Showing posts with label transit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transit. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Let`s fix this mess.. Chicoutimi style


Saarbrücken transit system, April 2003;
timed cross-platform interchange



Sent: Tuesday, October 11, 2005 7:26 PM
Subject: Let`s fix this mess.. Chicoutimi style (Nov11)


Yo guys,
I thought I'd call on you for your knowledge far and wide.

Alright, I'm trying to get a campaign together at the University for bus passes. There are a small number of students(over 3000) and a large number of parking spaces (1600). Not only that the transit system for the community at large is slim. They neeeeeed this deal, and it just so happens I snaked my way into the environmental commitee at the university and I will try to propose it as a staple campaign.

Ok, number one do you know any info about both campaigns in your schools (guelph and Mac, dunno about queens)?

Number two: did you have a referendum?

Number three: how much was the payment for one semester versus the payment for a bus pass for a month?

Number four: if you got any suggestions let me know.

cheers
aj

hi andy and friends,

i think the HSR got in touch with mcmaster and made the proposal -- they were very short on funds at the time, and were looking for a cash injection, which 15,000 students could easily supply. there was indeed a referendum at the school, but only after the bus pass program had been in place for a year. students who were paying for parking passes felt that it was unfair that they should pay for a bus pass they "wouldn't use", and so they organized a referendum. i imagine that you want to approach the issue from the other side, ie: have a referendum to get the program in place. as for the cost, i think it was $57 for an 8 month pass through the school, which at the time was the price of a monthly adult HSR pass. it's probably up around $70 or something now. i think the graduate student pass was closer to $90 ($101 now), as grad students get a 12 month bus pass instead of the undergrad 8.

the issue i'm wondering about is whether students will support the program if they know that chicoutimi bus service is bad, they will not support paying for the pass. if somehow you can convince the bus line to improve service along "student" routes, then the students might be convinced to back the plan.

i'm going to post this stuff on my web site, which maybe we can use as a forum for this project.

ps: the picture link above takes you to a McGill website to which you might want to extend this project. maybe you could see if they have any experience with the (admittedly different) situation in montréal.

Q x

Monday, September 19, 2005

Go Car Free, even for one Day



There has been a rising awareness of the impact that our transportation choices are having on ourselves and the world in which we live. Over the twentieth century, we got quite a bit of an addiction to the combustion engine. The speed, power, and comfort (read: laziness) which cars promote have allowed modern civilization to become almost hopelessly addicted to this little marvel of engineering. A lot has come as a result: increased productivity, a much higher degree of personal and collective mobility, long commutes to work which keep parents away from their kids, roadrage-inducing traffic jams, air pollution which kills thousands of Canadians every year, dwindling oil supplies which might be required for more important purposes (ie: food production; everything plastic in your life; electricity), and a vast increase in climate change caused by human activities.

With this in mind, we should celebrate September 22nd for what it really means. International Car Free Day was started in France in 1998, and like a stalled SUV going downhill has been growing in momentum ever since. It’s not a difficult concept to follow. Bus, ride, walk, blade – do whatever it takes to get around without resorting to the family car. If you work in an outlying or suburban area, organize a car pool for the day, which hopefully you can make permanent.

This week will see a wealth of car free activities in the city. Following in the popularity of Toronto’s "Open Your Streets" festivals, today should see a number of street parties throughout the city. Throughout in the week, numerous trips were held in which historians and local politicians led tours of the harbour, Webster’s Falls, and the city’s historic sites. If you missed it, join Ward One Councillor Brian McHattie on Sunday for a guided walking tour of Cootes Paradise, which is Hamilton’s best urban-rural area. There’s also the monthly Critical Mass, starting at Hess and George around 5:30. Check out Transportation for Liveable Communities for more details. More importantly, you could pretend that more and more of your days are International Car Free Day.

I know what you’re thinking: my job and my family are important and I can’t change my behaviour. It really isn’t as hard as it sounds. Bogota, a city of seven million people in Columbia, has been having yearly car free days in April, during which all private automobiles are outright banned. Families there haven’t suffered as a result. Alternately, the emphasis on the city’s bike and bus network has created a more liveable and sustainable community that is accessible to everyone.

