True Believers talk to each other
From a Streetsblog interview with the new Executive Director of Walk San Francisco:
Streetsblog: During your years with the Bicycle Coalition, what was your greatest accomplishment?
Jodie Medeiros: Getting past the injunction.
Streetsblog: The Rob Anderson environmental lawsuit? That really jammed things up, but it also forced some creativity, didn’t it?
JM: (Nods) We weren’t able to paint anything on the street. We weren’t able to put up a single bike rack. It was really an interesting time in our city’s history. Out of that period came the Great Streets program at the SFBC–--and that lead[sic] to Sunday Streets, and parklets, and institutionalizing the parklets program.
These are now things that we see every day in San Francisco. Parklets are flourishing. We’re using our streets for better uses than just car parking. That period was the greatest in my transportation history. I’m very proud of it.Rob's comment:
Out of the mud grows the lotus! The injunction against the city we got way back in 2006 was traumatic for the anti-car folks. It was one of the few events that pierced their normally impenetrable political bubble (see Susan King, the injunction, and PTSD and The Guardian rewrites history).
Note how Streetsblog and Medeiros talk around the issue without any specifics. How and why exactly did we get Judge Busch to issue an injunction against the city's Bicycle Plan? Because the city was obviously violating the most important environmental law in the state, the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) that requires an environmental study before implementing any project that even might have an impact on the environment. The city was beginning to implement its 500-page Bicycle Plan on the streets of the city without doing any environmental study
Yes, the city and the anti-car folks came up with the parklet idea, which they like because constructing parklets requires taking away parking spaces from those wicked motor vehicles (Parklets: Institutionalizing the smoking section).
Note how Streetsblog and Medeiros talk around the issue without any specifics. How and why exactly did we get Judge Busch to issue an injunction against the city's Bicycle Plan? Because the city was obviously violating the most important environmental law in the state, the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) that requires an environmental study before implementing any project that even might have an impact on the environment. The city was beginning to implement its 500-page Bicycle Plan on the streets of the city without doing any environmental study
Yes, the city and the anti-car folks came up with the parklet idea, which they like because constructing parklets requires taking away parking spaces from those wicked motor vehicles (Parklets: Institutionalizing the smoking section).
Why anyone but smokers want to sit next to motor vehicle traffic with the accompanying diesel and carbon monoxide fumes is still a mystery to me.
More from the interview:
All the "improvements" made to city streets under the Vision Zero idea have made no difference at all in the number of traffic accidents or fatalities in San Francisco.
More from the interview:
SB: If that was your brightest accomplishment, what is your biggest disappointmentRob's comment:
JM: Change in San Francisco is too slow. That’s definitely something that I’ve learned in my career in the SFBC and the Housing Coalition. Unfortunately, policy and engineering takes time.
SB: We aren’t on track to attain the Vision Zero goals either.
JM: (nods) It’s horrible, it’s tragic–--what’s most tragic is it’s preventable. We know just 13 percent of our streets are responsible for over 75 percent of severe and fatal injuries, so our streets are dangerous by design. It’s not rocket science. We have the tools to re-engineer our streets.
All the "improvements" made to city streets under the Vision Zero idea have made no difference at all in the number of traffic accidents or fatalities in San Francisco.
That result would give pause to everyone but the True Believers at the Bicycle Coalition, Streetsblog, Walk SF, and the SFMTA. For the latter---and the Department of Public Works---the Vision Zero bullshit is also a source of jobs to implement all that "re-engineering."
More on the interview tomorrow.
More on the interview tomorrow.
Labels: Anti-Car, Bicycle Coalition, Bicycle Plan, Cycling and Safety, Parking, Parklets, Pedestrian Safety, Streetsblog, Vision Zero, Walk SF