Parking
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Newsom Opposed to Sunday Parking Enforcement, Study or No
It's no surprise, but it's troubling. Mayor Gavin Newsom has confirmed to Streetsblog that he remains opposed to extending parking meter enforcement to Sundays, despite a promise by MTA Chief Nat Ford that it's being studied and remains on the table for consideration, along with evening metering to 10 p.m. -- revenue measures that would raise $9 million -- potentially offsetting fare hikes and service cuts, changes Ford still has the power to make (within five percent).
May 29, 2009
Proposal to Limit Vehicles on University Ave in Palo Alto Gains Support
In the past few weeks, Stanford University students have built support for a proposal to reduce parking, widen sidewalks, and eventually close eight blocks of University Avenue in Palo Alto to motor vehicles. The Palo Alto Pedestrian Mall (PAPM) started out as an assignment in a "Creating Infectious Action" class at the design school at Stanford and has since garnered support among transportation committee members of the city council and businesses along the avenue, many of them restaurants that want to take advantage of extra sidewalk seating.
May 28, 2009
Only 17 Percent Drive to Downtown SF to Shop, Study Finds
The San Francisco County Transportation Authority (TA) has released a survey of nearly 1400 shoppers in downtown San Francisco that found less than one-fifth drive to shop, and that they spend less money in aggregate than shoppers using other transportation modes (PDF). The study indicates drivers spend more each trip than transit riders, but visit less often and account for far fewer total visits and therefore spend less total.
May 27, 2009
A San Francisco Parking Enforcement Debate That Shouldn’t Be Happening
Why is San Francisco -- considered by many around the world to be a “progressive” and “green" city with a Transit First policy -- still debating whether to extend meter hours and parking enforcement, even in the face of a crippling Muni budget deficit? Didn't we merge Muni with the Department of Parking and Traffic precisely so policy decisions about management of the streets would benefit the operations of transit, bicycling, and walking?
May 22, 2009
SFPark: “It’s Really an Exciting Time in the Meter World”
The
Port of San Francisco last week installed the first 8 of more than 100
new multi-space meters along the Embarcadero from the Ferry Building
south to AT&T Park in what will become San Francisco's new pilot in
dynamic parking management, SFPark.
The Port meters are the first of what will be a year and a
half trial with 6,000 curbside spaces and 11,500 garage spaces in seven
pilot areas around the city, most of them downtown and in heavy-traffic
tourist destinations (see map below).
May 21, 2009
Newsom Should Charge Drivers More for Parking Before Cutting Muni
Transportation accounts for one third of US greenhouse gas emissions and is the fastest growing source of emissions globally. Most of this comes from automobiles, and technical fixes like biofuels or hybrid/electric cars will not get us to the 80 percent reductions in CO2 that we must attain to stabilize the climate. We need to reduce driving and re-orient our daily mobility towards transit, bicycling, and walking. Even Ray LaHood, Obama’s Transportation Secretary – and a Republican – made the connection on a recent interview on C-Span. And San Franciscans have demanded that their political leaders get it too. Polling, balloting, and surveying has reified that San Franciscans overwhelmingly support a “transit first” agenda and understand that this includes discouraging driving.
May 8, 2009
MTA Board Approves Budget But Caves on Stronger Parking Enforcement
Despite the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency’s daunting
deficit -- $128.9 million – members of the MTA Board of Directors
voted six to one yesterday for a surprise
amendment to the budget to eliminate a proposed extension of parking
meter enforcement on Sundays and from 6 to 10 pm on weekdays.
May 1, 2009
MTA To Get Greater Management Role Over SFPD’s Traffic Company
According to a "fact sheet" (PDF) released by the Mayor's office Friday, "new operational improvements and efficiencies" have been identified that will amount to $3.5 million in cost savings for the MTA, including giving MTA Executive Director Nat Ford more power over the SFPD's Traffic Company.
April 20, 2009
Streetscast: An Interview with MTA Chief Nat Ford, Part II
MTA Executive Director Nat Ford sat down with Streetsblog San Francisco last week for an hour-long interview. In today's segment, he addresses the funding crisis facing California transit agencies, the long-awaited implementation of the Bike Plan and the internal MTA battle over how to balance the different modes.
April 17, 2009
Cars Invade Golden Gate Park, Inner Sunset as Institutions Reopen
The Music Concourse in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park is living proof of that ancient maxim dating back to the movie Field of Dreams: if you build it, they will come.
April 16, 2009