One Less Car pushes bike access in Maryland

By Kirsten Frattini – Bike Radar

Cycling advocates, urban planners and state officials united this month to brainstorm about alternative transportation at the annual One Less Car Smart Transportation and Bicycling Symposium held in Maryland.

Sustainable and safe bicycle access rose to the top of their list.

“The Symposium is the perfect setting to inform our state delegates and senators that Maryland communities need smarter commuting opportunities,” said Carol Silldroff, executive director of One Less Car. “Those who attend want more bike lanes, better sidewalks, more trails, a statewide Complete Streets policy and access to a variety of modes of efficient transportation for everyone.”

One Less Car works throughout Maryland to reduce automobile congestion and pollution by decreasing car usage.

“We work to increase biking, walking, carpooling, public transit, telecommuting, and flex scheduling opportunities,” Silldroff added. “These smart transit choices promote physical activity, emotional and physical well-being, social interaction, livable communities, equity and environmental stewardship.”

The organization depends on its volunteer board of directors to promote these alternatives through education, lobbying, and facilitation between communities, governments, and state and local representatives.

“We meet with various environmental, sustainability, hospital groups and many more organizations to promote smart commuting,” Silldroff said. “We are developing and holding bike instructional series. Additionally, we are promoting a program called ciclovia/BMore Streets to open streets for all to ride, walk and play on without the fear of vehicle distractions. Each additional bike is one less car.”

One Less Car is supporting ten legislative bills. House Bill 461 ‘the 3-foot rule’, which is an important bicycle safety bill set in place in over 20 other states. Senate Bill 870 and House Bill 388 ‘Manslaughter by Vehicle’ bill that is currently legislated across muchof the United States but not in Maryland.

Others include Senate Bill 624 and House Bill 1193 covers bike safety legislation. They are designed to protect cyclists by enforcing the rules of the road and recognize cyclists as legitimate road users. Senate Bill 760 and House Bill 1155 requires the Maryland Department of Transportation to evaluate state-funded transportation projects and create less costly modes of transportation for the public and the environment.

“Some of the bills were voted upon favorably by either the House or Senate but none have yet been voted upon favorably by both which is necessary to make a bill a state law,” Silldroff said. “The session ends in April so until then we keep working to obtain support for the bills.”

“We believe that Maryland can be an example of the economic and social good that comes from a society where everyone, regardless of age, physical condition or economic background has the opportunity to bike, walk or use mass transit to get where they need to go.”
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Tony Kornheiser Condones "running down cyclists"

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Lance on Tony’s show

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Lance Armstrong takes on Tony Kornheiser

UPDATE: I guess Lance wins. He tweets again:

Just off the phone w/ Tony Kornheiser who’s very sorry 4 his comments re: cyclists. Going on the show 2morrow 2 discuss this w/ him….

To me this is all about a relationship. It’s bikes and cars. Both will be here forever. Awareness needs to exist as well as mutual respect.

/endupdate

Via the Washington post


Update: Kornheiser Rant Going Viral

By washcycle

So if my stat page is any indication it appears that a lot of people are reading the Tony Kornheiser rant against cyclists. It appears to have started after Mellow Johnny’s – Lance Armstrong’s bike shop in Austin – tweeted about it.

Action time
twitterati, ESPN’s Tony Kornheiser on cyclists on-the air, “run them,
down” “just tap them” “I have a large powerful car”

I urge all twitterati to let @espn know Tony Kornheisers comments aren’t acceptable, RT like you’ve never RT’ed my friends

People can email Tony Kornheiser at pti@espn.com. Everybody needs to let him know this is unacceptable.

Kornheiser’s boss, CEO Bruce Gilbert can be reached here. Contact him.
https://www.espn980.com/info/contact_us.php
Go time!

And it appears that a lot of other sites and message boards are now encouraging people to do the same. So, if you’re upset about his comments, and you feel the joke crossed the line, I’d recommend joining in.

Heck, they suspended him for making fun of a colleagues dress (and I thought she looked good too). It’s unfortunate, because when I’ve seen him on PTI, I’ve actually liked Tony Kornheiser.

Continue reading “Tony Kornheiser Condones "running down cyclists"”

It’s Called a Side-”Walk” for a Reason

by

Popout

658304 from Bikesafer on Vimeo.

Via Jeff Frings, who politely tries to educate a driver (who’s clearly trying to overcompensate in all kinds of ways) on traffic laws. Later he’ll tell his long-suffering wife about some “idiot” cyclist on the road who wouldn’t get out of his way. It leaves one to wonder what actual percentage of drivers out there have a grasp of, say, more than 50% of the traffic code.

