Thursday, December 9, 2021

Laguna Beach On-Demand Transit Service


Due to Covid-19 the old city transit services were suspended  March 20, 2020, the new LB On-demand transit service launched October 18 will replace it. 

Old Transit Trolley Service

  • Grant requirements were 10 passengers per hour, old transit fell below that. 
  • Boarding costs were $16 per boarding

New On-Demand Transit Service

  • Serving Top of the World, Arch Beach Heights, and Bluebird Canyon.
  • From local transit stops to Downtown or transfer points.
  • New on-demand scheduling is anticipated to improve boarding, convenience
  • New on-demand plan seeks to avoid delays due to traffic on fixed routes fixed schedule.

Pilot program budgeted $753,000 for services from a transit company, 80 percent of this transit funding is from state and local grants, the remainder LB parking revenues.

Service Schedule: 

-LS

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

COP26 Results from Glasgow Scotland

Key Points Climate Summit

  • Digging our own graves -Guterres
  • World is in Climate Crisis -Scientists
  • Urgent ACTION required -Guterres
  • 10X more Cycling and Transit Modeshare Required
  • China Russia missing from COP26 Summit


While politicians play the You Go First game, the world's carbon emissions have not abated even (surprise) under the Covid pandemic. Take action, reduce your personal carbon footprint, the politicians will never catch-up to this crisis.

-LS

Thursday, October 7, 2021

"Rolling Coal" in Texas

Story by JALOPNIK

 Photo and Story by JALOPNIK

All the King's lawyers and litigation will not prevent these intentional acts. 

And more bike hate in Arizona, Ford F-150 mows down six killing one.

The solution to multi-modal transportation begins with public policy, public outreach and education in schools. Respect each other, SHARE THE ROAD.

-LS

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Idaho Stop Before California Governor

Data from Delaware shows that collisions involving bikes at intersections went down by 23% after the state adopted the bicycle safety stop.

 Please tell the California Governor to approve AB-122 the Idaho stop (Bicycle Safety Stop) Bill. 

 

10/11/21 UPDATE:  10/8 Governor Vetos AB-122 citing accidents at stop signs. 

US States with "rolling stops": Arkansas, Oklahoma, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Delaware.

The three-foot passing law was defeated twice by Governor Brown, expect the Idaho Stop similar.

There are fewer lawyers in Germany (104,000) than Kalifornia (266,000), and more street users who can think for themselves. 

Sorry to all who participated, we've been Gavined by the Gov.

-LS

Thursday, September 2, 2021

Idaho Stop Passes Cal Senate


The Bike Safety Bill (Rolling Stop, Idaho Stop) AB-122 has passed the California Senate by a 31/5 vote on August 30. For cyclists, traffic Stop signs at intersections  may be treated as Yield signs. Thanks to all who participated by writing our legislators.

California will join other states adopting the safety stop: Idaho, Delaware, Oregon, Washington, Colorado, Delaware, Arkansas, Utah, Oklahoma, and North Dakota. These states have not reported any safety problems after implementing this rule.

For more details, legislation and a video, see Calbike here.

-LS

Tuesday, August 10, 2021

Infrastructure Bill Funds Status Quo

$682 Billion in new transportation infrastructure spending passed the Senate last week but supports highways not transit alternatives. To put into perspective, the amount spent on the US defense budget was $778 Billion in 2020 alone.

"In its current state, this deal fails to accomplish the administration’s goal of reducing emissions, preserving both the status quo of easy money to build new highways (while neglecting basic repair needs) and the existing, complex hurdles to build transit,” said Transportation America Director Beth Osborne. 
 

Transportation for America (TA) found the Bill falls short even before the dire warning given by the International Committee on Climate Change on Monday. 

The bill provides large federal investments in both public transit and electric vehicle recharging, the expenditures are undermined by historic levels of highway spending that will produce higher levels of greenhouse gas emissions, as it always has. The bill provides a small amount of funding for reconnecting communities divided by highways but providing hundreds of times more funding to build and expand highways creating new divisions. 

The TA Guiding Principles show:

  • States are permitted to defer basic needs and  highway maintenance in order to expand (think Toll Roads) new highway systems. This way the expansion is rewarded by federal highway funding but maintenance is not.
  • Cut the highway maintenance backlog in half by dedicating formula highway funds to maintenance. 

Our roadways are designed for speed over safety, check the 85% percentile rule followed by Caltrans to set speed limits. Transportation systems focus on speed of delivery compromising safety. The bill should emphasize moving people not vehicles.  Connect people to jobs and services first, then design emphasis should be connecting people to those jobs and services. Prioritize highway projects that will serve that mission and use existing funding expeditiously but meet the mobility goal. This Bill uses status-quo-supporting, five-year transportation bill the Senate passed a few months ago as the guide for investing $682 billion in transportation infrastructure.

