Disney Channel’s Chuggington characters offer valuable safety lessons

[B’ Spokes: Ah more propaganda on how to “how to crash safely.” Seriously, we need more information out there on how walk, bike and drive safely and end the acceptability of exceeding the speed limit by 10-15mph when kids, pedestrians and bicyclists are around. And that leads to the point I’m going to pull out of this post… cars kill. And if you think your kids are safer in the car then out on the street… well you might want to rethink that.

(Note the study that recommends child safety seats does not say what portion of the current childhood traffic deaths could be prevented. For all we know most childhood traffic deaths could have happened despite proper use of a child safety seat. Safe driving is far more effective then safe crashing.)]


Highlights from Welcome to the Fast Lane: The Official Blog of the U.S. Secretary of Transportation by Ray LaHood

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The sad fact is that, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, crashes are the leading cause of death in children ages 3 to 14.
Continue reading “Disney Channel’s Chuggington characters offer valuable safety lessons”

Complete Streets Bill that was passed by Council and signed by the Mayor

EXPLANATION: Underlining indicates matter added by amendment.

Strike out indicates matter stricken by amendment.

CITY OF BALTIMORE

RESOLUTION

Council Bill 09-0433

Introduced by: Councilmembers Clarke, Henry, Middleton, Branch, Kraft, Young, Conaway,

Holton, Reisinger, Cole, Welch, Curran

Introduced and read first time: December 10, 2009

Assigned to: Community Development Subcommittee

Committee Report: Favorable with amendments

Council action: Adopted

Read second time: November 8, 2010

A RESOLUTION OF THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL CONCERNING

1 Street and Transportation Projects – Complete Streets

2 FOR the purpose of directing the Departments of Transportation and Planning to apply

3 “Complete Streets” principals principles to the planning, design, and construction of all new

4 City transportation improvement projects; providing certain exceptions; requiring annual

5 reports on the implementation of “Complete Streets” principals principles; and generally

6 relating to transportation improvement projects.

7 Recitals

8 Baltimore’s streets provide the critical framework for current and future development while

9 playing a major role in establishing the image and identity of the City. Recognizing this, City

10 planners and transportation officials have made consistent efforts to improve the streetscape and

11 make the City’s transportation network responsive to the changing needs of our citizens. These

12 efforts have included an expanded focus on measures to make streets more accessible to

13 bicyclists and pedestrians.

14 While these efforts have borne fruit, allowing Baltimore to rank above many southern and

15 western cities in pedestrian safety, a recent study showed that Baltimore was still more

16 dangerous for pedestrians than many peer cities in the Northeast and Midwest. Maryland as a

17 whole also ranks near the bottom in spending on street accommodations for cyclists and

18 pedestrians.

19 In recognition of the fact that any effort to create more liveable neighborhoods in Baltimore

20 must include further improvements to the streets that are such a critical component of public

21 space, a more systematic approach to inviting all people to make use of the streets must be

22 adopted. “Complete Streets” principals principles require that the needs of pedestrians,

23 bicyclists, transit riders, and people of all abilities, as well as freight and motor vehicle users, be

24 taken into account when designing and implementing changes to transportation networks. The

25 systematic application of these principals to all transportation projects would create a

26 comprehensive framework to open up all streets to the full range of diverse users present in

27 Baltimore, by encouraging walking, bicycling, and transit use while promoting safety safe and

28 contiguous
routes for all street users.

1 Adoption of a “Complete Streets” philosophy for transportation projects is especially

2 advantageous in an urban area such as Baltimore where many people do not have regular access

3 to a car. Ensuring that the needs of all citizens are met by applying “Complete Streets”

4 principals principles across the board will improve access to communities throughout Baltimore,

5 make the City more liveable, encourage healthy behaviors, and reduce negative environmental

6 impacts city-wide.

7 SECTION 1. BE IT RESOLVED BY THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF BALTIMORE, That the

8 Department of Transportation and the Department of Planning are directed to plan for, design,

9 and construct all new City transportation improvement projects to provide appropriate

10 accommodations for pedestrians, bicyclists, transit riders, motorists, and persons of all abilities,

11 while promoting safe operation for all users. This can be accomplished through the

12 incorporation of construction elements such as special bus lanes, transit stops, improved

13 pedestrian street crossings, median islands, accessible pedestrian signals, curb extensions,

14 sidewalks, ADA compliant ramps, and bike lanes.

