Bipartisan advocates for smart, sustainable environmental policies in Connecticut



Showing posts with label vulnerable user bill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vulnerable user bill. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

CONNECTIONS: Linking Transportation and the Environment in Connecticut: May 9, 2011 Edition

– By Kirsten Griebel

At the LOB

  • Last week the Senate referred Bill 720, the Vulnerable User bill, to the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee.  They now have to act on it within seven days (by May 12th) in order to keep it alive.   CTLCV, along with a number of other organizations, has been supporting this bill as it improves safety and encourages pedestrian/bike friendly streets, a tenet of smart growth.  It is currently on the CTLCV legislation watchlist. 

    This bill successfully cleared both the Transportation and Judiciary Committees with the Judiciary Committee voting 41 to 4 in favor.  As a positive for this bill, the fiscal analysis states a potential $75,000 in revenue gain (from new fines), so this is a win – win; a win for the economy and the environment.   Representative Pat Widlitz, a CTLCV environmental champion, is Co-Chair of the Finance Committee and it is our hope she will throw her support behind this bill this week.
  • Governor Malloy and the Bond Commission released $89 million to fund the New Britain-Hartford Busway on April 29th.  This completes the state’s  20% matching funding commitment to the project.  Despite the potential for some very drastic federal transportation budget cuts, the New Starts funding for the NB-H Busway is still intact.  CTLCV joined a broad and diverse group of supporters to thank the Governor for his vision and leadership on this investment in the first new major public transportation project in CT in decades.
Around the State
  • Connecticut’s Complete Streets policy was recently recognized by the National Complete Streets Coalition as one of the top fifteen best Complete Streets policies in the country.  The bill, Public Act 09-154, was authored and championed in the state legislature by former State Representative Tom Kehoe.  Complete Streets and the new Vulnerable User bill make for more liveable cities and towns by making our roads safer for people who are walking or on bikes or other non-motorized transportation.  Safety and accessibility for pedestrians and cyclists is critical to changing Nutmeggers’ mindset of auto dependency and to get out of their cars and try walking or biking as alternatives.  A big part of this is a campaign to educate people about sharing the road and understanding that roads are for all users not just for cars.
  • It looks like the current state budget will put an end to the state subsidy of Dial-A-Ride leaving it up to the municipalities to fund the program.  The budget also decreases municipal matching grants for transit by about $1 million or about 25% of forecasted expenditures.  Otherwise the bus operations budget for the state maintains its current level of funding. Karen Burnaska, Transit for Connecticut, considers this pretty good news given the major budget deficit facing the state.  Maintaining the state’s investment in public transportation is critical for the health of Connecticut’s environment.
Around the Nation
  • Congratulations to the Michigan League of Conservation Voters on their recent success in getting out the vote to approve a bus system expansion in the Grand Rapids region that also includes the first Bus Rapid Transit system in Michigan. The ballot referendum to approve a property tax increase for expanding the region’s bus service passed by only 136 votes out of 34,432 cast! 

    Similar to the New Britain – Hartford Busway, the Michigan Bus Rapid Transit will have a dedicated bus-only lane for about eight miles and may cut travel times in half.  It is part of a larger comprehensive transit strategy that reinforces the need for regions to plan and build multi-modal transportation systems.

    As Ryan Werder, Political Director for Michigan LCV, said “It was an effort that tied us closely with business leaders, non-traditional allies, the mayors of every community involved. With the margin as close as it was, it was the ground game and GOTV work that made the win possible. We are now using this as an opportunity to highlight both the importance of politics in the process of advancing Michigan's environment as well as promoting the common agenda process that identified public transit as a priority.”

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

CONNECTIONS: Linking Transportation and the Environment in Connecticut

 – by Kirsten Griebel (kirsten.griebel@ctlcv.org)

CTLCV is rolling out a new e-letter called CONNECTIONS: Linking Transportation and the Environment in Connecticut, to provide brief updates on transportation news, issues, policies and legislation that impact your quality of life here in Connecticut.   We welcome your feedback and news tips and hope you find it interesting and informative.

At the LOB

  • Bill 720, Vulnerable Users Bill passed favorably in a 41 to 4 vote in the Judiciary Committee last week and we have high hopes that this is the year for the bill to finally become law.  CTLCV supports this bill as a smart growth bill that makes our roads safer and encourages non-motorized transportation by imposing penalties on drivers that “fail to use due care”.

    A special thanks to Senator Beth Bye who championed this bill, even donning her bike helmet during the Judiciary meeting to reinforce her support.  Thanks also to Judiciary Chairs, Senator Coleman and Rep. Fox for amending the agenda on the final day to place the bill first on the agenda, allowing it to come for a vote before the clock ran out.  Kudos to Bike Walk CT and Tri-State Transportation Campaign for tirelessly working this bill!

    Relevant Facts:
          -     A ‘Vulnerable User’ is a pedestrian, highway worker, person riding or driving an animal, riding a bike, using a wheelchair, skateboard, skates, or riding a farm tractor
          -     ConnDOT 2010 pedestrian accident reports highest number of ped. accidents were in the cities Bridgeport (128)  Hartford (127) Waterbury (105) Stamford (81) New Haven (75).

    This bill does not automatically assume the driver is at fault and does not remove responsibility from the vulnerable user.  State law already has provisions that subject bicyclists and pedestrians to safe use of roads. 
  • Bill 6200, Tolls to build new highways or highway extensions was amended to add “for the purpose of new expansion of Route 11 from Salem to I-95” and approved in the Finance committee this week in a 37 to 15 vote primarily on party lines with the D’s unanimously in favor of it.  There is a need for new sources of revenue dedicated to transportation infrastructure repair and mass transit projects and tolls need to be considered. Projects that involve building new roads or bridges need to be carefully evaluated through a smart growth prism to assess the net environmental benefit.  Both sides of the ‘completing Route 11’ environmental debate need to be heard and CTLCV will work to get that information to you over the next few weeks.

Around the State

  • Office of Fiscal Analysis projects the CT Special Transportation Fund will have a cumulative deficit of $35.1 million by FY 14Yikes!
Around the Nation
  • Transportation for America (www.t4america.org)  reports that there is reason for alarm among transportation advocates as the House approved FY12 GOP budget calls for cuts of $633 billion for transportation over the next ten years.  Read the article “Path to Prosperity or Road to Ruin? Either Way, the House Says Yes” on Streets Blog Capitol Hill here.
  • In CT those cuts could be bad news for the New Haven-Hartford-Springfield rail line project which is waiting for an additional $227 million in federal funding.  The federal New Starts funding for the New Britain-Hartford Bus Rapid Transit project however looks to be intact and especially promising as this project is considered shovel-ready for late spring or early summer this year. The busway is a win for the environment with an expected daily ridership of 16,000 people and decreasing road congestion and a win for the economy with an expected creation of 12,000 construction related jobs.