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Posts Tagged ‘alternative transportation’

Omaha Transportation Plan Survey

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Omaha Bike LaneThere are so many good things happening on the transportation front in Omaha. Mayor Fahey recently announced plans and funding for an essential East-West link between the Keystone Trail and downtown which will use dedicated bike lanes. Everyone who lives here knows how important that is. The Young Professionals just completed their Bus Challenge and Activate Omaha has the Bicycle Commuter Challenge in full swing. Omaha recently announced their downtown master plan where pedestrians and cyclists are well accounted for.

Now there is another opportunity to build a positive future for our city. The Metropolitan Area Planning Agency (MAPA) now has a Long Range Transportation Plan survey available for the public to complete. The responses from this survey will be used in updating the Long Range Transportation Plan for the Omaha-Council Bluffs metropolitan area for year 2035.

Go to www.mapacog.org and find the link for the survey at the top of the homepage. The 15 question survey covers a multitude of transportation topics and respondents can use this as a platform to make suggestions about the future of transportation in the metro area.

The MAPA Long Range Transportation Plan will provide a vision for the metropolitan area’s future transportation system. Additionally, projects must be identified in the Long Range Plan to be eligible to receive federal funding.

Please take a few minutes to help out. Thanks.

Claire Rides a Bike

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Apparently I’m in a visual mode lately. I promise that I do still read. But work has been busy and in my quick surfing I’ve been spending a little more time looking at bike sites rather than work or sustainability sites. I really should get out and ride.

I thought this was fun. Be wary if you are sensitive to swear words.

Thanks to No Ride Just Drive for the link.

Bike Parking, Tokyo Style

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

I posted a video about this system a few months back, but this updated vid is way better. Yesterday I rode to get my hairs cut and had to lock my bike to a planter near the front door of the salon. I had to wrestle my lock around the base of the cement planter and weave the cable through the rear wheel and frame. I’m not complaining, but I certainly didn’t look as dignified as the people in this video who are dropping off their bikes.

Americans Driving Less & Less

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

Americans Driving LessNew data from the Department of Transportation reveals that driving slid for the eighth straight month in June.

According to the DOT, Americans drove 12.2 billion miles less in June than they did in June 2007, a drop of 4.7 percent. That’s the largest monthly drop since the decline began in November.

A press release from the DOT says that, since November, Americans have driven 53.2 billion fewer miles than they did over the same period a year earlier, a drop that is more pronounced than the drop that occurred during the 1970s, a era marked by severe gas shortages. Rural travel has fallen 4 percent since late last year, while urban driving has fallen only 1.2 percent.

The biggest declines seem to occur in big states with wide open spaces. Driving was down 6.1 percent in Alaska, 6.2 percent in Kansas, 7 percent in Maine, 7.7 percent in Montana, 6.7 percent in Nevada, 6.9 percent in Washington, and 6.8 percent in Wyoming.

The Associated Press supplements the DOT’s data with a poll of the over-50 crowd, in which more than two-thirds say that high gas prices have prompted them to drive less.

Four in 10 said they have used public transportation, walked or ridden a bicycle more frequently since gas prices have risen, according to the AARP poll, which was being released Wednesday.

Elinior Ginzler, AARP’s senior vice president for livable communities, said she’s concerned that communities don’t have adequate sidewalks, bus shelters, bike lanes and public transportation options as more people look for other means to get around.

“More Americans age 50-plus are trying to leave their cars behind but face obstacles as soon as they walk out the door, climb on their bikes or head for the bus,” Ginzler said.

While a drop in driving is certainly positive from an environmental perspective – it directly translates into lower greenhouse gas emissions and more breathable air – all this suggests that many Americans, particularly those living outside of cities, are getting squeezed by high gas prices.

Maybe our energy crisis is also, in part, an infrastructure crisis. If more of us had access to public transit, if more of our neighborhoods had sidewalks and safe bike lanes, if more of us could buy our necessities on Main Street instead of at the strip mall on the outskirts of town, then our baseline would be lower, and maybe the spike in gas prices wouldn’t hit us so hard.

A lot of Americans would like to see these kinds of infrastructure improvements. One survey found that 40 percent of households would like to live in walkable urban areas. And, as I noted in my blog post in May, a survey by Rodale Press found that 40 percent of Americans say they would bike to work if they felt it was safer, and a 2008 Zogby poll found that 53 percent of Americans would take mass transit if it were close to their home and work.

But it seems that there is little political will to curb America’s car culture. Even as record ridership is straining mass transit, transportation officials seem more concerned about maintaining roads. In late July, amid worries that decreased driving is depleting federal funding for road upkeep, Transportation Secretary Mary Peters proposed a short-term solution of borrowing money from mass transit funding.

Source: Christian Science Monitor

Omaha’s Bike to Work Week

Monday, May 12th, 2008

I started the day today in beautiful Midtown Omaha with a healthy crowd of fellow bike commuters. The mayor hosted a press conference and a bike ride to announce several new initiatives for the city.

Omaha Mayor\'s RideThe event started with a tour of the Omaha Community Bike Shop, followed by a brief speech where the mayor announced a new 20 mile bike loop project in downtown, the formation of a Bicycle/Pedestrian Advisory Committee, the kick-off for the 3rd Annual Omaha Metro Bicycle Commuter Challenge (which Harvest designed the graphics and brochures for), and the start of National Bike to Work Week.

The ride rolled out with probably over a hundred cyclists. Our convoy was fullyOmaha Ped Bridge escorted by police in cars and on bikes or motorcycles. For one day of the year, cars were forced to completely concede the roads to bikes. Once we arrived at the river we took a moment to discuss the nearly completed pedestrian bridge that will link Nebraska and Iowa. The bridge will open up endless cross-border fitness and commuter options.

Thanks to everyone who put time into promoting this event. It is great to see such civic support to changing the way our city views transportation alternatives.