My assertion was correct. Educate yourself before making statements that mislead others into believing you know what you're talking about.
This is a great post!!etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
And, the developer would have paid for the traffic impacts - >$10MM for the Rock Prairie overpass (if I remember correctly) that the city/taxpayer had to foot instead...woodiewood said:Yep, the storage facility would have both high property texas and BPP taxes. Now, there are no taxes collectedtechno-ag said:Supposedly an air conditioned storage facility the city elders would find objectionable at a prominent entry point into the city, if memory serves from past discussions about it on here.Hittag1492 said:Bob Yancy said:RafterAg223 said:woodiewood said:Growth is fine and inevitable considering the presence of the growth of A&M and the desire of former students to live here whether young or retirees.Bob Yancy said:Stucco said:
Is this growth rate optimal? We don't want flat or negative growth, but what is the ideal rate to preserve the place we live the longest we can?
That's a really good question and the conversation I was looking for when posting this.
Frankly I don't know if a city can, or should, constrain growth. Like many folks I talk to, I miss the ever diminishing "small town feel." But my family and I also enjoy the growing amenities and entertainment options.
I suppose city government could constrain permitting, but in my gut that's not right. If folks want to relocate their families here or start a private sector business, who is government to say no?
I think the best a city can do is manage growth efficiently. Police, fire, roadways and infrastructure- and otherwise stay out of the private sector's way.
What is occuring is that those persons who desire the smaller town atmosphere and feeling are moving to Navasota, Caldwell, Anderson, Iola and other small towns.
Who would have thought that Navasota would have two or three fine dining restaurants?
Who would have thought that Anderson would have a winebar restaurant?
Hwy 50 from Breham is bumper to bumper every morning with persons driving to BCS from The small town Brenham area.
The challenge for those in charge is the manage growth so that the infrastructure in maintained in good condition and so that "big city" crime and other issues are minimized. Even Bryan has issues with growth. There are streets in NW Bryan that are in very poor condition with the city doing their best to address street conditions but it appears they are overwhelmed.
I think overall the city managers have done a good job although I didn't agree with the city getting into the real estate business with the Macys and other projects. I for one liked the new City Hall as it is a showplace and also built for growth in the next 20 years or so.
Now that they have it, the city might look at the Macys building for a combination senior citizens use and also for a YMCA. Some structural issues might be costly, but comparing its renovation cost versus building an new building elsewhere it might be advantageous to place those entities there? The city has set aside $22 million for the YMCA and half of that might cover any renovation cost of the Macys building as the parking is already present.
I would like a law that prohibits cities and countries from purchasing real property unless there is current or projected future public need of the property.
I realize it's becoming a dead horse, but the Macy's debacle is infuriating. I want even one member of council or city staff to give us just one good reason why that purchase occurred. They won't and they can't. They need to hear the displeasure on gross misuse of city funds loud and clear this November. Again, cities have zero business playing developer and landlord with taxpayer funds in the private sector.
Well I didn't support it and as quoted in The Eagle esports article earlier this week- the calculus has changed now that you, me, all of us, own it. There's a fiduciary duty to ensure the taxpayers lose no money on it. That's all we can do, now.
Respectfully,
-yancy
Respectfully-Hurry up and do it. It seem to me it is being made to be much harder to fix than it really is. Whatever the solution is-do it. It is burning money daily. If nobody there can figure it out or find someone who can-then you answered your own question on should you be re-elected.
Wasn't someone trying to get in there when the city bought it? Was it a business? Church? What exactly was the situation? Seems time for that cloud of mystery to fade away and someone give a bit of full disclosure. Why protect the fools who did it? Who owes them that protection? Aren't the taxpayers owed much more?
Find someone yo fill it and move on. I cannot wait for the day it gets filled and the entire council crows about how genius they are, lol. The sun will be shining and birds chirping that day-you can count on that my friend!
The city did the same at Rock Prairie where Wal-Mart wanted to put a Super Wal-Mart there but the city wouldn't approve it. So what do they do, allow The non-profit, non-taxed Scott and White buy it and building there. That was one of the best and highest land value vacant tract of land there is. Not only would the city collect the property taxes on about a $20,000,000 value in the building and the land, but also lost the sales tax receipts from hundreds if not millions of dollars of sales.
etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
Correlation does not imply causation.cavscout96 said:
As far as "giving engineers a bad name," they do that without any help from me.
Have you tried to serve or repair any piece of equipment newer than about 2005?
Hornbeck said:
There's a large, empty anchor store that they aren't paying common maintenance on that failed as an esports venue it was sold to the taxpayers as that all of a sudden now ain't up to muster,
Can we stop taking things off the tax rolls?
Can we stop with the vanity projects?
Can we stop raising the tax bar for the average homeowner?
