Curitiba Brazil is another City that changed as described for Bogota when Mayor Jaimie Lerner, a landscape architect, passionate about sustainability and being green, was elected Mayor. The trains all move off a hub cap with five arteries in and out of the city There are no cars downtown except emergency and public service vehicles. He directed many other things to happen just like Richard Daley, Jr. is doing in Chicago. It is all possible - I mean after all tonight at the Planning Commission Chicago was referred to as a very green, beautiful city. If one can make Chicago beautiful with changing transportation systems and adding other amenities besides thousands of trees that make transportation pleasant, so be it. It could happen here with a Mayor and City Council and a few others who truly believe and make it happen.
Unfortunately, this time they are not the problem - the biggest hangup to it all though is Mn DOT. And we all know what it's like to deal with MnDOT and especially those in charge these days. The paving over paradise crowd.
Annie Young
East Phillips




At 10:25 AM 9/4/03 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Perhaps I risk being off topic by posting this, but it is relevant to Minneapolis in that it shows an alternative approach to transportation issues that, as the article says, focuses "on improving the lot of people, not their cars."
The article linked here describes the reform efforts of Enrique Pe�alosa, who became mayor of Bogot�, Columbia in 1998, and the dividends it has paid for the city. In short, Pe�alosa pursued an aggressive approach to transform the city by restricting cars and promoting transit, namely the Bus Rapid Transit system, TransMilenio. He also promoted the building of 70 miles of bike routes.
The result? TransMilenio turns a profit, and crime has been reduced. AND "The answers he came up with have reshaped Bogot�, home to 7 million people, into a city so easy to negotiate by public transportation that people actually voted in favor of outlawing cars in the city during rush hour by 2015."
I know that Minneapolis is a different city with a different climate and a more auto-based culture. Nonetheless, why are we moving in a direction that is being recognized as a failure by more and more people around the world?
While we debate the merits of the archaic approach of the 35W Access project, Pe�alosa is a visiting scholar at New York University, and Bogot� is becoming a model for cities around the world.
When people ask why the Bogot� model is not followed elsewhere, Pe�alosa is quoted as saying, "I tell them the only issue is a political one. They don't want to take space from cars and give it to buses, bicyclists, and pedestrians."
The link is a bit of a mess.
http://www.enn.com/direct/display-release.asp?objid=D1D1364B000000F45A8D3AEC BCA40A3D
As an alternative, use the search function at
http://www.enn.com/index.asp
Search �transmilenio.� This should give you a link to the story.
Russell Raczkowski
Bancroft
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Increase efficiency, energy conservation, protect consumers and establish local distributed generation systems neighborhood by neighborhood.
A. Young 8/22/03












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