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  • Waiting for a ride

Tuesday, June 22 Your Toll Money at Work (perhaps)


A sunny cool morning with the promise of a warm summer day. The fog is still lapping around the edges of the bay and looks heavier as we get closer to San Francisco. I’m in the front seat of a lovely Mercedes E 320. You know how I love Mercedes, so I’m happy with the ride. Our driver is suited up in a sharp gray suit and a crisp white shirt. A take-out coffee is close at hand. Four of those eternal pine tree-shaped air freshners are hanging in a bunch near his left knee – a veritable air freshner grove. Traffic is moving smoothly.

Radio news says a bike lane from the east bay across the new bay bridge is in the works (has been for awhile). Actually a portion of the bike/pedestrian lane is already in the current budget and has been constructed – the portion that connects Oakland with Yerba Buena island. If you are in a high vehicle when you cross the bridge, you can look down on the finished part and see the lane. Today’s news is that a similar path, on the western span of the bridge, connecting Yerba Buena Island with San Francisco has now been approved by the California Senate (Bill 1061, sponsored by State Senator Loni Hancock). This portion, called the West Span Pathway, is estimated to cost between $178 and $428 million. The Senate Bill, which passed on Monday, June 7, allows toll revenues to pay for the project. So there is some of your toll money at work.

On-line comments I’ve read are mostly pro – coming from bicyclists. They’ve been waiting lo these many years for such a route across the water. But one comment said “. . .it’s way too frigging expensive. Even as a daily cyclist I find this crazy spending to be upsetting for something that really won’t be used much. You could completely fix Muni for that kind of money . . ”

However, another comment, “Reminds me of the (heavily used) bike lane on the Brooklyn Bridge”.

As much as I am not in favor of casual carpool toll, I can at least feel better about the money being used to actually decrease auto use in the bay area. I think once this is built, it will become popular and will be used a lot. And if you don’t ride a bike, you can walk across the bridge. Hey, it’s only 8.4 miles. Just a bit more than Bay to Breakers.

Another bright note for the anti-auto commute: Ferry service is going to be expanded with the construction of an expanded ferry terminal. The new terminal, which will be a “hub” for 12 ferry routes is part of a major project to connect Treasure Island as part of the ferry service. The plan is to triple ferry service during the next 25 years, serving up to 12 million passengers annually. Current service only includes 6 ferry routes. Funding, which will total close to $25 million, comes from state bond money. Completion of this project is expected in 2014 or 2015.

Monday, June 21 The Summer Solstice – the beginning of the end (of summer and free rides)


The longest day of the year. Although officially the first day of Summer, after today the days become increasingly shorter and we begin (today) to count down to December 21 and the Winter Solstice. I’m in a squeaky clean new VW sedan. Our driver is a 60s something clean cut fellow wearing a great shirt. I love it. Small yellow and white checks, worn with khaki pants. Very summery. From his key chain in the ignition dangles a small tag with what may be his name – David. It flashes on and off like a miniature billboard. Odd.

NPR radio nixes any conversation, however when the local KQED Perspectives portion cuts in, there is a right-on-the-money commentary about the upcoming tolls that makes the listening worthwhile. Check out http://www.kqed.org/epArchive/R201006210735. It’s by Stewart Florsheim, called “The Cost of a Toll”. He worries that the casual carpool might “go the way of drive-in movies”.

Some more worth-reading words on the toll (this from last month) are in The Island, the on-line Alameda news site. Writer Heather Lyn Wood wrote a good piece, “Casual Carpoolers Face Toll Charges in July” (http://www.theislandofalameda.com/2010/05/casual-carpoolers-face-toll-charges-in-july/.) This gives a good overview of carpooling and the current issues. Great bonus are the comments following the article. I especially liked this plea from Stuart Campau, “What can we do to stop this? If anyone has any ideas, contact me”. Ah Stuart, we all have ideas, but we’re not the ones making the rules. But I strongly believe that message boards, and blogs like this are a positive way to communicate with each other, share our ideas, and maybe come up with a way to change those rules.

Traffic is bad and we crawl, even in the carpool lane. Until, suddenly and mysteriously when we approach the bridge and the toll gates, there is hardly any traffic. We arrive in the city at 8 a.m.

Friday June 18 The party’s over


A long line of cars is waiting this morning. Just a few riders. I take a rear seat in a Honda CR-V. The driver is a young guy with a long pony tail – all Friday light in jeans, sneakers and a red athletic jersey top. He’s intently listening to the soccer match on the radio. It’s Friday light on the freeway, too. We’ll be in San Francisco in about 35 minutes today.

Last evening I watched a bit of the British Petroleum CEO Tony Hayward’s testimony before the House Oversight & Investigations subcommittee. Lots of talk. There’s been too much talk for too long about alternative fuels and energy. All the while the oilmen get fatter and richer. We need to plug up the oil for good and change the way we use our resources, our environment, and each other. The fossil fuel party’s over.

