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MTR #528

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Previous editions:
MTR #527
MTR #526
MTR #525
MTR #524

Mobilizing the Region #528

May 3, 2006

Inside this edition:

Big CT Spending Bill Emphasizes Transit
Both houses of Connecticut's legislature have approved a $2.3 billion funding package that will advance a number of significant new projects, but the measure's broad policy impact remains to be seen.

New Jersey's 2006-7 Budget Boosts Cycling, Walking, Bridge Repair
The New Jersey Dept. of Transportation released its $1.6 billion Capital Program to the public in mid-April, just hours before Commissioner Kris Kolluri gave the keynote address to the annual transportation conference in Atlantic City.

Legislating More Room for Metro-North
Legislation that was recently approved in the NY State Assembly and was given thumbs-up by the CT legislature last year would amend the compact between the MTA and Connecticut, allowing Metro-North to operate rail lines in addition to the New Haven Line in the state.

Changing Law Faster Than Challenging It?
Staten Island Borough President James Molinaro recently sued NYC Transit over its refusal to run bus service from S.I. to the NJ Transit light rail terminal in Bayonne. Transit says it cannot legally pick up or collect passengers in New Jersey. Whatever the merits of the suit, it seems like a good subject for remedial legislation in Albany, especially with the State Senate Corporations Committee Chair-ship residing on Staten Island in the person of Senator John Marchi.

NJ Transit's Outline for 2006-7
An extension of service on the Northeast Corridor Line to Atlantic City and Philadelphia is the big surprise in NJ Transit's 2007 capital program.

Car-Free City Parks in NYC Council's Hands
A bill scheduled to be heard by the NYC Council next Tuesday would direct the city to close the Central Park and Prospect Park loop drives to motor vehicles from June 24 to September 25 of this year.

Brookhaven's Stamp of Approval for Smart Growth Corridor
Calling it the beginning of the end of suburban sprawl, Brookhaven Councilman Connie Kepert and other local officials announced the approcal of a new land use plan for a 6-mile section of NY Route 25/Middle Country Road between Coram and Ridge earlier this month.

Atlantic Yards: Planning Problems Still at Stake
The Empire State Development Corporation released an updated scope of work for the environmental review for Brooklyn's big Atlantic Yards basketball arena, residential and commercial complex.

Bronx Station a Big Plus for Neighborhood
On April 3, the Municipal Art Society gave a Neighborhood Catalyst Award to the newly renovated Gun Hill subway station in the Bronx.

Truckers and Route 21
The NJ Motor Truck Assoc. wrote recently to repudiate our statement in MTR # 526 that the trucking industry supports a widening of Route 21/McCarter Highway in Newark.


Big CT Spending Bill Emphasizes Transit

Both houses of Connecticut’s legislature have approved a $2.3 billion funding package that will advance a number of significant new projects, but the measure’s broad policy impact remains to be seen. Governor Rell is expected to sign the bill.

The funding level represents a compromise between a giant $6 billion bill sought by House Speaker James Amman and a far more modest mass transit financing bill proffered by Governor Rell. State leaders say the financing requires no new taxes because public coffers are reaping a windfall from the recently increased petroleum gross receipts tax as gas prices and fuel-related business revenue trend upward. The 10-year capital program attached to the funding may have to be revisited if this optimistic revenue scenario fails to play out in coming years.

The legislation seeks to advance the big project list developed several years ago by the state Transportation Strategy Board. This is largely a “more of everything” menu, but funding in the bill seems to emphasize new transit lines — New Haven-Springfield commuter rail, express bus service from New Haven to Bradley International Airport, and a bus rapid transit line linking New Britain, downtown Hartford and points between. It also seeks to expand rail passenger service on the Metro-North Danbury branch, and study commuter rail service from New London to Worcester, MA.

Though few are mentioned explicitly in the bill text, highway projects could include any of those recommended by the Transportation Strategy Board. Different news articles and press releases pointed to different projects, including an extension of Route 11 from its terminus in Salem to the intersection of I-95 and I-395, widening I-95 from Branford to Rhode Island, widening I-84 between Waterbury and Danbury, and improving Route 2 and 2A to alleviate casino traffic in Preston to Montville area.

