FoS.blog: The Friends of Seattle blog

State Sen. Stevens Wants All Toll Revenue to Fund Highways, Not Transit

This is a bad idea:

Senate Joint Resolution 8207 (Requiring that  toll revenues be used exclusively for highway purposes)
Introduced by Sen. Val Stevens, (R-Arlington) (R) on January 15, 2009, proposes an amendment to the state Constitution to include toll revenues in the defined fees to be used exclusively for highway purposes.
http://www.washingtonvotes.org/Legislation.aspx?ID=69856

Posted on January 16, 2009 at 09:37 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Reminder: Tomorrow Is the Sound Transit Expansion Plan Q & A

Tuesday, Sept. 9, 5:30PM
McLeod Residence at (2209 2nd Ave, Belltown)

Have questions on the Sound Transit expansion plan that will be on your November ballot? So do we. That's why we've put together a question and answer session with Sound Transit's Executive Director of Policy, Planning and Public Administration, Ric Ilgenfritz.

Please join Friends of Seattle for an in-depth look at this proposed investment in our bus and rail system. We promise - this is not a lecture. We're going to cut Ric off after 15 minutes and let you ask the questions.

$10 suggested donation includes a drink.

Questions? Contact Anna Boone. We hope to see you there!

Posted on September 08, 2008 at 12:55 PM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

D.C. Launches Its Own Bike-Sharing Program

Because we support bike-sharing programs, we thought you might like to know that D.C. has launched a bike-sharing program of its own:

Apparently a bike-sharing program was also implemented for the Democratic Convention in Denver, and Ron Sims has reported that a bike-sharing program is currently being planned for King County. Yes, please!

Posted on September 02, 2008 at 11:48 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

The City Needs Bike Boulevards

We're not always fond of traffic calming techniques. Our reasoning is that traffic calming often makes a street near-useless for any purpose other than neighborhood parking. If the City is going to impose traffic calming on so many streets, at least it could do what Portland does and make the traffic-calmed streets useful for other purposes, like biking:

Happily, the Bicycle Master Plan provides for bicycle boulevards of Seattle's own. Unhappily, the Plan calls for only 18.1 miles of bicycle boulevards. More! More! More!

Posted on July 10, 2008 at 11:24 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Times Editorial Board Applauds Metro Fare Increase

The Seattle Times editorial board likes the $0.25 Metro fare increase.

A 25-cent bump in adult fares on Metro Transit will help keep buses rolling and routes expanding. That is worth an extra two bits.

The King County bus system is not immune to the same soaring fuels costs that helped fill bus seats with a record number of passengers. County Executive Ron Sims has a stark choice: raise rates in October or cut service.

We agree with the Times's conclusions. But again, soaring transit-ridership numbers suggest that Seattle needs more than light rail to Northgate and streetcar lines in the city center. Better, expanded bus service would help too. Doug McDonald has some great ideas for improving local bus service, but we don't necessarily endorse his assessment of Sound Transit.

Posted on July 07, 2008 at 11:55 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Because of High Gas Prices, Ex-Suburbanites Might Flock to Cities

From today's Seattle Times.

A Portland economist predicts that buyers soon will choose where to live based on what they would spend for gasoline.

That, eventually, will devalue suburban housing while strengthening in-city home prices, says Joe Cortright, whose Portland consulting firm, Impresa, recently released a report saying as much to U.S. mayors.

"The new calculus of higher gas prices may have permanently reshaped urban housing markets," said Cortright, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a nonprofit Washington, D.C., think tank. "What this really means is that as people move, they're going to look for places that enable them to drive shorter distances and avoid places where they have to drive a lot.

One little problem: Seattle isn't prepared. Whether it's our inadequate alternative-transportation infrastructure or our ugly multifamily housing neighborhoods, Seattle can and should do better. That's why Sound Transit expansion, streetcar network expansion, and the multifamily housing zoning code are issues we're closely tracking.

Posted on July 07, 2008 at 08:24 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Commuters Are Choosing to Bike More, But Seattle's Cycling Infrastructure Isn't Keeping Up

So reports the Seattle Times. Maybe it's just the nice weather. But bicycle shops are reporting huge sales boosts, and we've noticed more bicyclists on the streets recently.

The City's Bicycle Master Plan will provide more infrastructure for bicyclists:

With a bike advocate in Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels, city officials have approved a Bicycle Master Plan to promote commuting and recreational riding, via a network of bike lanes and trails. Nickels has said he wants to triple the use of bicycles in the city within a decade.

The Bicycle Master Plan identifies a goal of 143 miles of bike lanes by 2016 (there are currently 31 miles), along with making bike lanes at intersections more noticeable. The Seattle Department of Transportation counted 2,273 cyclists riding into downtown on one day last September during the morning rush hour.

That's great, but what we really want to see are more separated bike planes:

That we could get behind.

Posted on July 06, 2008 at 03:38 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Paris Planning New Electric Car Sharing Program

After posting about municipal bike sharing progams, we came across CoolTown Studios' post about a new electric car sharing program in Paris.

Zipcar is great, but Paris's Autolib program seems better. It's car sharing 2.0. Not only are the cars electric, but the computerized system allows users to park the cars at any drop-off point (700 of them!) and then, after completing the trip's purpose, to pick up a different car. This system would allow for more efficient use of the cars and the city's curb space. With Zipcar's system, in contrast, the cars just sit there unused when the driver doesn't need it, and the cars are more tethered to their parking spots.

Hey City of Seattle, why let Paris have all the fun?

Posted on July 05, 2008 at 01:23 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Bike Sharing and So Can Seattle

Barcelona:

Read more about the Barcelona program.

Corporate-sponsored program in Vancouver, BC:

Paris:

Read more about the Paris program.

Bring this to Seattle, please!

UPDATE: Portland is struggling to get its own bike-sharing program off the ground. (Via Planetizen)

Posted on July 05, 2008 at 12:54 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Americans Continue to Drive Less, Take Transit More

An amazing graph in the Times:

With our buses and commuter trains full, these irreversible trends beg the question: how are we going to invest in what people are demanding -- transit? Sound Transit expansion, without more, is not enough to meet our needs.

Posted on July 05, 2008 at 12:16 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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