18001 - 18250 of 19040 Topics |
|
LA Times Op-Ed pieces re Commuting Thread started by OverTheHill at 12.27.07 - 10:39 pm The LA Times 12/27/2007 op-ed pages includes 10 short pieces giving various ideas to lighten people's commutes. A piece regarding bike commuting by Stephen Box speaks to the larger benefits of cycling to non-cyclists. Check it out before the link dies!
reply
Here are the textzz, maybe...
-
A silly one
Smush the city together
By Matt Selman
December 27, 2007
You know how there are two San Vicente Boulevards in L.A.? Weird, right? One San Vicente curves to form the southeastern border of Brentwood, and the other San Vicente cuts largely diagonally from Sunset and Doheny to Venice and La Brea. Here's what I would do: Get rid of everything between the two San Vicentes. Then smush the city together, filling the gap.
Yep, the solution to all our of city's ills is a very, very, very big "Mad fold-in."
Think of the benefits. You can now get from the good western parts of town (Santa Monica, Venice) to the good eastern parts (West Hollywood, Los Feliz, Silver Lake) much more quickly. How many times have you been driving from one side of the city to the other and thought, "Am I still only in Westwood?"
Another benefit: Lose Westwood. Heck, lose all of West L.A. What would be missed? The worst part of the 405? So-called Millionaire's Row? The talent agencies? Face it, West L.A. is an obvious cut. In a city famous for its ugly stretches of road, that chunk of Santa Monica Boulevard is one ugly stretch of road. Kiss it goodbye. Don't worry -- there's another Zankou Chicken in Hollywood.
What about Beverly Hills? No worries -- we sell it to Dubai. Dubai will love Beverly Hills -- their whole country looks like the jewelry counter at Bulgari. (Confidentially, I already have an offer. A big offer.) And we use that money to clean the bay, hire shock troops to enforce the leaf-blower ban, buy an NFL team (I'm thinking the Patriots) and force everyone to take driving lessons. Utopia.
Matt Selman is a writer for "The Simpsons."
-
Improve bus service
Build better bus service
By Francisca Porchas
December 27, 2007
LA needs a first-class, bus-centered transportation system, with reliable 24/7 service and a bus every five minutes.
Double the bus fleet, provide a 50-cent fare and $20 monthly bus pass and implement bus-only lanes on all major corridors in the county instead of building multibillion-dollar rail lines or converting boulevards such as Olympic and Pico into mini-highways. Reducing the number of cars, not just moving them, must become the city's priority.
Lower fares mean more riders. From 1982 to 1985, annual bus ridership rose by 41% -- the highest in L.A. history -- when fares were dropped from 85 cents to 50 cents.
Bus-only lanes -- a means of prioritizing public transit over single-passenger automobiles -- have proved effective too. In Seoul, a city of 10 million people, adding buses on 119 miles of dedicated lanes attracted 1 million more riders.
This city needs to stop pandering to the car. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and City Council member Wendy Greuel (chair of the Transportation Committee) should lead by fronting $27 million in city money to start the bus-only lanes on Wilshire Boulevard. Waiting for federal funds to arrive puts off completion of bus-only lanes until 2011. In 2008, we need to stop talking and start building.
Francisca Porchas is lead organizer at the Bus Riders Union.
-
Drive better, ditch the car once a week for alternatives, drive alternate routes
Take control of your commute
By Denise Fondo
December 27, 2007
Change is at the root of the word "commute." Thinking ahead and being ready to change will help us live up to our role as commuters.
If you know you have to exit the freeway, don't stay in the left lane until the last second. This causes accidents. Lookey-loos add thousands of commuter hours to our roadways yearly. Stop gawking at accidents.
Ditch the car one day a week for Metrolink, carpools, buses, subways, bicycles or walking.
Finally, prepare for your commute as you would for an evacuation. Buy a comprehensive street guide and devise four alternate routes, using surface streets if possible. Choose streets other than major thoroughfares, because they're the first to clog up when the freeway stops moving. You'll feel less trapped and anxious if you have an exit plan.
Denise Fondo is the afternoon-drive traffic reporter for KNX-AM (1070).
