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#4595 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Wed Oct 5, 2011 8:32 am
Subject: The Transportation Majority. (And why can't our politicians count?)
fekbritton
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World Streets

 

   

 

 

New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

The Transportation Majority. (And why can’t our politicians count?)

by Eric Britton, editor

 

http://worldstreets.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/ws-roadrage.jpg?w=300Policy makers have given ample proof that they just don't get it. They plan and spend hard-earned taxpayer money for a distinct minority of all citizens and voters. It is amazing that they still manage to get elected. What's going on in their heads?

 

 

 

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Eric Britton, editor | 5 October 2011 at 08:51 | Categories: behavior, equity, Governance, non-drivers | URL: http://wp.me/psKUY-1SO

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Eric Britton, Editor / Managing Director

   World Streets / New Mobility Partnerships  / Sustainability Seminar Series

   8, rue Jospeh Bara   75006 Paris France

   Tel. +331 7550 3788   |  editor@...   |  Skype: newmobility

 

P Avant d'imprimer, pensez à l'environnement


#4596 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:46 pm
Subject: Wanted: Group videoconferencing trial participants
fekbritton
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

Wanted: Group videoconferencing trial participants

by Eric Britton, editor

A note to readers and colleagues who may be interested in giving free group videoconferencing a trial run. We have been using videoconferencing for our international networking on a daily basis since mid-1993, and have always had great difficulty in understanding why these technologies are not being put to more and better use by our [...]

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#4597 From: Simon Norton <S.Norton@...>
Date: Thu Oct 6, 2011 7:49 pm
Subject: videoconferencing
simonphillip...
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It is ironic that Eric's posting arrived while the US based Aviation Justice are
resorting to videoconferencing after their invited speakers were barred from
entering the US. I suspect that while many of the goals of conventional
conferencing can be achieved by videoconferencing there will always be some
intangibles that can't, though maybe in this case they might just be outweighed
by the effects of the publicity the ban led to.

Go to <http://www.airportwatch.org.uk> for a link to a petition to allow the
speakers into the US, as well as a link (via "More" on the relevant article) to
the Aviation Justice website with lots more about the issue.

  Simon Norton

#4598 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Mon Oct 10, 2011 9:26 am
Subject: A car to improve lives
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

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A car to improve lives

by Eric Britton, editor

What is that famous definition of an intelligent person? Someone who can keep two contradictory ideas in mind without her head exploding? Here is pretty interesting test of this for our more thoughtful anti-car friends.  And yes of course, your comments, caveats, etc. are warmly welcome. Let's turn this one around a bit and have a look at it in the cold light of day.)

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Eric Britton, editor | 10 October 2011 at 10:05 | Categories: all-car, Car-free, Cars, drivers | URL: http://wp.me/psKUY-1Tz

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#4599 From: Dave Brook <dbrookportland@...>
Date: Mon Oct 10, 2011 5:01 am
Subject: Re: A car to improve lives
carshare1
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Some may remember it was only a a few years ago that Amory Lovins (Rocky Mountain Institute) calculated that GIVING low income people households a Prius would have a net societal benefit.

Dave



On Oct 10, 2011, at 2:26 AM, "eric britton" <eric.britton@...> wrote:

 

 

 

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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

<image001.jpg>

 

<image002.jpg>

A car to improve lives

by Eric Britton, editor

What is that famous definition of an intelligent person? Someone who can keep two contradictory ideas in mind without her head exploding? Here is pretty interesting test of this for our more thoughtful anti-car friends.  And yes of course, your comments, caveats, etc. are warmly welcome. Let's turn this one around a bit and have a look at it in the cold light of day.)

Read more of this post

Eric Britton, editor | 10 October 2011 at 10:05 | Categories: all-car, Car-free, Cars, drivers | URL: http://wp.me/psKUY-1Tz

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<image004.gif>


#4600 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Tue Oct 11, 2011 8:55 am
Subject: Op-Ed: Universal Access to Bus Rapid Transit: Design, operation, and working with the community
fekbritton
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

Op-Ed: Universal Access to Bus Rapid Transit: Design, operation, and working with the community

by Eric Britton, editor

From Tom Rickert, Executive Director,  Access Exchange International. USA The ability of Bus Rapid Transit systems to serve persons with disabilities in less wealthy countries seemed obvious at first glance. The earliest graphics of BRT trunk lines in Curitiba, Brazil, depicted wheelchair users crossing boarding bridges into articulated buses. Problem solved! Thus, years later, many [...]

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#4601 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Tue Oct 11, 2011 11:24 am
Subject: Rethinking Car Free Days in Taipei City
fekbritton
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New post on Network Dispatches

 

Rethinking Car Free Days in Taipei City

by Eric Britton, editor

Your editor was kindly invited by Mayor Hau Lung-pin to come to Taipei City this year to discuss preparations for the celebration of the city’s tenth successive Car Free Day -- and as part of this collaborative brainstorming process to draw on my experience of some seventeen years working with this, one hopes, transformative transportation [...]

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#4602 From: Simon Norton <S.Norton@...>
Date: Tue Oct 11, 2011 10:50 pm
Subject: a car to improve lives
simonphillip...
Send Email Send Email
 
I don't think there is any dispute that a car will improve people's lives if
they have inadequate alternative transport options. What I do believe is that a
society has a duty to provide transport options which will enable people to
avoid having to own a car, and that if this is done then overall societal
welfare will be inversely correlated with car ownership other things being
equal.

Dave Brook said that giving poor people a Prius would improve overall societal
welfare as if this was unexpected. Surely giving poor people anything would
improve overall societal welfare ? Some free marketeers might say that it would
be better to give them the money and let them choose what they spend it on, and
although I'm not a free marketeer I'd agree in this case.

