Details on East Side SBS Come Into Focus at CB 8 Meeting

We’ve got a few dispatches from last week’s Manhattan Community Board 8 meeting on East Side bus and bike improvements, which we couldn’t attend ourselves. First, Michael Auerbach, who’s doing some fantastic livable streets advocacy at Upper Green Side, filed a report for Second Ave Sagas about how Select Bus Service will function alongside the subway construction zones on Second Avenue.

The area from 100th Street down to 67th Street, where the roadway has narrowed to accommodate subway construction, had been a big question mark in all the SBS presentations so far. Auerbach reports that DOT and the MTA intend to install temporary bus stations with off-board fare machines in the vicinity of 89th Street and 68th Street. That will be all for SBS buildout until conditions on the surface get back to normal, which means no dedicated lane for buses on this stretch. Auerbach writes:

DOT regulations require the MTA to maintain 4
lanes of moving traffic through the SAS zone at all times. A DOT
official even went as far as to say that the current curb side lane
(once a fully functional bus lane back in the day) is now NOT in fact a
bus lane, but simply a lane for buses. Which also means it’s a lane for
cars, and a lane for trucks… The statement makes one really wonder
whether or not SBS will be able to truly achieve its stated goal of
speeding bus trips along the corridor.

Streetsblog reader BicyclesOnly tells us that when the discussion turned to pedestrian and bicycle improvements in the East Side plan, parents told DOT they want to see better safety measures.

Heidi Untener, who bikes to school with her kids, criticized the decision to avoid implementing protected bike lanes on long stretches of Second Avenue. Untener got some spontaneous applause when she said that East Side
congestion is driven by the free price of driving across the East River
bridges, and that high traffic volumes are no justification for relying on the un-protected, shared route bike lanes in DOT’s "Design C" configuration.

At one point, when asked about the dangers of riding side-by-side with traffic in narrow, shared lanes, DOT Bicycle Program Coordinator Josh Benson said the agency’s intent is for cyclists to take the full lane in such situations. Benson added that DOT is updating its "Share the Road" signs to avoid giving the impression that cyclists should cede the center of the lane to motorists.

There was no vote but the early word is that CB 8 transpo committee will hold one at its next meeting.

ALSO ON STREETSBLOG

Electeds: Separated Bus Lanes Would Make East Side Plan Even Better

|
From left to right: State Senator José Serrano, Assembly Member Micah Kellner, Assembly Member Jonathan Bing, Borough President Scott Stringer, and Council Member Jessica Lappin. East Side electeds continue to express support for the MTA and NYCDOT’s redesign of First and Second Avenues while pushing for a more complete corridor. In exchanges with Streetsblog this […]

19 NYC Electeds Call for Separated Bus and Bike Lanes on East Side

|
State Assembly member Micah Kellner, City Council members Melissa Mark-Viverito and Dan Garodnick, Council member-elect Margaret Chin, and State Senator Bill Perkins are among 19 local electeds calling on DOT and the MTA to implement "true BRT" and "complete streets" on First and Second Avenues. A group of 19 elected officials has urged NYC DOT […]

MTA Maps a Five-Borough Network for Select Bus Service

|
At a press event yesterday to announce service restorations and upgrades, the MTA also went public with a citywide plan to expand Select Bus Service. With tunnel-boring mega-projects consuming billions of capital dollars apiece, the agency is featuring low-cost bus improvements more prominently in its strategy to increase transit capacity. Stephen Smith at the Observer reports: […]

Who Killed 125th Street SBS: A Timeline

|
Throughout the development of the 125th Street Select Bus Service project, local elected officials and community boards never came out in support of actual bus improvements. Instead, they cloaked their opposition in concerns about “process.” Following yesterday’s announcement from the MTA and NYC DOT that they will no longer pursue Select Bus Service on 125th Street, now is […]