Showing posts with label rail service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rail service. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Passing of our friend and mentor, John Rozankowski

Dear Friends,  

It is with great shock and sadness that I must inform you that our Friend and Mentor John Rozankowski has died of natural causes.

God have Mercy on his Soul.

We're going to miss you, John. A tremendous loss.  Thank you for helping the Rockaways, Queens and New York City with your transportation advocacy.

John lived in the Bronx and would take the train to help us. He was a good man.

Our sincerest condolences to his family.

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

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 

Monday, September 30, 2013

The Queens Public Transit Committee for the Reactivation of Rockaway Beach Line (RBL) Mission Statement



Queens Public Transit Committee Mission/Position Statement

How we define ourselves:
The Queens Public Transit Committee is one group that supports the former LIRR Rockaway Branch Line (RBL) for its original purpose, transportation. We want to see the reactivation of the RBL for the benefit of all the people of Queens and the City of New York. In short, Queens is notorious for long commuting times, especially by those that have no influence and power in the political process. The RBL is about fairness, inclusion, prosperity and equality.

We do not support a competing exclusive narrow park plan that will benefit only a small but fortunate section of Queens. 

Flaws of the ‘Park Plan’
The proposed park alternative will have little or no effect on relieving overcrowded buses and trains on our transportation corridors as it would only benefit a small area of Queens while the RBL would benefit all of Queens, the entire transportation system and the City. 

Comparisons to the High Line in Manhattan are not appropriate. That former New York Central elevated right of way was created in the middle of the Meatpacking District (which was already a tourist attraction) that feeds foot traffic there. Aside from small shopping districts, there’s nothing to feed the ex-LIRR right of way creating a negative return on investment – no ancillary revenue would be generated and would be nothing more than a money pit. 

Problem definition:
Queens is suffering from an inadequate overcrowded transit system and is notorious for long commuting
times for those who have no influence and power. On average, it takes 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 hours to travel from South Queens to North Queens by public transportation. This includes actual bus travel times and not a figure derived from a timetable. Express buses frequently are caught up in traffic and a connecting subway ride while efficient, sometimes requires multiple transfers until the final destination is reached.

Bus service is at best inefficient for a couple of reasons. The maximum passenger load is about 85 total riders. With increased dwell time due to slow passenger boarding/de-boarding and stopping in traffic for lights and other vehicular traffic, increasing bus service will have little or no effect on relieving overcrowded buses and trains on our traffic corridors. While the MTA’s Select Bus Service has improved bus service somewhat in the corridors where it has been implemented, it should not be a replacement to rail service on the RBL. 

Our roadways are clogged and dangerous with numerous vehicles that cause pollution and longer commuting times. The health problems created by the vehicular traffic lowers our Quality of Life and it's getting worse by the year. The original shutting down of rail service on the RBL created these health risks, reduced prosperity and opportunities in Queens. 

Problem solution:
The reactivation of the Rockaway Beach Line to rail use is the best transit alternative as it solves all these problem issues. Trains are more efficient than a bus and or a narrow park. 

We need to expand the transit system by reactivating the RBL as a subway and or LIRR line. The RBL is the best transit alternative as when the Long Island Rail Road operated trains on this line, a typical trip into Manhattan took about 35 minutes - compare that to a trip into Manhattan with our current set of  transportation options.

A train is more efficient than a bus and or a narrow park and here’s why. For example, a typical subway train car can accommodate 100 people and thusly, a 10-car train can carry about 1,000 passengers. The average rail car will last about 35-40 years while a bus has an average lifespan of 7 to 12 years before scrapping. With full length buses costing just under a million dollars each, this is NOT a good long-term transportation investment. In short, in terms of a cost/benefit analysis, the rail option is the best transit alternative and should be the only one considered. The park plan represents separation, isolation, division, exclusion, increase travel times and more transportation congestion. 

Brief history of the line:
The Long Island Rail Road began service on the Rockaway Branch Line in the 1800s and continued to serve mid-Queens and the Rockaways into the 1950s when after the last of a series of trestle fires on the Beach Channel Bridge, service was discontinued on that route to the Rockaway Peninsula in the early 1950s and that part of the line was sold to the City of New York in 1952 (today’s subway service). In 1962, all LIRR service on the branch was discontinued and abandoned in 1962. This part of the line has lain fallow ever since.

Summary:
The RBL would increase capacity on our transit system, increase property values and create a more positive economic cash flow than turning the former rail line into a park which generates nothing.

We are open to sharing the RBL with a trails option but we will not accept the exclusive park only idea as this line already goes through a park area.


Media Contact: Philip McManus, Chairman, 
Queens Public Transit Committee
E-mail: Rowing612@aol.com
Phone numbers: 718-679-5309, 718-474-0315