Over Thanksgiving I’ve been musing on some recent developments.
TRAINS:
Are you heading into NYC to go shopping? Veteran riders will remember when Metro-North would offer “Shopper Specials” trains to handle the crowds, but no more. The trains may be seeing more passengers but the railroad tells me only that they are “monitoring ridership carefully and (are) prepared to quickly add trains to any of (the) lines if demand calls for it.” Tell that to the standees on many rush-hour trains.
PLANES:
If you’re one of the 3 million
Americans who flew on Sunday, congratulations.
That’s a new one-day record, according to the TSA. But that’s nothing compared to the 5.7
million New Yorkers who take the subway, bus or commuter rail
each day in NYC. Just saying.
AUTOMOBILES:
What’s really been bothering
me this week is the unchecked pedestrian carnage in our city streets caused by
rogue drivers.
In Stamford last week a 74-year-old
woman was killed in a hit and run as she crossed the street at 6:15 am,
apparently not in a crosswalk. This
follows the slaughter of two restaurant workers last December as they crossed
the street in Stamford, in a crosswalk, and were struck by a 24-year-old from
Greenwich who didn’t even hit his brakes as he fled the scene.
And last March a 63-year-old
Greenwich woman, walking her dog away from the roadway, was killed
by a motorist in the Glenville neighborhood. Pedestrian deaths in other Connecticut cities
are just as frequent.
Where are the local police
departments? Why don’t they enforce the
law, ticketing jay-walkers and speeding drivers? Why is walking a game of “Survivor” for
people on foot?
As for the state’s plan to
require everybody to “go electric” in their car buying by 2035, it seems there
is far from universal support for the idea.
This summer DEEP (the
Department of Environmental Protection) asked for comments on the plan to ban
the sale of petroleum-powered cars and got more than 4000 responses. While the agency says the public
“overwhelmingly supported adoption” of the plan, a further review shows
otherwise.
Analysis
by The Yankee Institute showed that 900 of those
comments came from the same email address in a Bridgeport-style attempt to
stuff the ballot box. Of the remaining
responses, hopefully more genuine, 74% opposed the plan and only 25% voiced
support.
That regulation can move
forward by the vote of just 14 lawmakers later this month, members of the
Legislative Regulatory Review Committee.
But if they vote no then the entire General Assembly would have to
approve it next year, an election year… if they dare.
I’m guessing nobody is opposed
to the cleaner air that would result from such a scheme. But the price of electric cars and the lack
of sufficient charging stations would give many pause when considering its
impact on their lives.
And nobody, in this land of
steady habits, likes being told what they can and cannot do when it comes to
their cars.
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