Austin Butler : Vanessa Hudgens House Visit! LIL KIM – WINTERBEATZ Perth 2011 – dancing to Michael Jackson July Favourites! greatresumeguru says: The Bling Ring – Chris Christie – Patti Stranger ( The things you think are precious)I … http://t.co/i0EbcB8o /via @ wordpressdotcom
Continue reading …Amid the flurry of accusations in child custody disputes, allegations of marijuana use rank high on the list. Until recent years, the court’s position on this subject was easy to predict since judges and child custody evaluators maintained a zero tolerance policy toward smoking pot. In child custody cases within the greater Denver area, attorneys routinely admonished our clients that even if you’re smoking only when the kids are with the other parent, enjoying a Rocky Mountain high is illegal, ill-advised and potentially devastating to your parenting time request. In court, when one parent cried marijuana, the other parent was ordered to a drug testing facility for a hair follicle test or random urinalysis. If the offending parent flunked the drug test, the next visit with their ten year old just might be under the supervision of a local agency. Flash forward to 2011. The soup du jour is medical marijuana, and MM dispensaries have been sprouting up like weeds throughout the Denver/Boulder area and the entire country. Since implementation of Amendment 20, which amended the Colorado Constitution to recognize medical marijuana, the MM business has flourished. According to a recent report from The Daily, Denver now has more MM dispensaries than Starbucks and at least 125,000 Colorado residents have a license to smoke MM. If smoking irritates the lungs, one can always opt for medicated pizza or cheesecake at the edible outlet. In a state which is otherwise known for its healthy, fit and youthful population, a surprising number of people now require regular medication for the treatment of sore joints, chronic pain or additional physical ailments. While Colorado is particularly fertile ground for growers and users of MM, all indications are that the legalization of medical marijuana is becoming a national phenomenon. A recent report from ProCon.org states that sixteen states plus Washington DC now have laws legalizing medical marijuana. According to the See Change Strategy report of March of 2011, the medical marijuana industry nationwide is a $1.7 billion dollar market with 24.8 million potential customers. In Phoenix, Arizona, where voters approved medical marijuana last fall, a local big box store which does not sell marijuana but which specializes in hydroponic equipment for marijuana growers is commonly referred to as the “Walmart of Weed.” The explosion in medical marijuana has caused a corresponding relaxation in the national attitude about use of this drug with or without an MM license. All of this poses new questions and challenges for the courts in cases where one parent’s allegation of substance abuse is solely related to marijuana. If a parent is a card-carrying marijuana patient, does this give the parent a carte blanche license to take their medication before or during their court ordered parenting time? Since the doctor’s prescription for this medicine has no specific dosage, can the court rationally determine that a particular patient is over-medicating? When one parent’s use of marijuana is undisputed, is that conduct sufficient to order supervised parenting time or must the accusing parent also establish that unsupervised parenting time would endanger the children’s physical health or emotional development? The latter question was answered by the Colorado Court of Appeals in the 2010 case of Marriage of Parr, 240 P.3d 509 (Colo.App.Div.1 2010). At the time of their divorce, the parties’ parenting plan required the father to take ongoing UA’s to show that he did not return to marijuana use. Shortly after the divorce, dad got his MM license. Dad filed a motion to waive the drug testing and, when it was denied, mom filed a motion to restrict dad’s parenting time. One year later, after dad had been exercising unsupervised parenting time for the past eighteen months, the trial court ordered dad back to supervised parenting time with mandatory hair follicle testing. The Colorado Court of Appeals reversed this portion of the trial court’s order upon a finding that the trial court could not require supervised parenting time for dad based solely on his marijuana use without a specific finding that dad’s conduct endangered the child physically or impaired the child’s emotional development as set forth in C.R.S. §14-10-129(1)(b)(I). Since Colorado follows the Uniform Dissolution of Marriage Act, it is likely that the Parr case will be cited as legal precedent in other states which have legalized medical marijuana. (Note that the Parr decision does not address the parties’ property settlement but the rumor is that mom was awarded the house and dad got the potato chips.) In the wake of the Parr decision, attorneys and litigants in child custody disputes have some measure of guidance when addressing one parent’s accusation regarding the other parent’s marijuana use. If you’re the parent who is seeking supervised parenting time for your pot smoking partner, whether or not they have an MM license, be prepared to present credible and specific evidence that the other parent’s conduct endangers the child’s physical health or emotional development. If you’re the smoking parent, your first and arguably best approach in a child custody dispute is to do a cost/benefit analysis of the situation and “Just say no” to future marijuana use. When that’s not a viable option, be ready to show a strong pattern of competent, child-focused parenting along with evidence that your consumption of marijuana has never endangered your child. That said, if your testimony lacks conviction and you’re sinking fast under a blistering cross examination, you may have to switch gears at the end and employ the defense of a former president, “I didn’t inhale”.
