Episode 36: Open Streets Minneapolis

As cities respond to growing calls for safer streets and more open space, many have begun holding a series of Open Streets events where streets are closed to cars and opened to everyone else (people, bikes, skates and other non-motorized users). In most cases there is special programming including vendors, music, demonstrations and fun activities, but a few just put up some cones and let people have the street. And of course marathons, road races and charity walks are some examples of active use of streets and highways. For more info and a sampling of what different cities are doing, check out this Momentum Magazine article, the Wikipedia page and the Open Streets Project directory. Read all about the history of ciclovias (open streets) at Ciclovias Recreativas de las Américas. I took to Lyndale Avenue South on a beautiful Sunday in late June for Open Streets Minneapolis. This episode features "in the field" interviews with some of the organizations tabling as well as regular people trying out activities such and the pop-up cycle track and the slow race. Organizations represented are (in order): Metro Transit; Minneapolis Public Works Dept; Minneapolis Bicycle Coalition; Spokes community bike center; Bike Walk Twin Cities (Transit for Livable Communities, Non-motorized Transportation Pilot Program); Nice Ride bike sharing; Minneapolis Sculpture Garden; Hennepin County Medical Center; Bicycle Alliance of Minnesota.  The morning event I spoke about is the Brompton US Championship (photos).

Please send in your questions, comments and suggestions for future topics and guests to feedback@criticaltransit.com or via the contact page. Follow my work on Facebook and Twitter, and contact the people I interviewed for more information and inspiration.

Episode 35: The Efficiency of Transit & Listener Questions on Transit Operations

In this episode I debunk the myth endorsed by Freakonomics in their episode on Mass Transit Hysteria and peddled by many others that cars are more efficient than transit. Each transit route is part of a network which may serve many functions that we believe contribute positively to our society. Transit is a public benefit. Most of the episode is devoted to listener questions on transit service design and operations:

  • How to design a late night transit network,
  • The value of pulse point hubs and transit centers (and why transfers are good),
  • How to keep buses on time and minimize bunching,
  • Whether a series of coordinated green signals lights actually helps buses (not unless you have built-in transit signal priority) or is just a ploy by traffic engineers to pretend to support transit.
  • The fine hosts of the Progressive Podcast share their thoughts on using sustainable transport in places where being car-free is not so common. Listen to their show for informed commentary on political, social and cultural issues as well as sustainable transportation.

Share your thoughts and reactions to the show on Twitter, Facebook, and by emailing feedback(at)criticaltransit.com.

Episode 34: Transit News, Listener Feedback, Lessons from Pittsburgh

IMAG3552
IMAG3552
IMAG3666_PGH_Sched
IMAG3666_PGH_Sched

Finally a new episode with your feedback as well as some thoughts on recurring transit strikes and worsening climate change. I share some lessons from my experience riding buses and trains in Pittsburgh, including what kinds of information is important to visitors, new residents and seasoned transit users.

Links to people, places and systems mentioned on this episode:

San Francisco BART transit strike; flooding in Calgary and Toronto; train explosion in Quebec; good news for wildfires; Progressive Podcast Australia; Bikes on Metra commuter rail (The Chainlink forum); riding Divvy bike share (Chicago); Port Authority of Allegheny County (Pittsburgh bus/rail operator); Bike PGH; struggling city of Braddock; ("mini-Detroit"); Stockholm congestion pricing; Bill Lindeke, GaryRidesBikes, Copenhagenize, StrongTowns, walking_boston, bostonrailfan, TheTAdventure.

UPDATE: Walking Bostonian (@walking_boston) wrote a great summary of the transit situation in Pittsburgh.

Please contribute to the growing conversation about sustainable transportation and spread the word by sharing my work on your favorite social media outlets.  Send in your feedback by emailing feedback@criticaltransit.com or using the contact form at criticaltransit.com.

Episode 33: Grease Rag Minneapolis bike collective

I'm back with a tour update and an inspiring interview with a member of Grease Rag, a Minneapolis bike group offering education and support to women/trans/femme cyclists. The growing collective hosts several monthly open shop nights around the Twin Cities as well as day and overnight rides, discussions and other events which build community and connect people with helpful resources in a positive environment.  Lowrah joins me to share her biking story and discuss approaches to supporting new and current cyclists. Learn how we can all be more welcoming, supportive and sensitive to the tension that various forms of privilege can create.  Find out how you can get involved at GreaseRag.org or on Facebook or Twitter.

