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As a result, the table needs to be further broken down into cities where the ability to afford a card is more of an issue, and, those cities where this ability might be less of an issue. Cities where the Ability to afford a car is more of an issue Detroit Baltimore Chicago Indianapolis Milwaukee Jacksonville Cities where the Ability to afford a car is less of an issue* New York Washington DC San Francisco Seattle These four cities are among the top 10 that have recovered the quickest from the depths of the Great Recession. Consequently, I suspect that more of the reduction of car ownership reflects the freedom to choose to own a car or not. |
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You have these suburbanites complaining about how no one in the city has a job, but you've had people having no real regular access to suburban service jobs, and when they get them, getting fired because of the region's shoddy, unreliable mass transit network, and when you pose the question about properly funding transit, it always ends up being a stalemate. So, you want people to have jobs to improve the economy, but you won't support even a pittance to fund the crappy transit system as it is, let alone expand it, to get people to jobs they can keep? **head desk** |
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Railway Review |
Why trains may switch to natural gas instead of diesel
Read More: http://www.csmonitor.com/Environment...tead-of-diesel Quote:
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Since WWII, railroads have experimented with oil (and coal?) fired turbine locomotives, and, oil powered steam engines. I am sure, too, that LNG has been discussed at great length, also. The biggest advantage of diesel powered locomotives is that diesel is easy and safe to store, resists ignition during train accidents, has a higher burn temperature than LNG, and, uses very proven technology from the fuel tank through engine design. However, IMO, LNG has a role in freight switching engines where LNG could be stored close to where it is used. Another possible use might be for locomotives that would run 24/7 that would provide electricity to jump start diesels. Maybe, too, urban commuter trains would be a good candidate as the pollution benefits and short distance traveled by commuter trains would make centralized LNG stations very practical. |
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^I'm just glad someone else on here got the joke. :)
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The Largest Free Mass Transit Experiment in the World
Read More: http://www.theatlanticcities.com/com...nt-world/8231/ Quote:
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In the period since 1994, Estonia has relished it's freedom. And a lot of that freedom includes the freedom, if one can afford it, to drive one's own car. In a sense, Estonia today, is like the US in the 1920s where, for the first time, people do NOT have to take a tram, a train or a bus. For the first time, people do not have to smell people en route to work, to shop, or to go to entertainment venues. Making bus service free in Tallin, IMO, had a less significant ridership effect than doing something similar might in a city long accustomed to bumper to bumper traffic. In Estonia (as well as in Russia) and in most former members of the Soviet Bloc, people that can afford a car are just having too much fun driving to return to Soviet style buses, no matter how sleek they appear to be. |
I cant imagine it having much effect anywhere honestly. Using a car is already so much costlier than using transit (like several times more and a magnitude of hundreds of dollars per month) that if people are willing to shell out to buy, power, and maintain a car when transit was already so much cheaper, then eliminating the cost of transit altogether won't make that much of a difference. If they could already save $500/month by getting rid of the car and switching to transit, is increasing the saving to $550/mnth going to really have that much impact?
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^ I agree to an extent.
If you need a car for work or just want one to make things easy then you are going to buy one, case closed. Where this would make a difference is families that maybe have 2 cars where they may decide to ditch the second one. I appreciate in Estonia very few people have 2 cars but it is common in Canada. |
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I saw the electric Coca-Cola delivery truck again on Wednesday. Perhaps I am too much like a little kid but it is always exciting to see that.
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