The bill’s main institutional feature is to relocate the Transportation Strategy Board to the state house’s influential Office of Policy and Management, and to create of a new “Undersecretary of Transit and Growth” to run the board. The mandate of this new position seems to be to ensure that transportation investments can leverage economic opportunities. It is not at all clear that it will move in the direction of smarter growth or the traffic-minimizing town and city planning now being executed by the New Jersey Dept. of Transportation.

We agree with the Hartford Courant that “the bill affords little policy direction for the planning effort. In other words, what kind of plans are the planners supposed to be preparing? Smart planners will connect housing to transportation in a way that will revitalize the town centers along the rail and bus lines.” The bill directs the new undersecretary to “refine” project lists with a “build-out study,” but the intent of this provision is unclear to us.

The creation of the undersecretary position potentially sets up bifurcated transportation leadership within the state, and leaves the strong institutional bias toward highway-engineering and non-cooperation with local governments at ConnDOT largely untouched. At some point, reforming transportation in CT will have to move new methods and perspectives directly into ConnDOT instead of setting up separate budgets and executive positions that seem to be designed to rival it.

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New Jersey's 2006-7 Budget Boosts Cycling, Walking, Bridge Repair

The New Jersey Dept. of Transportation released its $1.6 billion Capital Program to the public in mid-April, just hours before Commissioner Kris Kolluri gave the keynote address to the annual transportation conference in Atlantic City.

Highlights of the program include a 3% cap of total spending on highway capacity expansion with concomitantly high levels of repair and maintenance outlays, and a near doubling of pedestrian and bicycle funding. However, about 35% of the bike/ped money is from one-time congressional allocations, rather than more sustained funding sources. The budget also doubles the allocation for the popular transit village program to $2 million.

Overall, the program allocates 46% towards road and bridge reconstruction (up from 42% last year), 16% for local aid (up from 15%) and 13% to congestion relief projects like intersection improvements. The remainder pays for staffing for the capital program and other categories such as freight-related and traditional road safety projects.

It is encouraging to see the state further hike road and bridge repair. Since the state set goals for the Transportation Trust Fund in 2000, hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent to shore up New Jerseys pavement and bridges. But in recent years the number of roads in poor condition has trended upward (MTR #524), so the state must dedicate even more fix-it money in future programs.

Funding for the controversial Route 206 widening in Byram Township was postponed for at least one year. Construction is now scheduled for 2008.

An area where the program falls short is public funding for rail freight projects, which remains static at $10 million. Despite the eye-popping projections for growth in truck traffic in the coming years, the DOT has been slow to roll out rail capacity projects that can directly relieve highway jams.

Transportation reformers can’t ignore that the positive program is built on a mountain of new debt. The state transportation fund would have zeroed out in July, and Governor Corzine and the legislature relied on additional borrowing to avoid raising money. Starting in July 2011, transportation will be broke again, with billions more in debt to pay off.

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Legislating More Room for Metro-North

Legislation that was recently approved in the NY State Assembly and was given thumbs-up by the CT legislature last year would amend the compact between the MTA and Connecticut, allowing Metro-North Railroad to operate rail lines in addition to the New Haven Line in the state.

Amtrak is currently under contract with CT to operate Shore Line East, which offers service primarily between New Haven and Old Saybrook, but has some trains that reach as far east as New London and as far west as Stamford. Connecticut is also considering new service between New Haven and Springfield, MA via Hartford.

The authorization is rooted in regional unease over the future of Amtrak, and in thinking that better integrating Connecticut’s railroads could lead to better service. New rail cars under order by the state will reportedly be capable of running under the several power systems in use between Old Saybrook and Grand Central Terminal. Amtrak is under contract to run Shore Line East until 2007.

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Changing Law Faster Than Challenging It?

Staten Island Borough President James Molinaro recently sued NYC Transit over its refusal to run bus service from S.I. to the NJ Transit light rail terminal in Bayonne. Transit says it cannot legally pick up or collect passengers in New Jersey. Whatever the merits of the suit, it seems like a good subject for remedial legislation in Albany, especially with the State Senate Corporations Committee Chair-ship residing on Staten Island in the person of Senator John Marchi.

