On the 20th Anniversary of ADA, Too Many Streets Remain Inaccessible
Yesterday marked the 20th anniversary of the Americans With Disabilities Act, the landmark law that set federal standards to make public places universally accessible. Two decades later, the ADA has improved access for millions, but in many places, the spirit of the law seems lost on those who shape the streets.
July 27, 2010
What if Roads Really Did Have to Pay for Themselves?
Pittsburgh
area residents are reeling from the news this week that their transit
agency, the Port Authority of Allegheny County, may cut 35 percent of its total service in January
-- and raise fares -- unless the state of Pennsylvania can come up with
new funding for transportation. The massive amputation would come on
top of a 15 percent cut three years ago, reducing the transit network to
a shadow of its former self.
July 23, 2010
Sympathy for the Careless Driver
One
of the stories that's been percolating all week on the Streetsblog
Network stars Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa in a new role:
urban cyclist. On Saturday, Villaraigosa was riding in a bike lane on
Venice Boulevard (his first bike trip as mayor), when a cab driver cut
him off, forcing him to brake suddenly and fall off his bike. Many
advocates for better cycling conditions, including Streetsblog
LA's Damien Newton, wondered whether the broken elbow Villaraigosa
suffered might prompt the mayor to tackle street safety problems with
more urgency.
July 22, 2010
Night of the Living Highway Extension
Tacoma resident Evan Siroky got a rude reminder of what's in
Washington State DOT's project pipeline yesterday, reading in the local
paper that officials are looking to revive
plans to extend state route 167 as a limited access highway. The
new highway segment would reach the Port of Tacoma, and Siroky writes on
member blog Tacoma
Tomorrow that it's being sold, in part, as a boon for freight
movement, though most of its impact will be to induce more driving and
sprawl.
July 20, 2010
We’re Hiring: Help Lead Streetsblog’s National Coverage
Editor’s note: Our search for a national reporter to take over Streetsblog Capitol Hill wouldn’t be complete without putting out a call to the audience with the greatest passion for livable streets and sustainable transportation policy — our readers. To apply, send a resume, cover letter, and relevant clips to jobs [at] streetsblog [dot] org. … Continued
July 12, 2010
Accounting for the Economic Payoff of Streetcars and Buses
Lots of reaction from Streetsblog Network members to yesterday's big
transit grant announcement. They're thrilled in Fort
Worth and Cincinnati,
where the FTA distributed the maximum $25 million for new streetcar
lines. They're disappointed in D.C.,
where the request to fund a streetcar segment linking up with Metro
lines was denied. When a billion dollars worth of requests are put
forward for $130 million in grant money, not every good proposal will
make it through.
July 9, 2010
Feds Announce Winners of $293 Million in Transit Grants
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and FTA chief Peter Rogoff announced the
winners of $293 million in competitive grants for bus and streetcar
projects today. The biggest chunks of funding will help build
streetcar projects in Cincinnati, Charlotte, Fort Worth, and St. Louis,
as well as rapid bus corridors in New York and Chicago. All told, the
funding will be distributed among 53 projects, chosen from more than 300
applicants.
July 8, 2010
Ohio DOT Can’t Fathom Bike-Ped Access on Downtown Cleveland Bridge
We've
got an update today on a storyline we've been following for months: The
Ohio Department of Transportation's refusal to build a path for biking
and walking when they replace Cleveland's I-90 Innerbelt Bridge. Back in
December, cyclists
rallied to urge the DOT to include such a path, which would create a
direction connection to downtown. In the face of ongoing
pressure from local activists, as well as Congressman
Dennis Kucinich and Senator
Sherrod Brown, DOT chief Jolene Molitoris has continued to
stonewall the idea.
July 8, 2010
Yes, You Can Move the Needle on Public Support for a Gas Tax Hike
Last
week, USA Today reported rather gleefully that the
U.S. gas tax has never been lower. Having remained unchanged at
18.4 cents per gallon since 1993, American drivers are now paying half
as much in inflation-adjusted gas taxes, per 1,000 miles driven, that
they did in 1975. We can pretty much forget about investing in new and
expanded transit systems -- or even just holding up our bridges -- as
long as this is the case.
July 7, 2010
The Freedom to Not Drive
The thought of the day comes to us from the island of Oahu, where
Doug Carlson writes the "Yes to Rail" blog. Carlson advocates for
construction of the Honolulu rail system, recent
recipient of a key approval from the Federal Transit
Administration.
July 6, 2010