What you can do about it:

Call the Capitol Swithboard (202) 224-3121, ask for four amendments:

Talking points:

“I live in [STATE] and I’m calling about the infrastructure deal. While I’m certainly glad that we’re near a deal to invest in our country’s infrastructure, we have to do more than invest in the same way we always have. As the Senate considers the deal this week, I urge you to SUPPORT these following four amendments:

  • The Kaine amendment (2373), which would require a “fix it first" approach to highway funding. 
  • The Klobuchar amendment (2301), which would require states to reduce traffic death targets and end the practice of planning for them to increase with no penalty.
  • The Warnock amendment (2167) (& Cardin 2176), would increase funding for reconnecting communities divided and damaged by highways from $3 billion up to $5 billion.
  • The Cardin amendment (2465), would implement a transportation greenhouse gas (GHG) performance measure to finally start considering the climate impacts of our transportation projects.

8.10.21 Update

Coming just a day after a dire new IPCC climate report calling for transformational change, the Senate is providing hundreds of billions for status quo programs that will be used to build new roads and produce ever-increasing emissions for decades to come.  

-LS

Saturday, August 7, 2021

LB Municipal Vehicle Fleet goes Electric

 SO WHAT? 

LB City Council is considering a replacement of the city vehicle fleet with electric vehicles to ostensibly, reduce the road noise they produce and "chiefly to reduce the number of polluting vehicles the City operates."

Let's try some math. 

 The city operates 200 vehicles (20-21 Budget)...............let's say they operate 1000 cars, trucks, beach buggies, and fire trucks. According Caltrans the Average Annual Daily Vehicle Trips to Laguna when people park is 29,400.  The entire city-fleet represents 3% of the tourist fleet of vehicles; the electric vehicle replacement program will do nothing to achieve stated goals.

 

Credit: @CanUrbanism
 
-LS

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Transportation Sector Carbon Footprint

(Credits: Our World in Data, Department for Business Energy and Industrial Strategy, UK )

The transportation sector contributes 29% to global GHG emissions, cars and trucks make up 82% of those emissions. Your choice of personal mobility greatly reduces GHG emissions.
How to reduce carbon emissions:

  • Walk instead of medium car for short trips: ~83% reduction
  • Use a pedal bike instead of car for short trips: ~75% reduction
  • Train instead of car for medium trips: ~80% reduction
  • Train instead of plane: ~84% reduction

-LS

 

 

Sunday, June 27, 2021

NextDoor Polling Results on LB Parking and Traffic

 From 2018 to 2021 Laguna residents responded to a series of NextDoor polls about parking and traffic, here is a summary of fifteen polls in three charts showing what Laguna respondents say. The three charts organize parking and traffic polls into problems, solutions, and the vision for Laguna Beach. From each poll only the majority vote is shown, some take-aways are these:

  • A large majority of respondents agree there are too many cars in Laguna.
  • A majority believe cars will disappear if parking structures hide them all.
  • A large majority prefer walking, biking, transit, Trolley over cars IF safe infrastructure was provided.
  • A majority of respondents remain ignorant of mobility solutions available. 

 





 -LS


Friday, June 18, 2021

OCTA Multi-Modal Transportation Study


Soon it will be cool to say the words "MULTI-MODAL".  No, not a Podcast production with Garageband, this is the Orange County Transit Authority public survey of a multi-modal transportation system for Southern California including beach cities. On June 17 2021 OCTA held a virtual town hall taking public input about what services we want and where to spend Measure-M money on a multi-modal system. OCTA is also taking an on-line survey to record your preferences. To take the survey click the last link. Previous studies are shown.

PCH Corridor Objective:  make it more convenient for people to travel without needing an automobile

2016 OCTA Get Moving

2016 Corridor Study for SoCal and PCH (pdf)

2021 Multi-Modal Transportation town hall recording and info

2021 PCH Corridor Executive Summary (Laguna Beach p15)

2021 Public Survey direct link

 

Want to see a Metrolink to Laguna Beach?  Want to see OCFlex schedule on your phone? Want to see bikelanes on Laguna Canyon Road?  

Take the survey and tell OCTA what preferences you like.

-LS

Friday, May 28, 2021

Origin and Destination Analysis for LCR 2015 RBF

Given the recent fuss about Parkletts and their impact on Laguna Beach parking, here is a reminder of who uses Laguna Canyon Road to arrive in Laguna Beach and park. The charts show the average number of car trips per day through LCR, where they come from and where they are going.  