Happy Father’s Day Weekend, everyone.

Thursday, June 17 KPIX joins the Casual Carpool!


Early this morning I met Gerry Watson, producer from KPIX-TV, San Francisco (that’s Channel 5) for an interview about casual carpooling and the July 1 tolls. Gerry is putting together a program on these issues and has been talking to carpoolers all over the Bay Area. Gerry and his camera joined me at the Vallejo carpool line, along with another passenger and Kevin, the driver, in his new VW sedan for an ‘on camera’ commute.

We talked about casual carpooling in general, how it works, why it’s great, funny times we’ve had as casual carpoolers, and our concerns about the new tolls and what’s going to happen next. I would have to rate today’s commute as my most unique ride to date. Crammed into a medium size car with 3 other riders and one big video camera is not my typical ride! At one point I was holding the camera, later my fellow rider, a diminuitive and very quiet lady, was asked to hold the camera to get another angle of the riders and the car. We covered a lot of ground in addition to the 35+ miles of the commute itself and I’m looking forward to seeing the program on air next week.

Kudos to Gerry Watson and KPIX for what promises to be a very informative and innovative program on bay area commuting and the July 1 tolls.

I”ll put the date and times in my blog as soon as I get the information. Stay tuned.

Wednesday, June 16 – I’m a driver today.


Today I’m a driver. A friend is with me who needs a ride back into the city, and we pick up one passenger, a young sort of ‘gangsta’-styled guy. He hops in the back seat and plugs himself into his head phones. I would have taken another passenger, but the back seat is full of my friend’s luggage. Traffic is heavy and challenging – lots of speed up and slow down and it takes a bit longer than usual. I notice Highway Patrol cars parked at 2 strategically located spots along the way, where they can monitor our comings and goings. It’s not often I see these guys, and wish they were around more often. We arrive in SF a few minutes after 8, drop off our passenger at Fremont and Howard and continue to our destinations.

Tomorrow COMMUTER GAL will be riding with KPIX-TV in some as yet unknown commuter’s car. They are interviewing for comments about the toll increases on July 1 and about car pooling in general, and will be taping us as we commute from Vallejo to San Francisco. So stay tuned my fellow riders and drivers! I’ll let you know when we’ll be on the air.

Tuesday, June 15 ‘your cheatin’ ride’


I’m in the front seat of an older Mercedes Sedan after a 15 minute wait today. I love Mercedes. Classy, safe, well-designed cars, although this car is pre-airbag, so I don’t feel quite as secure. But still, it’s a nice ride. As I approached the Vallejo carpool area, 2 women were standing alongside the curb waving for a ride, holding up 2 fingers to indicate they both wanted a ride. This is the area before you turn into the car pool pickup – about a block from where the riders line up. Blatant Cheating, ladies! I join the long line of riders and we slowly shuffle up to the front of the line and then I see those 2 cheating ladies walking to the end of the now even longer line. Ha. No one would give them a ride. How sweet it is sometimes.

This is a no talk ride. KBLX radio. Another cool morning and as we approach Berkeley and the view of the city, there is no view today. Just fog stretching across the bay.

Monday June 14 Pelicans and Tolls – Signs of Summer


The hot weekend felt great but waiting in the cold foggy wind at the carpool lane made it seem a dim memory. After 10 chilly minutes I have a ride in a Chevrolet Trailblazer, a big SUV. I’m comfy in the back seat of this big warm black vinyl interior. A friendly alert lady is driving. A small charm, a pale green bead, hangs from the mirror and a large San Francisco Giants decal is on the bottom of the windshield.

Enroute to the carpool this morning I saw a sight I’d never seen before. A group of about 20 pelicans at rest in the Carquinez Strait on various pieces of driftwood. “A flotilla of pelicans”, my husband commented. Although I’ve often seen pelicans flying in their swooping formations all over the bay, I have never seen them sitting in groups like that. Their huge white bodies against the backdrop of the softly lit morning fog was spectacular. This group at rest may very well have been flying all night, arriving just in time for the Summer Equinox – the first day of summer is next Monday, June 21, and pelicans are always a sure sign that summer is here.

Today’s ride is pleasantly uneventful. Traffic is heavy but it’s smooth sailing in our lane. I break the silence to ask the driver about her views on the impending toll. She’s not happy about it, but says “there’s not much we can do about it – not with this economy.” She’s not sure yet how she’ll deal with riders contributing.

We’ll all have some decisions to make this summer when the toll goes into effect – 2 weeks to go.

