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nashvillain_too

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Unincorporated Area

Unincorporated Area (2/14)

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  1. Mayor Freddie O'Connell Executive Order Number 045 Subject: Green and Complete Streets Policy https://www.nashville.gov/departments/metro-clerk/legal-resources/executive-orders/mayor-freddie-oconnell/fo045
  2. Maybe there is some overlap between WeGo and NDOT as their institutional roles aren't super well defined and/or maybe tackling the crosswalks within the scope of a larger infrastructural WeGo project might represent a good opportunity to get it done within the scope of that project rather than it being part of a separate NDOT project with a different funding mechanism and different timeline. Who knows...?
  3. If you swing on up to County Hospital Road, there's even more 3 story apartment/condo developments going up. Bordeaux blowing up
  4. Apparently the folks who are opposed to growth missed all the zoning hearings because it's happening. The question is how is the city going to (mis)manage all the growth? Baffling to me how Metro continues to put its head in the sand regarding growth along the pikes
  5. It's already 4 traffic lanes and a turn lane, how much more could it expand? The city really should be looking at more ways to cross the river as Trinity/Buena Vista is the ONLY way for all these residents to move in and out. It's going to be a cluster once all this new development comes on line
  6. "Drivers say parking in Montreal is difficult. Experts say it should be" https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/parking-solutions-montreal-1.6230219 Source: Nacto (National Association of City Transportation Officials)
  7. Metro and NES have a new contract which is much more advantageous for Metro this time around. NES will be replacing every single street light in the city over the next... 5 years (?) with smart LED lamps. I'm trying to find details about the new contract but I'm coming up empty but from what I remember, things should be much better in terms of random, persistent, and pervasive pole outages throughout the city. Did you know that in order to report a pole outage, you had to send NES the pole number? You couldn't just tell them the exact location of the pole. Anyway, that archaic system will be improved with the new contract which is already in effect. If I can find details of the new contract, I'll be sure to link it here
  8. I realized that my post wouldn't be taken well and wouldn't do anything to move the conversation in a positive trend so I tried to remove it. Unfortunately, I didn't act fast enough. However, the statement that views are not inherently worthy of respect shouldn't be controversial and it wasn't aimed at anyone's views in particular except for Nash_12South's contention that viewpoints need to be respected. They absolutely do not.
  9. I think you've made that point and I think everyone understands that significant changes to physical infrastructure, changes in systems of subsidies, and changing of mindsets and lifestyle preferences won't happen overnight. We all get that. Would you like to be on the side of change or would you like to be the guy who keeps saying it's gonna be hard and don't expect it to happen anytime soon? One of those things is helpful, the other is... less helpful
  10. That is definitely the case but it's also a specific scenario which comes out of the existence of the stadium and the lease agreement between the Titans and Metro. I wonder how/if that arrangement will change with the new stadium
  11. Big companies are providing their own parking to workers and if they aren't, they should be. The city doesn't need to continue to do it. All that parking takes up a tremendous amount of space. Space that could be used to house people. Space for transit lanes. It's also valuable real estate that is not maximizing its value for the city and for property owners by being underutilized to store private property at absurdly low rates.
  12. Reducing or ending subsidies for parking isn't a punishment nor is it hateful. Ya'll are ones who are making the debate hysterical and polarized by using that kind of rhetoric. I understand that taking away subsidies is unpopular but it's not a punishment. It's a correction to an unequal situation and it's an incentive to change behavior. As Paul said, local governments don't have any sort of obligation to provide cheap parking although they've certainly taken on the job, much to everyone's detriment. Making it harder to drive in the city is absolutely necessary to improving the built environment, to making it safe, quieter, walkable, and amenable to transit. I understand that a transition to that reality will be difficult, but nothing worth doing is easy
  13. The amount that governments have directly and indirectly subsidized the cheap storage of cars has not been reckoned with by anyone except obscure academics until very recently. The abolition of parking minimums throughout the UZO was a crucial first step and I hope Metro Council can keep up the pressure somehow--parking maximums, eliminating on-street parking and/or smart pricing based on demand, and UZO-wide upzoning. I just wish we could move more quickly on this which is why I'm so disappointed in the 10-year time frame that NDOT has laid out for Connect Downtown. It's impossible to have both. If you want a reliable transit system, you have to start making driving and parking more difficult
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