GOAL 2
ENHANCE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION OPTIONS.
GOAL 3
IMPLEMENT COMPLETE STREETS ELEMENTS IN THE WEST SIDE.
See the document and add your thoughts. Click the upper right corner…
http://asburyparkchoice.com/transportation-complete-streets-new

Asbury Park Complete Streets Coalition
Transportation Equity in Our City
ENHANCE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION OPTIONS.
IMPLEMENT COMPLETE STREETS ELEMENTS IN THE WEST SIDE.
See the document and add your thoughts. Click the upper right corner…
http://asburyparkchoice.com/transportation-complete-streets-new





Let the Senate Budget Committee know that now is the time to vote on making our roads safer for bike riders and pedestrians in New Jersey! Click here to send a message to the committee.
In a state that typically ranks near the top in bike rider and pedestrian road fatalities, education of new drivers is critical to safer roads. But our legislators continue to ignore the fact that almost a third of those killed on our roads in 2016 were either walking or riding a bicycle. Our legislators’ track record in the current legislative session for doing anything for vulnerable road users is abysmal. But here is a last chance for them!
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The League of American Bicyclists supports this bill also.
Read their post here.
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Amsterdam wasn’t always this way. We have plenty of work to do- with the prevailing love affair with cars in the US.
“Making a city where most trips are done on bikes requires utterly discarding conventional car-centric ways of thinking about transportation. Over the last 60 years, Amsterdam’s leaders, planners and designers have by trial and error created a template for a city where bikes are the dominant force in transportation planning and design. That template has five essential characteristics; skip or short-change any one of them and your city of bikes won’t work as well.”

In most cities, the network of bicycle tracks and lanes is far sparser than the overall street network for vehicular traffic. In Amsterdam, the street network map is the bike network map. Almost all streets in the city have excellent bike facilities of one type or another. What is extraordinary is that in Amsterdam you are more likely to need a specialized car map than a bike map, since many streets have limited or no car access.”
People unfamiliar with the idea of the bicycle as real transportation sometimes see Amsterdam—the famously bike-friendly Dutch capital—as a fantasyland that has very little to do with the grown-up transportation world of cars and trucks. In reality, a readjustment of perspective is needed, since Amsterdam has succeeded in creating a transportation system that is one of the most successful in the world. Transportation in Amsterdam is the epitome of sustainability. It is convenient, cheap, clean, quiet, efficient, and safe.
Read more…
A crosswalk does not necessarily make it safe to cross a street. This is not news or new science. But that hasn’t stopped developers and city councils to continue to target pedestrians with stricter enforcement, and to blame them in crashes.
“The MUTCD bases this provision on studies of crash data. Pedestrians crossing big highways, these studies report, have a greater chance of being hit by drivers at marked crosswalks than at similar unmarked ones.
There are several possible reasons for this.

“Most of the general public believes that marking those crosswalks makes them safer to use. But the Federal Highway Administration disagrees. Sometimes, at least.”
“The MUTCD bases this provision on studies of crash data. Pedestrians crossing big highways, these studies report, have a greater chance of being hit by drivers at marked crosswalks than at similar unmarked ones.”
Read more…
https://ggwash.org/view/30378/on-crosswalks-research-and-safety-campaigns-conflict

“The National Association of City Transportation Officials has highlighted the measure — called a “leading pedestrian interval” by traffic engineers and urban planners — as a best practice in its urban street design guide, saying that it is one of the ways that “effectively decrease crashes and save lives on our cities’ streets.”
Read more…
Enforcement is not the answer, which amounts to blaming the (potential) victim. The solution is with reduced motor vehicle speed, better infrastructure for bicycling and walking, and thereby reduced volume of automobiles and traffic.

“So, I’ve checked the statistics and, as far as I can discern, none of those pedestrians was killed because they were bumped into by another pedestrian checking their Twitter feed. No, instead, they were all killed because cars struck them. It’s as if the No. 1 cause of deaths on Ontario roadways are automobiles, especially those driven by distracted drivers.”
Janette Sadik-Kahn :
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/23/business/honolulu-walking-and-texting-fine.html?emc=eta1
Girl killed while crossing street Facetiming–WHILE WITHIN THE CROSSWALK. “Now we all tell our kids to look both ways when crossing the street, and not to look at phones. But everyone here is just so convinced that the kid is so totally at fault. Had she been daydreaming, had she been blind, had she been old with bad hearing and eyesight, it might not have even made the evening news. Instead, it just becomes part of the continuing campaign to shift the burden of responsibility from drivers to pedestrians.”
Read more…
People are screaming for more parking in charming business districts like this one in Pocatello, Idaho. When exceptions are made to infill or rebuild a beautiful movie theater like the one in the article, without parking minimums there would have to be viable alternative transportation options. Onward Asbury Park!

This Friday is our annual #BlackFridayParking event — a nationwide action drawing attention to the harmful nature of minimum parking requirements. Each year on Black Friday, one of the biggest shopping days of the year, people across North America are invited to snap photos of the (hardly full) parking lots in their communities to demonstrate how unnecessary these massive lots are. Participants then upload those photos to social media with the hashtag #blackfridayparking. Get more info about how to participate here.

Read more…
https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2017/11/20/we-forbid-what-we-value-most?utm_content=bufferf7989&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer
“…90 percent of bike accidents could be prevented by buying a car like a normal person,” writes the lede of a totally fake news story by the satirical and totally not real news website The Onion.”

Most bicyclists are never going to look like this! But a lot of drivers would like all bike riders to just get off the roads.
Read more…
https://www.planetizen.com/node/95853?utm_source=newswire&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=news-11202017

“The overwhelming factor is speed,” says Leonard Evans, an automotive researcher. Small differences in speed cause large differences in harm. Other countries tend to have lower speed limits (despite the famous German autobahn) and more speed cameras. Install enough cameras, and speeding really will decline.
But it’s not just speed. Seatbelt use is also more common elsewhere: One in seven American drivers still don’t use one, according to the researchers Juha Luoma and Michael Sivak. In other countries, 16-year-olds often aren’t allowed to drive. And “buzzed driving” tends to be considered drunken driving. Here, only heavily Mormon Utah has moved toward a sensible threshold, and the liquor and restaurant lobbies are trying to stop it.
Read more…
Or contact them through this site:
http://www.njleg.state.nj.us/
Here is language to send to them:
Dear Senator,
Please post bill S2894- the bill requiring the MVC to include bike and pedestrian safety in the driver’s ed manual, in the curriculum and on the exam- for a vote at the November Senate Budget Committee meeting. Drivers need to be educated on bike riders’ and pedestrians’ right to the road, so that we can start to eliminate the senseless deaths and injuries to these road users on New Jersey roads.
Thank you,
Your name.