Category Archives: Veolia

Petition the RTA!

Transport for NOLA is accelerating its work in 2012. In fact, we are moving so fast we can’t wait for the new year—we need your support starting now.

Today we are launching our first official petition of the Regional Transit Authority. The RTA has installed GPS transmitters on all streetcars, buses, and new stop signs but don’t release the data to the public.

We want the publicly-funded public transportation agency to make its data open to the public.

People in cities across America have successfully lobbied transit agencies to open their data. With open data, citizens can develop creative ways to make public transportation more predictable, dependable and easier to use–San Francisco’s BART has over 30 different apps that track the system.

The RTA needs to release their data to the public so New Orleanians can have the same opportunity. Sign our petition at change.org and share it with your family, friends and colleagues. Open data facilitates better transit service, which in turn facilitates a more prosperous New Orleans.

Sign and share the petition now!

Learn more about how this petition got started at Neighborland, and learn more about open transit data in the video below:

A Case for Open Data in Transit from Streetfilms on Vimeo.

 

Letter to the Editor on LED Lights on Streetcar

Jackie Dadakis recently submitted a letter to the editor at the Times-Picayune expressing Transport for NOLA’s support for the RTA’s new LED headlights and flashing lights (queue Kanye?) on the St. Charles streetcar line, which have improved the safety and visibility of the streetcars. The LED issue also drives to the heart of a larger issue that the RTA and Veolia are confronting: the tension between modernizing the St. Charles streetcars while abiding by the regulations placed on the streetcar as a result of being listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.

The Times-Picayune published the letter here.

Dear Sir:

In response to the letter concerning the LED lights on the St Charles Streetcars, I respectfully disagree with the author about maintaining the historic nature of the line. Landmarking the St. Charles line as an historic landmark was an innovative tool for preserving the transit system in an era when highways were king. It is not, however, an effective policy for guiding safety and operating decisions on the current line.

The new LED lights and the signs urging drivers to look both ways are steps the RTA took to reduce the number of vehicular, bike, and human accidents that occur on the line. The new features make the streetcars much more visible to the other traffic and they thus improve the safety and performance of the line. Since introducing these safety measures, the system has experienced a decline from 20 to 11 accidents/100,000 miles, a nearly 50% reduction.

To insist that the system remain static puts an undue operating burden on the transit system. Moreover, the insistence that we maintain the St. Charles Streetcar as is discriminates against disabled citizens, reduces the total capacity of the system by using smaller outdated cars, and affects on-time performance because the cars lack modern equipment like radios and defoggers.

I am proud that New Orleans is home to the longest running streetcar line in the world. To maintain that record, we must allow the system to embrace modern technology that improves safety and efficiency so the line can remain viable for another 100 years.

Jacquelyn Dadakis

Board Member

Transport for NOLA

20110716-062109.jpg