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It's not too
late to make a special end
of year donation to support T.A.'s work for bicyclists and pedestrians.
T.A. In the News
transalt.org/
media
Latest
1/19 One-Vehicle
Gridlock, New York Times
1/14 New
bike lanes aren't welcome in one Bronx neighborhood, CBS2
1/13 Prospect
Park set to go car-free... sort of, The Brooklyn Papers
1/13 More
Car-Free Hours Coming, Carroll Gardens/Cobble Hill Courier
1/13 Issue
of the Week: 311, Gotham Gazette
1/9 Prospect
Park cuts drive time, Daily News
1/9 For
1st Time, DOT Sets Car-Free Winter Hours in Prospect Park, The Brooklyn
Daily Eagle
1/7 Beep:
Cross In The Middle, Newsday
12/27 Guide
to Bicycle Parking Made Available for Building Owners/
Managers, The Urban Transportation Monitor
12/20 Upgrade
Transit, Daily News
12/16 Brooklyn
Politics: Car-Free Park Politics Revealed, Carroll Gardens/Cobble Hill
Courier
12/15 Going
the distance, Daily News
12/14 Let's
talk token utopia, Daily News
12/13 Transit
strike would squeeze NYC, USA Today
12/13 Water
they'll do during walkout?, Daily News
12/11 Forget
Taxis: Some Say Biking Is Best Bet In Event Of Transit Strike, NY1
12/11 How
About Biking to Work?, NBC4
12/9 For
whom the bridge tolls, Daily News
12/7 Runaway
car kills teen, injures man, Daily News
More
Quotes...

T.A. News

Come to the
Volunteer Mailing Party,
Wednesday, January 29th at 6 pm at the T.A. Office (115 West 30th, #1207).
Paid Advocacy
Internship/
Asst. to Executive Director
16 to 20 hours a
week. Minimum commitment of one semester. Visit transalt.org/jobs
for details.
Time on your hands? Eager to
make a difference? T.A. needs folks who are retired, work part-time or
between jobs to help our top-notch advocacy staff make the city a better place for bicyclists,
pedestrians and transit riders.
Call 212-629-8080 or e-mail info@transalt.org.
Valet Bike Parking
Volunteers Needed
Volunteer to provide
valet bike parking at events throughout the year. Register
online to express your interest in this opportunity.
T.A. still has
two open internships:
- Advocacy
(work with T.A. program staff)
- Bicycle Advocacy
Please visit transalt.org/intern
for more information.
Donations Wish
List
Help cycling and walking and get a tax deduction. Donate to T.A. We
need:
-Pentium II or better
PCs
-Laptop computer (P
100+)
-Digital Camera
-Good chairs for
conf. table or desks
-Computer Projector
Contact Matt: info@transalt.org

Do Your Part
for Safer Streets! Report:
Potholes
and Hazards:
212-CALLDOT (hit 0 to speak with a human) or report them online at transalt.org/
hazard
Sidewalk
obstructions: Mayor’s Quality of Life Hotline at 888-677-LIFE/
5433

Read more about
T.A.'s work to reduce street hazards at transalt.org/haz
Report Dangerous Cabs:
212-221-TAXI or report
them online.

Read more about
T.A.'s work to make cabs safer for pedestrians and cyclists at transalt.org/cabs
The T.A. Bulletin is a
bi-weekly publication of Transportation Alternatives. The Bulletin has 23,000
subscribers.
Transportation Alternatives is
a 5,000-member NYC-area non-profit citizens group working for better bicycling,
walking
and public
transit, and fewer
cars. We work for safer,
calmer neighborhood streets and car-free
parks. Join T.A. today!

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Week of January 6, 2003
Breaking
News
T.A. Wins Big Increase in Prospect Park
Weekday Car-Free Hours!
Councilmembers
want more — ask the DOT for three month car-free trial period
On
January 7, the Department
of Transportation announced [
press
release | Web
page] that, beginning January
21, 2003, Prospect Park will be car-free on weekdays except
between 7 am to 9 am and 4 pm to 7 pm. This is a huge win for park
users. Better yet, after daylight saving time resumes, cars will
be restricted to 5 pm to 7 pm during evening hours. Credit goes to
T.A.’s Brooklyn Committee and
Councilmembers
DiBlasio, Yassky,
Clarke, Davis and ex-member Rodriguez for pushing the
Department of Transportation to make this change. These councilmembers wrote DOT Commissioner Iris Weinshall in December
asking for a three month "Car-Free Summer" in Prospect
Park. Read
their letter.

