Monday, December 5, 2011

Bike Lab policies

Bike Lab policies, written 12/4/11 by Paul Anzel

Introduction
The Bike Lab managers can be contacted at bikeshop AT caltech DOT edu for any questions or issues. These policies are effective immediately.

Honor code announcement
All users of the Caltech Bike Lab are subject to the Caltech honor code: “No member of the Caltech community shall take unfair advantage of any other member of the Caltech community.” The full rules are posted here. We encourage members to be honest in all their dealings (not just in classes), and so ask them not to leave a mess for others, ensure tools remain in the shop, pay fairly for all parts used, keep current on dues, and to treat all equipment with care and respect.

Membership
Bike Lab key access is subject to an annual fee of $10/year, though the fee may be waived by donation of a tool or volunteer efforts (defined in the Volunteering section). New dues are collected at the beginning of the Fall term. Members who join in the Spring or Summer terms are covered for the next year.

Key access to the Caltech Bike Lab is limited to current members of Caltech and JPL. Friends and family of Caltech/JPL members are welcome to use the shop, provided their sponsor (the current Caltech/JPL member) is present with them. The responsibility of sponsored guests lies with their sponsor.

All members will be automatically enrolled on the Bike Lab mailing list (bikeshoplist AT caltech DOT edu).

Other access
Office hours and repair classes are open to current Caltech/JPL members, their friends and family, and alumni. We will not turn away other attendees, but preference for space and time is given to those listed above. Our bike rides are open to everyone, but non-Caltech/JPL members may be expected to help pay for any food or drinks involved in the rides.

We reserve the right to kick anyone out of an office hour, class, or ride for being overly disruptive, harassing others, or endangering the safety of themselves or others.

Leadership
The primary (and secondary, if available) manager of the Bike Lab must be a current undergraduate or graduate student. If there is need for further managers, they can be any other members of the Caltech community. Any call for new managers will be made open on the cyclists and bikeshoplist mailing lists. If the decision of a new manager cannot be resolved among the current managers and volunteers, the selection of a new manager will be put to vote amongst Bike Lab members.

Managerial duties include
- Taking inventory of the shop and ensuring all tools are in working order.
- Purchasing new tools.
- Organizing classes, rides, and office hours.
- Ensuring rags get put through rag service and any toxic chemicals are properly disposed of.

Managerial privileges include
- Unlimited time to stash their bike at the Bike Lab, if needed.
- Ability to freely take tools out of the shop.
- Love and adulation.
- The occasional free beer (or drink of preference).

Volunteering and Office Hours
Volunteers are asked to lead classes, hold office hours, or lead or support Bike Lab rides. Anyone is welcome to volunteer. A volunteer is expected to contribute at least two hours of work a month for at least one term for their fees to be waived.

Office hours for the week must be told to the shop manager by Thursday of the previous week so they can get them published in Caltech Today. Hours will be put on Caltech Today’s weekly announcements and on the Bike Lab calendar (see below).

Volunteers are asked to keep office hours reasonably consistent from week-to-week over a term to minimize confusion.

Office hours are a time for teaching, not direct repair. Volunteers are encouraged to teach visitors how to repair their own bikes, not to do it for them. Likewise, visitors are expected to actively participate during office hours rather than simply pass their bike onto the volunteers for repair.

Classes
The Bike Lab will lead at least one introductory bike repair class per term. Additional classes are at the discretion of the shop manager and other volunteers, but are a good thing.

Rides
Official Bike Lab social rides must have a small med-kit around. They are no-drop (unless stated otherwise) and we will have a volunteer riding DFL. For more training-style rides, you may be on your own; riders are expected to plan accordingly.

Shop policies
Shop users must sign in every time they use the shop.

Shop users are expected to clean up after themselves and are encouraged to leave the shop in better shape than they found it.

Shop users must inform the shop manager if any tool breaks or they find broken equipment, and are asked to inform the manager about any other shop-related issues.

Visitors and Members must NOT take tools outside of the front door of the shop without the explicit permission of a volunteer or manager.

Members are welcome to leave their bikes at the shop for a short period of time. To ensure their bikes are left untouched, members are encouraged to put a label with their name on their bikes. Bikes are left at the shop at their owners own risk. We ask that overnight time is kept within reason, and if anyone leaves their bike untouched for over a month without prior consultation of the management, their bikes are considered abandoned and may be cannibalized for parts. Managers may decide to clean out the shop and reclaim any bikes around, but will give fair warning via the mailing list.

Statement on office hours and classes
The managers and volunteers for the Bike Lab are not professionals, and their advice should not be treated as coming from such. We will help visitors to the best of our knowledge but we may be wrong at times or miss important issues. Take our advice at your own risk, and if you are concerned about anything we say there are a number of books and resources on-line for repair advice. A healthy dose of skepticism is not just important for science, it’s important for life.