GoGeary then GoBoozing.

Posted in san francisco, transit, sfgov, muni, gogeary on July 27th, 2006 by MarkBallew

If you’re tired of bitching about Muni, now here’s your chance to do something about it. I’ll be there, but I won’t be buying anyone drinks at Trad’r Sam. :) Well, maybe the mayor.

Spread the link.

(What is a BRT?)

Mental organics

Posted in mark ballew, cable car, reading, urbanism, shopping, reviews on July 26th, 2006 by MarkBallew

If there is any point in the day I look forward to the most, it is sitting in Snow Park beside Lake Merritt. After being cooped up in my noisy and stuffy cube-city of an office, picking up a book and sitting out there for an hour gives me a chance to find a different head space.

My latest set of books are both by Dan Brown, which my older sister graciously sent me. The first is the famed Da Vinci Code, which I felt was at best luke warm. The character development is so so, and the plot is somewhat predictable. It is junk literature, but easy to pick up where I left off.

The next is Deception Point, which is much more to my liking. It has action, intrigue, mystery, and politics! It is still junk in my mind, but some times I run over my lunch break doing the whole “one more chapter!” scheme.

On the San Francisco side of the pond, I’ve found this great up and coming grocery delivery service called Planet Organics. The way it works if you go to their website and pick a weekly packet for delivery. I’m doing half veggies and half fruit, but I can have all fruit, all veggies, or some other sort of combo. In addition, I can have regular items added to my cart. They carry the same or similar product as Trader Joes, and have outstanding customer service.

Every Tuesday, I come home from work and shortly there after I get a phone call from my front door buzzer. I let the delivery person in, they come up to the 9th floor and drop off a reusable plastic and/or polystyrene bin, and my shopping for the week is done. As far as pricing, they require a minimum $32 order. They have sales, but everything is pretty much full retail. No delivery charge, but that is really just built into the price.

The quality of the fresh food is outstanding. I used to eat out most weeks, and with the exception of going over to the cable car turnaround for some of Blondie’s pizza now and then, I can make food at home and eat like a king. The veggies and fruit must be picked only a day before being dropped off, because they are more fresh than anything I’ve gotten at any store, including TJ’s. It all also goes bad come Tuesday, but then I just get restocked!

Time to battle

Posted in san francisco, street cars, transit, trains, meetings, muni, breda, gogeary, parc55 on July 22nd, 2006 by MarkBallew

Sometimes the battles come to me, some times I come to the battles.

The first is the case of the battle coming to me is the new jet-sounding air exhaust system that the Parc 55 Renaissance Hotel installed just outside my apartment’s window a couple weeks ago. It is huge, loud, and runs full blast because of the latest heat wave to hit California. I’m not the only one who has to be annoyed by these buzzing fans, since the entire south side of the building faces them and I can hear it from the street level too.

The first stage of this battle is to look up noise ordinances, contact the San Francisco Tenants Union, and send the Parc 55 a letter. If that fails, I may have to resort to getting a lawyer as stage 2.

The second is the case of me coming to the battle is the GoGeary movement to implement a BRT system along the Geary corridor. While this is a good idea, it isn’t the best idea. Do we need more diesel powered vehicles on the road? They are noisy, uncomfortable to ride, and have short useful life times. Why they don’t expand the light rail to Geary is beyond me. Well, actually, it isn’t. Local business are meddling in the deployment of light rail, fearing that it will cost them business due to parking spots being lost.

I don’t know about you, but if I can take a non-crush capacity vehicle to your business, I’ll likely spend money. Why a another vehicle in Muni’s fleet? Why not the devil we know, the Breda cars?

I’ve been doing some research, of which I’ve made some very interesting finds on both San Francisco’s internal workings as well as just how a BRT will not help the dire situation the 38-Geary line is in. I’m going to prepare a 2-minute statement and let Muni and the GoGeary folks know during the project meeting on July 29th.

Heck, I don’t even take the Geary line anymore. I moved because it was just so bad — the downtown area transit is so much better. And guess what, it is mostly electric rail!

We have to set the president.

Who tags the Muni buses?

Posted in san francisco, tagging, transit, muni on July 19th, 2006 by MarkBallew

Go here to see why Muni buses are in such bad shape: Kids proudly damaging multiple trolleys.

(reported to sfpd via rescuemuni)

Spare the SUV is tomorrow

Posted in san francisco, street cars, bart, east bay, transit, trains, transbay terminal, sfgov, market street railway, cars, price of gas, muni on July 16th, 2006 by MarkBallew

The Transportation Commission pulled $5.3m out of car registration fees for 3 more spare the air days. So guess what? Transit is free tomorrow. [Linky linky].

I was wondering why my DMV fees were so high — so enjoy a ride on one of the 25 transit agencies on my dime. No really, go ahead, and don’t forget to exit using the rear doors (STEP DOWN!!!).

(ridership goes up 10%, or 155,000 people, on STA days)

Gas price goes up… demand goes up?

Posted in street cars, transit, trains, cars, price of gas on July 13th, 2006 by MarkBallew

The price of gas is at an all-time high today, $76.40 a barrel That’s $1.81 before being refined, shipped, and sold.

In the past year, the price of gas has gone way up, and at some stations flirts with the $4/gal price tag. So what are Americans to do? We consume 40% of the world gasoline, and we are starting to pay near what other developed countries pay. The solution?

Americans consumed 1.7% more gas now than they did last year.

