Wednesday, December 30, 2009

electric warrior?

Hybrids in more collisions with bikes in cities

Pedestrians and bicyclists have ended up in more crashes with quiet hybrid cars than with typical vehicles with noisy internal combustion engines (ICE). The new National Highway Traffic Safety Administration report, titled "Incidence of Pedestrian and Bicyclist Crashes by Hybrid Electric Passenger Vehicles", studied crashes between pedestrians/cyclists and vehicles finding that the lack of noise for new hybrids was linked to an increase in crashes. These crashes were more prevalent at intersections, interchanges, parking lots and other places where cars traveled at slow speed, the places where the hybrids were most likely to be quietest. It found that hybrids were twice as likely to be in a crash with a pedestrian in these areas.

According to ConsumerReports.org:

NHTSA looked at state-level crash files to compare crash rates on these two types of vehicle engines. Out of 8,387 hybrids 77 (or .9 percent) were involved in crashes with pedestrains. Out of 559,703 conventional vehicles studied, 3,578 (or .6 percent) were involved in crashes with pedestrians. In crashes involving bicyclists, 48 (or almost .6 percent) were involved in crashes with a hybrid vehicle whereas conventional vehicles were implicated in 1,862 (or .3 percent) of crashes.

The study (pdf) found that these incidences were more likely to occur in areas with low speed limits. The hybrids had a higher incidence—two times more likely to have a pedestrian crash—when they were slowing or stopping, backing up, or going in or out of a parking space. Most hybrids employ their electrical motors only at these situations, making these cars eerily quiet. However, there was no difference in rate of pedestrian crashes between these two vehicles when they were going straight.

In 2007, there were 70,000 pedestrians injured and 4,654 deaths due to crashes. A number of organizations, including the National Federation for the Blind, are pushing for legislation that would require all hybrid and electric vehicles to emit a sound. A number of car makers are looking into warning systems, as well.

In the meantime, hybrid drivers need to be aware of their stealthy approach and use extra vigilance and possibly look into installing a backup alert warning device or even a backup camera to be able to see pedestrians and bicyclists around their vehicle. Likewise, pedestrians need to be vigilant as electrified automobiles will become increasingly common.

Friday, December 18, 2009

National Post transit discussion

This article ran in the National Post on 7 December:

When the Toronto Transit Commission announced in November it would hike fares a 25¢ in the new year -- a roughly 10% increase -- it blamed the usual suspects: rising costs of fuel and wages.

The system, said TTC chairman Adam Giambrone, faced a $100-million shortfall in next year's operating budget.

When the bad news broke, the Torontoist.com, compared the inflation of the TTC's 21 fare hikes in the past 30 years against the price of gasoline and against the inflation rate.

Consistently, the analysis found, TTC fares had risen faster than inflation, and far faster than the price of gas. Between 1980 and 2010, the cash fare, adjusted for inflation, soared more than 80% and token prices are up 50%. The price of a litre of unleaded gas? Up about 30%, without inflation. As for wage increases, Statistics Canada reported last year that the median full-time, full-year salary of average Canadians has hardly increased at all since 1980.

Although it is charging more than ever, getting heftier federal, provincial and municipal subsidies than at any time in its history, although fuelling a car is pricier; and though its customer base has never been larger or keener to reduce its carbon footprint, the TTC, the largest system in the country, is struggling as much as ever to stem its losses. If this is the future of public transit, it does not look bright.

As other major systems across the continent strain in similar circumstances, the strategy of public transit system boosters has been to promote the service as an environmental necessity. In the name of Mother Nature, North American transit systems have received billions in subsidies in recent years - even though they were never developed for environmental purposes in the first place.

If the goal is to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, air pollution and gas consumption, and maximize the environmental impact of sustainability spending, we may be better off without publicly funding transit at all.

"Subsidized transit is not sustainable by definition," says Wendell Cox, a transport policy consultant in St. Louis, and former L.A. County Transportation commissioner. "The potential of public transit has been so overblown it's almost scandalous."

It's not that environmentally minded transit promoters are being dishonest when they argue that city buses are more efficient than private cars: It's that they're talking about a fictional world where far more people ride buses. Mass transit vehicles use up roughly the same energy whether they are full or empty, and for much of the time, they're more empty than full.

For the bulk of the day, and on quieter routes, the average city bus usually undoes whatever efficiencies are gained during the few hours a day, on the few routes, where transit is at its peak.

