Showing posts with label NJ BPAC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NJ BPAC. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Next NJ BPAC meeting on Wednesday March 13, 2013

What:   NJ BPAC Meeting

Where: Edward J. Bloustein School
             33 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 08901
             Special Events Forum (1st floor)

When:  Wednesday March 13, 2013, 10:00am - 12:00p

Agenda:  ???  TBA

We'll update this post when more info is available. 

Rutgers University, Civic Square Building at 33 Livingston Ave, New Brunswick NJ.

We advise that all New Jersey bicycle and pedestrian advocates try to attend NJ BPAC meetings.

Friday, December 2, 2011

UPDATED!! Next NJ BPAC meeting Thursday December 8th

The next New Jersey Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Council meeting has long been scheduled for next week and will be hosted by the Voorhees Transportation Center, at the New Jersey Bicycle and Pedestrian Resource Center .

When:    Thursday, December 8th at 10:00 am
Where:   Edward J. Bloustein School
             33 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 08901
On the agenda will be a discussion from Jerry Foster of the West Windsor Bicycle and Pedestrian Alliance about his town's reward of a Bronze Level Bicycle Friendly Community award, the first in New Jersey.

Pete Kremer of the consulting engineering firm Parsons Brinkerhoff with be discussing New Jersey's new Complete Streets Curriculum. 

Also, Karen Jenkins and Jim Nicholson of the New Jersey Bike and Walk Coalition will be discussing the upcoming New Jersey Bike/Ped Summit.

This is a public meeting and all interested parties are welcome to attend.

More details to come when we get them.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

September's NJ BPAC meeting rescheduled for October 6th

Last months BPAC meeting was canceled due to areas of flooding throughout the state that prevented some members from being able to attend.  To compensate, the meeting has been rescheduled for Thursday, October 6th at 10am. All members of the public are welcomed to attend.
What: NJBPAC Meeting
Where: Edward J. Bloustein School
33 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 08901
Room 261
When: Thursday October 6, 2011,10:00am - Noon
The agenda is the same as it was to be in September and can be seen in WalkBikeJersey's previous announcement here.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Next NJ BPAC Meeting on Thursday, September 8th

The following announcement comes from the good folks at the Voorhees Transportation Center, New Jersey Bicycle and Pedestrian Resource Center at Rutgers University.  All concerned New Jersey residents are welcomed to attend.
This is a reminder that our next BPAC meeting is scheduled to be held on Thursday September 8, 2011.

What: NJBPAC Meeting
Where: Edward J. Bloustein School
33 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 08901
Room 261

When: Thursday September 8, 2011,10:00am - Noon

For directions to the Bloustein School, please refer to the following link:
http://policy.rutgers.edu/school/visitors.php

The Bloustein School is located a short walk from the New Brunswick rail station and encourages all to use public transportation to reach the school. Due to a change in policy earlier this year, the NBPA will no longer accommodate parking reserved in the building. If you do drive, public parking is available for a nominal fee at several facilities located close to the building. For more information, see: http://www.njnbpa.org/parking-locator.

We hope to see you at the meeting. If you have any questions, please let us know.


Thank you
To see the meeting agenda...
10:00 – 10:10
I. Welcome and Introductions – Charles Brown

10:10 – 10:25
I. Complete Streets in New Jersey: Lessons Learned
Graydon Newman, Cross County Connection TMA

10:25 – 10:40
I. Subcommittee Updates – Charles Brown
i. Legislative subcommittee – Karen Jenkins
ii. Safety & Education subcommittee – Tiffany Robinson
iii. Design subcommittee – Denise Chaplick

10:40 – 11:15
I. Camden’s CYCLE Program
AJ Jensen, Cooper’s Ferry Development Association, Inc.

