Showing posts with label commuter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commuter. Show all posts

Saturday, May 16, 2015

Ten myths about select and rapid-transit buses

Allan Rosen's comments appeared in the Queens Chronicle newspaper and is a member of QPTC. The title speaks for itself. The item below represents the position of QPTC and was developed within the group.

Ten myths about select and rapid-transit buses

by Allan Rosen, | Posted: Thursday, April 16, 2015 10:30 am

Let’s examine things we’re being told about Select Bus Service and Bus Rapid Transit that aren’t true.
1. SBS/BRT is the best cost-effective solution to improve north-south travel in the Woodhaven-Cross Bay Boulevard corridor.
Actually, restoring the abandoned Rockaway Beach Line offers more advantages. It provides faster trips without removing two needed general traffic lanes. Studies have shown the public prefers rail to bus. Rail will stimulate development. The RBL is also greener and quieter because it uses electric power. It won’t impede first responders, unlike the design the city Department of Transportation has chosen.
The DOT cannot be trusted to provide truthful figures. It had been touting $28 million for SBS, then it suddenly escalated the cost to $200 million with BRT. That cost could double if any of the work has to be redone such as switching to Option 1 midstream, because emergency response times increase. Pedestrian islands may have to be ripped out, as happened several years ago in front of Maimonides Hospital in Brooklyn, when these islands were installed without discussions with EMS personnel.
There also are plans to destroy the RBL with the QueensWay trail, which has been priced at $120 million, and would likely escalate. The combined BRT and Queens-Way costs approach the cost of restoring the RBL, which provides a far superior level of service. Regulatory flexibility to permit shared LIRR/subway operations or an LIRR/subway transfer at Aqueduct or Howard Beach eliminates the cost of a new bridge across Jamaica Bay.
2. SBS/BRT will encourage drivers to switch to buses.
The number of transfers and fares needed to make a trip will not be reduced, a major reason why many choose to drive. Therefore motorists will not switch modes to compensate for the loss of general traffic lanes.
3. SBS increases bus reliability.
SBS buses operate no more reliably than local bus routes. SBS buses frequently arrive in bunches along Second Avenue in Manhattan and along Nostrand Avenue in Brooklyn. Many passengers see no improvement over the former Limited service SBS replaced.
4. Buses traveling faster equates with faster trip times for bus passengers.
Actually, for someone to fully benefit from bus travel time savings, they must ride from the first stop until the last stop, which few passengers do. There will be no savings for the passenger of up to 35 percent as DOT’s press release claims.
5. Bus passengers will save time during the off-peak.
During the midday before 3 p.m., in the evening and on weekends, buses already travel the maximum allowable speed and would not travel any faster because of exclusive bus lanes.
6. The needs of automobile drivers will be met.
Only the needs of bus riders have been considered, though they account for only one-third of the road’s users. The DOT admits that the majority — 57 percent — of Woodhaven Corridor residents own cars, though they state the negative that 43 percent of the households do not own cars.
The DOT also plans to ban left turns at Metropolitan Avenue and Rockaway Blvd. It claims that this won’t negatively impact drivers, but that is wrong. Drivers will have to travel farther and be forced to first travel in the opposite direction of where they want to go.
7. Traffic will improve after BRT is completed.
Traffic will significantly worsen with two lanes for general travel removed, and mergers from four lanes to three will become mergers of three lanes to two. The net result is increased congestion for motorists and also commercial vehicles as there is no nearby alternative north-south route. That includes livery cabs that transit-dependent residents rely on for doctor’s appointments and shopping,
8. Three lanes for general traffic will be maintained throughout the corridor.
Although this is what the DOT had promised throughout the process, only two lanes for general traffic will be maintained where Woodhaven passes beneath and above the LIRR, and a two-lane option is being considered for Cross Bay Boulevard as well.
9. Construction will be completed within a year.
None of the DOT’s past time estimates has been accurate. Even the first-year assessment for the B44 SBS is over four months late.
10. Community involvement has been adequate throughout.
Questions asked one year ago still have not been responded to, and there has been no outreach specifically for automobile drivers, who are mostly unaware of the BRT plans, which will greatly affect them. SBS was a predetermined conclusion before the first public meeting.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Rockaway Committee To Save The Ferry

On Thursday April 3rd 2014 at 6 P.M., the Queens Rockaway Ferry committee is holding a press conference at Beach 108th St. and Beach Channel Drive to say “Thank You” for Mayor de Blasio’s extension of the Rockaway Ferry service. The press conference was delayed due to severe weather over the last few months.