More importantly, those freedoms that we have gotten used to are highly dependent on cheap oil, which is quite obviously no longer something we can enjoy. The price of gasoline will go exponentially higher – and this is from industry experts such as Matthew Simmons, CEO of the world’s biggest energy investor Simmons & Company, and Dick Cheney, current VP of the United States and ex-CEO of evil devil's reject Haliburton. When the price of oil jumps from $66 per barrel to $200, and then jumps to $500 a barrel, people will be forced to understand what their freedoms relied upon. It wasn't ideology or economic growth which gave us "freedom", but rather finite material resources which are currently being wasted by bad planning, greed, and human apathy.

In North America, we’ve gotten so dependent on cars that we feel driving to be one of the most important rights and freedoms that we have. George Bush has gone so far as to call this lifestyle "non-negotiable", and with the recent Doctrine of Joint Nuclear Operations (Google it, it’s fun!) which specifies a pre-emptive nuclear strategy for those who disagree with America’s strategy for oil domination, we might in fact learn what it means to be truly free. This right of driving is so important that any attempts to get bad drivers off the road by screening more strictly for those who don’t in fact have the propers skills to drive – perhaps with driving tests every five years -- are routinely laughed away. Again as a cyclist who routinely uses every major street in the city, I can tell you how many Hamiltonians are still under the mistaken impression that bikes do not belong on the road and riders should remain out of "their" way by using sidewalks. Time for traffic school guys. We just accept road deaths as the cost of modern civilization, and to some extent we are correct in that assumption. At the same time, luck-of-the-draw circumstance should not overule proper urban planning.

I myself do not drive, but I can understand the dependence that it fosters. When you’re young, it’s pretty fucking sweet to be able to suddenly go where you want, when you want to make the trip. I know what that feels like. I felt the same when I was twelve and got my first bike which had gears. Suddenly the whole city belonged to me. The dual feelings of speed and mobility are very addictive. Those luxuries – let’s not kid ourselves by calling these characteristics "freedoms" – I found very stimulating, and consequently I remain an avid cyclist to this day.

The thing about youth, especially around the age when you first start driving, is that your lifestyle and recreational habits tend to solidify. By your mid-twenties, you are probably acting as you will when you are in your forties and fifties in terms of habitual behaviour. For this reason alone it is important to show kids that there are indeed alternatives to automobile transit. I can’t stress enough the importance of letting children ride their bikes, scooters, and skateboards around. Please parents, stop driving to school to pick them up. Let them take public transit or find their own ways home. Nobody wants to steal your kids, you've been conned by fear.
It’s also important to let them develop their culture around these activities. The Art Gallery of Hamilton – while doing good work otherwise – should be ashamed that it’s renovation has alienated skateboarders who used the Irving Zucker plaza by fencing off half the area and enforcing "trespassing" laws when boarders do show up. These kids got exposed to the art that was visible from the outside and which might have given them ideas about their own expressive abilities. Fascist ideas about how spaces should be utilized remove a use of public space by a community, which is the whole meaning of a downtown core. Boarders aren’t the problem with the downtown core; Hamilton’s Aerotropical desire to be the longest highway stripmall in existence is what keeps the core from achieving its potential.

We’ve gotten used to accepting roads as belonging to cars; it is time for pedestrians and human-powered vehicles to take back the streets. Keep your car at home, get some exercise, and learn what a living community really and truly can feel like. It’s nice that at this point in time, we have the freedom to choose whether to drive or not. That luxury is rapidly going to disappear over the next decade and a half.

Monday, July 18, 2005

Flying on Fumes: the plan to bring Hamilton into the 1950s

There have been some interesting recent developments in Hamilton's urban development strategy. The city expects a 20% swell in Hamilton’s population by 2030, with most of the new development envisioned to use the land around the airport. In a nod to B-grade sci-fi movies of the early 1950s, the umbrella term for this development is the Aerotropolis. This business technocrat’s nostalgic wet dream will apparently house 150,000 while employing 50,000. Hamilton airport will be the locus for this project, and will serve as the centre of a network of highways that will increase traffic flows between the Buffalo-Niagara region and the GTA.

