Anonymous wrote:Exactly how many people are driving on those streets at the same time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's be real. People driving cars are hogging the roads. Everyone else gets scraps. They like to try to pit us against each other but there's no question that the real problem is that we give too much space to individuals driving alone in oversized cars.
At least there are using the public resource. What good is allowing cyclists to hoard a public good for the exclusive use of 95 people per day? Imagine if the road was closed to everyone but 95 cars per day? Or a total of 95 transit passenger per day? Crazy.
Where's this 95/day coming from? A ticker on Chrismas morning? Most of the cycletracks in the city see that amount of traffic or more per hour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's be real. People driving cars are hogging the roads. Everyone else gets scraps. They like to try to pit us against each other but there's no question that the real problem is that we give too much space to individuals driving alone in oversized cars.
At least there are using the public resource. What good is allowing cyclists to hoard a public good for the exclusive use of 95 people per day? Imagine if the road was closed to everyone but 95 cars per day? Or a total of 95 transit passenger per day? Crazy.
Where's this 95/day coming from? A ticker on Chrismas morning? Most of the cycletracks in the city see that amount of traffic or more per hour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's be real. People driving cars are hogging the roads. Everyone else gets scraps. They like to try to pit us against each other but there's no question that the real problem is that we give too much space to individuals driving alone in oversized cars.
At least there are using the public resource. What good is allowing cyclists to hoard a public good for the exclusive use of 95 people per day? Imagine if the road was closed to everyone but 95 cars per day? Or a total of 95 transit passenger per day? Crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's be real. People driving cars are hogging the roads. Everyone else gets scraps. They like to try to pit us against each other but there's no question that the real problem is that we give too much space to individuals driving alone in oversized cars.
At least there are using the public resource. What good is allowing cyclists to hoard a public good for the exclusive use of 95 people per day? Imagine if the road was closed to everyone but 95 cars per day? Or a total of 95 transit passenger per day? Crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Let's be real. People driving cars are hogging the roads. Everyone else gets scraps. They like to try to pit us against each other but there's no question that the real problem is that we give too much space to individuals driving alone in oversized cars.
Anonymous wrote:Let's be real. People driving cars are hogging the roads. Everyone else gets scraps. They like to try to pit us against each other but there's no question that the real problem is that we give too much space to individuals driving alone in oversized cars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was very against the bike lane in my neighborhood (Kenyon St NW) because I thought it would just take up parking space and go unused like other bike lanes nearby (Warder, Park Pl). Instead it connected the area and now I see dozens of cyclists during my commute. So I’ll eat my words - it’s been fantastic for the neighborhood! It hasn’t added much traffic either, my commute time by car hasn’t changed.
Do you prefer better transit access or bike lanes? That is the question.
The Columbia Rd bike lane had on average 190 counts every day in the month of October. If people were going both directions, then that is 95 individual riders. You can fit than many people in a handful of buses. Do you think limited public space should go to this inefficient purpose or to improve transit options in some of the most densely populated neighborhoods in the city?
No, it’s not the question. Stop pretending that bike lanes somehow reduce transit access. Everyone who is pro bike lane is pro transit.
Setting aside valuable public land for the use of 95 people a day on bicycles instead of allowing for potentially thousands to use it for transit is exactly what it is. Shameful.
The two have nothing to do with each other. The bike lane replaced a lane that was previously for cars. It did not displace any buses. Your point is irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was very against the bike lane in my neighborhood (Kenyon St NW) because I thought it would just take up parking space and go unused like other bike lanes nearby (Warder, Park Pl). Instead it connected the area and now I see dozens of cyclists during my commute. So I’ll eat my words - it’s been fantastic for the neighborhood! It hasn’t added much traffic either, my commute time by car hasn’t changed.
Do you prefer better transit access or bike lanes? That is the question.
The Columbia Rd bike lane had on average 190 counts every day in the month of October. If people were going both directions, then that is 95 individual riders. You can fit than many people in a handful of buses. Do you think limited public space should go to this inefficient purpose or to improve transit options in some of the most densely populated neighborhoods in the city?
No, it’s not the question. Stop pretending that bike lanes somehow reduce transit access. Everyone who is pro bike lane is pro transit.
Setting aside valuable public land for the use of 95 people a day on bicycles instead of allowing for potentially thousands to use it for transit is exactly what it is. Shameful.
Since the MoCo BRT isn't funded in the near future, and the focus is on vision zero, why is taking away public land from tens of thousands of people driving in cars for the 95 people on bicycles ok? Makes no sense to me - will just make traffic more unbearable than it already is
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was very against the bike lane in my neighborhood (Kenyon St NW) because I thought it would just take up parking space and go unused like other bike lanes nearby (Warder, Park Pl). Instead it connected the area and now I see dozens of cyclists during my commute. So I’ll eat my words - it’s been fantastic for the neighborhood! It hasn’t added much traffic either, my commute time by car hasn’t changed.
Do you prefer better transit access or bike lanes? That is the question.
The Columbia Rd bike lane had on average 190 counts every day in the month of October. If people were going both directions, then that is 95 individual riders. You can fit than many people in a handful of buses. Do you think limited public space should go to this inefficient purpose or to improve transit options in some of the most densely populated neighborhoods in the city?
No, it’s not the question. Stop pretending that bike lanes somehow reduce transit access. Everyone who is pro bike lane is pro transit.
Setting aside valuable public land for the use of 95 people a day on bicycles instead of allowing for potentially thousands to use it for transit is exactly what it is. Shameful.
The two have nothing to do with each other. The bike lane replaced a lane that was previously for cars. It did not displace any buses. Your point is irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was very against the bike lane in my neighborhood (Kenyon St NW) because I thought it would just take up parking space and go unused like other bike lanes nearby (Warder, Park Pl). Instead it connected the area and now I see dozens of cyclists during my commute. So I’ll eat my words - it’s been fantastic for the neighborhood! It hasn’t added much traffic either, my commute time by car hasn’t changed.
Do you prefer better transit access or bike lanes? That is the question.
The Columbia Rd bike lane had on average 190 counts every day in the month of October. If people were going both directions, then that is 95 individual riders. You can fit than many people in a handful of buses. Do you think limited public space should go to this inefficient purpose or to improve transit options in some of the most densely populated neighborhoods in the city?
No, it’s not the question. Stop pretending that bike lanes somehow reduce transit access. Everyone who is pro bike lane is pro transit.
Setting aside valuable public land for the use of 95 people a day on bicycles instead of allowing for potentially thousands to use it for transit is exactly what it is. Shameful.