Continue reading …Here’s one reason why the approval rating for Congress is low: media outlets insisting that anyone standing in the way of providing federal cash to flood victims – regardless of their private insurance policies – are heartless. An AP story by Michael Hill was headlined “The disaster-stricken cluck tongues at Congress.” AP and Hill were clearly too “compassionate” to ask the question whether people who failed to buy flood insurance or other kinds of private insurance get to lecture politicians about hitting up taxpayers for money. Hill savaged Congress by editorializing that victims had “paid perhaps the highest price for politics.” Hill even lined up people who've already taken tens of thousands from the government to bash Congress: On Monday, Congress advanced legislation to assure there would be no interruption in assistance through the new budget year, which begins Saturday. But that didn't do much to appease those who would have paid perhaps the highest price for politics. They're spreading the blame both among Republicans, who want cuts in other government spending, and Democrats, who are accused of using the GOP opposition to win political points. “They aren't looking so much at what is actually needed as what's good for their party, and that to me is wrong, wrong, wrong,” said Lawrence Sayah, a Waterbury resident whose home, ravaged by the floods wrought by the remnants of Hurricane Irene, is still stripped to the studs inside. Sayah already received $18,000 from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, although he and his wife are appealing for more for repairs that will run more than three times that. He worried that an impasse could affect his appeal. Sayah wasn’t the only angry guy who’s already received a check from Washington: “You really wonder, what are they doing down there? What are they thinking?” said Skip Flanders, of Waterbury, who already got a $30,200 FEMA grant for his home. “They've certainly never been through it themselves to see what it's like to have your house and living somewhere else and not knowing how you're going to put it back together.” Didn’t Mr. Sayah or Mr. Flanders have flood insurance to handle this disaster? AP didn’t seem to ask. All the blame is supposed to be on Congress. You can’t blame the victim. But is Congress really doing the victimizing here? It was the same AP line for businessmen: “We're just waiting out Washington to make the move. It's our survival in this little town,” said Bill Briggs, whose factory making baseball bat blanks in upstate New York's Prattsville was destroyed by flooding wreaked by Irene. He was meeting Monday with his insurance man and a structural engineer to decide whether he could rebuild. But in the local media in upstate New York, you can hear a story of being under-insured: ” We're underinsured, like everyone else in town, and all we can do is pray for the best,” said Bill Briggs of Dimensional Hardwood….Briggs says his company has both flood and business insurance, but three weeks after Irene hit and he's still getting the runaround. Briggs said, “This insurance company's from Utah and has claims from South Carolina to Canada. When you call, they give you a number and when your number comes up, that's when they take care of you.” Anyone can sympathize with that. But AP is playing politics with this story just as much as any member of Congress. AP's reporter brought in the local liberal Senator for commentary in paragraph nine: Some Republicans had been pushing for expenses to be offset by cuts elsewhere. Democrats, like Sen. Patrick Leahy, who represent flood-stricken Vermont, countered that the same budgeting standards are not enforced when it comes to Afghanistan and Iraq. “Here you have Americans, and you say you can't help Americans in America with American dollars,” Leahy told The Associated Press. “It's ‘Alice in Wonderland.’” Where were the Republicans in this story? Sen. Mitch McConnell surfaced in paragraph 24 – the story’s very last paragraph. Everyone knows that many newspaper editors might slash the AP story to a smaller size, leaving the Republicans on the editing floor. In today’s Washington Post Express tabloid, the politicians from both sides were edited out, leaving only the victims to bash the “heartless” Congress.
