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星期五, 8月 09, 2019

陳敏先單騎環宇行 讓天下看見台灣

陳敏先和波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉,麻州元極舞聯誼會合影。(周菊子攝)

                                                                    (Boston Orange 周菊子牛頓市報導)活到六、七十歲,接下來的日子,你會怎麼過?來自台灣的陳敏先,選擇單騎行天下,長征萬里,要讓世界看見台灣,向各方傳遞福音,愛心。
波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉(右)歡迎陳敏先(左)到訪。(周菊子攝)
           2008年到2019年,陳敏先已騎單車環繞台灣島13次,踏過5大洲28個國家。這趟行程要騎過美加日三國,預定9月下旬返台。他透露,行前曾獲同為天主教徒的副總統陳建仁祝福,返台後,總統府將安排他晤見總統。
陳敏先的天馬騎士團-單車全球生態文化和平之旅美國行,是5月從舊金山開始的,沿線經過洛杉磯,鳳凰城,厄爾巴索(El Paso),休士頓,墨比爾,奧蘭多,沙洛特,華盛頓,紐約,然後來到他在美國的最後一站,波士頓。
陳敏先和波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉,麻州元極舞聯誼會合影。
(周菊子攝)
         730日他抵達,待到87日,期間住在青年旅社,拜會過波士頓經文處,僑教中心,和經文處長徐佑典,新聞組長施維鈞等經文處同仁開了場午餐分享會,和波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉,以及麻州元極舞聯誼會員晤面,閒談,和媒體暢述他的行腳經歷。
        在波士頓的這幾天,他穿著印有贊助商徽號的運動衣,騎著插有中華民國,美國兩面國旗,由美利達贊助的特製長途用自行車,穿過哈佛大學在劍橋市的紅樓,摸了約翰哈佛銅像的腳,把中國留學生在哈佛300週年時送給哈佛,刻有中文字的紀念石碑拍下來,騎到麻省理工學院面對查理士河的圓頂前留影,還為了騎去衛斯理學院,經過波士頓紅襪隊主場。
陳敏先寫了幅字,送給波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉。(周菊子攝)
       陳敏先強調自己其實是個很普通的人,小時家境不好,對發放救濟品,曾被稱為麵粉教的天主教會,一直心存感激,一度要進教會服務,但為幫補家計,繼續升學,參加聯考二、三次,才進中興大學外文系。畢業後當國中老師,1995年擔任台中縣清海國中訓導主任時,曾獲師鐸獎53歲退休,遇上人生轉捩點。
        本來退休後18%利息的月俸近2萬元,再加上其他收入,他的生活還過得去,沒想到2007年,大便見血,醫生說是大腸癌前兆,讓他開始為健身騎單車,竟就此開啟了人生另一頁,踏上騎單車環遊世界之旅。
        那時候正好台灣風行環島,他腦袋一熱,仿效阿甘的跑馬拉松環島,他騎單車,還經劉志文引介,加入天主教天馬騎士團,在騎單車環島的同時,為天主教博愛基金會「兒童關懷站」募款。
陳敏先每次都預先規畫行程。(周菊子攝)
        環島六次,還出了從台灣到全世界 福爾摩沙先仔傳奇台灣篇這本書後,他萌生騎向遠方的野心,開家庭會議爭取支持,寫企劃書募款。從20123月開始,一次又一次,他騎單車,走過中國,荷蘭,比利時,德國,義大利,法國,英國,以色列,巴西,韓國,越南,馬來西亞,新加坡,印尼,菲律賓,南非,史瓦濟蘭等等,細數下來,截至今年,他已穿梭過5大洲,28國,還打算走訪更多國家,出更多書,紀錄他在旅程中遭遇的許多感人故事,驚險經歷。
        陳敏先坦言,他能夠實現環遊世界的夢想,把台灣帶到四面八方,遇有機會就宣傳保護環境生態,為關懷兒童募款,全因為有許許多多的熱心人支持,包括那些印在他每次行程布地圖上的贊助者,例如生命溯源的劉志文,茶祖國際同濟會,先鋒環資訊,常廣股份有限公司,鋒明集團,蓮荷御品齋,靜山靈修中心,健野戶外休閒用品店,騎多旅遊用品公司,一起趣麵包坊,易特商務網,啟泰纖維企業,美國亞裔非營利機構策略聯盟,長春藤高級中學,樂齡網等等。
波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉(右)送上嶄新的中華民國和美國國旗
給陳敏先。(周菊子攝)
           二年前,經營電動手扶梯和淨水設備的羅布森集團汪世旭總經理,一出手就愾捐10萬元,更是讓陳敏先感動不已。
            陳敏先透露,這次單騎行,他原本的規劃是515日到822日,共100天,食宿,交通,保險等等費用預算22萬元,但後來有朋友建議,有些地點不該錯過,於是改為51日到923日,增加46天行程。為了樽節經費,他給自己訂下每天食宿費用1000元台幣的限制,帶著睡袋,帳篷,克難式的走天涯。
陳敏先說,一路騎來,沿途遇到許多僑胞熱心接待,讓他累積了說不完的愛心故事。
                 88日時,陳敏先搭灰狗巴士從波士頓往加拿大蒙特婁,轉渥太華,再騎到多倫多,然後搭機去溫哥華,停留幾天後再飛去日本名古屋,京都,大阪的繼續單騎行程,預定918日返台,騎回台中,為下次的再出發做準備。(圖片已於8月7日發表)
陳敏先穿的運動衣,印滿贊助商徽號。
(周菊子攝)