I go through the DDI at 2018 at least twice a day and I think it was a great improvement with traffic running smoothly. I have yet to see an accident on it.etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
Let me take a shot at this. My background is engineering, so call me an egg-head to start.etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
Bob Yancy said:91_Aggie said:
Bob,
In light of the last two responses above, can you clarify if the Double Diverging Diamond at 2818 and University was a TXDOT project or a city project, i.e. how much did COCS pay for it?
Same question about the Medians.
My memory is faulty but I thought both of those were TXDOT projects and TXDOT paid.
You are correct. TxDot, not city.
Captn_Ag05 said:
How often do the population signs get updated? Once we hit 130k I'd like to see new signs.
The old intersection needed to be redone. By the mid-2010s there would be several cars stacked up in the middle lane, which wasn't how it was back in the 1990s and 2000s.cavscout96 said:I read up on them when it was proposed. Spending millions on solutions in search of a problem is a waste of tax funds.etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
How MUCH "safer" and "efficient?"
14M worth? Doubt it.
Vanity Project: building a monument city hall and Instagram prop on a a high value property on a main thoroughfare when you own much less expensive land in proximity to other city buildings.Bob Yancy said:Hornbeck said:
There's a large, empty anchor store that they aren't paying common maintenance on that failed as an esports venue it was sold to the taxpayers as that all of a sudden now ain't up to muster,
Can we stop taking things off the tax rolls?
Can we stop with the vanity projects?
Can we stop raising the tax bar for the average homeowner?
Yessir I think we can and should. Except the vanity projects part. I'm not sure what a vanity project is and I stand ready to be educated. But on the rest of your statement I concur.
Respectfully,
-yancy
I bet a similar dialogue happened in 1914 with the first traffic light was installed in Cleveland.nought said:Let me take a shot at this. My background is engineering, so call me an egg-head to start.etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
That's the problem though -- the drivers going through an DDI aren't egg-heads. They are normal drivers. They aren't engineers. They aren't traffic experts. They haven't read how efficient DDIs are supposed to be. They aren't computer simulations.
What they are are regular people -- some 16-year-old early drivers. Some 45-year-old experienced drivers who are used to "normal" intersections. Some 70-year-old past-their-prime drivers. Some distracted drivers.
Instead of running the egg-head simulations which show that DDIs are the bomb, do you know what happens? Almost every single driver -- even very experienced ones -- gets up there ... takes a look ... is completely baffled about this new-fangled thing ... and slows to almost a complete stop while they try to navigate their way through it. Now -- that's the experienced ones.
Call me a shi**ty driver. I think I'm better than that, but still, call me that. Every. Single. Time. I have to go through the DDI at University and 2818, I slow to a crawl, look all over the place, and try to figure out what in the heck I am supposed to do. Now, throw in some 16-year-olds, some 70-+-year-olds, some olds and youngs on their cell-phones ... yeah, the DDIs are awesome! They are one of those things that is awesome in a computer simulation and absolutely the opposite in real life.
You can tell me I'm wrong, and I'm sure your engineering knowledge and simulations will prove you right, but I can tell you that the incredible DDI intersection at 60 and 2818 is accommodating far less traffic than this old guy saw it accommodate 30 years ago. I'd love to see the accident statistics from that intersection from the last 30 years compared to the next 10 years. Not sure if this egg-head will be around that long though.
I didn't say it was bad because I didn't understand it. I actually do understand it and have since it was planned.PS3D said:The old intersection needed to be redone. By the mid-2010s there would be several cars stacked up in the middle lane, which wasn't how it was back in the 1990s and 2000s.cavscout96 said:I read up on them when it was proposed. Spending millions on solutions in search of a problem is a waste of tax funds.etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
How MUCH "safer" and "efficient?"
14M worth? Doubt it.
Rather than reading up on the intersection and why it's better for flow and efficiency than the typical 1960s-era diamond interchanges you basically declared that it was entirely unnecessary and a waste of money without even a shred of evidence or counter-argument. "It's bad because I don't understand it" is not an argument, no matter how often its used.
i was referring to the ones that build equipment in a way that requires 5x as long to service or repair due the the layout and the lack of of forethought on how it would require servicing. Have you tried to repair or service any piece of equipment (truck/car/tractor, etc.) built after about 2005?91_Aggie said:Correlation does not imply causation.cavscout96 said:
As far as "giving engineers a bad name," they do that without any help from me.
Have you tried to serve or repair any piece of equipment newer than about 2005?
It's not engineers making the decision to not have something be repairable or to fail for planned obsolescence... that is the people in the C-Suite who aren't engineers.
In fact, the engineers are doing a fantastic job following the directions of their bosses.
It takes great engineering to make an item last just enough to get past warranty period and then fail.
Once again, just another emotional post that isn't moving your position forward in a debate...just a distraction from facts.
