Saturday, November 26, 2016

Letters To California Mosques Praise Donald Trump, Promise Genocide

Religious leaders in California are calling for a police investigation after identical letters were sent to local mosques hailing President-elect Donald Trump and calling for death to Muslims.



The San Francisco Bay Area chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) released a statement asking for increased protection after the hate-filled letters were discovered at the Islamic centers of Long Beach and Claremont as well as a mosque in San Jose.



The handwritten and photocopied letters, received over the course of the week, were signed by “Americans for a Better Way.” They call Muslims “a vile and filthy people” who “worship the devil” and evoke Trump.



“There's a new sheriff in town - President Donald Trump. He's going to cleanse America and make it shine again. And, he's going to start with you Muslims,” the letters read. “He's going to do to you Muslims what Hitler did to the Jews.”





CAIR leaders in San Francisco and Los Angeles didn't initially want to bring the letters into the public spotlight to avoid copycats, but they acknowledged the need for police intervention once the diatribe was sent to a number of jurisdictions across the state, according to the Los Angeles Times.



“We urge local law enforcement authorities to work with Muslim community leaders to ensure the safety of all houses of worship,” CAIR-SFBA Executive Director Zahra Billoo said in a statement. “Our state's political and religious leaders need to speak out against the mainstreaming of Islamophobia that we are witnessing in California and nationwide.”



Though Trump has said he isn't aware of campaigns across the country to intimidate and hurt Muslims since his victory, the problem is rampant.



The Southern Poverty Law Center has tracked more than 700 acts of this kind of bias intimidation and harassment targeting Muslims, blacks, Latinos, immigrants and LGBTQ people since Election Day, though not every incident has been independently verified. The Huffington Post's Christopher Mathias has identified at least 13 incidents in which Muslims have been attacked, harassed or threatened in Trump's name.



San Jose police are reportedly investigating the letters. It wasn't immediately clear whether police departments across the state would ramp up security in response to CAIR's statement.



CAIR urges Muslim community members to report any incidents to police and to the organization's civil rights department by calling 202-742-6420 or by filing a report online.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Introducing Compliments

Sometimes, 5 stars just isn't enough.


That's why riders often leave notes in the app letting their driver know what he or she did to make their journey that much more enjoyable. Sometimes the small thingslike playing the perfect song at the right time or lending a hand with a heavy piece of luggagecan make a big difference. We want to make sure that message gets through.



Starting this week, we're making it easier for riders to thank drivers for the things they doㄧbig and smallㄧto make the ride memorable. When a rider leaves a complimentㄧsay for expertly navigating winding city streets or striking up a conversation that brightened their moodㄧa notification will show up on the driver's home screen letting them know what they did to make a rider's day.



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rider_compliments_2


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It is Thanksgiving week after all-a time to be, well, thankful. We want to give riders the opportunity to thank and recognize drivers for the things they do to make the experience more memorable and fun. It's a small step we're taking to make saying thank you easier for riders and to celebrate drivers like Vickie, Alejandro and Habtamu who go the extra mile in their own special ways.


Because sometimes the little things make all the difference, and 5 stars doesn't quite cut it. We get that, and while we know there's always more we can do to improve the driving experience, we figured what better time than now to make it easier to say “thank you” to the drivers who help us get from A to B every day.


Friday, November 18, 2016

Featured Tonight: Family History for Family Holidays

Thursday, November 17, 2016
5:45 p.m.
502 West Benjamin Holt Drive, Stockton

Working Family History At Your Family Gatherings
Kim von Aspern-Parker

The holiday season is upon us! Dinners, parties, special gatherings will likely feature one constant: these are all events which will include family members. What a perfect opportunity to encourage interest in your family history research.

This month, we are pleased to  welcome Kim von Aspern-Parker back to Stockton as our guest speaker. A Sacramento area genealogist, Kim is a graduate of University of Nevada at Reno with a bachelor in journalism and public relations. Kim  speaks, teaches, coaches, and blogs about genealogy-and has done so for more than twenty five years, providing private genealogical investigation services out of her Sacramento office. In addition to this month's topic, Kim specializes in research in both California and Louisiana, where she often conducts  research trips.

Join us in welcoming Kim von Aspern-Parker back to Stockton at our meeting tonight, Thursday, November 17, at the Margaret Troke Library in north Stockton. As always, plan on coming early to enjoy some refreshments and a social time with fellow Society members. Also, feel free to invite a friend to attend the meeting with you-the more, the merrier!

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Manhunt Ends For Suspect In 'Execution' Of California Deputy



A search for a man suspected of killing a California deputy at close range Sunday morning has ended after an hourslong manhunt, authorities announced.



David Machado, 36, was taken into custody in Tulare County, the Stanislaus County Sheriff's Office announced on social media around 1 p.m. local time.











Stanislaus Deputy Dennis Wallace, 53, was responding to a call about a suspicious car and person around 8:30 a.m. when he was shot twice in the head, Sheriff Adam Christianson had said at an earlier press conference.



The 20-year veteran of the sheriff's department had just enough time to request backup after finding the suspect's stolen vehicle before he was killed, Christianson said.





“Within seconds he was murdered, he was executed,” the sheriff said of the brazen attack in Hughson's Fox Grove Park, about 95 miles northeast of San Jose. “We know for a fact that the gun used was in direct contact with his head when the trigger was pulled, twice. This was an execution.”