The Queens Public Transit Committee supports faster transportation including the Queens Rockaway Ferry. Good luck and congratulations to the Rockaway Committee to Save the  Ferry for a successful event.  

The Committee has confirmed Borough President Melinda Katz (D- Queens), Assemblyman Phil Goldfeder (D-Rockaway), City Council Member Eric Ulrich (R-Rockaway), Joseph Addabbo Jr. (D-Rockaway), Donovan Richards (D-Far Rockaway), Congressman Gregory Meeks (D- Rockaway), District Leader Lew M. Simon (D-Rockaway), and for Senator James Sanders Jr. (D-Far Rockaway) Liaison Lisa George attendance. 

Thank you. 

Philip McManus
Chairman
Queens Public Transit Committee 
718-474-0315

Saturday, March 22, 2014

HELP STOP THE QUEENSWAY PARK ONLY PLAN!!!


HELP STOP THE QUEENSWAY PARK ONLY PLAN!!!
BRING A POSTER SUPPORTING TRANSIT USE FOR THE ROCKAWAY LINE!!!  

STOP THE QUEENSWAY PARK ONLY PLAN!!! THE NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) QUEENSWAY PLAN WILL FURTHER PREVENT FASTER TRANSPORTATION AND PROSPERITY. STOP JUST LIVING WITH OVERCROWDED, DANGEROUS, UNRELIABLE AND SLOW ROADWAYS, BUSES AND TRAINS! 
Join us in our struggle for a better quality of life for you and your children.

WE WANT MORE TRAIN SERVICE!!! MORE TRANSPORTATION OPTIONS MEANS PROSPERITY!!! 
The QueensWay group needs to see us and hear us. Please bring posters and your enthusiasm.  It's also a photo and recruitment opportunity. The press will be in attendance. 
Please ask all rail option supporters to attend and promote reusing the Queens Rockaway Beach Line for transportation at the QueensWay Park meetings. Let's fill the room with supporters of the Queens RBL.  See below meeting locations.

Please contact us at 718-474-0315 or Rowing612@aol.com to confirm your attendance with Queens Public Transit Committee. RSVP QueensWay and speak your mind:

Shelma Jun
QueensWay Plan Engagement Manager
shelma@hesterstreet.org
212.431.6780 x110
www.thequeenswayplan.org

Attend these events!!!
CONVERSATION //
Mon. March 24th, 7 – 9pm
Metropolitan Expeditionary Learning School
91-30 Metropolitan Ave. Forest Hills, NY
(two blocks east of Woodhaven Blvd., yellow entrance)

CONVERSATION //
Wed. March 26th, 7 – 9pm 
High School for Construction Trades, Engineering and Architecture
94-06 104th Street, Richmond Hill, NY
(one block south of Atlantic Ave. at 94th Ave.)
Each workshop will include:
• Presentation of key issues from community outreach and ideas in progress
• Group activity: review of options going forward
ALSO 

Congratulations to all. Our recent Queens RBL Drive By Rally got into the newspapers.



The Queens Public Transit Committee had a successful Drive By Rally for the Queens Rockaway Beach Line, the new Queens Crosstown: Check out this link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKQkHtJhlcY
 
We want to increase our public exposure. We believe in faster transportation for Queens which is the key to our economic recovery, our unity, our renaissance and our quality of life.We need your help to improve our economy, increase access to jobs and better schools through faster transportation which will reduce unemployment, crime and suffering.  It's time to unite Queens with the new Queens Crosstown. 

We need your help to win the Queens Rockaway Beach Line battle.


