Friday, February 22, 2008

LAO: LA's Taxicab Quandry

Taxicabs in Los Angeles? I see more UPS trucks than I see taxicabs.

My latest post at LA Observed's Native Intelligence:
Los Angeles officials have decided to pop the hood on the city's taxicab ordinance, which is all good, except that the whole thing has left residents to wonder "whadaya mean when you say 'taxi?'"

A lot of us have seen the Mann movie, and that Scorsese film too. We've even glimpsed those yellow cars stacked up on World Way at LAX, though none of us would be caught dead on a theme park ride like that (they just go round and round, right?). Besides, have you ever actually priced a cab ride from LAX to anyplace you'd want to go? The answer — $42.00 just to get downtown — sounds a lot like the reason we get confused when anyone other than a weather girl uses "hail" as a verb.

Who knew LA actually discriminates against ...

Read the rest at LA Observed's Native Intelligence

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

A Sad End For Great Newspaper


The Albuquerque Tribune will close Saturday.

All I can say is what I already said.

Via CNN:
CINCINNATI -- The Albuquerque Tribune will publish its final edition on Saturday, Feb. 23.

The decision to close the newspaper follows a seven-month effort by The E. W. Scripps Company to sell The Tribune.

Scripps notified The Tribune's 38 editorial employees today of the decision to discontinue publication. Tribune employees will receive severance packages, including outplacement services and a limited health care subsidy.

"The loss of The Albuquerque Tribune is profoundly sad for the community, its dedicated staff and all of those great journalists who have contributed over the years to the newspaper's outstanding reputation for editorial independence and excellence," said Rich Boehne, executive vice president and chief operating officer for Scripps. "As The Tribune passes into history we take some solace in the knowledge that Albuquerque and New Mexico are better places to live today thanks to the newspaper's commitment to community service."

The decision to close The Tribune will end the nation's oldest joint operating agreement.

Since 1933 The Tribune has been published as part of a joint operating agreement with The Albuquerque Journal and its parent company, Journal Publishing Co. Journal Publishing has been responsible for all of the business operations of The Tribune, including advertising and subscription sales, production and distribution.

Scripps and Journal Publishing shared the combined profits generated by The Journal and The Tribune. Under a new agreement with Journal Publishing, Scripps will continue as a partner in the Albuquerque Publishing Co., which directs and manages the operations of The Journal newspaper.

The Journal will continue to be published in the mornings, seven days a week. The Tribune is published in the afternoons, Monday through Saturday.

Scripps in August 2007 announced that it was seeking to sell or discontinue publication of The Tribune after determining that the Albuquerque newspaper market could no longer economically support a separate afternoon publication.

Paid circulation of the afternoon Tribune, which stood at 42,000 in 1988, has been in persistent decline for more than two decades. The Tribune's daily paid circulation has declined to about 10,000 copies compared with The Journal's paid circulation of 106,000 daily and 145,000 Sunday.

Scripps acquired The Tribune in 1923 from its founder, Carlton Cole "Carl" Magee. Borrowing a phrase from Dante, Magee had adopted the slogan "Give Light and People Will Find Their Own Way." After it was acquired, Scripps adopted Magee's slogan, for all of its newspapers.

The Tribune is an award-winning newspaper with a rich journalistic tradition. Eileen Welsome, while reporting for The Tribune, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1994 for a series of stories that related the experiences of Americans who had been used unknowingly in government radiation experiments nearly 50 years earlier.

The Tribune also was a Pulitzer finalist in 1996 and was a first-place winner in the 1998 and 2001 National Headliner Awards.

About Scripps

The E. W. Scripps Company (www.scripps.com ) is a diverse and growing media enterprise with interests in national cable networks, newspaper publishing, broadcast television stations, interactive media, and licensing and syndication.