Christianson described Machado as a known criminal. After fleeing the scene, Machado carjacked someone in the community of Keyes, making off with a white 2009 Kia Rio.









“He was wanted for a felony warrant for felony-related criminal activity and of course he was in a stolen vehicle,” the sheriff said.



Wallace was known for his work in the DARE drug and violence prevention program, and leaves behind a wife and family, Christianson said.



“Dennis had a very special relationship with young people, and a special place in our hearts at the sheriff's office,” he said.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Saturday, October 22, 2016

Chelsea Handler Destroys Trump's Racism Defense In One Sobering Tweet



Here's a fun game!



If Donald Trump is the least racist person you've ever met, then you've: A) Learned to live in complete solitude since birth. B) Infiltrated an undercover white supremacist group à la Daniel Radcliffe. C) Recently awoken from a “Sleeping Beauty”-like slumber and missed this entire 2016 election campaign. D) Delete your account immediately. 



The Republican presidential nominee has pledged to ban Muslims from entering the U.S. and frequently used racially charged language about immigrants and inner-city residents.



Yet Trump told a reporter in Columbus, Ohio, on Thursday that he's “the least racist person you've ever met,” without the slightest hint of irony. 









Thankfully, comedian Chelsea Handler is here to break down Trump's claim for all those who need some clarification about what his statement really means. 



“If Donald Trump is the “least racist person you've ever met,” then I'm the most sober person you've ever met,” the author of Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea tweeted. 











There's only 16 days until this election is finally over. Cheers!









CORRECTION: A previous version of this article misstated the title of Handler's book. 



Editor's note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liarrampant xenophoberacistmisogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims ― 1.6 billion members of an e

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Monday, October 10, 2016

Court extends Florida voter registration in the wake of Hurricane Matthew

A voter walks to a polling precinct on primary day in Florida for the U.S. presidential election in Boca Raton, Florida March 15, 2016. REUTERS/Joe Skipper - RTSAIM3

A voter walks to a polling precinct on primary day in Florida for the U.S. presidential election in Boca Raton, Florida. Photo by REUTERS/Joe Skipper


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - A federal judge has given Democrats a partial victory in the presidential battleground of Florida, extending of the state's voter registration deadline one day and agreeing to consider a longer extension in the wake of Hurricane Matthew.


The initial deadline was Tuesday, but Florida Democrats, with the support of presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, argued that would-be voters deserved more time. Republican Gov. Rick Scott last week urged 1.5 million residents to evacuate as the storm approached the southeastern United States.


District Judge Mark Walker issued a temporary order Monday afternoon extending the deadline through the close of business Wednesday. He set a hearing Wednesday at 10 a.m. for arguments for a longer extension. Judges grant temporary restraining orders in cases where a petitioner demonstrates irreparable harm would occur if the court took no action. The orders often portend victory once a judge considers the merits of the case.


Clinton had called on Scott, before the suit was filed, to extend the deadline himself using his emergency authority. The governor declined, saying Floridians “had enough time to register” before the Oct. 6 evacuation orders.


Though the case involves the highest stakes in a perennial presidential battleground, the judge called it “poppycock” to claim that “the issue of extending the voter registration deadline is about politics.” The case, he wrote, “is about the right of aspiring eligible voters to register to have their votes counted.”


The case comes as the two presidential campaigns try to resume their full activities in Florida and North Carolina, the two battlegrounds where Matthew left fatalities and wracked widespread damage.


Republican vice presidential nominee Mike Pence was in western North Carolina on Monday, while Clinton was planning to visit south Florida on Tuesday alongside former Vice President Al Gore. GOP hopeful Donald Trump was also to campaign in Florida the next two days with stops in three cities that are usually GOP strongholds. And former President Bill Clinton has his own Florida schedule Tuesday on his wife's behalf.


The voter registration dispute is key since both campaigns acknowledge that the storm's interruptions could yield even marginal effects on voter turnout efforts. North Carolina and Florida remain close, even as Clinton appears to be taking a commanding national lead. Going days without door-knocking and phone-banking around Fayetteville, North Carolina, or registering voters around Jacksonville, Florida, is enough to make Republican and Democratic aides nervous.


“The time for politics will come back, and it will just have to take care of itself,” said Dallas Woodhouse, executive director of the North Carolina Republican Party, which together with the Republican National Committee leads voter turnout efforts for Trump and the rest of the GOP slate.


Woodhouse said GOP campaign offices remained closed in Fayetteville, Greenville and Wilmington.


In his first public campaign appearance since Sunday's second presidential debate, Pence told a Charlotte crowd that eastern North Carolinians are “inspiring” for their handling of the hurricane. Pence also praised Trump for apologizing after the Friday disclosure of a 2005 NBC video that captured the real estate billionaire making predatory comments about women.


Florida's voter registration deadline applies to both in-person registration and postmarks for mailed forms.


The initial petition argued that Matthew constituted a “daunting” and “life-threatening obstacle” to registration. Scott's office said earlier Monday that the governor's legal advisers were reviewing the suit.


In 2004, then-Gov. Jeb Bush used emergency authority to allow several Florida counties to delay the start of early voting after Hurricane Charley.