ALSO

Please ask your family and friends and commuters to sign our petitions to support the Reactivation of the Queens Rockaway Beach Line, the New Queens Crosstown, eliminate the toll on the Queens Cross Bay Veterans Memorial Bridge for everyone and expand the Queens Rockaway Ferry:




Philip McManus
Queens Public Transit Committee
718-474-0315
718-679-5309

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

LIRR Rockaway Branch Line train activity circa 1950

Below is a link to a YouTube video with Long Island Rail Road trains to the Rockaways circa 1950. You will see MP54 commuter cars going over Broad Channel as well as the viaduct as currently constituted. The scene at Rockaway Park can be an interesting juxtaposition versus today's current subway scene.

Feel free to copy the link into your browser, check it out and enjoy!!!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-gX1AtT6jzA&feature=youtu.be

Friday, March 7, 2014

Queens Public Transit Committee Holds -Drive By Rally- To Drum Up Support For Rail Service To Be Restored To The Former LIRR Queens Rockaway Beach Line And Calling It The New Queens Crosstown Route

I am Philip McManus, Chairman of the Queens Public Transit Committee and I’m here to ask for your help to help make a growing economy a part of your mission for the region and to address a huge problem we have in central and southern Queens - a lack of viable transportation options that results in lower economic output for the region. Queens in general, is being strangulated by a lack of transportation options that hurts the entire city. Transportation is the circulatory system of the city that results in overall economic growth.

The solution to this issue is the re-institution of rail service on the former Long Island Railroad Rockaway Branch line with either subway or LIRR commuter service. The right of way already exists so land acquisition isn't really an issue.

The best example of how rail service benefits the area is when the subway opened in 1904. People realized they no longer had to live within walking distance of their jobs in Lower Manhattan and could travel from other points in the city. The economy grew by leaps and bounds and New York City grew to the metropolis it has become. 
 
We advocate making central and southern Queens an economic empowerment zone by making it a destination for people to live in and have the mobility to easily reach jobs in other parts of the region. Returning it to operation will make the area a juggernaut of economic activity as it could become a destination and not just another place on a map that's hard to get in and out of.

We're not advocating just rail service, but increased bus service as well.
 
Come join our 'Drive By Rally' at the intersection of Queens Boulevard and Woodhaven Boulevard on March 9 2014 at 2:30 pm. Bring your car and passengers that can carry placards to hold as we drive by.
 
Help make Queens and economic empowerment zone by joining our rally.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

QueensWay Meets Rockaway Line Rail Advocates

November 20, 2013 - The two opposites met but certainly didn't attract.

In one corner, the QueensWay 'park' advocates and organizers of the workshop, were joined by the transportation advocates known as the Queens Public Transit Committee in the other corner and they kind of duked it out. The 'prize' in the middle of the ring (so to speak) was the 3.5-mile abandoned rail line that was once operated by the Long Island Rail Road as the Rockaway Branch Line.

While the final disposition of the right of way is far from decided, an ally of the rail transportation advocates stepped up to the table and made an effort to level the playing field. New York State Assemblyman Philip Goldfeder came up with the $50 to $100,000 dollars out of his discretionary expense account to fund a study to be conducted by Queens College's Department of Urban Studies. The money to fund that study is less than the $500,000 in state funds from the New York State Trust for Public Land but should prove to be a useful competing opinion on how to better serve the transportation needs of southern Queens versus a bike path.

To their credit, the Friends of the Queensway welcomed to 'opposition' study but stated that if it had not happened in the last 50 years, rail might not happen and they're seizing the opportunity to get their way. They seek to mimic the Highline in Manhattan even though the economic and land use doesn't match the largely residential make-up of the area. Another issue not addressed by the park plan are security issues which has a huge negative attached to it.

There is a major dividing line in this fight - the park advocates want the entire 3.5-mile tract of land exclusively while the Queens Public Transit Committee is willing to share the former 4-track mainline so both sides can benefit.


Philip McManus, Chairman of the Queens Public Transit Committee and made the statement that:
"Reusing the former LIRR Queens Rockaway Beach Line (RBL) for transportation is the best plan. It will reunite north and south Queens and decrease travel times and increase investments for everyone especially the poor and middle class areas that are underserved, excluded and separated from the American dream. 