This study does NOT count those drivers using PCH. This study does NOT include other modes of transport: walking, cycling, motorcycles, trams buses boats gliders or SUP paddle-boards. Also these are annual averages not peak visitors season, say Memorial Day.

As the charts show, on average the main users of Laguna parking is: us. The main users of Laguna's streets is:  pass-through commuters.


 

This data was reported 16 March 2015 by RBF Consulting as a deliverable to the City of Laguna Beach and their product in it's entirety. This reporting is comparable to city-wide citation and moving violation data posted previously. The values are different since LBPD data includes the PCH route through Laguna Beach, the RBF study does not.

-LS


Wednesday, May 12, 2021

eBikes: What are the LAWS?

CALIFORNIA LAW:

The California Vehicle Code treats bicycles as VEHICLES, so same laws apply to cyclists as motorists. Cal VC 21200 treats eBikes same as bicycles. 

LAGUNA BEACH LAW:

It is illegal to ride bicycles or eBikes on LB sidewalks by city Ordinance. 

(a) It is unlawful for any person, except for authorized law enforcement personnel, to operate a bicycle upon any sidewalk, the Main Beach Boardwalk, or any area within any city park. 

(b) It is unlawful for any person, except for authorized law enforcement personnel and for persons with disabilities, to operate any electric personal assistive mobility device (as defined by the California Vehicle Code and sometimes also known or referred to as Segways, T-3 Motions and/or motorized scooters) or any golf cart or low speed vehicle (as defined by the California Vehicle Code) on any sidewalk on Pacific Coast Highway, within the central business district, Main Beach Boardwalk, or any area within any city park. (Ord. 1614 § 1, 2016; Ord. 1546 § 1, 2011; Ord. 1509 § 1, 2009; Ord. 1299 § 1, 1995; Ord. 1081 § 1, 1985).

Sources:

CalBike Bike Laws (CVC 21200): Bicycles eBikes

LB City Ordinance: Bicycles eBikes 

LB City UPDATE: eBikes in Laguna Beach 

OC Register on eBikes: Rules Regulations Popularity

-LS

Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Bike Month in Laguna Beach

Think you are too old for cycling?  Check-out this 2012 chart from Prof. John Pucher Rutgers University NJ. For those over 65 years the trips made by cycling in the Netherlands are 23%, cycling trips made by the same age group in the US are 0.5%.

In a study by the AARP and the US National Household Travel Survey shows non-motorized trips taken by those 40-64 are the largest group. From the 2021 study:

  • Bike/Walk trips for those 50 years and older are increasing
  • Growth in older adults walking should change Public Health perspective
  • Accidents are more prevalent in this group that previously
  • Infrastructure to support more bike/walk adults must improve
  • More trips by non-working older adults not accounted for here

-LS

Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Steps to Complete Street Policy

  1. Admission

    Recognize if you drive, then you contribute to traffic congestion
  2. Policy Initiation

     Recognize traffic congestion is an economic, environmental social problem
  3. Gather the Evidence 

    Gather the pollution, traffic counts, time lost, ROI, obesity metric of mobility system
  4. Building Support

    Identify stakeholders, political leaders, partnerships, city staff, technical leads  
  5. Influence Factors

    Identify regulations, media advocacy, pub/priv financial influence, workshops
  6. Financial Support

    Identify $ources, agencies, MPO's, CDC, Land Use Connection Programs  

READING:  APA Guide to Complete Streets, APA Report 559

 -LS

Thursday, April 8, 2021

CALTRANS Takes Traffic Counts in Laguna

Caltrans is taking traffic counts in eight locations around Laguna Beach.The purpose of these measurements is to adjust vehicle speeds and signal timing to reduce car trip delay, and to update the traffic accounting system known as the Caltrans Highway Performance Monitoring System (HPMS) system.

The counting methodology is intended to move more cars faster and safer than ever before. Every so often the result of this approach is revealed spectacularly on Laguna's Arterial highways PCH and Laguna Canyon Road.

 

El Morro Crash 7 April 2021

Given Caltrans mission statement the project methodology falls short:

Provide a safe, sustainable, efficient and  integrated transportation system to enhance California's economy and livability.

Given the 10x20-foot hole-in-the-road at Broadway and PCH impeding car traffic, why would Caltrans take traffic count measurements now? Let's ignore this detail for the moment.

This iconic photo reveals the mobility problem particularly for Laguna Beach. Our Caltrans mobility system emphasizes a single mobility mode for cars alone when there are three more to choose to enhance our mobility system.