Incidentally there is a similar scheme in the UK involving mopeds rather than
cars and targeted at young people in rural areas, called "Wheels to Work".
However when I once saw an article about the scheme giving the viewpoint of one
of its beneficiaries I noticed that the person in question could have got to
work and back by train given a very minor improvement in the local train
service, and said so in a letter to the relevant magazine which was published.

My basic objection to the scheme is that in areas where public transport is
inadequate it undermines the residual market, and if this leads to service cuts
there is no assurance that the gain in welfare for the beneficiary is not
outweighed by the loss for remaining users. And this is before one even
considers pollution, climate change, danger etc.

  Simon Norton

#4603 From: Dave Brook <dbrookportland@...>
Date: Wed Oct 12, 2011 1:44 pm
Subject: Re: a car to improve lives
carshare1
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Here, here!  Exactly right.  The real benefit to the households is having improved transportation options.  Probably in most places in Europe a transit pass would actually be more useful.  But it's good example of "resource allocation" - the nonprofit (NGO) gets the cars for free through donation and puts them to good use. That's great. One could argue that bus and train companies actually have a similar "unused" resource - empty seats.  But designing a special program to help fill those seats at their marginal cost would be quite a challenge.

Dave

On Oct 11, 2011, at 3:50 PM, Simon Norton wrote:

 

I don't think there is any dispute that a car will improve people's lives if
they have inadequate alternative transport options. What I do believe is that a
society has a duty to provide transport options which will enable people to
avoid having to own a car, and that if this is done then overall societal
welfare will be inversely correlated with car ownership other things being
equal.

Dave Brook said that giving poor people a Prius would improve overall societal
welfare as if this was unexpected. Surely giving poor people anything would
improve overall societal welfare ? Some free marketeers might say that it would
be better to give them the money and let them choose what they spend it on, and
although I'm not a free marketeer I'd agree in this case.

Incidentally there is a similar scheme in the UK involving mopeds rather than
cars and targeted at young people in rural areas, called "Wheels to Work".
However when I once saw an article about the scheme giving the viewpoint of one
of its beneficiaries I noticed that the person in question could have got to
work and back by train given a very minor improvement in the local train
service, and said so in a letter to the relevant magazine which was published.

My basic objection to the scheme is that in areas where public transport is
inadequate it undermines the residual market, and if this leads to service cuts
there is no assurance that the gain in welfare for the beneficiary is not
outweighed by the loss for remaining users. And this is before one even
considers pollution, climate change, danger etc.

Simon Norton



#4604 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Thu Oct 13, 2011 10:36 am
Subject: Aw-shucks. GM Blunders onto Campus
fekbritton
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

Aw-shucks. GM Blunders onto Campus

by Eric Britton, editor

Not everything the auto lobby does today is greenwash. There is plenty of that about of course, but in addition the honeyed words that are constantly articulated to calm our raging spirits and to bring us to believe that we are all in the same side in this one big happy sustainable family, there are [...]

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#4605 From: Simon Norton <S.Norton@...>
Date: Wed Oct 12, 2011 9:37 pm
Subject: a car to improve lives
simonphillip...
Send Email Send Email
 
I dare say that in areas like West London the lack of a car can cause problems,
but I should be surprised if these problems were ever so big as to cause major
loss of employment opportunities, which, we're told, is happening in Baltimore.

At the Conservative Party conference an announcement was made that unemployed
people will be punishable with loss of benefit if they refuse jobs within 90
minutes commute. In other words, this is considered a reasonable commuting time
by our government. I am sure that one can get pretty much anywhere to anywhere
within a sector of London in this sort of time.

That isn't to say that we don't need big improvements. Transport campaigners
have proposed a light rail network for North-West London which would link
several important areas, including the industrial estates in Park Royal
mentioned by Dave Holladay. And as he says, our planning system has allowed
developments such as hospitals in transport discriminatory locations.

Coleshill Parkway is interesting in another way. When it opened it had buses
every 15 minutes to Birmingham Airport, fanning out to provide 4 services, each
hourly, to different surrounding towns. I cited it as an example of good
practice in rail/bus coordination, as against (say) East Midlands Parkway
station which has no buses at all except an occasional service on route 65 --
the route between Nottingham and East Midlands Airport goes past nonstop. Now,
following local authority cuts, the service between Coleshill Parkway and
Birmingham airport is down to half hourly, all journeys to places beyond require
a change at Coleshill, 2 of the 4 routes have disappeared completely and a 3rd
is now only occasional.

I have commented on the contrast between the 5000 pound bribe for those with
25,000 further pounds to spare to buy an electric car, and the cuts to bus
service support, which in Cambridgeshire has been about 5 pounds per person per
year. In Hartlepool, which summarily abolished all bus subsidies, there is a
case of someone who has to pay 11 pounds EVERY DAY for a taxi to visit a frail
relative and as a result can only do so 3 days a week.

One could argue that concessionary bus passes are a way of making socially
worthwhile use of spare capacity on buses.

Finally I'd like to mention an article on commuting in the US that I came across
through another e-group: <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15207973>. The
comments on it, both from the UK and the US, are worth looking through.

  Simon Norton

#4606 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Thu Oct 13, 2011 1:08 pm
Subject: World Carfree News #89 - October 2011
fekbritton
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World Carfree News #89 - October 2011 - English Version

 

facebook

youtube

QUOTATION OF THE MONTH

"'Rush Hour' is six hours of not rushing anywhere."
This is an acknowledgement of the authors of the new Annual Urban Mobility Report, released at Texas A&M University. More information found under Reports.

