O’Malley must step up on transportation funding

by Matt Johnson, Greater Greater Washington

According to reports, the O’Malley administration has yet to decide whether or not to push for an increase in transportation funding. Yet the administration clearly recognizes that without an increase in funding, both the Purple Line and Baltimore’s Red Line will be dead in the water.

O’Malley told reporters on Tuesday:

There will come a time when it no longer makes any sense to put any money into the Red Line or Purple Line if the General Assembly wants to pretend we can fund our transportation challenges based on a 30-year-old flat tax on gasoline.

https://greatergreaterwashington.org/post/17126/omalley-must-step-up-on-transportation-funding/

16th Annual Bicycle Symposium seeking sponsors and/or exhibitors

Bike Maryland (on Facebook)

Maryland’s 16th Annual Bicycle Symposium hosted by Bike Maryland will be held in February (official date to be announced in the coming weeks). In preparation for this amazing event, we are seeking sponsors and/or exhibitors. If you are interested in learning more, please contact Chanda@bikemd.org! Bike Clubs, Bike advocacy groups, nonprofits and retail sellers are all invited! Re-post and tell your friends!

Death of Jane Holtz Kay, author of Asphalt Nation

Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space quoting New York Times Book Review of Asphalt Nation
In her book’s first section, ”Car Glut: A Nation in Lifelock,” Kay, the architecture critic for The Nation, reports that more driving does not mean more mobility because the number and length of trips needed for everyday life are increasing; that the elderly and the young, who are unable to drive, have been transformed into virtual prisoners; that the United States gives automobiles at least seven times the subsidies it earmarks for public transportation; that improvements in emission controls have been canceled out by an increase in miles driven; that salt used on ice and snow causes trees and vegetation to wither; and that Americans are fat because they drive rather than walk.

To her credit, Kay recognizes that the automobile is not the only culprit. She points out, for example, that Europeans have avoided many American problems not just because of high gasoline taxes and excellent public transportation systems but also because they regard land as a scarce resource to be controlled in the public interest rather than exploited by whoever happens to own it at a particular moment. Thus, European governments have traditionally exercised stringent controls over land development, and they have operated on the theory that the preservation of farms and open space is an appropriate national goal. In Dusseldorf, Germany, possibly the richest city in the world, truck farmers tend their crops within a couple of miles of the city’s skyscrapers, not because alternative land uses would not yield a higher return, but because the law prohibits the very possibility of development.

Given that the review is by Kenneth Jackson, one of the leading urban historians of our time, he is critical, writing:
One wishes, however, that Kay had more effectively anticipated and countered the likely questions of the 40-million-member American Automobile Association and the other powerful elements of the highway lobby. What do current gasoline taxes, meager as they are, pay for? Who should pay for the construction and repair of local roads that serve residential areas? If cars are becoming cleaner and more efficient over time, why will pollution not take care of itself? Who gets the bill for the uninsured motorists who cause the innocent to live out their days in wheelchairs?

https://urbanplacesandspaces.blogspot.com/2012/12/death-of-jane-holtz-kay-author-of.html

Another Maryland County starting to get serious about reducing pedestrian deaths

[B’ Spokes: The following are highlights from Prince Georges County Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety. I’ll note we now need to get Baltimore County, Baltimore City and Anne Arundel County on board as well. I will also note this is the first time I’ve seen government acknowledge Maryland’s pedestrian fatality rate ranking nationally.]
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Continue reading “Another Maryland County starting to get serious about reducing pedestrian deaths”

Pedestrian Deaths on Railroad Tracks: The Failure of Design

[B’ Spokes: I’m going to repeat what I have said before about Baltimore Metro area train/pedestrian fatalities “Why would anyone walk on train tracks when there is a perfectly good high speed road with no shoulders or sidewalks to walk on? Oh wait.. never mind. I guess as long as the victims are at fault nobody has to do anything to correct this, right?”
Streets Blog goes into some more detail, and I would like to point out if responsibility is shared it makes it that much harder to hold those who are responsible accountable.]


by Tanya Snyder, Streets blog

The Federal Railroad Administration estimates that 500 people die every year walking on railroad tracks [PDF]. But who bears the responsibility of preventing these deaths? Was it Kristen’s responsibility to avoid trespassing where freight trains roar past? Her town’s responsibility to erect a fence before being spurred on by her death? Should planners have recognized that it’s human nature for people to take a calculated risk to reach the amenities they used? Or was it the railroads’ responsibility to identify where these deaths happen and try to mitigate the risk?

