Links
Breakfast links: Light rail reading
Books on the wind: Contra Costa County, California installed automated library kiosks in BART stations so patrons could borrow books before boarding trains. There are similar stations in Madrid, Bogota, Santiago, and Sao Paulo. (Polis, Justin M)
Fair and purple: Go back to Silver Spring the evening after our party for a forum Wednesday on making the Purple Line fair for residents of Langley Park. Prince George's has some bad ideas for redevelopment around the planned station. (JUFJ)
Mote out of our eyes: UMD's anti-Purple Line, pro-expressway President Dan Mote is retiring. Transportation aside, he did a lot for the University. (Rethink College Park)
People walk? News to 9 News: Apparently the only people trying to go to Georgetown for dinner on Valentine's Day were drivers; or at least, a WUSA9 story only talked about traffic backups on Prospect Street exacerbated by the snow with no mention of the blockaded sidewalks that hampered pedestrians. (JTS)
Stuck on the train: Passengers on two Amtrak trains got stranded for six hours Saturday around Lorton when one train broke down and an attempt to bring a second train to its aid didn't work. (Post, Gavin Baker)
Freeway pollution is bad: Researchers found that people living within 100 meters of an LA freeway had arteries hardening twice as fast as normal. (LA Times, Ben)
Bike bites: SmartBike has been suspended "until further notice" due to weather (DCist) ... 3-foot passing failed in the Virginia House but has another shot when the House votes on the Senate bill (VABike) ... Bicycling is worth almost $2 billion a year to Wisconsin (GOOD, John W.) ... NYC is replacing meters with bike racks as they install multispace meters. (NY Post)
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Comments
Successful speed cameras require fair speed limits
- Successful speed cameras require fair speed limits
- Amid scandal, don't lose sight of Gray's policy achievements
- VDOT ignores own data, pushes widening I-66
- Montgomery plans 160-mile, "gold standard" BRT system
- DC's divide need not be black and white
- Preservationists ask to shrink 3rd Church replacement
- Planners are the new public health officials
Wed May 23
12:00 pm Live chat with Matt Yglesias
Thu May 24
6:30 pm M Street SE/SW public meeting
Wed May 30
10:00 am Bike-ped safety enforcement hearing
Mon Jun 4







http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/7245385/Pollution-the-biggest-killer-on-Britains-roads.html
basically ultra-fine particulate matter passes through the lungs into the blood. ANother reason to ban diesel engines.
by charlie on Feb 16, 2010 9:59 am
Tax Increment Financing mechanisms are most often used to finance infrastructure development, but I don't see why the same concept shouldn't be used to capitalize an affordable housing development fund. The owners of land who benefit from investment in transit infrastructure could be required to include affordable housing elements that could be funded by incremental tax revenues.
by jnb on Feb 16, 2010 10:34 am
by dan reed on Feb 16, 2010 10:57 am
by David Alpert on Feb 16, 2010 11:07 am
by nathaniel on Feb 16, 2010 11:12 am
Correlation does not prove causation. The study's abstract (which is the only part available online for free) does not say that they controlled for income. Highway noise and pollution depress property values and so housing near highways is some of the most affordable housing in cities. People who live close to highways are likely to be among the poorest people in any city.
There are many correlations between income and health and those links may in fact be more important that proximity to highways.
I'm not denying that the study is true, but I think it needs closer examination.
by Eric F. on Feb 16, 2010 11:19 am
Again, where do you want the snow to go?
Kudos to the District for hauling away as much snow as possible. I walked over to RFK this weekend and saw a constant stream of dump trucks hauling snow away to dump in the RFK parking lots. I later saw a convoy of empty trucks along Pennsylvania Ave SE, and several front end loaders clearing away the berms from streetcorners and loading the trucks to haul the snow away.
This is a laborious and long-term process. It takes time, and patience is required.
by Alex B. on Feb 16, 2010 11:20 am
I realize it is a labourous process and I think in general the district has done a great job. My complaint here is they made situations regarding sidewalks that were acceptable and made them unacceptable. It is not asking too much to say don't dump big piles of snow in front of the cross walk. In many cases this is what they did. Where for a week there was shoveled areas at a crosswalk, there is now a 5 foot pile of snow.
Also it is never okay to dump snow from the street onto sidewalks in such a manner as to make the sidewalk unusable.
by nathaniel on Feb 16, 2010 11:50 am
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0009096
by Bianchi on Feb 16, 2010 2:00 pm
by Eileen on Feb 16, 2010 5:45 pm
http://cos-mobile.blogspot.com/search/label/Deegan%20expansion
by Douglas A. Willinger on Feb 17, 2010 4:17 pm
by Douglas A. Willinger on Feb 17, 2010 4:18 pm
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