WORLD CARFREE NETWORK ANNOUNCEMENTS

Velocypedia
 exhibition

TOWARDS CARFREE CITIES 2011 IN MEXICO
The tenth Towards Carfree Cities Conference was held in Guadalajara, Mexico, from 5 to 9
September 2011. Reports are that it was a wonderful and inspiring conference, with many great discussions. Further reports and downloadable presentations will be available soon.
Read more

CARFREE ART ON CARBUSTERS
See the collection of carfree art in an exhibition titled Velocypedia, held in Prague, Czech Republic, and now available for view on the Carbusters website. Exhibition curated by former WCN employee Lenka Kukurova as well as Milan Mikulastik.
Read more

BULLETIN DEVELOPMENT @ WORLD CARFREE MONTHLY NEWS
Thank you to those who responded to the last request. We are still able to make use of more volunteers who can donate their time. There are numerous ways the bulletin can still be developed - we can upgrade the bulletin website, add new language versions, provide outreach and look for more subscribers or apply for funding. If you have tech smarts, enjoy doing media outreach, you can translate into foreign languages, collect news stories, or you want to donate part of your inheritance ... we want to hear from you! Please get in touch at bulletin@....

GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

FOR OUR HABITAT!
On October 21-23 an international campaign, organized by the new international ecological movement "Habitat" and other ecological and social movements, will take place. We appeal to other movements from different countries to join us. We ask everyone to join the campaign "For our habitat!" and organize pickets, meetings, spread flyers, organize other protest actions in Your countries on these days! If you would like to join, please contact: zaprirodu.ru@....
See the Facebook page

U.S. EPA ASSISTANCE TO COMMUNITIES
Smart Growth Implementation Assistance and Building Blocks for Sustainable Communities - these are two calls for letters of interest that have been issued by the Environnmental Protection Agency for communities in the USA that want to foster economic growth, protect the environment and develop plans for development. Deadline is October 28

Read more

MOVE:ME
move:me – mobility film festival for Munich. Green City is organising a film festival for mobility related themes. The date will be the 19th to the 21th of October and the main topic is a view to the mobility of tomorrow. Included is a festival with live music. Venue: Gabriel Filmtheater, Dachauer Straße 16,  München, Germany 5,- € per show. Friday free entry.
Read more

SAFECYCLE TO START UP
SAFECYCLE is a new project, with EU funding, set to address cycling accidents and offer e-safety and ICT applications. For more information, contact Ronald Jorna.
Read more

BASIC BIKE PARTS
One Street has launched One Street Components in response to the rapid extinction of basic bicycle parts. This became necessary to their Social Bike Business program, that provides durable transportation bikes to impoverished people in communities around the world. Currently both bike parts donations (such as derailleurs or chains) or financial contributions are welcome.
Read more

CONFERENCE ON PEAK OIL
ASPO-USA conference for 2011 will take place on November 2-5 in Washington DC. This is the annual conference for the Study of Peak Oil, and participants from many fields, including both environmentalists as well as petroleum engineers.
Read more

TRANSPORT WORKS
A new website has been launched in the UK - called Transport works - which is intended to provide the general public as well as the press and specialists with arguments and information dedicated to supporting and investing in public transport.
Read more

ACTION

TIPNIS campaign
 poster

STOP THE AMAZON HIGHWAY!
Call on Bolivian president Evo Morales to cancel all plans for the construction of the Amazon highway through indiginous territory in Bolivia, which hurts the people of TIPNIS and also will endanger the ways of life of the forest and its people.

Due to heavy protest at the plans, Morales has suspended construction of the highway, although it is feared that plans are still on the table and will resume again once protests subside.

There has been a fair level of brutality by police forces. In response, the defense minister resigned, and Morales has called for an investigation into the incident.

You may sign an online Avaaz petition, found here.

For more background information you may read this in English.
You may read more about TIPNIS in Spanish as well as this letter to Evo Morales in Spanish.

IN THE NEWS

two
 by Andy Singer

Chen Guangbiao is one of the richest Chinese businessmen. In Nanking, he staged a media event where he had one of his luxary cars smashed to pieces, as a symbolic gesture of taking action against the pollution of Chinese cities by cars. One of his suggestions is to raise the price of fuel by 50%. He has also called on people to use their cars as little as possible.
Read more

Cebu City in Philippines implemented carfree day in the downtown. Proposals sent to city hall consist of ideas to transform road use for pedestrian, cycling and non-pollutting forms of transport. There is also a proposal being considered to have pedestrian-only streets every Sunday.
Read more.

Milan, Italy implemented a carfree Sunday as an answer to high levels of pollution. This measure kicks in every time 50 micrograms of particulates per cubic metre of air is measured over 12 days.
Read more

New York city received a new park - up above the street level, along an unused train corridor. The newest addition - called High Line - to public space in NYC,  immediately became very popular. The planners of the elevated aerial park worked ten years to get it ready.
Read more

New public bike sharing systems are continuing to gain in popularity around the world. A system in Melbourne, Victoria is up and running with 600 bikes, and Chicago, Illinois recently announced plans to make 3,000 bicycles available for public rent by next summer. New York City is currently taking suggestions from the public via its Web site about placement of rental stations for its upcoming bike-share system.
Read more: Melbourne, Chicago, NYC

According to a recent ranking of 17 European cities on air quality, Berlin came out on top. Milan and Rome rank at the bottom of the list. The survey was conducted by "Sootfree for the Climate".
Read more

REPORTS

2011 URBAN MOBILITY REPORT

The Texas Transportation Institute at Texas A&M University has released its annual mobility report, which looks at traffic and congestion throughout the USA. It has found, for instance, that the cost of congestion is $100 billion in total. Traffic problems are also tied to the economy, and are set to get worse in the future.

The full report may be downloaded here. See also their website and press release.
Read more

MEDIA & NETWORKING

Cuba
 traffic calming

easitNETWORK FOR GREEN TRAVEL
Based in the southern UK, easitNETWORK is designed to support and encourage businesses in their local area to adopt alternative transport behaviours to reduce pollution, ease congestion and increase satisfaction within its staff base. The group now represents over 50 businesses employing over 180,000 staff across 3 counties. It has just won the Queen's Enterprise Award for Sustainable Development.