The QueensWay plan and the No Way plan are exclusive and divide our borough. It also prevents development and investments in Queens. We need jobs and businesses for all the people so we can grow and help each other. The QueensWay plan sounds good [on the surface] but it will only benefit a few people and a small area of Queens. It’s the small plan while the transportation plan is the big plan, the most inclusive plan.  

The reactivation of the RBL will expand the transit system, increase social and economic opportunities, increase property values and tax revenue. As a rail line, the RBL will increase transit options including faster travel times to work, home, school, shopping, recreation, dining, family visits, and doctor visits. 

The RBL will decrease pollution, accidents, unemployment, crime and government dependence, reduce present and future overcrowding and unreliable buses, trains and roadways at a much, much greater level than the QueensWay plan.  

Thank you also to New York State Assemblyman Phil Goldfeder and Queens College for organizing this affordable study."

Clearly, the battle lines are drawn and the fight is on. In this era of evolving 'green' transportation and lifestyle, the rail transportation plan offers greater economic benefits and an actual return on investment with a better quality of life. No matter which option is chosen, the right of way needs to be rebuilt, the rail advocates seem to have the upper hand when it comes to an all-around solution.

Below is Assemblyman Goldfeder's press release:



Assemblyman Goldfeder and Queens College Urban Studies Department to Launch Comprehensive Study of Abandoned Rockaway Beach Rail Line
 Faculty, students, and staff from the college Urban Studies Department will perform a comprehensive community impact study to help assess the best use for abandoned tracks
Flushing, Queens—Assemblyman Phil Goldfeder (D-Rockaway), joined by Professor Leonard Rodberg, Chair of the Queens College Department of Urban Studies, announced plans for a comprehensive study to assess the community impact of the proposed options for the abandoned tracks of the old Rockaway Beach Rail Line.
“The Queens College Department of Urban Studies’ Office of Community Studies is renowned for its community-based research. It is the perfect partner to help determine what is in the best interest of Queens and city residents,” said Assemblyman Goldfeder. “Now that the MTA has signaled an interest in reactivating the Rockaway Beach Rail Line as an efficient and cost-effective way to significantly increase public transit for Queens residents, it’s important we do appropriate studies to determine the next steps. While other groups are using tax dollars to hire expensive consultants and do one-sided studies, we’re utilizing local expert resources and educating our students while supporting an objective study that will enormously benefit all our hardworking Queens families.”
The project will be led by Professor Rodberg together with Dr. Scott Larson and other faculty and students from the college’s Department of Urban Studies. The collaborative effort will include assessments of community transportation patterns and needs as well as community attitudes about the impacts, costs, need for and feasibility of a range of proposed uses of the abandoned rail line. The study will take approximately nine months to prepare and is expected to be completed by the end of next summer.
 “Our Department is pleased to be cooperating with Assemblyman Goldfeder in assessing the options for this valuable, unused area of Queens. We believe our study will help everyone evaluate what is best for the people and communities of Queens,” said Professor Rodberg.”
Queens College of the City University of New York enjoys a national reputation for its liberal arts and sciences and pre-professional programs. With its graduate and undergraduate degrees, honors programs, and research and internship opportunities, the college helps its over 20,000 students realize their potential in countless ways, assisted by an accessible, award-winning faculty. Located on a beautiful, 80-acre campus in Flushing, the college is cited each year in the Princeton Review as one of the nation’s 100 “Best Value” colleges, thanks to its outstanding academics, generous financial aid packages, and relatively low costs. In 2013, Washington Monthly ranked QC #1 among “Master’s Universities” as a Best-Bang-for-the-Buck college and #2 nationwide among colleges that do the best job of helping non-wealthy students attain marketable degrees at affordable prices.
The Rockaway Beach Line, also known as the White Pot Junction Line, was created around the turn of the century and was owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road. It provided residents with safe, affordable and expedient access to other parts of the city and 40 minute commutes to midtown Manhattan from Rockaway. In the early 60s, parts of the railroad service were condensed, sectioned off and eventually closed. In the following years, the property was vandalized, encroached upon and has become a source of embarrassment for the families that reside in the area.
Assemblyman Goldfeder has made transportation and the restoration of the Rockaway Beach Rail Line a top priority. In February of 2012, he called on Governor Cuomo to immediately restore the line to ease commutes for Queens residents. In May that year, Goldfeder launched a petition that garnered nearly 3,000 signatures that were later delivered to Governor Cuomo, the Port Authority, and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority in support of bringing the line back to life. Additionally, Assemblyman Goldfeder continues to work with Congressmen Gregory Meeks (NY-5) and Hakeem Jeffries (NY-8) to facilitate a portion of approved federal Sandy disaster aid be allocated to fund the restoration of the rail line and assist in recovery for residents.

