Protected two-way bike lane on Main Street in Medford, Oregon with green lane markings and physical barriers separating cyclists from vehicle traffic

Save the Medford Bike Lane

The Medford City Council voted to remove our protected bike lanes on Main Street. We need your voice to reverse this decision and keep our streets safe for cyclists.

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Photo: Joe Linton / Streetsblog

Study Session: April 8th

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The Study Session Is Here

On April 1st, 18 people submitted written public comments and four people spoke — all in support of the bike lane. The council heard us loud and clear. Now, a study session on the Main Street reconfiguration is scheduled for April 8th.

This is a critical moment. Show up and make your voice heard.

How to Attend:

  • When: Wednesday, April 8th at 6:00 PM
  • Where: Medford City Hall, 411 W 8th St
  • Public comment: Sign up to speak at the start of the meeting. Even 1-2 sentences makes an impact
  • Can't make it? Submit a public comment before the meeting so they hear from you anyway
18 Written Comments, 4 Speakers, All in Support
Latest Post

18 Written Comments, 4 Speakers, All in Support

April 4, 2026Read more →

What's Happening?

April 1, 2026

18 Written Comments, 4 Speakers — All in Support

At the April 1st council meeting, 18 people submitted written public comments and four community members spoke during public comment — every single one in support of keeping the bike lane. A study session on the Main Street reconfiguration is now scheduled for April 8th.

March 18, 2026

5 More Speakers, Zero Opposition — Again

Five community members spoke in support of the bike lane at the March 18th council meeting. Not one person spoke in favor of removing it. The council is listening — a study session on the reconfiguration is confirmed for April 8th. Read the full transcript.

March 4, 2026

14 Speakers, Zero Opposition

All 14 public speakers at the March 4th council meeting supported keeping the bike lane. Over 30 written comments were also submitted in support. Not a single person spoke in favor of removing it. Read the full transcript.

February 18, 2026

Community Turns Out Again, Council May Reconsider

More than two dozen people made public comments at the February 18th council meeting, with the overwhelming majority supporting Option 3, the compromise that preserves bike lanes while addressing parking and visibility concerns. Pedestrians, kids who bike to school, environmentalists, and downtown business owners all spoke up. Council member Kevin Stine called for a reconsideration, saying the council has received "tremendous response online and in person from stakeholders." The issue may return to a full council vote. Read more.

February 2026

17 Supporters Pack City Council Meeting

17 community members attended the February 4th City Council meeting to voice their support for keeping the protected bike lanes on Main Street, demonstrating strong public backing for safe cycling infrastructure. Meanwhile, downtown businesses are urging reconsideration of the reversal.

January 2026

Council Votes to Remove Bike Lanes

In a split decision requiring Mayor Zarosinski's tiebreaking vote, the Medford City Council voted to abandon the protected two-way bike lanes on Main Street—just three years after installing them. The reversal will cost $1 million and delay other road projects.

November 2025

Public Input Sessions

75-80 citizens attended an open house at Oakdale Middle School to review four design options for Main Street. Despite staff recommendations to keep protected lanes, an online survey showed mixed opinions.

2023

Protected Lanes Installed

Medford invested $500,000 to create the city's first protected two-way bike lane on Main Street, reducing vehicle lanes from three to two and adding 12 feet of dedicated cycling infrastructure.

Submit a Public Comment

Submit a public comment before the April 8th study session on the Main Street reconfiguration. It goes on the official record and becomes part of the meeting minutes. Public comments carry real weight. Every voice counts.

Your address shows council members you're a constituent.
Leave blank to use our suggested message, or write your own.

This will open your email app with a pre-filled public comment to PublicComments@cityofmedford.org — it goes on the official record.

Frequently Asked Questions