15 SECTION 2. AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the Department of Transportation is

16 directed to incorporate Complete Streets principals principles, as applicable and subject to State

17 and federal laws and regulations
, into all Department plans, manuals, rules, regulations, and

18 programs.

19 SECTION 3. AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the application of Complete Streets

20 principals principles may be waived for a specific project if the Director of Transportation issues

21 a documented exception concluding that application of Complete Streets principals principles

22 would be contrary to public safety.

23 SECTION 4. AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That Complete Streets may be achieved

24 through single projects or incrementally through a series of smaller improvements over time. It

25 is the Mayor and City Council’s intent that all sources of transportation funding be drawn on to

26 implement Complete Streets.

27 SECTION 5. AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the Department of Transportation is

28 directed to report to the Mayor and City Council annually, on the anniversary of the effective

29 date of this Resolution, on the Department’s progress towards implementing Complete Streets

30 throughout Baltimore. These reports must incorporate performance measures established to

31 gauge how well streets are serving all users and include information such as crash data, uses of

32 new projects by mode, complaints, the linear feet of sidewalk built, the number of ADA

33 compliant ramps built, how many miles of bike lanes have been created, the number of

34 exemptions from the application of Complete Streets principles that have been granted, and the

35 number of, and yearly change in, overall paved lane miles.

36 SECTION 6. AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That this Resolution takes effect on the 30th

37 day after the date it is enacted.

Certified as duly passed this _____ day of ________, 20___

_____________________________________

President, Baltimore City Council

Certified as duly delivered to Her Honor, the Mayor,

this _____ day of ________, 20___

_____________________________________

Chief Clerk

Approved this _____ day of ________, 20___

_____________________________________

Mayor, Baltimore City

If you saw an accident at Saratoga & st.Paul

This from Paul via Light St Cycles, pls help him out if you or a friend saw something::

Hey folks. i was hit by a car yesterday 9/21 at noon @ saratoga/st.paul. dude is trying to say i ran a red (not true….light was green for both of us and he turned left in front of me). i remember there being several cyclists on the scene and i’m looking for witnesses. hit me up if you can help. thanks. brokn wrist and 9 stitches to face but i’m not dead so hard to complain. thanks again.

Alert: Demand more for bike/ped

This is where we are:
image

This is what they are planning to do about it:
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The highest count of pedestrian fatalities are in:

  • Prince Georges County
  • Baltimore County
  • Baltimore City
  • Anne Arundel County

(Baltimore Metro Area is a major issue.)

Not even 1% of the road budget… And this is supposed to help with 22.7% of Maryland’s traffic fatalities that are bike/ped???

So your comments are needed to get that increased to 2.3% to be spent for bicycle and pedestrian safety improvements (10% of our traffic fatalities percentage.) Bike/ped crashes don’t happen because of the lack of trails but because of poor design of the roads. Don’t get me wrong, I like trails and trails can help some but how many have died crossing Ritchie Highway going from the B&A Trail to their homes? Trails are not complete unless there is an on-road component connecting them to the areas they serve. We cannot afford to neglect on-road accommodations any longer.

Remember the three big counties in the Baltimore metro area I mentioned earlier? This is what spending looks like for each of them:

Baltimore County $14,860,000 (mostly trails, $120,000 on-road)
Baltimore City $18,100,000 (all trails)
Anne Arundel County $0

This has never been done before but I for one am sick of the on-road portion of Baltimore County’s Bike Master Plan mostly just sitting there while they plan for faster car travel on mostly car centric roads. And there are thousand of locations throughout the metro area that need some improvement for the safety of bicyclists and/or pedestrians. Attention to this issue has to begins somewhere, so it begins here.

We have a right to have our projects main streamed just like other transportation projects so Baltimore Counties, Annapolis and Columbia Bike Master Plans should be in the long range plans.