星期四, 8月 08, 2019

大同村南停車場計畫建六層高大樓 85個單位

紐英崙中華公所主席陳家驊(左)和執行主任朱蘇珊(右)親自向華埠
居民說明大同村停車場建住宅計畫。(周菊子攝)
       (Boston Orange 周菊子波士頓報導)紐英崙中華公所(CCBA)計畫在大同村南停車場上蓋85戶可負擔住宅,87日晚上波士頓華埠居民會陳情,預告土地發展計畫概況,爭取支持。
         紐英崙中華公所行政主任朱蘇珊和公所主席陳家驊7 日晚親自以中英文解說,並即席回答問題。
波士頓華埠居民會共同主席余顯生(右)認為,大同村停車場或許
可以蓋得更高些,好有更多單位。(周菊子攝)
        朱蘇珊在會中說明,早在2016年的1112月,中華公所已做了大同村南停車場蓋住宅大樓的可行性研究,20177月時,中華公所發出報價要求 (RFQ),尋找潛在的土地發展合作夥伴,接著在1212日發出招標書(RFP)給三家獲選的發展商。今年(2019)129日,中華公所挑選了火炬社區(Beacon Communities LLC)為合作夥伴。
        朱蘇珊藉幻燈片,向出席的六,七十名波士頓華埠居民說明,大同村是個有4座樓宇,2個停車場,共214戶住宅單位的屋村,16個零售店面佔地約22,990平方呎,供居民及商戶使用的停車位有112個,其中43個在泰勒街和乞臣街那一邊,69個在夏利臣街和乞臣街之間,也就是南停車場,面積為23,686平方呎。
        目前的施工計畫是,蓋6層高有85個住宅單位的大樓,但地面一層透空,預防地層下陷,海水倒灌的可能。留出40個停車位,85個有棚蓋自行車停車位,17個無棚蓋自行車位。
梁德生(左)以親身經歷指陳紐英崙醫療中心的護士,服務品質很差。
(周菊子攝)
        在回答出席者提問時,陳家驊說明,住宅單位格局,預定為301睡房,402睡房,153睡房。目前估計造價4500萬元,以家庭年收入在麻州平均中位收入60%上下者為主要對象,大約是一個四口之家,年收入總額7萬元左右者,
        陳家驊指出,如果在蓋樓時,為募集資金,向政府申請了各種不同補助,那麼在出售或出租時,將受一定限制。目前中華公所試圖儘量從其他途徑籌資,以減少10%的單位須保留給年收入在AMI 30%家庭等的可能限制。
交通部代表(左)說明華埠一帶,多處將增設自行車道。(周菊子攝)
         由於出席民眾都很關心可負擔住宅計畫,對房屋格局,申購者適用收入限制等垂問頗詳細。居民會主席黃國威,黃楚瑜要求中華公所在該會下次月會時再次出席,做更進一步說明。
波士頓市議員愛德華費林(Ed Flynn)表示,他對波士頓公共衛生局
所做的華埠健康需求調查報告結果,很不滿意。(周菊子攝)
         87日的波士頓華埠居民會還有波士頓公共衛生局,塔芙茨醫療中心派代表出席,做華埠健康需求評估調查報告,亞裔健康計畫說明,以及波士頓交通局的增設自行車道,交通號誌變更等報告。波士頓市議員愛德華費林(Ed Flynn)專程出席,表示他對波士頓公共衛生局(DPH)和塔芙茨大學醫學院合作的華埠健康需求評估調查報告,竟然得出華埠居民患氣喘病的比率僅7%,遠低於波士頓全市居民的18%這樣的結果,感到十分不滿意,因為事實是華埠居民面對的空氣汙染,遠大於市內其他各地,需要更多資源來改善情況,若依照波士頓公共衛生局的調查報告來分配資源,華埠將失去應有的改善機會,他認為這情況絕不可接受。






