Tag Archives: LVLHS

The Transportation Situation #1 – Bus Blues

The Transportation Situation #1

Little Village - This week I spoke to a couple bus riders who have been having problems with bus service in Little Village.

A student travelling north from Marquette Park to Little Village complained of a 25 minute wait Monday afternoon for a 20 minute bus ride. When they got off the bus, they had a 5 block walk because there is no 31st Street Bus to transfer to. They could have travelled west on the 26th street bus, but this would have required an additional 3 blocks on the Kedzie bus and then 3 blocks of walking.

Yesterday I spoke to a senior who complained of just missing the eastbound #60 26th St/Blue Island bus. The senior rider decided to walk from Central Park to the Walgreens at Albany rather than wait in the cold. It is a 14 block, 25 minute walk. No buses came in the time it took to get to the store. Exiting Walgreens, the rider just missed the bus again. They ended up having to walk back home. Again, no buses overtook the rider.

On 31st and Hamlin, I met many parents at school dismissal who supported a 31st Street Bus. Folks living between Pulaski and Lawndale said that it would be of great benefit to the students at Little Village Lawndale High School. Because there is no bus, many parents are driving their students, increasing their travel costs, local auto traffic, and air pollution. 31st Street is a very congested as a commercial, residential and dirty diesel truck route.  Some  parents would rather drive than have students walk because of frequent gang violence in the area. There were at least a couple shootings on or near 31st Street in the last month.

Want to help us get the 31st Street Bus Route?

Come to a Community Meeting.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

10:00 am to 12:00 pm

Pollo Giro, 3823 W 31st Street

31st Street Bus cooperative

The Chicago IWW and LVEJO have been looking into what it would take to form a worker self-managed, community-controlled transit cooperative to run bus service along the 31st St. corridor.  We are exploring the possibility of a better service, owned by those who operate it, with union-scale wages and benefits, for less cost.  The self-managed system will set an example of workplace democracy and community accountability, both of which are clearly absent from the Daley-controlled CTA.

Read More

Workers meet to discuss a transit cooperative for 31st Street.

AREA #10 Release

2 LVEJO organizers wrote for this issue. Please come out and celebrate with us.

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On October 1, 2010, AREA Chicago is releasing its tenth issue: Institutions & Infrastructures at the Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E Washington St, from 5:30 to 8 PM.

Featuring contributions by and about: Kath Duffy, The Dill Pickle Co-Op, Sarah Smizz, Kari Lydersen, Decima Musa, libraries, Victor Thasiah, Marisol Rodriguez, Faheem Majeed, community centers, Mess Hall, Matthias Regan, Jerome Grand, Lisa Junkin, Lauren Cumbia, The South Side Community Art Center, Diasporal Rhythms, faith, The Hull House SEX Series, Lutheran social trust, The Puerto Rican Cultural Center, Illinois Community Justice, Robin Hewlett, ChaNell Marshall, Heartland Journal, Melinda Fries, Lee Ann Norman, Katherine Darnstadt, Carol Ng-He, Charles H. Kerr Press, Mad Housers, Elise Zelechowski, Ryan Gri?s, Caucus of Rank and File Educators (CORE), Abigail Singer, Ryan Hollon, Rebecca Zorach, Frank Edwards, Erica Meiners, Alice Kim, cultural journalism, Larry Shure, Javier Lara, Brad Thomson, Erin Dragotto, David Eads, Kate Khatib, The People’s Law O?ce, Tor Faegre, Barbara Koenen, rooftop gardens, Ben Helphand, No Coast, Wade Tillett, Warehouse Workers for Justice, Leonardo Rivera, Liz McCarthy, Nicole Summers, Luis Brennan, Padraig Kingston, Immigrant Youth Justice League, Chicago and the Supply Chain, Beth Gutelius, Cindy Marble, Robert B. Ross, Aay Preston-Myint, baseball, Mairead Case, public parking in the city, The Public Square’s tenth birthday, n. sol ireri unzueta carrasco, NeighborSpace, Chicago Artist Resource, Sarah Lazare, Mackel Garrison, Sam Barnett, John Duda, Free Geek Chicago, Jayne Hileman, DJ Forbes, Roxaboxen, Woodlawn Collaborative, Young Joon Kwak, Daniel Tucker, Chicago Childcare Collective, Joseph Baldwin, ReBuilding Exchange, Chicago Teen Museum, Maureen Hearty, Alex Iwasa, Chicago Books to Women in Prison, Chicago Public School students, and more.