"I believe that increasing public transportation is the right choice and I look forward to the results of the study and working with my colleges and the community to fund and implement next steps," concluded Goldfeder.
 

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Extremely Important Meeting/Workshop About The Future Of The Queens Rockaway Beach Line (RBL) On Wednesday, Nov. 20


Dear Friends of the Rockaway Beach Line and Queens Public Transit Committee, 

Are you and your family tired of long, slow, overcrowded, dangerous, and unreliable buses, trains and roadways? Are you tired of being treated like a neglected commuter with no voice and opportunity for improvement? 

This is your time to take action with our community. Fight for your family, and a better future. 

Faster transportation is the key to our prosperity which results in more freedom and more job opportunities.  We want to reuse the Queens Rockaway Beach Line (RBL) for faster transportation for all of Queens and the City. Development means increased economic and personal opportunities, employment, lower crime, better schools and roadways, increased neighborhood values, faster commutes, and a better quality of life. 

The QueensWay park plan is trying to stop Queens residents from having faster transportation by using the right of way for a park and stop the reactivation of the Queens Rockaway Beach Line for rail service forever.  They want to stop us from growing our economy by destroying the RBL for rail service. Link to this article: http://m.qchron.com/mobile/editions/queenswide/queensway-info-meetings/article_3f1b7990-9e90-5b28-ad2c-4ca282958f9a.html

"The Trust for Public Land, the parks advocacy group that is studying the possibility of building a High Line-like park along the right of way of the former Rockaway Beach Long Island Rail Road line, is holding three public workshops on the plan.

Please tell your family and friends to attend this extremely important meeting.  We will meet Wednesday, Nov. 20 from 7 to 9 p.m. at the 
Ozone Park Senior Center at St. Mary Gate of Heaven Church, 
103-02 101 Ave.
Ozone Park, Queens. 

Our goal is not to protest or to be disruptive but to stand up and speak up for the reactivation of the RBL, faster transportation and prosperity for all. 

Tell the NIMBYs (Not In My Back Yarders) we have a right to a better life for all of Queens. 

The first workshop will be held on Wednesday, Nov. 13 from 7 to 9 p.m. at 
Emanuel Church of Christ
93-12 91 Ave.
Woodhaven, Queens. 

The second will be on Tuesday, Nov. 19 from 7 to 9 p.m. at the 
Metropolitan Expeditionary Learning School
91-30 Metropolitan Ave.
Forest Hills, Queens. 

and the third will be on Wednesday, Nov. 20 from 7 to 9 p.m. at the 
Ozone Park Senior Center at St. Mary Gate of Heaven Church
103-02 101 Ave.
Ozone Park, Queens. 

The Trust for Public Land says the workshops are “an opportunity for community members, business owners and interested individuals to share input and ideas on the design and programming of the QueensWay.”

Besides the park, there are some who want to reactivate the rail line and some, especially in Woodhaven and Forest Hills, who want to the right of way left alone."

Please confirm your attendance by calling 718-474-0315 or 718-679-5309

Don't allow them to ignore and neglect us anymore. Come early and bring a poster. Make sure you get into the hall. 

Philip McManus
Chairman
Queens Public Transit Committee 
718-679-5309