Andrea Bernstein

Andrea Bernstein appears in the following:

Ford Investing $135 million in Hybrids

Monday, May 24, 2010

Ford announces today it's putting $135 million into design and technology for a new line of hybrids out in 2012.

From the release: " Ford Motor Company – moving to create a center of excellence in Michigan for vehicle electrification – today announced it is investing $135 million to design, engineer and produce key components for the company’s next-generation hybrid-electric vehicles.

"Ford engineers in Dearborn will design the battery packs while engineers in Livonia will design electric-drive transaxles for the next-generation hybrids, based on Ford’s global C- and CD-car platforms, which go into production in North America in 2012.

(snip)

"Ford’s Rawsonville Plant in Ypsilanti, Mich., will assemble the battery packs beginning in 2012, moving work to Michigan that is currently performed in Mexico by a supplier. Ford’s Van Dyke Transmission Plant in Sterling Heights, Mich., will build the electric drive transaxles beginning in 2012 from a supplier facility in Japan. Ford is adding a combined 170 jobs at the Rawsonville and Van Dyke facilities to build these key components."

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Cuomo's Policy Plan: Big Book, Wide Margins

Monday, May 24, 2010

WNYC

Andrew Cuomo's press office touted over the weekend his 252-page briefing book.

"The book lays out a bold vision for reform and action on the serious issues and challenges facing our state," the press release says. If past is prologue, Cuomo will be making many references to his policy book in the months to come. It's a way to give heft to his ideas and lend credibility to his campaign.

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Carolina Miranda: Bikes to Drool Over

Monday, May 24, 2010

Museum of Arts and Design bike exhibit: "sleek to retro-cool."

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TN Moving Stories

Monday, May 24, 2010

The Transit Cuts Edition:

WNYC: NJ Transit Cuts Started Sunday

Jesse Jacksons rallies with transit workers in Cleveland to protest 12 percent service cuts and 80 layoffs.... (Plain Dealer)

...but Detroit had him first! He was there protest that city's 100 layoffs. (Free Press)

The Times chronicles the social death that occurs when a bus line stops.  Kinda like when "Cheers" closed...

And In Houston, Mayor Annise Parker's criticisms of transit agency become fodder for Republican Governor Rick Perry in his re-election campaign. (American Statesman)

But, hey, the Olympics helped transit: Ridership up almost 20 percent in post-Olympics Vancouver. (The Province)

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The New Times Square Unveiled

Sunday, May 23, 2010

(Andrea Bernstein, Transportation Nation) The city has chosen local artist Molly Dilworth to paint the five pedestrian plazas at Times Square and Herald Square. Dilworth topped some 150 competitors to win $15,000 and the honor of having her designs installed at the “crossroads of the world” beginning in July and remaining for 18 months. City Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan says Dilworth’s designs, called “Cool Water, Hot Island” are based on a NASA-heat map of Manhattan. Sadik-Khan says the blues of the design will complement the oranges and reds of Times Square’s billboards.

Tim Tomkins, the head of the Times Square Alliance, said in an interview with WNYC last month that the design competition was meant to integrate the Times Square pedestrian plazas into the New York City streetscape, and attract locals as well as tourists to the plazas.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg closed parts of Broadway to car traffic a year ago. Some businesses and motorists objected because they said it scrambled traffic patterns, but Mayor Bloomberg’s traffic analysts disagreed. In February, citing data that traffic in most directions was flowing more quickly and pedestrian safety had improved, the mayor said he would make the plazas permanent.

The plazas have been derided by most cabbies, but have drawn scores of city planners and designers from around the globe, who see the plazas as a model public space.

On Friday, the Times reported that the plazas have slowed some bus routes, though the DOT vigorously pushed back, arguing that consolidation of the routes means buses come more frequently, and that few passengers experience the longer times because they are measured over the routes' entire lengths.

Last summer, the city put out mesh lawn-chairs in the plazas, which were widely derided. Those chairs were scooped up mid-summer and replaced with metal café tables. The café tables will remain in the new plazas until a more permanent design is selected in late 2011.

Dilworth’s work is characterized by large, colorful, abstract, site-specific paintings, including many on Manhattan rooftops. Here's the artists' flickr feed.

