Inside the Latest “Distracted Pedestrians” Con
Hospital records from 2014 showed that distracted walking accounted for 78% of pedestrian injuries throughout the United States.
March 31, 2016
The Boom in Subway Ridership Is Waning. Why?
Transit officials recently reported that 1,763,000,000 subway trips were taken last year, the most since 1948. But the rise in ridership was meager, with only 12 million more trips in 2015 than in 2014. The percentage growth rate was seven-tenths of one percent. Over the same year, employment in New York City rose three times as fast.
March 30, 2016
Street Safety Benefits of Congestion Charging Are Bigger Than We Thought
Evidence keeps mounting that congestion pricing can catalyze major reductions in traffic crashes. A year ago I reported on research that vehicle crashes in central London fell as much as 40 percent since the 2003 startup of London’s congestion charge. The same researchers are now expressing the safety dividend in terms of falling per-mile crash rates, and the figures are even more impressive.
March 9, 2016
Shutting the Midtown Stables Won’t Do Zilch for Manhattan Traffic
Mayor de Blasio’s newest rationale for his deal to shutter the horse-carriage stables in the West 50s is that it will alleviate traffic congestion in Midtown. At an MLK Day event yesterday in Brooklyn, the mayor told reporters:
January 19, 2016
Inside the City Hall Uber Traffic Study: Where’s the Beef?
What Gertrude Stein said about Oakland is what must be said about City Hall’s new traffic study: There’s no there there.
January 15, 2016
The New Climate Villain Is Cheap Oil
Long-term climate prospects brightened somewhat in 2015. Pope Francis put climate care on the moral and political agenda. President Obama rejected the Keystone XL dirty-oil pipeline. Denialist heads of state were routed in Canada and Australia, and their brethren in the U.S. faced growing ridicule. To cap it off, nearly 200 nations signed the UN Paris accord, committing to cutting emissions. Meanwhile, U.S. coal use took another double-digit plunge. And U.S. electricity generation from zero-carbon photovoltaic solar cells continued to soar and has now grown 20-fold in just five years.
January 11, 2016
Newsday Endorses Move NY for 2016, While the Times Misses Its Chance
Two of the region's papers laid out their Albany 2016 agendas in New Year’s weekend editorials. Both led with ethics reform, but the similarities ended there. One paper boldly called on the legislature to "adopt some version of the innovative Move NY tolling-and-congestion pricing plan." The other was silent on transit and traffic, even as it spurred Gov. Andrew Cuomo to "lead on climate change.”
January 4, 2016
The Man Who Saved NYC Cycling
"Our streetwise Dionysian godhead," is how one veteran of the 1987 Midtown bike ban protests described Stephen Athineos, who died yesterday of a heart attack in Inwood, where he lived.
December 18, 2015
MTA Service Bump Next June Won’t Keep Up With Growth in Subway Trips
Talk about running in place: At current growth rates in subway ridership, the service increases that NYC Transit is promising to roll out next June will probably be used up by April.
October 26, 2015