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Frostbike 2026 is Cancelled Due to Potentially Unsafe Conditions From Immigration Enforcement

Frostbike 2026 is Cancelled
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QBP was excited to bring back its in-house trade show called Frostbike. We, along with much of the industry, were excited to attend. But due to the current conditions in and around Minneapolis, MN related to federal immigration enforcement, QBP has made the tough decision to cancel the show.

From QBP:

As we have been preparing for the return of Frostbike, over the past six weeks we have been monitoring the situation in the Minneapolis metro area related to federal immigration enforcement activity. While we have been hopeful that a significant de-escalation would take place, it does not appear that meaningful change is coming soon. While better days for our community are certainly in our future, the current conditions make it potentially unsafe for some attendees. For that reason, we have made the difficult decision to cancel Frostbike 2026. 

In the coming days, the Frostbike events team will be reaching out to exhibitors to provide guidance on logistics related to the cancellation of the event. This decision did not come easy, and it was not the one we wanted to make, but we recognize if the current enforcement activities make it unsafe for some of our attendees to travel to the Twin Cities, then the event is not safe for all attendees. 

The theme of Frostbike 2026 is Take the Lane, and we encourage each of you to be proactive and Take the Lane for your business, your community, and yourself. There’s no better example of the power of our industry taking the lane together than last Saturday’s memorial ride honoring Alex Pretti, who was fatally shot in Minneapolis by Department of Homeland Security agents on January 24. Angry Catfish Bicycle Shop, with the help of other businesses and local citizens, hosted the Minneapolis ride and guided other organizers in hosting more than 250 officially scheduled rides across 14 countries and 43 states. In Minneapolis alone, we had over 5,000 riders show up despite the snow and cold weather.

The power of the bicycle and the collective bicycling community knows no bounds. Those boundless possibilities are the reasons we were very much looking forward to convening members of the bicycle industry to connect with each other and learn from one another. Events like Frostbike are important to us because we know that when we can meet face-to-face to share ideas and work through problems, the outcomes are good for the industry and good for our collective businesses. And while we have recently seen some bright spots, there’s still a lot of work for all of us to do, together, to help get more people on bikes and build a healthier, more sustainable industry. That’s why we are working diligently to find alternative ways to share much of the educational content and industry perspectives we had planned for this year’s event and we’re hard at work planning Frostbike 2027.

If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to reach out to your Q representative or Q Customer Service.

Sincerely,

Rich Tauer, Q President

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craig
craig
9 days ago

Interesting. Why didn’t QBP “take the lane” when one of its own was seriously injured? https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/cycling-racer-hit-by-pickup-severely-hurt-while-riding-to-job-at-twin-cities-bicycle-retailer/ar-AA1KJKCt?apiversion=v2&domshim=1&noservercache=1&noservertelemetry=1&batchservertelemetry=1&renderwebcomponents=1&wcseo=1 What happened to Pretti is sad and tragic, but when QBP says “there’s no better example of the power of our industry taking the lane together than last Saturday’s memorial ride,” somebody needs to ask where QPB is and where the memorial rides are when Minnesota cyclists die the way cyclists normally die all across the country – by being rundown by motor vehicles. Some joke about the legal reality that “if you want to get away with murder in America, use your car (or truck),” but it’s no joke. If QBP really wants to “help get more people on bikes and build a healthier, more sustainable industry,” maybe it could aggressively take up the cause of the many cyclists killed or maimed for doing nothing more than riding their bike on a road or street in Minnesota or Maine or Massachusetts or Mississippi. It’s painful to say this, but the Frostbike cancellation looks a little bit like grandstanding for PR reasons.

Mr Pink
Mr Pink
8 days ago
Reply to  craig

You really have no idea how bad it is up there do ya? Because if you did you’d get it. Unless of course you think ICE and Trump are doing gods work then it’ll be hard to explain further.

Tom
Tom
8 days ago
Reply to  craig

For those downvoting this one, in a way, Craig does have a point. However, as a Minneapolis resident I can state firsthand that there is a lack of equivalency here and this is another case of the what about-ism that plagues public discourse today.

Cyclists are killed by drivers on the streets of America every day and after 4 decades behind a handlebar, I feel it is getting worse, not better. We need everyone in the community from cycling companies to advocacy groups, government officials, drivers and law enforcement to step up and do the work the ensure safer cyclist/driver interactions.

The difference with this situation is however both simple and stark. ICE/DHS agents are not daily drivers hitting cyclists while watching TikTok on their phones. They are armed agents of the government wearing body armor and carrying guns. Shooting someone in the back in the middle of the street while multiple people film the event is no way equivalent to a driver hitting a cyclist and does require a significantly different, escalated response. This isn’t apples vs oranges; it’s apples vs bullets.

What’s happening in Minneapolis right now is terrifying and the water is being muddied as far too many people who don’t live here step up to share their opinions. Everyone is entitled to an opinion but given the sensitivity and severity of this situation I would ask anyone outside of Minneapolis to take a seat on this one because you don’t know what you’re talking about. We have media on both sides telling very different stories and fueling division, but the lived experience of those of us who call Minneapolis home is all that matters. We’re afraid to walk the streets without a passport in our pocket in the event of a random “citizenship check” which appears to be based fully on the color of one’s skin. We’re seeing our neighbors terrorized, assaulted and yes, murdered. Even with the memorial ride which thankfully was peaceful, there was concern of agitators that might aggressively go after those on bikes. Something I’m glad to report didn’t happen.

I commend QBP for their stance. I also commend all the local organizations across the Twin Cities and beyond who have stepped up to support our community. But most of all, I commend everyone in the Twin Cities who has held strong in the face of a situation that has no place in this country.

Dog Farts
Dog Farts
9 days ago

Good on them for putting people first.

Sharkey Muldoon
Sharkey Muldoon
9 days ago

Nice to see a company doing the right thing.

rodegeek
rodegeek
9 days ago

Disappointing for sure, but it’s the right decision. To any and all who are disappointed, please call your elected representatives and encourage them to restrain (or eliminate) ICE.

Chris White
8 days ago

I thought Americans rebelled against tyrannical leaders 250 years ago. They’re normally obsessed by the ideal of “freedom”. Sounds like it’s time for another revolution if you’re not even free enough to organize a bike expo’ that is safe from your own government. Shocking!

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