Transportation
Submitted by Mike on Wed, 30/07/2008 - 17:00.
I’ve always been impressed by the hardy souls who ride their scooters and motorbikes in peak hour traffic, rain hail or shine. Now I think maybe they are just cheap…. or smarter than the rest of us?

With the price of gas continuing to rise, people in Urban areas are looking at other options for their daily commute. Motorbikes and Scooters, while not regarded as the safest mode of transport have become increasingly popular among city workers and dwellers as a cheap means of rapid personal transport. Replacing an SUV with a scooter would have to save thousands of dollars a year in gas, but it would be a bit hard in many colder cities in North America!
The above photo is from Sydney, under one of the approach ramps for the Sydney Harbour Bridge.
Submitted by Mike on Mon, 14/07/2008 - 07:28.
Could you do your job from home?
And by 2015, according to demographer Wendell Cox, there will be more people in the country working electronically from home full time than are taking public transit.
Suburbia's not dead yet - Los Angeles Times
Telecommuting makes sense for many industries, even in some cases those that have been traditionally face to face service based. Businesses that are required to account for carbon emissions may have to take it to this level for offsets. If employees are not driving, could a business count that as an offset?
A bonus question: Would your boss be up for it?
Submitted by Mike on Sat, 05/07/2008 - 21:31.

How many times have you seen a road like this?
A pavement in this condition is a ticking timebomb ready to self destruct. An asphalt pavement is meant to serve as a wear course for vehicles to drive on safely, but just as important is it’s function as a barrier against the elements. When cracks like this occur, water can penetrate the base and sub base courses, breaking down the structural integrity of the road. The pavement also becomes much more susceptible to frost damage in cold climates.
Reading articles like the following is enough to make you wonder what it is going to cost to replace all the roads in Canada, (and the water and sewer pipes underneath as well)! read more »
Submitted by Mike on Thu, 22/05/2008 - 21:01.
Last week I wrote an article about Castlegar Airport, Gas Prices and the Potential for Airline cuts. Here's another article about the same problem that could be faced by many rural communities in BC, the last one was from ABC News America, this one's from the New York Times...
Airlines’ Cuts Making Cities No-Fly Zones - New York Times
Financially strapped airlines are cutting service, and nearly 30 cities across the United States have seen their scheduled service disappear in the last year, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Others include New Haven, Conn.; Wilmington, Del.; Lake Havasu City, Ariz.; and Boulder City, Nev.
Over the same period, more than 400 airports, in cities large and small, have seen flight cuts. Over all, the number of scheduled flights in the United States dropped 3 percent in May, or 22,900 fewer flights than in May 2007, according to the Official Airline Guide.
Is anyone keeping note of the problem here? If people can't get here, they won't be spending dollars here, and the tourism economy (along with other industries) will see a decline. The Kootenay region has always been relitively remote, could things become more remote once again?
Technorati Tags: travel, transportation, Castlegar City Council, Castlegar airport, airport, planes, airplane, fuel crisis, oil crisis, peak oil, airlines
Submitted by Mike on Thu, 15/05/2008 - 19:55.
Cars and trucks idling has been a contentious issue among drives, but I don't see people taking the sort of advice that I'm reading these days - That leaving your vehicle running, if you are stopping for more than 10 seconds, is worse than shutting it off and starting it again.
I've included a bunch of excerpts and links for your reading pleasure. More after the jump... read more »
Submitted by Mike on Tue, 13/05/2008 - 21:03.
Castlegar airport is a pretty quiet place, that is until about five minutes before a plane is due to land. Everyone looks to the sky and waits for the bussing of the twin prop flights from either Vancouver or Calgary.
There are only two destinations from this airport, East or West, and in winter you're lucky to catch a flight to or from either of them with the way this valley closes up in Winter.

But my post today is less about Castlegar Airport, and more about the way we rely on air travel, and what this means as the world spirals beyond peak oil...
ABC News: Why Airlines Might Abandon Your City
What the airlines are doing to stay "aflight" is raising prices and cutting back flights to make sure those price hikes stick. You know all about the raising-prices-and-fees part (American Airlines was the final airline to announce $25 to check a second bag); but what might be more nefarious for many travelers, especially those in smaller cities with regional airports, is what one airline analyst tagged as an inevitable "mother of all capacity cuts" that will occur as legacy airlines begin to merge. Deciding where to cut routes and cities is fairly easy; airline bean-counters simply sort their city-pair spreadsheets by profitability, and those at the bottom are first on the hit list. Naturally, they look at the number of passengers who travel in and out of the cities in question (although, interestingly enough, if there are too few passengers, smaller airlines may qualify for federal subsidies — during 2006, for example, Department of Transportation figures indicate subsidized Big Sky Airlines averaged just two passengers a day on its Lewiston to Billings, Mont., route). Unfortunately, even those subsidies weren't enough to keep Big Sky from going bust.
Seeing Air Canada, (ok, ok "Jazz") is the only scheduled commercial carrier to Castlegar, we can bet that there would be some provincial or federal support for maintaining a service? Don't be so sure, airlines, even federally supported ones, have gone under before, and we are coming to an unprecedented crisis., with cheap fuel scarcity and no viable technological alternatives on the horizon, (hybrid airplanes would just be too heavy with today's technology, and solar planes can barely carry one person, let alone a passenger!).
How much do you rely on air travel? Would airline route cuts impact your business? How about the tourism that uses planes to get to your city?
Technorati Tags: travel, transportation, Castlegar City Council, Castlegar airport, airport, planes, airplane, fuel crisis, oil crisis, peak oil, airlines
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