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陳文浩當選北美洲舜裔篤親總公所副總理

陳文浩(右)當選北美洲舜裔篤親總公所副總理。依序
為陳榮良總理,陳順盛副總理。
             (Boston Orange 周菊子整理報導)北美洲舜裔篤親總公所81日在加州首府沙加緬度市(二埠)舉行第五屆懇親大會,增添羅德島至孝篤親公所為新會員,並推舉新屆幹部,總理為二埠陳榮良,副總理為波士頓陳文浩,紐約陳順盛。
              原任總理陳伯強升任元老。紐英崙至孝篤親公所的顧問陳天佐也在這次懇親大會中獲推舉為總公所顧問。
            今年的懇親大會共100餘人參加,舜裔篤親總公所五名元老,陳兆鴻、陳達偉、陳羨棠、
陳仕維、陳健邦都出席了。
會中決定,2021年的第六屆懇親大會將到波士頓舉行,2023年第七屆轉往紐約。
       紐英崙的元老,陳毓璇,陳毓禮因年事已高,不克遠遊,未出席。另一名元老陳家驊在今年3月時,已同時辭去紐英崙和北美總公所的元老職務。紐英崙至孝篤親公所懇親大會代表團在這次會議中,再次轉呈,大會接受。
紐英崙至孝篤親公所代表團由22人組成,和黃海龍(前左一)合影。
             大會的特邀嘉賓眾多,包括中華民國僑務委員會主任秘書張良民,駐舊金山台北經濟文化辦事處處長馬鐘麟,華僑協會總會理事長黃海龍,二埠中華會館主席余國平,二埠中華會館副主席方鍚琨,大埠中華總會館前總董黃惠喜全美安良工商會元老團主席伍健生,舊金山華僑文教服務中心主任蘇上傑等。
                在大會晚宴中,華僑協會總會黃海龍理事長特別表揚陳仕維,頒給他一個僑光獎章。
       北美洲舜裔篤親總公所懇親大會代表團,這次到加州開會,適逢三藩市舜裔篤親公所慶祝十週年,82日晚在三藩市華埠皇宮酒樓筵開30席的歡聚。
               大會結束後,包括羅德島胡英僚,紐英崙陳文棟,陳文珊等代表團成員轉往台灣參訪5天。(圖片及內容資料,陳文浩提供)