BCS-Ag said:Vanity Project: building a monument city hall and Instagram prop on a a high value property on a main thoroughfare when you own much less expensive land in proximity to other city buildings.Bob Yancy said:Hornbeck said:
There's a large, empty anchor store that they aren't paying common maintenance on that failed as an esports venue it was sold to the taxpayers as that all of a sudden now ain't up to muster,
Can we stop taking things off the tax rolls?
Can we stop with the vanity projects?
Can we stop raising the tax bar for the average homeowner?
Yessir I think we can and should. Except the vanity projects part. I'm not sure what a vanity project is and I stand ready to be educated. But on the rest of your statement I concur.
Respectfully,
-yancy
p.s. Yes, I know this predated you, Councilman and do appreciate you engaging here
Again, that's not engineers fault. The leaders of those companies want you to have to take them into the dealer to get them repaired. Engineers just followed their bosses instructions (very well)cavscout96 said:i was referring to the ones that build equipment in a way that requires 5x as long to service or repair due the the layout and the lack of of forethought on how it would require servicing. Have you tried to repair or service any piece of equipment (truck/car/tractor, etc.) built after about 2005?91_Aggie said:Correlation does not imply causation.cavscout96 said:
As far as "giving engineers a bad name," they do that without any help from me.
Have you tried to serve or repair any piece of equipment newer than about 2005?
It's not engineers making the decision to not have something be repairable or to fail for planned obsolescence... that is the people in the C-Suite who aren't engineers.
In fact, the engineers are doing a fantastic job following the directions of their bosses.
It takes great engineering to make an item last just enough to get past warranty period and then fail.
Once again, just another emotional post that isn't moving your position forward in a debate...just a distraction from facts.
91_Aggie said:Again, that's not engineers fault. The leaders of those companies want you to have to take them into the dealer to get them repaired. Engineers just followed their bosses instructions (very well)cavscout96 said:i was referring to the ones that build equipment in a way that requires 5x as long to service or repair due the the layout and the lack of of forethought on how it would require servicing. Have you tried to repair or service any piece of equipment (truck/car/tractor, etc.) built after about 2005?91_Aggie said:Correlation does not imply causation.cavscout96 said:
As far as "giving engineers a bad name," they do that without any help from me.
Have you tried to serve or repair any piece of equipment newer than about 2005?
It's not engineers making the decision to not have something be repairable or to fail for planned obsolescence... that is the people in the C-Suite who aren't engineers.
In fact, the engineers are doing a fantastic job following the directions of their bosses.
It takes great engineering to make an item last just enough to get past warranty period and then fail.
Once again, just another emotional post that isn't moving your position forward in a debate...just a distraction from facts.
EVERY BUSINESS today is all about "Recurring Revenue" whether that is
- Subscription based service
- Planned obsolescence (make sure it doesn't last forever and needs to be bought again)
- or using that company's experts to have to repair the product (vehicles, tractors, bigger machinery, etc)
The engineers aren't dumb and making these products difficult to service... they probably hate doing that... but they have bosses that pay their salaries and they have to do what they want.
Almost all appliances now last about 5-8 years... you can be lucky to get 10-12 years.
Every mattress commercial will advertise "is your mattress over 8 years old?... well it's time to replace" when they used to last 20 years.
you are thinking too small if you believe "it's just dumb engineers who make it hard to service"
maroon barchetta said:
What new methods of making tax payers sign up for recurring subscriptions is council considering?
The design eliminates turning left in front of traffic as well as the total number of conflict points (and improves pedestrian access, too). I get the "just do it the cheapest way possible, I don't care if it's bad" mindset but you shouldn't disparage other people just because they have different ideas.cavscout96 said:I didn't say it was bad because I didn't understand it. I actually do understand it and have since it was planned.PS3D said:The old intersection needed to be redone. By the mid-2010s there would be several cars stacked up in the middle lane, which wasn't how it was back in the 1990s and 2000s.cavscout96 said:I read up on them when it was proposed. Spending millions on solutions in search of a problem is a waste of tax funds.etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
How MUCH "safer" and "efficient?"
14M worth? Doubt it.
Rather than reading up on the intersection and why it's better for flow and efficiency than the typical 1960s-era diamond interchanges you basically declared that it was entirely unnecessary and a waste of money without even a shred of evidence or counter-argument. "It's bad because I don't understand it" is not an argument, no matter how often its used.
I said you could have accomplished an appropriately safe alternative at much less cost. would it have been less efficient for that 40 minutes a day where the traffic is a PITA and the 4-5 home football games? Sure, but that added convenience is not worth the cost in my opinion.