So the ASK is this, write to:

Baltimore Regional Transportation Board
Offices @ McHenry Row
1500 Whetstone Way, Suite 1500
Baltimore, MD 21230
Fax: 410-732-8248

E-mail: comments@baltometro.org
Web: www.baltometro.org/bboard

All comments must be received by 4:30 p.m. on Friday, October 21, 2011.

— AND —

Your state delegate and representatives and ask that more be done for bicycle and pedestrian safety then just ticketing j-walkers. Mention something (and location) that you think will help; sidewalks free of obstacles; ped buttons that actually work; even basic sidewalks and ped signals are needed in too many locations; crosswalks that actually look like crosswalks rather then fickle stop bars; bike lanes; bikeable shoulders; sharrows; Bikes May use Full Lane signage; bike friendly storm grates; traffic calming; …

Other states are making a dent in their pedestrian fatality rate while Maryland’s ranking keeps going up and up (click the top picture and you will be taken to site where you can change the date and see for yourself.) Other states are building bike lanes and strongly enforcing pedestrian safety. Here… well… We have a law that says ” Ensure that there is an appropriate balance between funding for … projects with facilities for pedestrians and bicycle riders.” (full text after the “fold”) and less then 1% is a appropriate funding level for an area with a high pedestrian fatality rate, with projects that don’t really address pedestrian fatality rates or Maryland’s low bicycling modal share??

Be sure to include your name and address. And the target of 2.3% of the transportation budget, it’s more then just a fair request.

Plan It 2035 website
Continue reading “Alert: Demand more for bike/ped”

Stuff to bike to via the Urbinite

Yoga at Sunrise in the Inner Harbor
When: Fri., Sept. 23, 6:30 a.m.
https://www.urbanitebaltimore.com/baltimore/yoga-at-sunrise-in-the-inner-harbor/Event?oid=1462731

Baltimore Book Festival
When: Sept. 23-25, 12-7 p.m.
https://www.urbanitebaltimore.com/baltimore/baltimore-book-festival/Event?oid=1461096

The Farmer & the Chef
When: Mon., Sept. 26, 6 p.m.
https://www.urbanitebaltimore.com/baltimore/the-farmer-and-the-chef/Event?oid=1462710

Debunking the Cul-de-Sac

By EMILY BADGER

In their California study, Garrick and Marshall eventually realized the safest cities had an element in common: They were all incorporated before 1930. Something about the way they were designed made them safer. The key wasn’t necessarily that large numbers of bikers produced safer cities, but that the design elements of cities that encouraged people to bike in places like Davis were the same ones that were yielding fewer traffic fatalities.
These cities were built the old way: along those monotonous grids. In general, they didn’t have fewer accidents overall, but they had far fewer deadly ones. Marshall and Garrick figured that cars (and cars with bikes) must be colliding at lower speeds on these types of street networks. At first glance such tightly interconnected communities might appear more dangerous, with cars traveling from all directions and constantly intersecting with each other. But what if such patterns actually force people to drive slower and pay more attention?
“A lot of people feel that they want to live in a cul-de-sac, they feel like it’s a safer place to be,” Marshall says. “The reality is yes, you’re safer – if you never leave your cul-de-sac. But if you actually move around town like a normal person, your town as a whole is much more dangerous.”

Continue reading “Debunking the Cul-de-Sac”

Garden State Safer for Walkers in 2010

by Michelle Ernst

Fewer pedestrians and cyclists are dying on the Garden State’s roads,

Obviously there isn’t enough data to show causality between the decline in fatalities and New Jersey’s recently passed law requiring drivers to “stop and stay stopped” for pedestrians in crosswalks, or the ensuing crackdown on motorists who fail to yield . But the numbers certainly help allay concerns that the law would increase pedestrian fatalities by emboldening people to – horror! – cross the street.
*********************************************************************************************
B’ Spokes: What no crack down on j-walkers like what we do here. Maryland’s pedestrian fatality rate is climbing and yet government continues to blame the victims of overly car centric roadways and self centered drivers.

Now remember Maryland pedestrians you can’t j-walk and you can’t step into the crosswalk if the motorist cannot or will not stop. After all we are shooting for the #1 slot of having the highest pedestrian fatality rate in the nation. Go Maryland!
[/sarcasm]
Continue reading “Garden State Safer for Walkers in 2010”