You may write to easitNETWORK at info@... or call on 01306 886677.
Read more

World Carfree News is published once a month by World Carfree Network.
Bulletin #89 by Justin Hyatt
To unsubscribe, send an email to: world-carfree-news_eng-unsubscribe@... Available in six languages. Visit www.worldcarfree.net/bulletin.

 

 


#4607 From: Richard Layman <rlaymandc@...>
Date: Thu Oct 13, 2011 1:31 pm
Subject: Re: a car to improve lives
rlaymandc
Send Email Send Email
 
Below is an old blog entry.  FWIW, in fiscal year 2010 I served as bike and ped planner in Baltimore County, Maryland (grant funded).  At the time, the #1 transpo priority for the County Executive was to assist lower income households in acquiring a car.  Adding to the fixed rail transit system was 3rd on the list of 4 items I seem to recall.

The Baltimore region's biggest problem is that it has two transit lines (one subway line, one light rail) and some commuter railroad service focused on Baltimore and DC but it doesn't have a transit network.  Without a transit network you can't realize substantive transit use and you can't generate the kinds of land use changes that increase returns and benefits to transit.

I wrote an internal paper outlining a much more systematic approach to fixed rail transit connection and expansion for Baltimore County for the Master Plan group.  Nothing made it into the Master Plan.  I was told later that the County Executive Budget Office ("inter-agency review") deleted everything related to transit from the Master Plan because it would cost money.  Transpo. planning had been removed from the Office of Planning many years before.  In the DPW, transpo planning is mostly traffic modeling.  At my goading the then director of the planning office tried to make a play to get transpo planning back, but the move was denied by the County Executive's office.

Richard Layman

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

A really really bad article in the Washington Monthly

I love a parade on Flickr - Photo Sharing!.jpgFlickr photo by David Wyman.

"To be a fully functioning citizen in this country today, a car is a virtual necessity; so the federal government should subsidize a set of wheels and the commute to work" even more than it already does, a minimum of $200 billion/year in the military budget related to maintaining access to foreign oil, 50% of the cost of roads, the provision of free parking to government workers, etc. (my points in bold)

In "A Car In Every Garage," the author argues that, especially to end poverty, the policy choice should be to give everyone a car, and she fails to address the factors, such as land use planning that allows job locations to be disconnected from efficient transit options, etc., which make car dependence a virtual necessity for many.

And as the Location Efficient Mortgage program makes very clear, by not being auto-dependent, and living on transit lines, families can cut spending on transit and put that money into buying a house. (The average household spends up to 20% of its annual income on automobile-related transportation.)

From a brochure about the LEM : "People who live in location-efficient communities reap many rewards. Stores, schools, and public transit, all lie within walking distance of their homes. They have less need to drive, which gives them more discretionary income. They’re more likely to know their neighbors. Their frequent use of local amenities saves energy, which means cleaner air for us all!"

So rather than deal with the issues of deconcentration, sprawl, gasoline dependence, the likelihood of peak oil, and the impact that this has on our society economically, spatially, culturally, and in terms of foreign policy choices (read: wars to ensure continued access to oil) she suggests everyone, particularly the poor, get a car.

Hmm. So much for the pathbreaking nature of Washington Monthly.

From the article:

Among the many unpleasant realities exposed by Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath--from persistent income and racial disparities to the chronic incompetence of the Bush administration--one of the most surprising, to many, was this: our nearly total dependence on automobiles. 

Nowhere was this clearer than in the exodus from New Orleans itself. The difference between those who escaped with their lives and loved ones, and those who did not, often came down to access to a car and enough money for gas. Now, in the recovery stage, many of those who were left behind have been evacuated to trailer-park camps, where they are likely to be worse off than they were before, in part because they cannot get to where the jobs are.

portland ground Bagdad, Portland.jpgBike, car, walking, and bus are mobility options in the Hawthorne Distrit of Portland. Photos from Portland Ground.

portland ground Pioneer Square, Max Light Rail, Protestors, at Lunchtime.jpgAnd transit options abound, with light rail

Portland Streetcar, Oregonand streetcar, in addition to bus.


From: Simon Norton <S.Norton@...>
To: carfreecafe@yahoogroups.com; newmobilitycafe@yahoogroups.com; worldtransport@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, October 12, 2011 5:37 PM
Subject: [NewMobilityCafe] a car to improve lives

 
I dare say that in areas like West London the lack of a car can cause problems,
but I should be surprised if these problems were ever so big as to cause major
loss of employment opportunities, which, we're told, is happening in Baltimore.

At the Conservative Party conference an announcement was made that unemployed
people will be punishable with loss of benefit if they refuse jobs within 90
minutes commute. In other words, this is considered a reasonable commuting time
by our government. I am sure that one can get pretty much anywhere to anywhere
within a sector of London in this sort of time.

That isn't to say that we don't need big improvements. Transport campaigners
have proposed a light rail network for North-West London which would link
several important areas, including the industrial estates in Park Royal
mentioned by Dave Holladay. And as he says, our planning system has allowed
developments such as hospitals in transport discriminatory locations.

Coleshill Parkway is interesting in another way. When it opened it had buses
every 15 minutes to Birmingham Airport, fanning out to provide 4 services, each
hourly, to different surrounding towns. I cited it as an example of good
practice in rail/bus coordination, as against (say) East Midlands Parkway
station which has no buses at all except an occasional service on route 65 --
the route between Nottingham and East Midlands Airport goes past nonstop. Now,
following local authority cuts, the service between Coleshill Parkway and
Birmingham airport is down to half hourly, all journeys to places beyond require
a change at Coleshill, 2 of the 4 routes have disappeared completely and a 3rd
is now only occasional.

