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Today’s Headlines

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  • Driver Hits and Kills 12-Year-Old San Antonio Girl Walking to School (KSAT)
  • SE Houston Residents Want Safe Intersection After 67-Year-Old Grandmother’s Preventable Death (KHOU)
  • Austin Council Mobility Committee Asks Staff to Study Transit Priority Policy to Speed Up Bus (Monitor)
  • Austin South Central Waterfront Plan Is Beautiful: Dense Urbanism + Nature (Statesman)
  • Thorough Critique of Joel Kotkin’s “Dog Whistle to Supporters & Consumers of Sprawl” (CP-DR)
  • Take the Austin Mobility Talks Survey to Tell Council Your Transportation Priorities
  • Drunk Dallas Woman Drives Wrong Way, Smashes Into Police Car; None Injured (Morning News)
  • More Millenials Moved to Dallas Than Anywhere Else Last Year (Morning News)
  • TxDOT Doesn’t Want You to TxtDrive (NBCDFW)

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  • San Antonio Selected for Federal Assistance to Build Transit-Oriented Development (SGA)
  • How Houston’s “Non-Zoning” Codes Produce a Zony-Like Sprawl (City Observatory)
  • Texas Central Swears They’ll Run HSR Without Government Grants or Bailouts
  • A Real Estate Professional’s Guide to Selling Bikeability: The New Buyer’s Desire (HoustonAgent)
  • How Can Austin Increase Housing Choices for All Austinites? Tell the Austin Housing Plan
  • Hit-and-Run Driver Who Dragged and Injured a Cyclist in East Austin Arrested (TWC)
  • L.A. Considers Bus System Reimagining, Following Houston’s Lead (CityLab)
  • 4 of the Ways Austin Envisions Using Technology to Help People Get Around (Medium)
  • Texas Cities Rank High on Efficient Use of Taxpayer Money, According to Narrow Study That Doesn’t Include Transportation, Infrastructure, or Health as Indicators (CultureMap)

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via Not of it.

METRO Houston and Social Media – New @METROHouAlerts

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Over the past week or so some might have noticed that the Twitter account for Houston's METRO system had started tweeting bus delays. Until then, only a few rail line service announcements made their way into the Twittersphere. Now, after a week or so of service announcements on their main Twitter handle, the agency has employed a separate Twitter account, @METROHouAlerts, to keep riders aware of bus, rail and HOV/HOT lane delays or service announcements. (I had a draft post earlier in the week that recommended creating a separate service announcement account, but METRO beat me to it!)Tweets by @METROHouAlerts It may not mean much of anything to most, but this is certainly new, and is reflective of the growing desire of METRO to better inform its customers and provide increased customer service. One might ask whether this process is practical for individual bus routes, especially those that are infrequent. Who am I to decide? What's the proper service tweeting etiquette? This has the ability to unravel into a Seinfeld-like discussion about "over-tweeters". Maybe the delay notices are needed on frequent routes like the 82 that are the backbone of METRO's bus system.On a normal day though, it could be questioned how necessary or effective the notices are, especially when METRO readily provides notice on their TRIP application, and through the agency's text updates, personalized to each bus stop. It seems that riders may be apt to rely on notices through those services.Now, METRO's Twitter account is a relative lightweight at 7,400 followers when compared to other metropolitan transit systems. (And as of Sunday night, just over 100 people have followed the @METROHouAlerts account). This is likely indicative of METRO's ridership share as well. Do the majority of METRO's riders even use Twitter? I'd argue no, not many do. Or, maybe not enough to warrant real-time system delay announcements on their main feed.Chicago's @CTA account has 102,000 followers. The CTA doesn't separate service alerts from their general tweets, something that many other agencies do. The Bay Area is a bit different. San Francisco's @SFBART account has 136,000 followers.  San Francisco's @SFBARTalert account has over 48,000 followers by itself. Houston's METRO is moving toward this model, separating general information from service announcements. DART in Dallas also employs a separate alert account. You could also take an ultra-tailored social media approach, as the Philadelphia area's SEPTA has, customizing riders' Twitter feeds with accounts for each trolley, regional rail (come on Houston!), and subway line. This account from Boston's MBTA gives some background into how their agency benefited from some civic hacking, allowing for the creation of individualized service announcement Twitter accounts for the agency's most popular transit lines.I know that Houstonians are often quick to point out that Houston shouldn't be compared to other large cities. "We're different and unique." Well, yes. But we're the 4th largest city in the country. The unincorporated areas of Harris County, many of which are service by METRO, would be considered one of the most populous cities in the country by itself. So, there are many people who rely on public transit, and likely desire to continue to gain more and more information on a system that they depend on. (There was a 3% increase in METRO's local bus service from January 2015 to January 2016.)Do Twitter updates of delays make the system more enticing or appealing? Possibly. I doubt that anyone will decide to use METRO simply because of the fact that they provide service updates through social media. I think there's a greater stigma toward public transit here in Houston that will extend beyond being relevant on social media. But, as an agency, METRO is attempting to do all it can to be sure that once someone rides their network for the first time they are presented with as much information as possible, and their travel experience is one worth repeating.METRO continues to make improvements to their community engagement, and I believe it will pay dividends as the agency looks forward as to how to better serve their customers. Providing riders with continued information about delays is just another way METRO is displaying its desire to provide continuously improving customer service.