-
Open-top double decker busses with concessions
Serve double lattes on double-deckers
By Rob Long
December 27, 2007
When I go to a new place, I almost always end up on a bus. I rode the bus through northern Turkey; I take the bus in Paris; I took a kind of bus-like thing in Myanmar; the buses in Vienna are excellent; and in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, I took a taxi that was really closer to a bus because it kept stopping and picking people up.
I don't take the bus in Los Angeles, which is irrational, really, because I spend a lot of time -- we all do -- stuck in traffic behind buses.
When traveling, the bus has a kind of glamorous luster to it -- you feel smart and adventurous and part of the scene. Here at home, though, taking the bus means a lot of waiting around sun-baked intersections, wondering which bus will take you to the bus that will take you somewhat closer to where you actually want to be, which is probably where you parked your car.
Buses, in short, aren't much fun.
But they could be. In a city that enjoys 300 days of sunshine a year, buses should be fun, sunny, double-decker, open-air-type deals, with the top level leased to companies such as Starbucks, Peets, Quiznos or Chipotle. Imagine heading to work on a sunny morning, sitting in the top-level breeze, reading Variety and sipping a latte. Imagine coming home at night, watching the lights of the city from your top-level perch (we'll have heat lamps; we'll have awnings) and having a burrito and a couple of cold beers.
Of course, you'll have to transfer at some point. But imagine a Southland dotted by transfer hubs with Wi-Fi, Korean snacks, a Le Pain Quotidien and yoga. There will be big, long-haul buses for the Valley and the east-west boulevards, smaller electric buses for the smaller north-south jaunts. And each one will take your ATM card.
It'll be expensive, of course -- everything worth doing is -- but a lot cheaper than building a subway. And it will probably take longer to get everywhere, what with the lattes and the margaritas and the jewelry-making classes. But remember: The truth is, we're not really in a hurry to get where we're going; we're in a hurry to get off the damn road. And more people on the bus means fewer people behind the bus.
Rob Long is a contributing editor to Opinion. His weekly commentary, "Martini Shot," airs on KCRW-FM (89.9).
-
Retire the 40-year-old school bus fleet in favor of MTA passes for school kids
Retire the big yellow 'Twinkies'
By BY ERIKA SCHICKEL
December 27, 2007
There are more than 24,000 school buses in California's fleet of belching, lung-corroding "Twinkies" (as kids call those old, yellow, rounded buses), but not one of them has ever stopped for one of my kids or any of the kids I know.
We have two issues here: an aged, smog-spewing fleet of school buses, and a city that is jammed with commuters. At 3 p.m. on any weekday in L.A., a lot of those commuters are moms shuttling kids.
Let's make city buses accommodate school kids. Maybe not elementary school students, but buses should be a reasonable option for middle-schoolers and up. Student bus fares -- now $24 for a monthly pass on Metro buses -- should be free for low-income families and reduced to 25 cents a trip for other student-ID-wielding kids. Bus lines could be routed for school pickups.
Since my daughter started riding the #7 Pico bus home from school, we have saved greatly on gas and time. Best of all, I no longer battle gridlock. But I am an anomaly. Your average Westside mom is hesitant to let her lambkin ride the big, bad city bus alone.
I get it. Crazy people also ride buses, and often the bus barrels right past my daughter's stop, in which case she calls me on her cellphone.
Couldn't we reassign L.A. Unified school bus drivers to school-heavy routes where their "Hey! Down in back!" people skills could be put to good use keeping kid-packed city buses safe and civilized?
Less pollution, less traffic and future generations growing up with a comfortable, working knowledge of public transportation -- let's make city buses into school buses too, and literally leave no child behind.
Erika Schickel is the author of "You're Not the Boss of Me: Adventures of a Modern Mom."
-
Raise parking rates
Free up some spots along the curb
By Donald Shoup
December 27, 2007
Asurprising amount of traffic isn't caused by drivers on their way somewhere. Rather, it is caused by drivers who are searching for a parking spot. Cruising for curb parking in Westwood Village, for example, creates about 950,000 excess vehicle miles annually -- equal to 38 trips around the Earth.