The impetus for development seems to be the more family-friendly nature of real estate in Hamilton, as well as the city’s central location relative to nearby urban centres. City planners believe that new residents will flock to Hamilton in order to avoid the high cost of living in Toronto and its neighbouring suburbs. This belief is preceded by two other acts of faith: 1. that Hamilton real estate prices will stay low, and 2. that the price of transportation will also stay low.

So what is this about our low real estate costs in Hamilton? It is true that you can purchase a home in Hamilton for about 2/3 what it would cost in Toronto and maybe 4/5 of its cost in Oakville or Mississauga. Yet, these lower costs have everything to do with the fact that Hamilton skilfully avoided the economic boom of the mid to late 1990s that fuelled the real estate markets of those municipalities. Smart development has begun to reverse that trend to some degree. Many analysts have stated that due to extensive condo development, Toronto, for example, has cooled off as a real estate market, and prices for homes in several areas have actually dropped since 2002.

If Hamilton were indeed to become a hotspot for development, doesn’t it follow that housing prices will increase to match the extra money flowing into the city? Furthermore, we should question what increased property values would mean to Hamilton’s many lower-income families. The increase in property values associated with a booming suburban development would likely mean the continued marginalization of the downtown core.

The development requirements associated with sprawl include more infrastructure than just highways – roads and sidewalks, water and sewage, electricity, garbage collection, education, health and law enforcement services, etc. Currently, property taxes remain high downtown despite the relative weakness of the local economy in relation to suburban shopping centres such as the Meadowlands. Subsidies have been maintained to encourage business development in outlying regions of Hamilton. At the same time, the city must realize its operating budget from somewhere, and consequently core residents currently bear a majority of the tax burden.

The second and perhaps more prescient issue to consider in the aerotropolis debate is of course energy consumption. As has been pointed out in much of the local press, the city’s plan for development requires a high degree of cheap and accessible individual transportation. Increasing dependence on automobiles in order to link car corridors to distant jobs while living and shopping in suburban areas, and ultimately make the aerotropolis plan feasible, requires a cheap and increasing supply of fossil fuels. Additionally, the economic locus of the project – the expansion of the airport itself – requires a boom in the airline industry. As for being cheap, anyone can tell you that oil prices are going in only one direction.

What about all this oil talk? Sure, it’s almost de rigour to belittle oil these days, with opinions on oil’s links to war, terror, and economic subservience finding much ink in the press. Many people quickly tire of the discussion. But one thing both sides should be able to agree on is that as a collective, modern countries are exceedingly good at using oil. Better than we have ever been, in fact. We have made the process of extracting and consuming oil so efficient that nearly every human in industrialized countries has access to a decent supply of it whenever they need it (and perhaps more tellingly, even when they don’t). Consequently, we started taking it for granted on the consumer side of things, thus allowing a great deal of waste. Oil producers get rich no matter how much oil is used, and consumers, well, they get to have a socially acceptable substance addiction.

Everyone was winning until that very famous oil crisis of the 1970s, when prices reached a point that rendered cars inaccessible to many North Americans. What was that about anyway? That’s where the concept of peak oil comes into play.

Peak oil refers to the fact that oil production doesn’t "gush" the way that it does in Looney Tunes. Instead, it follows a bell curve, with production starting slowly, quickly accelerating, levelling off, decelerating slowly, then rapidly declining. Naturally, oil is most expensive when you begin or end the process. Peak oil has already occurred in America’s domestic supply: the U.S. was the gold standard for oil production until it peaked at 11 million barrels a day in 1970, and the country has been in rapid decline since, hence its dependence on foreign sources.
Outside of the US Department of Energy, most industry insiders have calculated that the world will reach peak oil production sometime between 2003 (coincidentally enough, that year was the start of the Iraq war) and 2015. From that point onward, there is no way to avoid a vast increase in oil costs.