A recent series by reporter Todd Frankel at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch makes clear that the responsibility is shared. But he also points a finger at the railroads, which have been obstructionist as others try to address the issue:

A few years ago, when the [Federal Railroad Administration] tried to get a better sense of who was walking on the tracks — by looking at trespassing cases that didn’t end in a casualty — regulators asked the railroads for help. They wanted the railroads’ internal trespassing reports. The railroads refused.

The agency recently was forced to concede defeat, noting that it “failed to garner the necessary support from the rail industry to conduct the study.”

Then there was the issue of where the casualties occurred.

For years, the agency required railroads to report only the county of a trespassing death or injury. Not the city. Not the closest milepost on the railroad system. Having so few details made it hard to identify hot spots for trespassing, said Ron Ries, director of the agency’s Highway-Rail Grade Crossing Safety and Trespass Prevention Division.

We reported in the spring that FRA guidance on pedestrian safety at railroad tracks focused only on approved crossings, ignoring the risks of so-called “trespassing” that occurs outside of those areas.

Only in the last year did federal law require railroads to provide GPS coordinates of the crashes. Before that, their crash reports only listed the county where the crash happened, making it impossible to identify where these crashes are clustered. Now, with better information, some danger “hotspots” became apparent.

In an interview with Streetsblog, Frankel of the Post-Dispatch said Hyattsville perfectly fits the profile of a likely hotspot for pedestrian deaths on railroad tracks: “It’s a residential neighborhood, high density, the speed limit on [the train tracks] is 70 miles per hour, you have both freight and commuter rail,” Frankel said. “And you have residential on one side, commercial on the other, so people have reasons to be going back and forth.” [Just like in the Baltimore Metro area.

He said that when he visited the site, there were obvious paths of well-worn gravel across the track, but the railroads still claim it’s impossible to know what spots are popular pedestrian crossings. Frankel said that tracks that carry fast trains have to be inspected twice a week by a slow-moving truck. Those trucks clearly see the “deer trails” worn by many feet.

In Villa Park, he said, where Kristen Bowen died, it felt like a train went by every ten minutes. The frequency of train traffic is another risk factor. And he says passenger trains are more dangerous than freight, “because the trains tend to be smaller, lighter, and faster. Quieter.” Many of these cases involved commuter rail and inter-city Amtrak trains.

https://dc.streetsblog.org/2012/12/13/pedestrian-deaths-on-railroad-tracks-the-failure-of-design/

Bicycle route planning, break it down to systems

[B’ Spokes: I like this idea of having bike routes with different purposes, though I might add to these concepts with recreational routes (loops.) Baltimore has Lake Montebello and Druid Lake, NYC has Central Park and Prospect Park.]
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Excerpt from Chicago Streets for Cycling Plan 2020
This proposed 645-mile bicycle system will run throughout Chicago’s neighborhoods. The overall system consists of three smaller systems: Neighborhood Bike Routes that utilize residential streets, Crosstown Bike Routes that use collector and arterial roadways, and Spoke Routes that connect all corners of the City to Downtown. Once the network is complete, all Chicagoans will be within 1⁄2 mile of a bicycle facility.
Continue reading “Bicycle route planning, break it down to systems”

Additional thoughts about our 3′ law and the narrow highway exception

Let’s start with a narrow two lane highway, which is basically the narrowest type of highway most people will encounter. Just considering width (which our three foot law does) there is plenty of room for one motorist to pass another on this type of highway. Given that, there is certainly enough room on this type of highway for a motorist to pass a lawful riding cyclist with at least three feet of space.

So the narrow highway exception must apply to something narrower, so the next whole number down is one lane highway. (Do you know where any one lane highways are? They are really rare.) So in attempt to turn legalize into the vernacular we are now talking about just one lane available to all traffic that is too narrow for a cyclist and a motorist to safely share side by side.

Now keep in mind that our 3′ law requires that the cyclist be a lawful cyclist. So what does the law say about the cyclist position in a lane that is too narrow to share? The law no longer requires the cyclist to ride as far right as practicable, safety advice can vary but basically they are: right tire track, right one third or center of the lane. So now there is really no room for a motorist to pass a cyclist. Yet MDOT’s interpretation of this law basically says when there is no room for a cyclist and motorist to be side by side a cyclist should take the lane and a motorist can pass a cyclist. – That’s crazy and scary.

