I’ve been saying this for years

However, putting more money in the hands of the states actually keeps it further out of reach of cities and towns that want to build better streets for biking and walking. The League of American Bicyclists’ Andy Clarke, following the proceedings on Twitter, responded that Herrera Buetler and Shuster “are missing the point.” The federal government is not dictating anything, Clarke said: “States are the problem.”
Via https://dc.streetsblog.org/2012/02/02/house-amendment-to-save-federal-bikeped-programs-fails/

Hampden’s DIY Crosswalks

[B’ Spokes: There is no doubt in my mind that drivers need to be educated on their responsibilities to other road users that are not cars. A modest effort by the city toward this end will benefit both cyclists and pedestrians.

But the City seems to be totally clueless to it’s obligations to provide "the best engineering practices regarding the needs of bicycle riders and pedestrians shall be employed" as required by law.* The City neglects to put in crosswalks (as in this article) and if they do install a crosswalk, it is too often the lest effective traverse marking kind.**

The result is 32% of all of Maryland pedestrian crashes are right here in Baltimore City. ***

That is not just a little bad, that is really bad. There is no justification for not installing crosswalks in Baltimore!

Baltimore, Get a clue and if you don’t like the DIY crosswalk then just put in a better one.]
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By Adam Bednar, Patch

Lou Catelli stood at the corner of Elm Avenue and West 36th Street late Wednesday morning showing off his handiwork from the night before.

At the intersection were three freshly spray painted crosswalks and stop lines at the intersection Catelli painted himself. After Hampden residents and businesses grew tired of asking the city to repaint the street following a repaving this summer, Catelli decided to take matters into his own hands.

At about 12:30 a.m. Wednesday, armed with some Sambuca, a striper and four cans of white spray paint bought from Falkenhan’s Hardware, Catelli went to work making the intersection safer.

“It’s for the children,” Catelli said only partially joking.

Catelli described the intersection as "dangerous." Since the city has made it a four way stop, some drivers still don’t realize they have to halt and just cruise through. A few minutes before, while standing at the intersection, a young woman in a black car drove through without even hitting her brakes.

Adrienne Barnes, a spokeswoman for the Baltimore City Department of Transportation, said the city agency took a dim view of the DIY street improvement.

"This is not something we’re very happy about," Barnes said.

She said residents are not permitted to do work on city streets because of liability concerns. She said the department would have to investigate whether or not it would or could take civil or criminal action against those that participated in the painting.

Benn Ray, president of the Hampden Village Merchants Association, said the Baltimore City Department of Transportation’s lack of response to merchants and residents pleading for the cross walks and yellow striped centerlines have forced actions such as Catelli’s.

Councilwoman Mary Pat Clarke, who represents most of the area, said the crosswalks, centerlines and bike lanes on West 36th Street haven’t been repainted because the contractor who repaved the street this summer has been unable to complete the job.

She said with so many schools in the area that getting crosswalks repainted should be a top priority, but that she has been told by Director Kahlil Zaied the repainting couldn’t be done in cold weather. Clarke also said she sent an email warning Zaied that residents have been threatening they would take action if the city didn’t act soon.

As for any repercussions for Catelli and his co-conspirators, Clarke said that was highly unlikely.

"I can’t imagine such a thing. We should be thanking them and apologizing for our contractors," Clarke said.

Continue reading “Hampden’s DIY Crosswalks”

Physician’s Weight May Influence Obesity Diagnosis and Care

[B’ Spokes: I wounder if the same effect is also happening with an active life style… If the physician does not lead one themselves then they are probably less likely to recommend that as well. ]
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By Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

“Our findings indicate that physicians with normal BMI more frequently reported discussing weight loss with patients than overweight or obese physicians. Physicians with normal BMI also have greater confidence in their ability to provide diet and exercise counseling and perceive their weight loss advice as trustworthy when compared to overweight or obese physicians,” said Sara Bleich, PhD, lead author of the study and an assistant professor with the Bloomberg School’s Department of Health Policy and Management. “In addition, obese physicians had greater confidence in prescribing weight loss medications and were more likely to report success in helping patients lose weight.”

