Snazzy station

Long after I stopped using Randolph Street Station, the long-promised (20 years?) renovation actually happened. Now, Paul Beitler — one of those rare businessmen who really does care about how the public experiences his buildings, recently investing millions into the Pittsfield and 360 N. Michigan with no obviously huge payoff — has been hired to manage the station. Sure, no one wants an odorous chicken shack (hah) in their train station, but Beitler would be remiss to forget that this station serves South Siders–and could provide convenient competition for overpriced Millennium Park concessionaires.

In other Metra news, the selection of Arlene Mulder for a Cook County board seat bodes fairly well for the region. A stronger voice from suburban Cook County on the board might counteract Jeff Ladd’s stridently anti-Cook stance (odd, considering most of Metra’s budget comes from Cook), and Mulder brings great experience in the value of transit oriented development to an agency which typically prefers its stations surrounded by parking.

Gas price reactions (saved up #2)

Surprisingly, the latest runup in gas prices has resulted in some eminently sensible voices cutting through the usual screeds. Perhaps it’s because the proximate cause of the gas crisis — the drowning of Louisiana and Mississippi — was exacerbated by oil consumption, both in sinking southern Louisiana’s wetlands and in pumping carbon into a warming atmosphere that fuels stronger hurricanes. Or maybe it’s because years of steady increases and a do-nothing administration have worked to convince at least a segment of the public that the same-old won’t work any more.

* Ben Adler, a new face at TNR, sensibly suggests “gas taxes to spur New Urbanist investment”:http://www.tnr.com/etc.mhtml?pid=2759: “We mass transit users would be rewarded by a tax rebate, but we’d also be rewarded by investments in mass transit that keep our fares down and our service reliable. That would encourage more drivers to join us as well… The government could also use gas tax revenues to provide tax incentives to localities that impose sensible zoning restrictions — limiting sprawl, requiring density, encouraging walking (by building sidewalks) and, as I’ve previously mentioned, limiting garage size. But maybe now I’m just getting into the realm of fantasy.” Well, not really: cities across the country are already taking these steps. (A Friendster search on Adler shows that he’s a Brooklynite displaced to DC, and New Yorkers famously [and somewhat understandably, given the vastness of their backyard] know little about urbanist initiatives across the land.)

* The Center for American Progress proposes “feebates”:http://www.northwestwatch.org/reforms/feebates.asp along with a scrap-and-replace program as parts of a “Progressive Response to High Oil and Gas Prices”:http://www.americanprogress.org/site/pp.asp?c=biJRJ8OVF&b=669657. In the section on car-sharing, they point out that “the average U.S. private car sits idle 96 percent of the time.” (Of course, they don’t mention the built environment surrounding said shared cars — although shared cars, like any common infrastructure, work best in dense, walkable neighborhoods.)

* For once, the Trib’s right-wing editorial bias comes in handy. “Steve Chapman”:http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/columnists/chi-0509080033sep08,1,3368822.column?coll=chi-business-hed comes down firmly on the side of “something for high prices rather than nothing at any price,” he notes that price controls would be “[t]elling consumers they should waste fuel to their hearts’ content, and telling producers to leave the black stuff in the ground. When events in the world conspire to make oil dear, there is nothing to be gained from masking that fact. We can ignore reality, but reality won’t ignore us.”

* Somewhat related: “Gregg Easterbrook”:http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050919&s=easterbrook091905 refers to the “Hummer personality defect.”

* I think I did admirably in this “Flickr message-board discussion”:http://flickr.com/groups/gaspump/discuss/82822/#comment678124 of gas prices, considering the built-in hostility of posting amidst photos of people flicking off gas pumps (way to release your anger — like that’ll do something).

Many people living in urban areas already have great transit alternatives. 40% of the trips that Americans make are less than two miles long–a great distance for walking or cycling. New technology makes sharing trips or replacing trips much easier, whether telecommuting, finding someone to carpool with, or shopping online (thus sharing delivery trucks, instead of everyone driving their own deliveries).

