New diet plan for Arlington residents


Take the Car-Free Diet Skeptics Challenge

If you love your car, but also love saving money, improving your health and helping the environment, Arlington County is looking for you.

The Car-Free Diet Skeptics Challenge is designed for Arlington County residents that currently drive their cars CFD_Skeptics_resize frequently, but are willing to attempt car-free living for 30 days. You do not have to go 100% car-free for the entire 30 days, but you do have to try. If you are chosen as one of the final Skeptics, you will communicate online about all of your transportation experiences during the 30-day challenge. You’ll be given several items to use during the challenge that will make going car free easier. And if you successfully complete the challenge, you’ll receive more car free related items. If you are already on the Car-Free Diet, but know a friend, neighbor, or family member who needs to go on the diet, be sure to tell them about this challenge.

Continue Reading

  • Currently 0.00/5
Rating: 0.00/5 (0 votes cast)

Despite Risks, Internet Creeps Onto Car Dashboards


image
LAS VEGAS — To the dismay of safety advocates already worried about driver distraction, automakers and high-tech companies have found a new place to put sophisticated Internet-connected computers: the front seat.
...
Safety advocates say the companies behind these technologies are tone-deaf to mounting research showing the risks of distracted driving — and to a growing national debate about the use of mobile devices in cars and how to avoid the thousands of wrecks and injuries this distraction causes each year.

“This is irresponsible at best and pernicious at worst,” Nicholas A. Ashford, a professor of technology and policy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said of the new efforts to marry cars and computers. “Unfortunately and sadly, it is a continuation of the pursuit of profit over safety — for both drivers and pedestrians.”
...
“We are trying to make that driving experience one that is very engaging,” said Jim Buczkowski, the director of global electrical and electronics systems engineering at Ford.
...
“But they’re totally ignoring one of the key issues of the future of driving, which is distracted driving.”
...
Charlie Klauer, a researcher at the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute, says motorists face a much greater crash risk when looking at a screen, even if it is just a simple GPS map. She says the overall danger for drivers will rise as screens deliver additional streams of data.

The longer a motorist looks away from the road, “the risk of crash or near crash goes up exponentially — not a linear increase, but exponentially,” Ms. Klauer said. “So when you start introducing things like e-mail, Internet access, restaurant options or anything like that, the risk goes up.”

Regulators worry about the developments, too. Ray LaHood, the transportation secretary, said the companies involved were on the wrong track.

“The idea they’re going to load automobiles up with all kinds of ways to be distracted — that’s not the direction we’re going, and I will speak out against it,” he said.
...
“Because a lot of this is so new, there’s not a ton of regulatory testing that’s required, like would be required with crash testing,” Mr. Stertz said. He added that the company was also hoping to avoid legal troubles, saying, “It could be a legal issue if someone gets into a car accident and the cops blame the car company for a system that’s too elaborate.”
...

Continue Reading

  • Currently 0.00/5
Rating: 0.00/5 (0 votes cast)

Police should try pedal patrols


Interesting as we reported something similar last August .

From the Baltimore Sun:

Baltimore Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld III is to be applauded for his efforts to make officers more accessible to citizens by taking them out of their cars (" City putting police back on foot patrol," Jan. 7). However, foot patrol is not the only alternative. Police officers on bikes can patrol more territory and respond more quickly than officers on foot. They can also move easily through congested areas and access alleys, parks, trails and other areas off-limits to cars. They can be swift and silent, approaching crimes in progress virtually unnoticed, often from unexpected directions and locations.

Additionally, police on bikes can engage youth, generate positive community relationships and serve as role models. They can be integrated into a wide range of operations, including community-oriented and problem-oriented policing, targeted enforcement, surveillance, public order and drug interdiction. Finally, bicycles are cost-effective and environmentally friendly and promote officer fitness.

Baltimore has many neighborhoods and business districts beyond the Inner Harbor that would benefit greatly from the approachability, versatility and mobility of bike officers. Commissioner Bealefeld is encouraged to fully explore the potential of bicycle patrols in his efforts to garner community support and enhance neighborhood safety. Allocating a portion of the $10 million federal grant to equipment and training for bike patrol would be a worthwhile investment.