Despite guidelines for physicians to counsel and treat obese patients, previous studies have found only one-third of these patients report receiving an obesity diagnosis or weight-related counseling from their physicians.

Continue reading “Physician’s Weight May Influence Obesity Diagnosis and Care”

DOCTOR JACKSON ON POOR URBAN DESIGN & AMERICA’S HEALTH THREAT

-> According to a Jan. 22nd Chronicle of Higher Education article, "Researchers can have revelatory moments in remarkable places–the African savannah, an ancient library, or the ruins of a lost civilization. But Richard J. Jackson’s epiphany occurred in 1999 in a banal American landscape: a dismal stretch of the car-choked Buford Highway, near the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. Dr. Jackson, who was then the head of the National Center for Environmental Health at the CDC, was rushing to a meeting where leading epidemiologists would discuss the major health threats of the 21st century. On the side of the road he saw an elderly woman walking, bent with a load of shopping bags. It was a blisteringly hot day, and there was little hope that she would find public transportation."
"At that moment, Dr. Jackson says, ‘I realized that the major threat was how we had built America.’ His center had already been dealing with problems that he suspected had origins in the built environment–asthma caused by particulates from cars and trucks, water contamination from excessive runoff, lead poisoning from contaminated houses and soil, and obesity, heart conditions, and depression exacerbated by stressful living conditions, long commutes, lack of access to fresh food, and isolating, car-oriented communities. Treatments could come in the form of pills, inhalers, and insulin shots, but real solutions had bigger implications…"
Source: https://bit.ly/y85FUr
from CenterLines, the e-newsletter of the National Center for Bicycling & Walking.

Transit Networks & Design with Jarrett Walker: baltimore: speaking at lunchtime, feb 7!

via Facebook

Transit Networks & Design with Jarrett Walker

Tuesday, Februrary 7

12 – 1 PM

Metro Gallery

1700 N. Charles Street at Penn Station

Please RSVP to info@buildthetrolley.org

Feel free to bring your lunch

The event is free and open to the public

Details:

“Public transit is a powerful tool for addressing a range of urban problems. But while many people support transit in the abstract, it’s often hard to channel that support into good transit investments. Part of the problem is that transit debates attract many kinds of experts, who often talk past each other. Ordinary people listen and decide that transit is impossible to figure out.”

Jarrett Walker, an international consultant in public transit planning, believes that transit can be simple if we focus first on the underlying geometry that all transit technologies share.

In this discussion on Tuesday, February 7 at Noon, Mr. Walker will detail how this “fundamental geometry” shapes successful systems; and leads to transit-friendly development.

Walker will address the key questions that should be addressed and debated within communities in order to create systems that are both resilient and useful for the communities they serve.

Jarrett Walker has been designing public transit systems for over 20 years. He is an independent consultant in North America and Principal Consultant with MRCagney in Australia.

He writes the popular transit blog HumanTransit.org.

Copies of Human Transit will be available for sale.
Continue reading “Transit Networks & Design with Jarrett Walker: baltimore: speaking at lunchtime, feb 7!”

City bikers look for more recreation, commuting options

By Candus Thomson, The Baltimore Sun

Representatives of Baltimore’s biking and hiking community gathered Saturday for a "state of the trails" summit to set a course for creating more opportunities for recreational users and commuters.

Despite a sluggish economy and a tight budget, the city is continuing work on several projects,

https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/bs-md-trails-summit-20120128,0,4241573.story

Loch Raven mountain bikers welcome council resolution, but compromise on trails remains elusive

By Jon Meoli, Baltimore Sun

"I’d say it’s farther along than it ever was," said Dave Ferraro, president of Mid-Atlantic Off Road Enthusiasts (MORE), a mountain biking advocacy group.
But he added, "I wouldn’t say it’s close, because my constituency — trail users — have been using trails out there for 30 years. "There’s this legacy network that’s basically being shut down.
"What we’re trying to find is where the happy medium is. Is it close? I’d say it’s starting to get there, but we’re not there yet."

https://www.baltimoresun.com/explore/baltimorecounty/news/ph-tt-reservoir-update-0208-20120131,0,3189111.story