Congestion Pricing Gets the Shiv

State of NYC map
Now that I can get my head above water after an extended charette, I wholly agree with Adam: Basically, fuck Sheldon Silver for killing Congestion Pricing for New York City.1 Of course, the New York Times is far more diplomatic, yet as scathing of Sheldon Silver:

Rarely does one man have a chance to do so much harm to so many.
New Yorkers should remember Monday as the day Sheldon Silver, the Assembly speaker, used the power of his office to deprive them of $354 million in federal funds to help mass transporation, ease traffic congestion and improve the air that all New Yorkers breathe.
Backed by his Democratic conference, the speaker killed congestion pricing in the most cowardly way: without even holding a vote. Mr. Silver said so many members of his own conference were against the plan that it would never pass. How many? Who knows? The speaker hid behind closed doors to keep the public from watching his cronies do the deed.

It isn’t just that the door was closed on congestion pricing but that it was defeated in a profoundly undemocratic (yet typical of Albany) method. What transpired here is also analogous with the push for universal health care in President Clinton’s first term. While Speaker Silver, who incidentally represents Lower Manhattan, was instrumental in the blocking of the congestion pricing proposal (and is thus responsible for the resulting $17.5 billion MTA shortfall) the placing of the shiv was aided and abetted by plenty of outer borough legislators; I’m looking at you Richard Brodsky from Westchester. I think it is high-time to reinstate the commuter tax for those who use our services yet pay nothing for them:

A recent report by two Hunter College economists Howard Chernick and Oleysa Tkacheva estimates that commuters cost the city between 2.2 and 3.8 percent of the city budget, or between $1.2 and $1.9 billion a year. The annual cost to the police force alone is an additional $185 million. The same report found that on average commuters earned 37 percent more than residents. The authors concluded that “the elimination of the commuter tax imposed a significant, and in our view, unfair fiscal burden on the City of New York.” 2

Food for thought: as I’ve postulated before about the possibilities of New York City becoming the 51st State, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) already apportions data along similar lines; the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA Metropolitan Statistical Area is a Metropolitan Statistical Area with a population of 18,815,988 according to the July 1, 2007 U.S. Census Bureau estimates. All we need now is the courtroom scene in Miracle on 34th Street to transpire, with large bags of mail and a judge wanting to be reelected; perhaps then New York City could become a state.
Lastly, I recommend reading this postmortem, Machiavelli meets the Big Apple – Ten reasons NYC’s congestion pricing plan went belly up:

1. Machiavelli’s dictum: “There is nothing more difficult to take in hand,” Machiavelli wrote in The Prince, “than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things … the innovator has for enemies all those who have done well under the old conditions, and lukewarm defenders in those who may do well under the new.” When pricing advocates return with a new plan — perhaps a variant of the Kheel Plan — we will do well to take this dictum to heart.

  1. Incidentally, I still have no clue why and how New York State can control what New York City does with their roads. &#8617
  2. If anyone has a copy of The Commuter Tax and the Fiscal Cost of Commuters to New York City by Howard Chernick and Oleysa Tkacheva please email me at randy AT plemel.com &#8617

Is Washington DC a Portal for Satan?

Satanic DC
From the You are the very definition of selection and confirmation bias, comes this article discussing whether or not Washington DC is a portal for Satan:

Presidential candidate John McCain keeps calling Washington the city of Satan. Turns out he’s not alone.
“McCain was right,” said David Bay, speaking by phone from Lexington, S.C., where as director of Cutting Edge Ministries he has long asserted that Washington’s streets are positioned to usher in Lucifer as “the ultimate master of Government Center.”

The most persistent rumblings about Washington as the devil’s workshop seem bound up in history about the city’s design and the role of Freemasons in building it. It’s a connection explored in the three-hour DVD “Riddles in Stone: The Secret Architecture of Washington, D.C.,” which notched a respectable 90th out of 1,363 titles recently in Amazon’s general history documentary category.

Look at the facts: Angled streets! Freemasons! That’s incontrovertible proof! The prosecution rests.

Access to the Region’s Core in NY Times

the tunnel project study map
I’ve written about Access to the Region’s Core – the new two-track rail tunnel under the Hudson River, but today The New York Times has an extensive write-up of the project, Tunnel Milestone, and More to Come:

But the tunnels reached their peak-hour capacity in 2003 when the Secaucus transfer hub opened. So New Jersey Transit and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey are planning to spend $7.6 billion to build a second set that will more than double, to 48 an hour, the number of trains that can traverse the Hudson.
The project, called Access to the Region’s Core, or ARC, is in some ways as monumental as the first tunnels, which cost the Pennsylvania Railroad $111 million, a price tag that included the old Pennsylvania Station and four other tunnels under the East River. (It’s about $2.5 billion now when accounting for inflation.)
If federal approval is given this summer and grants are secured later this year, construction will begin in early 2009 and take eight years. Contractors will deploy boring machines the length of football fields to drill through granite, schist and other materials, use laser-guided satellite signals to pinpoint their location, and carve a path under 34th Street so wide that commuters will be able to walk underground to 14 subway lines, and to PATH, Amtrak, New Jersey Transit and Long Island Rail Road trains.

Also see a multimedia explanation about the two different tunnels and what the Future Stewart Express Might Look Like which would utilize the new tunnels.

A Survey of Shed Roofs as Unifying Elements in Contemporary Architecture

Le Fresnoy – Bernard Tschumi

IMG_3085IMG_3085, originally uploaded by maos

Southern Cross Station – Nicholas Grimshaw


By tobermory womble

Terminal 4 Madrid Barajas Airport – Richard Rogers


Photo by coolmonfrere
Terminal 4 Madrid Barajas Airport Axon
Axon by Richard Rogers

Bordeaux Law Courts – Richard Rogers


Photo by Le Kizz

Waterloo International Terminal – Nicholas Grimshaw


Photo by youbrokemytaco

National Assembly for Wales – Richard Rogers


Photo by TFDuesing