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Sarah Goodyear

Recent Posts

Fighting to Take Back Louisville’s Waterfront

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 23, 2009 | No Comments
Today on the Streetsblog Network, we’re headed to Louisville, Kentucky, where Broken Sidewalk highlights grassroots efforts to prevent a massive expansion of the I-64 highway on the Ohio River waterfront. A local advocacy group called 8664.org (as in, "let’s 86 the 64") is opposing the Ohio River Bridges Project, which would cost $4.1 billion and […]

Vancouver Gives a Bridge Lane to Bikes

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 22, 2009 | No Comments
New York isn’t the only city that’s experimenting with closing roads to improve traffic and create better conditions for pedestrians and cyclists. Today, from Streetsblog Network member Human Transit, we hear of a bridge in Vancouver where a lane of car traffic has been given over to cyclists: Happy cyclists coming off the Burrard Bridge […]

Turning a Blind Eye to the Risks of Auto Culture

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 21, 2009 | No Comments
In today’s New York Times article about how the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration withheld research data on the risks of cellphone use while driving, one little nugget in particular caught my attention: [Dr. Jeffrey Runge, then the head of the highway safety agency,] said [the chief of staff for Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta] asked […]

How Much Do Bicyclists Really Slow Down Drivers?

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 20, 2009 | 8 Comments
What’s really slowing these cars down? Probably not bikes. Photo by richardmasoner via Flickr. What is it about bicycles that drives some motorists so crazy? Anyone who’s ever ridden a bike more than a handful of times in this country has experienced it. The honking, the rude remarks, the vehicles speeding past with drivers shouting […]

Can We Create More Meaningful City Rankings?

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 17, 2009 | No Comments
They seem to be coming out at an ever-increasing pace: rankings of cities and nations based on how livable they are, or how bicycle friendly, or how green and happy, put together by various advocacy groups, think tanks and magazines. The media loves to pick these up, and let’s face it, they’re fun. But as […]

Car-Sharing and the Case for a “Low-Car Diet”

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 16, 2009 | No Comments
Anyone who makes any effort to live more sustainably has been there — facing the accusation that what you’re doing isn’t enough. That you’re compromising, and that your willingness to deviate from a purist approach invalidates your efforts. Sometimes these accusations come from within. And sometimes they make you want to give up. It’s the […]

In Flint, Trying to Reinvent a Shrinking City

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 15, 2009 | 1 Comment
Yesterday on the Streetsblog Network, we looked at the concept of "resilient cities" — an idea that some of our commenters on Streetsblog NY and Streetsblog LA sites frankly weren’t buying. Today, we have a post from Streetsblog Network member Smart Growth Around America about a city that is desperately searching for some definition of […]

Cities Must Become More Resilient to Survive

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 14, 2009 | No Comments
The idea that cities are greener than suburbs has gotten a lot of attention lately. But a recently published book argues that in a future of diminishing resources, cities themselves are going to have to become much more efficient and inventive if they are to be sustainable — indeed, if they are to survive at […]

Warning: Windshield Perspective Hazardous to Your Health

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 13, 2009 | 1 Comment
Over the past couple of months, we’ve been following a story in Savannah about a crackdown on jaywalking — a crackdown prompted by the death of a tourist who was hit by a car on Oglethorpe Avenue in the city’s historic district. Streetsblog Network member Sustainable Savannah has done a great job of articulating why […]

All Aboard the Great Streetcar Debate

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 10, 2009 | 1 Comment
Streetcars provoke strong emotions in transpo geeks. A recent post on Human Transit called "Streetcars: An Inconvenient Truth" precipitated a very informed and sometimes heated thread of discussion on the relative virtues of light rail vs. bus rapid transit (a mode that got its moment in the limelight just this morning) streetcars vs. local-stop buses. […]

Making Climate Change Part of the Local Transpo Debate

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 9, 2009 | No Comments
As the leaders of the G-8 meet in L’Aquila, Italy, to discuss how to tackle climate change on the global level, we bring you a report from Streetsblog Network member GreenCityBlueLake about a victory on the local level in Ohio. It shows how advocacy organizations can reframe the debate over transportation spending so that addressing […]

Riding the Broadband Superhighway to Work

By Sarah Goodyear | Jul 8, 2009 | No Comments
This morning, I’m making use of a mass transit system while sitting at my desk at home. That’s the way the writer of today’s featured post on the Streetsblog Network would see it, anyway. On network member blog New Geography, Nicole Belson Goluboff — a lawyer who specializes in the legal aspects of telecommuting — […]
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