Tuesday’s Headlines: Tea and Sympathy Edition
Two big events will bookend today. First, at noon, Council Members Antonio Reynoso, Justin Brannan, Rafael Espinal, Carlos Menchaca and others will rally with private sanitation workers at City Hall to protest horrible working conditions in the industry.
Then, at 4:45 p.m., members of the Riders Alliance will show their support for congestion pricing by serving a calming cup of tea to Flushing commuters, who are burdened with substandard commutes that could be improved with proper financing for the MTA. The variety of beverage being brewed? Too-long Tea, the group punnily announced.
And now, the news:
- It was another bad commute yesterday. (amNY)
- So who should have the “panic button” in a cab: the passenger or the driver? That’s what was being debated on Monday at City Hall. (NYDN)
- Is it just us, or is the city’s plan to completely tear down and replace the Brooklyn–Queens Expressway moving inexorably towards someone swooping in at the last minute and realizing it’s a dumb idea? OK, it’s not just us — folks in Brooklyn Heights think so, too. (NY Post)
- Here’s another loss for local news: Readers of Brooklyn Daily — the news website devoted to southern Brooklyn — were shocked to learn Monday that the publication had been folded into the Brooklyn Paper, which is owned by the same company, but focused more on Brownstone Brooklyn. The chain was decimated by layoffs after it was purchased by Schneps Media from Community News Group late last year.
- New Jersey is pushing the Trump administration to funds the Gateway Tunnel project under the Hudson River, which is only, like, the most important infrastructure project since the Roman aqueducts. (WSJ)
- Politico’s Dana Rubinstein had a scoop about a six-figure ad buy aimed at persuading congestion pricing stragglers. The ad says it was made by the Regional Plan Association, but was actually purchased by a big-time real estate titan Scott Rechler! (Politico Pro) Learn more at fixourtransit.org.
- Transit gadly Larry Penner wrote an op-ed in amNY arguing that Gov. Cuomo’s plan for a partial shutdown of the L-train tunnel may cost more than the MTA’s full-shutdown plan.
- The angry cyclist from that viral video surrendered for allegedly attacking a cabbie — though in a reverse bit of victim blaming, the NYPD said the driver might have cut off the cyclist in traffic, causing him to lose his temper. (NYDN)
- The Brooklyn Paper covered the outrageous meeting last week featuring some Park Slope residents — yes Park Slope residents — complaining that the Ninth Street protected bike lanes have made the roadway where two kids were killed last year more dangerous. Missing from the battered new outlet’s coverage? This piece of key context: Park Slopers know exactly how safe protected bike lanes are, having enjoyed fewer crashes on Prospect Park West since that “controversial” lane went in nearly a decade ago.
- A driver almost killed a beloved Columbia University professor as he walked home on Friday night. (Spectator)
- In case you missed it, there are now two Council Members — Brad Lander and Helen Rosenthal — running for comptroller. (Gotham Gazette)
- City Lab has two recent stories about the drawbacks of ride-hailing: Another study — this one with newer data than previous studies — blames public transit’s declining ridership on Uber and Lyft. And Uber’s new rewards program gives users an incentive to ride solo, worsening congestion even further.
- And, finally, here’s some top quality bike lane porn, thanks to the great Clarence Eckerson Jr. at Streetfilms:
Take a quick trip to the Netherlands via this @Streetfilms montage featuring footage of Amsterdam, Groningen, Rotterdam, Nijmegen & Utrecht. Can't wait to visit again (maybe 2019!) @mbruntlett @modacitylife @BicycleDutch @Cycling_Embassy @fietsprofessor pic.twitter.com/PSvWsRMBUB
— Streetfilms (Now 1,100 films strong!) (@Streetfilms) January 7, 2019