FYI

from Getting There by Michael Dresser
"Like the leaders of Maryland’s other 19 jurisdictions, the mayor and county executives are grappling with severe cutbacks in the amount of local highway money the state sends to local governments each year. Baltimore’s highway aid has been cut nearly in half, while the counties have lost about 97 percent of their highway money over the past two years."
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Two highways were having a drink in a bar …

-> "Putting entertainment centers in automobiles does not contribute to safe driving. When you’re trying to update your Facebook or put out a tweet, it’s a distraction."
— Ray LaHood, U.S. Secretary of Transportation
https://tinyurl.com/4su5qvo
-> "Strolling through the international Toy Fair at the Javits Center in New York City last week was like walking through the brightly painted halls of a children’s hospital — at once cheery and sad. Cheery were the shiny bikes and busy ant farms. Sad was the way the marketers made it sound like they were peddling early intervention in a box…"
Via Streetsblog Capitol Hill: https://tinyurl.com/4fct4e6
-> "Two highways were having a drink in a bar when a piece of pink tarmac walked in. The highways dropped to the floor and cowered under the table. The pink tarmac had a drink and then left. The highways got up and resumed drinking. ‘Why did you guys hide from that piece of tarmac?’ the bartender asked. A highway was quick to respond, ‘Are you kidding? That guy’s a cycle path!’"
— Source unknown
from CenterLines, the e-newsletter of the National Center for Bicycling & Walking.

Walker Budget Eliminates Transit As Transportation, So No Dedicated Money From Gas Taxes

from Streetsblog.net by Angie Schmitt
In an enormously destructive move, Scott Walker’s budget removes transit as a transportation category – – per Walker, transportation budgets are not the private preserve of the road-builder – – so “financing transit operation aids from the general fund will begin in fiscal 2102-2013.”

That means bus systems will have to fight with other services for state aid in a shrinking state budget – – while highway aids gets a $410.5 million increase.

Look for local bus systems to raise fares, cut services, lay off drivers, then die.

We’ll be arriving at the Walker Promised Land, where every low-income person has a car, insurance, money for maintenance, repairs and fuel.

As gas goes to $4.

Something like 30% of City of Milwaukee residents do not have access to a car, and rely on the bus system – – transit, only since rail has been disallowed by Republicans since light rail planning was killed fifteen years ago.

Like the rest of his budget which hammers public schools and social services, this budget is aimed squarely at lower-income Wisconsinites.
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“Green” Cars Linked to Increased Driving:

Via Streetsblog Capitol Hill by Angie Schmitt
TreeHugger reports that sustainability superstar Sweden has observed a pattern in its quest to become fossil fuel free by 2020. Emissions from the transportation sector rose by 100,000 tons last year despite a movement toward low-emissions vehicles. Researchers found that while purchases of “green” cars reduced emissions on a per-car basis, a rise in miles driven caused an overall increase in polluting byproducts. The Swedish Transport Agency had this to say about the trend: “It is clear that more effective motors and biofuels are not enough to offset increased traffic — at the most these can only stabilize emissions levels. To achieve cuts will require a change of direction in the development of society and infrastructure. The car must be less important in favor of increased public transport, cycling, rail transport, and shipping.”
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‘Vulnerable user’ law would protect bicyclists, pedestrians

Dan DeWitt, Times Columnist
This seems like a natural for the most lethal state in the country for walkers and cyclists — a "vulnerable user" law.
I received an e-mail on this subject in response to Sunday’s column about Brad Ash, the Pasco County middle school teacher who was killed after being hit while riding his bicycle on St. Joe Road.
Like many other such drivers, the woman whose car struck Ash received only a minor traffic citation: careless driving. It was a charge that suited the action — briefly taking her eyes off the road — but not the consequence, thereby creating a legal puzzle.
The solution? Maybe a vulnerable user law.
Ash died mainly because, like all cyclists and pedestrians, he was traveling without the protection of what Portland, Ore., lawyer Ray Thomas calls a car’s "steel ectoskeleton."
Other aspects of law have long recognized that certain populations, including children and the elderly, are more susceptible to harm than others, said Thomas, who helped pioneer vulnerable user legislation in the United States.
So why don’t traffic statutes do the same for walkers, people in wheelchairs and on bikes and, ideally, motorcyclists? The idea is not to make criminals of drivers who hit them — just to make sure these motorists reflect on the potentially grave results of distracted driving and spread that word to others.
Before the passage of the 2008 Oregon law, based on similar ordinances in several European countries, the maximum fine for a careless driver who caused a death in that state was $750. Now, if the victim is a vulnerable user — as they often are when minor slip-ups end tragically — that amount is $12,500.
Drivers can greatly reduce this fine by taking traffic classes and doing community service, usually giving talks about their experience. The drivers in these fatal crashes "of course feel terrible, and this gives them an opportunity for reconciliation," Thomas said.
In doing so, of course, they increase public awareness of the danger faced by cyclists and pedestrians. So did just passing the law — the state giving its stamp of approval to a legal shield for these folks.
Since then, Thomas said, the law has received lots of publicity, including in this month’s trial of a Portland bus driver who was convicted of striking five pedestrians, killing two of them.
Said Thomas: "Law enforcement people aren’t as likely to think, ‘What is that goofy guy doing riding his bike on the road? Doesn’t he know he can get killed?’ "
Some enhanced penalties are already in Florida law.
Tuttle, for example, could lose her license for as long as a year and be fined as much as $1,000; if there was no fatality or injury, she’d keep her license and probably face a smaller fine. Another provision allows judges to impose as much as 120 hours of community service, though they rarely do, according to lawyers to whom I spoke.
"I’ve never seen it. Never, ever, at all," said J. Steele Olmstead, a Tampa personal injury lawyer and cyclist.
Bike and motorcycle groups in Florida have lobbied for tougher penalties for careless drivers who cause deaths — and gotten nowhere.
Which is too bad, and not only for the main reason — that people’s lives are in danger — but because scary roads are expensive.
People who, say, liked to ride their bikes to hang out at a coffee shop or play a game of basketball at a park will now drive. That puts more cars on highways and eventually more burden on us to pay for widening projects.
And the roads in Florida are more than scary; they’re terrifying. Not just recently, and not just because of the dozen cycling deaths in the Tampa Bay area since late July. Year after year, more cyclists and almost as many pedestrians die in Florida as in California, which has twice our population. Mike Lasche, a longtime cycling activist from Sarasota, found that between 2001 and 2008, Florida ranked among the top three states in per-capita cycling and pedestrian deaths.
Nowhere else came close, certainly not New York or Delaware, both of which followed Oregon’s lead and passed vulnerable user laws last year.
Can anyone seriously argue that Florida should not do the same?
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Maryland Contributory Negligence Statute

from Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog

I reported here last year that the Maryland Court of Appeals – or at least Judge Bell – is looking at whether the Maryland high court should adopt comparative negligence in Maryland. Republicans in the Maryland House of Delegates are trying to beat the court to the punch by introducing House Bill 1129 which would make contributory negligence codified Maryland law.

To my knowledge, I don’t think any state in recent history has codified contributory negligence.

Take action: https://www.baltimorespokes.org/article.php?story=20110223135459843
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