View the current
car-free hours on the NYC Parks Department Web site. Please also see the DOT's
"before/after" car-free hours comparison chart.
New Winter Weekday Hours
Jan. 21 - Apr. 4
- Cars Allowed
- Car-Free

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Before:
Cars allowed in Prospect Park at all times on Winter weekdays |
After: Cars allowed only five out of 24 hours on Winter weekdays
beginning Jan. 21 |
New Summer Weekday Hours

|
Before:
Cars allowed in Prospect Park eleven out of 24 hours on Summer weekdays |
After: Cars allowed only
four out of 24 hours on Summer weekdays |
Net Gain in Car-Free Hours

|
Before:
Cars allowed in Prospect Park approximately 50% of annual hours |
After: Cars allowed
during roughly 20% of annual hours |
This represents a net gain of the equivalent in
hours of more than 100 car-free days per year.

Write
to DOT Commissioner Iris Weinshall to thank her for expanding Prospect Park
car-free hours by more than 2,500 hours per year. Be sure to send T.A. a copy of
your message when you are finished: info@transalt.org.
Read
more about the Car-Free Prospect Park campaign.
T.A. Poll: Car Alarms
Car
alarms are a frequent quality of life complaint. How often are you bothered by
them?
All polls are anonymous. If your e-mail program does not
support forms, simply visit this page online to
participate in this poll.
Read
more about banning car alarms.
Queens
Boulevard 2003: Still Mean and Deadly
In 2002, two pedestrians were
killed on Queens Boulevard, the fewest in decades. Yet the seven-mile long
roadway remains a daunting obstacle for pedestrians. Indeed, a pedestrian was
killed there last week. In
2000, the Daily News led the public outcry over the "human bowling
alley," aka the "Boulevard of Death." Relentless media
coverage led to an intense police crackdown and safety improvements by the
Department of Transportation--including longer crossing times, a pedestrian
fence on the center median, better lighting, new signage and a uniform 30 mph
speed, new parking regulations and traffic-calmed access roads. Thanks to these
changes, pedestrian fatalities fell from more than a dozen a year to four in
2001.
Unfortunately, DOT seems
uninterested in transforming this beast of a street from a quasi-highway into a
functional, walkable urban boulevard, like say upper Broadway, Park Avenue or
Ocean Parkway. Recently,
Borough President Helen Marshall rightly asked the DOT to install more mid-block
crosswalks on Queens Boulevard, a must on a street where pedestrian crossings
are hundreds of feet apart. The DOT is said to be "considering" her
proposal. The troubling thing is that the DOT has no sense of urgency and is not
initiating or planning profound pedestrian improvements. The agency seems to
have settled back into its familiar role of saying "no" to requests
for new improvements on the boulevard. Sadly, it's a good bet that the Queens
Boulevard of 2003 will be the same in 2053.
In
late 2000, T.A. laid out in the Daily News a multi-year improvement plan for a
pedestrian- and bicycle-friendly Queens Boulevard. Check
it out.

