Anonymous wrote:
Are you saying that less than 1000 people made 100,071 trips plus whatever trips were made by people who owned or borrowed bikes? So, the average person who ever rides a bike made 4 trips a day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of people in DC drives cars. A very small number of people in DC ride bikes and use other types of transportation. That's the proportion we should use in divvying up the roads. No one is more important than anyone else.
Plenty of people in DC walk, and take public transportation, and do things besides driving for every trip.
Not to mention, he isn’t just for DC.
There's 350,000 cars registered in DC. That's at least 500,000 who rely on a car. How many people ride bikes in DC? Probably fewer than 1,000 people.
"Having a car" and "relying on a car" are not synonyms.
There is no reason a car-owner can't also use their feet, a bicycle, a bus, or the subway for their transportation, and plenty do.
As for bikes, there were 100,071 trips just on Capital Bikeshare bikes, just in January 2021.
We're switching to trips now? That's apples and oranges. I drive my car at least twice a day. Assuming I'm a typical car owner, those 350,000 cars would translate to 22 MILLION trips in January. And there's surely a lot more than 350,000 cars in DC. Many aren't registered because the city charges an arm and a leg to register your car.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, DC drivers are scofflaws. Well, we knew that. All the more reason for the USDOT to take all road users into account, not just people in motor vehicles.
Although people in cars are the vast majority of road users. Bicyclists are a rounding error.
Anonymous wrote:So, DC drivers are scofflaws. Well, we knew that. All the more reason for the USDOT to take all road users into account, not just people in motor vehicles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of people in DC drives cars. A very small number of people in DC ride bikes and use other types of transportation. That's the proportion we should use in divvying up the roads. No one is more important than anyone else.
Plenty of people in DC walk, and take public transportation, and do things besides driving for every trip.
Not to mention, he isn’t just for DC.
There's 350,000 cars registered in DC. That's at least 500,000 who rely on a car. How many people ride bikes in DC? Probably fewer than 1,000 people.
"Having a car" and "relying on a car" are not synonyms.
There is no reason a car-owner can't also use their feet, a bicycle, a bus, or the subway for their transportation, and plenty do.
As for bikes, there were 100,071 trips just on Capital Bikeshare bikes, just in January 2021.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of people in DC drives cars. A very small number of people in DC ride bikes and use other types of transportation. That's the proportion we should use in divvying up the roads. No one is more important than anyone else.
Plenty of people in DC walk, and take public transportation, and do things besides driving for every trip.
Not to mention, he isn’t just for DC.
There's 350,000 cars registered in DC. That's at least 500,000 who rely on a car. How many people ride bikes in DC? Probably fewer than 1,000 people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of people in DC drives cars. A very small number of people in DC ride bikes and use other types of transportation. That's the proportion we should use in divvying up the roads. No one is more important than anyone else.
Plenty of people in DC walk, and take public transportation, and do things besides driving for every trip.
Not to mention, he isn’t just for DC.
There's 350,000 cars registered in DC. That's at least 500,000 who rely on a car. How many people ride bikes in DC? Probably fewer than 1,000 people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of people in DC drives cars. A very small number of people in DC ride bikes and use other types of transportation. That's the proportion we should use in divvying up the roads. No one is more important than anyone else.
Plenty of people in DC walk, and take public transportation, and do things besides driving for every trip.
Not to mention, he isn’t just for DC.
Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of people in DC drives cars. A very small number of people in DC ride bikes and use other types of transportation. That's the proportion we should use in divvying up the roads. No one is more important than anyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So the former mayor of a midsized Indiana town, who couldn’t even keep the potholes manageable, is onboard with turning the federal interstate highway system into a pedestrian mall.
This. Is. Awesome.
That's not what he said at all.
He said that roadways should be designed with all users in mind. He might be talking about safer crossing for pedestrians including wheelchair users, or bike lanes, or improved access for public transportation, or opening up sections of roads for pedestrian and bicycle use the way part of Rock Creek Parkway is used.
He didn't say "interstate highway". He didn't say we would all be using them in the same way.
He needs to stay in his lane (pun intended)
The Sec of Trans job is to focus on interstate and strategic transportation nodes. Highways. Railroads. Aviation. Ports and waterways. Pipelines.
Not making sure every ‘burg in the country has bike lanes.![]()
The job of the Secretary of Tranportation is to focus on transportation. Which includes
-walking
-rolling (e.g., in wheelchairs)
-bicycling
Heard of this thing called the Constitution? It reserved powers not expressly granted to the central government to the states. Some courts have held that interstate commerce allows the Feds to dominate interstate transport, otherwise all they can do is bribe localities to implement their vision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So the former mayor of a midsized Indiana town, who couldn’t even keep the potholes manageable, is onboard with turning the federal interstate highway system into a pedestrian mall.
This. Is. Awesome.
That's not what he said at all.
He said that roadways should be designed with all users in mind. He might be talking about safer crossing for pedestrians including wheelchair users, or bike lanes, or improved access for public transportation, or opening up sections of roads for pedestrian and bicycle use the way part of Rock Creek Parkway is used.
He didn't say "interstate highway". He didn't say we would all be using them in the same way.
He needs to stay in his lane (pun intended)
The Sec of Trans job is to focus on interstate and strategic transportation nodes. Highways. Railroads. Aviation. Ports and waterways. Pipelines.
Not making sure every ‘burg in the country has bike lanes.![]()
The job of the Secretary of Tranportation is to focus on transportation. Which includes
-walking
-rolling (e.g., in wheelchairs)
-bicycling
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So the former mayor of a midsized Indiana town, who couldn’t even keep the potholes manageable, is onboard with turning the federal interstate highway system into a pedestrian mall.
This. Is. Awesome.
That's not what he said at all.
He said that roadways should be designed with all users in mind. He might be talking about safer crossing for pedestrians including wheelchair users, or bike lanes, or improved access for public transportation, or opening up sections of roads for pedestrian and bicycle use the way part of Rock Creek Parkway is used.
He didn't say "interstate highway". He didn't say we would all be using them in the same way.