I have commented on the contrast between the 5000 pound bribe for those with
25,000 further pounds to spare to buy an electric car, and the cuts to bus
service support, which in Cambridgeshire has been about 5 pounds per person per
year. In Hartlepool, which summarily abolished all bus subsidies, there is a
case of someone who has to pay 11 pounds EVERY DAY for a taxi to visit a frail
relative and as a result can only do so 3 days a week.

One could argue that concessionary bus passes are a way of making socially
worthwhile use of spare capacity on buses.

Finally I'd like to mention an article on commuting in the US that I came across
through another e-group: <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15207973>. The
comments on it, both from the UK and the US, are worth looking through.

Simon Norton




#4608 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Sat Oct 15, 2011 11:35 am
Subject: Musing: Your iPad is a bicycle for your mind
fekbritton
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

Musing: Your iPad is a bicycle for your mind

by Eric Britton, editor

Eric Britton, editor | 15 October 2011 at 11:40 | Categories: Cycling, mental model, musing | URL: http://wp.me/psKUY-1UQ

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#4609 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Mon Oct 17, 2011 7:33 am
Subject: "Leaders in Urban Transport Planning program
fekbritton
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"Leaders in Urban Transport Planning” program

From: Cornie Huizenga
Topic: "Leaders in Urban Transport Planning” program
Date: October 17, 2011

Message:

The World Bank is developing a capacity building program, called the “Leaders in Urban Transport Planning” program. The objective is to help build capacity for holistic and comprehensive planning at leadership levels. The first of this series is a 7 day learning event that is being held in Singapore from January 15th to 21st, 2012. I attach a copy of the program brochure and registration form for your ready reference.

Organized jointly by the World Bank and the Land Transport Authority Academy of Singapore, this event aims to create awareness of what integrated mobility planning involves, what are its different components and how it needs to be undertaken. It will use a “hands on” learning technique, making extensive use of case studies, group exercises and site visits – all aimed at highlighting linkages between the different components of the urban transport system. It will be preceded by a 5 week self learning phase, from their work locations, during which participants will need to go through a self learning course, based on material provided to them.

A mentoring program for 6 months will also be available for interested participants. During this phase an expert will be assigned to a participant or a group of participants for advice and guidance as they work on their projects. Mentoring would be for a period of about one hour every two weeks. The mentor would be able to help review work done and provide the required guidance in specific projects and assignments. This would be purely optional, though at an additional cost.

The 7 day learning event along with the self study phase would cost Singapore $4000, and would include the cost of boarding and lodging in Singapore. The 6 month mentoring phase would cost Singapore $5500.

This is to request your support in having this circulated widely and also having a few participants nominated from the countries you are working in, perhaps under the capacity building component of an ongoing project or other programs that the country or city may have. In making such nominations it would be useful to keep in mind that the candidate nominated should be occupying a senior position or should be expected to do so shortly. A good knowledge of English would be important to benefit fully from the program.

The last date for submission of applications is 15th November 2011 and so I would request that the names may be sent by this date. We plan to take only about 35 – 40 participants so that the interactive nature of the program is not compromised. Therefore, an early registration will have advantages.

For further information please contact OP Agerwal at the World Bank oagerwal@...

 


#4610 From: Todd Edelman <edelman@...>
Date: Mon Oct 17, 2011 8:16 pm
Subject: BlackBerry Outage Linked to Massive Drop in Traffic Crashes
traintowards...
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BlackBerry Outage Linked to Massive Drop in Traffic Crashes
by Brad Aaron
http://www.streetsblog.org/2011/10/17/blackberry-outage-linked-to-massive-drop-i\
n-traffic-crashes/

According to data released last week by NYPD, distracted drivers were
the leading cause of city traffic crashes in August. Of 16,784
incidents, 1,877 were attributed to “driver inattention/distraction,”
while an additional 10 were linked specifically to phones or other
electronic devices.

While NYPD reports make it impossible to decipher exactly how many city
drivers are texting or talking before a crash — we’ll go out on a limb
and assume it was more than 10 — the recent BlackBerry service outage in
Europe, Africa and the Middle East served to illustrate the extent of
the problem in two cities. The National reports:

A dramatic fall in traffic accidents this week has been directly linked
to the three-day disruption in BlackBerry services.

In Dubai, traffic accidents fell 20 per cent from average rates on the
days BlackBerry users were unable to use its messaging service. In Abu
Dhabi, the number of accidents this week fell 40 per cent and there were
no fatal accidents.

Lt Gen Dahi Khalfan Tamim, the chief of Dubai Police, and Brig Gen
Hussein Al Harethi, the director of the Abu Dhabi Police traffic
department, linked the drop in accidents to the disruption of BlackBerry
services between Tuesday and Thursday.

Gen Tamim said police found “a significant drop in accidents by young
drivers and men on those three days”. He said young people were the
largest user group of the Messenger service.

Last week’s developments have reportedly acted as a wake-up call to
drivers and authorities in both Abu Dhabi and Dubai, where police are
issuing fines to distracted drivers and confiscating their vehicles.

Unfortunately, given the opacity of NYPD data and the inattentiveness of
top brass to epidemic traffic violence, it’s unlikely that a similar
result from an accidental experiment such as this would even register
with New York motorists, much less with those charged with maintaining a
safe environment on city streets.

--
Todd Edelman
Green Idea Factory / SLOWFactory

Mobile: ++49(0)162 814 4081

edelman@...
www.greenidea.eu

Skype: toddedelman
http://twitter.com/toddedelman
http://de.linkedin.com/in/toddedelman

Urbanstr. 45
10967 Berlin
Germany

#4611 From: Simon Norton <S.Norton@...>
Date: Tue Oct 18, 2011 3:04 pm
Subject: mobile communications
simonphillip...
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For reasons such as those given in Todd Edelman's posting, proposals have been
put forward for a total ban on use of mobile communication devices by drivers
while in motion.