Maureen Becker, Baltimore

The writer is president of the International Police Mountain Bike Association.

Continue Reading

  • Currently 0.00/5
Rating: 0.00/5 (0 votes cast)

Triumph Over Adversity


image

By Rochelle Maruch Miller

Dodi Blumstein doesn’t have time for the pain. Personifying the triumph of the human spirit, the indefatigable Far Rockaway resident is persevering against all odds and emerging a champion. Back in 1997, Dodi was 14 and had just completed ninth grade at Bais Yakov of Baltimore. A sports enthusiast blessed with an infectious zest for life, she approached each new day with a sense of optimism rare in someone of her age. Eagerly anticipating a summer filled with friendships, adventures and myriad athletic challenges and events, Dodi embarked upon what she hoped would be the summer of much content.
But on August 14 of that summer, Dodi fell while hiking. The accident impacted greatly on the lives of Dodi and her family. Without any warning, the lively teenager who had been at the peak of athletic endurance, mastering every challenge with agility and facile was now disabled and suffering excruciating, undetermined pain.
...
It was through her involvement with Achilles that Dodi became interested in riding a hand-cycled wheelchair bike. She is vigorously training in Central Park twice a week, riding approximately six miles and lifting weights, building her strength and endurance as she prepares to “give back” for the greater good, specifically, competing in the Team Lifeline marathon to benefit Camp Simcha Special.
...
Dodi is very excited about the opportunity to give back to Chai Lifeline for all the support and succor they have given her and her family over the past nine years. “Riding this hand-cycle bike gives me a sense of freedom I haven’t known since I was 14, before I got injured twelve years ago. Reaching this point is a milestone for me—I’m literally moving forward with my life.”
...

Continue Reading

  • Currently 0.00/5
Rating: 0.00/5 (0 votes cast)

EPA Air Chief: We Need to Do More to Reduce VMT


by Elana Schor

Obama administration officials "need to align together" to work on reducing the nation's total vehicle miles traveled -- work that should go beyond a pending congressional climate bill -- the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) air-quality chief said today.

GinaMcCarthy.jpgGina McCarthy, EPA's top air pollution regulator. (Photo: CECE)

Gina McCarthy, EPA's assistant administrator for air and radiation, acknowledged in a speech at EMBARQ's transportation conference that her agency as "less effective" working alone on crafting strategies to cut VMT.

McCarthy called for federal agencies to work together on a coordinated approach to transportation policy that makes economic and environmental factors an essential part of the mix.

"When we say transportation, everybody thinks 'car'," McCarthy said. "That's a challenge for us as individuals, as a society -- and clearly it's a challenge for me, as someone who's supposed to deliver clean air to breathe."
...

Continue Reading

  • Currently 0.00/5
Rating: 0.00/5 (0 votes cast)

Your Car Will Not Save Your Planet


by

Today on the Streetsblog Network, member blog Riding in Riverside sets out to explode the myth of the "wundercar" -- a vehicle powered by sustainable fuels that will allow us to hold onto our driving lifestyle and all its accoutrements, while saving the planet and feeling "green."

That kind of futuristic fantasy isn't going to solve our problems, writes the blog's Justin Nelson. The answer, he argues, lies instead in older patterns of development and mobility:

3936973020_bc1a9152e6.jpgThis is not an environmental silver bullet. (Photo: bindermichi via Flickr)
[E]ven if we were to devise a perfect car, one made out of recycled tires and printer paper, one that harnesses photosynthesis to not only be carbon-neutral, but actually make energy from atmospheric C02, even if we could make a car with no direct environmental impact, it would still be an environmental and social disaster. Our waterways are contaminated by engine fluids and lubricants that run off of road surfaces. Our natural groundwater tables are falling because rainwater is unable to penetrate pavement.

Cars still allow sprawling development that eats up wild lands and spits out bland suburbia. Species' ranges in the few precious areas of wilderness that we have are disrupted by highways. We would still live in a society where we shut ourselves off from one another in our own private boxes, promoting inequality and a lack of respect for shared humanity. We would still leave our inner cities to dangle. Our streets would still be unsafe places for children to play, and we would still kill thousands every year in automobile crashes. Alternative fuels are, on a perfect day, a solution to only a few of the myriad problems that cars cause.