Source: CNNMoney

I have theories on why Americans have failed to conserve fuel, beyond “Americans love their cars”:

1. There is no viable mass transit infrastructure in most cities
2. Municipalities are slow to build new transit
3. New transit is usually diesel consuming buses, since they are easy and rapid to deploy
4. Americans, especially those with families, aren’t sure how to use the system properly (assuming it did work)
5. Most cities aren’t used to car pool / car share programs (these save a lot of gas)
6. “Gas guzzling” cars get more advertising time on TV, Americans incorrectly think “fuel consumption == performance”

Sitting in on a MSR board meeting

Posted in san francisco, street cars, transit, trains, sfgov, market street railway, meetings on July 11th, 2006 by MarkBallew

At 6:30, I walked over to the Flood Building around the corner to sit in on a Market Street Railway meeting. I wanted to see what kind of people attended, how the meetings were conducted, and find out the who’s who.

As with any meeting, minutes were called, and the budget was discussed. Various tidbits were discussed, the meat of the gathering being about the new museum and store opening near the Ferry Building. It was your standard meeting stuff, finding out what they can sell, profit margins on their calendar, and the like.

A few MSR members brought some old photos they had dug out of their closets, mainly photos of old rail cars in Hayes Valley, as well as they stories attached to them.

“The 21 line, seen here at 700 Hayes St on it’s last day of service, had to have it’s rail replaced on the last day of service. Muni had little choice, other street cars needed to cross that line, so the 21 got to run over some freshly laid track on it’s last day of service. All these buildings you see here in the background are still there to this day. Circa 1941.”

One of the local landmarks presidents said a few words by proxy for a very old gentleman who wanted to preserve the old LRV shelters. There are about 6 in San Francisco still, the two I can remember are the Fort Mason one, and the other is the Dolores Park shelter. When taking the J-Church through Dolores Park, note the old street car passenger shelter as you come out of the right away into the park. Back behind that is an old Muni LRV shelter, part of the original line, fenced over and covered in litter and graffiti. There is an effort to restore that brewing, so if anyone wants to help clean that up, I’m sure Dolores Park would look even more beautiful after.

I wouldn’t say an MSR meeting is the most exciting thing in the world, though I may show up to the September meeting. If you like trains, and you like to see all the people in their 50’s discuss train politics, that’s the place to be.

Also, Muni is all powerful. Bow to Muni. Nothing happens without Muni’s grace.

The trick is to remember the end of the day

Posted in san francisco, street cars, transit, trains, caltrain, transbay terminal, sfgov on July 10th, 2006 by MarkBallew

I think what really keeps me going at the end of the day is knowing that when it is time to go home, I’m going back to San Francisco, 5 days a week.

Also, I watched some SFGovTV tonight. Yes, pretty dry stuff, but I found the meetings on the Third Street Light Rail, Transbay Terminal Project, and Financing for the Caltrain Electrification Project rather fascinating.

Points of interest:
* The Board of supervisors insists on a Jan 1, 2007 revenue date for the third street light rail

* CalTrain is willing to do what ever accommodations are required to integrate into the new Transbay Terminal, even arrogantly implying they’ll be done first anyhow (no doubt they will, talk about having your shit together)

* The Electrified Caltrain trains and tracks will have an estimated operating life time of 100 years!

eBART At the speed of government

Posted in bart, east bay, transit on July 9th, 2006 by MarkBallew

I’ve been doing research on the state of the various transit systems in the bay area lately. This time around I took a look at eBart, the Bart expansion from Pittsburg to Byron.

First of all, I think any expansion of Bart is a good idea — I’ve felt for some time now that Bart is a good system: always on time, reduces suburban traffic, and joins together Bay Area economic centers. It has it’s problems, like not always being the cleanest thing in the world, and it is sort of expensive. In the end I still feel Bart is an extremely good deal for a single traveler, though for a family it can be pricer than a cab, depending on how far they are traveling.

All of that said, I must wonder out loud why it takes 5 years to build a 23 mile route? Actually, according to their timeline, construction is a whopping 2.5 years! What are they doing for the other 2 and a half? “Scoping” and “Right of Way”. Does it really take 5 years to do all this? I’m not a project manager by any extent of the imagination, but maybe 24 months would be enough time for only 23 miles! It certainly doesn’t take that long for a freeway.

I won’t even ask why they didn’t start on this project until 2005; over 30 years since Bart was put into revenue service. Is the price of gas starting to hurt or something? Too many cars on your 6 lane freeways?

Street cars

Posted in san francisco, tagging, street cars on July 3rd, 2006 by MarkBallew

Anyone that knows me knows that I like trains. I have since I was little, and now that I can actually ride trains every day, and I’m talking classic street cars here, I’m in a virtual train paradise.

There are plans to expand these Museums in Motion to not only go from the Castro to Fisherman’s warf, but to go from the Caltrain station to the Presideo via the circa 1912 Fort Mason Tunnel.

This is all pretty exciting to me, and I’ve been looking for ways to help contribute to the culture of San Francisco. Some people help out with gay rights, women’s rights, or helping the homeless and drug addicted. I’ve chosen to help the transit system. I’ve sent off a $100 donation, which will be matched by one of the Market Street Railroad’s sponsors, then attending the MSR’s meeting on July 11th to see what is going on in the group. They hold their meetings literally next door to my apartment, so making the 6:30pm meeting shouldn’t be a problem.

So the next time you see some kid scratching a window on a train, or pulling out his felt tip marker, you’ll know that I’ll be the one possibly cleaning that up, or putting fresh paint on the side of the train, or calling you up at dinner time asking for $35 to go to the street cars.