative framing of Koch's bike lanes accompanying the Opinion Pages in the New York Times discussing lanes past and present, Faust wrote:
"Cyclists had some tumultuous times with Ed Koch, but on balance, much, much more was accomplished than lost in those 12 years. Koch laid the groundwork for what has followed. 

I was part of the NYC Bicycle Advisory Committee formed by Koch in 1978. Much of the agenda laid out then was accomplished by Koch, and much of the rest has been put in place by following administrations. Koch was not at all a bicycle failure, and what Bloomberg is doing is not at all out of line with plans laid out over 30 years ago."
"You might say he was pushing the envelope at the beginning," recounted Herz. "Not everyone in the beginning thought that bicycles were a legitimate mode of transportation."
Faust held a masters in city and regional planning from the Harvard University School of Design, and went to work for the Federal Transit Administration.
Staying there until 2000–22 years–Faust planned, designed, and performed environmental reviews and construction oversight of multi-billion dollar transit projects in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, including the new 2nd Ave. Subway, Metro North stations and trains, New Jersey Transit bus and rail, and Connecticut bus and New Haven Rail Services, according to his resume.
But even after his retirement Faust was active in bicycle advocacy. He played a strong role in assisting co-counsels Adam White and Steve Vaccaro who have been active in pressing the cases of cyclists and pedestrians–or their family members–after horrific crashes in New York City.
Faust worked for the firm as an expert who documented crash scenes and other crash evidence, and prepared reconstructions.
"He prepared with me to give testimony in several cases, although he never actually got to testify, " said Vaccaro.
Vaccaro shared pictures of distance markers Mr. Faust had recently created and placed on Hudson Terrace to demonstrate the number of seconds a driver had to view a southbound cyclist before striking him.
"He had a powerful and intuitive insight into how traffic works and helped me develop theories of liability. We'll miss him very much," said Vaccaro.
Faust is also fondly remembered by many cycling advocates who closely watched the unfolding of mass arrests of cyclists during the Republican National Convention in New York in 2004, and at a subsequent critical mass bike ride in 2008. Both events yielded court cases where Faust provided "brilliant" testimony, according to his good friend and fellow advocate Steve Bauman.
"Those were both federal cases and I would argue that the whole nation owes him thanks for his efforts holding back the tide." (See end of article for some excerpts.)
Faust also spent two years in the U.S. Army from 1968 to 1970, and for one year acted as a press photographer and scout in Vietnam.
By Jen Benepe–April 1, 2014
Cyclists have been mourning the death this past Saturday of Steve Faust, 67, a long-time bicycle advocate whose voice was heard in many places trumpeting the cause of cyclist safety.
The cause was chronic lymphocytic leukemia which Faust battled for some time, but had been surviving, according to his family.
Mr. Faust, who is survived by his wife Linda, and his children, Nathan and Julie, and their spouses Terry and Tamarah, will be memorialized this Thursday on the upper west side, followed by a funeral to be held in Long Island.
Faust was known for his dedication to the cause even though he was rarely paid for his work, which often included attending the National Bike Summit where he visited elected officials to demand safer streets for New Yorkers.
Cyclists International accompanied Mr. Faust in 2011 to several congressional offices, and heard him tell our elected officials in no uncertain terms, that what we have in cycling infrastructure, is not enough.
"Steve's advocacy extended half a century," said Steve Bauman, a close friend and fellow advocate. "He led a protest against the lack of pedestrian/ bicycle access at the Verrazano Bridge's opening in 1964."
That followed with one of Mr. Faust's biggest contributions to making the city's roads and bridges more accessible, his 1976 proposal to add a bike path to the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge , the connection between Brooklyn and Staten Island.
What makes Faust's study, "A Bicycle/ Pedestrian Path for the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge: A Demand and Feasibility Study," so remarkable is that his idea has been revisited every several years by various mayoral administrations and departments of transportation, yet the bike and pedestrian path has never been built, noted one of his close friends, Roger Herz.
In 1993 the New York City Department of City Planning called for a footpath across the bridge as part of their "Greenway Plan for New York City." That was followed in 1997 by a feasibility study conducted by the city's planning department. Ironically, after many fits and starts, including a promise from Mayor Michael Bloomberg to establish the path in 2003, the project was reborn under a new name, Harbor Ring, and is currently being reviewed under the MTA's 2015-2034 Capital Needs Assessment that would include a feasibility study for a bike path.
But the Verrazano wasn't the only bridge that Faust felt cyclists should be able to cross.
Faust was also well known for his critical contribution to what became informally known as a bicyclists' manifesto, or formally
known as the "Bicycle Blueprint" during the Mayor Edward I. Koch administration, and for his work on the city's Committee on Bicycles and Bicycle Facilities, said Herz who first met Steve and Linda at an American Youth Hostel ride in 1974.
"Koch's election was a big turning point because his administration was willing to meet and listen to the bicycling community. At that time only two East River bridges permitted bicycle access – the Brooklyn and Williamsburg," recounted Bauman.
"The Brooklyn Bridge promenade had 5 flights of stairs that had to be navigated. The fight to get those stairways removed took a 2-plus year effort."
"Steve was in the middle of this fight [and he] spent more hours on it than any of the handful trying to remove those stairs. The Landmarks Preservation Commission's approval was a result of the many hours Steve spent pouring over the Bridge's construction documents."
But the Bicycle Blueprint, and Koch's approach to cycling was later overshadowed in part by Koch's proposed ban on bicycles during weekdays on three major avenues in the city, Park, Madison and Fifth to accommodate the Taxi and Limousine lobby that didn't want cyclists in the way.
But Faust thought differently about the whole thing. In a recent response to a negative framing of Koch's bike lanes accompanying the Opinion Pages in the New York Times discussing lanes past and present, Faust wrote:
"Cyclists had some tumultuous times with Ed Koch, but on balance, much, much more was accomplished than lost in those 12 years. Koch laid the groundwork for what has followed. 

