Issue #40 / December 2009


Dear friend,

In this issue
 

Special Event

· Second Annual Boston Bikes Update event, Dec 10, 6:30 pm, Boston public library 
 
Action e-lert
· Public Meeting: Anderson Memorial Bridge / Charles River, Dec 15, 7:00 pm
 
Recent Activity 
· LivableStreets Awarded Matching Grant

· Blog

Describes Ten Ways to Transform Transportation
· Creating a Shared Vision: What is a livable street to you?
 

 Announcements
· More than 400 pedestrians are killed while crossing or walking along a street
· MBTA Safety Undermined by Underfunding

· Lower Charles River Basin Bridges to be Built - finally!
· Cambridge seeks members for bicycle, pedestrian, and climate advisory committees
 

Calendar -- Click here to view full calendar of public meetings and related events 


Special Event
____________________________________________________________________

 

Second Annual Boston Bikes Report Event

by Nicole Freedman, Director of Mayor Menino's Boston Bikes Program

Thursday, December 10, 6:30-8:00 PM (doors open at 6)
@ Rabb Lecture Hall, Boston Public Library, Copley Square, 700 Boylston St

 

Free and open to the public

 

Nicole Freedman, Director of the Boston Bikes Program, will present her second annual report on the past achievements and future goals of the Mayor's efforts to create a "world class bicycling city." Ms. Freedman will discuss plans for the city's bike sharing program, bike lanes and off-road networks, bike parking facilities, youth programs, bike festivals, and more.

 
What are you questions for Nicole about biking in Boston? There will be a Q&A following her talk. 
 

Hosted by LivableStreets Alliance.  

For more information:

click here, event@livablestreets.info, 617-621-1746


Action Alert

_________________________________________________________________

 

Public Meeting: Anderson Memorial Bridge

connecting Harvard Sq to North Harvard St, Allston over the Charles River


Tuesday, Dec. 15, 7:00 pm

@ Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. School, Auditorium, 100 Putnam Avenue, Cambridge

Would you like to see walking, biking and transit improvements on bridges across the Charles River? Come to the Anderson Bridge public meeting to speak up for bicycling, walking, public transit, and improved approaches on either side. 

 

The first bridge across the Charles River, constructed in 1662, was called the Great Bridge. The structure that now connects Harvard Square (via JFK St) with the Harvard Business School (via North Harvard St. in Allston-Brighton) is called the Anderson Bridge and was constructed by 1915 (photo right).  As it nears its 100th birthday, the bridge needs serious repair. The new Department of Transportation's Highway Division will present preliminary plans at this public meeting.  

 
For more information, click here. 


Recent Activity

_________________________________________________________________

 

LivableStreets Awarded Matching Grant

 
 

 
The Alliance for Biking & Walking will match every dollar we raise in the coming months. But we don't get it unless you give it. Donating $50, $30, or even $10 will make a big difference - every dollar counts.

Taking advantage of every dollar will enable us to expand our staff, and strengthen our advocacy - furthering our goal of safe, convenient, and affordable transportation for all users in urban Boston.  So if you believe livable streets are critical to solving the challenges of everyday urban life - donate now!
 
Click here for press release.

 

Blog Suggests Ways To Transform Transportation

Musings on transportation, health, and livable communities
by Steve Miller, LivableStreets board member
 

A recent series of postings include a 3-part series on Ten Ways To Transform Transportation.
Part I suggests that government:
  1. Lower speed limits 
  2. Design for ordinary situations and ordinary people 
  3. Strengthen driver testing and training 
Part II suggests that government:
  4. Expand safe routes to school and safe routes for seniors programs  
  5. Require local citizen's bike/ped advisory committees 
  6. Change regional & local decision-making process 
  7. Encourage smart growth 
Part III suggests that government
:
  8. Price parking properly 
  9. Change liability assumptions 

 10. Set goals and measure progress 
 

In the context of Legislation setting up a "Healthy Transportation Compact" that brings together the new Department of Transportation, Health and Human Services, Energy and the Environment, the blog's most recent post examines:
 
"What is 'Healthy Transportation'"?

 

Steve Miller's blog can be accessed from LivableStreets Alliance's home page or directly at http://blog.livablestreets.info

 

Creating a shared vision: What is a livable street to you?

Share your thoughts with us today.

 

How would you describe a livable street? How would the creation of a transportation system that better balances walking, mass transit, bicycling, rail, and cars help move us towards more livable communities? How can we use transportation to help make our communities healthier, friendlier, more sustainable, and affordable places to live, work, play, shop, go to school, raise families, and grow old?

At public events, LivableStreets Alliance asks people to give us their thoughts on these topics. Add to the conversation! Send your thoughts via email to vision@livablestreets.info. Here is what some of you have to say:

 
a livable street is... 'diverse with office, retail, residential, art and great bike facilities'
a livable street is... 'a street where my son can play'
a livable street is... 'fun'


Announcements
_____________________________________________________________

 
More than 400 pedestrians are killed while crossing or walking along a street each month

New Analysis of What Makes for Safety: Complete Streets and Traffic Calming


More than 76,000 Americans have been killed while crossing or walking along a street in their community in the last 15 years, more than 9,000 during 2007 and 2008 alone. Each month, on average, more than 400 pedestrians are killed. While about 9 percent of all trips were made by foot, pedestrians comprise 11.8 percent of all traffic-related deaths. Despite this, pedestrian and bicycle projects have received less than 1.5 percent of federal transportation dollars over the last few years.  Massachusetts spends less than 1.2 percent.