Last year, policy analyst Randal O'Toole ran the numbers for the CATO Institute, where he is a senior fellow, comparing mass transit vehicles to private vehicles, ranking each based on how much energy they consume and how much CO2 they emit. The average motorized city bus, he reports, burns 27% more energy per mile than a private car and emits 31% more pounds of CO2. The U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics confirms that the average city bus requires 20% more energy per passenger than the average car.

"Unfortunately, right now the state of the art is that you're generally better off with private automobiles when you're talking about energy utilization. About the only way that transit can be competitive for energy or for environmental quality is if the transit lines gets an incredible amount of use, far higher than is now normally the case," says Tom Rubin, a transit policy consultant in California, and former chief financial officer of the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. But crowded systems are a turn-off for riders, he says, so more passengers means even more buses and rail cars. "It's almost impossible to make transit more attractive without spending a huge amount of money."

The bus may be the most inefficient part of any major city's transit network, but they're the most vital part. Wider use of subways and light rail relies utterly on a feeder system of buses, says Michael Roschlau, president of the Canadian Urban Transit Association. "You can't just run [Calgary's] C-Train by itself and expect everyone to drive to the stations," he says. "Same thing for the subway in Toronto or Skytrain in Vancouver."

Without buses to carry them from their neighbourhood to the train stations, even fewer citizens would ride the trains, making trains, in turn, less efficient per passenger. Already, when trains, subways and streetcars are combined, the average public transit system is still no more efficient that private cars, according to the CATO study. All transit together does emit less CO2 than passenger cars carrying the same number of people the same distance (about 13% less) but even that gap is disappearing -- fast.

The U.S. Department of Energy's Data Book shows that while transit's energy efficiency has worsened in recent decades -- transit buses today consume 4,315 BTUs per passenger mile, or about 50% more energy than in 1980 -- the trend in cars has been the opposite direction: Today's cars are already nearly 20% more efficient than they were 25 years ago, down from 4,348 BTUs per passenger mile in 1980 to 3,514 in 2007.

The environmental case for public transit is falling just as fast, now that hybrid cars are achieving mass market status, with 65 models set to hit North American roads next year, Chevrolet planning to launch its electric Volt by 2011 and manufacturers rolling out super-high efficiency vehicles. In the next few years especially, the average energy consumption of passenger vehicles, and their emission levels, will only improve, with projections by the International Council on Clean Transportation showing the average auto could beat all public transit modes for efficiency and CO2 within the next five years.

"At this point, a Toyota Prius is less greenhouse-intensive than New York City Transit," Mr. Cox says. "Whatever advantage that transit has at the moment is going away very quickly."

Once eco-conscious urbanites realize the bus is worse for the planet than cars, they'll have little reason to keep riding, making transit's comparative per-passenger environmental footprint look even worse. And while transit system operators talk of "greening" their fleet, the fact is they face substantial limits. Whatever green gains transit can make, automobiles can probably do better, Mr. Rubin says.

When the federal government, the B.C. government and BC Transit revealed plans to run 20 hydrogen-powered buses in Whistler, B.C., in February for the Olympics, even the hard-green David Suzuki Foundation balked at the preposterous $2-million-per-bus price tag -- four times the price of a standard diesel -- arguing that the money would have been better spent on traditional transit initiatives, which "are on life support as far as the financial needs go," Ian Bruce, the group's climate-change campaigner, said.

He's surely right about the pointlessness of what will amount to a four-year, $90-million showpiece of technology not even remotely realistic for actual, financially strapped public transit systems.

And more money for diesel-powered buses may be hardly more worthwhile: The fact is that despite best efforts of transit planners and funding governments, and surveys showing a public keen on environmentalism, most commuters simply will not, or cannot, ride.

Last year's census data confirmed that the vast majority of Canadians have little use for transit. Just 216,000 more people rode at least once than did in 2001, a half-a-percentage increase, but that's actually a decrease relative to the 5.4% population growth over the same period. At the same time, Statistics Canada shows that operating costs for Canadian transit system has ballooned, up 30% from $3.7-billion in 2003 to $4.8-billion in 2007. In the United States, public transit's market share for travel has fallen by a third since 1980, from 1.5% to 1% in 2005. If anything were to get people out of their cars to stand at a bus stop, it would be the severe pain of soaring gas prices. But even as fuel in the United States. approached the unseen price of $4 a gallon in 2008, public transit ridership rose a mere 3.3%.

