Tuesday, February 14

Sam Adams is on Yelp

News The other day I noticed a curious tweet from our venerable mayor's Twitter account:Yes, Sam is tweet... More

Feb 13, 2012 01:20 pm by RUTH BROWN  | Comments 1
 

Doctor Groups Flex Muscle In Capitol: $2.3 Million in Campaign Cash to Influence Health-Care Reform

News The State Capitol has been abuzz the last couple of days because of a hot list (PDF) circulating in ... More

Feb 10, 2012 06:00 pm by NIGEL JAQUISS  | Comments 4
 

Nonsense Knows No State Boundary: Washington Legislators Get Bogus Job Claims on CRC

News Up north of here, Washington legislators in Olympia are debating whether or not they should authoriz... More

Feb 10, 2012 09:09 am  | Comments 1
 

Occupy Arrestees Win Their Right to Full Trials—Even Though They May Not Need It

News The estimated 160 people arrested during Occupy Portland protests in the past five months have won t... More

Feb 9, 2012 01:24 pm by HANNAH HOFFMAN  | Comments 3
 
 
 
Home · Articles · News · News · Textual Criticism
July 2nd, 2008 COREY PEIN | News
 

Textual Criticism

MSG FM CMSR SAM: WHR R U GOING? WATCH THE ROAD!!1

6 Comments
     
Tags:

IMAGE: Dennis Culver

Portland Commissioner Sam Adams won’t cook you breakfast, but he wants to make your mornings a little easier.

Adams—the City Council’s resident techno-geek, with his iPod, his blog and his buzzing cellie—hopes to send up-to-date traffic alerts, specific to your city driving route, to your cell phone by text message. Last week, the Council OK’d a $400,000 grant application from the Portland Office of Transportation, which Adams oversees, to the state transportation department to develop just such a system.

The text alerts would be more specific than the helicopter-view traffic reports already blaring over the radio every few minutes—though, initially, they would be limited to the downtown area, including the bridges and highways leading into it.

One possible downside: Isn’t texting-while-driving a little, umm...dangerous?

“I did have the same concern myself,” says Ellen Vanderslice, the PDOT manager overseeing the project. But the plan’s specifics calmed her.

“You don’t text, you just get a text, and they’re very brief,” Vanderslice says.

The system, as imagined, would let folks go online and sign up for free to receive traffic information along a specific travel route. Then, they’d get texted with traffic alerts within a set timeframe—say, the pre-commute hours of 6-7 am and 4-5 pm.

“Ideally, you alert folks before they get on the road,” Adams says. “It doesn’t do us any good if they get an alert in the car sitting in a traffic jam.”

State Rep. Greg Macpherson (D-Lake Oswego), the chief sponsor of a 2007 bill that banned cell phone use in Oregon by drivers younger than 18, isn’t terribly concerned about the potential of Adams’ idea to further distract drivers. But state Rep. Jackie Dingfelder, (D-Portland) who cosponsored the bill, is more cautious.

“It’s not a bad idea as far as getting information to folks, as long as it doesn’t create an additional distraction,” Dingfelder says. “It depends on how people are going to respond to it.”

Hopefully, not by checking text messages from behind the wheel. As of July 1, when stricter new laws took effect in Washington and California, Oregon became the only state on the West Coast that permits adult drivers to use their cell phones without a hands-free headset.

Adams’ proposal would be covered by $395,000 from the state transportation department, and cost the city about $12,500 in staff time.

He says the alerts, similar to systems in New York and Illinois, will help reduce traffic congestion by making the most of traffic data already collected by the state.

“I don’t have the money to do congestion, much less maintenance and safety,” says Adams, the mayor-elect.

(True enough. He might not decide to put his $464 million “safe, sound and green streets” proposal on the November ballot, depending on the results of a public opinion poll to be conducted next week. And any 14-cent-per-gallon increase in the state gas tax, which gets shared with the city, could be consumed by the proposed $4.2 billion Columbia River Crossing project.)

The city enlisted Eponic Corp., a local software company, to help develop the grant proposal. Eponic President John Gilman, who donated $250 to Adams’ mayoral campaign, says he and a colleague came up with the concept while driving to work, then pitched it to Adams and a “Keep Portland Moving” committee that was looking for ways to smooth downtown traffic snags.

State transportation officials will approve or deny the grant in October.


FACT: In 2006, following a transportation safety summit, Adams wrote on his City Hall blog: “I would like to see the day where handheld cell phone use is not allowed when you are behind the wheel in Portland.”
 
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
 
 

 

 
07.02.2008 at 11:44 Reply
Sam Adams is so stupid.

 

07.02.2008 at 01:47 Reply
Wow that's a bad idea. The dangers of drivers reading text messages is fairly obvious, but why spend money on this when it's going to happen anyway? Google has been pushing traffic info into Google Maps, readily available on any phone with a data connection. How long before they (or someone) take it to SMS? And do we really need to spend half a mil of city money to beat them to it?

 

07.03.2008 at 08:48 Reply
I would love this! Please include texts that tell me where the latest pothole has formed so I can avoid it.

 

07.03.2008 at 08:53 Reply
This has got to be the most stupid fucking idea Mr. "I'm Too Sexy for my Shirt" has ever come up with. Now somebody with a law degree please tell me, does the city's liability insurance kick in now that the city encourages brief visits with one's text device while driving?

 

07.04.2008 at 03:16 Reply
Leave it to Sam to find a way to spend hundreds of thousands for a system that already exists!!!! I've used it for over a year now and its free... I get daily texts from Traffic.Com tailored to my specific route and time of day.

 

 
 

Web Design for magazines

Close
Close
Close