dad, 🚂, 🚲

Joined May 2010
118 Photos and videos
Whenever I think it couldn't get worse for Houston, I just remember we could be Dallas 🫤
The Mavericks say they have chosen the former Valley View Mall site over downtown Dallas for their new arena home and hope to have the new building ready to move into for the 2031-32 season after their American Airlines Center lease expires.
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Somehow our leaders avoided this new trend of disposing of perfectly good sports arenas to camp out in far flung suburbs. The arrangements aren't great (NRG) but it could be worse! Imagine 2 rotting football stadiums right next to each other
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I'm hopeful the World Cup will shame Houston leaders into actually going back to building a modern city (eg Amazon HQ selection)
What the hell is a “temporary” sidewalk?
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As an HISD parent, this tweet was Iraq war levels of disqualification. If you were that naive to believe Abbotts takeover would be positive I have zero faith in your judgement
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In the year of our lord 2018, to believe a MAGA state government would be an honest broker IN PUBLIC EDUCATION just defies all logic
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My hottest take is that the mayor of Houston shouldn’t brag about how much money he's spending while also not fixing the budget (am I doing twitter right? @BayouBikeyBoi)
As Houstonians have emphasized the condition of our streets and neglected infrastructure, this year we’ve allocated $500 million for streets and drainage. Click the link below to watch the full episode. youtube.com/watch?v=4gKzQ9m7…
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I first noticed this last year when he rewrote a whole thread of mine. I'm too lazy to find it but it would be around this time. I don't think anyone cares it's just fake internet points @krobbn @BayouBikeyBoi @gratifihouston
Is plagiarizing a tweet a thing?
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Is plagiarizing a tweet a thing?
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Tom Reeves retweeted
May 22
In reality American cities spent the back half of the 20th century tearing down half their downtown buildings for surface lots and the top complaint everyone still has about them is that there’s nowhere to park
This is the most walkable city I’ve ever been to It’s incredibly easy to walk to your car and then drive to your destination
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I swear I'm not making these up
In case you thought I was exaggerating
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In case you thought I was exaggerating
Can't wait for World Cup visitors to miss a train because half the doors don't work anymore. Has anyone else experienced a huge uptick in broken doors? @METROHouston
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Can't wait for World Cup visitors to miss a train because half the doors don't work anymore. Has anyone else experienced a huge uptick in broken doors? @METROHouston
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"Wait, that thing is permanently installed into the ceiling? What is thanksgiving going to look like?"
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Saw this mural on a rare trip on pierce elevated. This one looks amazing! It looks like a giant urban decay art installation now with the blown out windows
Judge Lina Hidalgo joined Commissioner Rodney Ellis for the unveiling of the latest mural produced by Street Art For Mankind. “Fly Away,” located at 1820 Milam, was created by internationally acclaimed muralist INO. This piece celebrates Harris County’s innovation and serves as a reminder that it takes courage to make dreams happen against all odds.
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With how popular MKT and the beltline is its astounding we don't have more political support for the Hollywood trail extension @Hollywood_Hou @AdrianGarciaHTX
The Atlanta Beltline being this packed with people at 7pm on a TUESDAY is just a delight. Every restaurant along the trail is packed, people everywhere socializing and being humans together. The dichotomy of this experience against Atlanta Freeway Hell just boggles the mind.
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Bill King lives in an alternate reality where every city wishes they were more like Houston and we are praised for our freeway system
Replying to @theSurlyBiker
There is no place in the world except a few dense urban cores where transit even comes close to carrying as many people as vehicles do. That is the reality. In every city in the world there is a large freeway system because people prefer the convenience and privacy of a car. They do not want to be crowded on congregate transit vehicles like cattle.
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The problem with republican governance in a nutshell. No matter what long term planning responsible leaders put in place, they will just raid the piggy bank to cut taxes.
How will it run out of money? It has a 1.4B dollar fund balance, revenues been put pacing expenditures and this admin fee is gonna go up in the next few years that will effectively fund solid waste. I’d much rather have a garbage fee or admin fee than property tax increase
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Bill King shredding his last ounce of dignity in this thread. Jesus this is embarrassing to read. What a hack @JRDNLTHMS
100% wrong. Because of the dramatic water rate increases the CUS is currently in very good shape. Has a $4bb surplus. Transferring $100mm will not affect its ability to invest in fixing the system. Will writing on this tomorrow.
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I wish mayor Whitmire would look at long term solutions for metrorail vs his police surge. I remember hearing there are ADA compliance issues with fare gates though. Wish we could figure something out
BART spent $90 million on new fare gates. They're recovering about $10 million a year in fares. That's a 9-year payback on paper. The actual return hit in six months. Embarcadero station went from 112 hours of corrective maintenance in the six months before installation to 2 hours after. Daly City saved 109. Balboa Park saved 75. Across the system, 961 hours of cleanup work disappeared. Corrective maintenance is the term BART uses for graffiti, heavy soiling, vandalism, the damage that needs a crew not a janitor. At several stations it dropped to zero. Crime fell 41% year over year. Riders who reported seeing fare evasion on their trip dropped from 22% to 10%. Citations issued by BART police went from 2,200 in January to under 1,000 in July, because there was nothing to cite. The gates were a filtering project disguised as a revenue project. Old BART gates were waist-high orange fins designed in the 1970s. You could hop them in under a second. That made the station effectively a public space, and the rider mix reflected that. The new gates are 72 inches of polycarbonate with 3D sensors that detect tailgating. You either pay or you don't enter. Once you don't enter, you also don't smoke on the platform, sleep in the elevator, or harass other riders. BART tried hiring more police for years. Blitz operations at high-traffic stations. Increased patrols. Dedicated transit cops. None of it moved the numbers the way six feet of polycarbonate did. The $10 million in recovered fares is the smallest line in the return. Fare revenue used to cover 70% of BART operations. After the pandemic it collapsed to 22%. The gates won't fix that gap directly. They fix the precondition for fixing it: a system that office workers, families, and tourists are willing to use again. Ridership growth at stations with new gates outpaced ungated ones before the rollout finished. A $400 million annual deficit is heading to voters in November as a sales tax measure. Voters don't approve sales taxes for transit agencies they don't feel safe in. The $90 million on gates is buying BART the right to ask the public for more money. That's the real return on six feet of polycarbonate.
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@evan7257 an op-ed please!
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If I was mayor I would simply ask Claude to run public policy
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