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NJ Transit's Outline for 2006-7

An extension of service on the Northeast Corridor Line to Atlantic City and Philadelphia is the big surprise in NJ Transit’s 2007 capital program. The record $1.3 billion spending plan includes $150 million for the new passenger rail tunnel under the Hudson River into Penn Station (ARC) along with funding for new rail stations and buses.

At New Jersey’s state-wide transportation conference in April, Warrington announced that NJ Transit has had private discussions with Amtrak for nearly a year to create the Trenton-Philadelphia-Atlantic City route. Currently the use of tracks between Trenton and Philadelphia, owned by Amtrak, are off limits to NJ Transit trains.

The plan would run direct NJ Transit trains from both Hoboken and Newark’s Penn Station to Philadelphia and Atlantic City. Stops along the way would include Princeton Junction, Hamilton and Trenton.

Transit has also said Newark’s Broad Street light rail project, connecting the Broad St. and Penn station, will be done and operating this summer.

Other notable 2007 projects include the construction of a station in Mt. Arlington on the Montclair-Boonton Line, fixing bridges on the North Jersey Coast Line and extending the platforms for NJ Transit trains in New York Penn Station.

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Car-Free City Parks in NYC Council's Hands

A bill scheduled to be heard by the NYC City Council next Tuesday would direct the city to close the Central Park and Prospect Park loop drives to motor vehicles from June 24 to September 25 of this year.

The mandate would represent the “summer test” of car-free parks long sought by Transportation Alternatives. The bill, authored by Manhattan Council Member Gale Brewer, directs the city transportation commissioner to study the areas surrounding the parks for any traffic impacts of banning cars from the loop drives, and to submit the report to the mayor by year’s end.

For years, city administrations have offered a litany of excuses for allowing a small handful of motorists to use the city’s two most famous parks as high-speed shortcuts. Threatening traffic chaos is the most persistent reason — Transportation Commissioner Weinshall recently said Central Park was a key commuting artery for the city even though the amount of traffic handled by the loop drive is negligible in relation to Manhattan’s street grid and perimeter highways.

City traffic managers made similar arguments in the 1950s when a citizens’ movement in Greenwich Village, which included Jane Jacobs (see story on final page), not only defeated a Robert Moses plan to expand the extension of Fifth Avenue that then ran through the middle of Washington Square Park, but went on to demand that traffic be diverted and permanently removed from the park.

City government argued that closing the park to traffic would flood the surrounding area with cars. But public pressure was strong enough so that in October, 1958, the Board of Estimate ordered a temporary closing of the park to test whether traffic would lessen or become worse.

On October 30, 1958, the park was closed to cars. The New York Times noted that, “Observation during different periods of the day revealed no congestion. The police reported no trouble.” A community leader at a traffic-closing ceremony noted that where the park was once a potter’s field, it had now become “a burial ground for certain individuals with antiquated notions of city planning.”

We expect that a similar test of car-less Central and Prospect parks to yield similar trouble-free results, and to reveal the incredible persistence of antiquated traffic engineering perspectives at the NYC DOT 50 years after Fifth Avenue was removed from Washington Square Park.

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Brookhaven's Stamp of Approval for Smart Growth Corridor

Calling it the beginning of the end of suburban sprawl, Brookhaven Councilwoman Connie Kepert and other local officials announced the approval of a new land use plan for a 6-mile section of NY Route 25/Middle Country Road between Coram and Ridge earlier this month.

The Middle Country Road Renaissance Project, under the leadership of locals like Kepert, has worked for five years for alternatives to sprawl development and road widening along Route 25. In response to NY State DOT plans to widen the route, the group conducted public planning sessions in 2002 for an alternative. Brookhaven imposed a building moratorium along the study area in July 2003 to give the town time to re-do its master plan.

Many of the smart growth features supported in the community visioning process are now in the official land use plan. It seeks to establish future zoning for traditional neighborhood design, encourage pedestrian and bicycle access and reduce commercial sprawl. It designates four areas as denser, walkable hamlets by encouraging multifamily housing, dense commercial uses and street grid connections. Developers who choose to build according to the Town's guidelines will receive density bonuses that can make projects more profitable. The plan also regulates curb cuts, parking and landscaping.