Clinton aides declined comment on the suit earlier Monday, but maintain that under normal circumstances, they would have registered tens of thousands of Florida residents in the final five days of registration. President Barack Obama won the state in 2012 by fewer than 75,000 votes out of more than 8.4 million cast. Both Republicans and Democrats have intensified their voter registration efforts since.


Democrats note that South Carolina, another GOP-controlled state, extended its original Oct. 7 deadline to accept registration forms postmarked no later than Tuesday.


Hurricane Matthew drifted farther north than projected when Scott ordered evacuations, leaving south Florida's heavily Democratic counties - Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach - relatively unscathed. Campaign activities there have resumed, with Clinton aides saying only a handful of their 65 offices around the state remained closed Monday, all of them in more Republican north Florida.


North Carolina's voter registration deadline is Friday, but the state also has same-day registration on Election Day.


Barrow reported from Atlanta.


The post Court extends Florida voter registration in the wake of Hurricane Matthew appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Wells Fargo Created Fake Accounts for Nearly 10,000 Small Businesses

More information is being discovered in relation to Wells Fargo's recent scandal, showing that nearly 10,000 small businesses were also victims of the banking giant's illegal and corrupt up-selling practices. Despite CEO John Stumpf claiming ignorance as to whether...

Thursday, October 6, 2016

How Montgomery County's Bus Rapid Transit Can Alleviate Suburban Poverty

Montgomery County, Maryland, just outside DC, is getting ready to do something that could set a precedent for American suburbs - build a bus rapid transit network. The 82-mile system should offer a huge boost in job access, especially for people without cars.


A more equitable transportation system is coming to Montgomery County, Maryland. Photo: Beyond DC

Bus rapid transit can improve job access while reducing household transportation costs in Montgomery County, Maryland. Photo: Beyond DC


Pete Tomao at Greater Greater Washington is especially interested in how the effort might help reduce economic inequality within the county:


Studies have found that as sprawl increases social mobility decreases. This is particularly important on Route 29, where over 12% of households have no access to a vehicle. Digging deeper we see that many folks who live on the Route 29 corridor are also those who can least afford sprawl. 50% of renters on Route 29 earn under 50% of the area median income and a total of 30% of corridor households earn under 50% of AMI.


Further compounding the need for better transit access is Montgomery's uneven recovery from the recession. The Route 29 Corridor in particular was hit hard, median income fell 12% between 2009 and 2014, compare this to 1% in the Bethesda area.


Consider this stat: in 2000, none of the county's census tracts had more than an 18% poverty rate, now there are 12 census tracts exceeding that standard. Much of this new “suburbanization of poverty” is affecting communities in the east far more than those in the west - the Route 29 BRT could help equalize odds in a part of Montgomery that has not seen major transit investments.



Perhaps nothing illustrates the need for affordable transportation on the Route 29 corridor than the number of residents who are rent-burdened, which means they spend more than 30% of their incomes on rent. Looking at data from the US Census we see that 43% of the corridor are renters, 60% of whom are rent burdened.


When you combine housing and transportation costs you see the heavy price of living in a car dependent area. Certain census tracts in Burtonsville show that the average household is spending 71% of their income on rent+[transportation]. That leaves little left over for groceries, healthcare, or savings. The trend continues when looking at other communities along Route 29. In White Oak we see households spending 50% of their income on rent+[transportation] costs, this compares with averages in transit accessible Downtown Silver Spring of 30%-35%. Providing a brt system on Route 29 will allow families to spend more money on essentials like food, and housing.


Elsewhere on the Network today: Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space says it's easy to understand why D.C. Metro ridership has dropped so much: service has declined. And Market Urbanism shares a study that examined what areas of L.A. that were upzoned have in common.

Monday, October 3, 2016

When Commuter Rail Has the Potential to Be Something More

American commuter rail lines tend not to draw many riders. That's what happens when service is limited and the line is set up to shuttle suburban park-and-ride commuters to an urban center in the morning and back home in the evening.


Greater Cleveland RTA's Blue Line is the type of commuter rail that, with some planning, could evolve into ?, Photo: Wikipedia

Greater Cleveland RTA's Blue Line could evolve into a more useful service than plain old commuter rail. Photo: Wikipedia


But there's a lot of untapped potential in commuter rail lines. A new report from the Transportation Research Board examines how railways like Cleveland's Blue Line, which extends to the suburb of Shaker Heights, can do a better job of connecting people to the places they need to go, writes Marc Lefkowitz at Green City Blue Lake:


Their analysis of the Blue Line shows that, for the most part, access is limited to those able to drive to it. Except for Shaker Square and downtown, the Blue Line is missing employment options.


“Employment opportunities are rare along this corridor between its terminus at Van Aken Center and Shaker Square, as is pedestrian- or transit-based access to cultural destinations, health care, and major retailers.”


Limited service outside of rush hour is a big drawback. As is the lack of development at station sites. The line is most valuable to one type of customer - a Shaker resident who works downtown.



“The relative lack of these opportunities within this Suburban Commuter Corridor is mitigated by the access to a higher diversity of opportunities available to corridor residents in the CBD. But, transit service is generally limited to commute hours, and the travel time between outlying stations and the CBD is high.”


The Blue Line is a type of “Emerging” corridor where auto-dominated travel patterns and low-density development prevail.


