Listen Live
Listen Live

Active transportation advocate Glen Byle running for Trail council

A man who serves on the board of the West Kootenay Cycling Coalition is running for Trail city council with hopes of making it easier for people to get around town without a car.

“I’m interested in making some improvements to transportation in Trail, specifically for active transportation, which is good for kids and seniors and people who can’t drive,” Glen Byle says.

Byle thought about running for council a few years ago when he was trying to spearhead transportation-related improvements in the city and wasn’t making much headway. The city is now developing an active transportation plan.

Byle says his own assessments might consider what it takes for a child to reach a nearby park.

“I look at that path and say where are the pinch points? I look for the spots missing a sidewalk or a spot where there’s no safe route where a kid has to go on the road with cars. That’s something I look for that would be a higher priority.”

Byle says he’s also interested in creating safe routes between neighbourhoods and ensuring adequate crosswalks and signage. He further wants to make sure sidewalks are stepped down so those using scooters can use them. He’s seen people unable to navigate the transition who end up driving on the road with traffic.

Byle has run provincially twice before in Kootenay West: for the BC Conservatives in 2020 and as an independent in 2013. He says the experience taught him a lot about the difference between provincial and municipal responsibilities and how important it is for them to work together.

“Specifically for Trail, with the shelter downtown, a lot of the solutions for helping the homeless come from provincial organizations,” he says.

Byle, 35, says he has been serving on volunteer boards to better understand parliamentary procedure and how the collaborative decision-making process works.

He has lived in Trail for 16 years and is married with three young kids. “If people are looking for someone to encourage things for youth and kids, I’d be a good choice,” he says.

Additionally, he wants to improve access to community spaces like parks, gyms, and halls and reduce bureaucracy or barriers for business.

When Byle graduated from college, he applied for jobs everywhere outside the Lower Mainland, which brought him to Trail. He liked it and stayed. He works at the regional hospital fixing medical equipment.

Greg Nesteroff
Greg Nesteroff
Greg has been working in West Kootenay news media off and on since 1998. When he's not on the air, he's busy writing about local history. He has recently published a book about the man who founded the ghost town of Sandon.

Continue Reading

cjat Now playing play

ckqr Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Demolition begins on downtown Trail department store

The Trail Mercantile. Eaton's. The Town Square Mall. Liquidation World. The building at 900 Spokane Street has been known by all of those names since 1917. But within a few weeks it will be no more.

Citizens stop suspected drunk driver near Genelle

A 41-year-old Trail man received a 24-hour driving ban and multiple fines after being forced to pull over by alert witnesses on Highway 22.

Columbia Basin Trust funds upgrades to boost livability and emergency readiness in affordable housing

Affordable housing complexes across the Columbia Basin are set to receive upgrades aimed at improving comfort, accessibility and emergency preparedness, through nearly $3.3 million in new funding from Columbia Basin Trust.

First Nation rebukes B.C. leaders over ‘misleading’ statements about Richmond title ruling

The Quw'utsun Nation says recent comments about their land title case from Premier David Eby, Richmond’s mayor and other politicians are “at best, misleading, and at worst, deliberately inflammatory.” The post First Nation rebukes B.C. leaders over ‘misleading’ statements about Richmond title ruling appeared first on AM 1150.

BCGEU members head back to work as they vote on tentative agreement

Public service workers with the the B.C. General Employees Union (BCGEU) are back on the job Monday after the union and the province reached a tentative agreement over the weekend.  The post BCGEU members head back to work as they vote on tentative agreement appeared first on AM 1150.
- Advertisement -