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The New Times Square Unveiled

Sunday, May 23, 2010

The city has chosen local artist Molly Dilworth to paint the five pedestrian plazas at Times Square and Herald Square. Dilworth topped some 150 competitors to win $15,000 and the honor of having her designs installed at the “crossroads of the world” beginning in July and remaining for 18 months.

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Obama signs order to develop fuel standards for trucks.

Friday, May 21, 2010

The president starts the process for fuel standards for trucks.

From today's Rose Garden ceremony.

"And today, we’re going even further, proposing the development of a national standard for medium- and heavy-duty trucks, just as we did for cars and light trucks." 

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Bixi: Big Expansion of Washington DC's Bike Share System

Friday, May 21, 2010

(Andrea Bernstein, Transportation Nation) -- "Bixi roulera de Washington a Washington" announces the website of the Montreal-based BIXI bike sharing company today.

Here's a partial (and somewhat loose) translation from the French: "The capital of the United States, Washington, District of Columbia, its neighbor, the city of Arlington, Virginia, as well as the campus of Washington State University, situated on the west coast, in the state of Washington, are adopting bike share systems like the one that made its debut in Montreal just a year ago. Starting this fall, 1,100 new BIXI's will be available in one of 114 stations that will be installed in the heart of the Washington/Arlington area, and 30 will be available to students on the campus of Washington State University."

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TN Moving Stories

Friday, May 21, 2010

NY Times: Ped Plazas Slow Buses. Ouch, two of NYC DOT's favorite constituent groups -- bus riders and pedestrians -- pitted against each other. True wonks can read the full report, which presents a somewhat muddier picture than the headline would indicate.

Good News/Bad News: Green car maker Tesla to buy closed Bay Area auto plant, but Toyota's Lexus cars get recalled in Japan, US to follow. (SF Gate)

NJ Transit cuts go into effect this weekend....but they're giving away BON JOVI tickets, so who cares? (NJ Record)

Happy Bike To Work Day: Philadelphia to double bike lanes. (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Another player struts their stuff for Las Vegas to LA high speed rail. (Las Vegas TV-3)

LaHood to Women: Drive a Truck! (Trucking Info)

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LaHood: Tolls Can Pay for Transportation Bill

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

(Andrea Bernstein, Transportation Nation, May 19) Speaking at a community meeting in New York City's Chinatown, U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said Wednesday that tolls ought to be considered as an option to pay for the federal transportation bill. That bill has been stalled in a congress laden with (other) legislative priorities and a total non-desire to pursue any of the unpleasant options for paying for the $600 billion bill (gas taxes, vehicle miles traveled taxes, oil taxes, stock taxes, etc.)

In a discussion about what locals would like to see in the bill, LaHood became animated as he said "these are all good ideas." And then he added "The only problem we have in Washington, believe it or not, is finding the $600 billion to pay for it. " Pressed on sources of funding OTHER than a gas tax, Lahood said: "Another way is -don't run me out, okay? Tolling. Some places in the country are talking about using tolls. You can raise a lot of money by tolling." The crowd, (a New York City crowd, after all), applauded.

"Oh good! You like that idea," LaHood said.

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Goodbye, Arlen Specter

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

WNYC

I first saw Arlen Specter in September, 1990.  Working for then-New York City Comptroller Liz Holtzman, I travelled down to Washington with her, where she was testifying in the confirmation hearings of Justice David Souter.  Like Specter, Holtzman had been a D.A., and the then-curly haired former Philadelphia prosecutor parried sharply with the ex-Brooklyn D.A. on whether Souter had appropriately applied the rape shield law in a New Hampshire case.  Holtzman argued that Souter had not been sufficiently attentive to the victim’s privacy rights, Specter disagreed.  Strongly.

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A reporter says goodbye to Senator Specter

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

I first saw Arlen Specter in September, 1990. Working for then-New York City Comptroller Liz Holtzman, I traveled down to Washington with her, where she was testifying in the confirmation hearings of Justice David Souter. Like Specter, Holtzman had been a D.A., and the then-curly haired former Philadelphia prosecutor parried ...

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Senate Bus Ads: Stop the Sag!