Friday (finally) June 11 Naked Bikers tomorrow


Ahh Friday. And a warm, real summer weather weekend coming up! This morning’s ride is a big Nissan SUV and I’m in the front seat with a lovely lady. Waits till we’re buckled in, makes sure radio and temperature are all to our liking and then off we go. We talk about the weather, my recent trip to New York (and the high humidity there that nearly did me in) and plane rides. I had a very uncomfortable flight on Continental. She is over 6 feet tall and said her cross country plane trips are “torture” with the limited seat space. Of course I ask her about the upcoming toll. She has been a regular casual carpool driver, but thinks it may be time to change her commute plans. She has been taking an evening karate (black belt!) course in San Francisco and when that ends in another month, she may switch to BART.

We agree that this may be the beginning of the end of the casual carpool system.

She said she’ll give it a try for a month and see how it works out. Whatever riders want to pay or not pay, she’s okay with that, and she would never refuse a ride to anyone because of the money. A good lady.

We have a laugh when we see a Toyota pick up go by with the decal “AMERICAN BY BIRTH – RAIDERS FAN BY CHOICE”. The rear bumper also sports a US AIR FORCE sticker. How’s that for a classic example of American Prime?

Something I’ve missed the last few years is the WORLD NAKED BIKE RIDE (http://www.sfbikeride.org/), taking place tomorrow, Saturday, June 12 in San Francisco. This is the 7th Annual such event in San Francisco. For six years in a row they have “protested against our dependence on fossil fuel by riding our bikes across San Francisco – Naked!” “Can you think of a better way to get people to pay attention?”, they ask. Check them out. They meet at noon at the Justin Herman Plaza and bike to Golden Gate Park and back.

A nice Friday light ride and we’re in the City in 40 minutes.

Thursday June 10 More Toll Talk


Plenty of rides again. Today I’m in the back seat of a Honda sedan. A Phillipino couple I’ve ridden with before are in the front seat. A small wooden cross swings from the mirror. Traffic is heavy, the radio is loud and we sit quietly as we move along, at a pretty good pace in spite of the traffic. Until just before Berkeley, and then we crawl. As we approach the Maze intersection we see the reason for the slow down – a stalled SUV in the center lane. Once we’re around that we speed along and up onto the bridge.

I lean forward and ask the driver if he’s a regular casual carpool driver, and he says yes, most of the time. So I ask how he feels about the toll and about collecting money from his passengers after July 1. He shrugs and says the economy is bad, what can we do. He seems a bit vague on the numbers, so I explain. “The $4 bridge toll is going up to $6 during commute hours; $5 during off commute hours and weekends. Carpool lane is going to $2.50”. His wife says, “$12 a day, just for toll?” Right, unless you use the carpool lane.

After navigating a lane change on the bridge the driver says, “I wonder what they do with the money. Think about all the thousands of cars crossing the bridge every day – at $6 a car it must be millions of dollars!” “Yes,” I agree. “But I think a lot of it will go to cover expenses already incurred, instead of for new costs.” “So” he says, “they are charging toll to cover their over-runs? They should stick to their budgets!” About 270,000 cars cross the bridge (both ways) each day and the morning one-way commute is about 30,000. The only actual dollar amount I could find was from 2008; at that time nearly $43 million in bridge tolls came in for that one year.

I would like to see the tolls being used, at least in large part, to pay for more BART tracks, more accessible parking lots for public transit connections, more commuter buses. I hate to see (as I have just yesterday on the 80 freeway) men in hard hats working away to WIDEN the freeway and add yet another lane for the gas guzzlers. We should be aggressively getting out of the car-gas business instead of accommodating it.

“I think people could pay $1 if they want to”, he says in response to my question about collecting toll from riders. I ask him if he has a Fast Track transponder and he does not, yet, but seems okay with getting one. (required for carpool lane drivers)

It’s a sparkling sunny day on the bay. Yesterday’s heavy winds have cleared the air and we breeze into the city.

Wednesday, June 9 “No Pay, No Ride”


Well once again I am the solitary rider with a long line of drivers to choose from. The first car is a bright red Dodge Avenger, a passenger already in the front seat, so I get in the back. This is a clean, new, pleasant car, with a tape of new age/jazz stuff coming out of the speakers. Before we hit the freeway I ask “Are you ready to start paying toll July 1?” “Sure. Just put my transponder in the window”, the driver replies. I ask him if he expects passengers to pay and he is emphatic – “Yes!”.

“What about riders who have no money with them, or only have large bills?” he pats the arm rest between the seats. “I think I’ll keep 20 singles and some change in here.” As for riders who can’t pay, he says he’ll probably give them a ride. He and the rider in the front seat speculate about cars with no transponders and what will happen. Then we’re underway and we retreat into our own spaces.

It’s a gray, overcast morning again, but summer weather is due to return for the weekend. Traffic very heavy, but the carpool lane is moving at 50 mph. We’re in the city in 45 minutes.