Continue reading …PERUGIA, Italy — Italian prosecutors asked an appeals court on Saturday to uphold the conviction of Amanda Knox for the murder of her British roommate and increase her sentence to life in prison. The 24-year-old American sat motionless as Prosecutor Giancarlo Costagliola made his request. The prosecutor sought the same sentence for Knox’s co-defendant, former boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, capping two days of closing arguments by the prosecutors. Costagliola also requested six months of daytime solitary confinement for Knox and two months for Sollecito. A verdict is expected in early October. Knox, of Seattle, Washington, and Sollecito, an Italian, were convicted by a lower court of sexually assaulting and murdering Meredith Kercher while they were all studying in Perugia in 2007. Knox was sentenced to 26 years, her co-defendant Raffaele Sollecito to 25 years. They both deny wrongdoing and have appealed the 2009 verdict. But in Italy prosecutors also can appeal, and they did so in this case. The prosecutors had sought life imprisonment, Italy’s harshest punishment, in the original trial, too. For two days, prosecutors sought to persuade the appeals court that there is sound evidence incriminating the defendants: witness testimony, genetic material, cell phone activity. Manuela Comodi, summing up the case Saturday, said there is “gigantic, rock-solid circumstantial evidence.” The prosecutors believe the defendants deserve the harshest possible punishment because of the brutal nature of the murder, the sexual assault, and the lack of a motive. “They have killed for nothing,” she said. Kercher was stabbed to death in the apartment she shared with Knox, in what prosecutor said was a drug-fueled sexual aggression. Curt Knox, the defendant’s father, said her daughter had reacted well to the prosecutors’ request, which had been expected. “She was actually fine. She said today was easier than yesterday, mainly because today was technical,” he said. “Yesterday it was kind of character assassination that they tried.” Earlier Saturday, Comodi defended the forensic evidence that had been used to convict Knox, firing back at an independent review that criticized the investigation and the work of police in the case. The DNA is crucial in the case, where no clear motive for the brutal killing has emerged. Prosecutors maintain that Knox’s DNA was found on the handle of a kitchen knife believed to be the murder weapon, and that Kercher’s DNA was found on the blade. They said Sollecito’s DNA was on the clasp of Kercher’s bra as part of a mix of evidence that also included the victim’s genetic profile. But those findings were always disputed by the defense, and during the appeals trial the court decided to appoint two independent experts to review the evidence. The independent experts challenged the prosecution’s findings. They said police had made glaring errors in evidence-collecting and that below-standard testing and possible contamination raised doubts over the attribution of DNA traces, both on the blade and on the bra clasp, which was collected from the crime scene several weeks after the murder. The review significantly weakened the prosecution case, giving Knox and her supporters hope that she might be freed after four years behind bars. Sensing dangers, prosecutors have fought hard to try to undermine the review’s results. They described it as superficial and sketchy. In several hearings in past weeks, and then again during summations Friday and Saturday, the prosecutors challenged the review point by point. Comodi used down-to-earth expressions, simple language and even food analogies to keep the jurors engaged during the highly technical discussion about DNA testing and forensic science, which took about five hours. At one point, she pulled out a bra from her bag, seeking to illustrate how she thought the garment had been cut from the victim’s body. She showed photos of bloody footprints found in the apartment, which she claims are compatible with the defendants. Francesco Maresca, a lawyer for the Kercher family, supported the prosecution’s stance on the review. Speaking after the court proceedings, he said: “They deserve the just penalty. Killing a girl – or anybody else – is punished by Italian law with life in prison, so they deserve life in prison, if they are found guilty.” Next week a lawyer for the victim’s family and the defense teams will deliver their closing arguments. “I think we’ll have a little bit of a different story than what was portrayed in the last two days,” said Knox’s father. Knox herself is expected to address the court before deliberations. The appeals trial, which opened in November, included several witnesses and a fierce debate over the DNA review, which was completed in June. A third person, Rudy Hermann Guede of the Ivory Coast, also has been convicted of Kercher’s murder in a separate proceeding. Italy’s highest criminal court has upheld Guede’s conviction and his 16-year prison sentence. Guede denies wrongdoing, but he admits he was in the house.
