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Sarah Goodyear

Recent Posts

Living Up to the Nation’s Transit Potential

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 15, 2009 | 2 Comments
Today on the Streetsblog Network, we’ve got a post about unfulfilled potential — American cities that could do a lot better at getting people to ride transit. The Transit Pass compares the cities with the top ridership to those with the top population: Riders boarding light rail in Phoenix. Photo by Michael Ruiz via Flickr. […]

Highways and Rapid Transit: Should They Go Together?

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 14, 2009 | 2 Comments
Today on the Streetsblog Network, we’ve got a something of a debate going on the subject of putting new transit routes alongside highways in American cities. Last Friday, Yonah Freemark at The Transport Politic noted the opening of Portland’s Green Line with a post titled "Portland’s New Rail Line Is Welcome News, but It’s Not […]

“Summer Streets” Aren’t Enough…But They Would Be Nice

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 11, 2009 | No Comments
New York has them. San Francisco has them. Portland, too. Now St. Louis might be getting its own version of Summer Streets. Streetsblog Network member St. Louis Urban Workshop is happy with Mayor Francis Slay’s proposal to close some of the city’s streets to motor vehicles on summer weekends. But the blog calls for more […]

Building Codes to Deal With Abandoned Big Boxes

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 10, 2009 | 1 Comment
Today from the Streetsblog Network, a report from Charlotte, NC, on the city’s efforts to deal with derelict big box stores. Mary Newsom at The Naked City reports that a proposed new building code to address the problem is in the works: An abandoned store in Charlotte, NC. The issue is important for neighborhoods where […]

When Parking Spaces Are More Important Than Homes

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 9, 2009 | No Comments
Parking. It takes up a lot of space in the discussion of transportation and planning. No surprise, since one of the main problems with cars is how much space they take up even when they’re not in use. The Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, DC, is no exception. In a post today from Greater Greater Washington, […]

A Livable Streets Renaissance in Savannah?

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 8, 2009 | No Comments
The last time we checked in with the folks down at Sustainable Savannah, it was to get an update on the jaywalking ticket blitz that the city was conducting — not exactly evidence of a progressive attitude toward traffic safety. Today, we’ve got better news. Biking in Savannah: the future is looking brighter. Photo by […]

Intercity Trains: How Good Do Connections Need to Be?

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 4, 2009 | 1 Comment
Today on the Streetsblog Network, we return to the question of connectivity — or, to translate it out of transpo jargon, how to get there from here. The Transport Politic looks at one of the objections to high-speed rail: that people won’t want to ride it because when they arrive at their destination, transit connections […]

The Brute Power of the Car

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 3, 2009 | No Comments
For the last couple of days, there’s been a lot of talk around the Streetsblog Network about a particularly horrific incident on Monday in which a cyclist, Darcy Allan Sheppard, was fatally injured on Toronto’s Bloor Street in an encounter with a car allegedly driven by the former attorney general of Ontario, Michael Bryant. Montréal’s […]

Portland Gets a Cycle Track, and All That Comes With It

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 2, 2009 | 2 Comments
In Portland, Oregon, already one of America’s best cycling cities, a new amenity was unveiled this past weekend: a cycle track, or physically separated bike lane, near Portland State University. For several blocks, it provides a protected place for bikers to ride — by taking a lane from motor vehicle traffic and changing the place […]

Streetsblog.net Carrots Are Good for You, and So Are Sticks

By Sarah Goodyear | Sep 1, 2009 | No Comments
A very interesting post today on the Streetsblog Network from getDowntown, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The getDowntown program, which aims to get more people using alternative modes of transportation through a variety of incentives and support systems, is a partnership between the Ann Arbor Area Chamber of Commerce, the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority, the City […]

Drinking and Driving; In Some States They Go Hand in Hand

By Sarah Goodyear | Aug 31, 2009 | 1 Comment
Drinking and driving laws vary from state to state, but in Wisconsin, it’s not until your fifth offense that you’re charged with a felony for drunk driving. That’s an awful lot of leeway for a behavior that so often leads to serious bodily harm. But as Urban Milwaukee points out, it’s not just the law […]

The Importance of Making the Connection

By Sarah Goodyear | Aug 28, 2009 | 1 Comment
Yesterday, I made the trip from Brooklyn, NY, to Jersey City, NJ, to visit the Liberty Science Center. It really wasn’t hard to do, although it required three separate transfers — from the F train to the A train, from the A to the PATH train, and then from the PATH to the Hudson-Bergen Light […]
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