However, there are groups of drivers who are dependent on mobile communications
and who, as far as I know, are able to cope with them safely. Some obvious
examples include taxis and police (and other emergency) vehicles, who need to be
able to respond to calls.

One other category which should be of concern to members of this group is
drivers of demand responsive public transport. In the UK there are many such
schemes in rural areas, but with most of them people have to book a day in
advance. Or sometimes more, especially if the journey is being made on a Monday.
This is unacceptable. We need to have a system whereby drivers of such vehicles
can respond to calls immediately in the same way as taxis can.

I would be worried that if legislation banning mobile communications came into
effect, emergency services and taxis had the clout to get an exemption but this
was not extended to demand responsive public transport, which after all mainly
caters for the underclass of people who live in rural areas without owning a
car.

Mobile communications are also often used by drivers of long distance coaches to
warn one another of traffic jams and advise them to take alternative routes. I
think that passengers would be very angry if they has to reconcile themselves to
missing flights because there was no way for drivers to know what was happening
up the road.

Any ideas for what kind of legislation to press for that would outlaw use of
mobile communication devices when they are a distraction from driving, but allow
them when they are required for drivers to do their jobs ?

  Simon Norton

#4612 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Thu Oct 20, 2011 4:21 pm
Subject: On “Filtered Permeability†as a sustainability tool
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

On “Filtered Permeability†as a sustainability tool

by Eric Britton, editor

During one of our eternal research and reading probes which had us looking at and weighing the advantages, etc., of the many diverse approaches to creating "Livable Streets" (my favorite that being the term of the great and much missed Donald Appleyard), "Complete Streets", "Quiet Streets", "Fused Grids" . . . (just to cite a [...]

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#4613 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Fri Oct 21, 2011 7:56 am
Subject: Welcome to TEMS - The European City Modal Split Database
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

Welcome to TEMS – The European City Modal Split Database

by Eric Britton, editor

This open project from EPOMM -- the European Platform on Mobility Management -- is an absolutely brilliant idea. It does not require much explanation to get started; you can be off and going if you simply to click here and dig into their Google map. That said, a few words of introduction may not be [...]

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Eric Britton, editor | 21 October 2011 at 08:41 | Categories: Europe, Modes, New Mobility | URL: http://wp.me/psKUY-1Vx

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#4614 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Mon Oct 24, 2011 5:18 am
Subject: World Share/Transport Forum II. Changzhi, China
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

World Share/Transport Forum II. Changzhi, China

by Eric Britton, editor

Changzhi, China. 24 October: The Second World Share/Transport Forum opens in Changzhi today, with the mission of probing the concept of Share/Transport for selective adaptation, application and extension in Chinese cities. The Forum is supported by a collaborative effort led by the China Urban Transport Development Strategy and Partnership Demonstration Project (CUTPP): National Development and [...]

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Eric Britton, editor | 24 October 2011 at 02:29 | Categories: China, Conference, policy, Share/Transport | URL: http://wp.me/psKUY-1VM

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#4615 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Tue Oct 25, 2011 11:22 am
Subject: European City Modal Split Database: An invitation
fekbritton
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

European City Modal Split Database: An invitation

by Eric Britton, editor

This open project from EPOMM -- the European Platform on Mobility Management -- is an absolutely brilliant idea. It does not require much explanation to get started; you can be off and going if you simply to click here and dig into their Google map. That said, a few words of introduction may not be [...]

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Eric Britton, editor | 25 October 2011 at 11:44 | Categories: World Streets | URL: http://wp.me/psKUY-1Wi

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#4616 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Thu Oct 27, 2011 12:32 pm
Subject: Common Mobility Cards (Big brother is watching in India too)
fekbritton
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

Common Mobility Cards (Big brother is watching in India too)

by Eric Britton, editor

A trickle of media reports over the last year or so have been hinting about a new single unified ticketing system or fare collection method being pushed through various big and small cities. That sounds promising, but is there more to it that we should be considering? (Venkatesh Nayak. Access to Information Programme . Commonwealth [...]

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#4617 From: Pascal van den Noort <operations@...>
Date: Thu Oct 27, 2011 12:56 pm
Subject: Push the button for more knowledge
phoenixamste...
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#4618 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Fri Oct 28, 2011 9:25 am
Subject: International Modal Split data to TEMS
fekbritton
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_____________________________________________________

World Streets

 

 

Good morning Karl-Heinz and Glen,

 

Our articles in the world, Italian and Indian editions are getting pretty heavy readership. And a few ideas are coming in that I would like to share with you.

 

1.       The upload section of the site shows that there is a capacity to register somewhat more detailed information on Cars and PT. The point is made that it would be excellent given the strategic thrust we are trying to introduce, to have data on passengers as well. How might that work?

2.       Also, and especially in Asia but increasingly in other parts of the world as well, it is important to know more about motorized two wheelers? ??

3.       It would seem that the whole process could be greatly enriched  if there were provision for Comments and reading of them. In our experience that should not be awfully hard or dear to do, but one never knows.

 

Finally, you should start to getting your first international input. I have asked my colleagues in each country for now to limit themselves to three cities, preferably of different sizes.  Then once you have seen what this entails we might talk about next steps?

 

I look forward with real interest to following progress on this great idea of yours. And I know I am not the only one.

 

Best/Eric

           

 

   

 

  Eric Britton, Editor / Managing Director

   World Streets / New Mobility Partnerships  / Sustainability Seminar Series

  8, rue Jospeh Bara   75006 Paris France

   Tel. +331 7550 3788   |  editor@...   |  Skype: newmobility

 

P Avant d'imprimer, pensez à l'environnement

 


#4619 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Fri Oct 28, 2011 10:44 am
Subject: A Mayor's Eye View of Sustainable Transportation
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A Mayor’s Eye View of Sustainable Transportation

by Eric Britton, editor

The letter that follows is, as you will quickly surmise, not a specific communication from one elected official in one case, but rather a composite, the distillation of the experience that I have had over these last years of trying to push the sustainable transportation agenda, almost always in conjunction and in dialogue with mayors [...]