波士頓華埠居民會換屆 8人同額當選

左起,余顯生,馬華,阿圖羅,鄧潔梅,伍新杏,瑤鋒,劉華權,
和不在圖中的何素月當選為華埠居民會新任全區執委。(周菊子攝)
        (Boston Orange 周菊子波士頓報導) 波士頓華埠居民會(CRA) 87日晚召開月例會,聽取健康,交通,土地發展等報告,並改選執委會全區委員。8名參選者當晚同額當選,將於20201月上任。
       波士頓華埠居民會成立於1999年,設有由17名經票選產生委員組成的執委會,其中3人為共同主席, 8人為全區委員, 9人為分區委員。任期各二年,隔年改選。
華人前進會社區組織員鄺寶蓮(左),周宣寧(右)宣佈
選舉結果。(周菊子攝)
       從華埠居民會成立以來,一直在旁輔佐的華人前進會,迄今仍支援華埠居民會的行政工作。7日晚的選舉結果,由華人前進會社區組織員鄺寶蓮,周宣寧在會末宣佈。
根據華人前進會資料,目前有波士頓華埠居民會有200多名繳費會員,當晚有40多人出席投票。8名同額當選者為余顯生(華信屋),馬華(君子樓),阿圖羅,伍新杏(南灣東座),姚鋒(美順樓),劉華權(公路村),鄧潔梅(綠茵苑),何素月(南灣東座)。前面6人為連任,最後2人新當選。他們大都是已退休,但有心為地方服務的人士。
其中的阿圖羅(Arturo Gossage)是今年當選執委中唯一的非華裔居民,已連任三次。過去幾年來一直擔任居民會財政。他在參選告白中透露,當初居民會帳戶餘額不足5000,如今已有40,000元。
波士頓華埠居民會的現任共同主席為余顯生,黃國威,黃楚瑜,財政為阿圖羅,執委為馬華,姚鋒,劉華權,伍新杏,以及分區執委曹鼎榮,李榮耀,朱惠玲,黃偉平,馬炳祥,陳勤娣,王嘉接,卡特琳娜。原任執委陳丹心,已辭職並喬遷回中國定居。
       根據波士頓華埠居民會章程,凡年滿16歲,居住在華埠,包括堡壘村、華福樓的南端(South End),南灣東座,西座,屋街(Oak),拿秀街(Nassau),尊尼閣(Johnny Court),華信屋(Oak Terrace),信義大廈(Metropolitan),美華村(Mei Wah),哈佛街(Harvard),乞臣街(Hudson),泰勒街(Tyler),好事福街(Oxford),必珠街(Beach),大同村(Tai Tung),君子樓(Quincy Tower),公路村(Mass Pike),美順樓(Mason Place),施頓樓(Stearns),彩絲樓(Chauncy)等地區的居民,繳交一元會費,加入成為會員後,都有資格投票。(更新版)

MassDOT Releases Study Detailing Congestion Impacts and Trends, Recommends Series of Next Steps

MassDOT Releases Study Detailing Congestion Impacts and Trends, Recommends Series of Next Steps
Recommendations suggest actions by municipalities and private sector, expanded housing, greater public transit capacity and study of “managed lanes”

BOSTON – A data-driven report on congestion was released today by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) with recommendations for state and municipal government, the private sector and other stakeholders to make commutes by road and transit more reliable, accessible and predictable while reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The report quantifies levels of congestion and recent trends for specific locations, analyzes the problem’s causes and recommends solutions ranging from transit improvements to more telecommuting to conducting a feasibility study of congestion pricing using managed lanes.

As part of efforts to provide workers with more options for commuting, MassDOT also announced today that it is accepting applications for a new grant program to support innovative programs such as first/last mile van connections, partnerships between municipalities or employers with Regional Transit Authorities, and vanpools and carpools, which will help increase shared ridership options.

The administration will also create a new grant program for municipalities to offer technical support so that cities and towns can develop their own transportation and management plans.

