Sarah Goodyear
Recent Posts
Portland Bus Driver Says Let There Be Light…on Bikes
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Usually when we talk about someone having a windshield perspective on this blog, we don’t mean it as a good thing. But today, courtesy of Streetsblog Network member Bike Portland, we bring you a windshield perspective that is actually quite helpful. TriMet bus operator Dan Christenson has written a guest column about how happy he […]
Midtown Movie Car Chase Ends with Car Jumping Curb, Injuring Two
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The New York Post has posted shocking video of a movie car chase being filmed in Times Square that ended with a car losing control, jumping the curb and injuring two pedestrians. (Warning: this includes some graphic images): Fortunately, according to the AP, the pedestrians’ injuries were not life-threatening. It’s not clear how tightly the […]
Experimenting with the Elimination of Traffic Lights
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Today from the Streetsblog Network, Tom Vanderbilt writes on his How We Drive blog about an upcoming experiment in London. Traffic lights at seven intersections in the borough of Ealing will be covered with bags, and drivers will be expected to safely navigate by making eye contact with pedestrians, cyclists and other motorists. The move […]
Complete Streets Could Hit a Speed Bump in Milwaukee
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More and more, municipalities are seeing the advantages that "complete streets" development can bring to a community. The problem can be, as we see in a post by Streetsblog Network member Urban Milwaukee, that funding mechanisms are skewed heavily to a completely different kind of planning: Could funding mechanisms prevent this… S. 2nd St., in […]
Illinois Transit May Take a Hit; for Roads, It’s Business as Usual
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In Illinois, as elsewhere around the country, more people are riding transit — and, as elsewhere, transit funding is being threatened because of state money problems. Meanwhile, reports The Transport Politic, road and bridge projects are going ahead as planned: Next stop for transit in Illinois: funding delays? Photo by John Picken via Flickr. Evidently, […]
Fighting for Transit-Oriented Development in Wisconsin
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Today on the Streetsblog Network, we check in again with John Michlig, who writes the blog Sprawled Out from Franklin, Wisconsin. Michlig has a blow-by-blow account of his often frustrating attempt to raise the issue of transit-oriented development at a meeting of the Economic Development Committee of his city: The status quo in Franklin, Wisconsin. […]
Rep. McCarthy Needs to Check Facts on Bike-Sharing
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Yesterday we heard about social conservatives who support a less autocentric transportation policy. Today, back to our regularly scheduled programming. Adam Voiland at DC Bicycle Transportation Examiner looks at Republican Chief Deputy Whip Kevin McCarthy’s scornful remarks about Washington, DC’s use of stimulus funds for what he referred to as "bike racks." As Voiland points […]
Obama’s Touted Office of Urban Policy Slow to Take Shape
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When Barack Obama was elected, urbanists were, in some cases literally, dancing in the streets. For once, America had elected a president who understood the importance of cities — and who promised to create an "Office for Urban Policy" that would help those cities to take their rightful place in the federal policy debate. But, […]
Why Conservatives (and Everyone) Should Care About Transit
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Big thanks this morning to Streetsblog Network member Trains for America, which links to a fascinating essay from the Witherspoon Institute on why social conservatives should support public transit and walkable communities. Here’s a taste of the Witherspoon piece: Looking for real family values? You’ll find them in walkable communities. Photo by renee @ FIMBY […]
Danger: Journalist With Windshield Perspective Ahead
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Today’s featured post from the Streetsblog Network comes from member blog Greater Greater Washington. David Alpert has identified an all-too-common strain of a problem familiar to our readers, Entitled Driver Syndrome. A particularly dangerous variant of this common affliction, writes Alpert, is Entitled Driving Journalist Syndrome, or EDJS: Photo by PDXdj. This week, epidemiologists discovered […]
DOT Secy Wants “Sustained Engagement” from Bike Advocates
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OK, so we still really don’t like the name of the DOT Secretary’s blog, The Fast Lane. (Not to mention the design — could someone do something about those graphics, please?) But more and more, we like what we’re reading there. Like yesterday’s post, titled "Bicycling Is an Important Factor in Less Carbon-Intensive Commuting," in […]
Transportation, Class and Housing: Making the Connections
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If you’re interested in transportation policy (and we know you are!) it can sometimes seem as if all the problems plaguing America have their root there. Today, we have a reminder from Streetsblog Network member Cap’n Transit that not even transportation can cure all ills. But we also have some very hopeful news from columnist […]