Continue reading “It’s Called a Side-”Walk” for a Reason”

Gas Prices and Consumer Behavior

By Robert Puentes and Emilia Istrate

Empirical evidence from 1980 to 1990 found that a 1 percent increase in the price of gas is estimated to reduce gas demand by 0.3 to 0.35 percent in the short run and 0.6 to 0.8 percent in the long run. More recent research estimates the short run effect of gas prices on the demand for gasoline is much smaller: about -0.06 percent at the end of the 1990s and between -0.03 and -0.08 during 2001 and 2006.

Also, these studies on the price elasticities of gas demand and VMT are based on data up to 2001 or the latest 2006. Therefore, they do not reflect the recent slump in VMT or the enormous spike in gasoline prices to over $4 a gallon or the rapid drop back to historically average prices. (A recent Harvard paper suggested that what are really needed are gas prices up to/above $8 per gallon to reduce emissions by 14 per cent from 2005 levels.).

The literature is also not broadly reflective of transportation alternatives within metropolitan areas. Intuitively, the elasticity for gasoline should be different in Manhattan than it is in Manhattan, Kansas, right? Examining driving trends in a dozen metropolitan highway locations in California, the CBO found gas prices do impact driving on metropolitan highways that are adjacent to rail systems (light rail and subways), with little impact in those places without. Further, they found that the increase in ridership on those transit systems is just about the same as the decline in the number of vehicles on the roadways.

This suggests that freeway traffic volume is responsive to changes in gasoline prices and commuters will switch to transit if service is available that is convenient to employment destinations.

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Coalition Formed to Promote Public Road Safety

WASHINGTON, March 12 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — A coalition of road safety advocates has formed the Partnership for Advancing Road Safety (PARS) and vowed to make roads safer by raising awareness of traffic safety initiatives that prevent injuries and decrease fatalities.
PARS will work to send a clear and consistent message to the driving public: It is not okay to speed, run red lights, drive while distracted, or in any other way endanger the lives of others on roads and highways.

"While a vocal minority may oppose road safety cameras, our research indicates just the opposite — 80 percent of the public support intersection safety cameras and 67 percent support speed safety cameras," said Kelly. "Automated road safety cameras share one thing in common with other proven safety countermeasures – they save lives. And that’s the message PARS intends to communicate to everyone we can reach."
The U.S. Department of Transportation reports that of the 37,261 fatalities on U.S. roadways in 2008, 31 percent were speeding-related. In addition, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) estimates that the economic cost of speed-related crashes is more than $40 billion each year. NHTSA also reports that speeding now causes as many fatalities as drunk or distracted drivers.

"Speeding and intersection crashes contribute to more than 10,000 deaths each year," said John Ulczycki, Group Vice President – Research, communications and Advocacy for the National Safety Council. "Changing the driving behaviors that cause these deaths and injuries must be part of the comprehensive solutions needed to improve traffic safety,"
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Vicious Cycle

[Baltimore Spokes: Probably a bit too long video and transcript but generally coverage of everyone’s POV on sharing the road was well presented sans one, the scoff law cyclists. While I understand the rational of cycling advocates unwillingness to "justify" the scoff law cyclists but still, mass civil disobedience is a form of protest but a protest of what some how alludes the press attention. (Hint: I am looking for a group of volunteers willing to stand in front of stampeding bulls. No volunteers? Hmmm… I wounder why people think standing in front of a bunch of cued cars getting ready to speed off is a completely unrelated experience from having bulls stampeding by you? )]

LIZ HAYES: Nathan and Simon are well aware of the aggression they face. Every moment they’re on the road they must be alert for the next assault.
LIZ HAYES: Are you trying to tell me there are drivers who deliberately try to frighten you, to run you off the road?
NATHAN BESH: Without a doubt.
SIMON HOOKHAM: Absolutely. Hit the horn right when they’re right at your shoulder, that sort of thing.
NATHAN BESH: And also deliberately push us into other lanes and literally run us off the road.
LIZ HAYES: They just hate you being on the road?
NATHAN BESH: Some seem that way, yes.

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The usual blaming of the victim follows latest pedestrian death

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Baltimore’s “It’s the pedestrians fault” ad campaign. I don’t know about you but I feel safer crossing the streets now. :-/


By John Bennett

This sequence of events is becoming awfully easy to predict:

  1. Pedestrian is killed or injured on a local street that’s dangerous by design.
  2. News media coverage of the incident uncritically repeats law enforcement warnings that pedestrians should use crosswalks.
  3. Readers and viewers of news media coverage  jump at the chance to share stories about “stupid” pedestrians who represent “a nuisance to motorists” because they don’t use crosswalks.

Continue reading “The usual blaming of the victim follows latest pedestrian death”