11:15 – 12:00
I. Briefing: New Jersey Walks and Bikes Blog Overview
Jim Van Schoick
II. Safe Routes to School Update
Maeve Johnston
III. Briefing: “For the Good of New Jersey”
Charles Brown / Jim Van Schoick
IV. Open floor / discussion period / 2 minute updates
V. Final Remarks

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Next NJ BPAC Meeting on Thursday, June 9th

The next meeting of the New Jersey Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Council will be held next week and hosted by the Voorhees Transportation Center at the Bloustein School of Rutgers University.

When:    Thursday, June 9th at 10:00 am
Where:   Edward J. Bloustein School
               33 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 08901
               Room 261

This is a public meeting and all interested parties are welcome to attend.

Select parts of the tentative draft meeting agenda are as follows:
I. New Jersey’s #5 ranking from the League of American Bicyclists
Debbie Kingsland/Bill Feldman

II. Subcommittee Discussion – Charles Brown
i. Legislative subcommittee
ii. Safety & Education subcommittee
iii. Design subcommittee

III. 5 to Ride Campaign – Stuart C. Gruskin Foundation
Presentation by Nancy Gruskin of the Stuart C. Gruskin Foundation

IV. Briefing: VTC New Website Overview - Jim Van Schoick

V. Briefing: Safe Routes to School
Leigh Ann Von Hagen

VI. Briefing: “For the Good of New Jersey”
Charles Brown/Jim Van Schoick

VII. Open floor / discussion period / 2 Minute Updates

VIII. Final remarks

Monday, January 31, 2011

NJ Bike - Ped Advisory Council Meetings for 2011

While we are talking schedules here is the list of New Jersey Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Council (NJ BPAC) Meetings for 2011.


Wednesday, March 23 (Room 253)
Thursday, June 9 (Room 253)
Thursday, September 8 (Room 261)
Thursday, December 8 (Room 261)

All meetings will be held from 10:00am – Noon at the Edward J Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, 33 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901.

Meeting reminders and agendas will be sent out in advance of each meeting from both the good folks at the Voorhees Transportation Center that host the meetings and from us at WalkBikeJersey.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

December 2010 NJ BPAC Meeting info brief

On Wednesday, December 15th NJ DOT with the Voorhees Transportation Center hosted the latest New Jersey Bicycle Pedestrian Advisory Council (NJ BPAC) meeting.
For those of you that don’t know, ever 3 months state, county, and local government officials, consultants as well as advocates and members of the general public come together at the Bloustein School at Rutgers University for the NJ BPAC meeting. Here the latest happenings and other news concerning bicycle and pedestrian are discussed and shared. All are welcomed.

Items discussed and announcements include:
  • NJDOT announced the completion of the updated New Jersey Bicycling Manual. It was done with the assistance of the NJ BPAC Policy Subcommittee and the consultants at the RBA Group and funded with a grant from the Federal Highway Administration (or so I believe). This new manual is geared to all age groups, unlike that last version that focused only on children and includes advice on everything from lane positioning, hand signals, how to properly lock and secure one’s bicycle, commuter tips, advantages of the different types of bicycles, essential repair tools for the road, lights, wet weather gear and even bicycle touring. This is a quality product produced by people who are highly experienced bicyclists. The Manual will only be available on-line and will be released before Christmas. When it is, WalkBikeJersey will have a complete review with a direct link.
  • A representative from the West Windsor Bicycle and Pedestrian Alliance announce that they are putting together a Complete Streets petition that they will present to Mercer County. They hope that Mercer County will follow the lead of Monmouth County and adopt their own Complete Streets Policy.
  • Ranjit Walia of the Voorhees Transportation Center gave a quick review and rundown of the Complete Streets Summit held this past October at Rutgers University. The official attendance was 160 but there were many more there, up to as many as 200. 27 municipalities and 14 counties sent representatives. There were also 12 elected officials, 42 consultants and 19 people representing non-profits (for more details see the CS Summit Report or the official BPAC minutes - both not available at press time).
  • Ranjit Walia and Peter Bilton of the Voorhees Transportation Center will be leaving the center by years end to start their own private venture. Along with a third partner, their new company will do custom bicycle and pedestrian as well as community visionings using multimedia, video, etc. Their hope is to provide a product that is as visually compelling as Streetfilms but with the years of planning expertise that both Ranjit and Peter bring to their project. During a few minutes of extra time at the end of the meeting Ranjit even showed a few examples of their work. It should be also noted that Peter and Ranjit’s leaving does not mean the end of their relationship with VTC and NJDOT. Both parties already plan to work with Ranjit and Peter on future projects that will help advance walking and bicycling issues here in New Jersey.