Today’s Headlines

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  • 65,000 People Bike and Play in Downtown San Antonio at 10th Annual Siclovia (Rivard)
  • Why Spending $4.7B to Widen I-35 Is a Waste of Money (Austinrailnow)
  • Fort Worth Bicyclist Killed, Left for Dead in Another Hit and Run (Dallas News)
  • McKinney Housing Authority to Triple Capacity of Low-Income Senior Housing Site (Dallas News)
  • 40,000 Rental Units on the Way to Meet Record Demand in Dallas (Dallas News)
  • USFS Finds Austin’s Trees Worth $34M/Yr in First U.S. Urban Forest Inventory (Conservation)
  • Dallas’ Homeless Move Into LEED Platinum Tiny Homes Near Downtown (Dallas News)
  • 3 Reasons Why Adding 2,500 Uber Drivers to South Dallas Might Not Help the Poor (Observer)
  • City of SA & Bexar County to Sell Key Property Over 8 Downtown Acres Along Creek (Rivard)

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  • TXDOT Responds to Call to Rethink Freeways By Only Thinking About Freeways (Chron)
  • Bike Link From Buffalo Bayou Park Into Downtown Closes Gap in Houston’s Bike Network (HPM)
  • Houston Parks Board Hires Nationally-Known Trust for Public Land Leader as New CEO (Chron)
  • TXDOT to Kick Of “Talk, Text, Crash” Campaign in April (Telegraph)
  • Energy Industry Heavy Loads Causing Highways, Roads to Deteriorate Too Soon (Chron)
  • Kinder Director: Leaders Should Dedicate Next 10-15 Years to Helping People Experience Houston on Foot (OffCite)

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Parking Madness Elite Eight: Dallas vs. Muncie

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We’re down to six remaining contenders in this year’s Parking Madness tournament after the grey expanse of Niagara Falls, New York, blew out the competition from Rutland, Vermont, claiming the second slot in the Final Four. Today’s pairing: a Texas-sized disaster and a Midwestern moonscape. Only one will advance. Dallas Dallas’s Fair Park is a 275-acre complex near downtown that is home to the state fair. The enormous [...]

Today’s Headlines

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  • Volunteer Two Shifts at NCAA Bike Valet and Get a BikeHouston Jersey
  • Houston Bike Plan Webinar Today at Noon
  • SA DOT Says 2017 Bond Should Support Vision Zero Initiative & Ecological Sustainability (Rivard Report)
  • Thought Experiment Finds Eliminating Toll Roads Would Cost Texas About $38 Billion (Morning News)
  • Two Historic Structures Should Be Competing For, Not Against, DART’s Light Rail Alignment (Observer)
  • The Plans & Parks in Walking Distance of the Hardy Rail Yard Redevelopment (Swamplot)

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