Continue reading …After rejecting the House’s bill to fund the government into November, the Senate will vote today on its own version, hoping to dodge a new threat of government shutdown, reports the Washington Post . After the weekend brought leaders no closer to agreement, and with disaster relief potentially running out tomorrow,…
Continue reading …Go to Barnes & Noble. Read pages 137-142. Put the book back on the shelf. After reading The Rogue, Joe McGinniss’ new book on the life and meteoric rise of Sarah Palin, that’s my advice. Joe McGinniss is a smart guy, an entertaining drinking companion, and a journeyman wordsmith who has taught himself how to tell a story even when there is no story to tell. But thousands of writers have the same skill-set. What throughout his career has distinguished Joe from his peers is that he also is an unusually talented marketeer. That’s a compliment. Because any trade press publisher will tell you that what a writer has to have in order to get published these days is a “platform.” “Platform” is trade press lingo for an author’s ability to generate the kind of free publicity in newspapers and magazines, through radio and television appearances, and on the Internet that can move product, which, like a tube of toothpaste or a six-pack of Diet Coke, is what a book is. As everyone who has been reading the comic strip Doonesbury recently knows, Joe McGinniss has constructed a brilliant platform for The Rogue. Joe first began building that platform back in 1969 when an imprint of Simon & Schuster published The Selling of the President, Joe’s expose of how Roger Ailes used network television to sell Richard Nixon to the electorate during the 1968 presidential election. Since the book tour on which he embarked to sell The Selling of the President, Joe has demonstrated a natural gift for self-promotion. But at the core, Joe McGinniss is a derivative talent who, thanks to Gary Trudeau, the cartoonist who draws Doonesbury, is this week’s most famous writer in America only because more than 40 years ago Joe set-about ripping off Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, the writer who reinvented the writer’s platform for the modern media age. Dr. Thompson’s manic genius was to write himself into the middle of the story. In 1966 Random House published Hell’s Angels in which Hunter experimented with reporting on the famous outlaw motorcycle gang by reporting on riding with them, an account that ends with the postscript: “On Labor Day 1966, I pushed my luck a little too far and got badly stomped by four or five Angels who seemed to feel I was taking advantage of them.” By 1971 when Random House published Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Dr. Thompson had become the central subject of his own writing, his Wild Turkey-fueled drug-riven adventures the spine of the narrative around which he strung snippets of information about whatever the subject was that he purportedly was being paid to write about. As a writer Joe McGinniss is no Hunter Thompson. Compare “I moved in next door to Sarah Palin today,” the first sentence of The Rogue, with “We were somewhere around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold,” the legendary first sentence of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. So what does Hunter Thompson have to do with Joe McGinniss? In The Selling of the President, which Joe wrote two years after the publication of Hell’s Angels, Joe made himself a minor character in the Roger Ailes/Richard Nixon story. Then, following along behind on the trail Dr. Thompson had blazed nine years earlier in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, in Going to Extremes, which Alfred Knopf published in 1980, Joe imitated Hunter by making himself the story in his first-person account of a winter he spent in Alaska. Joe passes through Juneau. Joe visits the Prudhoe Bay oil field. Joe flies to Bethel. Joe spends time in Anchorage. Joe meets some locals. That’s the book. When Joe McGinniss passed through Alaska to “research” Going to Extremes I had been living there six years. So I knew the places Joe visited, and a number of the people about whom Joe wrote were friends or acquaintances of mine. I thought then and continue to think now that Going to Extremes was an entertaining read but an inconsequential book. But more than thirty years later Going to Extremes is still in print and remains one of the best-selling books that has ever been written about Alaska. Not because of its content, which is stale and of no lasting importance. But because of the genius Joe brought to promoting Going to Extremes by making himself the center of his own writing and his own book marketing campaign. Having mastered in Going to Extremes the formula Hunter Thompson had pioneered, in 1983 Joe used that formula again to earn another six figure payday when G.P. Putnam’s Sons published Fatal Vision, Joe’s account of the time he spent living with Captain Jeffrey MacDonald and his defense attorneys when the army put MacDonald on trial for having carved up his wife and children in their home on the Fort Bragg Army Base in North Carolina. I mention all that because The Rogue is Going to Extremes Redux. It’s a marketing platform. It’s not a book. In The Rogue Joe flies to Alaska and rents the house next door to Sarah and Todd Palin and their dysfunctional brood on the shore of Lake Lucille in Wasilla. Joe buys two arm chairs at a garage sale. Joe drives to Fairbanks. Joe visits Homer. Joe flies to Sitka. Joe’s wife comes for a visit. Joe packs up and flies home. That’s the narrative, which is of interest only in its odd passivity. Around the spine of that narrative The Rogue hangs snippets of information about Sarah Palin that Joe (or his research assistant?) plucked out of the thousands of newspaper