The report, which was sponsored by the Federal Transit Administration, points to Minneapolis's Corridors of Opportunity initiative as a model for involving many people with diverse interests in the effort to promote housing and development around rail stations, Lefkowitz says.


Elsewhere on the Network today: Systemic Failure asks which country has the more market-oriented approach to transportation policy - China or the United States? And Market Urbanism critiques the shaky new defense of sprawl from Joel Kotkin.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Deficit Is Surging as Candidates Look to Spend Freely

In this bizarre election cycle, the problem of increasing federal budget deficits has received little attention. But Greg Valliere of Horizon Investments brought it to light in a research note Wednesday titled, "A Forgotten Issue Suddenly Returns."

Valliere was among the first Washington analysts to point out that the deficit started shrinking over four years ago. Now he's early to point out the positive trend has reversed.

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

#USImmigrationLaw: 5 Facts About Illegal Immigration Laws

While it comes as no surprise to recent immigrants, the United States has rather strict immigration laws. For undocumented immigrants, also called "illegal immigrants" or "illegal aliens," the legal system can be scary. Below are five important facts about...

Sunday, August 21, 2016

Carmelo Anthony Preaches Unity Following Gold Medal Victory



Carmelo Anthony started to tear up as he reflected on his Olympic career on Sunday. The U.S. men's basketball team had just beaten Serbia, 96-66, to win Anthony his third gold medal, an unmatched achievement in men's Olympic basketball, and the weight of the moment started to overwhelm him. 



“I know this is the end,” Anthony said. “This is it for me.” 











There had been vast interest in how Anthony would responds to winning gold after he authored a July op-ed in the The Guardian in which he said he hoped to use the Olympic stage to make a statement following the shooting deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile. “This is a chance to do something meaningful before an audience of billions,” he wrote at the time, leading many to wonder aloud what he might do.



But on Sunday, Anthony's message was one of unity. 



“Despite everything that is going right now in our country, we've got to be united,” he said. “America will be great again, I believe that. We got a lot of work to do, but it's one step at a time.”



After Anthony's comment, the U.S. men's basketball team approached the podium with their arms interlocked, a clear extension of Anthony's call for unity. 





Anthony has become one of the most politically outspoken American athletes in recent years. In July, the same day Anthony published his Guardian op-ed, the New York Knicks star stood alongside NBA superstars LeBron James, Chris Paul and Dwyane Wade at the 2016 ESPY Awards, who, together, asked for the country to take a committed stance against gun violence and unnecessary force on the part of police officers.  



“The problems are not new. The violence is not new. And the racial divide definitely is not new,” Anthony said. “But the urgency to create change is at an all-time high.”



Olympians John Carlos and Tommie Smith, whose decision to raise their fists at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics remains one of the most iconic moments in Olympics history, have supported Anthony in his recent activism. “He is direct, very direct. And there is truth in [being] direct because there is purpose,” Carlos has said. 



Questions will remain about whether the International Olympic Committee's rules scared the team away from a more overtly political statement. The IOC explicitly states in its Olympic Charter that political statements of any sort are not allowed at the games and may result in disqualification. Soon after Carlos and Smith raised their fists, the International Olympic Committee booted the pair from the games and Team USA suspended them. 



I know about that rule,” Anthony told The Undefeated before the Rio Olympics. “We had a rule talk about the do's and the don'ts. What you can do and what you can't do. I know the basics of what I want to do and what I don't want to do.”

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Thursday, August 4, 2016

Chris Christie's Transportation Record Is a Bigger Disaster Than Bridgegate

What a fiasco. Six years after New Jersey Governor Chris Christie killed the ARC transit tunnel under the Hudson so he could avoid raising the gas tax, the jig is up. The state has run out of transportation funding anyway.



NJ's Transportation Trust Fund dried up a month ago, bringing a halt to basic infrastructure projects all over the state. Raiding major transit projects, it turns out, is not a sustainable way to fund a transportation system.


But even now, with their backs against the wall, state legislative leaders and reputed Donald Trump manservant Christie are coming up empty, reports Janna Chernetz at Network blog Mobilizing the Region:


It's been one month since the TTF dried up, and the Garden State is still without transportation funding - or even a foreseeable solution. The past six weeks have been rather rocky for the governor and the state's legislative leaders:



  • June 23 – The Senate and Assembly TTF reauthorization bills are considered and passed out of committees.

  • June 28 – Assembly Speaker Vincent Prieto changes the Assembly's gas tax proposal in a secret midnight meeting with the governor. That version later passes the full Assembly.

  • June 30 – Senate President Stephen Sweeney refuses to advance the Assembly proposal, and the fiscal year ends without a resolution to TTF crisis. The TTF officially goes bankrupt, and Christie signs an executive order halting all TTF-funded projects.






  • July 22 – Sweeney and Prieto announce a joint plan to renew the TTF.

  • July 29 – The Senate Budget Committee considers and passes the Sweeney-Prieto revised plan.

  • August 1 – The Senate once again delays a vote on the TTF bill after failing to garner enough votes to guarantee a veto override.


Governor Christie has been - and remains - the biggest obstruction to a solution with his unmerited opposition to a gas tax increase that isn't coupled with unrelated tax cuts. (Where was the call for tax cuts when NJ Transit voted to raise fares last summer?) And this irrational insistence on “tax fairness” has resulted in a complete stalemate in Trenton. It's ironic really, because the purpose of the Transportation Trust Fund, when it was established in 1984, was to remove transportation from the political process.


