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Monday, June 26, 2017

Message sent to the Stakeholder Task Force of the WP Transit District Study about the BUSES!

Task force members: http://whiteplainsny.gov/index.aspx?NID=616

from: Ken Matinale
to: transitdistrict@whiteplainsny.gov
date: Mon, Jun 26, 2017 at 6:58 AM
subject: White Plains, NY

http://white-plains-ny.blogspot.com/


The Common Council has not provided any information about all the HUGE buses that are all over downtown. How about you?

Even yesterday, Sunday, Greyhound and Adirondack regional buses were roaring along North Broadway and then down residential Barker Avenue. Do you know that? How does that benefit White Plains residents?

How do Coach, Leros, and other private buses benefit White Plains residents?

And aren't the MANY private buses just a way for non-poor people to avoid riding the Westchester County Bee-Line buses, which rarely have even one third of their seats occupied when driving to/from the White Plains bus terminal, the Transmania?

What does your planning do about all that? Or are you simply trying to placate groups like the Battle Hill and Fisher Hill associations?

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

NO TRUCKS sign on Fisher Avenue, so how about a NO BUSES sign on Barker Avenue?

At the Rochambeau school on Fisher Avenue there are two signs hung vertically:

NO TRUCKS

TRUCK ROUTE
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Trucks heading south are directed to make a right and head toward the industrial area but not continue past the school and further into the residential area.

The top sign limits trucks by weight.

So if the city can  do that, why can't it direct buses away from residential Barker Avenue and onto non-residential Hamilton Avenue?

And if that doesn't do it, get creative. Maybe enforce the speed limit with a cop car or two posted with a radar gun clearly visible. Make Barker Avenue one way during hours of most use by buses, except for residents. How about a sign suggesting that they use Hamilton Avenue? Come on, come. How about a little: where's a will there's a way, instead of hey, we have no idea what to do. Our hands are tied. We give the heck up.

How about FINALLY changing the direction of all those convoluted streets in the train station area, so that the buses have a better entry/exit than Barker Avenue and Water Street? How difficult can that be? The mayor has been talking about it for almost two years. Doesn't the Traffic Department have a plan yet?

And please address the entire issue of whether White Plains benefits from all these buses going to/from the train station.

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

Bus categories violating downtown, in case any city officials care.

Common Council members, spend a few minutes at about 5:30 PM at the intersection of Barker Avenue and Church Street. See for yourselves. Come on. Get around downtown occasionally.

Three general groups of buses:

1. Westchester county Bee-Line: mostly empty except during rush hour; poor people going to work for rich people.

2. Private (Leros, etc.): companies providing transportation to/from the train station for employees who won't ride the Bee-Line with poor people. Because Church Street is still one way between Hamilton Avenue and Barker Avenue, the passengers from the big office building on the corner board private buses on Church Street and the bus then proceeds to Barker, then left to the train station.

3. Regional (Adirondack, Greyhound, etc.): few passengers; why do they bother with White Plains, except for passengers to transfer to the train and continue on to New York City?

Do you really think that people, even millennials, want to live at the functional equivalent of the 8th Avenue Port Authority bus terminal?

Sunday, June 18, 2017

Buried on city website: White Plains Transit District Request for Expression of Interest.

http://www.cityofwhiteplains.com/bids.aspx?bidID=7

It does, of course, mentioned the resident groups of concern to Common Council members: "adjacent neighborhoods including Battle Hill, Fisher Hill, and Ferris Avenue".

Hey, how about people living on Barker Avenue, North Broadway, Lake Street, Martine Avenue, ...?

White Plains Common Council ignores downtown residents.

7:30 AM on a sleepy, foggy Sunday morning and monster buses, first Greyhound then county, are already roaring down Barker Avenue heading toward the train station. They never use non-residential Hamilton Avenue. Never.

Traffic commissioner Tom Soyk will assure you that he is powerless to do anything about this. Maybe make a meaningless, ineffectual phone call to someone at a bus company, then continue with 100% unimaginative administrative duties.

Many posts about this mess have appeared on this blog, all ignored by White Plains Common Council members, even when a link to a post has been sent to each. The same will be done with this post, both the sending and the ignoring.

Are White Plains Common Council members really that oblivious, disinterested, incompetent? If they actually wanted to see the bus mess, simply go to the intersection of Barker and Church at 5:30 PM any weekday. After ten minutes, the nature of it will become apparent.

As written previously, White Plains residents living in downtown apartments are a bizarre oddity to White Plains Common Council members, all of whom live in houses nowhere near downtown, an area that exists only for their amusement. Given all that, White Plains Common Council members are as involved and interested as one might expect: not very. How do they get away with this benign neglect?

1. At large voting. White Plains Common Council members are elected city wide, not by geographic area. They pretend to represent all residents but only care about their immediate neighbors and the Council of Neighborhood  Associations (CNA). The CNA seems like a company organized union, one that makes it easier for the company to control the workers. The CNA never holds any meetings in downtown White Plains. Never.

2. Those of us who live in downtown White Plains apartments are dumb and lazy. It's embarrassing to admit this but it's obviously true. We have enough people to easily overcome reason number one but don't do anything. It's pretty sad.

So the buses roll into downtown. Has any city official explained how this benefits White Plains generally and downtown residents, who get the brunt of the traffic, danger, noise, pollution, congestion, specifically? The buses also park wherever they please and never get a ticket for that or for speeding. Never.