Transit boosters insist that we must go further, and redesign our cities to support transit systems. "Our cities continue to approve the suburban sorts of development that are very difficult to serve using public transit," Stephen Hazell, executive director of the Sierra Club of Canada, told reporters upon release of last year's disappointing ridership data. But the thousands of delivery trucks, taxi drivers, emergency vehicles, service trucks, car-bound workers and buses mean even high-density cities will keep needing highways, ring roads, bridges and flyovers. Meanwhile the massive cost of overhauling cities is just more billions to address an automobile environmental problem that is already on the way to resolving itself -- money that might be better, and more effectively deployed toward other earth-friendly measures, such as reducing traffic congestion.

A congestion charge toll implemented in Stockholm in 2007, for instance, reduced CO2 emissions in that city by roughly 16% last year, cut traffic by 18%, and, because it exempts low-emissions vehicles, led to a tripling of purchases of so-called green cars. Best of all, it sustains itself.

More roads, and more efficient roads, still won't address public transit's original, non-environmental purpose: providing mobility for citizens who lack their own. But where public transit is absent, or impractical, solutions for the small minority totally lacking other means have readily sprung up. Ridesharing applications for smart phones -- users enter their location and desired destination and a cost-conscious carpooler responds -- are already in wide use, Mr. Rubin says. Self-sustaining, small-scale private jitney systems have successfully operated for years in Atlantic City and Puerto Rico (all North America's early public transit systems were privately operated until they were nationalized). And with billions freed up from public transit funds, it appears entirely feasible to simply offer subsidized Prius taxis, or even car subsidies, to the small portion of the public entirely reliant on public mobility. A study last year by HDR Decision Economics, commissioned by the Canadian Urban Transit Association, found that Canada's public systems will need $78-billion more in infrastructure spending and $3.6-billion in annual subsidies to reach optimum capacity. For that kind of money, Canadian governments could, if they wanted, hand out $16,000 car or taxi allowances to every single Canadian who rides transit even casually, and still have $50-billion left over at the end of the decade. That plan wouldn't please the public unions and other transit-reliant lobbies pressing for more green-related transit funding. But it would relieve Canadians from having to perpetually prop up a system that's increasingly unsustainable -- financially and environmentally.

National Post

klibin@nationalpost.

Kudos to letter writer Patrick Condon for writing this response:

Re: Save The Environment: Don't Take Transit, Kevin Libin, Dec. 7.

Kevin Libin gets it all wrong. He uses average transit ridership figures from cities in the United States that are falling from a market share of 1.5% of all trips to 1% of all trips. If you have ever been to Atlanta or Phoenix you can see why. In the Vancouver area, however, transit trips to work increased from 16%t oover 17% during the same period, seventeen times more trips per capita than in sprawling U.S. cities.

More misleading still is the claim from the Cato Institute that a Toyota Prius produces less greenhouse gas per passenger mile than a diesel bus. But for this to happen (according to analysis by the University of British Columbia Design Centre), the Prius would have to have five people in it and the diesel bus no more than 10. I don't remember ever seeing a bus with less than ten people in it, or a Prius with more than two, do you?

Professor Patrick M. Condon, University of British Columbia, James Taylor Chair in Landscape and Liveable Environments, Vancouver.

This letter went unpublished:

While Kevin Libin is entirely correct to challenge the generally uncontested conclusion that public transit is necessarily clean and efficient, he draws some unjustified conclusions based on some statistical sleight of hand. First, his comparisons present a distorted picture: on the one hand, he compares the per kilometre transportation cost between cars and public transit while on the other hand, he compares the energy consumption per passenger between cars and city buses. Far more costly light rail, included in the cost comparison, is excluded from the energy comparison, where the higher cost pays dividends, using less energy than the buses he identifies. Furthermore, the per kilometre cost referenced in the first figure is based on amortising all kilometres driven by the total cost incurred. This does not accurately represent the cost associated with driving in a grid-locked metropolis. In this regard, I commend Libin for his praise for Stockholm's congestion charge toll, though it is worth noting that Stockholm's official report indicates that the majority of diverted car occupants opted for public transit over the purchase of a low-emission vehicle.

