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Latest

11/19 'Dooring' top culprit in cycling crashes, Newsday

11/19 MTA Stashes Away $200M, New York Post

11/18 Bronx pol pushes for mandatory bike licenses, Newsday

11/18 Pol rolling out Council bill to license bikes, Daily News

11/18 Protesters Show Up At MTA Board Meeting To Object To Cuts, NY1

11/18 To get action, it helps to have alternatives, Philadelphia Daily News

11/17 Nun just latest victim at killer corner, Daily News

11/17 Silver's backing DWI bill, but Assembly version too weak, critics say, Daily News

11/17 Friends Hail Nun Cut Down by Truck, New York Post

11/17 MTA spends $1M on staff cars, Newsday

11/15 East River tolls: Fact vs. fiction, am New York

11/12 Cyclists spinning for more parking, Daily News

11/8 Safety in numbers' mass appeal, am New York

11/8 Biking in NYC, am New York

11/5 Bikers, walkers battle on bridge, Daily News

11/4 The Bike Helmet as Riot Gear? The New York Times

11/1 Want to know where your fare money's going? Here's the truth, am New York

10/31 Taking the Drive Out of Central Park, The New York Times

10/29 SUV Driver Loses Control, Injures Four on Sidewalk, The New York Sun

10/25 City's not thru with crosstown ban, Daily News

10/25 Foil thieves with indoor bike parking, am New York

10/24 Study: Park car ban would 'barely' impact traffic, Newsday

10/22 'Thru Streets' will become permanent, Newsday

10/22 A sinking feeling in boro: Has most street craters in city, Daily News

10/18 School crossing mishap shows need for change, am New York

10/15 Man. Bridge pathillogical: Bike route lacks view, easy access, Daily News

10/15 Transportation rally, Newsday

More Quotes...


T.A.  News

Time on your hands? Eager to make a difference? T.A. needs folks who are retired, work part-time or between jobs to help our top-notch advocacy staff make the city a better place for bicyclists, pedestrians and transit riders.
Call 212-629-8080 or e-mail info@transalt.org.

Valet Bike Parking Volunteers Needed

Volunteer to provide valet bike parking at events throughout the year. Register online to express your interest in this opportunity.

T.A. still has two open internships: 

- Advocacy (work with T.A. program staff)
- Bicycle Advocacy

Please visit transalt.org/intern for more information.


Donations Wish List

Help cycling and walking and get a tax deduction. Donate to T.A. We need:

-Pentium II or better PCs
-Laptop computer (Pentium II or better)
-Digital Camera
-Good chairs for conf. table or desks

Contact Matt: info@transalt.org


Do Your Part for Safer Streets!  Report:

Potholes and Hazards:
212-CALLDOT (hit 0 to speak with a human) or report them online at transalt.org/
hazard
 

Sidewalk obstructions: Mayor’s Quality of Life Hotline at 888-677-LIFE/
5433

Read more about T.A.'s work to reduce street hazards at transalt.org/haz

Report Dangerous Cabs: 212-221-TAXI or report them online.

Read more about T.A.'s work to make cabs safer for pedestrians and cyclists at transalt.org/cabs


The T.A. Bulletin is a bi-weekly publication of Transportation Alternatives. The Bulletin has 31,000 subscribers.

Transportation Alternatives is a 5,000-member NYC-area non-profit citizens group working for better bicycling, walking and public transit, and fewer cars. We work for safer, calmer neighborhood streets and car-free parks. Join T.A. today!


 

 

 


November 19, 2004


New York, Nation Mobilize Against Mandatory Bike Registration

Now, Let's Turn the Tide and Score a Major Win for Better Biking in NYC!

Together we are winning! The bike licensing bill is stalled for now. Thanks to over 5,000 people who responded to T.A.'s Action Alert and faxed Councilmember Madeline Provenzano in opposition to Int. No. 497. With help from the League of American Bicyclists and scores of other bicycle, health and environmental groups, the call to action was answered from across NYC and across the country. The message, restated in the newspapers and on the T.V. news, was loud and clear: forcing people to license their bicycles will reduce bike riding and is bad for New Yorkers and New York City.

Let’s not stop now! We now need your help in passing a different bill, a truly landmark piece of legislation that would bring bicycling into the NYC mainstream: Int. No. 155, the indoor bike parking bill.

Take two minutes and contact your City Councilmember and tell her or him that you support Int. 155 (and oppose Int. 497). With 70,000 bikes stolen each year in NYC and less than 2% recovered, bike thieves and the lack of indoor bike parking are the largest obstacles to would-be bike riders in New York City. Int. 155 would require landlords, building owners, managers and supers to make reasonable provisions for tenants to bring their bicycles inside. This would greatly increase daily bike riding.

