Bernie’s Transportation Communications Newsletter – April 08, 2009

April 8, 2009 at 6:18 pm

Wednesday, April 8, 2009 – ISSN 1529-1057


Off-the-shelf TIC from GEWI Provides Highly Configurable 511 Solutions

With worldwide experience in over 100 projects, GEWI’s off-the-shelf TIC provides proven and highly configurable solutions which can be deployed faster, more affordably, and with less risk than build-your-own solutions.  Data can be created by users or collected from service providers.  Data can be automatically selected and personalized before being sent as information and alerts. Data can be distributed to web sites, IVR, mobile phone text, navigation devices, and even radio stations for time-scrolled announcements.  Data can include speed & flow, traffic events, roadside camera images, weather, travel & tourism information, sponsorships, parking availability, fuel prices, and more.  With the new TIC3 architecture, the only limitation… is your imagination!  Visit www.gewi.com to download a brochure and specific use-case leaflets, or contact jim.oneill@gewi.com to discuss your requirements.

AVIATION

1) Miami Phasing in Air-Traffic Innovation

Link to story in The Miami Herald:

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation/story/989545.html

2) FAA Requests Comments on Standards for Airport Sign Systems

Link to story on AviationNews:

http://www.aviationnews.net/?do=headline&news_ID=166023

3) US Department of Homeland Security Secretary Praises TSA Test Facility

Link to story on AviationNews:

http://www.aviationnews.net/?do=headline&news_ID=166078

CAMERAS

4) Enforcement Camera Expansion on Hold in Arizona

Link to story in The Arizona Republic:

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/local/articles/2009/04/08/20090408photosuspend0409.html

5) Snap Decisions at Red Lights

Meet the companies behind the cameras waiting to catch you.

Link to story in the Chicago Tribune:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/transportation/chi-red-speed-08-apr08,0,6871221.story

CARTOGRAPHY

6) Street View UK is Here to Stay, Says Boss of Google Maps

Link to story and video in The Times:

http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/article6058197.ece

PUBLIC INFORMATION / EDUCATION

7) Tweet Along with the Delaware Office of Highway Safety

Link to story in the Sussex Countian:

http://www.sussexcountian.com/homepage/x1098992497

Link to Twitter page:  http://twitter.com/DEHighwaySafe

ROADWAYS

8) Archives of Webcast on I-95 Express Lanes in Florida

Link to archives from the National Transportation Operations Coalition:

http://www.ntoctalks.com/web_casts_archive.php

SAFETY / SECURITY

9) Air Chase Tests US Security Network

Link to story in USA Today:

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2009-04-07-stolen-plane_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip

10) The Security Swamp

Secure Flight, the government’s new airline passenger-screening program, wants to identify troublemakers. But making it work might be a nightmare for travelers.

Link to column in Portfolio:

http://www.portfolio.com/business-travel/seat-2B/2009/04/07/TSA-Launches-Secure-Flight

11) A Guide for Reducing Speed-Related Crashes

Link to document from the Transportation Research Board:

http://www.trb.org/news/blurb_detail.asp?id=10229

12) Side Object Detection Systems Evaluation

Link to report from the Federal Highway Administration:

http://www.itsdocs.fhwa.dot.gov/JPODOCS//REPTS_TE/14461.htm

VEHICLES

13) Social Networking Leads Ford to Fiesta Fans

Link to AP story:

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Social-networking-leads-Ford-apf-14885800.html

News Releases

1) VIA Rail’s Departure and Arrival Times Now Online

2) Web Improvements to Ease UK Holiday Traffic

Upcoming Events

Vehicle Dynamics Expo 2009 – June 16-18 – Messe Stuttgart, Germany

http://www.vehicledynamics-expo.com/

Today in Transportation History

1904 **105th anniversary** – Manhattan’s Longacre Square was formally renamed Times Square.

http://tinyurl.com/cw9e6w

=============================================================================================

The Transportation Communications Newsletter is published electronically Monday through Friday. 

To subscribe send an e-mail to:  TCNL-subscribe@googlegroups.com

To unsubscribe send an e-mail to:  TCNL-unsubscribe@googlegroups.com

TCN archives: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/transport-communications

Questions, comments about the TCN?  Please write the editor, Bernie Wagenblast ati95berniew@aol.com.   