“Traffic and congestion are a nuisance for too many residents, and this report provides our administration with robust data to help us make informed decisions on how to build on our efforts to tackle the Commonwealth’s congestion issues,” said Governor Charlie Baker, who directed MassDOT in August 2018 to begin a comprehensive analysis of when, where and why roadway congestion is worsening in Massachusetts. “From this report, we have identified several ways to address congestion by expanding capacity on our transit system, adding more housing, and exploring managed lanes to help make people's commutes be more reliable. We look forward to working with the Legislature, local government and the private sector to develop solutions to reduce the variability in people’s commutes.”

“Statewide, all leaders, including those in government and who manage cities and towns, must be part of conversations now with the business community and other groups to assist the administration in developing a coordinated set of policy options to restore reliability to our transportation system,” said Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. “The report’s recommendations can help our administration take important steps to improve the quality of life in the years ahead.”

Key Recommendations:

The following report’s recommendations address several important policy priorities - reliability, accessibility, sustainability and equity:


                 Address local and regional bottlenecks where feasible
                 Actively manage state and local roadway operations
                 Reinvent bus transit at both the MBTA and Regional Transit Authorities
                 Increase MBTA capacity and ridership
                 Work with employers to give commuters more options, including providing grants for employers, Transit Management Associations, Regional Transit Authorities and others to provide innovative workforce transit options to employees
                 Create infrastructure to support shared travel modes
                 Increase remote work and telecommuting
                 Produce more affordable housing, especially near transit
                 Encourage growth in less congested Gateway Cities
                 Investigate the feasibility of congestion pricing mechanisms that make sense for Massachusetts, particularly “managed lanes”

“We cannot eliminate congestion entirely, but we can better manage it to make trips more reliable and predictable,” said Transportation Secretary and CEO Stephanie Pollack. “That includes new initiatives as well as a greater emphasis on practices already in use, such as Traffic Management and Systems Operations (TSMO) practices that have been used in Massachusetts for years. Moving forward, managing roadways through a TSMO framework must become as much a part of MassDOT’s DNA as fixing potholes and plowing snow. Advancing, expanding, and institutionalizing these kinds of solutions will help limit the effects of crashes, work zones and weather on already lengthy commutes.”

The report takes a broad approach to potential congestion relief solutions, focusing on ways to improve access to jobs for workers within a reasonable amount of time, rather than just on increasing speeds on congested roadways. As the report states, “Traffic congestion effectively shrinks the number of communities with good automobile access to jobs and high housing costs limit who can afford to live in those high-access communities. For this reason, the quantity and location of housing is a big part of the congestion equation. If the Commonwealth strives to maximize reasonable and convenient access to jobs and other opportunities for its residents, increasing the availability and affordability of housing in high-access areas is a critical factor to achieve that goal.”

The report also evaluated different methods of congestion pricing using Massachusetts traffic data and identified “managed lanes” as an approach for further study:

                 Managed lanes: MassDOT will investigate the feasibility of implementing “managed lanes” on one or more highways in Greater Boston. Managed lanes are a system of parallel lanes on a road, with one or more lanes for drivers that remain free to use while one or more lanes require drivers to pay a fee, which may be constant or vary depending on congestion levels. Managed lanes could also be used by carpools, buses and vans carrying large amounts of people for no cost, allowing more people to travel in a faster lane with less congestion and no congestion fees.

Key Findings About Congestion:

The report describes the locations, extent and causes of vehicular congestion. The five most severe occurrences of weekday congestion occur on: I-93 southbound from Mystic Valley Parkway in Medford to McGrath Highway in Somerville at 7 a.m., Route 2 eastbound approaching Alewife Station at 8 a.m., I-93 northbound from the Braintree Split to Neponset Circle at 7 a.m., Route 2 eastbound approaching Alewife Station at 7 a.m., and I-93 southbound from Mystic Valley Parkway in Medford to McGrath Highway in Somerville at 8 a.m.