Some cities have reduced cruising in business districts by setting the parking meter rates to achieve about 85% occupancy, so one or two vacant spaces are almost always available on each block. Getting those rates right can eliminate much needless driving.
There is plenty of room for price adjustments; the rates for 81% of the parking meters in Los Angeles have not changed since 1990. Most drivers would probably accept gradual upward adjustments -- especially if they can find a parking space without cruising. But first the City Council must sign on to the 85% occupancy target for curb parking.
The goal is not to get the meter rates exactly right, but Los Angeles could get them far less wrong.
Donald Shoup, a professor of urban planning at UCLA, is the author of "The High Cost of Free Parking."
-
Set rail in competition with telecommuting for MTA funding
Create some healthy competition
By Ted Balaker
December 27, 2007
It propelled SpaceShipOne into suborbital space, so maybe a low-altitude version of the X Prize could give Angelenos more space on the road. Here's how it might work: The Metropolitan Transportation Authority carves out some of the $115 billion in transportation funding that's headed to the region over the next couple of decades to stage a contest.
It also creates two teams. Team A tries to lure as many motorists out of their cars as possible by building rail. (Note to referee: Ex-bus riders don't count as ex-motorists.) Team B must lure motorists to telecommuting. The team with the most ex-motorists after a set period of time wins the prize.
(Let the general public chase the bounty too. The X Prize was just a $10-million purse, yet it helped induce the birth of private spaceflight as well as a host of technological innovations. Is it really so fanciful to think that it could conquer gridlock?)
Does telecommuting really stand a chance? Absolutely. Telecommuters already outnumber rail commuters in the L.A. area, and according to U.S. census data, those who work from home outnumber total transit commuters (rail and bus) in most of the 50 most populous metro areas. A zero-minute commute alone is an enticing carrot -- imagine what an extra nudge might do.
Ted Balaker, a policy analyst at the Reason Foundation, co-wrote "The Road More Traveled."
-
Walk or bike to work, build bike infrastructure like Portland's (yea Portland!)
Lace up and head out
By Charlie Hoover
December 27, 2007
I have experimented with various methods of traveling the eight miles to and from my sporting goods store in Encino. When I run to work, it only takes me about 25 minutes longer than when I drive. When I ride my recumbent bicycle, I beat my driving time by about 15 minutes.
For years, my partner made his 26-mile round trip over the Santa Monica Mountains to our shop by running on fire roads, and arriving not much later than someone making the drive on the 405. Other members of our staff bike in occasionally from as far away as Santa Clarita. Besides enjoying a pleasant commute, we also stay fit, save money and pollute less.
Not everyone can or wants to run or bike to work. But more people would be willing to try if Los Angeles' infrastructure was more bike and pedestrian friendly. Cities such as Portland, Ore., have a well-developed system of bike paths and dedicated bike lanes, making commuting easy and safe for thousands of cyclists, runners and walkers. Let's make that a model for L.A.
Charlie Hoover is co-owner of Phidippides Encino
-
Cycle, but if not, at least respect the benefits they bring to all
Love your local bicyclists
By Stephen Box
December 27, 2007
The most elegant solution to L.A. traffic is simply to pedal to where you need to go. If cycling is not for you, at least give some respect to those who choose to ride. Here's why: Cyclists are the "indicator species" for a healthy community.
Cyclists favor well-maintained streets free of potholes and debris. They prefer streets with moderate vehicle volumes and speeds, an environment that is likewise safer and more hospitable for drivers and pedestrians.
Surveys in San Francisco found that local businesses benefited from "traffic calming" through their districts, which included accommodations for cyclists.
Finally, an increase in the number of cyclists in a neighborhood -- which means more eyes on the street -- has a direct relationship to a reduction in crime.
In other words, what's good for cyclists is good for your community.
Stephen Box is a cycling advocate living in Hollywood.
-
Monorail:
Imagine an elevated future
By Mark Pisano
December 27, 2007
Imagine clean, safe, elevated, high-speed monorails traversing alongside Southern California freeways.
Some view that concept as science fiction, but the technology exists. We already own the necessary right of way. And, with some visionary thinking, we have the ability to make such a system a reality through a partnership between government and the private sector. The Southern California Assn. of Governments already has received a proposal from a private consortium to finance and implement this type of system.
