Anonymous wrote:DC has really good air quality. Surprisingly good. Why is this shocking to you? Dont you want to ground your public policy in actual fact?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thats really hyperbolic. Dc has very low air pollution and people already use lots of mixed travel. Greatly improve public health? Would you like the maid services to shlep from house to house with their vaccuums by bus? Im guessing whatever health benefits they accrue would be offset by exhaustion. What would have an impact on public health is cramming in more cars, as would happen with higher density. If each new resident of these apartments had a car, that would raise idling cars and air pollution in the city very quickly.
No, talking about the health benefits of fewer cars in DC is not hyperbolic. Talking about the effect on cleaning service workers if DC banned cars is hyperbolic, though.
Do you have any idea how clean dc air is compared to other cities? Ee have very good air quality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Covid 19 plus high density plus public transport sounds worrisome
Oh? Is coronavirus is more dangerous for people who live in apartments than for people who live in detached one-household houses?
I don't know. Do you think densely packed cities and only public mass transport options might be? I dunno.
If you're looking to improve public health, more cars is really, really, really not the way to go.
I would think no cars isn't the way either. Probs need reasonable mix.
Who is banning cars? Nobody. But greatly reducing car use in the city would greatly improve public health.
So would preserving and enhancing the city’s tree canopy. But for some unexplained reason, the DC government recently clear-cut about 150 trees in Hearst Park!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thats really hyperbolic. Dc has very low air pollution and people already use lots of mixed travel. Greatly improve public health? Would you like the maid services to shlep from house to house with their vaccuums by bus? Im guessing whatever health benefits they accrue would be offset by exhaustion. What would have an impact on public health is cramming in more cars, as would happen with higher density. If each new resident of these apartments had a car, that would raise idling cars and air pollution in the city very quickly.
No, talking about the health benefits of fewer cars in DC is not hyperbolic. Talking about the effect on cleaning service workers if DC banned cars is hyperbolic, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public street is not your street. The greenie in the apartment building pays the same taxes you do. Why are you entitled to public space that others are not?
What im opposed to is cars crawling the block . Existing folks have cars. Selling new units to people without cars seems reasonable. Telling them to battle it out in the streets does not. You are making a great case for e ,isting residents to oppose.any added density. Thanks
It isn't YOUR street. You are just showing your sense of entitlement.
Do what the residents have done on certain streets in Cleveland Park and the Palisades: lots of lots of speed bumps. That way, only local drivers will use those streets, not folks looking for a fast cut-thru!
What do speed bumps have to do with parking?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Covid 19 plus high density plus public transport sounds worrisome
Oh? Is coronavirus is more dangerous for people who live in apartments than for people who live in detached one-household houses?
I don't know. Do you think densely packed cities and only public mass transport options might be? I dunno.
If you're looking to improve public health, more cars is really, really, really not the way to go.
I would think no cars isn't the way either. Probs need reasonable mix.
Who is banning cars? Nobody. But greatly reducing car use in the city would greatly improve public health.
Anonymous wrote:Thats really hyperbolic. Dc has very low air pollution and people already use lots of mixed travel. Greatly improve public health? Would you like the maid services to shlep from house to house with their vaccuums by bus? Im guessing whatever health benefits they accrue would be offset by exhaustion. What would have an impact on public health is cramming in more cars, as would happen with higher density. If each new resident of these apartments had a car, that would raise idling cars and air pollution in the city very quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Covid 19 plus high density plus public transport sounds worrisome
Oh? Is coronavirus is more dangerous for people who live in apartments than for people who live in detached one-household houses?
I don't know. Do you think densely packed cities and only public mass transport options might be? I dunno.
If you're looking to improve public health, more cars is really, really, really not the way to go.
I would think no cars isn't the way either. Probs need reasonable mix.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Covid 19 plus high density plus public transport sounds worrisome
Oh? Is coronavirus is more dangerous for people who live in apartments than for people who live in detached one-household houses?
I don't know. Do you think densely packed cities and only public mass transport options might be? I dunno.
If you're looking to improve public health, more cars is really, really, really not the way to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Covid 19 plus high density plus public transport sounds worrisome
Oh? Is coronavirus is more dangerous for people who live in apartments than for people who live in detached one-household houses?
I don't know. Do you think densely packed cities and only public mass transport options might be? I dunno.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public street is not your street. The greenie in the apartment building pays the same taxes you do. Why are you entitled to public space that others are not?
What im opposed to is cars crawling the block . Existing folks have cars. Selling new units to people without cars seems reasonable. Telling them to battle it out in the streets does not. You are making a great case for e ,isting residents to oppose.any added density. Thanks
It isn't YOUR street. You are just showing your sense of entitlement.
Do what the residents have done on certain streets in Cleveland Park and the Palisades: lots of lots of speed bumps. That way, only local drivers will use those streets, not folks looking for a fast cut-thru!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Covid 19 plus high density plus public transport sounds worrisome
Oh? Is coronavirus is more dangerous for people who live in apartments than for people who live in detached one-household houses?