© 2009 Bernie Wagenblast

National Transportation Operations Coalition Newsletter – NTOC Talks: April 8, 2009

April 8, 2009 at 1:50 pm

National Transportation Operations Coalition

 

 

 

 

NTOC Web Cast Recording and Discussion Now Available

http://www.ntoctalks.com/web_casts_archive.php

Category > Now Available: April 8, 2009 (NTOC)

The recording and transcript of the April 1 Talking Operations Web cast on the 95 Express project in Miami-Dade County, Florida is now available at http://www.ntoctalks.com/web_casts_archive.php. This project converted a single High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lane into 2 variably priced express lanes. The project also enhanced and expanded Bus Rapid Transit service on I-95 from I-395 in downtown Miami to Broward Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale, reducing congestion on that heavily traveled north-south artery.

The presentation yielded a lively discussion and answer period. Since time was limited to answer all questions, a thread has been added to the NTOC Talks Web forum for participants to continue to ask questions and give feedback. The thread can be found at: http://www.ntoctalks.com/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=20

Key Transportation Nominations Announced

http://voices.washingtonpost.com/44/2009/04/02/transportation_and_education_d.html

Category > Breaking News: April 8, 2009 (U.S.DOT)

 On April 2, the White House announced two key nominations relevant to the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Highway Administration and Research and Innovative Technology Administration.

Victor M. Mendez is the nominee for Administrator, Federal Highway Administration. Mendez was a member of former Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano’s Cabinet as the Director of the Arizona Department of Transportation. He has extensive experience in transportation including innovations in the areas of funding and financing, technology, infrastructure, research, planning and internal operations. Mendez has served as a past president of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials and in 2008 he was selected as Leader of the Year in Public Policy in Transportation by the Arizona Capitol Times. Previously, Mendez was selected as the deputy state engineer to lead the implementation of the Phoenix area’s multi-billion dollar freeway system. Mendez earned a Masters of Business Administration degree from Arizona State University and a Bachelors of Science in Civil Engineering degree from the University of Texas at El Paso.

Peter H. Appel is the nominee for Administrator, Research and Innovative Technology Administration. Appel is a principal with the global management consulting firm of A.T. Kearney, Inc. He has led business improvement initiatives for clients in the private and public sectors, with a focus on transportation and infrastructure. Appel has over 20 years of experience in Transportation, and has supported organizations in the railroad, trucking, airline, and ocean shipping industries with growth strategy, supply chain improvement, post-merger integration, public-private partnerships, and other key business and policy issues. Previously, Appel served as the special assistant to the administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration, and as assistant director for pricing and yield management at Amtrak. Appel earned his bachelor’s degree from Brandeis University in Economics and Computer Science with Highest Honors and received his Master of Science in Transportation from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Transportation Funding Available Through the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant Program

http://www.eecbg.energy.gov/

Category > Breaking News: April 8, 2009 (NTOC)

 Over $2.6 billion in formula grants are now available to states, U.S. territories, local governments and Indian tribes under the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grants (EECBG) Program. Federal grants may be used to reduce energy use and fossil fuel emissions and for improvements in energy efficiency.

Section 7 of the funding announcement states that these grants provide opportunities for the development and implementation of transportation programs to conserve energy used in transportation, including but not limited to:

  • development and promotion of zoning guidelines or requirements that promote energy efficient development;
  • development of infrastructure such as bike lanes and pathways and pedestrian walkways;
  • synchronization of traffic signals;
  • state/locals/regional integrated planning activities (i.e. transportation, housing, environmental, energy, land use) with the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and vehicle miles traveled;
  • incentive programs to reduce commutes by single-occupancy vehicles;
  • improvements in operational and system efficiency of the transportation system, such as implementation of intelligent transportation system (ITS) strategies;
  • idle-reduction technologies and/or facilities to conserve energy and reduce harmful air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions from freight movement; and
  • installation of solar panels on interstate rights of way to conserve energy in highway operations and maintenance activities.

Section 12 of the announcement pertains to traffic signals and street lighting, stating, “Entities may use grant funds to replace traffic signals and street lighting with energy efficient lighting technologies, including light emitting diodes; and any other technology of equal or greater energy efficiency.”

To learn more, go to the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grants Web site at http://www.eecbg.energy.gov/.