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#4620 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Sun Oct 30, 2011 10:21 am
Subject: World Streets Editorial: A devine solution for Car Free Days?
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I posted this article this morning to my personal blog, NetworkDispatches, rather than putting it into the pages of World Streets because I have considerable hesitation about never trotting out any form or source of religious ideas or practices in public.  We here in France believe that your religion is your private affair and should be kept exactly that, private!  In your view, is an article like this which comments on how religious practices and culture may or may not influence the uphill struggle towards sustainable transportation and sustainable cities, is such an article appropriate for our non-denominational collaborative journal.  Thanks for giving me your views, and if it seems to be an idea which has some support, I will certainly be interested in hearing about how other religious groups might be influencing of somehow making their voices heard on the matters which concern us here.  Kind thanks/Eric Britton

 

 

New post on Network Dispatches

 

Editorial: A religious Car Free Day?

by Eric Britton, editor

One of the sayings we use most often at World Streets is one that goes "you can never tell where the next good idea is going to come from". Here is an example. As some of our readers certainly know, we have something of an affinity with the concept of Car Free Days -- which [...]

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Eric Britton, editor | 30 October 2011 at 10:49 | Categories: Dispatch | URL: http://wp.me/p1fsqb-Bb

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#4621 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Tue Nov 1, 2011 9:43 am
Subject: World Carshare Organizations - Inventory update
fekbritton
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We are updating the several sites and sources that together constitute the World Carshare Consortium. It's about time. If you go to our original program site at www.worldcarshare.com, which first saw the light of day back in August 1999 ,you will see quite a cornucopia of information and sources, some of which still current and useful, and some of which a bit tired and needing either a major overhaul or trip to the trash basket.

 

One specific collaborative project that we might launch in the closing days of 2011 that comes to mind is an updating of our World Carshare Operator Inventory, which the last time was brought up to date at the end of 2008. The concept of handling it as an open group project worked pretty well the last time, so we thought we might try it again.  If you recall from the time, we eventually ended up with a master listing identifying no less than five hundred going carshare operations.

 

Our previous master table was organized primarily by city, country, operator group, and technology. Here attached you have an example for Australian (clearly well out of date, but let's start with what we have). So here is how it works if you wish to get involved.

 

1.       Get in touch and let us know briefly which of these four categories you wish to help us to cover.

2.       We then send you the 2008 inventory for your category as an Excel table, which we would ask you to kindly update and compete.

3.       We will also open up the entire working table to you as a Google document reserved for collaborators at this point.

4.       When the entire exercise is completed, we will then open it up to the students, non-profit groups, researchers, cities, public agencies, media, technology sources and others around the world who can benefit from this kind of comprehensive updated information. That after all is our mission – to support and expand carsharing knowledge and practice worldwide. Carsharing – a great way to get around.

 

It will never be compete of course but it might be useful.

 

Please get back to us if you wish to land a hand.

 

With all good wishes/ Eric Britton

 

PS., And should you wish to lend a hand with the costs of this exercise, well that would be great. The last time around we received a dozen or so contributions varying from $50 to $500, and that helped a lot. And it was also very encouraging. Otherwise we have to cover all these costs on our own and that somehow does not seem quite right.

 

Other World Carshare Consortium reference points that may be of use to you:

 

·         Original website – www.worldcarshare.com

·         WCC on Facebook-  http://www.facebook.com/groups/worldcarshare/

·         Carshare Café - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WorldCarshare

·         World Streets on Carsharing - http://worldstreets.wordpress.com/category/carshare/

 

 

CSO name

URL

Group *

City/Service area

Country

Size

Technology

Year

Email

Note: Size: XS= >10 cars. S=10-50.   M=50-200.  L=200-1000.  XL= >1000 cars

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Brisbane Go-Get Australia 

http://www.goget.com.au/

GoGet

Brisbane

Australia

Fleetcutter

Brisbane smartdrivers

http://www.smartdrivers.com.au

Brisbane

Australia

Gold Coast smartdrivers

http://www.smartdrivers.com.au

Gold Coast

Australia

Melbourne Go-Get Australia 

http://www.goget.com.au/

GoGet

Melbourne

Australia

Fleetcutter

Melbourne Flo ALso - Flexcar 

http://www.flocarshare.com.au

Melbourne

Australia

Melbourne smartdrivers

http://www.smartdrivers.com.au

Melbourne

Australia

Charter Drive

http://www.charterdrive.com.au/

Charter Drive

Multiple

Australia

EILEO

2005

paulr@...

Nexus Car Share

http://nexuscarshare.com.au/

Perth

Australia

Sydney Go-Get Australia 

http://www.goget.com.au/

GoGet

Sydney

Australia

Fleetcutter

Sydney smartdrivers

http://www.smartdrivers.com.au

Sydney

Australia

Melbourne - Charter Drive 

http://www.charterdrive.com.au

Charter Drive

Melbourne

Australia

EILEO

2005

paulr@...

Sydney - Charter Drive 

http://www.charterdrive.com.au

Charter Drive

Sydney

Australia

EILEO

2005

paulr@...

Newtown CarShare 

http://www.newtowncarshare.info

Sydney

Australia

GoGet CarShare

http://www.goget.com.au/

Group

Australia

FleetCutter - Fleet management system

http://www.fleetcutter.com/

Group

Australia

CarShare Australia

http://www.csau.com.au/

Seems broken?