Write DOT Commissioner
Iris Weinshall and tell her that her work on Queens Boulevard is not done.
Urge her to formulate a 5, 10 and 15 year plan to create a bicycle- and
pedestrian-friendly Queens Boulevard that is reintegrated into the surrounding
neighborhoods. Be sure to send T.A. a copy of your message when you are
finished: info@transalt.org.
This
month, a red maple sapling and bronze plaque memorializing "all who lost
their lives on Queens Boulevard" was dedicated at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs
Church in Forest Hills.
Norbert Chwat, co-president of the Forest Hills Action League, was noted at the
dedication as saying that, "You cannot or should not have a superhighway
running through a residential area. You will eventually have death."
U.S.
Govt. Gives $1 Billion/Yr. Subsidy to SUV Buyers
The NY Times and Wall Street
Journal report that SUV buyers receive a federal subsidy of as much as $987
million a year because of a quirk of federal tax law that allows business owners
to depreciate SUVs and pickups more quickly than cars. The
discrepancy has been around for nearly two decades, but it's getting new
attention amid the soaring popularity of SUVs and pickups as suburban
people-movers. The deduction stems from the longstanding and somewhat bizarre
classification of SUVs as "light trucks" rather than "cars."
This language confusion means a tax break that was at least partly intended to help farmers buy
pickup trucks is now being applied to today's quintessential suburban passenger
vehicle.
The law gives people who
qualify an immediate deduction of as much as $24,000--which grows to $25,000
next year--off the price of an SUV. Plus, until 2004, there's a bonus
deduction of 30% of the rest of the cost of the truck. Both these deductions are
on top of the regular five-year depreciation that would apply to light trucks
bought as business transportation. The only catch: To get all these breaks, you
have to buy a truck that weighs over 6,000 pounds. The Chevy Suburban makes it,
but the Chevy Blazer doesn't.
January 8, 2003
TV Ads Say S.U.V. Owners Support
Terrorists
By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, NY Times
WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 - Ratcheting
up the debate over sport utility vehicles, new television commercials suggest
that people who buy the vehicles are supporting terrorists. The commercials
are so provocative that some television stations are refusing to run them.
Patterned after the commercials that try to discourage drug use by suggesting
that profits from illegal drugs go to terrorists, the new commercials say that
money for gas needed for S.U.V.'s goes to terrorists.
The
two 30-second commercials are the brainchild of the author and columnist Arianna
Huffington. Her target audience, she said, is Detroit and Congress, especially
the Republicans and Democrats who last year voted against a bill, sponsored by
Senators John McCain, Republican of Arizona, and John Kerry, Democrat of
Massachusetts, that would have raised fuel-efficiency standards.
Spokesmen for the automakers
dismissed the commercials.
Eron Shosteck, a spokesman for
the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, said of Ms. Huffington, "Her
opinion is out-voted every year by Americans who buy S.U.V.'s for their safety,
comfort and versatility." He said that S.U.V.'s now account for 21 percent
of the market.
Senator Kerry distanced himself
from the commercials. He said that rather than oppose S.U.V.'s outright, he
believed they should be more efficient.
"Anybody can drive as
large an S.U.V. as they want, though it can be more efficient than it is
today."
Ms.
Huffington's group, which calls itself the Detroit Project, has bought almost
$200,000 of air time for the commercials, to run from Sunday to Thursday. The
advertisements are to be broadcast on "Meet The Press," "Face the
Nation" and "This Week With George Stephanopoulos" in Detroit,
Los Angeles, New York and Washington.
But some local affiliates say
they will not run them. At the ABC affiliate in New York, Art Moore, director of
programming, said, "There were a lot of statements being made that were not
backed up, and they're talking about hot-button issues."
Ms.
Huffington said she got the idea for the commercials while watching the antidrug
commercials, sponsored by the Bush administration. In her syndicated column, she
asked readers if they would be willing to pay for "a people's ad campaign
to jolt our leaders into reality."
She said she received 5,000
e-mail messages and eventually raised $50,000 from the public. Bigger
contributors included Steve Bing, the film producer; Larry David, the comedian
and "Seinfeld" co-creator; and Norman Lear, the television producer.
November 19, 2002
What Would Jesus Drive?
By DANNY HAKIM (Excerpted from the
NY Times)
DETROIT, Nov. 18 - A broad
coalition of religious groups is preparing a grass-roots campaign linking fuel
efficiency to morality, with some ads going so far as to ask: "What Would
Jesus Drive?"
"We are under a
commandment to be faithful stewards of God's creation," said Paul Gorman,
of the National Religious Partnership for the Environment, an umbrella
organization of Christian and Jewish groups. "This is a crisis in God's
creation at the hands of God's children." Leaders of many groups within the
partnership have signed a letter to the Big Three automakers asking for
improvements in fuel economy. They say they have a biblical mandate to be good
stewards of God's creation and a responsibility to the poor who are especially
harmed by pollution. And they decry supporting "autocratic, corrupt and
violent" governments that produce oil.
"We write now to ask you in the
automobile industry a more explicit question," the letter said, "what
specific pledges - in volume, timing and commitments to marketing - will you
make to produce automobiles, S.U.V.'s and pickup trucks with substantially
greater fuel economy?"
The letter was signed by an
array of denominations, including Frank T. Griswold, the presiding bishop of the
Episcopal church; David A. Harris, executive director of the American Jewish
Committee; and the Rev. Mark S. Hanson, presiding bishop of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America.
The campaign could create
complications for G.M.'s Chevrolet brand, which makes S.U.V.'s like the
TrailBlazer and has been courting religious conservatives by sponsoring a
Christian concert series.
www.whatwouldjesusdrive.org
is more pointed.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
 Fall
2002 T.A. Magazine
This issue is being mailed to all T.A. members.
It includes news on bicycle, pedestrian and car-free Central
Park and Prospect Park, sensible transportation, features
and much, much more!
View the Table of Contents
or request a copy!
Selected articles
Port
Authority Eyes Bike Improvements on Both Ends of GWB
DOT
Waiting for Cyclist to Be Killed on Brooklyn Side of Manhattan Bridge
Five
Easy Things Gov't Should Do to Better Bicycling in 2003
Bike
Parking at Penn Station
Bikes
Aboard Staten Island Railroad Now: Child Cyclist Struck as SIR Dithers
New
High Security "Chicago" CityRack Hits the Sidewalks
Heralding
the New Herald Square: T.A. Calls for Bike Improvements and More
Pedestrian Space
T.A.
and Taxi Industry Hold Safety Talks
Take
Action
T.A.
has many volunteer opportunities. Please visit our site to learn
more about how you can help. Come to the Volunteer Mailing Party,
Wednesday, January 29th at 6 pm at the T.A. Office (115 West 30th, #1207).
transalt.org/volunteer
Advocacy Committees
Want to do more? Step into the front lines of T.A.’s campaigns for better
cycling, walking, transit and car-free parks. Join a T.A. volunteer advocacy committee.
Read more at: www.transalt.org/volunteer/advocacy
Bronx@transalt.org
Brooklyn@transalt.org
transalt.org/campaigns/brooklyn
Centralpark@transalt.org
transalt.org/campaigns/cpark
Gowanus@transalt.org
transalt.org/campaigns/sensible/gowanus.html
Citywide:
Info@transalt.org
www.transalt.org
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JOIN
T.A. TODAY
• Sign-up
Online! T.A.’s members support our advocacy for
bicyclists, pedestrians and car-free Central and Prospect Parks. So
should you.

