Art of Transit: check out the fancy new ‘bike hotel’ at a train station in Lillestrøm, Norway.
The FBI says that a foreign government intercepted an imminent threat specifically about the Universal City/Studio City Station on the Red Line, but declined to say which government. The Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department and the Los Angeles Police Department have said that law enforcement is working to determine if the threat was credible or a hoax. The FBI, LASD and LAPD held a news conference last night.
In the meantime, security has been ramped up at that station and across the Metro system, according to the agency. Here is the latest news release from Metro. The important point is, as always, be vigilant and you see something, say something. You can call Metro’s Transit Watch Hotline at 888.950.SAFE (7233) or notify us through the Transit Watch app.
I’d be remiss not to mention that this threat comes amid Metro’s consideration of a policing contract for the agency. The agency’s Board of Directors voted last week to delay a vote on that contract until February. The staff proposal calls for splitting the work between the LASD, LAPD and the Long Beach P.D.; the LASD is the sole agency in charge of the contract now. More in last week’s post.
Blue Line could see additional grade separations (Urbanize LA)
Long road to go on this issue but a feasibility study is being done for Metro that will look at the possibility of eliminating some street crossings for the Blue Line — which crosses dozens of streets and runs down the middle of some on its 22-mile route between downtown L.A. and downtown Long Beach. One of those crossings to be studied specifically is Wardow; a rendering is above.
Of course, funding is always an issue for this sort of thing. But the recently-approved Measure M sales tax measure could be of help. Stay tuned.
The rendering comes from this report, which includes several other studies underway to improve the Blue Line.
As the Metro-WeHo saga ends, which route will the Crenshaw/LAX Line take? (Urbanize LA)
Speaking of Measure M, one of the project it will help fund is a northern extension of the Crenshaw/LAX Line. The city of West Hollywood — a big-time supporter of Measure M and previous Metro sales tax measures — has lobbied hard to be connected to the Metro Rail system.
WeHo envisions that taking place with this project, which would route the Crenshaw/LAX Line north from its current northern terminus at Exposition Boulevard to West Hollywood and then to the Red Line in Hollywood. Under the Measure M spending plan, the project isn’t scheduled to open until the late 2040s but Metro officials have said they will try to accelerate this project and others through public-private partnerships — and that the environmentally study for this project will soon begin in case it can be accelerated.
The study will be key and Metro will likely hire a consultant (as per usual) to help write and research the study (these things are enormous). The study will ultimately decide a route and the route is what everyone is curious about as this line could potentially mean a light rail line that runs from Torrance via a Green Line extension, then up the route of the Crenshaw/LAX Line to WeHo and then to Hollywood.
Such a line would have transfers to the Green Line, Expo Line, Purple Line and Red Line, not to mention transfers to future Measure M projects — such as a rail line connecting LAX to the San Fernando Valley and a bus rapid transit project to run along Lincoln Boulevard between LAX and Santa Monica.
Yeah, that’s a lot to process and a lot of this stuff is still a ways down the road. But the passage of M will allow the studies to get underway on Crenshaw North and other projects and these studies should offer a clearer vision of what’s possible with our transit system.
Interlude that has little to do with transit: A year ago at this time there was still the possibility we’d be writing Go Metro to see the AFC-leading Raiders blog posts. That said, the fact that the Rams only surrendered 26 points to the Patriots is perhaps something positive. I wouldn’t be shocked if the Rams D gives the Falcons some issues this Sunday at the Coliseum; after all, the Falcons are known for starting strong and faaaading. How to Go Metro to Rams games is here.
Seattle transit agencies move toward mobile ticketing (Streetsblog)
King County Metro and Sound Transit will be rolling out the smartphone app that lets users buy transit tickets on their phone and forgo using an Orca Card, the area’s equivalent of our TAP card.
So will Metro be following suit? At some point quite possibly, says Metro’s TAP staff, who I spoke to yesterday about this issue.
First, one important point. There are no turnstiles at rail stations in the Seattle region. Patrons ‘tap’ their Orca cards before and after boarding and the appropriate fare is deduced from the balance on their cards. At the same time, and as Source readers have pointed out in the past, smart phones can be used to, for example, store a boarding pass and then board an airplane.
The concern Metro has about this technology is basically twofold:
First, there’s no single proprietary system that Metro can purchase that would allow a smartphone to get a passenger through a turnstile.
Second, sinking millions of taxpayer dollars on one particular system at this time doesn’t seem prudent because the technology still may change. The transit fare systems that do use smartphones are either ungated or have spent many millions of dollars on the technology.
Three, there are usually airport/airline staff on hand to help passengers use boarding passes on their smartphones. That’s not the case at Metro stations and turnstiles, which are often unstaffed.
In the meantime, the TAP card website does work on smartphones and riders can use it to add stored value to their TAP cards, with rail riders being able to use that stored value usually within about 15 minutes. It’s not the same as using your phone as a TAP card, but it does mean that you can add fares to your card even when you’re nowhere near a TAP vending machine. (It takes longer to use stored value purchased online on buses because that info is uploaded to the bus’ farebox/TAP system when the buses are back in their maintenance divisions).
On another front, Metro is working toward broadening the ways that TAP cards can be used. A contract approved by the agency’s Board of Directors last week will update TAP technology so that TAP cards can be used to purchase more than just transit — i.e. parking and bike share and car share and things along those lines.
Things to read whilst transiting: Fun graphics on the NYT’s Upshot blog on the people/things that President-elect Donald Trump has tweeted about the most over the past 18 months. By ‘about’ I mean ‘targeted.’ Of course, we all ‘target’ things at times. I recently went on a perhaps-wine-fueled late night Twitter rant against the ‘American Baking Show.’ Not entertaining!
Climate change will bring wetter storms to U.S., study says (NYT)
The study is by the National Center for Atmospheric Research and suggest that North America is in for more extreme weather events (as well as hotter weather), although there will be regional differences. California would not be impacted as much as other areas and the study doesn’t suggest we’ll get wetter — just that more rain could come in particularly serious storms.
Worried about global warming? As we’ve said before, generally speaking taking transit instead of driving alone is one way to reduce your greenhouse gas emissions. Walking and biking more often are even better.
Related: Trump’s meeting with Al Gore gives environmentalists hope, reports the NYT. The meeting was presumably about climate change, which has been an issue that Gore has long championed. But neither President-elect Trump or Gore is saying much and Trump continues to consider a number of appointees who have denied global warming for key government posts that concern the environment, the NYT adds.
Quasi-related: Google says it will run entirely on renewable energy by 2017, also reports the NYT. That will be quite a feat since Google last year used as much energy as the city of San Francisco. In the future, your Google searches and ads for that thing you searched online for will be powered by wind or solar, so says Google.
Beyond car ownership: how Finland set the stage for beyond car ownership (Streetsblog)
Transit, taxi, car rental or bike: Finns can purchase them all through Whim. See the above video. It’s not particularly cheap — see below. FYI, one Euro currently equals about 1.07 U.S. dollars.