Livable streets advocates always seem to think that for political reasons they need to make clear they're not anti-car. But I am. I hate cars with a passion. Cars are entirely responsible for the dismal state of our built environment and its negative effects on society. Sure, they can be useful for moving big stuff, but virtually all car trips are totally unnecessary and millions of us do just fine with bikes and buses. My case for why these dangerous steel boxes have to go, finely tuned while navigating around them on my peace-loving bicycle. Also see Right of Way and 50 Reasons Why Cars Suck.

Speaking of bicycles, I will be in Minneapolis next weekend for the Brompton US Championship, a folding bike ride and race that promises to be a fun time. It takes place June 22 and 23 at the Open Streets event in Uptown.

Gareth wrote in from Toronto about the latest mayoral scandal (background) and prospects for a sustainable transit funding plan.  Meanwhile the TTC wants to absorb and expand the city's Bixi bike sharing network but Mayor Ford is again being an obstacle.  In New York, residents and visitors (including me) are already enjoying North America's largest bike share system, CitiBike: blog, video, interviews with idiots.

Music comes from Rock The Bike's Pedal Powered Stage (video) at Sunday Streets, May 2011, San Francisco.

Send comments, questions, suggestions for topics and guests or anything else to feedback@criticaltransit.com or use the contact form above. Follow me on Facebook or Twitter for near-daily micro thoughts.

Transforming Amtrak to a useful and sustainable network

There is very little intelligent discussion of how to improve passenger rail in the United States (and Canada for that matter). It should be our goal to provide a useful, efficient, reliable and affordable transportation service, not merely to make money as most Amtrak critics seem to think. When discussing Amtrak, advocates typically fall in two camps: the more libertarian group believes everything except the profitable Northeast Corridor is a waste of money and should be discontinued; others see this attack and vigorously defend all existing services. Then there are the regional non-profit groups working to raise large sums of money for a few isolated high-speed rail lines.

The purpose of any planning is to evaluate your performance and work to achieve your previously defined goals. Yet ever since Amtrak was created 40 years ago to stop the bleeding of bankrupt private railroad companies, we have never defined any goals for intercity rail service. That’s probably why Amtrak fails at one of the top priorities for any transportation service: usefulness.

This is the main problem with our intercity passenger rail non-system: it is unsustainable because it is completely useless to the vast majority of Americans. Even for people like me who love riding trains, it can be very difficult to plan a trip on the infrequent, slow services. If you’re not a rail fan and don’t hate flying, air travel is likely to be your mode of choice, even if you would rather take a train.

These are the main deterrents to using intercity passenger rail in the United States (same for Via Rail in Canada):

Lack of geographic coverage.  Amtrak operates a handful of regional routes and even fewer long-distance lines. Many important cities are served indirectly, in only one direction, or omitted entirely. All east-west long-distance routes go far out of their way to meet in Chicago. Stations are often located outside of the walkable areas where people want to be and lack convenient local or regional transit and intercity bus connections. While most Americans live somewhere near a train route, few live near a service that is useful to them.

Infrequent service and poor schedules.  Amtrak owns and manages very few of the corridors on which it operates, meaning that it adheres to the rules and capabilities of its host railroads. The private freight operators are not bad people; they just have different priorities which are dictated by the needs of transporting cargo over long distances on very long train sets and shifting it to/from trucks.  As a result of these constraints, most Amtrak lines run only once per day and often at times that are inconvenient to potential passengers. For example, Cleveland and Toledo are served only by the Lake Shore Limited (New York/Boston - Chicago) and the Capitol Limited (Washington - Chicago), which both pass through only in the middle of the night.

Slow travel & frequent delays.  Since Amtrak does not control its running ways, its service quality can only be as good as its host railroads will allow. The top speed of 79 miles per hour is considered low by international standards, yet many segments don’t even allow that speed. It all has to do with the condition of the tracks, capability of the signals, and what/how other trains using the line. Schedules and sidings (extra tracks for passing) are often designed to deal with these issues but the most complicated schedule only works if you stay on time. An example of slow travel is the Empire Builder route which serves Minneapolis, Milwaukee and Chicago on its eastern end, but is too slow and often delayed for most people to rely on it.

