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Eyes on the Street: Access Denied
Here's another case of dangerously uncivil servitude, via Gothamist's John Del Signore, who came upon an Access-A-Ride driver parked in the elevated Sands Street bike lane. It's no surprise that Del Signore's complaint to the driver was answered with a shrug (or, more accurately, a "What's the big deal? Just go around."). But when he sent the photo to NYC Transit for comment, here was the response:
November 12, 2009
Civil Servants Behaving Badly, With Deadly Results. What Can Be Done?
The killing of Seth Kahn by MTA bus driver Jeremy Philhower was the fourth instance in a recent spate of pedestrian deaths at the hands of public employees, either on or off the job. These fatalities have brought to light disturbing patterns at both the MTA and NYPD that could be putting more New Yorkers … Continued
November 12, 2009
Taxi Surcharges and Congestion Pricing — They Go Great Together
The surcharge on NYC medallion taxi fares that took effect this month is a bit like a bases-loaded groundout that scores a run but kills a big inning: It does some good, but a ringing base hit could have done a lot more.
November 12, 2009
Safer, More Livable Streets for the East Side — The Campaign Heats Up
Advocates and volunteers working for protected bike paths on the East Side, flush from last month's highly encouraging Community Board 8 vote, delivered more than a thousand handwritten letters yesterday to City Hall, supporting protected bike lanes on First and Second Avenues. Keep an eye on this story. It's a big one.
November 6, 2009
Off-Peak Discounts for NYC Transit: An Intriguing Idea
Discounting off-peak transit service could be a boon to New York City's transportation and quality of life, so long as revenues can be found to make up for the likely farebox shortfall.
October 22, 2009
Jay Walder’s Well-Placed Priorities: Doing More With New York City Buses
“In London, you
carry nearly twice as many people in the bus system as you do on the
Underground.” In New York, the opposite is true. “We must close the gap and
make more of the bus system.”
October 21, 2009
NYC, SF, and DC Sign Deals to Upgrade Transit Technology
IBM's Smarter Planet project, which uses technology (and sometimes plain old polling) in an effort to revamp urban infrastructure, today signed deals with transit agencies in New York, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. to "smartly" manage the ins and outs of keeping trains and buses running.
October 7, 2009
The Case for Open MTA Data: Transparency, Savings, and Easier Riding
Without good information for riders, transit systems don't work very well. A subway station sans system map or a bus stop lacking a posted schedule perform terribly from a usability perspective. That's why real-time bus information and subway countdown clocks have been getting so much play lately. They would give New York City transit riders extremely useful information that's currently unavailable.
September 23, 2009
Time-Polluting Daily News Honcho Goes Public
In Utah, they flip off forest rangers and wheel their ATV’s onto delicate wilderness trails. In the Virginia exurbs they lounge in air-conditioned trophy homes and write checks to stop carbon taxes. Here in NYC, they find their “Network” moment in a 25-cent bump in MTA bridge tolls, then ferret out toll-free routes into Manhattan and crow about them in the Daily News.
August 18, 2009
Real-Time Bus Tracking Pilot Is Live on 34th Street [Updated]
Will the third time be the charm for reliable bus arrival displays in Manhattan? NYCDOT and the MTA announced today that, yes, they will deliver a tracking system bus riders can count on.
August 11, 2009