As a consequence, any process which relies on oil as an energy source is doomed to becoming increasingly and prohibitively expensive. Being the least fuel-efficient form of transportation available to consumers, aeroplanes are simply not the answer to future development. Air travel will likely return to its roots as a hobby for the rich. This is not to suggest that masses of humans will never fly again, just that until we can make flying vehicles using alternative energy sources, reliance on the industry seems to my eyes a logistical nightmare given the world’s declining stocks of oil.

Maybe just for a second I’ll play the devil’s advocate. It is possible to incorporate mass transit into the proposed development plan. Principally, it is now a perfect time for Canada invest in a high-speed rail network in this country. A corridor in southern Ontario would allow commuters to live in Hamilton and work in Windsor, Toronto, or Ottawa without sacrificing the environment to the blight of highways and their resulting air pollution. Canadian companies such as Bombardier could construct the trains and the infrastructure with steel from Hamilton, thus providing some of those proposed 50,000 aerotropolis jobs. Furthermore, to decrease transportation requirements as a whole, it is time to reintegrate work spaces with domestic spaces, which ironically enough is traditionally what city cores have always done. High-density zoning is the key here, so that we do not have to sacrifice our rich local farmlands to treeless suburban driveways and parking lots as suggested by the current aerotropolis plan.

Maybe Aerotropolis really is a nostalgic dream, back to the highway expansions of the 1950s. Let me complete the metaphor. All those little toy spaceships and cars that signify 1950s Americana, well they were made of American metal back then. Their modern counterparts are plastic, manufactured in China, and engineered to be disposable: three characteristics which signal the increased load we have placed upon our oil supplies, and the increased hubris with which urban planners render economic development as a monolithic and unidirectional entity.

Association for the Study of Peak Oil & Gas

Guardian Unlimited published an interesting article in May which you can find here .

Launch a local awareness campaign by screening the film End of Suburbia .

Even old guard oil producers like Chevron are getting serious about peak oil.

Saturday, March 19, 2005

automotive statistics and other games of symantic barbarism

automakerad

response

American auto manufacturers have never been ones to face the reality of the changes required by sustainable economies. Now it seems that they are prepared to "educate" the public about the science that they like to believe. It's not that you can bring any real material evidence against what they are publishing; such an exercise would be merely academic. The point is not even whether Ford or General Motors themselves trust the actual words that are being used.

In case you can't read them, the actual words in the ad are as follows: "Autos manufactured today are virtually emission-free. And that's a dramatic improvement over models from just thirty years ago. So if you want to know what it really means to drive a clean car, look beyond your back seat. [Gosh Uncle-Science Man, you're Uncle-Science right to learn me that all chemical compounds ever in the history of ever are visible to the naked eye. Nothing invisible can ever harm us, right Mr. Federal-Budget-Is-One-Crazy-Fucking-Deficit Man? Wait, Gays can spread their homo aids with invisible perversions! And terrorism: TER-ROR-ISM!] See what's under the hood of every new car and light truck we make."

If the medium is the message, then it becomes clear that what is being sold is not the car, truck, or SUV, but rather safety itself. Car buyers need to be reminded of the assurity of their investment, in terms both financial and self-reflexive. See, I bought a good vehicle. I know what I'm doing, and all major decisions in my life are under control. I can afford this vehicle, but more importantly, I can't afford not to have and use it. The underlying ideology behind this ad -- if not advertising in general -- is that the consumer be made aware that a gesture of affirmation to the status quo is a guarantee for mutual success. Of course your kids will be safe, the Auto Alliance tells us: buy into us and we'll drive them to the future in the fast lane.
Publishers need money to do their work, and the importance of advertising revenue to this process has serious consequences for objective journalism, and by extension to the democratic process as a whole. Where can ideological justice be found in such a closed system of accountability, otherwise known as publishing driven by advertiser revenue? Maybe we should begin to hold publishers accountable for (at least some of) the lies spread by their corporate clients.

After all, defamation laws might be turned upon themselves with the following logic:

1. Company X -- let's just lay the poop on the pudding tray and say it was the Auto Alliance -- publishes an ad which tells people that their product follows certain physical laws as determined by the scientific literature.