The feature presentation at this BPAC meeting was given by Ian Sacs, the Director of Transportation and Parking for the City of Hoboken. If you are regular reader of WalkBikeJersey you are already aware of some of the innovative (Ed - if less than ideally executed) bicycle and pedestrian amenities found in Hoboken. Most of what Ian talked about in his presentation on this day however was more on how he, with the backing of the City Council, has been creating incentives for residents to leave their cars at home or to get rid of them all together and not so much on the finer details of Hoboken’s bicycle and pedestrian amenities.

Ian comes from an engineering background and calls himself a transportation engineer, not a traffic engineer and this is evident in the way that he approaches transportation and traffic problems in Hoboken. For many decades prior to his arrival, the only proactive approach to transportation and parking that the city undertook was to accommodate cars by increasing to supply of parking through the construction of expensive parking garages. Instead of continuing down this ever more costly and futile path of an ever-increasing parking supply, Ian’s approach is that it is better and much cheaper to reduce parking demand.

Ian admits that much of what he has been able to accomplish in Hoboken is the direct result of how the city was planned and laid out many years ago, when walking and transit was the only way that people got around and commuted to work. The residual pedestrian friendly layout, dense urban residential infrastructure and transit amenities, new (Hudson-Bergen Light Rail) and old (NJ Transit’s Lackawana Terminal and PATH), has made it rather easy for him to get residents to leave their cars at home and in some cases get rid of them all together. The two new major initiatives that city has implemented with Ian’s guidance to reduce private motor vehicle mode share and parking demand has been the “HOP” bus shuttle and the new and highly visible car-share program called “Corner Cars.”

While Hoboken has great transit amenities to help take residents to destinations outside of the city, transit options to destinations within Hoboken were actually rather limited. The HOP Shuttle, with its three different routes servicing major destinations only in Hoboken looks to remedy this oversight and eliminate much of the need for expensive paratransit services that provides door-to-door transportation for the elderly and disabled. While the service has yet to break even financially (typical of transit BTW), Ian continues to find additional revenue streams and riders for the system, while expanding service, keeping regular fairs low and free for the cities elderly and poor.

Corner Cars is a much more innovative and controversial (at least for some in the city) approach to reducing parking demand and car ownership in the city. While Hoboken has long been a site of a successful car-share program, this new program brings to visibility of Hoboken car-share out onto the streets. Like the name implies, Corner Cars are literally parked in reserved spots on the streets at select and even spaced corners throughout Hoboken. What has made this program controversial to some has been the elimination on on-street parking spaces to make room for the Corner Cars. To help silence critics who lament the loss of “precious” parking spaces, the city has also implemented a program called “Surrender Your Permit” which provides additional financial initiatives for residents with a parking permit to get rid of it if they sign up to become a member of the Corner Cars program. So far around 50 people have done just that, which about makes up for the lost on-street parking taken by the Corner Cars (did not remember the exact numeric details but this is roughly correct).

Reducing traffic and parking demand does benefit those who wish to walk and bike by helping to tame the streets. A more direct way to help the city’s cyclist and pedestrians has been to simply enforce current parking regulations more strictly. Not only does this clear up the streets and increase city revenues but also eliminates illegal parking at street corners that often blocks a driver’s view of pedestrians crossing at the intersections along with cyclists and other vehicle traffic. A more proactive way to keep street corners clear has been to install flexible bollards to block people from parking in the last 25 feet before a crosswalk which he termed “corner daylighting.” However, even this does not stop 100% of illegal parking at these locations.