Second, the graph that compares CO2 emissions per passenger mile is similarly misleading. On consulting the CATO policy analysis referenced, it is evident that the vehicle fuel efficiencies used are the ideal values from the American Environmental Protection Agency which represent driving new cars (this study used the 2008 model years) under ideal city conditions which do not represent typical, rush-hour city driving. However, the transit values used are the actual energy consumption values from the Federal Transit Administration. Furthermore, as rail runs on electricity, it is only as clean as its source. The translation of energy consumption to CO2 emissions for this study is based on the 2006 U.S. State energy profiles though CATO did not elaborate on how it selected a value of CO2 emissions per unit energy produced. While we are certainly stuck with decades old electricity plants, sources including nuclear, hydro, solar, and wind offer the potential to reduce these emissions numbers to zero. The vehicles in question may have been built in 2008, but the power plants certainly were not.

It is important that the viability of public transit options be examined, but, as a starting point, I believe that better-researched studies should be employed.

Yours sincerely,
N Ellens

roads sinking Hamilton into debt pothole

Hamilton councillors are taking a wait-and-see view of capital projects

Kevin Werner, News Staff
Published on Dec 11, 2009

Hamilton’s skyrocketing debt has prompted councillors to curtail its 2010 capital budget, despite the city’s deteriorating infrastructure problems that amount to over $60 million every year.

Councillors approved a 0.5 per cent increase, or $2.9 million, in capital spending for 2010, and reserved the right to bump it up to one per cent, or $5.8 million before the budget is approved early next year. The 2009 capital budget was set at $77.5 million. With a one per cent approval, the budget will jump to $83.3 million. The increase to the capital budget will remain until council decides to remove it.

The difference is that for a full one per cent, there will be an additional $4 million for road construction, instead of $40 million that would be allotted under a 0.5 per cent budget. For that extra $4 million, an additional $6 million will be added to this year debt, making it $34.2 million.

The city’s overall consolidated debt is expected to balloon from $590 million in 2010 to $810 million in 2011. The city’s debt is expected to reach a high of $1.26 billion in 2017 before dropping slightly in 2018 and 2019.

“We are caught between a rock and a hard place,” said Robert Rossini, the city’s corporate services general manager.

Despite its high debt and the potential for the city’s credit level to affect how it finances projects, Hamilton still desperately needs to spend on infrastructure projects, Rossini said. Hamilton’s infrastructure deficit for major projects is projected to be about $62 million each year for the next 10 years.

Just under half of Hamilton’s capital budget will be directed to road construction. Money will also be used for park acquisition and development, economic development proposals and waterfront development.

A few of the projects proposed for next year include $21 million for the West Mountain Recreation Centre, $15.4 million for city hall renovations, $13 million for the Stoney Creek recreation centre, $11.7 million for the Trinity Church Arterial Corridor to open up the North Glanbrook Industrial Park, $10.3 million to twin the Morgan Firestone Arena and improvements to Woodward and York roads, and Randle Reef rehabilitation.

Mayor Fred Eisenberger urged councillors to accept the extra 1 per cent funding for infrastructure. He said both the federal and provincial governments are looking at how the city pays its share of infrastructure projects.

“Some time we will have to get our heads around that the federal and provincial governments will not fund our infrastructure,” he said. “We need to keep pace. This signals to other governments we are doing our bit.”

He said there have been complaints made by provincial officials that Hamilton has used provincial and federal monies to cut its taxes rather than direct the money to needed capital projects.

Stoney Creek councillor Maria Pearson, who supported the one per cent, said her greatest fear is the potential for safety problems for residents who are injured due to the city’s crumbling sidewalks and roads.

Ward 1 Councillor Brian McHattie suggested councillors wait early next year when councillors have more information about the city’s financial situation.

Councillors are scheduled to approve the 2010 budget at the end of February.

“I’d like more time to understand our situation,” he said.

http://www.dundasstarnews.com/news/article/196907

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Stockholm's congestion tax

http://www.stockholm.se/PageFiles/70349/Sammanfattning%20eng%20090918_.pdf

This report details the findings of Stockholm's decision to implement a congestion tax on vehicles entering the city from
beyond a cordon during certain hours, similar to that in London, England.


C02 emissions fell, transit ridership increased, and low-emission vehicle purchases increased
(as they are exempt from the tax).

Thursday, December 3, 2009

US Highways Increasingly More Subsidized

Original link: http://www.subsidyscope.com/transportation/highways/funding/

Interesting - this study shows that the US highway system is more subsidized than both GO Transit (80% fare revenue) and the TTC. (70%)


Analysis Finds Shifting Trends in Highway Funding: User Fees Make Up Decreasing Share

The way America's roads are funded is changing. Revenues that predominantly come from users of roads (“user fees”), including fuel taxes, vehicle registration fees and tolls, pay for a decreasing share of road costs. Taxes and fees not directly related to highway use (“non-user fees”) and bonds are making up the difference.