Look up your councilmember at
www.nyccouncil.info/constituent/member_list.cfm  

If you don't live in New York, tell Mayor Bloomberg you support indoor bike parking:
www.nyc.gov/html/mail/html/mayor.html 

Here are three more ways you can help stop mandatory bike registration and help win indoor bike parking:

1) Write a letter to the editors of the Daily News and Newsday and tell them: bike licensing bad; lawful cycling and secure bike parking good (But be more eloquent than that.)
Daily News voicers@edit.nydailynews.com
Newsday letters@newsday.com 

2) Help make NYC's streets safer for everyone by riding safely and lawfully and always respecting pedestrians. For safe bicycling tips see
www.transalt.org/press/askta/030529.html#w and www.transalt.org/press/magazine/033Summer/
07greenwayrules.html
 

3) Volunteer at www.transalt.org/volunteer to help win better biking in NYC.

Stay tuned to www.transalt.org for updates and alerts.



Sister Catherine Lee

Death of Sister Lee was Preventable

80-year-old Catherine Lee, a nun with the Mary Knoll Sisterhood, was killed Monday morning by a turning truck at Sixth Avenue and 23rd Street in Manhattan. At the scene, the commanding NYPD officer told a Newsday reporter, "It was just a tragic accident."


CrashStat.org

But there is a consistent history of such tragedies at this intersection, indicating that this was no "accident." The death of Sister Catherine Lee was preceded in 2002 by the death of 50-year-old Betty Kapetanakis (also by a turning truck) and yet another death in 2001--all three at the exact same location. In fact, between the years 1995 and 2001, there were no fewer than eight fatal or near fatal driver-pedestrian crashes at Sixth Avenue and 23rd Street.

There are several ways to fix this intersection so that pedestrians are not killed by turning drivers, the most common type of driver-pedestrian crash. One way is to install medians so that turning truck drivers would be forced to make a tighter turn, and thus slow down, onto Sixth Avenue. Another is to provide pedestrians with exclusive crossing time free from turning drivers.

Thankfully, there are signs that the DOT is beginning to recognize and more effectively wield its power to prevent traffic crashes. DOT announced in October that it will expand and make permanent the Midtown THRU Streets program.

The THRU Streets program, which began in the fall of 2002, will soon include 49 "split phase" signal locations. Split phase signals allow pedestrians to cross undisturbed while drivers in both directions are held at a red light.

Kudos to the City DOT and Mayor Bloomberg for standing up for Midtown's beleaguered walking masses. Now, in the interest of preventing future tragedies, it is time to expand such efforts and provide pedestrians with exclusive crossing time throughout the City.


Olympian Level Effort Needed to Save Transit

Hundreds of straphangers, many of them T.A. members, turned out to a series of Metropolitan Transit Authority public hearings to voice their opposition to planned fare hikes and service cuts. Undeterred by the fact that the hearings were held in remote locations difficult to reach by subway or bus, many arrived by bike to protest the MTA's planned double-whammy of fare hikes and service cuts.

Meanwhile, the Governor’s office, leaders in the State Legislature and the New York City Council all reiterated their strong opposition to re-tolling the East River bridges (the bridges used to be tolled in the early 1900's). The Independent Budget Office, on the other hand, joined the chorus of those calling for bridge tolls as an obvious solution for the MTA's root problem: the dearth of dedicated revenue to fund transit. Mayor Bloomberg, who to his credit has already tried, unsuccessfully, to push the tolls, last week threw up his hands once more, telling the New York Times that bridge tolls are, "politically impossible."

Tolls are a heavy political lift, but as the Mayor of London found, it can be done. If Mayor Mike were to apply to MTA fund-raising half of the political muscle he is flexing to win the 2012 Olympics, then tolls might be a contender.

In addition to moving tolls up the priority list, the Mayor could do much more to convince New Yorkers what they stand to gain. In addition to generating vital transit funding, tolls would diminish peak hour traffic and speed business-critical trips. And Brooklyn and Queens residents, many of whom fear that the tolls will disproportionately impact them, would clearly reap more benefit than cost in terms of quicker commutes and reduced neighborhood through traffic, as outlined in a report released last year by T.A. and the Straphangers Campaign. [ Read the full report ]

Until we convince NY power brokers to address the MTA's root revenue problem by making bridge tolls a top political priority, here are eight things you can do to save mass transit: www.straphangers.org/farehike1004/


New Crosstown Bike Routes a Boon...but Stop Short of Greenways

The DOT recently striped two new cross town bike lanes on 9th and 10th Streets in Greenwich Village, Manhattan. The east and west lanes run between 6th Avenue and Avenue A and connect to existing bike lanes on 2nd Avenue, Lafayette Street, and 5th and 6th Avenues. There is also a new two-block stretch of bike lane on Christopher Street between West and Greenwich Streets.

