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#41
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We have bike racks on all of our buses here in the Tampa Bay Area.
I use them frequently, and despite the Mercedes Diesel parked in my carport, I consider my bicycle my main means of transportation within Tarpon Springs and Pinellas County. That's wonderful, Bob. I'm glad they're being used *somewhere*... Hell, I hope that when I'm 68 I can still walk upstairs, let alone ride a bike 68 miles! Our bus drivers never touch the bikes, one must view a 10-15 minute training video, pay for a photo ID card, and display it to the bus driver each time that the bike rack is used. Wow. I can just imagine the bureaucracy that's been set up to administer THAT little program. Who's paying those folks' salaries? I doubt it's the bicyclists. (Or do you pay an extra fare for your bike?) What comments do you have about the mandatory wheelchair lifts that we also have on all of our busses? We have them, too, and I find them to be completely absurd. They cost taxpayers enough so that we quite literally could have purchased a special handicapped-accessible van, and staffed it with a full-time driver -- and STILL been money ahead. Best of all, were a special van purchased we wouldn't be inconveniencing and delaying those few who DO use mass-transit. How many quit riding the bus because of these kinds of delays? More than will admit it, I suspect. I have found that as I age, I become much more considerate and understanding of the needs of others. I have found that as I age I become less and less tolerant of people demanding "rights" that simply don't exist. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#42
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"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message thlink.net...
"lowflyer" wrote in message om... Do you think you'll ever appreciate the point I made? Seemed pretty clear, but you seem to think I missed something. What was it? |
#43
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:JtVTc.161536$eM2.64302@attbi_s51... I have found that as I age I become less and less tolerant of people demanding "rights" that simply don't exist. Oh, I'm sure if you really thought about it you could list a whole bunch of "rights" that you have, and take advantage of, that others might well consider as nonexistant. Let's start with aviation and everything that goes with it (e.g. weather briefings). Absolutes are difficult and the rest is just a matter of degree. |
#44
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:j4JTc.314255$XM6.88329@attbi_s53... Iowa City spent a hundred thousand dollars (or more) installing "bicycle lifts" on the front of all city buses. These contraptions allow the bus driver to stop, get out, and "easily" load a bicycle onto a rack mounted on the front of the bus. Those racks, along with bicycle lanes on bridges and bike trails and the like, are heavily used in this area. I think it depends a lot on population density, though I would have expected bicycling to be more popular than it is in your area -- after all, you don't have the hills we do. It has been kind of miserable riding across the Hood Canal Bridge lately since the bike lane has been all but closed for bridge maintenance, but I expect once that is completed that people will be riding across the bridge again. Of course, I am one of those infernal bike nuts, which I suppose would make me a Green when I am not a rabid right-wing conservative. :-) It is funny how some pilots who are sensitive to airlines complaining that we don't pay our fair share of taxes will turn around and level the same charge at bicyclists, yet the situations are very similar. Sure, bicyclists don't pay gas taxes when they are not driving cars, but then in most places gas taxes aren't being used to pay for roads anyway. There is very little difference between bicyclists and motorists on the total amount of taxes paid. |
#45
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On Sun, 15 Aug 2004 12:56:47 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: In my own experience with American Greens, they oppose anything that THEY don't do, while demanding outrageous privileges from government. Example: $4 million to have a bicycle lane across the Dumbarton Bridge in San Francisco Bay. Maybe three people a week use it. Iowa City spent a hundred thousand dollars (or more) installing "bicycle lifts" on the front of all city buses. These contraptions allow the bus driver to stop, get out, and "easily" load a bicycle onto a rack mounted on the front of the bus. Mistake number one. Almost any serious bicyclist is not going to let some buss driver with or without training load their bicycle. You don't play around with bikes of this class just like you don't walk up and pick up some musicians axe. (Guitar) Today's bicyclists do not ride the old bikes we were so fond of while growing up. Today's bicyclist rides a bike that cost as much as a nice, but small used car. Joyce and I are both over 60, yet at least once a week she rides 20 miles one way to another town for lunch with friends. She just returned from a trip that went from South of Muskegon MI to Mackinaw City. In past years she'd ride from the "Straights" across the upper peninsula all the way past Green Bay to Manitowoc (sp?) WI in the same week I was at Oshkosh. It sounds as if the system you are talking about was designed by non bicyclists, or at least people who know little of alternate transportation.. IOW they had the wrong people doing the work. As was mentioned in another answer the bicyclist is the one who loads the bike. You don't let some one else play with your toys when they cost that much. Moving to alternate forms of transportation is a complex issue. First, we don't have the alternate forms because we don't have provisions for them such as racks on the buss, bike lanes, rail trails...etc... but when you put in provisions for those alternate forms of transportation they are not used because the alternate forms have not developed due to the lack of provisions to support them. (bike lanes, rail trails, traffic education among others) The Greens insisted that this would encourage the use of public transportation (which has been a financial catastrophe here -- we could literally buy each rider a car for less tax money), and rammed the issue through our sheepish city council. Think positive. These are the attitudes that have prevented the alternate forms in the first place and continue to discourage them It all takes time. If you develop a rail trail (replace abandoned rail roads with bike, or non motorized trails) and they may not see much use at first, but once available the use will develop. We built a paved rail trail from Midland to Clare Michigan. It's a bit over 30 miles long. http://www.lmb.org/pmrt/ (go to the map) Photos along the trail are also on the site. At first people fought the tail and the "bikers". They feared it would raise crime in the areas where it was going to go through. Now that the tail is in, there are restaurants along the trail that cater to the riders as well as the general public. Several bike shops have been built. Instead of trouble it is building business. We have people riding 15 to 30 miles for Saturday or Sunday lunch and then back. In town (Midland) hundreds use the trail every day for hiking, biking, and roller blading. The first 4 or 5 miles are one busy stretch. I