I was part of the NYC Bicycle Advisory Committee formed by Koch in 1978. Much of the agenda laid out then was accomplished by Koch, and much of the rest has been put in place by following administrations. Koch was not at all a bicycle failure, and what Bloomberg is doing is not at all out of line with plans laid out over 30 years ago."
"You might say he was pushing the envelope at the beginning," recounted Herz. "Not everyone in the beginning thought that bicycles were a legitimate mode of transportation."
Faust held a masters in city and regional planning from the Harvard University School of Design, and went to work for the Federal Transit Administration.
Staying there until 2000–22 years–Faust planned, designed, and performed environmental reviews and construction oversight of multi-billion dollar transit projects in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, including the new 2nd Ave. Subway, Metro North stations and trains, New Jersey Transit bus and rail, and Connecticut bus and New Haven Rail Services, according to his resume.
But even after his retirement Faust was active in bicycle advocacy. He played a strong role in assisting co-counsels Adam White and Steve Vaccaro who have been active in pressing the cases of cyclists and pedestrians–or their family members–after horrific crashes in New York City.
Faust worked for the firm as an expert who documented crash scenes and other crash evidence, and prepared reconstructions.
"He prepared with me to give testimony in several cases, although he never actually got to testify, " said Vaccaro.
Vaccaro shared pictures of distance markers Mr. Faust had recently created and placed on Hudson Terrace to demonstrate the number of seconds a driver had to view a southbound cyclist before striking him.
"He had a powerful and intuitive insight into how traffic works and helped me develop theories of liability. We'll miss him very much," said Vaccaro.
Faust is also fondly remembered by many cycling advocates who closely watched the unfolding of mass arrests of cyclists during the Republican National Convention in New York in 2004, and at a subsequent critical mass bike ride in 2008. Both events yielded court cases where Faust provided "brilliant" testimony, according to his good friend and fellow advocate Steve Bauman.
"Those were both federal cases and I would argue that the whole nation owes him thanks for his efforts holding back the tide." (See end of article for some excerpts.)
Faust also spent two years in the U.S. Army from 1968 to 1970, and for one year acted as a press photographer and scout in Vietnam.

Gravesite Details

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCvL_bkUQRw#t=108



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