When originally planned by the DOT, the 9th and 10th Street bike lanes were slated to stretch from the East to the Hudson River and connect the East River and Hudson River Greenway paths that line both rivers' shores. But DOT engineers did not want to interfere with motor vehicle travel or parking lanes. So, for now, the DOT has decided to only stripe lanes between 6th Avenue and Avenue A, leaving cyclists to find their own way between the Hudson River Greenway and 6th Avenue and the East River Greenway and Avenue A.

Though the new lanes connect with four of NYC's busiest bike lanes, they fall short of making the critical coast-to-coast connection.


Having Trouble Crossing Delancey?

Then attend this Important Public Meeting:

Tuesday, November 23, 6:30pm

Spector Hall, 22 Reade Street, Manhattan

NYC Department of City Planning

Delancey Street Transportation Study

Do you walk or bike on or around Delancey Street in Manhattan’s Lower East Side? Do you live, work, shop or travel in the area, use Delancey Street to visit the many stores and restaurants in the neighborhood, to get to and from the Williamsburg Bridge path or Allen Street bike lanes?

If so, please attend this important public meeting to air your concerns and ideas about how to make Delancey and the surrounding streets safer and easier for biking and walking.


Bike Giveaways

Congratulations to George G. of Manhattan, who won a free NYC Bike in our NYC Century sweepstakes! All NYC Century riders who joined T.A. or renewed their membership were eligible to win.

Watch your inbox over the next few weeks for an e-mail from us regarding the long-awaited giveaway of a $1,000 Brompton folding bicycle. All e-bulletin subscribers are automatically entered to win. Some restrictions apply. The winner must respond to our e-mail within seven days.


Letters

7th Avenue Bike Lane in Brooklyn?

Dear T.A.,

You did a great job getting the bike lane on Fifth Avenue in Brooklyn. Thank you for that. Now that 7th Avenue has been repaved is there any chance of a bike lane there? I would like to help if I could.

Thank you
Mark L.

T.A. Response: 7th Avenue is not in the Bicycle Master Plan, but that does not mean that we should not ask for a bike lane there!

We recommend writing (and faxing, if you can) a short letter to the Department of Transportation Brooklyn Borough Commissioner Lori Ardito, thanking the DOT for its good work on 5th Avenue and urging them to stripe a bike lane on 7th Avenue too.

Brooklyn Borough Commissioner Lori Ardito
NYC Department of Transportation
16 Court Street
Brooklyn NY 11241
FAX: (718) 222-7256

We will also ask her about this.

Keep us posted!


Central Park West Southbound Bike Lane

Dear T.A.,

Thank you for noting that the Central Park West bike lane in Manhattan is for northbound traffic only.

Sadly, the lack of a southbound bike lane has led many cyclists to believe that it is for traffic in both directions. This creates a hazardous situation during rush hours when the lane sees its heaviest use. I commute north from Manhattan to the Bronx and am regularly confronted with anywhere from six to a dozen cyclists riding south in the bike lane.

As long as there is no southbound lane this situation will continue.

Richard G.


Plum Beach Bike Path Sand Dune

Dear T.A.,

Please get the sand removed from the bike path at Plum Beach (the one that parallels the Belt Parkway in Brooklyn).

Thanks,
Martin C.

T.A. Response: Martin, we are working on it and could use your help.

When T.A. discovered the problem over the summer, we did not know what government agency has jurisdiction over it. We wrote to City Departments of Transportation, Parks and Design and Construction and the State Department of Transportation. The State Department of Transportation and City Department of Parks indicated that this patch of greenway path is under the jurisdiction of the City Department of Transportation.

We are waiting to hear back from them. It would greatly help if you could send a quick note to the City Department of Transportation and ask them to fix this problem.

Brooklyn Borough Commissioner Lori Ardito

NYC Department of Transportation
16 Court Street
Brooklyn, NY 11241
FAX: (718) 222-7256
Thanks!