Elsewhere on the Network today: Denver Urbanism makes the case for “transportation variety” in cities. Streets.mn reports that the departure of a suburban county from a regional transit organization puts plans for bus rapid transit in jeopardy. And Mobility Lab explains how Arlington County transportation engineers were treated to a tour of local bike infrastructure - an exercise everyone hopes will improve road design for cyclists.

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Donald Trump Goes After Grieving Mother Of Killed American Soldier







Donald Trump responded to the moving speeches of the father of an American hero at the Democratic National Convention by questioning why his wife stood at his side but did not speak. 



The remarks were clearly intended to question whether the couple's Islamic faith precluded her from speaking so publicly.



Khizr Khan, whose son, Army Capt. Humayun S.M. Khan was killed in Iraq in 2004, gave one of the most stirring speeches of the convention when he questioned what sacrifices Trump had made for his country. Khan's wife, Ghazala, appeared beside him at the lectern but did not speak.



Trump suggested in two separate interviews that Ghazala Khan had been blocked from speaking.



“I'd like to hear his wife say something,” Trump told The New York Times in an interview published Friday. 



“If you look at his wife, she was standing there. She had nothing to say. She probably, maybe she wasn't allowed to have anything to say. You tell me,” he said in an interview with ABC on Saturday.



A visibly shaken Ghazala Khan spoke at length about her son during an interview with MSNBC on Friday. She said she had to work to keep her composure onstage at the DNC because she is still grief-stricken.



“[I] was very nervous, because I cannot see my son's picture, I cannot even come in the room where his pictures are,” she said of her appearance at the DNC.



She also recounted her last conversation, on Mother's Day. “'Be safe, and don't become hero for me, just be my son, come back as a son,'” she recalled, fighting back tears. “He came back as a hero.”



Trump's Democratic presidential rival Hillary Clinton paid tribute to Ghazala Khan for speaking about her grief so publicly.



 “I was very moved to see Ghazala Khan stand bravely and with dignity in support of her son on Thursday night,” Clinton said in a statement to ABC News. “And I was very moved to hear her speak last night, bravely and with dignity, about her son's life and the ultimate sacrifice he made for his country.”



The founder of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America defended the Khan family, after Trump claimed he had made sacrifices of his own, without actually naming any. Trump went on to boast of business successes and made charity work claims.



“For anyone to compare his 'sacrifice' to a Gold Star family member is insulting, foolish and ignorant,” said IAVA CEO Paul Rieckhoff in a statement to ABC News. “Especially someone who has never served himself and has no children serving.”



Editor's note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar,rampant xenophoberacistmisogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims ― 1.6 billion members of an entire religion ― from entering the U.S.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Thursday, July 28, 2016

67 Congress Members Tell Feds: Measure the Movement of People, Not Cars

A proposed rule from U.S. DOT could undermine transit. Image: Transportation for America

If U.S. DOT doesn't change its proposed congestion metric, 50 people riding in a bus will count as much as one person in an SUV. Image: Transportation for America


The federal government hands states about $40 billion a year for transportation, money they can basically spend however they want. The result in many places is a lot of expensive, traffic-inducing highways that get clogged with cars soon after they're finished. Can measuring the effect of all this spending lead to better decisions?


U.S. DOT is developing a metric to assess how well states address congestion. This is a minefield - if the new congestion rule only measures the movement of cars, it's going to entrench 60 years of failed transportation policy. Unfortunately, the first draft of the DOT rule left a lot to be desired.


Reformers have been pushing the agency to revise the rule so it takes a broader, multi-modal view of congestion. Stephen Lee Davis at Transportation for America reports 19 senators and 48 U.S. representatives have written a letter to U.S. DOT [PDF] demanding a healthier approach.


The Congress members write:



If we focus, as this proposed rule does, on keeping traffic moving at high speeds at all times of day on all types of roads and streets, then the result is easy to predict: states and MPOs will prioritize investments to increase average speeds for cars, at the expense of goals to provide safe, reliable, environmentally sensitive, multi-modal transportation options for all users of the transportation system, despite those goals being stated in federal statute. This singular focus on moving vehicles undermines the progress this Administration has made on multi-modal planning and investments through the TIGER program. Encouraging faster speeds on roadways undermines the safety of roads for all users, as well as the economic vitality of our communities.


The excessive congestion performance measure should be amended to assess people hours of delay and not just vehicles. This change is critical to account for the many non-single occupancy vehicle users, including transit bus riders and bicyclists and pedestrians traveling along the corridor, which provide critical congestion relief and could be undercounted or even penalized under this measure.


The letter also insists that U.S. DOT require state and regional transportation agencies to assess the impact of projects on greenhouse gas emissions.


U.S. DOT is currently accepting comments about the rule change. You can weigh in and help promote a better policy.


Elsewhere on the Network today: The Transport Politic offers a side-by-side comparison of the Republican and Democratic transportation platforms. Bike Portland highlights a study that found streetcar tracks cause a large number of cyclist injuries in Toronto. And The Fifth Square wants Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney to enforce parking rules on South Broad year round, like the city is during the DNC.

Friday, July 15, 2016

A 50-Year-Old Cartoon Satirizing Car Culture Still Rings True Today

If aliens came to Earth, who would they assume is in control - people or cars? Cars, of course. That's the premise of this 50-year-old animation dug up by Alex Ihnen at NextSTL.


