Tuesday 4 December 2007

Exciting news for the Pittsburgh Promise

So I know it's unlike me to post twice in one day...but wow - the PG is reporting that UPMC will donate $100 million over the next 10 years for the Pittsburgh Promise.

Despite all the bad press the Pittsburgh Promise has received (and surely, not without reason), I think it is an innovative, visionary program that will help to make urban living more attractive for families. This is truly excellent news that UPMC, the oft-criticized nonprofit, has made such a strong commitment to the program. I really hope the Mark Roosevelt doubters will start to believe - this guy is good at what he does.

Walking and Metro Rail

According to a recent study by the Brookings Institution, Pittsburgh is one of the 10 most "Walkable" Cities in America, ranking one spot ahead of New York. Good news, and something that I'm sure will be helped by the recent addition of the walking/biking path over the Hot Metal Bridge.

According to the study, of the 10 cities in the top 10, all but Seattle are served by some sort of Metropolitan rail systems. Also of the top 10, 5 of the 10 have "full" rail transit systems, and Pittsburgh is listed as having a "starter" syetem.

Give it a read, it's a great article on how good transport makes more livable cities, and good transport breeds new development. If you're interested, you could also check out the full study.

Still coming soon (seriously) - Pittsburgh City Line: Part 2

Monday 26 November 2007

Two Newspaper Articles

1) First Person: Pittsburgh's Lovely Trap - A great article written by a recently graduated CMU student, about Pittsburgh's magnetic culture.

2) Opening bid: Internet auctions call for a modern state solution - A P-G editorial about a strange business law in Pennsylvania. Hopefully, the State will continue to change outdated laws that hurt entrepreneurs and small businesses (albeit in a specific industry). It's good to see the P-G bringing attention to issues like this.

PA is chock full of laws that hurt small businesses - just a few days ago, Darren brought to my attention that "State Law in PA allows peer to peer lending of only up to 6%, this is the lowest of the 50 states and inhibits entrepreneurs from using services such as prosper.com to start their business." Hopefully legislators and voters alike push for changes in these outdated laws so that our cities can more easily foster small business growth.

Coming soon - Pittsburgh City Line: Part 2

Tuesday 20 November 2007

Pittsburgh City Line: Part 1

Traveling around Europe has inspired me on Public Transport. I have had many new ideas on how Pittsburgh could create a rail/dedicated right-of-way based public transport system that was sustainable and scalable for a city of Pittsburgh size. I have a two ideas that I believe could work for this, and the one I will outline today is the first, and more conservative, of the two. I call it the "Pittsburgh City Line." Click on the picture for an interactive Google Map.

This looks similar to the Circle line in London, but would function completely differently. It passes through Downtown, and then subsequently hits neighborhoods based on a couple main criteria
  • Population density
  • Shopping/Entertainment attraction
  • Sports Venue
  • Access to Hospitals
  • Access to main hubs for employment
The stations, in order, are
  1. Steel Plaza (Transfer for T)
  2. First Avenue (Transfer for T)
  3. Station Square (Transfer for T, Incline)
  4. 10th Street Bridge (Alight for Entertainment District)
  5. South Side Works (Alight for Entertainment District)
  6. Oakland Central (Alight for Universities, Hospitals, and Museums)
  7. Squirrel Hill
  8. Point Breeze/Shadyside
  9. East Liberty
  10. Shadyside Central (Alight for UPMC Presbyterian Hospital Shadyside)
  11. Lawrenceville (Alight for Children's Hospital)
  12. Strip District (Alight for Greyhound/Amtrack)
  13. Allegheny Commons
  14. North Shore/Stadiums (Transfer for T, Alight for Stadiums)
  15. Gateway Center (Transfer for T)
  16. Wood Street (Transfer for T)
The line would be automated, similar to Paris Metro Line 14. The automation would allow it to run at shorter headways without needing extra drivers (and salaries, and pensions, and benefits) and continue to run good frequency service in off peak hours. Also similar to Line 14, it would use a combination of traditional rail and rubber tires so it could climb the steeper grades needed in Pittsburgh's geography. The whole City Line would be approximately 15 miles long, and I'd estimate it would take 25-30 minutes to travel the entire length. This would mean that a trip from any one point to another would take a maximum of 12-15 minutes...not bad.

The sytem would also allow for extensions which would integrate into the City Line concept perfectly, which I will discuss in my next post.

Wednesday 14 November 2007

Pittsburgh Schenley

Everyone's got themselves all riled up because Mark Roosevelt has proposed a plan to close and relocate programs from certain schools, most notably Pittsburgh Schenley in Oakland. This is all part of a larger plan to retool PPS from the ground up. While Pittsburgh Schenley is a good school in a good location, and it will certainly be missed for many of its good factors, moves like this are needed to move PPS forward.

