Andrea Bernstein appears in the following:
Brownstoner: PPW Bike Lane Construction Starts
Wednesday, June 02, 2010
The Brownstoner Blog has photos of striping beginning for the Prospect Park bike lane. You may remember we covered this controversy back in April. Live near PPW? We'd like your photos....send them to newstips@wnyc.org.
And while we're at it, the Upper West Side also gets a ...
The $508 million Brooklyn Bridge Project is going to generate jobs. Whose?
Wednesday, June 02, 2010
(Andrea Bernstein and Kate Hinds, Transportation Nation) Vice President Biden comes to New York Wednesday to tout the success of the stimulus program. He'll stand on the Brooklyn Bridge, a $508 million project using $30 million in stimulus funds, to tout an investment that "is creating jobs, generating local economic activity, and allowing New York City to address other critical infrastructure needs." But many questions about the scope of the project -- and who will benefit, remain unanswered.
When President Barack Obama launched the stimulus bill, in February 2009, he promised America a new leaf in government, a new website called Recovery.gov, where Americans could track "every dime" spent under the $800 billion stimulus program.
Vice President Joe Biden has dutifully carried that message to the nation.
In Biden’s words, “We still need to know where every dollar went and to -- and every recipient that got a dollar.” But when it comes to tracking the Booklyn Bridge Project, the City of New York has been less than forthcoming.
Now that Biden is set to come to the Brooklyn Bridge to tout stimulus spending, we thought it would be an opportune time to recap our efforts to track "every dollar" of Brooklyn Bridge funding, and to find out who is getting those jobs.
New York City to Give Smart Cards a Try
Tuesday, June 01, 2010
(Matthew Schuerman, WNYC) The New York region's three transit agencies launched a "smartcard" pilot today, saying it would cut down on their operating costs and make commuting more convenient for riders.
If it works, the technology could lead to the demise of the MetroCard and the rise of an interstate system that would let commuters travel from Red Bank, New Jersey to Red Hook, Brooklyn, without buying a ticket--much less two or three tickets.
Over the next six months, people with certain types of credit or debit cards can tap them against specially designated fare boxes and turnstiles on parts of New York's and New Jersey's transit network. That means, instead of buying a MetroCard at a machine and then swiping it, the commuter only needs to dig out the right card from his or her wallet.
The $508 Million Brooklyn Bridge Project is Going to Generate Jobs. Whose?
Tuesday, June 01, 2010
New York State Politics Round-Up
Tuesday, June 01, 2010
WNYC reporter and director of the Transportation Nation blog Andrea Bernstein and fellow WNYC reporter Bob Hennelly discuss the latest in New York state politics.
Biden to Visit Brooklyn Bridge Wednesday
Tuesday, June 01, 2010
(Andrea Bernstein, Transportation Nation) Vice President Joe Biden hosts a presser at the Brooklyn Bridge tomorrow. The Bridge is receiving some $30 million in stimulus funding toward a 4-year renovation. WNYC has been chronicling the project here.
From the press release:
"New York City has received funding to repair and upgrade key components of the Brooklyn Bridge to improve its efficiency and extend its useful life. Part of this funding was awarded through a $30 million Recovery Act grant from the Department of Transportation. This investment is creating jobs, generating local economic activity, and allowing New York City to address other critical infrastructure needs. The Vice President will be joined by Deputy Secretary of Transportation John Porcari and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
TN Moving Stories: Tampa's Transit Tax and Virginia's Diminishing Road $$, thanks to Gulf Spill
Friday, May 28, 2010
Voters in Denver and Charlotte -- even Republican ones -- have liked transit taxes. Will they in Tampa? Swing county referendum provides key test. (Tampa Bay Online)
Midwestern Drivers are best (Omaha World-Herald), New Yorkers are worst (WNYC)
More transit cuts coming for East Bay (SF Gate)
Halt in off-shore drilling slashes Virginia's Rail and Road Budget. (Washington Post)
High Speed Rail inches forward in Midwest (Kansas City Tribune)
And, it's memorial day! Traffic! Summer Driving! Gas prices inch down, AAA predicting 3 percent increase in summer travel over last year. (Everyone, here, here, and here)
Where's my bus? Boston has an answer...