It's worth noting, says Ihnen, that the piece was made by Canadians:


It tells the story of aliens viewing earth and concluding that the automobile is the dominant species on the planet. It's a biting commentary, and the culture that produced it is the same that prevented highways from decimating Vancouver, and other Canadian cities to the extent of their American counterparts. It's hard to imagine an American equivalent, though even locally around the same time we were well [aware] of the negative impacts of the automobile [Mass Transit as a Regional Priority – St. Louis 1965].


Ihnen also posts this summary from the National Film Board of Canada:



This animated short proposes what many earthlings have long feared - that the automobile has inherited the planet. When life on Earth is portrayed as one long, unending conga-line of cars, a crew of extra-terrestrial visitors understandably assume they are the dominant race. While humans, on the other hand, are merely parasites. An Oscar® nominee, this film serves as an entertaining case study.


Make sure to watch til the end - the best satire is in the final minute.


Elsewhere on the Network today: Green City Blue Lake explains how two influential conservative thinkers envisioned Cleveland as a model transit city. And Bike Portland weighs in on Pokémon Go, calling it “a boon for bicycling.”

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Pulse Nightclub Was A Lifeline For Orlando's LGBTQ Community

Over the past 12 years, the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, had carved out a reputation for great music, fierce entertainers and, above all, space for anyone to come find support and be themselves. 



Early Sunday, the LGBTQ nightclub became the scene of the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history, with at least 50 people dead and 53 injured. Authorities say the suspected shooter, Omar Mateen, stormed the downtown club around 2 a.m. before taking dozens of people hostage and killing dozens more. 





For Orlando's LGBTQ community, Pulse was a place to go and "get lost from all the crap in the world," said Blue Star, an LGBTQ-friendly business owner and co-founder of the cancer survivor charity The Barber Fund.



"When you get in those doors, terrorism doesn't matter, discrimination doesn't matter," Star said. “It was a place to be free, period. Just be free.” 









As one of the premier clubs in Orlando's small but close-knit LGBTQ community, Pulse offered more than entertainment and escape, according to Gia Gunn, a former "RuPaul's Drag Race" contestant who performed multiple times at the nightclub. 



"If you're questioning your sexuality or your gender ... Pulse is one of those places in Orlando that created a safe environment for people to come and be themselves," Gunn said. 



She described Pulse as a haven for entertainers honing their art as well as for those "who didn't have a safe place at home or a comfortable environment to express themselves."



Parliament House, an LGBTQ club that has been in Orlando for 40 years, shared customers, employees, entertainers and philanthropic efforts with Pulse, according to Parliament's assistant beverage manager Dan Schwab.



Schwab ticked off a list of groups Pulse supported or raised money for, including AIDS patients, LGBTQ youth and Hurricane Katrina victims.



"[Pulse] is not just a nightclub, a place to go out; it's a place to get community support and find resources you need," he said.  



Pulse's ethos stemmed from its founding purpose. Co-founder Barbara Poma formed the club in 2004 as a tribute to her brother John, who died of AIDS 13 years before. The club's name is a nod to John's heartbeat, according to an information page for Pulse.  





“[Pulse] was a place to be free, period. Just be free.”

Blue Star, co-founder of The Barber Fund





"[Barbara] built that place to give the community a place to go to be free and be happy. It was built out of love and respect for the community," said Star, a longtime friend of Poma. "It was a place for wayward souls to kind of find their way in a safe environment."



Star noted that Pulse was also a major supporter of The Barber Fund.



"This act of violence was done on good people -- very good people," Star said. 



Gunn said that while Pulse's legacy of openness and love will endure, some of the carefree spirit has been replaced by worry. 



"I feel for gay clubs in general. Is it going to be a thing? Let's target all gay clubs?" she said. "There's a lot of hate out there."  



Nina Golgowski contributed reporting. 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Paul Ryan officially endorses Trump

Donald Trump can turn his agenda ideas into laws to help people's lives, House Speaker Paul Ryan said in an offical endorsement. Joshua Roberts/REUTERS

Donald Trump can turn his agenda ideas into laws to help improve people's lives, House Speaker Paul Ryan said. Joshua Roberts/REUTERS


WASHINGTON - House Speaker Paul Ryan endorsed Donald Trump on Thursday, ending an extraordinary public split between the GOP's presumptive presidential nominee and the nation's highest-ranking Republican office holder.


Ryan outlined his support for the New York billionaire in a column published in his hometown newspaper, declaring his goal to “unite the party so we can win in the fall.”


“It's no secret that he and I have our differences. I won't pretend otherwise,” Ryan wrote. “And when I feel the need to, I'll continue to speak my mind. But the reality is, on the issues that make up our agenda, we have more common ground than disagreement.”


Trump, Ryan said, “would help us turn the ideas in this agenda into laws to help improve people's lives. That's why I'll be voting for him this fall.”


While Ryan did not explicitly say he was endorsing Trump, spokesman Brendan Buck wrote on Twitter that the column marked a formal endorsement.


Ryan shocked the political world last month by refusing to endorse Trump once he became the last major Republican presidential contender still in the race. The pair met privately in a series of Washington meetings last month and their campaigns have maintained contact.