ITS Research Results: ITS Program Plan 2008

http://www.itsdocs.fhwa.dot.gov/JPODOCS//REPTS_TE/14429.htm

Category > Now Available: April 8, 2009 (JPO)

The ITS Joint Program Office (JPO), part of the U.S. Department of Transportation’s (US DOT) Research and Innovative Technology Administration (RITA), is charged with researching and fostering the development and evolution of ITS and facilitating deployment and use of these technologies across the Nation. The ITS Program delivers on this charge by leveraging public, private, and academic research, testing, and commercialization efforts.

The ITS Research Results: ITS Program Plan 2008 describes the progress and changes in the ITS Program over the past two years. The ITS Program Plan 2008, builds on the previous 2006 Five-Year Plan to report on:

  • The status of the ITS Program and research initiatives in 2008.
  • Progress, accomplishments, and changes to the ITS Program since 2006.
  • How the ITS Program has and will fulfill the requirements of SAFETEA-LU.

Talking Freight Seminar on April 15, 2009: National Freight Performance Measurement Data Dissemination Tool

http://www.ops.fhwa.dot.gov/freight/fpd/talking_freight.htm

Category > Opportunity: April 8, 2009 (FHWA)

This seminar will offer an informational presentation on a Web site developed by the FHWA to provide State DOTs, MPOs, and university personnel engaged in transportation research access performance data for freight significant highways. Developed by ATRI and Virginia Tech, the Web site is currently in a BETA version and due to be fully operation in the June 2009 timeframe. For more information and to register, click on the link above.

National Work Zone Awareness Week

http://www.atssa.com

Category > Breaking News: April 8, 2009 (ATSSA)

 April 6-10, 2009 marks the 10th anniversary of National Work Zone Awareness Week. The national campaign is conducted every year at the start of the construction season to call attention to the importance of slowing down through highway construction and repair sites. Each year, approximately 1,000 people are killed in roadway work zones. With the recent enactment of President Obama’s economic recovery package, a good deal of highway repair and construction will soon be underway, which means drivers should be more vigilant. The national kick-off media event takes place Tuesday, April 7, at 10:00 a.m. at the Columbia Island Marina just outside of Washington, DC. For information on the American Traffic Safety Services Association or the campaign, go to http://www.atssa.com.

National Summary Report for the Traffic Incident Management Self Assessment

http://www.ops.fhwa.dot.gov/publications/timsa08/index.htm

Category > Now Available: April 8, 2009 (FHWA)

The Traffic Incident Management Self-Assessment (TIM SA) provides a means for evaluating progress in achievement of individual TIM program components and overall TIM program success. Now in its sixth year, the TIM SA also has allowed the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) to identify program gaps and target resources to TIM program advancement.

Climate Change: Current Issues and Policy Tools

http://assets.opencrs.com/rpts/RL34513_20090306.pdf

Category > Now Available: April 8, 2009 (TRB)

This U.S. Congressional Research Service report explores the fundamentals of climate change policy, including current understandings and controversies, an update on the status of domestic and international policies, and available tools to address climate change. To view the report, click on the link above.

Efforts to Limit Cell Phone Use While Driving Grow

Link to article by Jayne O’Donnell, USA TODAY

http://www.usatoday.com/money/autos/2009-03-29-driving-distracted-cellphones_N.htm?POE=click-refer

Category > Breaking News: April 8, 2009 (NTOC)

More than 250 bills prohibiting or restricting cell phone use while driving are pending in 42 state legislatures despite disagreement over the risks cell phones pose and the effectiveness of enforcement. The number is up from about 120 bills in 18 states just 10 months ago, according to an analysis by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, a safety research group funded by insurers. Four states-Georgia, Idaho, North Carolina and Texas-are considering banning all types of cell phone usage behind the wheel, including hands-free devices.

Match Made in Ether! Zipcar Plans Partnership With Zimride

April 8, 2009 at 12:51 pm

(Source: Wall Street Journal)

Zimride

Zipcar Inc., the world’s largest car-sharing company, plans to announce Wednesday a partnership with Zimride, a fast-growing online carpooling service that uses social networking tools like Facebook Inc. to match potential riders and drivers on university campuses or at companies like Wal-Mart.

The partnership — being launched first at Stanford University — means carpoolers can share rides, even if they don’t own a car, using Zipcar’s hourly rental system. Car-sharing companies allow drivers to rent cars by the hour from locations close to their homes. 

When reserving a car on Zipcar, members will be able to automatically post the date, time and destination of their rental onto the Zimride Stanford University Web site. Then Zimride finds and notifies users looking for a ride. Zimride’s users also will be prompted to consider booking a Zipcar for their trip.

