Links
Morning links: Rebutting stereotypes and arguments
End tired bicycle stereotypes: Ann Scott Tyson summarizes Metro's efforts to encourage biking to stations, but Lydia DePillis takes exception to the characterization of bicycling as only for the intrepid or ideologically dedicated. (Post, City Paper)
"Cheap shot" on BRAC: Richard Layman says an Examiner editorial criticizing local governments for not just building roads around BRAC installations is a "cheap shot," since local governments don't have that money, Congress could have stepped up, and since when is the Examiner a fan of unfunded mandates? (RPUS)
Floreen vs. the bag fee: Montgomery Councilmember Nancy Floreen comes out against a 5¢ bag fee, saying it's a "nickel and diming" waste of time if it won't clean up the Chesapeake all on its own; Keith Berner says it'll make a positive impact and the Council spends plenty of time on more frivolous topics. (Post)
Talking buses hot topic in Portland: Portland spent $46,000 on audible turn warning systems for their buses. A female engineer duplicated the talking bus technology for $10 on YouTube, which prompted the CTO of the company that sold it to make a sexist remark in the comments. (The Oregonian, Ken Archer)
Metro morsels: No Board members and only 2 members of the public attended a hearing on WMATA's capital budget ... After eliminating closely-placed bus stops along 4 lines in the fall, Metro has backtracked on some of the changes in wards 4 and 5 following some resident pushback. (Examiner)
How to win a contest: Robert Solorzano, winner of the Capital Bikeshare "Winter Weather Warrior" contest, rode to every one of the 104 stations in one bad weather day, including east of the river and Crystal City. (TBD)
TJ parents argue over ESL: Fairfax County's most elite public high school, Thomas Jefferson, will offer English as a Second Language instruction, raising some questions about whether the school emphasizes math and science too much in admissions and angering others who resent the numbers of immigrants at the school. (Post)
Tell residents, not commuters, about program: To advertise a HUD-financed program to encourage home ownership among long-time residents of Ivy City and Trinidad to encourage home ownership, a sign was placed along a commuter highway that the residents don't use. (District Curmudgeon)
Lessons from New York: The Bloomberg administration defended New York's new bike lanes, noting that most New Yorkers support them including local community boards (like DC's ANCs). (Streetsblog, NYT) ... New York's grid is now 200 years old, an urban form that gets newfound respect (like in Tysons and White Flint) after a period of scorn during suburban development. (NYT, 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
- Montgomery plans 160-mile, "gold standard" BRT system
- VDOT ignores own data, pushes widening I-66
- DC's parks are 5th best in the nation, says "Park Score"
- Bethesda gets new but terrible bike racks
- DC's divide need not be black and white
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
Wed Jun 6
6:30 pm WMATA Riders' Advisory Council







http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0031160/
It was lefties who wanted us to move to the suburbs....
by charlie on Mar 22, 2011 10:10 am
Things are working as they should. Detailed ridership studies cost lots of money. It makes sense to spend that kind of money before building an expensive rail line. But it's too expensive to do before adjusting a bus route, or even before starting a new bus route. You need to try things, see how they work, and adjust.
by Ben Ross on Mar 22, 2011 10:45 am
I hate these turning announcements, and certainly don't think sexism is called for, but I'm not impressed by the intellectual dishonesty in this claim.
by BeyondDC on Mar 22, 2011 10:49 am
by RJ on Mar 22, 2011 10:53 am
by jag on Mar 22, 2011 11:01 am
by MW on Mar 22, 2011 11:52 am
All local governments are going to be biased towards their voters, GGW should be fighting this bias.
by MW on Mar 22, 2011 11:56 am
by SJE on Mar 22, 2011 12:45 pm
by Liz_B on Mar 23, 2011 3:24 pm
by anon on Mar 24, 2011 1:38 am
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