Now, I understand pride in one's high school. But people have to realize, the moves that are being made by Roosevelt are being done to improve the overall quality of the school district. Using the closing of Pittsburgh Schenley as a lightening rod to condemn the whole plan is both ridiculous and myopic.

I have heard Roosevelt speak last year, at the Pittsburgh Foundation. He's smart, innovative, and uses deep studies of educational problems to find correct solutions. I'm certain that the plan he has proposed is something that, while it will be tough for students in the short run, will help to make the district successful in the long run. That is what is important to Roosevelt, and really, what should be important to all Pittsburghers. The public school system that is in place right now is an artifact of a different time for our city, and serious reforms, like what Roosevelt has proposed, are needed to move us forward.

Thursday 8 November 2007

US Airways and the Senators

I've been very pleased by the current news of how our Pennsylvania members of congress and the Senate, especially Senator Specter, have been handling US Airways in the wake of their announcement to drastically reduce service in Pittsburgh.

It's good to know that our elected officials are standing up for our region in what has been a decade of broken promises. The mistake, it seems, was Pittsburgh putting too many eggs in one basket and catering to the needs of one airline. Unfortunately, this isn't ending, with the announcement in February that Pittsburgh has landed the new US Airways Operations Center, at the cost of $16 million in grants and tax credits coming from taxpayer's pockets. Maybe it's time we start using taxpayer money to reduce the tax burden on small business in the region, instead of putting so much money into a company that has continuously broken promises to the region.

You can see the news article about Specter/Casey's meeting with US Airways CEO here. Kudos to Senator Specter and our other PA legislators in Washington for coming down hard on US Airways - let's hope this means it won't happen again.

Monday 5 November 2007

Solution to Route Cuts

OK, but back to the subject of route cuts. My belief is that Port Authority should tackle this issue from the entirely opposite angle. Think about this. Go back to our hypothetical situation. This time, rather than cutting routes, get more people to ride the routes already in place. Simple idea, hard to execute. I firmly believe, though, that if Port Authority improved certain aspects of their system, most notably improving the information available at bus/T stops, more people would use the bus. My time in DC and London has implanted this belief in me. In London, for example, at every bus stop there is, along with the standard listing of buses that stop there:
  • Timetables for all buses that stop there
  • Route maps, usually in the form of straight line schematics, showing major stops/destinations
  • Area maps, showing other area bus stops
  • Area maps, showing all bus routes passing through the area
  • Lists of which buses stop at which bus stops in the area, so if you aren't at the right bus stop you can easily find the one you should be at
  • Index of major stops/destinations with cross references to bus routes that travel there
  • Area maps, showing night buses in the area with timetables
  • Electronic screen showing next three-four buses arriving, and how long until they arrive (only at major stops)
The idea behind this is that the easier you make it to ride the bus, the more like you are to actually ride it. Even being from Pittsburgh and using public transportation often, I still find it somewhat intimidating to ride a bus I have never rode before. I have, on a number of occasions, made the decision to drive rather than take the bus for this reason. If Port Authority provided maps, timetables, and information at bus stops, more people would ride the bus in the first place, and less route/frequency cuts would be necessary.

Public Transit solves problems

When speaking to TallE, he posed a question to me that I thought was both interesting and deserved a look here. He asked me "What sort of problems you think better public transit will solve for Pittsburgh/other medium American cities?" It's a very open ended question, and as such, I will be responding to it in a roundabout way. First, I am going to examine the quality of public transportation in Pittsburgh. Then, I will discuss why it's important for our city to continue to improve public transportation in order to make our city successful.

Let's face something. Pittsburgh's public transportation isn't that bad. It really isn't. In a recent discussion with my father, we marveled about how despite the size of our region, you can get nearly anywhere in Allegheny County on public transportation. Now, we ignored the fact that it might take you two or three hours to get there, and that you will undoubtedly be routed through Downtown whether that makes sense for where you're going or not. But still. That's not too bad, for a Port Authority which covers about 1.2 million people. But here's the problem. Faced with budget problems and ever increasing costs, consistent service is suffering. Late buses are being cut. Buses are coming less often. Routes that aren't used as often are going by the wayside.

