Tag Archives: Denton

Denton Neighborhood Alliance candidate forum, TONIGHT 7PM

Denton Neighborhood Alliance Forum
April 23, 2009
7:00 p.m.
City Council Chambers
City Hall
215 E. McKinney

I urge as many Denton residents as possible to go to these candidate forums and participate.  Show up 15 minutes early, fill out cards with questions, and wait for answers from the city council candidates.  This is a prime time to see who supports biking and pedestrian infrastructure improvements.  Don’t forget, frustration with bicycle and pedestrian paths is the #3 complaint from the recent citizen survey.

I hope to see you there, but don’t shake my hand, because I’m sneezing with a cold…

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Denton Community Bike Parade: April 21st @ 6pm

Denton Community Bike Parade

The growing community of cyclists is coming together on the streets of Denton this Tuesday in celebration of Earth Week. The Denton Community Bike Parade is a friendly demonstration of the growing number of cyclists in our city, all in one place at one time.

This Tuesday, April 21st @ 6pm.

Meetup at the corner of Fry st and Hickory st.

Join us in celebrating bikes across Denton.

And thanks to our friends at Querenicia for organizing it.

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A Shared Vision for A Shared Future

Thanks to a streetsblog post, I noticed a bold announcement from the U.S. Deputy Secretary of DOT.  I know that he was addressing a regional east coast group, but these words still ring out as a federally endorsed initiative from the top of the DOT command chain.  Via nymtc.org:

Keynote speaker Vice Admiral Thomas Barrett, Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Department of Transportation, discussed the Obama Administration’s key transportation priorities, emphasizing the role the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 will play in the nation’s economic recovery, as well as their approach for integrating transportation and land use through innovative programs such as the recently announced joint HUD/DOT Sustainable Communities initiative. 

I can’t overstate my thought that Denton is poised to become a model city for sustainable multi-modal transit.  It might not happen unless we ask for it, though.  Some key people in the city, like the mayor and Pete Kamp, support multi-modal transit, but so far I haven’t seen a collective citizen campaign to bolster and encourage it.  

Denton stands to gain so much from attracting intelligent innovators, who may have previously thought of Denton as a transitional college town.  This article from Fast Company sums it up succinctly:

If the suburb is a big loser in mortgage crisis episode, then who is the winner? Not surprisingly, the New Urbanists, a group of planners, developers and architects devoted to building walkable towns based on traditional designs, have interpreted the downturn as vindication of their plans for mixed-use communities where people can stroll from their homes to schools and restaurants.

Richard Florida, a Toronto business professor and author of “Who’s Your City?: How the Creative Economy Is Making Where to Live the Most Important Decision of Your Life,” argues that dense and diverse cities with “accelerated rates of urban metabolism” are the communities most likely to innovate their way through economic crisis. In an article published in this month’s issue of The Atlantic, he posits that New York is at a relative advantage, despite losing a chunk of its financial engine, because the jostling proximity of architects, fashion designers, software writers and other creative types will reenergize its economy.

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riding through rain

If the radar looks like this, don’t despair:

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Weather.com says it’s 36 deg F outside, and it was raining lightly on my commute this morning.  Tools I use to accommodate cold rain are these:

  1. Rain Suit or Poncho, the cheaper you go, the easier they tear.  The cheap stuff lasts me one season.
  2. Wooly hat under helmet
  3. Gloves, preferably waterproof.  Right now I have plastic bags to cover my fuzzy gloves, if necessary.
  4. Sunglasses.  Even though it’s cloudy, I don’t like stinging drops in my eyes.
  5. Fenders.  Today I used the SKS raceblade fenders, which are so-so in my opinion.
  6. Lights, duh.  
  7. Boots, see photo below
  8. If you’re miserable, sing a song, recite a poem, laugh.  It works, trust me. 