Thursday, May 27, 2010
At any given time, at any bus stop in any major city in America, you'll find riders leaning into the street, looking towards the horizon, straining to see if their bus is coming. If you talk to riders, like librarian Carolyn MacIntosh, in Boston, they'll tell you, "If you want the bus, you just wait."
Transit agencies around the nation have coped with this in different ways, but mostly, they've tried to build systems, from the ground up, that capture the data, develop the technology, and post it all in an LED sign. All at the transit agency's multi-million dollar expense, subject to the usual contracting issues and delays. But Boston and a few other cities are turning that process on its head....For the rest of the story, listen here.
DC Metro Votes in Major Hikes
Thursday, May 27, 2010
(David Shultz, WAMU) Metro board adopts major fare hike - 15 percent for rail, 20 percent for buses. Also adopts new "peak-of-the-peak" fare structure - a 20 cent surcharge on rail during the busiest 90 minutes of rush hour. Also adopts a larger than expected increase in para-transit fares.
Will Minneapolis St Paul Light Rail Slow Fire Trucks?
Thursday, May 27, 2010
(John Keefe, WNYC)
A new light rail line is in the works to connect Minneapolis to St. Paul, raising both hopes and concerns in neighborhoods along the way.
Today, a group of journalists visiting St. Paul's "Frogtown" neighborhood heard worries that the new tracks in their community will hurt firefighter response times by cutting off streets and changing traffic patterns.
As part of a citizen-sourcing project called Public Insight Journalism, the reporters are casting a net to urban planners, fire officials and traffic experts to help dig into this story. If you have information or knowledge that would help, they would love to hear from you.
Listen here to Minnesota Public Radio's terrific four-part series on the line.
LaHood to Brian Lehrer: We Haven't Endorsed the Transit Bill
Thursday, May 27, 2010
(Andrea Bernstein, Transportation Nation)
(This post has been updated) U.S Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood tells WNYC's Brian Lehrer the administration has not endorsed is not endorsing Senator Christopher Dodd's Emergency Transit Aid Bill. " In the interview, LaHood did not say whether he or the administration might support the bill or one like it in the future. "We really need to look at how we pay for that," he said.
In an email exchange, LaHood's Press Secretary, Olivia Adair, went to pains to convey that LaHood's use of the present perfect tense does not imply anything as to to the future. "He said we have not endorsed it because we're still looking at how to pay for it. He never says we are not endorsing the transit bill." When asked if that meant LaHood might endorse a bill in future, Adair would not go beyond his broadcast remarks.
There's room for interpretation of LaHood's statement -- politicians have been known to use the "looking at how to pay for it" explanation to avoid supporting a bill altogether. "Looking at how to pay for it" can also signal a yellow light -- Congress has certainly passed emergency aid provisions in the past without first figuring out a funding mechanism. But it can also mean that, if and when LaHood and President Obama are satisfied there is a funding mechanism for emergency transit aid, they'll support it.
Here's the full audio of the interview:
[MP3]http://audio.wnyc.org/news/news20100527_bl_lahoodcut.mp3 [/MP3]
Here's a partial transcript of the interview:
Brian Lehrer: We are happy to have with us the U. S Transportation Secretary, Ray LaHood, a former member of congress from Illinois, Mr. Secretary, thanks so much for coming on WNYC, Good Morning.
RL: Good Morning!
BL: As part of the fiscal crisis for state and local governments, as you know, there seems to be a mass transit bloodletting, underway, in my area the cuts to the MTA and NJ Transit are really bad for mass transit. I’ve heard about Atlanta, where 25 percent of the service could be threatened, there’s a possibility that Silicon Valley could be left without mass transit with CalTrain cut under consideration, imagine no mass transit to Apple and to Google Are you paying close attention to the shrinkage in mass transit taking place nationally right now?
RL: We sure are. We are in communication with our transit folks all over the country on a very regular basis and we know because the economy is lousy and the recession continues that ridership on every transit district around the country is down and has been for quite some time.
At the request of many transit groups, to Congress and to us, Congress was able to provide provisions that allowed transit districts to use some of their operating money so they can keep the buses running and keep the schedule in away that accommodates people that need to go to work early in the morning or come home late at night. And this is certainly true in cities like New York or Chicago or Atlanta or elsewhere in big cities. We’re very attuned to it and we’re trying to do everything we can to try and accommodate the downturn in ridership and the downturn in resources that the transit districts have.
