Study: Painted Bike Lanes Don’t Endanger Pedestrians or Anyone Else
New York City's tabloid media simply can't stop seeing the city's bike boom as a mortal threat to pedestrians. Even research showing a decline in the number of bike-ped crashes was somehow spun to say the opposite, that more cyclists were hitting pedestrians than ever. Now, new peer-reviewed research confirms once again that bike lanes don't endanger pedestrians and don't cause more crashes. If anything, researchers say, they make streets safer.
January 6, 2012
Times Architecture Critic Calls For Eliminating NYC Parking Minimums
The fight to eliminate parking minimums in New York City just went mainstream.
January 6, 2012
Seattle Bridge Toll Eases Traffic. Will It Boost Transit, Too?
Located on a pair of peninsulas, the city of Seattle isn't so easy to reach from its eastern suburbs. Only two bridges cross Lake Washington. Newly-installed tolls across one of the two, the SR-520 bridge, have the potential to seriously reshape travel patterns in the region.
January 6, 2012
DCP Advances Promising Manhattan Parking Reforms, Fixes Flawed Study
When plans to reform parking policies in the Manhattan core leaked out of the Department of City Planning last fall, the documents presented a riddle. The proposed changes were solid reforms to successful policies, closing loopholes in the existing parking caps and rationalizing the current system. The draft study which accompanied the reforms, however, seemed to play fast and loose with the facts while arguing for the city to allow parking to eat up more of Manhattan's valuable space. One hand didn't seem to know what the other was doing, and with New York's powerful real estate industry lobbying against the parking maximums, parking reform was in a precarious position.
January 3, 2012
Electeds and Advocates: Tappan Zee Needs Transit From the Start
Support for transit on the new Tappan Zee bridge -- built up over a decade of consensus building and 280 public meetings -- runs deep and broad in the Hudson Valley. Though Governor Andrew Cuomo is already rushing forward with plans to build the bridge without any transit option, 11 local elected officials from both parties and a coalition of 16 environmental, labor, social justice, and transportation organizations have now come together to say that Westchester and Rockland County residents need transit on the Tappan Zee. In a statement released today, the coalition argues that Cuomo can't leave transit to be built later; the Hudson Valley needs transit now.
December 15, 2011
Deadline Approaching for Towns to Get a Helping Hand With TOD
An important heads up from the Tri-State Transportation Campaign: Towns looking to shape their future around NYC region's extensive transit network have until the end of the week to apply for a grant from Tri-State and the One Region Funders' Group to help turn those aspirations into a concrete vision.
December 14, 2011