Danger: Journalist With Windshield Perspective Ahead
Today's featured post from the Streetsblog Network comes from member blog Greater Greater Washington.
David Alpert has identified an all-too-common strain of a problem
familiar to our readers, Entitled Driver Syndrome. A particularly
dangerous variant of this common affliction, writes Alpert, is Entitled
Driving Journalist Syndrome, or EDJS:
April 24, 2009
DOT Secy Wants “Sustained Engagement” from Bike Advocates
OK, so we still really don't like the name of the DOT Secretary's blog, The Fast Lane.
(Not to mention the design -- could someone do something about those
graphics, please?) But more and more, we like what we're reading there.
Like yesterday's post, titled "Bicycling Is an Important Factor in Less
Carbon-Intensive Commuting," in which Secretary LaHood discusses
funding opportunities for bicycling infrastructure in the stimulus bill
and beyond:
April 23, 2009
Transportation, Class and Housing: Making the Connections
If you're interested in transportation policy (and we know you are!) it
can sometimes seem as if all the problems plaguing America have their
root there. Today, we have a reminder from Streetsblog Network member Cap'n Transit that not even transportation can cure all ills. But we also have some very hopeful news from columnist Neal Peirce
on the Oregonian's website about the blossoming connection between
transportation and urban policy at the federal level (H/T to Portland Transport).
April 22, 2009
Are Stimulus Funds Being Misused for New Jersey Roads?
Today on the Streetsblog Network,
we hear about the possible misuse of stimulus funds for the widening of
the Garden State Parkway and New Jersey Turnpike in New Jersey. Network
member blog Mobilizing the Region,
the voice of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, reports that the
TSTC has sent a letter to Gov. John Corzine about the matter:
April 21, 2009
Progress Through Undevelopment
Today Streetsblog Network member blog Hub and Spokes
picks up on an interesting story from the LA Times about how falling
real estate values could mean an opportunity to develop more public
spaces:
April 20, 2009
The View of Congestion Pricing from Texas
Remember congestion pricing? It's not much fun to think about what happened to that idea in New York last year. And considering the craziness
that's been going on over bridge tolls in Albany, any kind of road
pricing in our fair city certainly seems like a non-starter for the
foreseeable future.
April 17, 2009
Urban Revitalization Continues Amid Recession
These days good news can be hard to come by, which is why Kaid Benfield's most recent post on NRDC Switchboard caught our eye. It's about the Old North neighborhood of St. Louis, and how revitalization efforts there have taken off:
April 16, 2009
America’s Big Fat Road Problem
America has a fat problem. You knew that, right? But it's not just the people who are fat. It's the roads.
April 15, 2009
Reaching Across the Urban-Suburban Divide
As today's post from Seattle Transit Blog
acknowledges, criticizing the place where someone lives is one of the
surest ways to create division and contention when discussing planning
issues:
April 14, 2009
Sen. Mikulski Supports Car Tax Breaks While Transit Languishes
This just in from the Streetsblog Network: Greater Greater Washington
takes Maryland Senator Barbara Mikulski to task for supporting car
sales tax breaks -- and asks how that money could be better spent:
April 13, 2009