PS3D said:The design eliminates turning left in front of traffic as well as the total number of conflict points (and improves pedestrian access, too). I get the "just do it the cheapest way possible, I don't care if it's bad" mindset but you shouldn't disparage other people just because they have different ideas.cavscout96 said:I didn't say it was bad because I didn't understand it. I actually do understand it and have since it was planned.PS3D said:The old intersection needed to be redone. By the mid-2010s there would be several cars stacked up in the middle lane, which wasn't how it was back in the 1990s and 2000s.cavscout96 said:I read up on them when it was proposed. Spending millions on solutions in search of a problem is a waste of tax funds.etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
How MUCH "safer" and "efficient?"
14M worth? Doubt it.
Rather than reading up on the intersection and why it's better for flow and efficiency than the typical 1960s-era diamond interchanges you basically declared that it was entirely unnecessary and a waste of money without even a shred of evidence or counter-argument. "It's bad because I don't understand it" is not an argument, no matter how often its used.
I said you could have accomplished an appropriately safe alternative at much less cost. would it have been less efficient for that 40 minutes a day where the traffic is a PITA and the 4-5 home football games? Sure, but that added convenience is not worth the cost in my opinion.
maroon barchetta said:
What new methods of making tax payers sign up for recurring subscriptions is council considering?
maroon barchetta said:
What new methods of making tax payers sign up for recurring subscriptions is council considering?
Craig Regan 14 said:maroon barchetta said:
What new methods of making tax payers sign up for recurring subscriptions is council considering?
Work with me here
What if GOV actually OFFERED ! not commanded ! OFFERED a subscription for you to make money and earn a dividend (tax credit)? Principal and interest guaranteed.
And or/maybe that dividend is when GOV saved or spent less than they thought they would?
Putting money right back into the economy that previously was scheduled to leave. Right back into your pocket. O yea and what you did earn was TAX FREE
Yes/no/maybe so ?
cavscout96 said:PS3D said:The design eliminates turning left in front of traffic as well as the total number of conflict points (and improves pedestrian access, too). I get the "just do it the cheapest way possible, I don't care if it's bad" mindset but you shouldn't disparage other people just because they have different ideas.cavscout96 said:I didn't say it was bad because I didn't understand it. I actually do understand it and have since it was planned.PS3D said:The old intersection needed to be redone. By the mid-2010s there would be several cars stacked up in the middle lane, which wasn't how it was back in the 1990s and 2000s.cavscout96 said:I read up on them when it was proposed. Spending millions on solutions in search of a problem is a waste of tax funds.etmydst said:
I'm not going to teach you engineering on a message board, but I'll give you a hint. DDIs have fewer signal phases which allows for more green light time, is more efficient, can handle more capacity, has more longevity, etc. DDIs are also safer. There are numerous websites that can explain it in detail.
My issue is that you and many others make statements that paint an entire profession (engineers in this case, but others too) as fools, which is counterproductive because it turns everyone into a cynic. Instead, be curious, research, ask questions to understand, and then point out specific issues that seem out of line based on your understanding. Most things aren't perfect and can be questioned. For instance, I believe there's a minor inefficiency in a part of the 2818 DDI setup that they will hopefully correct one day, but otherwise it appears to be operating wonderfully.
How MUCH "safer" and "efficient?"
14M worth? Doubt it.
Rather than reading up on the intersection and why it's better for flow and efficiency than the typical 1960s-era diamond interchanges you basically declared that it was entirely unnecessary and a waste of money without even a shred of evidence or counter-argument. "It's bad because I don't understand it" is not an argument, no matter how often its used.
I said you could have accomplished an appropriately safe alternative at much less cost. would it have been less efficient for that 40 minutes a day where the traffic is a PITA and the 4-5 home football games? Sure, but that added convenience is not worth the cost in my opinion.
Pedestrians? Really?
Has a single person actually used that DDI for foot traffic in the time it's been open?
Where in the world were they coming from or going?
The thing is a waste. The obsession with shiny new objects just because an engineer stamped them absolutely baffles me.
The one thing it almost certainly accomplished was making a pile of cash for some road and bridge contractor.
We are in the same situation that Austin was in the early 1970s...uncontrolled growth and overwhelmed infrastructure. I told people then that they will have major issues, and now they do.Bob Yancy said:Stucco said:
Is this growth rate optimal? We don't want flat or negative growth, but what is the ideal rate to preserve the place we live the longest we can?
That's a really good question and the conversation I was looking for when posting this.
Frankly I don't know if a city can, or should, constrain growth. Like many folks I talk to, I miss the ever diminishing "small town feel." But my family and I also enjoy the growing amenities and entertainment options.
I suppose city government could constrain permitting, but in my gut that's not right. If folks want to relocate their families here or start a private sector business, who is government to say no?
I think the best a city can do is manage growth efficiently. Police, fire, roadways and infrastructure- and otherwise stay out of the private sector's way.