The company's portfolio of media properties includes: Scripps Networks, with such brands as HGTV, Food Network, DIY Network, Fine Living and Great American Country; daily and community newspapers in 16 markets and the Washington-based Scripps Media Center, home to the Scripps Howard News Service; 10 broadcast TV stations, including six ABC-affiliated stations, three NBC affiliates and one independent; Scripps Interactive Media, including leading online search and comparison shopping services, Shopzilla and uSwitch; and United Media, a leading worldwide licensing and syndication company that is the home of PEANUTS, DILBERT and approximately 150 other features and comics.



— TJ Sullivan in LA

LAO: Beyond Words

Is the future of Beyond Baroque in peril?

My latest post at LA Observed's Native Intelligence:
Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo's side of the story has yet to be told, but supporters of Beyond Baroque say the future of the literary arts center is in serious doubt, possibly tangled in a political battle between ...

Read the rest at LA Observed's Native Intelligence

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Saturday, February 16, 2008

To Left Or Not To Left ...

Yesterday I posted an essay on LA Observed's Native Intelligence blog regarding the latest news on the one-way plan for W. Pico and W. Olympic boulevards here in Los Angeles. In that post, I opined (in far too few words) that fewer left turns could result from the effort to favor westbound traffic on W. Olympic Boulevard and eastbound traffic on W. Pico Boulevard.

Here's how:
I've written about traffic issues many times during the past 15 years, and was often told by planners and engineers that traffic snarls are created any number of ways, but that one of the primary causes is the left-hand turn. So, if you increase the left-turn time for one side of the street and not the other, you should improve the flow on only the favored side.

Another way to achieve favor would be to eliminate, or restrict, left-hand turns for vehicles traveling in the unfavorable direction, which, I would guess, engineers might consider for both Pico and Olympic. The back-up that could result in the absence of elimination or restriction isn't hard to imagine, but that's kind of the point, isn't it? A disincentive to use one street emphasizes the incentive to use the other.

But in some situations, no matter what you do, it seems the problem will be moved rather than solved.

For example, westbound Pico Blvd to southbound Overland Ave is the most direct route to the Santa Monica Freeway for office workers in Century City. At present, the completion of a left-hand turn at rush hour from westbound Pico to southbound Overland often requires enough time and patience to sit through a couple signal cycles. But if Pico is pinched down to two westbound lanes, yet provides no additional time for left-hand turns, the back-up can only get worse, and would likely spill out of the turn lane, blocking the flow of one of the two westbound lanes.

Eliminate the left turn on Pico and drivers would surely choose westbound Olympic to access southbound Overland in order to reach the freeway. Do nothing, and many drivers are likely to do the same thing if only because LA drivers are conditioned to seek faster routes. Under either scenario, the result will be another nightmarish snarl when all those freeway-bound drivers on westbound Olympic join freeway-bound drivers from Santa Monica Blvd on "Little Overland," which runs bumper-to-bumper between Santa Monica and Pico boulevards. They call this portion of Overland "Little Overland" because it's a slim residential street with one lane running in each direction, plus the added pressure of a public grade school and no fewer than three stop signs along the way.

From there, it's not unreasonable to assume that a few dozen rat runners will spill onto nearby residential streets and gum those up too.

That's just one example.

Of course, I'm not a traffic engineer. I just drive.

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Friday, February 15, 2008

LAO: More Than One Way To Pay

My latest post at LA Observed's Native Intelligence:
A year ago, on March 29, 2007, the suggestion of a one-way plan for Pico and Olympic Boulevards made me think of some of the more massive protests I've covered as a journalist. This was bound to get ugly. People wouldn't sit this one out.

But, yesterday's news suggests otherwise ...

Read the rest at LA Observed's Native Intelligence

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Cool Book Of The Day: The Dog


My friend Sal Glynn, who I met last year at a writing workshop in Big Sur, is featured as today's Cool Book of the Day, which he says is "opinionated, irreverent, and derived from years of hands-on experience." And, by God, if you're going to read (or write) a book about writing, it better be all of that, or why bother?

— TJ Sullivan in LA