and magazine articles that have been written about Sarah over the past three years, including several of mine. The Rogue also passes along rumors, innuendos, and first and secondhand hearsay that the various people Joe sought out passed along to him. Are those rumors, innuendos, and hearsay worth the $25 Joe and Random House want you to spend in order to read them? You can decide for yourself. But I don’t think so. So what if during the 1980s Sarah and Todd Palin snorted a line or two of cocaine off the top of an oil drum? As anyone, starting but hardly ending with me, who was there will tell you, in Alaska during the 1980s almost everyone Sarah and Todd Palin’s ages who had the money to do so did coke, including quite a few members of the Alaska Legislature and the late twenty and early thirty-something staff members who worked for them who occasionally coked up in public off lines they laid down on the tops of the tables at which they were sitting in the Latchstring, which until it burnt down in an arson, was the Legislature’s principal watering hole in the state capital. So Sarah’s recreational drug use during the 1980s was hardly aberrant. And so what if, as Joe tells us that one of her “friends” told him, when she was 23 and single Sarah fucked (according to Joe, Sarah’s word choice) a black college basketball star who was about her same age? Is it any of the world’s business who Barack Obama, Mitt Romney, Rick Perry, Ron Paul, and Michele Bachmann were fucking when they were single and 23? And what does whoever that may have been have to do with their qualifications to be President of the United States in 2012? But if The Rogue is to books what the Saw franchise is to movies, using the platform he has spent the past 40 years building to exploit Sarah Palin (who certainly deserves being exploited) for what this time around may be a seven figure payday, Joe McGinniss has done America an important service by including in The Rogue a description of the lunch Joe had with Gary and Corky Wheeler. Gary Wheeler is not a disgruntled Wasilla homeboy or one of Sarah’s unnamed “friends” who talked to Joe because they are embittered road kill who friend Sarah chewed up and then (to mix my metaphors) left gut-shot along the side of the Parks Highway that runs through Wasilla during her it-only-can-happen-in-America journey up the line from small town mayor to People magazine icon. Gary Wheeler is a retired Alaska State Trooper who provided security for Sarah during the two-plus years she served as Governor of Alaska, just as he had the two governors who preceded her. Spending hours of private face-time with Governor Palin gave Trooper Wheeler an opportunity to assess Sarah’s intellect, character, and temperament that few other people, and certainly not John McCain before he selected her as his vice presidential running mate, have had. If Sarah decides to run for President (which I’ve been betting that, when push finally comes to shove, she’s not going to do) Joe McGinniss is going to sell a lot more copies of The Rogue than the several tens of thousands he already has because Trooper Wheeler’s assessment of candidate Palin will be required reading. If you can’t wait until Sarah announces whether she’s running or not, go to Barnes & Noble, pull The Rogue down off the shelf, and read pages 137-142. I won’t spoil your fun other than to predict that if based on what you’ve seen of her over the past three years you suspect that Sarah Palin is a narcissistic and intellectually incurious sociopath Gary Wheeler will confirm your hunch. And for those of you who may not be able to get to your local Barnes & Noble before The Rogue sells out, I’ll pass along Trooper Wheeler’s bottom line. Which is that Sarah Palin’s “no mama grizzly; she’s a rabid wolf. Take a look at the snow: wherever she’s been, there’s a trail of blood in her wake.” So thanks Joe. That quote alone makes The Rogue worth every dollar that I have to fess up that I took my own advice and didn’t pay for it.
Continue reading …ABC News did not get around to the story that Michelle Obama wore a $42,000 set of bracelets to a Democratic fundraiser. But they certainly helped the Obama campaign by touting her appearance on Sunday night's season debut of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. The Obama campaign used the appearance to promote the First Lady's work on behalf of military families (and let's not recall how her liberal husband won the Democratic nomination by promising to clear American soldiers out of Iraq by like, yesterday.) This episode dealt with a woman helping homeless female vets. On Thursday's Good Morning America, news anchor Josh Elliott prodded Extreme Makeover host Ty Pennington to tell the folks at home just what a “cool lady” the First Lady was, and promote the “very special episode” ABC made. Pennington insisted she wore low-top Converse sneakers: JOSH ELLIOTT:
Continue reading …Young people today would rather have the latest smartphone than a flashy car. And the number of them who can drive is plummeting. Is Britain’s love-affair with the car really over? Liz Parle can’t drive. “I did try to learn,” says the 24-year-old, Birmingham-born cafe owner, “but I failed my test a few times.” Then she moved to London, where running a car can be a nightmare. Instead she cycles everywhere. “It’s cheap, keeps me fit, and is of course better for the environment.” Parle is by no means atypical. In Britain, the percentage of 17- to 20-year-olds with driving licences fell from 48% in the early 1990s to 35% last year. The number of miles travelled by all forms of domestic transport, per capita per year, has flatlined for years. Meanwhile, road traffic figures for cars and taxis, having risen more or less every year since 1949, have continued to fall since 2007. Motoring