On the other hand, instead of pursuing unproven technologies in a desperate last-ditch attempt to hang on to the way of life we've been living for the last 50 or so years, why don't we look ahead and try to build a better world.… Instead of a risky gamble to maintain a failing lifestyle, we should spend our resources on forging a bright future based around principles of city-building as old as cities themselves.

Continue Reading

  • Currently 0.00/5
Rating: 0.00/5 (0 votes cast)

When Cycling isn't Viewed as Transportation


by

This was commented on quite a bit yesterday in the comments of this post, but I wanted to write about anyway. Cyclists have been concerned about ice on the Capital Crescent Trail following the blizzard.

Brian Woodward, Southern Region Division Chief for the Montgomery County Department of Parks, said removing ice and snow on all 75 miles of paved county trails is "not practical." Re-freezing overnight would make the task a daily chore, and the department can't focus solely on the Capital Crescent Trail because "we can't treat one section of trail differently than we treat another."

CCT with snow tunnel Huh? So, if you can't plow all the trails then you can't plow some? That seems odd. Because they do it with roads. Some are Snow Emergency Routes which have unique parking restrictions and get extra attention. Granted, that is in part to ensure that emergency vehicles can reach people, but even after that there is usually a ranking system for streets. Additionally, they already treat the CCT differently as it is the only trail that bike commuters are legally allowed to use after dark. The fact that they have recognized it as an important commuter route is perfect justification to plow the 5.5 miles of trail in Montgomery County (or even the 2.7 miles of paved trail) but leave the others alone.

No one is asking to plow the Blue Mash Trail or the Long Branch Trail and even if they were, you can say no. It's called prioritizing. Governments do it all the time. It's why Dick Cheney got shuttled to an underground bunker  9/11 and I wasn't. If you have some money to clear some trails, and you can't prioritize them, work with the MCBAG (if they still meet; their last agenda online was from 2005) or other bike commuter stakeholders and identify the trails that are a priority. This isn't like locking doors where either you lock them all or it's pointless, it's like losing weight where even getting from 300 to 250 makes things better.

Though the department hasn't determined how much it would cost to plow the trails, he said the recent snowfall is already taking a toll on the department's budget by necessitating workers to work overtime to keep parkways clear of snow.

"We have no idea how much it will cost, but are nonetheless certain that the CCT has a lower benefit to cost ratio than every single street we plow."

Woodward urged trail users to take care in winter months, particularly with the recent cold weather that's preventing ice from melting. Those who use the trail do so at their own risk, he said.

The department hasn't received any reports from trail users about injuries on the trail because of ice this year, he said, though they have received at least one complaint about the conditions, Woodward said. The department has placed a notice of caution on its Web site about winter trail conditions, advising residents that they are unable to shovel, treat, or clear trails within the county park system.

"If you start clearing snow on trails, you give the perception it's going to be a safe and clear passage, and you set yourself up for failure," Woodward said. "I think the best think to do is to let people know they are using it at their own risk."

No the best thing to do is to actually clear the trail. It isn't like this has never been done before. Clearing a trail is technically the same as clearing a road (except you need a smaller vehicle to do it). And lots of other cities manage to do it.

I will once again point out that Arlington, MA plowed the 3.5 miles of the Minuteman Bikeway in its town for the price of $2700 for one year. And I've heard that Massachusetts gets more snow than Bethesda.

I guess one lesson, that Richard Layman hit on, is that when new trails are being proposed/designed, that's a good time to start asking about snow removal. 

Photo by Dan Gross/The Gazette

Continue Reading

  • Currently 0.00/5
Rating: 0.00/5 (0 votes cast)

Friday ride


Friday Morning… 8:00 AM, yes… 8:00 AM… in front of City Hall. We’re going back to beautiful Lake Montebello.

NOAA says partly sunny and high of 48 on Friday… but it’ll be chilly in the morning… Dress warm!

  • Currently 0.00/5
Rating: 0.00/5 (0 votes cast)