2. An actual consultation of the scientific literature demonstrates the opposite.

3. Company X reminds the public that they never made any claims to science in their ad.

4. Public watchdogs cry out that the invocation of statistics like 99%, as well as the car-under-the-microscope animation and all of the technology demonstrations from the company website, seem to demonstrate an appeal, maybe even a dependence, to what most come to understand as "science".

5. Company X reminds the public that it is a leader in innovation, growth, and scientific research.

6. An actual consultation of the scientific literature demonstrates the opposite.

7. Public watchdogs try to get media space to share their "opinions" (a kind of news that's always a tough sell if you don't own a 24-hour news-entertainment network).

8. Company X reminds everyone that

AMERICA'S AUTOMOBILE INDUSTRY IS THE ENGINE THAT DRIVES THE ECONOMY.
-- http://autoalliance.org/economic/

by buying up ad spaces when other voices want to buy into the dabate.

9. Constitutional Ally (in some circles, known as Minuteman) gets gagged, hooded, and has his penis laughed at by yokels.

10. The general population is made stupider by the fact that they will almost never follow up on the information that they receive in a day.

Company X shouldn't really make fun of the few conscious people who somehow manage to keep their shit out of the swamp, at least in so obvious a manner as showing us all how dumb we are. It's kind of like telling Iraqis that they are free to vote in an election. Yup, Joe and Jane Iraq can say, we are, as you say in your country, free to vote in an election.


Long story short, my case of defamation rests on the fact that by appealing to intelligence and scientific knowledge, the Auto Alliance has incorrectly and quite negatively slandered the true nature of the general public. Let their lies fall like leaves from the sky.

Friday, March 04, 2005

cars should fuck off after spitting in yr face

another consumptive round of innocent behaviour...

Canada finally seems to be getting a little serious about adopting a more Kyoto-friendly environmental strategy in 2005. The federal budget, for example, has $1billion earmarked for “cost-effective initiatives” to reduce carbon emissions in industry. Of course, it seems somewhat likely that this money will be used to buy emission credits from countries which are “cleaner”, rather than actually doing something to make our industries sustainable. So where do us little people fit in? As a matter of fact, everywhere. After all, we shouldn’t think of Kyoto as a “governmental” policy, but rather as one for all energy use.

The reality is this: reducing emissions will require changing energy sources. The vast majority of the North American population has been willfully avoiding changing lifestyles, largely thanks to the efforts of oil lobby groups and reactionary conservatives. Note that neither of these groups represents the scientists who actively study the biosphere or industrial systems, and who have themselves been the principle catalysts for change in the media. Maybe I’m a bit wacky for this, but I’ll trust the biologists who study tree rings, ice cores, and coral formations for climate change rather than politicians and industrialists who have shareholders to address. Britain’s New Scientist magazine had a recent article on climate change which noted that 19 of the 20 warmest years on the scientific record have occurred since 1980: “the bottom line is that we will need to cut CO2 emissions by 70% to 80% simply to stabilise atmospheric CO2 concentrations”.

So, knowing that many shortsighted industries are going to drag their feet on this issue, isn’t it time that citizens became empowered and actually took control of their own negative influence on climate change? Over the next few articles, I’ll outline a few simple ways to – how can I say it – join the 21st century and not ignorantly pollute like all those pricks who lived in the 20th.

One of the more positive changes that you can make for both yourself and the environment would be to adopt cycling into your lifestyle. This alters the energy source that you use for transportation from the oil and gas in your car to the food that you eat daily. It’s really not as impossible as you think. I can speak from experience that once you attain even a marginal level of fitness, then every part of Hamilton is accessible by bike within an hour or two at the most. Those of us who ride regularly can get from Westdale to Stony Creek in about 30 minutes. Granted, it does take a bit of willpower to go riding when the weather’s not the best – winter tends to leave only a few diehards on bikes. But then there’s all that “character” that gets built if you do become a year-rounder. I’ve noticed over the years that most people are impressed by the callous disregard of personal safety in the face of extreme danger, and these same people are easily convinced that heavy rain or a cold wind are terminal challenges.