groups put it down to oil prices and the economy. Others offer a more fundamental explanation: the golden age of motoring is over. “The way we run cars is changing fast,” says Tim Pollard, associate editor at CAR magazine , “Car manufacturers are worried that younger people in particular don’t aspire to own cars like we used to in the 70s, 80s, or even the 90s. Designers commonly say that teenagers today aspire to own the latest smartphone more than a car. Even car enthusiasts realise we’ve reached a tipping point.” As hi-tech research and development budgets source to keep pace with the iPhone generation, Pollard says carmakers are also coming to terms with less possessive buyers. “Towards the end of the 20th century, manufacturers cottoned on to the fact that we were owning things for shorter periods.” This has led to a proliferation of different ownership and rental schemes such as Streetcar , Zipcar and Whipcar . In response, the latest deals from the big carmakers are very unlike your usual forecourt deal. “Peugeot, for instance, has launched a European project called Mu ,” says Pollard. “You become a member and can then rent whichever Peugeot best suits your mobility needs that day. So you can borrow a van to move house at the weekend. Then get into a 308 for the school run, Monday to Friday. Then hop into an electric car to scoot silently around town. Then borrow a Peugeot bicycle to cycle to the pub in the evening. It’s an attempt to second-guess how we’ll run cars in future, and a pilot scheme at present, but you can do this today in London. Other car manufacturers are studying similar ideas.” Stefan Liske helps shape these ideas. The German entrepreneur once worked as a car designer and mechanical engineer, but now runs PCH , a company that models and plans new developments for companies entering choppy waters – their clients include Mini, Audi, Volkswagen and Daimler. Liske presents a picture of an industry that is being forced to confront major changes at every level: batteries that are so heavy the rest of the car must become lighter and use new materials; environmental pressures that mean current models, in which only 10% of a car is made from natural material, will be junked in favour of parts and interiors using “rattan, coconut wool, bamboo, recycled plastics”. The most radical change is that “in big societies, there is a huge status shift happening, where we are losing the idea that you use a car to define your status. So the industry needs more flexible leasing, financing and car-sharing models. And second, they have to find new revenue streams.” The near future that Liske describes echoes the computer industry’s earlier shift from a business model based on hardware to one based on software. “Audi and Toyota have just invested $1bn in wind energy. If you’re leasing a car from them, they can sell you the energy – or they go in a different direction like BMW, who just invested $100m in start-up companies offering transport-related mobile services.” Underpinning all these innovations and ideas is what Liske sees as a major behavioural shift among the generation of “digital natives”. “They don’t care about owning things. Possession is a burden, and a car is a big investment for most people – not just the vehicle, but the permits, the parking space.” He points to BMW, which in mid-July announced its investment in parkatmyhouse.com , a UK-based online parking marketplace that matches local drivers with homeowners who have empty garages and driveways. “Really,” Liske says, “it was obvious a long time ago that something had to happen.” Crucially, these ideas aren’t forming in the ether of maybe/if science fiction, but are based on proven technology that is ready to be rolled out. “Cities such as London will, in 10 years, [have these vehicles] going along autonomously and you can hop in and out of them,” he says. A vehicle such as the one Liske describes is operating on the edge of the capital. The ULTra system consists of 21 electric vehicles running on a 4km elevated guideway from Heathrow’s Terminal 5 to two stations in the business parking lot. It replaces shuttle buses, which still serve the airport’s other parking lots. Passengers first boarded the ULTra pods in April, but was it officially launched last week. It’s the first commercial Personal Rapid Transport (PRT) system anywhere in the world, and, as it drifts off from its bay in the terminal, it brings to mind both the Docklands Light Railway in London and Legoland’s Sky Rider train. “I think it’s terrific,” says David Metz, visiting professor in UCL’s Centre for Transport Studies , as we glide to the parking bays. “It’s obvious. Really, it should be here. Though the big question is what are the long-run costs and what is the feasibility of putting it on to other environments.” BAA, which helped develop the system and now owns a 70% stake in the company, says it cost £30m, which was spent over six years. While the ULTra cars themselves are simple – using the same tyres and wheels as a Ford Ka – the control-and-command system represents the most costly. This is housed in a single-storey building in the car park’s compound and staffed by ex-Network Rail employees, erstwhile RAF air traffic controllers, as well as a mechanic from the Australian navy. Though the operation is small, Mark Griffiths, its head, says it is ready for expansion at Heathrow; it is tendering for a project at the Golden Temple in Amritsar, India, and have had interest from the local councils in Bristol and Bath. So could a set-up like ULTra slip into an ancient spa town? “As long as there are planning regulations,” says Griffiths. He outlines a number of scenarios that are currently within their reach: if, for example, a newly arrived passenger wanted to hire a car or book into a hotel, ULTra could present