Taking advocacy to the next level
Moss and her husband are long-time bike riders. “We love our biking lifestyle. It’s a huge part of who we are. It brings the whole family so much joy,” she said. “It also is in alignment with our values around community and sustainability.” She noted that her kids never ask, “Are we there yet?” when they’re on the back of a bike.
“You get to know your neighbors when you’re riding a bike. There’s this interaction with the world around you that feels so alive and so important.”
Her keen awareness of the joy of biking has led Moss to deepen her advocacy, especially in the face of a personal challenge. “I am not going to simply encourage biking and walking to school without simultaneously doing everything I can to make that safer,” she said. “We have a long way to go before we have a Vision Zero city.”
Moss’s family got an unhappy reminder of the need for safer streets this February. Her husband had dropped off her six-year-old at Malcolm X and was biking the three-year-old to preschool when a turning car driver crossed the center line and hit him head-on. Her husband’s knee was injured, and he can’t get around by bike for the time being. Her son was thrown from the back of the bike into the street, and while he fortunately wasn’t injured, he was traumatized by the impact.
“I was an advocate before all this,” Moss said. Now she’s redoubling her efforts, especially because a pedestrian was hit by a car driver at that same intersection a few weeks later. She’s talking to city council members about what happened and asking Berkeley to harden that intersection to protect vulnerable road users. “I am hopeful,” she said — and still looking forward to upcoming SR2S events that bring joy to the community and celebrate a car-free culture.