Recently Los Angeles joined many others in banning plastic shopping bags:
In the first five months of the year, the number of plastic bag bans in the U.S. has doubled, from 37 to 75, after almost doubling, from 19 to 37, in 2011. The industry has been unable to stop major U.S. cities such as Seattle, Austin and now, most likely, Los Angeles, from banning its products.
ABOVE: Reusable bags are often free or low cost
Two-thirds of the bans are in California, and plastic bag bans are now in place in three of the 14 largest and five of the 29 largest cities in the U.S., with Los Angeles — the nation’s second-largest city, with a population of 4 million — set to join that group. (Plastics News)
However, such measures are not without controversy:
Many cities are imposing fees and bans on plastic shopping bags. Advocates argue these measures help the environment. But others say these measures are ineffective, and hurt the urban poor. (NPR)
Some stores, such as Aldi, don’t offer free plastic bags, customers must buy bags or bring their own. Other stores offer five cent discounts if you bring your own bag.
This is the topic of poll this week, the question is “Should the City of St. Louis ban plastic shopping bags?” The poll is in the right sidebar, results on Wednesday June 20, 2012.
Recycling seems commonplace these days, especially compared to 30-40 years ago, I’ve even taken stuff home to recycle rather than discard it in a trash receptacle on the street.
ABOVE: Recycling and solar trash compactor bins exist throughout Uptown Normal IL
Increasingly municipalities, such as Normal IL, are providing recycling options on the street. Lately solar trash compactors have helped reduce trash collection costs.
Here’s a news report on these solar trash compactors:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8e8Be9rq_C8
I like these compactors, hopefully their initial cost will come down and we’ll start getting them in St. Louis.
A week ago tonight the St. Louis Metropolitan Police were all over four blocks of Washington Ave (10th-14th). This will be my fifth summer as a downtown resident and last weekend seemed very familiar based on the last few year.
It goes something like this:
Zero police presence during the busiest times (late friday & saturday nights)
Something bad happens, usually a late night shooting
Everyone gets upset
Elected officials and police develop a plan
Following weekend make a huge show of force
Next weekend police nowhere to be found
What will tonight and tomorrow night look like? My guess is nothing like last weekend.
ABOVE: The St. Louis Police "Incident Command Center" truck was parked on Tucker at Washington Ave.ABOVE: Flares were used at 14th Street to make sure drivers saw the barricades
As officers began placing the barricades to block eastbound Washington at 14th the officers were wearing dark uniforms and the lighting is poor, drivers couldn’t see them. One officer yelled at a couple of drivers like this was an occupied police state. Maybe the flares were necessary given the poor execution of going from open to closed road. The number of police was astonishing, blue uniforms and vehicles everywhere.
Personally I think closing the street to traffic killed the vibrancy of the street. Will this be sustained all summer or will it be impossible to find a single cop on these four blocks tonight?
Last week I was at Kingshighway Blvd at Devonshire Ave but I wanted to be on the other side of Kingshighway.
ABOVE: Looking west across Kingshighway at Devonshire Ave, click image for map
Most signals in the city don’t require activating the pedestrian signal but after I didn’t get the walk symbol I began looking for a button.
ABOVE: Crosswalk button is placed high and on the one side lacking a sidewalk
Oh there it is. Unfortunately, I can’t reach it because 1) it’s too high and 2) it’s at the one place on the poll I can’t reach because no sidewalk exists. After dinner I crossed Kingshighway at the other crosswalk, pressed the button but still no walk symbol. Complete pedestrian failure.
– Steve Patterson
UPDATE: Monday June 11, 2012 @ 9:15am – Just received an email from a city traffic engineer that this button was moved on Friday June 8th.
ABOVE: The red arrow shows the ramp onto the PSB from SB I-70 before it merges with the ramp from NB I-55
MoDOT wants to build a double lane ramp from northbound I-55 to the PSB but it says it can’t without the room gained by eliminating the other ramp. MoDOT wants eastbound I-70 traffic to use the new river bridge opening in 2014.
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