travellers with options on a touch screen, make reservations, and drive them straight into the lobby, where their room key will be waiting. “Zero emissions, you see.” Metz’s account of underlying transport trends is simple: ultimately, we don’t want to travel more. “Look at the [Department for Transport's] National Travel Survey , an annual poll of 20,000 people, dating back to the early 70s. The average travel time has not changed over that period. The number of journeys that people make in a year hasn’t altered. It’s about 1,000 journeys a year, and about an hour’s travel per day.” This figure for daily travel is remarkably consistent. Look at Tanzanian villagers in 1986 or Britons today, and we all seem to travel, on average, for about 66 minutes a day. What did rise, in Britain at least from the 70s through to the 90s, was the distance people covered. “In the early 70s, it’s about 4,500 miles per person per year, which includes all modes of travel except international travel by air, which is a different story,” says Metz. “It rose to about 7,000 miles per year by the mid 1990s, and it stayed steady at about that level since.” Metz also thinks a general satisfaction with the number of places people can go has lead to this levelling-off; he calls this the saturation of demand. “What is the benefit of travel?” he asks. “It’s about getting more choices of places to go – the choice we have of jobs, doctors, hospitals, schools for our kids. My hypothesis is that the growth of daily travel has come to an end because now we have quite good choice.” Other analysts agree. “There are these models used by international agencies, and oil companies and the like,” says Adam Millard-Ball , assistant professor at the department of geography of McGill University, Montreal. “They say as we get richer, we’ll want to travel more. There’s no limit. Our hunch was that this might not be the case.” Working with the late Lee Schipper, a senior research engineer at Stanford University, Millard-Ball examined travel figures dating back to the 70s, from as many industrialised countries as possible. “The data that we have shows fairly clearly that the growth in travel demand has stopped in every industrialised country that we looked at,” he says. Schipper and Millard-Ball published their work last November in the paper Are We Reaching Peak Travel? Trends in Passenger Transport in Eight Industrialized Countries, adding to a growing body of work, all drawing similar conclusions. If these trends continue, it is possibly foresee a decline in car travel and a stagnation in total travel per capita. Though he doesn’t have any firm evidence to back it up, Millard-Ball thinks infrastructure plays a big part. “During the 70s and 80s we were building a lot more roads, allowing people to go further and faster. That era has come to an end, especially in Britain and America.” He also suggests that a general satisfaction with travel options also plays a role. “Once there’s a set of places you can get to, it’s less useful to get to any more. If there’s a Sainsbury’s two miles from your house, are you really going to go to the Sainsbury’s four miles away?” Break down the figures further, and other tendencies arise. Metz says the proportion of men in their 30s who drive has remained steady, while twentysomethings appear to be putting off getting behind the wheel until it’s absolutely necessary. “It’s partly the cost of ownership, the cost of insurance,” he says. “Other factors that are more speculative are that there are more people in higher education, which typically takes place in urban centres where the car isn’t part of the mix. Then people stay on in these urban centres.” He also says retirees often give up driving once they begin to suffer from minor disabilities. “If you retire to a place with high population density, then mobility scooters come into their own.” These electric vehicles haven’t been thoroughly researched, and mass production hasn’t quite brought automobile-industry standards. Yet he believes they could become a viable transport option for many people, even if they can only do 8mph, “and that’s a bit fast for pavements”. Not everyone shares these rosy transport visions. Paul Watters, head of public affairs and roads policy for the AA, cautions against calling time on the car. “We are a small island with a very old road network, and a fairly complicated rail network. We haven’t invested enough in transport for generations. People driving less is good for the environment, but not good for the economy, and we’ve got to find a way to make the economy keep going.” Though he is willing to admit that the AA might be “late to the party” on more progressive trends such as online car sharing or new hire schemes, Watters says car ownership still matters to its members. He also doubts whether major technological changes will make much difference within the next decade. “We might see bigger penetration of electric and hybrid cars, but it won’t be a shattering change by 2020,” he says. He also cautions against abandoning the road network. “It’s going to be very hard to maintain the road network over the next few years. As the economy picks up, we could see horrible growth in traffic and horrible congestion.” Neither the blue-sky visions of ULTra nor the jam tomorrow predictions of Watters are inevitable. Social trends can lead to change, but our travel habits are shaped by government policy too: by road, rail and airport building, most obviously, but also by planning regulations. Greenfield development, or the construction of housing on undeveloped land, is favoured by developers because it’s cheaper to build and easier to sell. Yet this is often low-density, suburban-style housing that is poorly suited to public transport and more or less requires homeowners to drive. Brownfield