Random Thoughts On Greening Toronto

This blog is a temporary repository for random environmental thoughts and ideas to be shared with others. It doesn't aspire to be particularly newsy or eventful -- it's simply a place to store information for easy reference. Thanks for reading.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Vote for a healthy, safe and prosperous Toronto!

Dear Toronto citizens,

The Toronto municipal elections are upon us -- Mon. Nov. 13. Please choose your representatives wisely. A green, healthy and prosperous Toronto is possible! Please exercise your democratic rights and vote...


1) Here's the skinny on who's running for City Council:

http://whorunsthistown.to



2) Where do your candidates stand?

Two surveys created by the Toronto Coalition for Active Transportation. Find out what responses your local candidates gave (click your ward, then the candidate's name).

Where do the Candidates in your ward stand on the issues of active (sustainable) transportation in Toronto ?

http://torontocat.ca/MayoralCandidates.html

http://torontocat.ca/CouncilCandidates.html



3) Auto-emailer to City Council candidates on Toronto cycling.

Don't forget to use the TakeTheTooker.ca emailer to candidates - with just one click! You'll learn much more about your candidates just by sending it in - even if you don't ride a bicycle.

http://takethetooker.ca/?page_id=84



4) Don't know who your school trustees are? Find out more!

article - http://spacing.ca/votes/?p=239

website - http://schooltrustees.ca/voter_info.cfm


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A City Transformed

For a vision of what a green and healthy Toronto could look like -- where community abounds, the air is clean, and children are safe to play on streets -- see the videos below.

Inspiring interview with Enrique Penalosa, the award-winning, internationally acclaimed former mayor of Bogota, Columbia:

A Conversation with Enrique Penalosa (12 min; dir. by Clarence Eckerson, Jr.)

http://www.nycsr.org/nyc/video.php

(If you don't have QuickTime, try this one: http://homepage.mac.com/trorb/TOPP/iMovieTheater144.html)


Article: 'The Politics of Happiness' by Enrique Penalosa and Susan Ives

http://yesmagazine.org/article.asp?id=615



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Finally, this wonderful 3 min. video will make your week! Hope you love it, too!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vr3x_RRJdd4

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Saturday, October 21, 2006

Cycling Safety Hotline

Okay, maybe Bike Hotline would be a simpler moniker.

Here's the idea:

We should have a bicycling reporting line (perhaps housed at Cycling Toronto - http://www.toronto.ca/cycling/index.htm) and be able to report licence plates of dangerous drivers. Yes, community policing. If that same licence plate should get into an actual accident involving a cyclist, and they're already on file, the fine should be doubled -- and if the cyclist is injured, there should be possible jail time (or at the very least, community service). If there is widespread public awareness of such protective measures, drivers would probably be far more cautious around cyclists. Sad to say, but true.

Note: The bicycling hotline could also be used to report police officers who refuse to enforce laws affecting cyclist safety/rights. (Then feedback to Toronto Police Board, Toronto Police Accountability Coalition, and that other community oversight group...?) Right now, Cycling Toronto is a 'play nice' entity with no bite or political power.

Haven't really thought this through, but was proposing the licence plates of cars who drive dangerously and nearly hit cyclists (or do in fact hit them) be called into this Bike Hotline and stored in a file. We could and should somehow get both the City and the Police to co-operate on this. It would be a way of forcing them to be accountable -- serve and protect, right?

I realize the Police are often extremely lackadaisical (nay downright complicit and car-rupt, as Hamish Wilson would say) when it comes to cyclists' rights -- *even* when the cyclists have been injured or killed. Maybe we could work with the cyclist cops on this. Makes sense, right? More empathy.

Perhaps with the right statistics and pressure, this could get off the ground and indirectly shift policing accountability, attitudes and enforcement with respect to cyclists' safety and bike lanes. I know that's being pretty hopeful, but...

Cyclists are taxpayers too -- in fact, we pay equal taxes, hello!

By ignoring information about dangerous drivers, the City and the Police would be complicit in causing harm to citizens who are actually bettering Toronto with their alternative/sustainable transportation choices. Cyclists should not be punished for being good citizens, while the real culprits are being aided and abetted by authorities.

People could call and/or visit a website (eg, enter the info in a web form, which would be sent off to whoever the coordinater is - maybe Cycling Toronto or the Cycling Committee, since they already work with the City?).

What do you think? Is this all pie in the sky?
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Also I understand that Martino Reis and Darren Stehr did a lot of this type of community policing via ARC and a now-defunct site called getoutofthebikelane.com. Suggest that we approach the authorities and put pressure on the right parties to set up infrastructure for a Bike Hotline, so that it exists within the (dreaded) system.

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