Suburbs

Delmar Crime Wave

It’s warm weather once again. Crime is spiking through the roof, even coming to the comfortable suburbs that are widely viewed as being safe compared to living in cities like Albany. Today’s incident shocked the conscience of all residents in Bethlehem, after Margie Smith is alleged to have parked her car at a bus stop. The incident was first reported to the police by an anonymous tipster. A blue Toyota Sienna mini-van was seen parked, illegally, in a bus stop. Thanks to quick action by the local police, all five police cars responded to the scene and ensured no unsafe conditions beyond the illegally parked car where to break out.

Passengers who might normally have boarded the bus at this stop where directed by a combination force of the Bethlehem Police and CDTA supervisors. These people stood by to ensure if any passengers sought to board the bus that they would be directed to board the bus not at the curb-side but near the traffic lane. Thanks to the supervision of the CDTA, it was ensured that no bus passengers’ lives where put in risk by waiting closely by passing traffic. Many commuters may have been tied up for a number of minutes getting past this vehicular infraction scene. To compensate for this lost, CDTA President Ray Mellady is offering free one-day CDTA trip passes, that anybody effected by the incident may obtain by calling the CDTA central headquarters and explaining their situation. He also apologised for people’s inconvenience, and reminded people of the importance of obeying traffic laws.

Police told News 10 that Margie Smith was issued an appearance ticket to Bethlehem Town Court. In addition, her car was impounded waiting further analysis of tire track prints left near the bus stop. The Bethlehem Police Forensic Unit has fully investigated this traffic infraction, and has taken pictures detailing the illegal parking, including aerial photography. Pavement samples where taken for further analysis in the crime lab. D.A. P. David Soares has this to say about the traffic infraction, I am awful sorry that this had to happen. Yet, people where inconvenienced and lives where put at risk by the choice of illegal parking by Ms. Smith. Other politicians, including Bethlehem residents Assemblyman Tim Gordon and Senator Neil Breslin also stated their shock over this callous incident of illegal and dangerous parking.

Ms. Smith referred all questions on this alleged crime to her lawyer, Mr. Terry Kindlon. He described the incident as little more then a careless mistake caused by a quick run to the coffee shop to purchase a cup off coffee. He also questioned the legality of the law, noting that the signs did not mention no parking, but only No Stopping Except Buses. Ms. Smith did not stop her car here to let out passengers, she only parked it. A hearing over this parking ticket is set to occur on Wednesday. The maximum penalty Ms. Smith faces is a $40 fine for parking in a bus stop. It is widely believed that this fine will be reduced and that Ms. Smith will plea to a reduced charge rather then be convicted of illegal parking in a bus stop.

Parking Lagoons

parking lagoon – a place for the temporary disposal of private automobiles in urbanized areas while folks shop, work, recreate

Ever since the start of the automobile age, we have been building parking lots, or as James Howard Kunstler and some of the environmentalists like to call them in a deriding fashion, parking lagoons.

Parking

Parking lagoons are large fields paved over with asphalt, designed to allow people to park large amounts of automobiles while they enage in their day to day business. Rather parking along on the street, and requiring people to potentially walk a few blocks, parking lagoons create consolidate parking.

This causes a number of problems:

  • Parking lagoons cover vast areas of land that could be better used for buildings, farm fields, or forests.
    • The average parking lagoon is 3 to 5 times the size of the average building they serve.
  • Parking lagoons collect up rain and leaking fluids from cars, often depositing them in creeks and rivers without treatment.
  • Parking lagoons collect heat by providing vast black surfaces to collect heat.
  • Parking lagoons are dangerous to people walking to and from their cars.
  • Parking lagoons are areas of large numbers of minor car accidents.

The Scale of New York

Notes on the Re-Run for Wednesday, April 25th.

— Andy

I was wondering how big the New York City-metro area is compared to other regions in our state. What does New York City-metro area look like compared to Albany County, the Plattsburgh and North Country-area, and the Ithaca-Watkins Glen Finger Lakes-area?

All of these maps are exactly the same scale, 75 pixels per 5 miles of real land below it. You can visually compare the size with these maps, and look at urban density and farm uses, via the color of the land below. It will not display in the RSS feed or Facebook, so view at andyarthur.org.

New York City-Metro Area.

This map includes part of Westchester County and Nassau County, but gives you an idea of the size of the metropolitan area that is most associated with what people think of when they think of NYC. Not all of this area is highly urbanized, much of the surrounding area that appears with higher levels of green is suburbs.

Albany County (Albany & Schenectady).

As you can see the New York City metro area would cover all of Albany County, plus significant portions of Northern Greene and Eastern Schoharie County. You could easily fit Albany and Schenectady within the borders of New York City, along with surrounding suburbs. NYC is not only populous, it’s also fairly big.

Clinton County (Plattsburgh).

Clinton County is much larger and rural then Albany County and New York City. There is relatively less of Essex and Franklin County in this map then there is Westchester and Nassau County in the NYC-metro map. Even Albany County appears small compared to Clinton County. Notice the darkness of the highly-forested Adirondack Park, and the light green of the fertile Champlain Valley farmlands.

Ithaca and Watkins Glen.

This map shows Ithaca and Watkins Glen. You can see the public forest lands and pastures of the Finger Lakes National Forest, Sugar Hill State Forest, Ithaca, and Watkins Glen. You go into the Allegany Mountains in the south and in the north the sloped landscape that is the norm of the Finger Lakes.