Online carpooling service Zimride uses social-networking tools to match riders and drivers on university campuses or at companies.

Zipcar hopes to quickly launch the program at other universities across the country. “The intent here is to go big fast,” says Scott Griffith, chairman and chief executive of Zipcar. “I would guess in the next couple of months, you will see dozens of these things rolling out.”

Zipcar declined to provide financial details on the partnership.

In recent years, online carpooling services such as Goloco.org and Pickuppal.com, which use social networking to link drivers and riders, have sprung up, but significant user growth has proved elusive.

 

In 2007, Zimride launched as the first online carpooling service to integrate a Facebook application — free software programs that Facebook members can use — to arrange ride-sharing within specific communities like universities or companies. Zimride could then use the social-networking site to show potential riders and drivers the people who might be riding with them.

 

Click here to read the entire article.

See you in court! Group sues Obama administration over weak MPG standards

April 8, 2009 at 12:26 pm

(Source: Autoblog)

When the next step in the road to 35 mpg by 2020 CAFE standards was announced recently, those in the know made it clear that the Obama administration’s upcoming goal of 27.3 mpg by 2011 would not be hard for automakers to meet. In fact, the 2007 average was already 31.3, so the 2011 goal would not require any change in product lineup (more difficult changes are scheduled to come into effect down the line). The 2011 standards were so light, in fact, that the Center for Biological Diversity (CBD) took the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and Department of Transportation to court last week, saying that the Obama administration’s standards “ignore greenhouse gas emissions and the climate crisis, are illogical, illegal, and very disappointing from a president who has promised to make the United States a leader in the fight against global warming.”
The source article on San Francisco Chronicle notes that some environmental groups have said the new standards are a small step in the right direction, but the Center for Biological Diversity said Thursday they’re actually weaker than the requirements that the Bush administration proposed last year for 2011 vehicles.

“These low standards, which ignore greenhouse gas emissions and the climate crisis, are illogical, illegal, and very disappointing from a president who has promised to make the United States a leader in the fight against global warming,” said Kassie Siegel, who directs the organization’s climate law project.

The group asked the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco to declare that the administration violated a federal law requiring that fuel economy standards be set at the maximum feasible level, in light of current technology, economic impact, and the nation’s need to conserve energy. The same court ruled in a similar lawsuit in 2007 that the Bush administration’s fuel standards for light trucks and SUVs for the 2008 through 2011 model years were invalid.

Click here to read the Autoblog article and for the press release from CBD.

Paradigm Shift Does G.M.’s P.U.M.A. Rethink Transportation?

April 8, 2009 at 12:13 pm
G.M.'s P.U.M.A. Concept

The Project P.U.M.A. prototype on 18th Street in Manhattan.

 (Source: Wheels Blog – New York Times)

When General Motors unveiled Project P.U.M.A. in New York on Tuesday (with partner Segway), it was showing not so much a vehicle as a vision for a new transportation system. And that’s high risk, high reward, because as much as new concepts are needed, they’re excruciatingly hard to actually put in place. Our highways are haunted with unfulfilled visions, from electric station-cars to statewide hydrogen-refueling networks.

The P.U.M.A. is a two-wheeled, two-seat gyroscopically balanced urban transit device with a top speed of 35 miles an hour and the potential to be remotely operated. Toyota has also shown a fanciful personal mobility option, called the i-Swing, a single-seater pod on wheels, with joystick controls.

So far, the P.U.M.A. concept is receiving cautiously optimistic reviews. “It’s exactly the right vision, and it’s the kind of thinking we need desperately in transportation,” said Dan Sperling, director of the Institute of Transportation Studies at the University of California-Davis and coauthor (with Deborah Gordon) of “Two Billion Cars: Driving Toward Sustainability.”

Mr. Sperling points out that the Low-Speed Vehicle (L.S.V.) category, limited in most states to 35 miles an hour, was created by the Department of Transportation in the 1990s to respond to the type of technology that G.M. is now talking about.

The L.S.V. category, which includes battery-powered neighborhood electric vehicles, has been slow to take off. But Mr. Sperling said he saw those vehicles, including the Chrysler GEM, gaining popularity around Davis for use in retirement and gated communities, military bases and office parks. “We need more diversity of vehicle types,” he said. “There’s no reason everything has to be 3,000-plus-pound cars and trucks. But for this to take off it needs one extra step to integrate the vehicles into the broader network of roads.”

