Year: 2009
Top Categories
Transit Creates As Many Jobs As Roads — But it Could Do Even Better
Members of Congress remain intensely focused on health care this fall, but as the unemployment rate hits double digits in more states, their No. 2 priority is best summed up in three words: Jobs, jobs, jobs.
October 22, 2009
The ‘Infrastructure Condo’ That Could Help Make High-Speed Rail Happen
As the Obama administration prepares to
roll out its ambitious new investment in high-speed rail (HSR),
right-of-way -- primary control over a stretch of train track, whether
existing or envisioned -- has become a major consideration for states
that want to jumpstart local networks.
October 22, 2009
SFPD and Health Department Announce Pedestrian Safety Campaign
The San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) and the Department of Public Health (DPH) recently announced a pedestrian safety program funded by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety (OTS, tag: "Toward Zero Deaths, Every 1 Counts"), a joint initiative that aims to increase enforcement of dangerous and illegal driver behavior, coupled with education campaigns to seniors and other vulnerable pedestrians.
October 22, 2009
Seeking Stimulus Money For Bike Sharing, D.C. Looks Beyond Cutting CO2
The Transportation Planning Board (TPB), the Washington D.C. area's metropolitan planning organization (MPO), recently made a pitch to the U.S. DOT for a share of the economic stimulus law's $1.5 billion in innovative transport grants. Among the suggested projects was $13 million for bike sharing, enough to expand the D.C. program into a regional network that would use wi-fi internet to guide travelers.
October 22, 2009
Should Cities Try to Keep Out Big Chains?
Chain stores. A lot of people hate them because they often muscle
out local businesses that give a neighborhood character (the excellent
film Twilight Becomes Night documents this painful loss in New York City).
October 22, 2009
Today’s Headlines
Better Market Street Trial Gaining Broad Support (SF Examiner) Examiner Editorial: “City Can No Longer Afford to Write Off Unpaid Muni Rides” Residents Still Upset About Terminus Location for the 2-Clement (SF Examiner) NY MTA Chief Wants to Talk About Discount Off-Peak Subway Fares (NYT) Crossing Guard Hired for Oak Intersection Where Girl Was Killed … Continued
October 22, 2009
To Reduce Delay and Fare Evasion, Muni Considers All-Door Boarding
There are plenty of eye-popping statistics in the MTA's new proof-of-payment study [PDF]: 9.5 percent of Muni riders don't have valid proof-of-payment, costing the agency $19 million in missed revenue annually. The fare-evasion rate is even higher among riders who illegally board buses through the back door: 55 percent don't have valid proof-of-payment. As the MTA looks to address the problem with back door boarding, staff has its eyes on another illuminating statistic in the report: on average, about 70 customers board any given MTA bus each hour - more than any other large transit system in the nation.
October 21, 2009
ABCs of Form-Based Codes
"Increasingly,
Americans are choosing to live and work in walkable, diverse
communities with transit options when these communities are available.
Policy makers are beginning to realize the best way to reduce carbon
emissions is to develop in a more compact urban pattern. Nevertheless,
poor urban design persists. Why? Unless the right implementation tools
are being used, better design is difficult to mandate.
October 21, 2009
The Land of the Free (Parking)
It shouldn't come as a surprise to those of you who didn't watch the San Francisco MTA Board meeting yesterday on your live-feed or on SFGTV that the meeting devolved into a referendum on the merits of free, or nearly free, parking. With half a dozen television cameras lined up along the far side of City Hall's Room 400, approximately 60 people took the microphone to testify, some with the opprobrium of a pastor admonishing the unrepentant, all with a fervor that few other issues in urban life can stimulate.
October 21, 2009
GOPers Re-Name the Climate Bill Again: Now It’s a ‘Gas Tax’!
Seven months after first trying
to re-brand congressional climate change legislation as an "energy
tax," Senate Republicans were back at it today with a new report and op-ed that attempts to expose the climate bill as a "$3.6 trillion gas tax."
October 21, 2009