There's no single "silver bullet" solution to solving Southern California's traffic woes. But a high-speed monorail that builds on our existing transportation network to better connect our residential, employment and trade centers could serve as the centerpiece of a reinvented transportation system.
Mark Pisano is executive director of the Southern California Assn. of Governments.
OverTheHill12.27.07 - 11:50 pm
reply
While I enjoyed most pieces in that LA Times page, I resented Stephen Box's self appointed "advocacy" for "Cyclists". He made it sound as "Cyclists" is a special class of people separate from the community at large requiring special privileges.
Charlie Hoover from Phidipides put the pro-bike argument much more eloquently by writing that "more people would be willing to bike to work if Los Angeles' infrastructure was more bike friendly".
Charlie Hoover's argument allowed everyone to be a potential "cyclist".
marino12.28.07 - 12:49 am
reply
marino:
Let's face it, most LA residents are stalwart motorists who don't see driving as a choice. The way I read Stephen's entry, it is presenting the case that having cyclists in a community is a healthy thing for everyone (not just for those who are cycling). To do this, he is directly addressing the majority of people who do not consider cycling to be a viable transportation option. Maybe I'm reading between the lines, but I believe that If these drivers begin to notice and respect cyclists in their neighborhoods, some would see that the cyclists aren't all that different from themselves, and try it at some point.
Also, if cycling is considered beneficial to everyone in the community - not just a "special interest" - it is much more likely that the community will be willing to invest in Portland-style infrastructure to support it.
Anyway, all these articles are pretty interesting taken as a whole. I, myself am in complete support of smushing the city.
angle12.28.07 - 5:38 am
reply
Soap Box!
Champion of Bikes!
NEWB31012.28.07 - 12:07 pm
reply
Perhaps Marino is just trying to give pointers to Mr. Box and others so that they might sell the idea better to the community at large? A lot of people tend to cringe at the word - "advocacy".
Midnight Ridazz does a great job at inspiring cycling fun to the community without even trying too hard. I hope it stays that way.
I do appreciate everyone's attempts. There's always more than one way to skin a cat. "Live the Dream!"
Joe Borfo12.28.07 - 12:18 pm
reply
I don't know Marino, you're taking a pretty hard line against what I see as an eloquent and insightful point made in a very small space. Then to resent Box as some sort of self-appointed cycling advocate? I'm not sure what the problem is. Would it be more legit if he was sponsored by Shimano? Or the Bike Kitchen?
You may differ in your opinion of how to integrate cyclists into the at-large grid, but whether his advocacy is self-appointed or bestowed by the community at large he's got my respect and appreciation. Box has stepped up on numerous occasions. He and his wife Enci were instrumental in reversing the Griffith Observatory bike ban, they regularly attend and encourage attendance at the city's bike commission meetings, they were the transmission that drove Bike Winter's events and an increased awareness of last May's Bike to Work Week, and he was one of the key players involved in last Friday's storming of the DWP Light Festival.
Box rox in my book.
Agent Orange12.28.07 - 3:15 pm
reply
Policies like not being able to ride through lights or to the Observatory just boggle my mind. Good on Box.
toweliesbong12.28.07 - 3:38 pm
reply
I think our friend Mr. Box has earned the title "Bike Advocate".
Its what he does. He advocates for bikes.
The title "bike advocate" may be self-appointed (as is his relentless bike advocacy) but it is an inarguably apt description of the man.
As far as his chosen angle for the op-ed, I think it is excellent. There is a million reasons to ride a bike in LA, but all the convincing in the world will not get certain people on a bike ... ever.
Even if LA became bike city USA or one of the bike capitol's of the world, the bike will still be a minority vehicle on the road. Nothing short of banning all (or most) cars will change this.
In the mean time, many of us endure aggression, hostility, and danger from motorists who are ignorant to our right to the road and the ways in which our choice to cycle benefits them. That danger, or perceived danger is the thing that keeps many would-be cyclists off the road. If drivers are more accomidating to cyclists more people will ride.