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

(Andrea Bernstein, Transportation Nation, May 17)  With all there is to worry about in Albany -- a months-late budget,  closing parks, furloughing state workers,  closing a $9 billion budget gap-- you can see why State Senators Eric Adams and Malcolm Smith are worried about young men's underwear.   Smith is the latest to take $2000 from his campaign kitty to run bus ads urging young men to raise their pants and "raise their image."  WNYC's Arun Venugopal, um, covers the issue, in his Micropolis blog.

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Should Real Estate fund Transit?

Monday, May 17, 2010

Christopher B. Leinberger has an interesting history of how rail got funded in America in this month's Altantic.  In the early twentieth century, he writes, every city with more than 5000 had a rail system:

""How did the country afford that extensive rail system? Real-estate developers, sometimes aided by electric utilities, not only built the systems but paid rent to the cities for the rights-of-way.

These developers included Henry Huntington, who built the Pacific Electric in Los Angeles; Minnesota’s Thomas Lowry, who built Twin City Rapid Transit; and Senator Francis Newlands from Nevada, who built Washington, D.C.’s Rock Creek Railway up Connecticut Avenue from Dupont Circle in the 1890s. When Newlands got into the rail-transit business, he wasn’t drawn by the profit potential of streetcars. He was a real-estate developer, and he owned 1,700 acres between Dupont Circle and suburban Chevy Chase in Maryland, land served by his streetcar line. The Rock Creek Railway did not make any money, but it was essential to attracting buyers to Newlands’s housing developments. In essence, Newlands subsidized the railway with the profits from his land development. He and other developers of the time understood that transportation drives development—and that development has to subsidize transportation."

Read the full article here.

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Napolitano drops the other shoe on transit security funding

Monday, May 17, 2010

(Andrea Bernstein, Transportation Nation, May 17) Apparently, the Department of Homeland Security was not happy with the very public beating the agency took in the New York tabloids and from New York pols on transit security funding last week.     Last week, after a Congressional Briefing, Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY) and Rep. Peter King (R-Long Island) went out guns a'blazing, hammering DHS for what they called a $42 million cut in transit security funding and an $11 million cut in port security. The White House says, if you account for stimulus funding, New York got an increase in both these areas.  (Here's the breakdown.)

WNYC's  Bob Hennelly got hold this weekend of a letter Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano wrote to Representative Peter King, (R- Long Island)  claiming New York has more than $275 million in port and transit security funds it hasn't spent.  New York officials are blaming FEMA for tying up the funding.   Apparently,  Napolitano, who is from Arizona, has a bit of Brooklyn in her.

Yo! You wanna piece of me?

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Critical Mass's San Francisco Beginnings

Friday, May 14, 2010

(KALW, May 14) Ever wonder how the Friday Night cyclists' demonstrations became such a (controversial) tradition?  KALW takes a look at the rides' roots in San Franciso.

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A Global Look at Farebeating

Friday, May 14, 2010

(Andrea Bernstein, Transportation Nation, May 14) In San Francisco, writes KALW's Nathaneal Johnson, paying the transit fare is sometimes seen as a voluntary act.  But the transit system is losing $19 million a year -- and is stepping up enforcement.  Johnson takes a ride with a MUNI "cop".   Meanwhile, in Paris, farebeaters have a taken a different tack.  Instead of paying the fare, they're contributing to a fund for those caught not paying.

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Brooklyn Bridge Project Closes Skate Park

Thursday, May 13, 2010

(WNYC, Kate Hinds, May 13)        The Brooklyn Banks (a red brick plaza under the ramps of the bridge on the Manhattan side) whose ramps, angled surfaces and staircases are catnip to skateboarders (and bikers, and practitioners of Parkour) -- is about to be taken offline.  The Department of Transportation just posted a notice (pdf) that this area will be closed beginning May 15th. (More)

This has been long in coming and has inspired a slew of blog posts, and even a couple of Facebook groups.  We're doing some research to see how long the area will be closed and if it will be restored after the bridge work is completed.  If you know anything, please comment below and make sure to provide a source.  In the meantime, you can feed your Brooklyn Banks skateboard craving by watching a video tribute here.

For more on the Brooklyn Bridge Project, to contribute your stories, or to send pictures, click here.

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