Cost.  In most places Amtrak is reasonably priced and easily beats the cost of driving or flying, but in high demand corridors such as California and the Northeast Corridor, the prices can be unaffordable for most travelers. Buses provide much cheaper travel on the same corridors but are unreliable as they must operate in heavily congested traffic, a glaring example of income inequality.

What’s missing from every Amtrak discussion I hear in transit circles is the need to build and maintain an intercity and regional transportation system that is useful to people. All four of the above issues can be solved if we invest in infrastructure upgrades that would permit fast, frequent, reliable service everywhere it is needed. With this approach, some segments will yield a good farebox recovery ratio, and it would also hopefully prompt a serious discussion on what we’re trying to achieve with our rail service.

So far we have only done the equivalent of local transit service cuts: eliminate some routes to make it look more efficient on paper while in reality the network erodes and loses riders in a death spiral.

Episode 32: La Crosse, Wisconsin: small city and rural transit

We look first at the small radial bus system transit run by the La Crosse Municipal Transit Utility, which I rode on Fare Free Day.  Service Rep/Dispatcher Sonna Severson explains the system, then Director Keith Carlson explains some of the issues and what they've been working on. I toured the MTU service area, rode one of their brand new hybrid buses and enjoyed the two-year-old Grand River Station, a beautiful indoor/outdoor transit center which functions as a pulse point hub for ten fixed routes and Jefferson Lines intercity buses.

When I accidentally discovered the very new Scenic Mississippi Regional Transit, I had to take a ride. I share some audio from the trip as bus driver Carrie tells us about the service and who is using it.  Regional Transportation Planner (MRRPC) Peter Fletcher explains the process of starting a new transit service in Wisconsin, the complex public-private partnership that funds SMRT, and how it's going so far. The service is operated by Running Inc., which also operates a regional shared-ride taxi company.  Some publicity and coordination with MTU schedules, and a spot in Grand River Station, would help the ridership grow.

I biked from La Crosse north along the Mississippi River to Winona, Minnesota, my next stop, in the dark on country roads without my regular dynamo taillight. I blame Brompton for selling me an inferior halogen headlight which caused my inferior rear light to burn out, but thanks to the great folks at Calhoun Cycle in Minneapolis for replacing it and getting me on my way. [UPDATE: Eventually I replaced these with a good Busch & Muller LED light set that's been flawless.]

Read and contribute to the rural transit resource library of the TROUT in Bancroft, Ontario.  Learn about the Brompton US Championship race which will take place during Open Streets Minneapolis on June 23.

Most of this episode was recorded during the first few days of April.  Please send your questions, comments, ideas for show topics and guests to feedback@criticaltransit.com or using the contact form. Follow me and my work on Twitter @criticaltransit or Facebook.

Tour update: across the Upper Peninsula of Michigan

Time for some bike touring! While I won't be camping quite yet, I am excited to ride in what has been described as one of the best biking environments in the United States.

I had a great few weeks in Minneapolis and another week in Duluth, Minnesota, before boarding an overnight Indian Trails bus across the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. My preference was a day trip but it's a state-subsidized bus line that runs once a day. Buses from each direction (Duluth, St Ignace, Hancock and Milwaukee) meet in the small town of Escanaba at 4 AM for connections. Mine will arrive in the "unincorporated place" called Engadine shortly after 6 AM so I can ride along the northern shore of Lake Michigan toward St Ignace. Then I'll do a loop of the eastern Upper Peninsula ending with a ferry ride to car-free Mackinac Island.

Should be a great ride, as long as my internal hub doesn't cause trouble again. I think I finally fixed it right ... And hope so ... Probably no bike shops on my route!

Episode 31: Nice Ride: Bike Sharing in the Twin Cities

IMAG2169-e1367389769522.jpg

I stopped by the Nice Ride Minnesota offices near the Midtown Greenway in Minneapolis.  Nice Ride is a bike share system now in its fourth year of operation and its second year in St Paul.  Anthony Ongaro and Mitch Vars discuss the state of the system and how it is helping to make the Twin Cities a happier and healthier place. Later we dream about moving Nice Ride bikes by bike, and Executive Director Bill Dossett explains the evolution of the local bike network and shares his favorite places to ride.