MAD AS HELL?
DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!

Call the Mayor's Quality of Life Action Line (real people 24 hrs a
day): 888-677-5433 or 888-677-LIFE.
POTHOLES, STREET
HAZARDS GOT YOU IN A RUT?
Call DOT at 212-225-5368 and hit 0 to skip the message and speak with a
human. You can also report them online at transalt.org/
hazard.
STAY
SMART & INFORMED
Savvy
transit riders get their lowdown on the subways here:

straphangers
.org
The ultimate source for bus and subway service changes, rider
comments and complaints that produce action. Help yourself and T.A.’s favorite
transit advocates. Check it out.
Sensible
Transport Junkies:

Subscribe to the Tri-State Transportation Campaign’s e-weekly,
Mobilizing the Region.
tstc.org
Insiders
Breakfast on Fresh Baked NYC Politics & Policy

The daily Gotham Gazette:
gothamgazette.
org
NYC News summaries and savvy commentary.
Bikes
in Bogota? Car-Free Cartagena? Tel-Aviv by Train?

Go
global at itdp.org!
Give
on-line at transalt.org/join
Quick!
What's your city council
member's name?
Don't know? See:
nypirg.org
GET
THERE! 
Check
our maps page
for links to NYC-area bicycle and transit maps.
RIDES
AND WALKS
Saturday,
January 11, 9 am. Temperature Regulators--
Quick Spin. Pelham Parkway at
White Plains Road. 5BBC.
Sunday,
January 11, 9 am. Orchards. New York Side of the GWB. Fast and
Fabulous.
Saturday,
January 11, 9:15 am. Brighton Beach. Food Emporium, 59th St. & 1st
Ave. NYCC.
Saturday,
January 11, 9:30 am. Diner Finders: White Plains. Central Park
Boathouse. NYCC.
Saturday,
January 11, 10 am. Nyack the Fun Way. Central Park Boathouse. NYCC.
Sunday,
January 12, 9 am. Bronx River Trail. Grand Central Terminal: 9:23 train
to Bronxville. Shorewalkers.
Sunday,
January 12, 9 am. Winter Off-Road Series--Blue Mountain Bike Trail.
Peekskill Metro-North Station. 5BBC.
Saturday,
January 12, 9:30 am. Chilly River Road Challenge. New York Side of the
GWB. Fast and
Fabulous.
Sunday,
January 12, 10 am. Frostbite Series #7--Coney Island Dreamin' on such a
Winter's Day. City Hall. 5BBC
and NYCC.
Tuesday,
January 14, 10 am. TBA. Central Park Boathouse. The
Weekday Cyclists.
Wednesday,
January 15, 8 am. Bound Brook--
Kingston, NJ. Penn Station NJ Transit
Windows. Shorewalkers.
Saturday,
January 18, 9 am. Temperature Regulators--Quick Spin. Pelham Parkway at
White Plains Road. 5BBC.
Saturday,
January 18, 9 am. Coney Island. New York Side of the GWB. Fast and
Fabulous.
Sunday,
January 19, 9 am. Frost Bite #8--Historic Flushing. City Hall. 5BBC
and NYCC.
Sunday,
January 19, 9 am. Winter Off-Road Series--
Graham Hills Mountain Bike
Trail. Mt. Pleasant Metro-North Station. 5BBC.
Sunday,
January 19, 10 am. 45 Minutes from Broadway. Van Cortlandt Park &
242 St. 5BBC.
Sunday,
January 19, 11:37 am. Tod's Point. Grand Central Terminal: 11:37 am
train to Old Greenwich. Shorewalkers.
Tuesday,
January 21, 10 am. TBA. Central Park Boathouse. The
Weekday Cyclists.
More
Rides and Walks...
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