If you’re really mad about gas prices, you could do something really radical: never buy gas, ever again. Oh wait, I did that already…

Maybe other people shouldn’t be lazy, or at least maybe they shouldn’t complain loudly when they have to pay the price for their laziness.

I don’t get ten bags of groceries at a time. Buying smaller quantities more often means fresher food. Even when buying for parties, I can carry it easily with a bicycle trailer or a small cart, or have it delivered. (I don’t know what you buy from Best Buy, but most of my electronic stuff is small.) And most of the time, people _aren’t_ traveling very far with loads of stuff. They’re just lazy, as you say, and so they drive…

Higher [gas] costs eventually get passed down; for instance, taxi and air fares have increased. However, someone who drives has to pay both higher air fare _and_ higher gas prices; I only have to pay the former. Gas taxes here in Chicago rank among the highest local taxes in the country, at around 30c/gallon, but residents of, say, the Netherlands pay gas _taxes_ of over $4/gallon. Since they’ve paid those taxes for a long time, though, the entire economy uses gas more efficiently. Food is grown and processed closer to cities, things are sent by boat or rail instead of truck, etc. So, the market prices for food and other necessities end up being no higher than here. Transit operators do end up paying more for fuel, but fuel is only 3% of my local transit system’s budget.

It’s not an optimal situation for anyone, really, since even I’d prefer that higher prices be offset by better transportation alternatives or for rebates to lower-income consumers. However, let’s hope that today’s high prices will provide a strong impetus to begin using gas more economically, so that we’re not caught in a similarly bad situation during future oil-supply crunches — which, by all indications, will happen more frequently…

We’ve successfully cut pollution: for instance, the Clean Air Act cut carbon monoxide pollution by 90% and sulfur dioxide by 60%, while CFCs have almost disappeared in 10 years since the Montreal Protocol. Many large (and quite wealthy) cities like Vancouver, Copenhagen, Singapore, Zurich, Melbourne, and London have used proactive policies to reduce car traffic and increase transit ridership, walking, and cycling, sometimes dramatically: walking has increased 60% in Melbourne and 50% in Vancouver. Here in the USA, our economy became 33% more energy efficient between 1970-97, and higher prices will accelerate that trend….

The key is to use transportation appropriately: instead of driving half a mile, as many people in cities and suburbs do, maybe we city folks should consider alternatives. That way, we can make sure there’s more scarce gas available for those who truly need it.

Edit: “One economist”:http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A5080-2004May31.html calculates that a program combining a $2/gallon tax and a “gas guzzler buyback” (to ease the transition to higher prices) would save two million barrels of oil each day in the first year. By contrast, Hurricane Katrina knocked out production of 0.86 million barrels of oils a day. Smarter energy policies today will help us when future crises hit.

Saved up: hurricane, etc.

A bunch of incomplete blog-able blurbs archived during the server transition — which, of course, took place while a major American city disappeared under the sea, American media actually sat up and noticed, and the Bush administration was exposed as the lying sack of incompetent cronies they are. Oops.

* Some surprisingly good reporting about the TV reporting (“available online”:http://www.crooksandliars.com for us TV-free folks) on Katrina comes from Maureen Ryan’s “Watcher” TV column, notably “this recap”:http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/chi-tribtv,1,3096468.htmlstory#katrinatv of “a week when everyone’s mask dropped and raw honesty was everywhere.” Meanwhile, Oprah’s “endless well of empathy”:http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/chi-tribtv,1,3096468.htmlstory#katrinaoprah boiled over into anger: “When it comes to what happened, and didn’t have to happen, to children, it’s pretty overwhelming. It makes me so mad. This makes me mad! This should not have happened.”