The plan calls on NY State DOT to consider alternative improvements for Route 25, stating that the town will do as much as possible to avoid land uses that generate additional driving and congestion.

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Atlantic Yards: Planning Problems Still at Stake

The Empire State Development Corporation released an updated scope of work for the environmental review for Brooklyn’s big Atlantic Yards basketball arena, residential and commercial complex. The project now contains 3,800 new parking spaces, hundreds more than originally proposed. Critics also noted that the project is still 600,000 to 1 million square feet larger than when first proposed in December 2003, despite announcements that the project had been “scaled back.”

The document does little to assure transportation reformers that the project will fit well into the transportation needs of booming Brooklyn. Perhaps most alarmingly, it calls for the creation of an “interim” 2,000 space surface parking lot on the eastern side of the project between 2010 and 2016 (during Phase I of the project). In other words, phase one would knock down buildings in favor of parking lots. Around 2016, phase II would turn the eastern portion (including the surface parking lot) into offices and residential units and an additional 1,800 structured parking spaces would be added.

The project now calls for the widening of Flatbush, Atlantic and 6th Avenue and Pacific Street to either accommodate “drop off lanes” or two way traffic. Forest City Ratner representatives have made it clear in public meetings that these drop off lanes will be for car services, not buses.

The transportation analysis will study 93 intersections and a larger area than originally proposed, but will not reach Grand Army Plaza or the BQE. Sidewalks will be widened along portions of Flatbush and Atlantic avenues, but there is nothing that indicates that these thoroughfares or their infamous intersection will become any safer or more pleasant for those not in cars.

The study will look at on street parking utilization rates, which could point toward residential parking permits to save nearby areas from basketball game traffic. However, NYC DOT officials have said the idea of parking permits is a no-go in nearby Brooklyn Heights (MTR #526). The ESDC notes that it will override certain aspects of the NYC zoning code, including parking requirements. We encourage project managers to further reduce the parking supply to reduce car trips and increase mass transit’s competitive edge at the site.

Transit advocates will closely monitor analyses of the project’s impact on subway capacity in the context of rapid growth elsewhere in Brooklyn.

Urban planners have noted the monolithic nature of Frank Gehry-designed buildings and the towers-in-parks layout of much of the proposed project will lack street life and offer lifeless open spaces. Many have suggested changes, such as providing new street connections between Prospect Heights and Fort Greene, developing great, pedestrian-attracting streets with shops and other activity generators on street-fronts, building appropriate scale and density (rather than all large buildings), and creating a good balance between new and old housing. Forest City Ratner would be wise to take such criticisms seriously, and orient its plan around these ideas.

Additionally, we hope the environmental impact study will evaluate innovative solutions that discourage driving to the site, like:

¨ Shuttles to the arena from remote parking sites.

¨ Traffic calming on residential streets to slow through traffic and prohibit inappropriate trucks.

¨ Residential parking permits.

¨ A pedestrian-oriented site plan that promotes and better sense of place and contributes to the Brooklyn context.

¨ Bus rapid transit along Flatbush Avenue.

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Bronx Station a Big Plus for Neighborhood

On April 3, the Municipal Art Society gave a Neighborhood Catalyst Award to the newly renovated Gun Hill subway station in the Bronx, noting its contribution to the revitalization of the surrounding community. A modern station house was built at the intersection of Gun Hill and White Plains Roads, the station was made ADA compliant and received a new public address system and art installations. The award was one of five in the society’s annual MASterworks Awards ceremony, which recognize good urban design and serve as a reminder of the advantages of integrating form and function.

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Truckers and Route 21

The NJ Motor Truck Association wrote recently to repudiate our statement in MTR #526 that the trucking industry supports a widening of Route 21/McCarter Highway in Newark because “Route 21 is a North-South alternative to the New Jersey Turnpike and its tolls.” In fact, the NJMTA has not commented at all on the Route 21 project.

However, NJ DOT report it is hearing pro-widening sentiment from individual truckers and insists some of the congestion issues on Route 21 are caused because it is a free alternative to the Turnpike. Not all truckers are members of the NJMTA. Still, we appreciate the clarification.

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