Ryan's announcement was released the same time that Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton was delivering a foreign policy speech excoriating Trump's foreign policy.


This story will be updated.


Associated Press reporter Steve Peoples wrote this report.


The post Paul Ryan officially endorses Trump appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

After the Skilled Worker Visa Lottery, Are There Options?

If you think Americans are lucky, kind of like lottery winners, you are right. This year, nearly a quarter million highly skilled foreign workers applied for H -1B visas to remain in the US but only 85,000 visas were...

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Why Many Terrorists Are Criminals Before They Turn To Extremism



Every week, The WorldPost asks an expert to shed light on a topic driving headlines around the world. This week, we speak with author Mubin Shaikh on the rise of jihadist groups in the Syrian civil war.



At least two of the bombers involved in this week's attacks on Brussels, which killed at least 32 people, had extensive criminal backgrounds: Ibrahim el-Bakraoui and his brother Khalid held multiple convictions between them, including for armed robbery, shooting at police officers and attempted car-jacking.



Similarly, some of the people involved in the November terrorist attacks on Paris had previously been convicted of or questioned about a range of crimes.



In fact, analysts have found that jihadi terror networks are often populated with criminals and ex-criminals, complicating the conception that their crimes are inspired by ideology alone. This especially has proven to be the case in France and Belgium.  



The WorldPost spoke with radicalization expert Mubin Shaikh, an ex-counterterrorism operative for the Canadian security services and former extremist, to discuss the relationship between extremism and criminal networks.





What role do criminal networks play in radicalization?  



We can say that the criminality aspect of this is what makes these individuals more susceptible to use violence, because they’re used to using violence.  



The overarching thing with criminal networks is, number one: It accustoms you to violence. It makes it easier for you to commit that violence, because you’re used to seeing it, you’re around it. Number two, it allows you to build up a operational capability -- you now have a skillset you can apply to terrorism. Number three, it gives you access to a wider network of people who exhibit those previous two attributes.



You will see this in the overwhelming majority of individuals who join ISIS. They are criminals first, and their religion becomes a costume for them.



In terms of areas where radicalization can occur and people can be recruited: Can prison act as an environment for radicalization? 



There’s two sides to that issue of radicalization in prisons. One is, if you look at what’s happened in the term "radicalization" -- a lot of people immediately associate that with religion, Muslim radicalization. But radicalization is just a generic term -- it refers to a very human process of people becoming increasingly extreme in their political views, or their ideological frame.  



So you could say, yes, prisons are a university of radicalization. I mean that in a general sense -- if somebody goes into a prison, is he going to come out more hardened or is he going to come out softer? 



Right, and that could be of any ideology, whether it’s white supremacy or Islamist terrorism.



Exactly, so in that context, prisons are a factory for radicalization. The jihadis themselves say prison is the university of jihad. They say that because you can have intimate networks with people, you can spend time to indoctrinate yourself and you’re not busy with being in the outside world. In that sense, yes, it is.



On the other side, when you’re locking up a disproportionately high number of Muslims, that is their common identity. You can be a drug dealer, a robber or whatever, but at the end of the day you have that common identity around which you can unite.



That feeds into a kind of perception of in-group among radicals?



Yeah, absolutely, it’s a group dynamic aspect of it. At times ideology is a driver of violent extremism, and at other times ideology becomes the passenger while other psychosocial factors become the driver. Those include in-group dynamics, out-group dynamics and marginalization based on discrimination. The prison experience is just another aspect of that.









Another thing that has been noted is that there’s a high proportion among terror attacks of people with close family ties. What role do peers and family members play in radicalization?



Marc Sageman did a lot of study on this, and his argument was that it’s not ideology that drives these people but kinship. It’s not what you know but who you know. So that’s one side of it. A lot of research does indicate that a lot of these people do get involved because of family ties, peers and kinship.



The other thing is operational security. A brother is not going to inform on another brother; a sister on a brother; or a mother on a son. Cohesion -- that you trust your brother, you love your brother -- is very useful for those purposes.



What can security service do to better counter radicalization and violent extremism? Particularly speaking about North American and European security services.



I see it in two ways. One is that you need to have strong human intelligence. Human intelligence is key, and when doing so, framing it in a way that gives those human intelligence services a sense of meaning. A sense that you’re actually doing something good, and you’re defending your faith from people who are failing your religion. This was the narrative they got me on, in that sense. 



Another is NGO-based intervention. An intelligence guy can’t talk to an at-risk youth, because he is the enemy as far as they’re concerned. But NGOs that have training in mental health and educational or economic support can intervene when they see a troubled youth and give them an alternative.



Is there any country attempting something like that and showing signs of success?



Yeah, there are a number of countries that have been doing this for some time now. In Denmark, they’ve been doing that. The Nordic countries also have a very particular approach that is very heavy on this. When their intelligence services pick up some guys, what they’ll tell them is, "You should go talk to such-and-such imam, or this community organization." This shows that they’re not just about locking people up and throwing away the key -- they actually want to help.



In North America, it’s really just Canada -- where a lot of community interventions are being done quietly. The U.S. is still not on point yet on that. It’s starting, and there are some cases where there are imams who are talking to people, but it’s still not developed to the level it needs to be.



Any final thoughts in general on this you’d like to add?