* Todd Purdum in “the Times”:http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/03/national/nationalspecial/03voices.html reports on the “outrage at the response” from the viewpoint of a revered big-city mayor. “Andrew Young, the former civil rights worker and mayor of Atlanta who was Jimmy Carter’s ambassador to the United Nations, was born in New Orleans 73 years ago, walked on its levees as a boy and ‘was always assured by my father that the Army Corps of Engineers had done a masterful job.’ But, Mr. Young said, “they’ve been neglected for the last 20 years,” along with other pillars of the nation’s infrastructure, human and physical. “I was surprised and not surprised… I think we’ve got to see this as a serious problem of the long-term neglect of an environmental system on which our nation depends.” Mayors, more so than any other high-profile elected officials, know the minutiae of infrastructure and know how important it is to the proper functioning of a great city, state, or nation. Too bad that 30 years of anti-government rhetoric from Washington has deprived our nation of the chance to do some great things with its infrastructure.

* The National Review’s “Rich Lowry”:http://nationalreview.com/lowry/lowry200509021731.asp offers up a grand bargain that my New Urbanist conscience thinks acceptable: “If the tableaux of suffering in the city prompts meaningful soul-searching, perhaps there can be a grand right-left bargain that includes greater attention to out-of-wedlock births from the Left in exchange for the Right’s support for more urban spending (anything is worth addressing the problem of fatherlessness).”

* The “NY Times”:http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/08/opinion/08thu1.html has editorialized against Congressional pork in light of the disaster, particularly the “Sprawlway”:http://www.sprawlway.org/news/nytimes090805.html, er Hastert Highway, er, Prairie Parkway.

*Miscellaneous stuff*:
* Geoff Canada’s “latest idea”:http://nytimes.com/2005/09/09/nyregion/09promise.html is to bring Slow Food ideas to Harlem on a public-school budget: $5.87 a student buys two meals and two snacks a day of fresh, healthful food.

* Charles Shaw, who somewhat “confusedly conflates”:http://www.planetizen.com/node/148 public housing redevelopment, New Urbanism, the war on drugs, and the Creative Class, has “gone out of commission for a while”:http://newtopiamagazine.net/articles/58?POSTNUKESID=9d6121b529292a6621e24b12b2c46c02. It all makes more sense now, or maybe not.

Suburban office park discovered in Manhattan

A recent study done for Transportation Alternatives found a single census tract in Manhattan where nearly half of employees drive to work. (The average for all office jobs in Manhattan is around 12%.) Executives on Park Avenue? Financiers on Wall Street? Nope: try bureaucrats at City Hall. As always, “build parking and they will drive”; the city gives away $33 million a year in free parking to thousands of workers at NYPD, NYCDOT, and other agencies.

Ironing

Sorry for the downtime (really, only about an hour or two) over the past day. I’ve been ironing out the kinks, and re-imported from Movable Type thrice in order to fix some links and some funky text formatting behavior. (I knew that my penchant for em dashes would get to me one day, but “Textile”:http://www.textism.com/tools/textile/index.html sees double dashes without spaces as strikethrough.)

The entire move has been planned for a while, but mostly has to do with dropping Apple’s $100/year .Mac service, which I had been using for web storage and the email account. However, three primary email boxes and two web hosts became too much to juggle, so now I’m down to two boxes and one host.

Bonus feature: comments are back! Plus a new, temporary look while I rebuild the templates.

Conservation useful after all

See? Conservation is useful after all! As quoted in the WSJ: “President Bush took the unusual step yesterday of urging Americans not to buy gasoline if they don’t have to. ‘Americans should be prudent in their use of energy,” he said in brief Oval Office remarks. “Don’t buy gas if you don’t need it.’

My favorite scathing hurricane related editorials of recent days come courtesy of Joan Walsh and the War Room at Salon and, naturally, “the Times”:http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/01/opinion/01thu1.html.

$4 a gallon, here we come


$4/gallon, here we come!

Originally uploaded by paytonc.

All sorts of wonderful things can happen with $4/gallon gas, since that’s about where a number of alternatives become economically feasible.