Learn more about the show and my ongoing transit tour, send questions and stories, suggest destinations, topics or guests by emailing feedback@criticaltransit.com, and follow me on Facebook and Twitter.

Bicycling in Minneapolis: city of lakes and trails

Aside from the cold, Minneapolis is a great city to get around by bike. Unlike other cities which have been working hard to add bike lanes, the backbone of Twin Cities bicycle network is its system of off-street paths.  Trails around the lakes have existed for decades the spine is the newer Midtown Greenway. Built in an old railroad trench, the greenway ranges from an arterial to a limited access highway, with separate spaces for bikes and pedestrians. It provides a safe, fast and direct route across the city and connects with several other trails. Experienced bicyclists tell me that once the greenway opened bicycling took off everywhere. I am impressed by how many people are biking through the winter (at least according to the weather it's not spring yet). The city does an overall excellent job of clearing snow from the trails, especially compared to other cities that pretend bikeways are for recreational use only. It's hard to overstate the importance of the trail network: it's easier for new cyclists to get started, more comfortable for everyone, and accommodates all types of bikes and bicyclists. Perhaps most important, when ice and snow are present, I would much rather be on a wet path than with drivers who don't pay attention even in good weather. That's what makes it so casual and peaceful.

In recent years the city has worked to connect the trail network to more neighborhoods and downtown with bike lanes and bike boulevards. Most of these leave a lot to be desired, especially where narrow bike lanes exist on very wide one-way streets, but hopefully the city is learning from its experiments and willing to revisit them.

[gallery ids="911,909,902,913,912,898,897,826,906,914,904,908"]

Another factor is the personal interaction. Apparently many car drivers also bike at least sometimes, probably on trails. (In fact, I wouldn't be surprised in this region has comparatively high rates of recreational biking.)  That's the only way I can explain the common occurrence of drivers yielding to me when they are supposed to and even when they are not. I wish I could say the same about riding in other cities.

Have you visited or lived in Minneapolis?  Do you share my assessment?  Should I move here?

Transit corridors in Minneapolis

It is late April in Minneapolis and still no sign of spring. The past few days have seen more snow and rain, including enough snow on Thursday to cause the Nice Ride bike sharing system to shut down and Metro Transit bus routes to be significantly delayed. According to locals it is unusually cold for this time of year. Of course. Express buses brave the late April snow.

The snow hasn't stopped me from exploring the transit system and biking the many trails. While there is certainly a long way to go, the Twin Cities and Metro Transit have made great progress in improving the speed, reliability and usefulness of public transportation. Aside from one recently added light rail line, Minneapolis is a bus-only downtown. That means it welcomes more buses than much larger cities like Boston and New York which are served almost exclusively by fast, high-capacity subways.

Metro Transit groups bus routes onto shared corridors, which helps orient passengers, facilitate transfers and justify the cost of service and facility improvements.

The best example of bus priority is the pair of bus lanes for suburban express routes. Buses operate northbound along Marquette Ave and southbound along 2 Ave S in two bus lanes that run in the opposite direction as other traffic. During rush hour there is a constant stream of buses on both streets.

Express bus traffic on 2 Ave South

Express bus traffic on Marquette Ave South

Other corridors are still in need of improvement. Nicollet Mall, a two-lane street intended for buses and bicycles handles several local routes and is hampered by an arbitrary 10 mph speed limit and no passing room. This is a picture from the central library showing Nicollet Mall as well as 4 St which hosts four of the busiest routes in the region: 3, 16, 50, 94.

Local bus on Nicollet Mall (bottom) and 4 St (right); express buses on Marquette (background).

Hennepin Ave, 7 St and 8 St serve many buses per hour all day but have no dedicated lanes and force buses to be delayed in mixed traffic. No bus lanes exist in St Paul, even though all Metro Transit buses are concentrated on two one-way street pairs. Most of the streets in both downtowns are very wide and entirely devoted to mixed traffic. There is so much opportunity to improve transit speed, reliability and effectiveness by creating dedicated bus running ways; hopefully that's in the future.