Now let me pose a hypothetical situation. You have one bus route - the 900 - that travels east/west across the region. Prior to budget cuts, it runs three buses an hour, and has approximately 30% capacity on each trip. It's easy to say, in this situation, "why not cut two trips, run one per hour, and put everyone on to one bus. " Then you'd have one route that runs at 90% capacity." I don't think it's quite that simple. With every decrease in frequency, rather than shifting riders to new buses, you lose a significant percentage of them who no longer can handle the reduced frequency. It's simple economics: If you have a bus coming once an hour, people will wait longer for buses or will no longer have a bus that fits their work schedule, making it more inconvenient to use the bus. Because of this, many of these people will drive, rather than taking the bus. This is a problem for a number of reasons:
  • More cars on the road means more congestion, causing more delays to main destinations
  • More cars on the road mean more smog and worse air quality
  • Car ownership costs
  • Parking costs
  • Gas costs
There are many other reasons that it is bad that people would have to drive instead of taking public transport, but I tried to hit on some of the main ones. Those five reasons have some far reaching consequences, too. For example, public transportation is safer than driving. If more people are driving to work congesting roadways, that only increases the spread between the safety between driving and public transport. If people are spending more money on cars - car ownership/gas/parking/insurance costs an average of $700 a month (according to Flexcar, and granted they're biased) - they are spending less at their local restaurants, bars, and shops. So this brings me to perhaps the best reason that public transport is important in Pittsburgh - effective public transport helps the economy.

If people are more able to quickly and cheaply make it from their homes to the city, or from destination to destination within the city, they are more likely to take advantage of opportunities to shop, dine, and be entertained. If they have to schlep in the car, pay for parking, pay for gas, they will be more likely to stay close to home. Also, quality dedicated right-of-way public transit has been shown to boost economic development. When the government makes significant investment into, for example, a light rail system, businesses develop around it because they know it will be there and it will make their business more accessible. Silver Spring, MD is a fantastic example of this - despite having a history back into the 1800s, the DC Metro station brought new investment and development into Silver Spring and has made it into the bustling town it is today. So really, quality public transport is a huge boon to the economy in any city, large or small, and that's what makes it so important to Pittsburgh.

I could go into a few more issues on why it's important, especially for young people, but I will leave that for another day. I will also, in the next few days, outline why route and frequency cuts in bus routes are perhaps the opposite of what Port Authority should be doing to save our public transportation system.

In other news, I'm very excited for the Mayoral election tomorrow, and I'm hoping that this election will be the catalyst that Pittsburgh needs to start moving forward.

Thursday 1 November 2007

Why do cities matter?

I'll tell you a story. It's one some people have heard before, but it'll be new to most of you.

On a recent trip to a restaurant in London, I found myself at a table with a number of students, all study abroaders from universities around the US. I don't know how conversation brought us to it, but I predictably started talking about what a great city Pittsburgh is. After some discussion, one of the gentlemen I was sitting with blurts out "Pittsburgh's not even a real city!"

Dismayed, and still assuming he'd burst into laughter as if it was a joke, I gave him a few seconds. Nothing. So, once again predictably, I began defending my city with ferocity. I tried to get across to this guy, a New Yorker, that the United States is about more than just Boston, New York, Philly, Chicago, and L.A. He began backing up his argument by telling me that, in order to be a city, a place has to have distinct areas, like an uptown and a downtown. I laughed briefly to myself, realizing that this guy was nothing more than a fool, and totally misunderstood what it means to be a city like Pittsburgh. I explained that we have many distinct areas, from the North Side, to the South Side, to Oakland, Downtown. Pittsburgh is one of many cities, great cities, that are really important to this country. He failed to understand why, and I left the dinner, frustrated.

In a way, this experience was one of my main motivations for starting this blog. The United States has never and will never be only those few big cities. The small and medium sized cities of our country matter, and they matter a lot. Unfortunately, it seems that so many cities, Pittsburgh being a prime example, are faced with substantial uphill battles right now. A city that once was extremely important in American industry, that had nearly 600,000 residents at its peak, has been dying. The loss of big industry has hurt Pittsburgh and many cities like it. We are plagued by budget problems, dwindling funding and support for public transportation, blight, and an exodus of our youth. And perhaps the biggest problem is simple - ineffective and uninspirational government, hanging it's hat on the most mundane accomplishments.

Only through close examination of these issues and thoughtful innovation will Pittsburgh be able to live on in its past splendor. And sure, it's never going to be an industrial hub again. But that doesn't matter. What matters is that the cities aren't forgotten, and that through this examination of the issues, we learn how Pittsburgh can be a success. Luckily there is no shortage of pride in our city, and people truly care about the revival of it.

Now, I realized I haven't explained why cities matter. I feel like that will be our continuous endeavor. But, in an attempt to prove it, I'll leave you with a quote from a Howard Finegold article about Pittsburgh from 2005 : "In America, pride of place is an all-but-forgotten form of salvation. Cities matter."

So true. Not that it proved anything...but stay tuned!

Wednesday 31 October 2007

Welcome

Cities Matter will be a blog about the problems afflicting small and medium sized cities. I will focus mainly on the City of Pittsburgh, my hometown, as a case study for where cities like it go right, and go wrong. No urban issues are off limits.

Ground rules of the blog:
-Open minds only. I plan to look at issues in different and innovative ways.
-Post comments if you read. Discussion is what leads us to true innovation.
-Keep it civil