building, though less profitable and less popular, often raises population density, making public transport more viable. Metz is unimpressed by the new National Planning Policy Framework , which makes little reference to transport issues, while removing the national priority for brownfield development. There’s nothing wrong with wanting a little house in the country, and a car to get you to and from it. Yet there is something reckless in restricting new buildings to a particular form of transport, especially if that form of transport shows signs of decline. “There’s this idea of a green metropolis, where land values are high so there’s less space to heat, and where electric vehicles are viable, because the trips taken are shorter. If we’re living in a world that is urbanising globally, this is worth considering.” It remains a compelling idea, though not everyone agrees its time has come. The car could be reaching the end of the road, or it could idle on for some time to come. Additional reporting by Justin Quirk Transport policy Motoring Alex Rayner guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media (h/t Heather at VideoCafe) When Sen. Lamar Alexander resigned his leadership position in the GOP , I had a faint hope that Alexander was protesting the caricature his party has become with the increasing but clueless influence of the tea party. But no, that was for naught, as his very first Sunday show appearance after his Good Bye Cruel GOP letter of resignation was to blame Senate Leader Harry Reid for “manufacturing a crisis” in terms of the potential for another government shutdown over funding disaster relief for Hurricane Irene : CROWLEY: Senator Alexander, let me ask you if you buy into Senator Warner’s premise, which is that tea party folks are basically at fault, I think I’m — that’s not a direct quote, but that the tea party-backed folks in the House are the ones behind this stalemate that is now threatening yet another government shutdown. Do you agree with that? SEN. LAMAR ALEXANDER (R), TENNESSEE: No, I don’t. You know, I’ll give the Senate Democratic leader most of the credit. He manufactured a crisis all week about disaster when there’s no crisis. Everybody knows we’re going to pay for every single penny of disaster aid that the president declares and that FEMA certifies. And the House sent over a bill that does that and the Senate should have approved it. What it did was take $1.5 billion of unobligated funds and say, we’re going to — instead of adding to the debt we’re going to not add to the debt when we do this. No crisis? Our third approach to a government shutdown in a year due to the ridiculous hostage taking of the Republican Party and it’s Harry Reid that is manufacturing the crisis? We are well and truly in Bizarro-land. But of course, it’s not for Candy Crowley to point out that every little thing is being held up by the Republicans in congress, making this one of the least productive congressional sessions in history . And if “everybody knows” that Congress will approve the disaster aid, then what is the kabuki theater that the tea party Republicans insist upon? Why are Republicans suddenly now looking for budgetary offsets when they approved trillions of off-budget expenditures while they held the majority? Of course, none of this was raised by Crowley in response. Why give her viewers any context or facts to assess Alexander’s statement?
Continue reading …Click here to view this media (h/t Heather at VideoCafe) When Sen. Lamar Alexander resigned his leadership position in the GOP , I had a faint hope that Alexander was protesting the caricature his party has become with the increasing but clueless influence of the tea party. But no, that was for naught, as his very first Sunday show appearance after his Good Bye Cruel GOP letter of resignation was to blame Senate Leader Harry Reid for “manufacturing a crisis” in terms of the potential for another government shutdown over funding disaster relief for Hurricane Irene : CROWLEY: Senator Alexander, let me ask you if you buy into Senator Warner’s premise, which is that tea party folks are basically at fault, I think I’m — that’s not a direct quote, but that the tea party-backed folks in the House are the ones behind this stalemate that is now threatening yet another government shutdown. Do you agree with that? SEN. LAMAR ALEXANDER (R), TENNESSEE: No, I don’t. You know, I’ll give the Senate Democratic leader most of the credit. He manufactured a crisis all week about disaster when there’s no crisis. Everybody knows we’re going to pay for every single penny of disaster aid that the president declares and that FEMA certifies. And the House sent over a bill that does that and the Senate should have approved it. What it did was take $1.5 billion of unobligated funds and say, we’re going to — instead of adding to the debt we’re going to not add to the debt when we do this. No crisis? Our third approach to a government shutdown in a year due to the ridiculous hostage taking of the Republican Party and it’s Harry Reid that is manufacturing the crisis? We are well and truly in Bizarro-land. But of course, it’s not for Candy Crowley to point out that every little thing is being held up by the Republicans in congress, making this one of the least productive congressional sessions in history . And if “everybody knows” that Congress will approve the disaster aid, then what is the kabuki theater that the tea party Republicans insist upon? Why are Republicans suddenly now looking for budgetary offsets when they approved trillions of off-budget expenditures while they held the majority? Of course, none of this was raised by Crowley in response. Why give her viewers any context or facts to assess Alexander’s statement?
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