Tuesday, November 19, 2024

A Survey on Priorities for 2027-2032 Funding at the MPO and a Nice Story about an old Oak on Gaiety Hill

Our Metropolitan Planning Organization started a survey for preferences in scoring, ranking, and ultimately choosing projects to fund in the next 2027-2032 cycle, in which about $28 million is expected to be available.

Safety and Climate head the list

The survey design is a bit dodgy. At the top of the list are high level values like "climate" and "safety." But the next item is "reduces a gap," much more specific. The level of generality is not at all consistent.

They also jam together disparate elements. Safety and security have different connotations. The problem of greenhouse gas is acute and chronic right now in a way the problem of carbon monoxide is not. It wasn't necessary to mention carbon monoxide unless you deliberately wanted a path to old-school congestion relief.

Some of the categories overlap. Reducing gaps also increases access. Improving transit also reduces greenhouse gas.

And the very great problem of speed is not mentioned.

With the way the survey is constructed, it may not be possible to give the MPO clear signals about what to prioritize.

Still, take the survey and reply more fully in the free response box towards the end. Safety and climate deserve more attention!

An Old Oak

The Oak at High and Oak Streets on Gaiety Hill

Salem Reporter has a lovely story about the prospect of cutting down the old Oak at the intersection of Oak and High at the crest of Gaiety Hill, right by the Smith-Fry house of 1859.

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Beginning of the End for Streetcar Service: First Buses in 1924

Though the final end of Salem's streetcar service has been dated to 1927, one significant moment in that transition happened three years earlier in 1924. The first buses directly replaced streetcars. There had been less formal jitney and motor stage service before around Salem, and streetcar routes abandoned, but not an explicit and direct swap for buses operated by the streetcar company.

November 30th, 1924

Back in the summer of 1924 Seventeenth Street had been torn up in preparation for paving. It was delayed and as summer passed, residents got upset.

August 19th, 1924
The poles and wires for the streetcar were the impediment, and the streetcar company was waiting for "appropriations from the New York office." The City could not proceed on its own since the streetcar company owned them.

The delay turned out to be an opening for the streetcar company to end service. A week later it secured

Permission to abandon more than one mile of street car track in the city of Salem and to substitute two motor busses....Under the ordinance eight-tenths of a mile of track on Summer between Market and Chemeketa would be abandoned and the tracks, wires and poles removed. The same would apply to the North [Seventeenth] street line between Center and D, with that portion of Seventeenth between D and Market still with the track.

August 26th, 1924

The ordinance was signed a couple weeks later. At the time residents of Englewood objected that the removal would reduce their property values and make real estate sales more difficult. They understood the streetcar as core transportation and also an amenity.

Thursday, November 14, 2024

Portland's Audit of Vision Zero can Point to a Better Instance Here

Only partial progresss

There's been a good bit of coverage for the City of Portland's formal Audit of the Vision Zero program.

City of Portland Audit

If if hasn't hit your news reading yet, here are good pieces:

Above all, they say, there's no feedback/assessment loop, insufficient "evaluation and monitoring." Did this countermeasure or intervention work? Did it make a difference?

Many of the observations apply equally to our Metropolitan Transportation Safety Action Plan. 

As the City of Salem updates our Transportation System Plan and develops its own Vision Zero Plan, it would be helpful to anticipate the critique in Portland's Audit and proactively incorporate its suggestions into our own plans and execution of them.

We'll come back to this in more detail later!

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Union Street Bikeway shows Problem with Insufficient Attention to Design Speed

Over the weekend our Strong Towns group considered a table of speed targets from Eugene. The targets were not just for signage but were engineering targets for the details of "design speed."

via FB

Salem should absolutely do this.

But this was also a very large missed opportunity in the Metropolitan Transportation Safety Action Plan. The plan hardly mentioned design speed and reductions in posted, lawful speed.

Speeding is too casual and easy throughout the city

The way we design roads makes it way too easy and comfortable to speed.

Sunday, November 10, 2024

A 1936 Footnote on the 1935 German Eugenics Exhibit

In March of 1936, a year after the German Propaganda Eugenics Exhibit was popular here, a Willamette University Professor who had praised the exhibit crossed over a line with advocacy for infant euthanasia.

March 13th, 1936

Sceva B. Laughlin had come to Willamette in 1923.

August 14th, 1923

He died in 1947, and his obituary noted he was "a nationally known Quaker...prohibitionist, and a member of the Grange and Farmer's union." He had also been a Salem City Councilor.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

City Council, November 12th - Doughboy Centennial

With Veterans Day, Council meets on Tuesday the 12th.

Nov. 12th, 1924

100 years ago the Doughboy statue and World War I memorial was dedicated at the old Courthouse. It has since been moved to the small monument park beside the Oregon Department of Veterans Affairs.

On Council agenda is an interesting note about a new record high in cyanotoxin levels in the source of our drinking water.

Beginning June 10th, routine testing of the North Santiam River at the Middle Intake, the raw water intake to the Geren Island Water Treatment Facility, indicated levels of microcystin were elevated. Levels continued to rise throughout the summer, peaking at over 18 µg/L on July 16th, 2024, at the Middle Intake. This was almost 3 times higher than the highest level experienced during the 2018 cyanotoxin event.

On the one hand, we haven't been keeping records for very long, but on the other hand this is clearly a growing problem because of climate warming, and it seems unlikely that any earlier period would have led to a higher reading.

July 2024 temperatures (Accuweather)

Though the Staff Report doesn't mention it, July 16th was towards the end of a heat wave in the first half of July, with five consecutive days of 100+ heat. They could discuss the link to climate change explicitly, but seemingly prefer not to.

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Early Suffrage Advocate and Lawyer, Olive S. England Deserves to be Remembered Better

Back in 1912, after failed attempts in 1906, 1908, and 1910, the Oregon amendment for woman suffrage was close and took several days to count.

Olive S. England, c.1898
(via OE and WU Law)

Election Day was November 4th. By the 8th, victory had finally become clear.

November 8th, 1912

The morning paper first went to Olive S. Enright for comment.

A couple weeks later as a celebration was organized, listed as Olive England Enright she was to give the welcoming remarks.

November 21st, 1912

Olive S. England, as she most often seems to be known, has not been discussed much at all in Salem history. In the Oregon Encyclopedia article on Woman Suffrage she is not mentioned. It is plausible, perhaps likely, that she was not a significant figure in any statewide context.

Even so, she is certainly an interesting and significant person in local Salem history and deserves more notice.