Using Federal Highway Administration statistics, Subsidyscope has calculated that in 2007, 51 percent of the nation's $193 billion set aside for highway construction and maintenance was generated through user fees—down from 10 years earlier when user fees made up 61 percent of total spending on roads. The rest came from other sources, including revenue generated by income, sales and property taxes, as well as bond issues.


Source: Highway Statistics, forms HF-10 and HF-210, Federal Highway Administration.

Going back further, the trend is more pronounced. Forty years ago, user fees amounted to 71 percent of revenues spent on roads. Today, user fee revenue as a share of total highway-related funds is at an all-time low since the Interstate Highway System was created in 1957. A complete data set of highway revenue by source is available for download. In 2007, non-user revenues contributed $70 billion to the highway system. By comparison, this contribution totaled $26 billion in 1967 (in 2007 dollars).

Not all user fees collected are made available for highway purposes. Of the 18.4 cent per gallon federal tax on gasoline, 2.86 cents are allocated specifically for mass transit projects. Another 0.1 cent per gallon is used to pay for environmental cleanup resulting from leaking fuel storage tanks. From 1990 to 1997, the federal government also set aside a portion of taxes on gasoline, diesel and other fuels to reduce budget deficits.

However, even if those funds were fully devoted to highways, total user fee revenue accounted for only 65 percent of all funds set aside for highways in 2007, according to Subsidyscope calculations. This is down from 84 percent in 1997 and 77 percent in 1967. Subsidyscope provides a complete data set of user fee revenues and allocations for download.

Various factors account for the shift in funding away from users fees. Fuel taxes lose their buying power unless adjusted to keep pace with rising highway construction and maintenance costs. The amount of federal fuel tax allocated to highway purposes has not increased since 1997 and states have had trouble increasing fuel taxes to keep up with inflation. Further, changes in driving patterns and fuel consumption can lead to unexpected dips and peaks in user revenues. For instance, increases in fuel prices at the pump can cause vehicle owners to cut back on driving, reducing revenues. Similarly, changes in vehicle efficiency can reduce revenues available from fuel taxes while vehicle usage remains constant.

Another major funding source for roads is borrowing through bond measures, which made up almost 13 percent of highway funds available in 2007. This number has fluctuated over the years. Moreover, the use of bonds to fund roads varies widely from state to state. Subsidyscope considers bonds separately from user fees and other revenue because it is not clear which sources of revenues will be used to repay the bonds.

In addition to a decline in user fee revenue, federal dollars have gradually declined as a share of total highway funding. As a result, state and local governments have taken on a higher share of road costs and are increasingly reliant on alternative sources of revenue.

All data are from Highway Statistics, forms HF-10 and HF-210, Federal Highway Administration. All figures adjusted for inflation using the Engineering News Record Construction Cost Index.

Updated November 25, 2009

Monday, November 30, 2009

Time for the TTC to get smart cards

http://v1.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/GAM.20091128.GEE28ART1710/TPStory/TPComment

Marcus Gee
28 November 2009
The Globe and Mail

Time for the TTC to get smart cards

To pay your fare on a Toronto subway is to step into a bygone era. You approach the grumpy guy in his little glass cubicle and drop some coins into a little glass box, just as your father or grandfather once did. Or you put a little metal token into a slot in a turnstile. The sole concession to the 21st century is a slide reader for the Metropass. The basic system has remained the same since the Beatles were playing Hamburg.

There has to be a better way - and there is. Cities from Shanghai to Atlanta use a microchipped miracle called the smart card that does everything from getting you on the subway to paying for your fried-chicken takeout. While Toronto ponders the idea, it is already old hat in many places.

Hong Kong's Mass Transit Railway introduced its Octopus smart card in 1997. Riders simply wave it past an electronic reader at the turnstile. A computer deducts the cost of the ride from the monetary value in the card's microchip. Riders can recharge their cards at an easy-to-use machine. They can even use them to pay for groceries or movies.

In North America alone, at least 17 cities have smart-card systems in operation or in the works. Chicago discontinued tokens and took sales agents out of their booths a decade ago. Today riders can reload their Chicago Card Plus online. Seoul transit's T-money can be embedded in stuffed animals, key chains or cell phones. Four out of five riders on London transit use the blue Oyster card, allowing the system to redeploy many ticket takers to other jobs.