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Take Action

T.A. has many volunteer opportunities.  Please visit our site to learn more about how you can help. Come to the Volunteer Mailing Party on Wednesday, December 8th at 6 pm at the T.A. Office (115 West 30th, #1207)! Free beer, soda, snacks and scintillating conversation. 

transalt.org/volunteer

Advocacy Committees
Want to do more? Step into the front lines of T.A.’s campaigns for better cycling, walking, transit and car-free parks. Join a T.A. volunteer advocacy committee. Read more at: www.transalt.org/volunteer/advocacy 

Bronx@transalt.org

Brooklyn@transalt.org
transalt.org/campaigns/brooklyn      

Centralpark@transalt.org
transalt.org/campaigns/cpark 

Gowanus@transalt.org
transalt.org/campaigns/sensible/gowanus.html  

Citywide:
Info@transalt.org
www.transalt.org 

Breaking News

Bike Messenger Doored and Killed

Yesterday morning 42-year-old Dell Covington was riding up 8th Avenue near 49th Street when, apparently, a deliveryman opened a truck door and hit him. Mr. Covington was knocked headfirst into the pavement. Dell is the fourteenth person to be killed while riding a bike in New York City in 2004.

For details see:

Killed on bike

'Dooring' top culprit in cycling crashes

New York City Bicycle Messenger Association nybma.com

 


Come to the Volunteer Mailing Party, Wednesday, December 8th at 6 pm at the T.A. Office (115 West 30th, #1207)! Free beer, soda, snacks and scintillating conversation. 


Join T.A. today to start receiving Transportation Alternatives Magazine, our members-only in-depth quarterly magazine—
just one of the many personal benefits of T.A. membership!

Request a sample copy!

Selected articles

"Safety in Numbers" Redefines Road Safety

Bike Lanes Coming to Park Slope's 5th Ave

TA Fights for More Safety, Less Harassment

Restoring Vital Habitat: NYC Kids Need Car-Free Parks, Playgrounds and Side Streets

The Just Desserts of DOT's Piecemeal Policy

Governor Pataki's Low Capital Crime: Will He Commit it Again?


THE T.A.
E-BULLETIN

• Sign up for
T.A.
's free bi-monthly e-bulletin (fresh news for area cyclists and pedestrians) and win a $1000 folding bike!

TAKE THE TOUR!
NYC Century Bike Tour



POTHOLES, STREET HAZARDS GOT YOU IN A RUT?

Call DOT at 212-225-5368 and hit 0 to skip the message and speak with a human. You can also report them online at transalt.org/
hazard
.


STAY SMART & INFORMED

Savvy transit riders get their lowdown on the subways here:

straphangers
.org
The ultimate source for bus and subway service changes, rider comments and complaints that produce action. Help yourself and T.A.’s favorite transit advocates. Check it out.

Sensible Transport Junkies:

Subscribe to the Tri-State Transportation Campaign’s e-weekly, Mobilizing the Region.  tstc.org

Insiders Breakfast on Fresh Baked NYC Politics & Policy

The daily Gotham Gazette
: gothamgazette
.org

NYC News summaries and savvy commentary.

Bikes in Bogota? Car-Free Cartagena? Tel-Aviv by Train?

Go global at itdp.org!


Give on-line at transalt.org/join 


Quick! What's your city council
member's name?
Don't know? See: nypirg.org


GET THERE!

Check our maps page for links to NYC-area bicycle and transit maps.


RIDES AND WALKS

Saturday, November 20, 8 am. Heading North, Bear Mountain Metric Century. Plaza Hotel. 5BBC.

Saturday, November 20, 9:15 am. Wandering to Wave Hill. Columbus Circle. 5BBC.

Sunday, November 21, 9 am. Hastings to Van Cortlandt Park. Grand Central upper level info. booth. Shorewalkers.

Sunday, November 21, 9 am. Nyack. Central Park boathouse. Fast & Fabulous

Sunday, November 21, 10 am. Saddle Up and Ride The Hutch. Dyre Avenue subway station, #5 train. 5BBC.

Tuesday, November 23, 10 am. TBA. Loeb Boathouse. The Weekday Cyclists in NYC

Friday, November 26, 7 pm. Critical Mass: Manhattan. Union Square North. Time's Up!

Saturday, November 27, 9 am. Walk Off the Turkey. South Ferry Terminal entrance. Shorewalkers.

Saturday, November 27, 10 pm. Riverside Ride. Columbus Circle. Time's Up!

Saturday, November 27, 10 am. Turkey Jam. Bridgemarket. 5BBC.

Sunday, November 28. Call for time. Kingston, NJ to Hamilton, NJ. Port Authority Bus Terminal, by the commuter statues. Shorewalkers.

Sunday, November 28, 10 am. Near Brooklyn. City Hall. 5BBC.

Sunday, November 28, 10:47 am. Stump Pond plus Caleb Smith. Smithtown LIRR station. Shorewalkers.

Tuesday, November 30, 10 am. TBA. Loeb Boathouse. The Weekday Cyclists in NYC. 

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127 West 26th Street, Suite 1002
New York, NY 10001