 

For David J. Friedman, research director for the clean vehicles program at the Union of Concerned Scientists, the P.U.M.A. has possibilities, though what he called “the massive monitoring and managing of traffic to minimize congestion and maximize road usage” has been tried before; the general category is called Intelligent Transportation Systems. G.M. experimented with hands-free Buicks on automated highways in 1997, but the efforts were thwarted by high costs and driver confusion.

“We need to design our cities around something other than two- or three-ton vehicles,” said Mr. Friedman. “The data suggests that by 2030 half of the built environment in the U.S. will be new. What if we designed new suburban towns with integrated shopping so you could walk, bike or use a P.U.M.A. to get around, with conventional vehicles only for longer trips?”

 

Click here to read the entire article

TRB’s Transportation Research E-Newsletter – April 07, 2009

April 8, 2009 at 11:19 am

Transportation Research Board

Summary of Contents

TRB News


Webinar on Performance-Based HMA Construction Specification
TRISworld Database
FY 2010 ACRP Research Problem Statements Sought – Candidate Statements Due April 10, 2009
Economic Changes Driving Future Freight Transportation – Proposals Due June 2, 2009
Expediting Future Technologies for Enhancing Transportation System Performance – Proposals Due June 4, 2009
Long-Range Strategic Issues Affecting Preservation, Maintenance and Renewal of Highway Infrastructure – Proposals Due June 9, 2009
Effects of Changing Transportation Energy Supplies and Alternative Fuel Sources on Transportation – Proposals Due June 11, 2009
Climate Change and the Highway System: Impacts and Adaptation Approaches – Proposals Due June 16, 2009
Fuel Purchasing Strategies for Public Transit Agencies – Proposals Due May 21, 2009   

Recently Released TRB Publications


Guidebook on Preparing Airport Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventories
Appendices to ACRP Report 11: Guidebook on Preparing Airport GHG Emissions Inventories
Evaluating Implementation of Section 4(f) Streamlining Provisions: Review of U.S. Department of Transportation’s Draft Phase I Study Report and Phase II Draft Methodology
Adjacent Precast Concrete Box Beam Bridges: Connection Details
Cooperative Research Programs Security Research Status Report
Transportation Security: A Summary of Transportation Research Board Activities   

Federal Research News


Review of High-Speed Passenger Rail
Wireless Passenger Communication System
Recommended Best Practices for States Conducting Three-Year Safety Reviews
Clean Cities Alternative Fuel Price Report
Alternatives to Traditional Transportation Fuels 2007
Transportation and Climate Change Newsletter – March 2009
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009: Oversight Challenges Facing the Department of Transportation
Successes in Stewardship April Newsletter
Seat Belt Use in 2008–Use Rates in the States and Territories
Early Estimate of Motor Vehicle Traffic Fatalities in 2008
FAA Aerospace Forecasts FY 2009-2025
U.S. Aviation Accident Statistics for 2008   

State Research News


Utah Department of Transportation Research Division Newsletter: March 2009
Investigation of Solutions to Recurring Congestion on Freeways
WisDOT Research Program: 2008 Annual Research Report   

University Research News


Crack and Concrete Deck Sealant Performance
Rural Safety News: March 2009   

International Research News


Transportation at a crossroads: TERM 2008
Distraction and Drowsiness – A Field Study 

In the Know

Project ACTION Update: March 2009

Private Roads, Public Costs
Eno Brief: March 2009
The Voice of the European Road: March 2009

Zero Takes Electric Motorcycles to the Street

April 8, 2009 at 12:13 am

(Source: Wired)

Zero_s_01

The dust kicked up by the 24 Hours of Electricross has barely settled and Zero Motorcycles is back with a street-legal electric motorcycle it will have in driveways later this month.

The Zero S builds upon the the technology underpinning the Zero X dirt bike by doubling the size of the battery to deliver 60 miles of electric commuting and corner-carving. The Santa Cruz startup promises a top speed of 60 mph and a zero-to-60 time of about 5 seconds from a highway-legal bike that weighs just 225 pounds.

The Zero X proved its mettle last weekend during an unprecedented 24-hour endurance race where 10 teams log as many as 507 miles flogging the bikes around a track in San Jose. But while the Zero X is strictly an off-road machine, the S is designed for city streets and the occasional back-road run.