Although there are no specific statistics on the number of accidents involving wheelchairs in streets, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation's Fatality Analysis Reporting System, disability was a factor in 617 pedestrian traffic fatalities last year.
 
Up to 40% of these "accidents" have one thing in common: they weren't really accidents - they occurred on roadways that were "Dangerous by Design" - engineered for speeding traffic and little or no provision made for people on foot, in wheelchairs, or on a bicycle.
 
The analysis comes from new report from Transportation for America and the Surface Transportation Policy Project, titled "Dangerous by Design."  In response, Barbara McCann, Executive Director of the National Complete Streets Coalition, stated: "We need Complete Streets policies that ensure that every road is planned and designed from the outset for the safety of everyone who will be using it - whether driving, walking, bicycling, or getting on a bus. Complete streets are not only safe, but help create more attractive, livable communities."

Boston's colonial heritage of short blocks and narrow streets makes it more walkable than most, and the Boston metropolitan area is the second-safest for pedestrians out of 52 cities of a million or more residents, according to the report. But pedestrians still totaled nearly 18 percent of Massachusetts' traffic deaths in 2007-2008, and we have the eighth-highest rate of pedestrian fatalities for seniors in the nation. While the city has begun a "complete streets" task force, the Department of Public Works has not embraced complementary "traffic calming" measures such as curb extensions and raised intersections.

The full

"Dangerous By Design" report is available online.

 

New Report Says MBTA Safety Compromised by Lack of Funding

The Big Dig was not only so expensive that it absorbed almost every available dollar of transportation funding for the past decade, it left the state - and its main public transportation agency, the MBTA, to which some of the costs were transferred  - in such deep debt that important safety upgrades haven't been completed.
 
The easy-to-read 36-page report by former John Hancock Life Insurance chief David D'Alessandro said that the unfunded projects include fixing bridges, repairing platform stairways, replacing backup power generator turbines, repairing tunnel lighting, and replacing 60-year-old cables.  
 
Because the state system of funding, the T creates revenues that do not nearly cover its operating costs, the T has had to reschedule over $500 million in old debt into the future simply in
order to pay current bills. Of course, this raises the eventual total cost. As a result, the T has a maintenance backlog of over $3 billion. It would require an annual investment of at least $694 million simply to keep the backlog from getting longer. A state bailout is unlikely without new revenue sources such as the rejected gas tax increase - Massachusetts will pay over $1.8 billion in service fees this year simply to keep debt at its current level.
 
While T fares have already been increased three times in recent years, and service has been reduced, most commentators agree that the state is unlikely to provide any significant relief during this election year.

 

Lower Charles River Basin Bridges to be Built -- Finally!

 

One of the reasons the Big Dig got initially approved for federal funding was the large number of "traffic mitigation" features it contained - infrastructure improvements that would encourage bicycling, walking, and the use of mass transit in order to offset the negative environmental impact of adding additional (albeit underground) traffic lanes in downtown Boston. Of course, we all know that the Dig ran so grossly over budget that there was no money left for a rail connection between North and South Stations, or for finishing the bike/ped paths and bridges along and across the Charles, or for connecting the Rose Kennedy Greenway (inexcusably built without formal bicycle accommodations) to the river.  

After years of advocate pressure, the federal stimulus program has finally provided the money to at least construct the missing bike/ped bridges and paths. Most significantly, there will finally be a way for people coming towards Boston from the north - via the future Community Path Extension in Somerville, Cambridge Multi-Use Trail, and North Point Park - to safely get across the Charles.
 
As the Boston Globe illustration shows, the three bridges and one path will tie together the pieces of the river basin's "lost half-mile" connecting the New Charles River Basin Parklands to the Boston Harbor Walk and to the Greenway. Next challenge - getting bike lanes along the Greenway!


Within the next two years, the first bike/ped bridge will be constructed; the North Bank Footbridge, connecting North Point Park with Paul Revere Park, and a path along Beverly Street Extension will connect the Greenway to the Charles River Parklands.

 

City of Cambridge seeks members for Bicycle, Pedestrian, and Climate Advisory Committees

Three City of Cambridge committees are looking for residents who care about the community and would like to have a say in what happens. They are appointed by the City Manager to advise city staff on important environmental and transportation issues. People of all ages and backgrounds are encouraged to apply.
 

If you are interested in getting more information about any of these


committees, or if you are interested in applying, please contact Rosalie
Anders at 617-349-4604 or go to the City website.


 
_____________________________________________________________________
 
Sincerely,
Jacqueline Douglas
 
LivableStreets Alliance
E: jackie@livablestreets.info   
P: 617.621.1746