These bollards stop the driver of this $100,000+ Maserati from parking too close
to the curb but they aren't always enough to stop some drivers from parking illegally.

Finally Ian noted that the city’s efforts to make the streets more livable have increased the number of cyclists using a bike for simple local transportation. Scenes of bicycles with child carriers grocery baskets and fenders parked around the city are becoming evermore common. When asked by WalkBikeJersey about the parking at the train station he announced that the plan to develop the area around the train station would include what will probably be New Jersey’s first bicycle station.


That’s a rap on the December 2010 NJ BPAC rundown. Check back here to find out more when the next BPAC meeting likely scheduled for March 2011.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Reminder - NJBPAC Meeting December 15th

The below reminder comes to us from Peter Bilton at the Voorhees Transportation Center:
Greetings BPAC Members,

This is a reminder that the next BPAC meeting is scheduled to be held on Wednesday, December 15th at 10am here in the Bloustein building. For directions to the Bloustein School, please refer to the following link:

http://policy.rutgers.edu/school/visitors.php

Those of you who requested parking in the building will receive a parking permit by email.

(Ed - NOT) Attached you will find the meeting agenda and the member updates that were submitted by email. There will be an opportunity to share additional updates during the meeting.

I hope to see you there. As usual for the December meeting, we will be going out to lunch in New Brunswick immediately after the meeting to celebrate the holiday season and the end of a successful year. Everyone is welcome to come.

Thanks,

Peter

--
Peter Bilton

Senior Research Specialist
Alan M. Voorhees Transportation Center
Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning & Public Policy
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
33 Livingston Avenue
New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901
732.932.6812 x586

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Next BPAC Meeting moved back a week to December 15th

The below message come to us from Peter Bilton at the Voorhees Transportation center at Rutgers University. I always advise all New Jersey bicycle and pedestrian advocates to attend NJBPAC meetings.
Greetings BPAC Members,

This is a notice that we are moving the date of the December Bicycle Pedestrian Advisory Council Meeting from December 8 to December 15 to avoid a conflict with an NJDOT meeting. I hope this doesn't cause any inconvenience.

The BPAC will be held on Wednesday, December 15 from 10am-12pm at the Bloustein School in New Brunswick. The preliminary agenda is as follows:
- Member updates
- A recap of the Complete Streets Summit
- A report on the Newark Walking School Bus event
- Ian Sacs, Director of Transportation in Hoboken, will speak about their many initiatives: carsharing, parking management, speed reduction, bikeways

An agenda, update form, and parking info will be sent out prior to the meeting. Please let me know of any upcoming bike/ped events that you would like the BPAC to be aware of so I can add them to the "events" sections of the agenda. Also let me know if there is an item that you would like to discuss and want placed on the agenda.

Thanks,

Peter

--
Peter Bilton, AICP/PP
Senior Research Specialist
Alan M. Voorhees Transportation Center
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
(732) 932-6812 ext. 586; bilton@ejb.rutgers.edu

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Next BPAC Meeting December 9 at Rutgers New Brunswick

The New Jersey Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Council (BPAC) will hold their next meeting on Wednesday, December 9th from 10am to 12pm in the Civic Square Building, room 261 at Rutgers University in New Brunswick.

Rutgers University, Civic Square Building at 33 Livingston Ave, New Brunswick NJ.

The featured talk at this BPAC meeting will be from members of the New Jersey Bicycle Coalition who will be discussing their formation, mission and their upcoming New Jersey Bicycle Summit.

All interested persons are invited to attend (but please be polite). Organizers ask that you please RSVP by emailing Rob Williams at ( rjwill@rci.rutgers.edu ).