 

The brushed permanent magnet motor produces 31 horsepower and the bike weighs 225 pounds, making the Zero S a little less powerful – but 96 pounds lighter – than a Suzuki DR-Z400SM. With 62.5 foot-pounds of torque on tap, the Zero S has significantly more grunt than, say, the KTM 690 SMC.

Juice comes from a 4 kilowatt-hour lithium ion battery that weighs 80 pounds and charges in less than four hours when plugged into a 110 volt outlet. Zero predicts the battery will last five or six years with normal use. No word on the replacement cost, but an extra pack for the Zero X – which uses a 2 kilowatt-hour pack – costs $3,000.

Power flows directly to the back wheel – no transmission – and the bike offers 9 inches of suspension travel up front and 8 at the rear. Zero wouldn’t offer any details on who’s producing the suspension or brake components.

 

Click here to read more.

The “Chosen One” – NY Times profiles Obama’s Car Czar-lite, Mr. Steven Rattner

April 8, 2009 at 12:01 am

(Source:  New York Times; Photo: Jay Mailin/Bloombern News)

Obama’s Top Auto Industry Troubleshooter

After 26 years as one of the most politically connected investment bankers on Wall Street, Steven Rattner finally took a job in Washington — only it is not quite the one friends and business associates thought it would be.
Washington buzzed that Mr. Rattner, a big name in the New York media world who, friends say, aspires to a cabinet post like Treasury secretary, would be named the car czar of the Obama administration. Instead, he is one of 14 people on a committee that is orchestrating the rescue of the giant automakers.

Still, Mr. Rattner, a well-known media banker, is playing a central role as car czar lite, traveling to Detroit to visit plants, meeting with the automakers’ bankers, unions and bondholders, and advising the White House on which companies seem salvageable and how. If he succeeds, he may get a chance at a larger job in the administration.

That is a big if. He has to push the car companies to overhaul decades-old practices, persuade his former colleagues on Wall Street to lower their demands on the automakers’ debt payments and appeal to union leaders who may be turned off by Mr. Rattner’s financial success.

Mr. Rattner said in an interview that he has long been interested in returning to Washington, where he worked as a newspaper reporter 30 years ago, and that he hoped to stay on for some time to work on aspects of the financial crisis.

“In the fall, as the economic crisis intensified, it became clearer and clearer to me that this was a moment of historic importance,” Mr. Rattner said, “and if one was ever to have an interest in serving your country in the area of economic policy, this was the moment.”

Mr. Rattner has been among the most politically connected people in the banking industry. He and his wife, Maureen White, who together have been referred to by New York magazine as the “D.N.C.’s A.T.M.,” have hosted many Democratic fund-raisers at their lavish apartment on Fifth Avenue. They were initially Clinton supporters, but they hosted events for Barack Obama after he sealed the nomination.

Click here to read the entire article.

Cycling Mecca (Holland) reclaims the World’s safest country for cycling title

April 7, 2009 at 8:26 pm

(Source: Treehugger)

Img: Daniel Sparing @ Flickr

The Dutch and the Danish pass back and forth the crown for best cycling country. Now new research (from the Dutch) shows Holland to have the safest cycling roads (graph after the jump). Here’s how Tineke Huizinga, State Secretary of Transport, views the bike:

“The bicycle oils the wheels of the municipal traffic system. Cycling means arriving at work, school or the gym in a more alert frame of mind, feeling creative and positive.”

That may seem like a subjective statement, but the Dutch have found cyclists do have fewer sick days. And, amazingly, cycling safety is NOT give the highest priority in Dutch planning.

Dutch Cyclists Safest graphic

More Dutch cycling = safer cyclists
The Dutch, in their 2009 Cycling in the Netherlands report, attribute Holland’s low number of cycling fatalities – 2 people killed per 100 million kilometers traveled by bike – to the fact that so many of the Dutch are also cyclists. It isn’t a ‘we versus them’ mentality any longer, now that each person owns an average of 1.1 bicycles. This coupled with the fact that, as the report states: “Wearing a bicycle helmet for daily trips is unusual in the Netherlands,” is indeed food for thought.

In addition, Dutch liability dovetails with the recent TreeHugger post of making heavier vehicles more responsible in accidents.

Click here to read the entire article. 