 

Boots + Powergrip straps = dry, warm, harmonious
Boots + Powergrip straps = dry, warm, harmonious

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ride slow look around

It’s quite easy when on a bike to pull over, walk 10 feet, feel the breeze, and take a photo.  In a car, I probably wouldn’t have noticed this, and if I did, I might not bother to stop and take a photo.

This is the kind of work commute that I like:

tx77

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Peticab Woofbiking

The pup had a vet appointment this morning (for ehrlichia), and we both decided not to use the car.  I think it’s about a mile or so each way, with a couple hills.  We went down Hickory, through the square, and down Locust to the Small Animal Wellness Center.  The Burley D’Lite trailer worked marvelously, and it take about 30 seconds to attach to a bike’s rear triangle.  I put a blanket down so Chase’s nails couldn’t hurt the trailer fabric, and amazingly, he just curled up and even slept a little (when his nose wasn’t up in the wind). 

img_0269

He's so curled up, you can BARELY see his head in the trailer.

I CAN HAS SLEEPING

I CAN HAS SLEEPING

 

Whoa, this.... is the sign of a good vet.  Love the autograph legibility and punctuation.

Whoa, this.... is the sign of a good vet. Love the autograph legibility and punctuation.

 

 

On Monday, Kimchi the ancient kitty will get the same peticab transit to the vet.  She usually yowls during car transport, so we’ll see if this proves any different.

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cyclist hit at Hickory/Ave D

Anyone got the scoop on this?  I found it on the UNT PD blotter page, which should have an RSS feed but doesn’t.

Friday, February 13, 2009

17:07 Minor Crash – A staff member reported a bicyclist was struck by a vehicle, W Hickory St/Ave D, City of Denton. Officers and EMS responded to the scene. A state motor vehicle crash report was completed.

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indexified!

Finally, Harpers put 25 years of the index online, and it’s searchable.

The results for “sex” are… illuminating. Of course, I typed in “bicycle” too:

  • Percentage increase, since 1975, in the number of Americans who commute to work on bicycles: 325
  • Number of bicycles for every car in China: 200
  • Energy, in megawatt hours, saved over thirty-five years by a bicycle rider who does not drive a car: 109
  • Portion of these savings that will be used up over the extra years the biker will live: 9/10

Mega means million and a watt is a unit of power.

A megawatt hour is the amount of power used if 1,000,000 watts are used for 1 hour, or 1 watt is used for 1,000,000 hours. If 100 light bulbs each using 1,000 watts of power are turned on for 10 hours, they will use 100 x 1,000 x 10 watt hours = 1,000,000 watt hours = 1 megawatt hour.

Most electric companies charge for the number of kilowatt hours used. A megawatt hour is 1,000 kilowatt hours.

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14% of Denton ride bicycles as primary transportation!?

UPDATE 2/8: The DentonRC just published a front page article discussing these same survey results. Unfortunately they only mentioned the top two citizen complaints. #3 is walking and bicycle trails. 😦

So I noticed the city posted a link on their site to some survey results. There’s a wealth of important data here, and a significant portion illuminating how dentonites feel about the state of our sidewalks and bike paths. There’s so much data that I’ll just post this little tidbit to get the ball rolling.

Respondents were asked how often they use a bicycle as a primary mode of
transportation. As shown in Figure 7, 85.9 percent of respondents answered “never.”
Fourteen percent used a bicycle as their primary mode of transportation either daily (2.8
percent), weekly (4.3 percent) or monthly (7.0 percent).
Primary usage of a bicycle (at least monthly) was greater among male respondents,
college graduates, employed respondents, renters, respondents with children under 18
living in the household, and Internet survey respondents (see Table 70).

So if that survey was assumed to represent the entire city population of 115,506, that would mean 16,171 people are riding bikes as their primary transportation.

Another quick observation which deserves discussion is that bike and walking trails received the 3rd highest negative response from all city service categories. Hmmmmmmmmm.

Cyclists and pedestrians of Denton, find your voice.

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