Oh look, some more unserious Chicagoans are coming out against the LSD revamp, as currently proposed.
What's wrong with these people? How did they get so unserious? Quote:
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If the cars must be slowed down to 40 and the busses are going 40, again no need for bus lanes. Bus lanes allow the busses to go faster than the cars right? So if the cars are already going slower than 40 such that bus lanes are needed, then why spend tax payer dollars to redesign LSD to slow down cars? As a serious person who has fought against IDOT blasting a 5 lane road through my forest preserve, I assume there's math to back this up? If the end goal is to entice rich empty nester seniors to buy all those 2nd home condos in awesome downtown skyscrapers, and they're one slip on the ice away from a broken hip, you won't be enticing any of them onto busses. However, just thinking out loud, if you tell them that the bus lanes are to get all those slow crawling busses out of their way so they can happily speed away, they might go for it. Know your target market. |
^ you seem painfully out of touch with the tens of thousands of people who rely on the LSD express buses everyday, and how those express buses operate.
People > cars. It's the foundational principle of all cities worth a damn. |
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It's fun going faster than traffic on DLSD via bike. |
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And those of us who do the work that make cities possible can't afford to live in the "cities worth a damn". Traffic congestion happens at intersection and interchanges. Do the busses get their own off ramp too? Their own turn lanes? Do they get to turn the traffic lights green like ambulances? What you want is a subway. Until you get that, going to have to deal with cars. |
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Busses and cars should travel at the same speed. |
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The speed limit is a separate issue. Outside of rush hours when the road is not congested, higher speeds contribute to more noise pollution in lakefront communities (faster speeds = more road noise), more deadly accidents and more damage to the park. |
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In the future, if transit moves faster on DLSD, fewer people will have to purchase depreciating assets (cars) and fuel (pollution). |
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In a big dense crowded city like Chicago where physical space is at a premium, it simply makes logical sense to prioritize and incentivize highly efficient methods of transportation over highly inefficient ones. And now that the very unserious people at the RTA have decided to throw their organization's weight behind the effort to get IDOT to remove their collective head from their ass, it seems as those also unserious grass roots transit proponents (who you like to laugh at for some reason) might now have a better chance of getting what they want (dedicated bus lanes on LSD). If they had taken your poor advice and just shut up and "take what you can get", we wouldn't now be looking at a potentially smarter and better outcome here. Viva la unserious protestors!!! Quote:
Here are the census 2020 macro-age demos for the City of Chicago. Ages 0-19: 22% Ages 20-59: 58% Ages 60+: 20% And FWIW, my folks are 77, they both fortunately still walk, and because they live in a Sheridan Road highrise up in Edgewater, they actually use the 147 LSD express bus to get downtown from time time (on topic!). Quote:
And looking at the age demos above, apparently 1.6M other working-age people are also capable of doing the same. |
Kirk Dillard is to be commended for courageously standing up for transit riders, not just once but repeatedly.
First he leaned on CDOT to add bus lanes at Chicago/Halsted, where CTA's #1 and #2 busiest buses cross. That was successful, and CDOT agreed to add the bus lanes in the coming rebuild of that intersection. Now he is leaning on IDOT to add bus lanes on North Lake Shore Drive, where 7 different crowded bus routes jostle for space with cars and routinely sit in traffic jams. Important to note that RTA has the statutory power to declare bus lanes on any street or road in the region, unless there is a state or local law that expressly prohibits them. I don't think they've ever used this power, but it does give them leverage. Kirk Dillard only answers to the governor, and so far the guv is sitting out of this whole debate. |
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And now some dude from Palatine is gonna have to laugh at him, to boot. |
I will say though that bus lanes on north Michigan Ave might be more important than bus lanes on DLSD.
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Michigan Ave is important for buses too, but there's less urgency. It's also unclear if the "community" will support bus lanes. A recent exhibition at CAC had two rival visions: the Mag Mile Association's vision designed by LJC included bus lanes, while a rival vision funded by a deep-pocketed landlord and designed by Gensler had no bus lanes at all (despite narrowing Michigan Ave overall to just four lanes wide). Now that's unserious! Not surprisingly, the Gensler vision was heavily peddled to media outlets in Chicago as well as the architectural press - and a lot of the coverage gave the impression that it was an official, approved city project. Meanwhile, the Mag Mile Association vision with the bus lanes got almost zero press. So, any official planning for bus lanes on Michigan Ave will likely face some stiff, well-funded opposition from some very influential people. |
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