Bernie’s Transportation Communications Newsletter – April 7, 2009

April 7, 2009 at 8:16 pm

Tuesday, April 7, 2009 – ISSN 1529-1057


Deadline Extended to April 17 for ITS America’s Student Essay Competition

The deadline to submit entries for the Student Essay Competition has been extended to April 17.  This year’s competition, one of the highlights of ITS America’s Annual Meeting, is sponsored by Southwest Research Institute.  The Student Essay Competition is designed to encourage student interest and future participation in the development of Intelligent Transportation Systems and solutions.  Three winners will be honored in conjunction with the Best of ITS Awards during an awards ceremony on Monday, June 1, 2009, at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in National Harbor, MD – inside the Washington DC metropolitan area.  For full entry guidelines and essay topics for this competition, please click here.  If you have further questions, please contact Edgar Martinez at emartinez@itsa.org 202-21-4223.

AVIATION

1) FAA Gets High Marks for Deployment of Satellite-Based Surveillance System

Link to story in Aircraft Maintenance Technology:

http://www.amtonline.com/article/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=7859

CAMERAS

2) Pilot Project in UK Uses Cameras in Helmets of Traffic Wardens to Record Video and Sound

Cameras to be used to resolve disputes over fines but concerns about recording private conversations.

Link to story in the Enfield Independent:

http://www.enfieldindependent.co.uk/news/4273430.Traffic_wardens_given_surveillance_powers_under_new_videocamera_scheme/

PUBLIC INFORMATION / EDUCATION

3) National Work Zone Awareness Week

Link to story and video on WTTG-TV:

http://www.myfoxdc.com/dpp/news/dc/040709_work_zone_awareness_week

Link to news release from US DOT:

http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/pressroom/fhwa0911.htm

4) Rhode Island DOT Enters the World of Social Networking

Link to story in The Interchange:

http://www.dot.ri.gov/documents/news/interchg/Winter2009.pdf  (page 8)

RAILROADS

5) United Transportation Union Launches Close-Call Pilot Program with NJ Transit

Link to story in Progressive Railroading:

http://www.progressiverailroading.com/news/article.asp?id=20109

Link to UTU news release: 

http://www.utu.org/worksite/detail_news.cfm?ArticleID=46622

ROADWAYS

6) West Virginia House Approves Emergency Response Bill

State department of transportation must be notified during certain emergencies.

Link to story in The Charleston Gazette:

http://www.wvgazettemail.com/News/200904063534068

7) Signs at I-75 Ramp in Atlanta Incomplete, Two Years After Fatal Bus Crash

Link to story in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

http://www.ajc.com/services/content/printedition/2009/04/06/hovramp0406.html

SAFETY / SECURITY

8) Whole-Body Scans Pass First Airport Tests

Link to story in The New York Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/07/business/07road.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&pagewanted=all

TRANSIT

9) New York City Transit Begins to Blog the L Train

Link to story in Metro:

http://www.metro.us/us/article/2009/04/07/05/4355-82/index.xml

10) Dude, Where’s My Bus? Ask DIYcity!

Link to story in The New York Observer:

http://www.observer.com/2009/media/dude-wheres-my-bus-ask-diycity

Link to DIYcity:  http://www.diycity.org/

11) Wireless Passenger Communications System

Link to document from the Federal Railroad Administration:

http://www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/Research/rr0834.pdf

TRAVELER INFORMATION / TRANSPORTATION MANAGEMENT

12) Road Weather Information System Environmental Sensor Station Siting Guide Version 2.0

Link to draft report from the Research and Innovative Technology Administration:

http://www.itsdocs.fhwa.dot.gov/JPODOCS//REPTS_TE/14447.htm

VEHICLES

13) Utah Rolls Out New ‘Share the Road’ License Plate

Link to story in The Salt Lake Tribune:

http://www.sltrib.com/news/ci_12091043

News Releases

1) New Greyhound Buses Redefine Leisure Travel – Upgraded Fleet Features Wi-Fi

2) Houston TranStar Goes Twitter

Upcoming Events

APTA Rail Conference – June 14-18 – Chicago

http://www.apta.com/conferences_calendar/rail/

Today in Transportation History

1989 **20th anniversary** – A bus, en route from Montreal to New York, was hijacked to Ottawa.

http://www.nytimes.com/1989/04/08/world/a-bus-headed-for-new-york-is-briefly-hijacked-in-canada.html?n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/Subjects/H/Hijacking

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Questions, comments about the TCN?  Please write the editor, Bernie Wagenblast at i95berniew@aol.com.   

© 2009 Bernie Wagenblast