Bl: Unfortunately I think the downturn in resources outpaces the downturn in ridership and that’s the problem but Senator Dodd has an emergency mass transit aid bill is it something you or the President has endorsed?
RL: We haven’t endorsed it because we really need to look at how we pay for that or how the Congress is going to pay for it. But we’re in discussion with Congress on a regular basis about these kinds of transit problems -- lower ridership and lower resources. It’s an issue. We’ve talked to Congress a lot about it, these things have to be paid for too, it’s one thing to say you’re going to appropriate x amount of dollars but we’ll continue to keep a watchful eye on it.
DC Bus, Metro fares to go up?
Thursday, May 27, 2010
(David Schultz, WAMU) The Board of Directors of Metro, Washington D.C.'s transit system, was scheduled to vote on a package of historically large fare increases and services cuts late last month.
They did not.
Instead they delayed for two weeks a vote on the package, which was meant to close a nearly $200 million shortfall in Metro's budget.
Two weeks later, on May 13, the Metro Board met again. And again, they decided to delay the vote another two weeks to today.
DC Streetcar Dead, Victim of Budget Woes
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Takeaway Correspondent Todd Zwillich writes from Washington: "The DC City Council Budget Battle is killing streetcar program, at least for now." DCist has more details.
Center for Public Integrity Gives Cuomo Plan a 'B'
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
The Center for Public Integrity (CPI) has given presumptive Democratic gubernatorial nominee Andrew Cuomo's policy plan a "B." And that’s a good thing.
What Will Andrew Cuomo Do on Transportation? He's Not Telling.
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
(Andrea Bernstein, Transportation Nation). Like moth to a flame, I'm drawn to read every page when a candidate releases a 252-page briefing book. So when Andrew Cuomo sent out his "The New NY Agenda: A Plan for Action" on Sunday night, I was excited. Really.
I wouldn't be spending the campaign waiting for my interview, or listening closely to q-and-a's, or shouting out questions at press conferences. It would be all there, in black and white, the answers to all my questions. Too bad I was wrong.
Senate Introduces Emergency Transit Aid bill
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Would divide up $2 billion to stressed systems facing cuts and layoffs. Streetsblog has the story.
Blood on the Tracks: Could the Cal Train Die?
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
(KALW, Nathaneal Johnson)
It’s hard to imagine that the Caltrain, the commuter train that runs through the heart of Silicon Valley, could actually die. But the whistles that echo past Cisco Systems, Sun Microsystems, Yahoo, Google and Apple may be silenced if the transit agency doesn’t solve its budget woes – quickly.
On April 1, Caltrain declared a state of fiscal emergency. “This is not an April Fools Joke,” Caltrain CEO Mike Scanlon said then. “There’s a possibility this railroad could go away."
Ford Investing $135 million in Hybrids
Monday, May 24, 2010
Ford announces today it's putting $135 million into design and technology for a new line of hybrids out in 2012.
From the release: " Ford Motor Company – moving to create a center of excellence in Michigan for vehicle electrification – today announced it is investing $135 million to design, engineer and produce key components for the company’s next-generation hybrid-electric vehicles.
"Ford engineers in Dearborn will design the battery packs while engineers in Livonia will design electric-drive transaxles for the next-generation hybrids, based on Ford’s global C- and CD-car platforms, which go into production in North America in 2012.
(snip)
"Ford’s Rawsonville Plant in Ypsilanti, Mich., will assemble the battery packs beginning in 2012, moving work to Michigan that is currently performed in Mexico by a supplier. Ford’s Van Dyke Transmission Plant in Sterling Heights, Mich., will build the electric drive transaxles beginning in 2012 from a supplier facility in Japan. Ford is adding a combined 170 jobs at the Rawsonville and Van Dyke facilities to build these key components."
Cuomo's Policy Plan: Big Book, Wide Margins
Monday, May 24, 2010
Andrew Cuomo's press office touted over the weekend his 252-page briefing book.
"The book lays out a bold vision for reform and action on the serious issues and challenges facing our state," the press release says. If past is prologue, Cuomo will be making many references to his policy book in the months to come. It's a way to give heft to his ideas and lend credibility to his campaign.