The TTC swears we are going to get smart cards too - in a few years, if it can find the money. But, like so many things in this city, the idea has been kicked around and around and nothing ever seems to happen. The TTC has shrugged off the Ontario government's PRESTO smart-card system, which is rolling out for GO Transit and other systems but will appear in the TTC only as a pilot project.

Why the hesitation? Cost is one answer. The estimated price tag has risen from about $140-million a decade back to $450-million today. That's a lot of money for a network that has just raised fares to help cover a $100-million budget shortfall. On the other hand, it pales beside the $10-billion budgeted for new light-transit lines to the suburbs.

The TTC also claims it already has a functioning fare-collection system that does not cry out for immediate replacement - the turnstiles turn, the tokens come out of the machines. Functioning, perhaps, but hardly consistent with a modern transit network. Look at the mess over token hoarding in advance of the fare increase. It wouldn't happen with a smart card.

Smart cards have many other advantages. Riders no longer have to line up for tickets or tokens. And they can board buses or streetcars through several exits, waving their card past a reader as they enter. Bus and streetcar drivers no longer have to check every rider, which reduces dangerous disputes with suspected fare dodgers. Transit systems can track how many people travel, where and when, allowing planners to add more buses to overcrowded routes and stop sending empty buses past deserted stops. They can also bring in new pricing systems, charging riders for how far they travel or when they travel. New York is looking at a smart-card system that would charge riders less in off-peak hours, easing the rush-hour crush.

The former head of the Chicago Transit Authority, Frank Kruesi, once said that to succeed, transit systems have to overcome defeatist attitudes that lead to stagnation and decay - just the sort of decay that has afflicted our own system in recent decades. The best way to do that, he said, is to embrace innovations that make the transit experience easier and more enjoyable, changing people from mere riders into valued customers. The smart card is the ideal way to kick start that change. Bring it on.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

walk don't talk

No walk in the park
A hands-free cellphone makes crossing street riskier: studies


Toronto Star

(Nov 19, 2009)

It may be the modern version of walking and chewing gum at the same time.

But walking and talking on a hands-free cellphone is a lot riskier, according to researchers at the University of Illinois.

Two new studies found that pedestrians engaged in hands-free cellphone conversations had more difficulty navigating traffic and ran a higher risk of getting hit by a vehicle.

"We assume that walking is very automatic, and it is," said lead researcher Art Kramer, a professor of psychology and neuroscience.

"But walking while scanning for pedestrians and cyclists and other vehicles is less automatic."

Add a Bluetooth-style earpiece and it makes too many distractions to manage safely.

Listening to iPods, however, did not increase danger, Kramer said.

The first study, published in the current edition of the journal Accident Analysis and Prevention, involved 36 young adults walking on a treadmill in a virtual streetscape.

Those walking while they talked on a hands-free cellphone took 25 per cent longer to cross the street than peers without phones. They were also more likely to take longer than the 30 seconds designated for crossing.

The second study, involving adults aged 60 and older walking in the simulator, showed more striking differences.

Those on phones were hit by virtual vehicles 15 per cent more often and fell more frequently, Kramer said in an interview.

That study has not yet been published.

Neither group showed increased safety risks while listening to music, even though many members of the older group didn't use iPods regularly.

Kramer, an expert on driver distraction, says that's because listening to familiar music doesn't demand the same attention and concentration as engaging in a conversation.

He said the studies provide more evidence in the quest to understand the real-world impact of humans multitasking using technology.

Kramer's bottom line: Pedestrians should think twice about when and where they use their cellphones.

"I wouldn't if I was walking across a busy street in Manhattan."

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

rapid talk

LRT route needs more debate, councillors say

Emma Reilly, The Hamilton Spectator
(Nov 11, 2009)

City councillors whose wards surround a proposed rapid transit route say there needs to be more debate and public education about the plans.

Preliminary plans for the rapid transit route include a two-way line running down the centre of King Street, a pedestrian-only area downtown, and restrictions on parking and left turns along the entire Eastgate-to-McMaster line.

The city predicts businesses will flourish along the RT route and foot traffic will increase.

Metrolinx is expected to announce if it will fund a rapid transit line for Hamilton early next year.

Councillor Bob Bratina, whose downtown ward includes a proposed pedestrian-only stretch along King Street, said he's worried about the tolerance for change of this magnitude in Hamilton.

"I'll support what needs to be done, but we don't want to lose the public enthusiasm on this," he said.