Australia

Easy Drive 

http://www.easydrive.at/

Austria

 

 

 

 

 

           

 

   

 

   Eric Britton, Editor / Managing Director

   World Streets / New Mobility Partnerships  / Sustainability Seminar Series

   8, rue Jospeh Bara   75006 Paris France

   Tel. +331 7550 3788   |  editor@...   |  Skype: newmobility

 

P Avant d'imprimer, pensez à l'environnement

 


1 of 1 File(s)


#4622 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Wed Nov 2, 2011 6:30 pm
Subject: FW: [New post] Sustainability and Equity: A Better Future for All?
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

Sustainability and Equity: A Better Future for All?

by Eric Britton, editor

Today we step back and look beyond our usual sectoral concerns, and consider what this important report from the UNDP released today may or may not offer to help us to understand in our up-hill push to sustainable transport and sustainable cities. At first glance, their linking of sustainability and equality as their main theme [...]

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Eric Britton, editor | 2 November 2011 at 18:57 | Categories: behavior, equity, Governance, sustainability | URL: http://wp.me/psKUY-1YM

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#4623 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Thu Nov 3, 2011 10:36 am
Subject: P2P Carsharing galloping ahead in the USA
fekbritton
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New post on World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda

 

P2P Carsharing galloping ahead in the USA

by Eric Britton, editor

As we have seen in a certain number of articles over the last year or so -- click here to review -- the totally unexpected dark horse of carsharing which has emerged and is presently galloping with surprising speed in quite a number of places around the world is the concept of peer-to-peer (think do-it-yourself) [...]

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#4624 From: "eric britton" <eric.britton@...>
Date: Sat Nov 5, 2011 1:27 pm
Subject: Charsharing in China's cities - An invitation (review)
fekbritton
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Dear sustainable friends,

 

Two weeks ago during a conference on share/transport in Changzhi China, in which I was a distance participant and co-moderator, I ran into a technological glitch in what we had hoped would be my closing remarks to the meeting on a session devoted to exploring the eventual role that carsharing might play in the sustainable transportation strategy in China.  You can see an article that appeared in World Streets on the conference at http://worldstreets.wordpress.com/2011/10/26/changzhi-world-sharetransport-forum-opening-keynote-with-chinese-subtitles/.

 

Now why do I write  you about this today?  Well, since I was acting as co-moderator of the session on eventual roles of carsharing in Chinese cities, I took it very seriously that my last five or ten minutes to close the session was going to be an opportunity for me to share my best experience and thoughts on this with the conference, bearing in mind that what I was trying to look for was the eventual overlaps between carsharing -- past, present and future -- and the specific circumstances  found in Chinese cities, where up until now carsharing has been an entirely dead letter. I was very glad to have a significant audience of Chinese administrators and politicians working on the issues of sustainable transportation and sustainable cities with whom to share my experience.  As a result, when the links crashed I was really quite disappointed, and decided immediately that I would in the coming days see if I could remedy this through a combination of a short report with a one-page "executive summary" and an informal video giving me a chance to go before them what I intended to set the conference.

 

This I have now done, albeit in almost final draft form, and I would like to share my best draft against comments with any of you who might be interested in putting our heads together on this in what I hope is an efficient and possibly even interesting manner.  Once again, the idea is not to write a book about carsharing, but rather to see if we can sort out in a handful of pages some of the most important points and lessons that we think that our Chinese college should be looking at as they decide whether or not this particular sustainable transportation/mobility/Access strategy is going to be something they should be pursuing.

 

So if you let me know that you are ready to share your critical comments and suggestions on this, I will be pleased to send it along immediately.

 

Teamwork/Eric Britton

 

 

 

A World Streets Policy Brief

Closing moderator comments to Changzhi carshare session

 

Presented to the Changzhi World Forum on Share/Transport. 24 Oct. 2011

-  Eric Britton, World Streets and the New Mobility Partnerships, Paris.

 

As co-moderator of this session I was asked to provide a final summary to close out this part of our forum, drawing on my experience in this field to share with you my best critical thoughts as to if, how and when carsharing might become  a real option for Chinese cities. Here it is.

 

Thank you for this opportunity to share my thoughts with you on this important topic. Let me open with my final conclusion: The concept and the reality of carsharing is going to be very much part of China's transportation future, starting in cities but by no means stopping there. There can be no doubt about it.

 

I have been  impressed by the presentations made this afternoon showing carsharing as a 21st century share/transport option that works, and also by the discussion on the part of several of the experts in the audience.  However, we have been looking here at what are some of the best-known and most successful carsharing projects up to the present. These are working well in various parts of the world today, so it makes perfect sense to give the floor to them.  As a starting place in our discussions.

 

That said, it is my firm belief that the real future of carsharing in China is not going to stop with those known, let's call them, Western models. I except that you are going to look closely at them and then innovate and bring in new forms that are better adapted to your cities and culture. And for this you are in luck, because there is a whole new wave of innovation currently going on and as a result transforming the face and potential of this new way of getting around in the city. It will be an exciting process for you.

 

To conclude, here are four hard-learned  lessons  about carsharing that are, I very much hope, going to effect the future of car ownership and use in Chinese cities.:

 

Fact 1.     Carsharing is not a new form of transportation. It has been around for decades and is practiced  on a daily basis in more than one thousand cities and communities in different parts of the world. This gives you a very  firm base for your own future programs.

Fact 2.     You cannot get to sustainable transportation and sustainable cities without it. (Time does not permit me to expand this as I should, so for now I ask you to think about this.)

Fact 3.     The kind of carsharing that you will see taking shape in cities and even rural areas across China are going to look very different from what we are seeing in the OECD region .

Fact 4.     The key to a successful carshare program is the city and local government.  However unto now, few cities have had a well thought out program as to how to get the best mileage out of this new way to own and use cars. This is a great opportunity for you.

These are very cryptic statements and may surprise. So to round out this discussions I have prepared some brainstorming notes in print form that I will now submit to the organizers in the hope they will share them with you in the days and weeks ahead. (And in Chinese of course)

 

[Full report follows.]

 


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