Motorist and Cyclist simply describe a person's vehicular status at any given moment based on the vehicle they are using at that moment.
Last night I was a "motorist" and when I passed a "cyclist" (Orlando) on the road, i passed cautiously and gave him plenty of room. I've noticed the same treatment, as a "cyclist", from "motorists" who have bicycle stickers on their cars.
As I understand it, the point of Stephen's article (which was read by probably 98%+ people who rarely or never ride bikes for transportation) is that: cycling benefits your community. Even if you don't ride you can help increase the benefits of cycling in your community by supporting and accommodating the people who chose to use a bicycle for transportation.
I think it's a clear and simple message that badly needs to be heard.
Great Job Stephen!
trickmilla 12.28.07 - 4:03 pm
reply
I like Box's comment because it thinks from the motorist point of view and makes a case for cyclists even if the motorist decides not to cycle. clever way to sell cycling. and cyclists ARE different, just grab my buns and you'll feel the difference.
Roadblock12.28.07 - 4:05 pm
reply
SoapBoxLA's editorial is so f**kin right on.
Bicycling, as it has begun to be shown in scientific studies of urban areas, has a host of benefits it can bestow: fewer traffic fatalities, better business, measurably happier and safer-feeling people, and less pollution.
I think that these benefits are often overlooked by those of us trying to push for changes in the way the government treats cycling - but we do so to the detriment of our cause.
Stephen (and Encie!) you guys did a great job with that Griffith Park ride (where is the post-event film, press release, photo stream? Need help? Email me dude) and with this editorial as well.
ubrayj0212.28.07 - 4:23 pm
reply
I completely agree that it's silly to separate the world into cyclists and non-cyclists, and that's why I appreciate the careful wording Stephen uses in his article. He says, "If cycling is not for you, at least give some respect for those who choose to ride."
The phrase "If cycling is not for you" is a clever and informal way of getting people to acknowledge the conscious choice they're making with their mode of transport. If my experience is any indication, lots of people in LA firmly believe that driving is the only safe and acceptable way to get around, and that those who do not drive are on the fringes of society. Instead, cycling is portrayed as simply "for you" or "not for you" - no big deal, you've got your own personal reasons for what you do, and that's fine. This is a very non-condescending way of leaving the door open for some to change their minds.
It's true that the article goes on to use the word "cyclists" to indicate a group of people who are currently choosing to use bicycles. This is a convention that has to be used in order to write a readable article, and it doesn't imply that cyclists are an elite cadre, as it was already established that cycling or not cycling is a choice that is made by everyone.
I think the point of the article is a very important one, attempting to bridge a gap between different road users, as conditions exist right now. I know I deal with the antagonism and possessiveness of drivers on a daily basis, both as a cyclist and pedestrian, and I believe that a change in thinking would be every bit as significant as a change in the infrastructure of our city, maybe more so.
angle12.28.07 - 4:46 pm
reply
I think more people would benefit from a CRANK MOB than commuting. Fuck clean air, we need some clean FUN.
SKIDMARCUS12.28.07 - 4:48 pm
reply
FUN? None of us advocates should be having any fun!
angle12.28.07 - 5:07 pm
reply
I read Steven's part...and I think he did a great job.
I've thanked him for what he has done before....he does the difficult stuff.
While many ridazz went out to the SM city council meeting to voice concerns about CM, he was there. But, most of us don't show up to every relevant meeting in the area. He is usually there, wherever it may be. And, his comments and work are a part of making riding bikes in the LA area better. I could go into details, but I don't think it's needed. Steve and Enci stick up for us...over and over again.
Axe grinding isn't very nice.
tern12.29.07 - 1:05 am
reply
I have always loved the idea of "traffic calming".
Except my idea involved speed bumps that are either felt at, or are activated by a speeding vehicle.
Especially around the desert where I continually emphasize the local fetish of "FlowMasters" and other, annoyingly loud and dangerous, after-market componentry.
The lowest speed I've seen posted on any street out here is 35mph.
Yet, no matter where, everyone is always going 10-30mph over that.
Hell, Hesperia Road on which I currently live sounds like a freeway when I open the door!!
bentstrider12.29.07 - 1:29 am
reply
Reply |