Councillor Bernie Morelli said he's "not so sure the final solution is on the table."

Councillor Sam Merulla said he's a "strong proponent" of RT, but called for "a thorough and complete public consultation process to examine the concerns of both business and residents prior to finalizing the design."

Councillor Brian McHattie said Hamiltonians will adjust to any traffic constraints created by the RT line.

"You have to make these kinds of choices. If people think we're going to get LRT and it's going to be business as usual, they're wrong."

Jill Stephen, the city's director of strategic and environmental planning, said there will be public information sessions and open houses after the Metrolinx decision. In the meantime, she's happy to make presentations to community groups.

Councillor Chad Collins said initial reactions from many businesses in his ward were negative.

Dave Serwatuk, who owns a car wash, a tanning salon and a Little Caesar's restaurant on King Street and Queenston Road, is an example.

"I don't serve people in my immediate area," he said. "People stop by because it's on their regular route. They'll see there's no access and they'll drive by."

Nicholas Kevlahan, co-founder of the citizens' group Hamilton Light Rail, said though LRT will cause some initial headaches, the long-term benefits and economic gains far outweigh the costs.

"It's a bit the same as when people complain about potholes on the road, then complain about the construction that arises," he said.

ereilly@thespec.com

905-526-2452



http://thespec.com/News/Local/article/670379

transit expansion report

CATCH Articles:

Study says HSR should be expanded

Nov 09, 2009

A comprehensive operational review says the HSR needs to add ten to fifteen buses a year to achieve the city’s transit goals. It also suggests ways to improve Hamilton’s transit system and offers ideas on modifying existing bus routes and service frequencies.

The year long study by IBI Group was commissioned by the city and tracked ridership at all 2264 stops on the HSR’s 32 routes and compared the results to other communities. A summary was given verbally to councillors in a slide presentation on October 29, but the full document has not yet been made public.

The slides say that the HSR is “performing well … given financial and other constraints” but warn councillors that “there are no magic bullets to grow transit ridership without incurring increased costs”. The consultants argue strongly that more spending is what is required.

“A paradigm shift is needed in city thinking and decision making to make transit a priority,” said IBI presenter Brian Hollingsworth. “The HSR is at a crossroads. All policies and plans call for continued growth, but continued financial constraints are a barrier.”

Hollingsworth pointed to the Vision 2020 goal of 100 rides per person per annum by 2020, and the target of the city transportation master plan to reduce vehicle use by 20 percent by 2030. The provincial and federal governments are also supporting transit improvements with gas tax monies.

He noted that HSR ridership is currently at 45 rides per capita per year, down from 47 in 2008. To achieve the 100 target “would require a doubling of service hours and associated funding increases”.

“HSR should be adding 10-15 buses per year to meet this target by 2021,” says the summary, but notes that “concentrating future population and employment in existing transit corridors and other transit supportive policies can reduce the need for service expansion” in meeting city targets. These policies include promoting infill and higher density, reducing parking requirements, and “controlling sprawl of commercial (i.e. big-box) development”.

The study also contends there are good reasons to improve transit services including the “high cost of owning and operating private automobiles” and the fact that gas tax funding for the city “is tied to demonstrated progress on ridership growth.” It also notes that transit promotes economic development because “increasingly companies are seeking to locate in cities that have high levels of transit accessibility.”

While praising the overall efficiency of the HSR, IBI notes that average fares are low because of the large number of riders getting discounted or free trips. They calculate that “44 percent of all passengers have a discounted fare other than an adult monthly pass” and note that “free boardings for persons with personal mobility devices are potentially subject to abuse.”

Reducing this fare “leakage,” IBI suggests, could be an alternative to fare increases. And they urge “discounts for social programs should be treated as such and not funded entirely from the HSR budget.”

Other ideas for savings include “implementing transit priority in the King-Main corridor” which IBI calculates could significantly reduce the number of required buses – each of which costs the HSR $300,000 a year to operate.
Maps in the presentation show possible changes to bus routes and service frequencies as “for discussion”. At the request of city staff the IBI findings have been referred to the transit department for review and a future report to committee of the whole.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Gridlock costs GTA billions a year: OECD

Gridlock costs GTA billions a year: OECD
Lost productivity putting brakes on growth

TORONTO — Traffic congestion in the Toronto region costs Canada $3.3 billion in lost productivity a year, the result of urban sprawl, decades of underinvestment in public transit by Ottawa and a disjointed system, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development says.