Naturally I don’t really expect every car off the road and every family on bikes all the time. There are indeed many times when a car is decent option, but I bet that if you are travelling alone in your car, then that moment is not one of them. How often are cars used when they are not required, like most work or school commutes, short trips to the corner store or a friend’s house, vacations along routes where buses or trains are available, or trips to city downtown areas? You can shop for almost everything you need by using a backpack. When you do buy large items, get a cab or use the bus. Hey parents: let your kids walk home with friends. Not to be a grandad or anything, but in my day friends and I either rode a school bus, biked, or walked the 1.5km to our french school almost every day. The few kids who had “nervous” parents would always be driven to school, and picked up immediately afterward so they couldn’t get into “trouble”. These kids grew up to be special people. Those of us who walked or rode never got accosted or abducted, because by and large our cities are safe places during the day.

There’s also the bonus of actually getting to see the scenery while you travel (a gift from rail travel as well, by the way...). Trust me, cycling through the wine country around St. Catherine’s is much nicer than going for a drive there, as you get to smell the grapes in the fields and not the gas in your tank. We are quite lucky to have a pretty extensive network of trails for cyclists in Southern Ontario, and accordingly one can get to any major city in a day trip.

There are two key problems, however, that might keep a lot of people from riding anywhere except in parks and on trails. Cars can pose a fair hazard, especially when you combine their inertia with driver error or arrogance. Many people that I have spoke with cite Hamilton’s manic drivers as the key reason why they themselves drive. It’s too dangerous to cycle on roads they say. I’ve been riding safely in the area for over 10 years now, and will admit that I have had a fair share of “incidents”. Usually these involve cars that don’t see you while turning or changing lanes. As a cyclist, make sure you are visible by getting some lights or reflective tape for your helmet. The easiest way to stay safe is to plan a route which uses as few large streets as possible.

To those drivers who think that bikes should not be on the road and want to make a point by “scaring” us: check the Highway Traffic Act, which hopefully you remember from driving school [aside: why aren’t drivers tested every few years to make sure they are actually fit and capable to drive?]. A bicycle is a vehicle, with the same rights and responsibilities as other users of the road; you may occupy any part of the lane if it is warranted by your safety. So if things are getting ridiculous on the road when you are riding, then slow cars down behind you, and make sure that they have to change lanes or wait to pass. Principally, you need to maintain a sense of calm. Enjoy the ride, but enjoy it by keeping aware of your surroundings. Nothing pisses drivers off more than cyclists who aren’t paying attention to what they are doing.

Sometimes, no matter what, there’s nothing you can do in the face of road rage. The other day, I was assaulted by a random middle age guy whose aggressive driving at the Main + Queen intersection caused me to impulsively throw a snowball at the back of his car (Little Man: that pop can you thought I threw at your car I had picked up to recycle, no more). Endangering other cars, he then spun around to try and teach me a lesson. Little Man: that cum-in-my-face of your spit was classy, and makes me wonder if you kiss your wife with the same lips. I chose to go home instead of fight you because I like challenges, and it was tougher for me to not care about what you did than give you a broken nose and a heart attack.

Problem #2 involves a larger project. Current urban developments are by and large car-specific, or in other words engineered with car traffic in mind to the exclusion of other forms of transport. Cycling is easy in cities that are not suburban track developments. As pointed out in a decent agit-prop documentary called The End of Suburbia, track developments can only exist when every citizen owns several cars and oil stays cheap. As such, for most people in these areas it’s virtually impossible to access public transit or commute with a bike. The only solution is to not purchase a home in these developments, and instead become more socially responsible in an urban setting. Developers aren’t evil men wasting the world’s resources on the most unsustainable communities that they can build. They build what makes them money, and right now a lot of people are buying into the suburban nightmare. If people stop buying, then companies will stop building.

Despite a few obstacles, riding is one of the most positive changes that you can make in your life. Think of it as cheap transportation with a lot of free exercise. Kids learn from example, so getting families riding at young ages is important. They have to get used to daily physical exertion in order not to get accustomed to laziness and obesity, which are arguably the biggest obstacles faced by sustainable transportation. Make a change, and you can feel a bit better that they might have a planet that’s in better shape then when our generation found it.