Lots of transportation related stories to catch up with, so here goes:
WATCH NEW JERSEY: Commuters in the Garden State are in for
some expensive travel as NJ Transit just
approved a 15%
fare hike, its first in nine years.
The reason? Reduced ridership,
just as we have seen on Connecticut trains.
The NJ transit agency said they could either raise fares or cut service
(both of which have already happened here in Connecticut).
The NJ Transit fare increase
begins July 1st, just after New York City’s new congestion pricing
scheme takes effect, so Jerseyites heading to Manhattan will pay more whether
by car or train.
NEW HAVEN STATION: Over 1.7 million Metro-North and Amtrak
passengers use New Haven’s Union station each year. And while the 100-year-old
station has been restored, it still sits in a comparative wasteland of
parking lots and empty land. Now the city
is launching a major redevelopment plan
to gentrify the station with shops, cafes and high rise mixed-use buildings
nearby… true TOD (Transit
Oriented Development). But be
patient: they have neither the funding,
the zoning revisions or specific plans at hand.New Haven's Union Station
COLLAPSING BRIDGES: How disappointing to see Connecticut media
regurgitating the same old stories about the sorry
state of our bridges following the ship collision in Baltimore that
destroyed the Key Bridge. It wasn’t old
age or rusting steel that took out the Baltimore harbor bridge: it was a 985-foot container ship weighing
over 100,000 tons traveling about 9 mph.
Given its momentum, it’s doubtful that any protective barriers (had they
been built around the base of the bridge) could have halted the vessel. Nor do ships of that size come anywhere close
to Connecticut ports. So yes, some of our
bridges are in need of work. But no, in
our state “the ship will not hit the span”.
MICROTRANSIT: At the same time they’re cutting rail
service, CDOT is funding nine new Microtransit
pilot programs: on-demand,
door-to-door shared ride services akin to an Uber. Commuters will find such rides useful for solving
the first /
last mile problem getting to / from train stations, while seniors and those
with disabilities will now be able to travel in their local communities at
lower cost. The $19.5 million trial will
run for two years in Ansonia, Derby, Shelton, East Windsor, Enfield, Groton,
New London, Stonington, Middletown, Madison, Milford, New Haven, Norwalk,
Stamford and Trumbull.
Isn’t it interesting that the
Governor can find money for populist projects like these but he refuses to
adequately fund existing services like Shore
Line East?
EATING CROW: My thanks to the many of you who alerted me
to an error in last week’s column “Too Old to Drive?”. I was wrong when I said that Connecticut
limited the duration of driver’s license renewals to two years after age 65, as
in California. Not so! Older drivers can request two-year license
renewals or go for the standard 6 to 8 year renewals. And they don’t have to renew in person or
pass vision or dementia checks. So, I
got my facts wrong, for which I apologize.
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