In a first-of-its-kind review of the region’s economy, the OECD said transit service in the Toronto Census Metropolitan Area has not kept pace with population growth, with 71 per cent of commuters still dependent on the automobile — one of the highest rates of car use among cities in the organization’s 30 member countries.

The result is air pollution, some of the longest commutes among OECD countries, and “a direct hit on productivity,” especially in economic sectors that depend on rapid delivery such as retail, logistics and food.

A pair of minor accidents on Hwy 403 east in Hamilton brought the morning commute to a near standstill for more than an hour today. A fender-bender near the Hwy 6 exit and a rollover between King Street and York Boulevard backed up eastbound traffic as far as Fiddler's Green. It was a perfect example of how even minor problems have major effects.

To curb traffic jams, the Toronto region should consider measures such as toll lanes, local fuel and parking taxes, and a Singapore-style congestion charge in which roads in the city centre and major routes such as the 400-series highways would be subject to fees that vary according to peak hours, the OECD says.

Although the Toronto region is one of Canada’s “chief economic powerhouses,” the report says the area’s gross domestic product per capita is middling compared to other OECD countries, while its rate of labour productivity is lower than most U.S. and European cities with comparable income levels, the report says.

That’s due in part to the decline in manufacturing jobs, weak investment in innovation, a failure to capitalize on the skills of its immigrant population and a lagging regional transport network, the 200-page report notes.

Toronto Mayor David Miller said the OECD identified several concerns long expressed by Canada’s mayors, including the need for a national transit strategy and revenues that grow with the economy.

“The OECD report makes it clear that if Ontario and Canada are to thrive, its largest urban centre a must not be taken for granted,” he said.




http://thespec.com/News/CanadaWorld/article/669904

The Rapid Transit Squeeze - The Spec, 10 Nov 09


The Hamilton Spectator

(Nov 10, 2009)

Rapid transit and traffic are competing for limited space on city streets. The city is beginning to map out how rapid transit will operate in Hamilton, revealing dramatic impacts on the way traffic moves along the entire east-west corridor.

Potential changes include the creation of a pedestrian mall in the downtown core and conversion of King Street to two-way traffic with restrictions on left turns from Eastgate to McMaster.

According to a new report, Hamilton will see two rapid transit (RT) lines running along the centre of King Street -- one eastbound, one westbound. These plans are in place whether the city receives light rail or buses. That decision is expected from transportation authority Metrolinx in January.

The heaviest impact will be downtown, where the proposal sees the International Village area of King Street closed to traffic. Vehicles will be routed away from King Street at Wellington Street to either Main, Cannon or Wilson streets, then merge back onto King in a proposed "transition zone" between Mary and John streets.

Drivers could lose on-street parking and loading zones from Eastgate Square to McMaster University, and face restrictions on left turns along the entire route.

Cars won't be allowed to cross the centre lanes in order to maintain the speed of RT and to ensure the safety of motorists.

That means residents and owners and employees of businesses along King Street will only be able to make right turns in and out of their driveways. Left turns and U-turns will only be permitted at traffic lights.

The city chose median RT lines because they ultimately offer traffic more freedom than curbside RT, said Jill Stephen, director of strategic and environmental planning. Since there would be the same restrictions on cars crossing the RT tracks or lanes, curbside RT would mean side streets and driveways would have to be dead-ended.

Stephen says she's aware city residents will need time to adjust to the proposed plan.

"Change can be difficult, but there are lots of good reasons for this change," she said.

News of the traffic restrictions came as a surprise to Councillor Chad Collins. He first heard of the plan at an information update for council members in late October.

Since then, he says, he's been discussing the plans with businesses in his ward and reactions haven't been positive. Few businesses he spoke to were even aware of the direction of the RT plans.

"I'd like to see a system that the community can support," he said. "I'd hate to see a design that turns people off of LRT to the point that they don't want it."

Manny Rebelo, the general manager and soon-to-be owner of Swiss Chalet on Queenston Road, says he's worried about how the traffic restrictions will affect his business.

"It could slow down our service, certainly to delivery guests, and of course our patrons will suffer as well because it will be very inconvenient for them."

Denninger's spokesperson Norm Legault said he's very concerned about plans to close King Street -- the eatery and food store is in the middle of the proposed pedestrian zone.

"I would say this worries us," he said after hearing of the plans for the first time yesterday.

"I don't think that would be in the best business interest for this location."

ereilly@thespec.com

905-526-2452