Additional data identify several corridors in the state with segments that are congested for more than ten hours per day. Nine roadway segments each see more than ten hours per day of congested or highly congested conditions: Route 1A southbound in Revere, American Legion Highway, (Route 60), in Revere, O’Brien and McGrath Highways northbound from Leverett Circle to Mystic Valley Parkway, the Fellsway and Main Street southbound from Reading to Medford, the Sagamore Bridge, Fresh Pond Parkway in Cambridge, and I-93, (from Boston to New Hampshire, running along the Central Artery portion, the Southeast Expressway segment and a segment that partially carries the I-95/128 designation.)

One concern is the spread of congestion toward the outer reaches of the Boston metropolitan area from the area inside I-95/128 to the area extending out to I-495 including radial roadways such as Route 3, Route 24 and the Massachusetts Turnpike. While congestion is not as persistently severe outside of Greater Boston, it is nonetheless a source of frustration for drivers who travel along Route 9, Route 7, I-91, I-290, or some western portions of the Mass Pike during peak commuting periods.

Importance of Additional Local Traffic Data:

The report recognizes the limits of data to capture the full effect of congestion on local and other roads. “While anecdotal and experiential information suggests that local roads are also significant sites of congestion, there is simply no authoritative data reported about them,” the study explains. 

Such local congestion is slowing down MBTA buses, which need to see ridership increase as part of addressing the region’s congestion problems. The study notes that “the MBTA now assumes that its buses will travel at their slowest speeds since data has been available,” an assumed speed of 11.5 miles per hour. To address this problem, the study calls for more partnerships between the MBTA and Regional Transit Authorities and cities and towns to create bus priority infrastructure such as bus lanes and transit signal priority.

Building on Work Already Underway:

The report explains that MassDOT and the Baker-Polito Administration “have not waited to complete this report in order to begin implementing solutions to address congestion.” The recommendations build on work already underway to address local and regional congestion bottlenecks and improve public transportation provided by Regional Transit Authorities and grow transit ridership throughout the Commonwealth. 

The Baker-Polito Administration’s Housing Choice Initiative is spurring housing production while the Transformative Development Initiative is accelerating economic growth in Gateway Cities. Across agencies, the administration continues to advance transit-oriented development projects across the Commonwealth to encourage people to live closer to transit options. To date, these projects include 1,425 housing units, 481 of which are affordable units, along with over 660,000 feet of commercial space. There are an additional seventeen projects in the works that will produce 2,200 housing units, including 650 affordable units, and almost 3 million feet of commercial space.

The report also states that the administration looks forward to working with our colleagues in the Legislature to advance three pieces of legislation that address the report’s recommendations:

1.               Housing Choice legislation that would enable cities and towns to adopt certain zoning best practices related to housing development by a simple majority vote, rather than the current two-thirds supermajority.
2.               An Act Relative to Public Safety and Transparency by Transportation Network Companies that would allow for additional data to be collected from TNCs and provided to municipalities, which will help them make better informed transportation planning decisions.
3.               An Act Authorizing and Accelerating Transportationinvestment, an $18 billion transportation bond bill filed on July 25 by the Baker-Polito Administration to continue the administration’s efforts to modernize and improve the reliability of the Commonwealth’s transportation system. The bond bill includes $50 million for a new local bottleneck program to fund proven, relatively low-cost investments to address local congestion hotspots, a tax credit for employers for telecommuting and $50 million for a Transit Infrastructure Partnership Program with grants enabling transit authorities and municipalities to work together to provide bus lanes, transit signal priority and other infrastructure to keep buses moving.

The report’s conclusion urges action now by many stakeholders – to “double down on initiatives already underway and investigate solutions not yet tried, including ‘managed lanes’ that may allow Massachusetts to use congestion pricing in a manner that addresses the serious equity issues that can arise when trying to control congestion by making drivers pay more.” As the report notes, “A range of factors created today’s growing congestion problem. Only an equally wide range of actions by public and private players alike can fix it.”

A copy of the MassDOT Congestion Report can be viewed here.