I would say that right now what people are starting to agree on is the need for the use of former extremists, reformed extremists who have been there and done that. The equivalent of this is found in Germany, where they have the exit program for white supremacists, and a lot of them use ex-white supremacists.



The principles are exactly the same -- correcting the ideology, correcting the worldview and offering psychosocial support. 



This interview has been edited for length and clarity.





Read more HuffPost interviews on the conflict in Syria:



How Syria Became The Center Of The Jihadist World



The Terror Group That Could Ruin Syria’s Ceasefire Isn’t ISIS



Inside The Islamic State’s Apocalyptic Beliefs



Have We Got ISIS All Wrong? 



Russia Says Its Airstrikes In Syria Are Perfectly Legal. Are They? 





MORE ON BRUSSELS:






For additional coverage in French, visit Le Huffington Post and their live blog; For coverage in German, visit HuffPost Germany; For coverage in Spanish, visitHuffPost Spain; For coverage in Arabic, visit HuffPost Arabi.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Thursday, March 17, 2016

An Illustrated Guide For Anyone Who's Ever Been Confused By A 401(k)

Saving money for retirement is a lot like flossing. Experts agree that it’s important in the long run, but getting into the habit of actually doing it now isn’t easy.



The good news is that many employers offer a retirement savings plan commonly known as a 401(k). The bad news is that understanding your 401(k) isn’t easy. There are many different types of 401(k) plans to consider, and the surrounding terminology may make it tricky for some employees to understand how to make the most out of this investment.



We joined forces with State Farm® to explain the ins and outs of 401(k) retirement plans in six simple comics, helping you maximize your savings while avoiding common pitfalls that may chip away at your nest egg in the long run.



Your job offers a 401(k) plan? Great!









Image: Michael Driver



No one would choose to pay taxes voluntarily, yet that’s exactly what you do when you don’t take advantage of a 401(k). Arising from a 1978 law, 401(k) plans have helped Americans save more by allowing them to invest, or defer, a portion of their pre-tax earnings into a retirement fund sponsored by their employer. Unlike the funds in a savings account offered by a bank, the money in a 401(k) is directly invested in higher interest opportunities.



Does your employer offer matching contributions? Boom!









Image: Michael Driver



Although they’re not required to, many companies offer matching contributions to your 401(k), which is a game-changer in boosting the size of your retirement account. On average, employers match contributions up to 2.7 percent of an employee’s salary, which has a huge impact on the total size of your retirement account when it’s time to cash out. Think of it as a bump in salary!



Wait, how much should you contribute?









Image: Michael Driver



Get the most out of your employer’s matching plan: Contribute at least as much as your employer is willing to match, otherwise you are literally passing up free money. Although a portion of your employer’s matching contributions is immediately available to your 401(k), you often need to satisfy a vesting schedule that slowly unlocks your employer’s contributions after each year you remain with the company -- typically five -- until you’ve reached 100 percent.



Switching jobs? Here's what you should do.









Image: Michael Driver



If you’re changing employers, you have four options to consider when deciding what to do with your (now) old 401(k). You may choose to leave your old 401(k) with your former employer, roll it over to a new employer’s 401(k), or cash out. The fourth option is to roll over your 401(k) into an IRA, or Individual Retirement Arrangement.



As tempting as it may sound, cashing out is generally considered to be the worst decision, because not only will your savings be subject to a 25 percent federal income tax in addition to state tax, you’re also subject to a 10 percent early withdrawal penalty if you’re younger than age 59 1/2.



If your new employer permits it, rolling over your old 401(k) to your new plan is generally a sound strategy; you’ll continue to earn money on your previous savings while putting in additional money from each paycheck. In case your new employer doesn’t offer a 401(k), your previous employer may allow you to keep your old 401(k) under the stewardship of the fund manager if it has $5,000 or more in it. The drawback is that you won’t be able to make additional contributions toward your old 401(k), making it grow much slower.



What about an IRA? When does that make sense?









Image: Michael Driver



IRAs allow you to set up a savings account similar to a 401(k), except it’s not tied to your employer and you generally have more flexibility over how your money is invested. There are two types of IRAs for you to consider: a traditional IRA and a Roth IRA.



A traditional IRA is similar to a 401(k) in that you won’t pay taxes on your earnings until you decide to cash out. The major differences: an IRA’s individual contribution limit is $5,500 as opposed to the $18,000 for 401(k), and there won’t be any matching contributions from your employer.



On the other hand, the money you put into a Roth IRA is post-tax, but you won’t have to pay any taxes on your earnings when you withdraw your money. Many employers also offer what’s known as a Roth 401(k), which functions exactly like a 401(k) but it follows the tax scheme of a Roth IRA.



It’s time to cash out! Or is it?









Image: Michael Driver



When you’ve turned age 59 1/2, you’re finally able to cash out your 401(k) and IRA accounts without paying the steep early withdrawal penalties, but should you?



Since the full retirement age is 67 for anyone born in 1960 or later, it’s in your best interest to keep working at least until then, as you’ll be able to delay the distribution, or payout, of your 401(k) and traditional IRA until you’re 70 1/2 years old.



Once you’ve figured out the right way for you to receive your savings, take a moment to step back and marvel at the prudence of your younger self: you’ve made it.



Life gets infinitely easier when you’ve planned ahead. Now that you have the tools to embrace your future with confidence, let State Farm® help you to protect it.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.