believe that part is 12 feet wide. We are getting ready to add another 7 miles of trail out to the Chippewa Nature Center. As most of us knew all along, they (like the buses) are rarely used -- thankfully. Each time they ARE used, the bus -- which, of course, must stop at curbside, blocking the traffic lane -- sits for up to 5 minutes while the poor driver wrestles the bike onto the rack. Again, poor design. It should only take seconds to load the bike. We can load both our bikes onto the car carrier in less than a minute and they weren't designed for speed loading. First you have to build the infrastructure as the bicyclists aren't going to be there until it is in place. You'd be surprised just how fast a properly designed system will develop use. If the rest of the alternative system is designed as the buss system, it will not develop. Ten years ago Joyce and I flew to Florida. We took our road bikes. One look at the roads and we decided we were not going to ride in that state. There were no shoulders and no provisions for riding bikes and with the elderly drivers and narrow roads you needed a death wish to take a short ride. .. They tell me Texas was even worse. Today both Texas and Florida are rated among the top states for alternative transportation. If you really want to see a city designed to handle cars, pedestrians, and bicycles, go to Boulder Colorado. Every major street has wide bike lanes and they are well used. They have a tremendous system. I've heard there are now cities that are much better. I often wonder how much gas those 25 cars idling behind the bus are "saving" thanks to the Greens. Again as in Florida the faulty design of the system is causing the delay. But, of course, we're the idiots for letting them control the agenda... The problem is the idiots controlling the agenda didn't understand what was needed and built an expensive answer that wasn't an answer, but rather more of another problem. It's not the Greens, but those who seek alternate forms of transportation. Getting the extremists in the planning is as bad or worse than getting those who know noting about alternate forms of transportation. Any city, or county that decides to go ahead with alternate forms of transportation will gain in the long run if the program is properly implemented. They will just create a lot of animosity if the system is not properly designed and run. Even the implementation of a properly designed system will be a painful growing experience. It takes time to design, it takes time to implement, and it takes time for the user base to develop. If we had the bridge across the river, just down the road, I'd be riding my bike to the airport. It'd be just over 5 miles. As it is now, it's nearly 11 miles and 5 of those are on a very bad stretch of highway. So to get around that you have to ride another 5 miles making the trip 15 instead of the possible 5. Hell, for a slightly exorbitant price I know of a couple people who might be willing to serve as consultants. For that matter I could probably find a lot more who have substantial experience in the field. Just go to the site listed above and follow the links. Another good one is the Michigan State university site http://www.prr.msu.edu/trails/ Another is a pdf put out by the state of Michigan for land use development http://www.michigan.gov/documents/Strader2_85237_7.pdf You might find others by going to www.mi.gov This is a complicated issue due to the need to interface different forms of transportation with different needs, drastically differing speeds, and differing mind sets that are some times a bit on the incompatible side. Good luck, Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#46
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"Jay Honeck" wrote
"Bob Moore" wrote Our bus drivers never touch the bikes, one must view a 10-15 minute training video, pay for a photo ID card, and display it to the bus driver each time that the bike rack is used. Wow. I can just imagine the bureaucracy that's been set up to administer THAT little program. Who's paying those folks' salaries? I doubt it's the bicyclists. (Or do you pay an extra fare for your bike?) No extra fare...bicycles are a popular means of transportation and exercise here in the Tampa Bay area....no snow. :-) The number of bike shops here in Pinellas County alone must number close to one hundred. They administer the bike rack program as a part of their business....attracts new customers. The citizens of Pinellas County voted an extra penny sales tax to fund the public parks system which includes the 34 mile bike-jog path. A lifestyle without snow can be GREAT! What comments do you have about the mandatory wheelchair lifts that we also have on all of our busses? We have them, too, and I find them to be completely absurd. They cost taxpayers enough so that we quite literally could have purchased a special handicapped-accessible van, and staffed it with a full-time driver -- and STILL been money ahead. Not here in Pinellas County where we have a larger percentage of senior citizens with health related issues than most anywhere else in the country. I have found that as I age I become less and less tolerant of people demanding "rights" that simply don't exist. I think that the Disabled American Veterans using their wheelchairs on our public transportation systems to get to the VA hospital have earned that "right". Bob Moore |
#47
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Roger Halstead wrote
Ten years ago Joyce and I flew to Florida. We took our road bikes. One look at the roads and we decided we were not going to ride in that state. There were no shoulders and no provisions for riding bikes and with the elderly drivers and narrow roads you needed a death wish to take a short ride. No longer true, state law now requires bike shoulders on all new road construction and sidewalks anywhere near populated areas. Bob Moore |
#48
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![]() "lowflyer" wrote in message om... Seemed pretty clear, but you seem to think I missed something. I'll take that as a "No." |
#49
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Not here in Pinellas County where we have a larger percentage of senior
citizens with health related issues than most anywhere else in the country. Ah, good point. Here in Iowa City the average age is something crazy, like 27, thanks to the University. I think that the Disabled American Veterans using their wheelchairs on our public transportation systems to get to the VA hospital have earned that "right". Agreed. We have a huge VA hospital here in Iowa City (one of THREE medical centers, believe it or not) -- and they have their own transportation for vets. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#50
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Mistake number one. Almost any serious bicyclist is not going to let
some buss driver with or without training load their bicycle. You don't play around with bikes of this class just like you don't walk up and pick up some musicians axe. (Guitar) I don't think they want individual riders standing in the street, in front of an idling bus, fiddling with a bike rack that may already contain one (or more) other bikes. In this regard, I agree with them. The liability insurance issue here would be even worse than it already is. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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