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It is great to have JFK car-free. We need to do more for equity and environmental progress.
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It is great to have JFK car-free. We need to do more for equity and environmental progress.

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Boomer parents say that vans are their number one concern. Vans were their number one concern for their children’s well-being. As in: Sickos driving vans loaded with candy to send young people off to faraway places.

Unless you’re a traveling musician, vans don’t seem so common anymore. Maybe that’s the best.

In my generation, I was not prepared for how much parental stress would be related to cars. I was constantly telling my children to watch out for driveways and keeping them off the street. This is exhausting, and all-consuming. The idea of car-free spaces is a welcome thought.

Do not mistake: After many months of work and many years of pleading, the Board of Supervisors decided Tuesday 7-4 to declare John F. Kennedy Drives carless. It is intrinsically a noble end to have a safe place for people to walk and socialize without worrying about being crushed or maimed. Arguments against this particular closure were either largely addressed or are bafflingly and questionably real (more on that in a moment).

I am however concerned that in a place with so many existential maladies or overt afflictions, there is a possibility that it might be a problem. ThisThis is what causes the issue to attract such large attention and participation. I am more concerned that the decision to limit car access on a mile-long stretch, which only consists of a small fraction Golden Gate Parks roads, required such a long, bitter, convoluted process, which is politically unfavorable.

San Franciscans can be content that we have created a needed social space. But it’s not over You can also Satisfied: Cars being taken off JFK drive has been touted as an eco-friendly move. This is a questionable claim. San Francisco will not address the environmental goals nor the elusive attempts to achieve equity without engaging in much more difficult battles over much larger issues.

Ratifying JFK’s status as a car-free community is a good thing, according to Sarah Jones (the former planning director for the Municipal Transportation Agency), who played a major role in engineering this long-awaited decision.

She continues to say that JFK Drive is not an environmentally-friendly destination. JFK Drive is a limited source of climate benefits. Transit is the key to climate action.

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