The trouble is, of course, that the $4 is going to oil corporations (and their often-despotic vendors) and not to rebuild our own decrepit infrastructure.

“The postwar modern American city was built on a foundation of cheap gas that allows even low-paid workers to drive to and from their jobs. Take away the cheap gas and the foundation begins to crack.” Jeffrey Ball writing in the Wall Street Journal, 12 July 2004

Full coverage, or what I’m missing

Well, not quite. While admiring the 2005 bike map, I decided to see how many Chicago community areas I have neither walked nor cycled in and found five: Avalon Park, Burnside, Calumet Heights, Dunning, and Mt. Greenwood. The first three are in a triangle south of the Skyway and southeast of Chatham — not too difficult, and near some interesting street patterns I want to check out. The latter two are at the city’s edges. Dunning is due west-northwest, but literally has nothing to see but miles of bungalows (including Schorsch Village) and an asylum. Mt. Greenwood has the Agricultural High School, Cook County’s last working farm.

Transit oriented banking

A curious thing: the 2005 Chicago bike maps were paid for by Chase/Bank One as part of its Bike One marketing scheme. (Personally, I suspect it’s because LaSalle has had pretty good success “owning” many of the local running events, notably the Marathon.) This year’s map notes the many recently opened branches around town. Curiously, a good many are within one block of CTA stations — most obviously following the Blue Line out along Milwaukee, where before there were no branches between the West Loop and Avondale, now four branches have sprouted within a block of the Blue Line between Division and Logan Square, plus two further from the train. This is in addition to the ATMs placed inside many stations. Of course, this makes eminently good sense — many stations have existing retail clusters around them, and people want convenient banking that fits into their daily schedules, and many of said schedules include the train — but it’s still interesting to have this longitudinal comparison.

CTA stations that Bank One has opened branches within two blocks of in the past year:
Red Line: Cermak, Harrison, Chicago, Sheridan, Lawrence, Bryn Mawr, Thorndale/Granville
Brown Line: Armitage, Irving Park, Western, Kedzie
Blue Line: Logan Square, California, Damen, Division
Orange Line: Roosevelt, Pulaski
Purple Line: South Blvd.

Triangle awards huge TOD contract

The “Triangle Transit Authority”:http://ridetta.org/Home/News_Events/8-05TTA-Cherokeetalksbegin.htm recently awarded a major contract to guide development around the future TTA rail stations. I’m not quite sure whether this is also a management contract for the station facilities themselves or what, but hopefully having a developer in the playing this early on will ensure that station land is used for development before parking. Oddly enough, the contract winners: PB PlaceMaking, run by CNU long-timer GB Arrington, and Cherokee Investment Partners, run by Tom Darden. I sat next to Tom Darden, Jr. in sixth-grade science class — and in seventh grade orchestra, sat behind now-Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker’s son. Small world.

bq. the Triangle Transit Authority on its transit-oriented sustainable development project. The regional rail system has the potential to help shape the future of this region,” Darden said. “Transit oriented development — a blend of retail, office, housing, entertainment and recreation — is a critical element to mass transit systems nationwide.”

Jack Hagel in “the N&O”:http://www.newsobserver.com/front/story/2752582p-9190305c.html quotes Darden: “We would be looking for development that would be relatively urban, which would support transit infrastructure and benefit from it.”

Walking for heart health

Nicholas Bakalar writes in “the Times”:http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/23/health/nutrition/23walk.html

bq. A Scottish study demonstrates that the walkers are more active during the rest of the day than their peers who arrive by car, bus or train. Why walking to school encourages greater physical activity is not clear, but the authors speculate that a morning walk may stimulate further social interaction and lead to more exercise.

Those physical activity habits, over the course of a lifetime, would help millions of people. Renowned cardiologist Jeremiah Stamler, in a “Times interview with Jane Brody”:http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/23/science/23conv.html?pagewanted=1, points out that “only about 5 or 6 percent of people 35 and over are [at] low risk” for heart disease.