Let’s back up for a second, Maryland does have a few bidirectional one lane (narrow) dirt roads. Do drivers pass each other on these roads? Sure. Do motorist pass each other safely on these roads? Sure. So now you might be asking how is this done? From my experience one driver backs up to find a point where the road widens and then safe passing takes place. I think it’s important to note that the point where passing takes place is wide enough to do so safely. The issue I have is describing this as any time there is not enough room to pass with 3 feet you can pass with less then 3 feet. That does not accurately reflect how safe passing is done in this situation.

I will speculate that Delegate Malone did not want cyclists going "Oh look that motorist passed me 2′ 10" ticket him." when the motorist was doing their best in trying to pass a cyclist safely. That’s fair enough but if that is the case MDOT needs to stress safe passing at a location where safe passing is possible on one lane roads. I would even add that the cyclist needs to indicate that they are cooperating with the passing motorist. This is how motorist do it, so the same should apply to cyclists as well.

As I previously noted (https://www.baltimorespokes.org/article.php?story=20121215212451386 ) not being in violation of the 3′ statute does not negate other laws like passing safely. Additionally a bicycle is a vehicle, we can look how motor vehicles behave in one lane situations and apply the same principles with a bit less space. MDOT does no say to motorists when there is not enough room to safely pass another motor vehicle on a one lane road you can do so less safely, so why are they doing that with cyclists?

Read more for some bizarre considerations of this exception
Continue reading “Additional thoughts about our 3′ law and the narrow highway exception”

Don’t drink and drive but having 4 drinks before driving is fine

Can you imagine such a safety campaign as I have in the headlines? Yet consider the latest from MDOT:

The 3-Foot Passing Law – Motorists are now required to give
cyclists 3 feet of clear­ance when pass­ing. The 3-foot law has an
exemption for roads that are too nar­row to allow 3 feet of clear­ance
safely. In this case, drivers are allowed to pass cyclists with less than
3 feet.

I will assert there are more people that are male and weigh more then 220 lbs (were I got the 4 drinks from see BAC Information below) then there are highways that are not wide enough to lawfully pass the bicycle at a distance of at least 3 feet.

I will also note this law is still in effect no mater how you look at our 3′ law.

§21–303.(b) The driver of a vehicle overtaking another vehicle that is going in the same direction shall pass to the left of the overtaken vehicle at a safe distance.

And there is this in the SAME statute as well:

§ 21-1209.
(a) Drivers to exercise due care.- Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, the driver of a vehicle shall:
.(1) Exercise due care to avoid colliding with any bicycle, EPAMD, or motor scooter being ridden by a person;

I really have to ask does MDOT summary even come close to expressing due care in avoiding colliding with any bicycle is a legal requirement no mater the width of the road? I will also note that a two lane highway does not fall under this exception, we are taking about a narrower highway with less then two lanes.

Jim Titus had a great response:

My main concern is that the statement quoted is incorrect in at least
three ways.
a. First, the exception applies for “highways” that are too narrow, not
“roads” that are too narrow. Legally, these two words are not synonyms.
b. Second, the law does not say that one can pass with less than three
feet, only that the specific statutory requirement does not apply. It is
an open question what the required passing clearance is on a narrow
highway, just as it is an open question as to what even if a narrow
highway. Bottom line: No authoritative legal opinion exists that
identifies any specific road where a driver is allowed to pass with less
than three feet–so why invite general readers to speculate?
c. The statute has some exceptions, not exemptions. Exemptions are part
of the tax law.

Continue reading “Don’t drink and drive but having 4 drinks before driving is fine”

Join the Baltimorean Team LUNA Chix rider in Haiti to ride MTB Ayiti

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Marla Streb is all-in for the feel good race of the year – and you all are invited to join the Baltimorean Team LUNA Chix rider in Haiti to ride MTB Ayiti www.mtbayiti.org

The first 10 riders using promo code “marla-ayiti” are sponsored with a $300 entry fee savings

Here’s how to enter:
1. Click on https://mtbayiti.eventbrite.com
2. Under the two registration options, there is a small link that reads “Enter promotional code”
3. When you click that link, a small box pops up and you type in “marla-ayiti” and click “APPLY”
4. Follow and complete the registration process