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Sarah Goodyear

Recent Posts

Getting Real About High-Speed Rail

By Sarah Goodyear | Jun 3, 2009 | 8 Comments
Today on the Streetsblog Network, member blog Worldchanging has an interview on the future of American transportation with Nancy Kete, a senior fellow at the World Resources Institute and the managing director of EMBARQ, the WRI’s Center for Transport and the Environment. A bullet train is not necessarily a silver bullet. Photo by rikdom via […]

Using the Hive Mind to Make Biking Safer

By Sarah Goodyear | Jun 2, 2009 | 10 Comments
Whenever anyone asks me why I like Twitter so much, I tell them it’s about the information. If you follow the right people (and who that is obviously depends entirely on you) you can tap into an amazing amount of great stuff from around the Internet (and real life too). It’s like having a custom-made […]

How the Autocentric Lifestyle Hurts Our Kids

By Sarah Goodyear | Jun 1, 2009 | 8 Comments
Last week, several of our Streetsblog Network member blogs picked up on a recent policy statement from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), "The Built Environment: Designing Communities to Promote Physical Activity in Children." It examines how sprawl harms the nation’s children by reducing physical activity, and how denser development, traffic-calming measures and more parks […]

Making Room for People Rather Than Cars

By Sarah Goodyear | May 29, 2009 | 3 Comments
We talk a lot on this blog about the way that government policy can help to create livable streets. But we don’t often discuss the role that individual property owners can play when they’re inspired to create a more pedestrian-friendly space. The owner of this property in Miami has decided to convert a parking lot […]

We Need a Complete Solution to Climate Change

By Sarah Goodyear | May 28, 2009 | No Comments
This morning, Jeff Wood at The Overhead Wire points us to a newly released measure of CO2 emissions from the Center for Neighborhood Technology (which just won a 2009 MacArthur Foundation Award for Creative and Effective Institutions, BTW). He says maps like these help to show why changing land-use patterns is vital in the fight […]

The Permanent Effect of Temporary Street Closures

By Sarah Goodyear | May 27, 2009 | 2 Comments
So, we all love a good street party, yes? But at some point, the party is over… right? Or is it? That’s what Joan Pasiuk over at the Streetsblog Network member blog Transit for Livable Communities, in the Twin Cities of Minnesota, is asking. Noting the popularity of festive street-closure events in cities around the […]

The Sidewalks of San Francisco

By Sarah Goodyear | May 26, 2009 | 1 Comment
Coming off a weekend in which New York City gave one of the most famous stretches of street in the world to pedestrians, we’re going to San Francisco to take a walk with Streetsblog Network member Pedestrianist. They’ve got a post on the inadequacy of that city’s sidewalks — and a few very simple suggestions […]

A Pedestrian Is Killed, So Let’s Ticket — Pedestrians?

By Sarah Goodyear | May 22, 2009 | 6 Comments
Earlier this week, Brad posted a piece about a recent pedestrian death pedestrian critically injured by an SUV on 14th Street, asking "Is Death an Appropriate Penalty for Jaywalking?" in which he included some fascinating historical information about how jaywalkers have been demonized over the years. Photo by Poppyseed Bandits via Flickr. In Savannah, that […]

T4America on How to Create Safer, Healthier Streets

By Sarah Goodyear | May 21, 2009 | 5 Comments
As the reauthorization of the federal transportation bill draws nearer, the need for clear, simple explanations of why reform is important grows greater. The folks at Transportation for America have stepped forward to make the case with Route to Reform: A Blueprint for a 21st-Century Transportation Policy, a 100-page document that lays out the most […]

Would Motorists Pay 15 Cents a Mile for No Traffic?

By Sarah Goodyear | May 20, 2009 | No Comments
Congestion pricing may be dead in New York, but the discussion about its merits continues elsewhere. Today, David Alpert at Greater Greater Washington looks at how road pricing could dramatically change the traffic situation in the DC area: Photo by derang0. If the Washington region charged around 15 cents per mile for use of the […]

Is There Such a Thing as Too Much Emphasis on Safety?

By Sarah Goodyear | May 19, 2009 | 42 Comments
There’s a lot of focus this month on getting more people out and about on their bikes. We posted last week about the effort to normalize bike commuting, a topic that as usual sparked a lot of discussion about sweat, appropriate clothing, secure bike parking and, of course, safety. How they promote cycling in Holland. […]

Van Jones and the Vision for a New Urban Environmentalism

By Sarah Goodyear | May 18, 2009 | 2 Comments
This morning we’re featuring a post from Streetsblog Network member Where, an always thought-provoking international blog that "brings together urbanists from all walks of life living in cities around the world to poke, prod, and otherwise examine everything urban in an effort to maintain a global conversation about this increasingly vital subject matter." Today Where […]
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