Demonstration of mobility modes to transport 60 people. Muenster Germany

In the HPMS measurements, bus bicycle and pedestrians are not counted as criteria for success, only cars are counted (a metric called AVMT). Why should Laguna Beach prescribe to a HIGHWAY monitoring system exclusively for cars?

Nationally 60% of all vehicle trips were less than six miles all within the reach of transit, cycling and walking (US Department of Transportation 2018).

The optimal mix of four transportation modes is a balance of car, bus, bicycle and walking, the proportion of each is different for every municipality. A better balance reduces congestion, improves road safety, increases available parking, reduces air noise and water pollution, and achieves LIVABILITY desired in the Laguna village.

Project documents for the Caltrans HPMS upgrade reveal there is no mention of the policy standards or traffic count methodology to support the other transportation modes as found in these documents written by Caltrans:

  • 2014 Complete Streets Integrating Transportation System (DD-64-R2)
  • 2019 Count Methodology Guidance for Active Transportation (ATP)
  • 2016 Corridor Study for Pacific Coast Highway (CSPCH)

In 1959 Los Angeles took extreme measures to expand a freeway interchange from South Los Angeles through Boyle Heights. The expansion demolished and segregated the existing mixed racial community of Boyle Heights (LA Times).

Why should Laguna Beach and San Clemente residents prescribe to a similar freeway policy forced upon East Los Angeles?  There are much better written policies already prescribed in CALTRANS Directives above. They should be followed.

-LS

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Toll Roads Action Letter Supports Senate Bills 760 761

 

 

California Senate Bills 760 761 limit new extensions to the TCA Toll Roads, please take ACTION to send a letter, two model letters are found in the link to the San Clemente website below. Letter deadline is April 2 2021.



 

 

Support letter from NOT MY TOLL ROAD:

I support SB 760 which aims to limit the Hwy 241 toll road extension at Oso Parkway rather than plow through South Orange County.   The Transportation Corridor Agency (TCA) responsible for these toll roads has proven to be self-serving by refinancing the debt service to 2053 rather than mature them last Millennia. Several independent analyses of the TCA debt service have determined the 2053 maturity is also unrealistic, in fact the bonds must be refinanced indefinitely meaning TCA organization will never sunset.  I urge you to pass this important legislation to update and correct the TCA’s legislative route and return trust back in transportation. 

https://www.san-clemente.org/Home/Components/News/News/6585/16?fbclid=IwAR2sJeiMLTx1ktvi66t03YrRPuMZWNho6Md0ZFS2RZh66H7m_jOU5bFDoaE
Michelle 949.280.4276 
 
Some Details:
 
SB 760 – makes the terminus of the 241 toll road at Oso Parkway (currently legislation has it ending South of San Clemente) this needs to be changed to end at Oso – thank you Senator Pat Bates for bringing both of these incredible bills.

 SB 761 – protects our open spaces and conservation areas. 
 
Use the California State Senate Portal to submit the Support letters on the page link above – it is so easy. Just select the Senate Bill for the Bill type and then the number SB 760 and type your support comments.   Repeat for the next bill. 

Remember DEADLINE to receive letters is April 2, 2021. 
Thank You for helping us defeat these Toll Road extensions.  

 -LS

Friday, March 12, 2021

The Idaho Stop for Pedal and eBikes


CalBike is sponsoring AB-122 the Idaho Stop for California. Also known as the rolling stop, the safety stop, the Euro stop, the new legislation allows cyclists to roll through a stop sign when the intersection is not occupied by other vehicles. The specific text in the California Vehicle Code will change as follows in blue:

Section 22450.
 
(a) The driver of any vehicle vehicle, except a bicycle or electric bicycle, approaching a stop sign at the entrance to, or within, an intersection shall stop at a limit line, if marked, otherwise before entering the crosswalk on the near side of the intersection.

(c) A person riding a bicycle, including an electric bicycle, approaching a stop sign at the entrance to, or within, an intersection shall yield the right-of-way to any vehicles that have stopped at the entrance of the intersection, have entered the intersection, or that are approaching on the intersecting highway close enough to constitute an immediate hazard, and shall continue to yield the right-of-way to those vehicles until reasonably safe to proceed.

The change in law is welcome in Laguna Beach where forcing a bike rider to stop or dismount on hilly intersections is difficult even dangerous for riders with clip-in pedals. 

For more information follow the links: 

California Vehicle Code Text 

CalBike website and background 

 Latest Bill history at Leginfo

UPDATE: (7-15-21) The bill is called back for second reading. The bill stands a good chance of passing. Amended in March the bill was reread and voted April 14 2021 Ayes:12 Noes:3.  Presently the bill is ordered to a third reading.

-LS