logo
Select intersections along First Ave. E. to receive ADA signal improvements

Select intersections along First Ave. E. to receive ADA signal improvements

Yahoo19-04-2025
Apr. 19—Five signalized intersections along First Avenue East in Newton will get ADA signals with audible sound and pedestrian countdown heads installed, and a significant portion of the project will be paid for with a more than $102,000 Traffic Safety Improvement Program (TSIP) grant.
Affected streets include intersections at East Eighth Street, East 12th Street, East 14th Street, East 19th Street and East 23rd Street on First Avenue East.
According to city council agenda documents, those with specific disabilities may find it difficult to know when it is safe to cross the intersection without the ADA signals. The loud sounds and countdown signal improvements are commonly used to help people with disabilities to cross the street.
Three bids were received by the city: the Des Moines-based Kline Electric for $149,506; the Newton-based Van Mannen Electric for $150,600; and the Grimes-based Iowa Signal for $171,404. The engineer's construction cost estimate was $173,572.50. Much of the costs will be covered by the grant.
The TSIP grant — funded with Road Use Tax funds — covers exactly $102,420.
Even though Kline Electric was the lowest responsive, responsible bidder, council member Stacy Simbro asked why the council couldn't choose the local bid from Van Mannen, which was only $1,094 higher than the low bid. Jody Rhone, the acting public works director, said the city does have a 5 percent local preference policy.
"In our current policy, that excludes projects because when that was created we did not want to get into any issues violating public bidding laws," Rhone said. "So those were intentionally excluded. We've had some discussion with the city attorney, and we may be looking at revising that policy."
However, because there is a DOT grant on this particular project and the project has already been bid, Rhone said changing that policy midstream would not be kosher. The city is following its policies and public bidding laws, but choosing another bidder would not work in this particular situation.
Simbro said, "So because it is a DOT grant that has its own rules and keeps us from looking at it? OK. Thank you."
The council approved the project in a 6-0 vote. The remaining funds not paid for by the grant will be paid using 2022 bond proceeds.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Air Canada suspends plans to resume operations as flight attendants defy back-to-work order
Air Canada suspends plans to resume operations as flight attendants defy back-to-work order

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Air Canada suspends plans to resume operations as flight attendants defy back-to-work order

Air Canada says it has suspended plans to resume limited operations after the union representing the airline's flight attendants said Sunday it will defy a federal back-to-work order for binding arbitration to end the work stoppage. "Approximately 240 flights scheduled to operate beginning this afternoon have now been cancelled," the airline said in statement. Air Canada said it will instead resume flights as of Monday evening, but with more than 10,000 flight attendants remaining on strike, it is unclear how Air Canada plans to operate these flights. CBC News has reached out to the airline for clarification. Earlier Sunday, the Montreal-based airline announced it planned to resume flights starting this evening, a day after the federal government issued a directive to end a cabin-crew strike that caused the suspension of around 700 daily flights, stranding more than 100,000 passengers. But just hours later, the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) said in a statement that members would remain on strike and invited Air Canada back to the table to "negotiate a fair deal." "We will be challenging this blatantly unconstitutional order that violates the Charter rights of 10,000 flight attendants, 70 per cent of whom are women, and 100 per cent of whom are forced to do hours of unpaid work by their employer every time they come to work," it said in a statement. "I don't think anyone's in the mood to go back to work," Lillian Speedie, vice-president of CUPE Local 4092, told CBC's News Network at a picket line outside Toronto Pearson International Airport on Sunday. "To legislate us back to work 12 hours after we started? I'm sorry, snowstorms have shut down Air Canada for longer than we were allowed to strike." All Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge operations are affected, though flights by Air Canada Express, operated by third-party airlines Jazz and PAL, are not. The airline says customers whose flights are cancelled will be notified and are "strongly advised" not to go to the airport unless they have confirmed flights on other airlines. Air Canada will offer those with cancelled flights other options, including a refund or credit for future travel. The carrier also said it will offer to rebook customers on other carriers, "although capacity is currently limited due to the peak summer travel season." WATCH | Federal government steps in to resolve Air Canada labour dispute: Air Canada relies on government help: labour expert Steven Tufts, an associate professor and labour geographer at York University, says Air Canada has become dependent on the federal government to solve its labour-relations issues. He mentioned last year's dispute between the airline and the pilots' union; Air Canada asked for the government to be ready to step in before the two sides reached a tentative agreement in September 2024. "[Air Canada] tried to get the government to intervene with pilots last year," Tufts told CBC News Network. "Air Canada has to learn not to call mommy and daddy every time they reach an impasse at the bargaining table. They have to actually sit down and get a deal done with their workers." Earlier this week, Air Canada asked Hajdu to order the parties to enter a binding arbitration process. But intervention was something she resisted until Saturday afternoon, when she said it became clear the two sides were at an impasse. CUPE maintained it opposed arbitration, instead preferring to solve the dispute through bargaining. It said Hajdu's decision "sets a terrible precedent." "The Liberal government is rewarding Air Canada's refusal to negotiate fairly by giving them exactly what they wanted," the union wrote in a statement Saturday afternoon. The two sides are set to return to the table this week. The union accused Air Canada of refusing to bargain in good faith due to the likelihood of the government stepping in and imposing arbitration. It has said its main sticking points revolve around wages that have been outpaced by inflation during its previous 10-year contract, along with unpaid labour when planes aren't in the air. CUPE also launched a national day of action for Sunday, with demonstrations outside of the Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver and Calgary airports.

Newly promoted Ligue 1 side Paris FC signs striker Geubbels from St. Gallen
Newly promoted Ligue 1 side Paris FC signs striker Geubbels from St. Gallen

San Francisco Chronicle​

time5 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Newly promoted Ligue 1 side Paris FC signs striker Geubbels from St. Gallen

PARIS (AP) — Newly promoted Ligue 1 side Paris FC signed striker Willem Geubbels from Swiss team St. Gallen on a five-year contract on Sunday. Paris FC announced the signing with a video posted on X. No transfer fee was given but French sports daily L'Équipe said Geubbels cost 9 million euros ($10.5 million) with a further 2.5 million euros in eventual bonuses. The 24-year-old Geubbels came through Lyon's famed youth academy but hardly played for the club before joining Monaco. He scored one league goal there and two for Nantes before joining St. Gallen in 2023, where he scored 14 league goals last season. Paris FC has large funds at its disposal since its takeover by France's richest family, the Arnaults of luxury empire LVMH. The energy drink giant Red Bull acquired a minority stake. For the first time in 35 years two Paris-based soccer clubs are in Ligue 1. Furthermore, Paris FC has changed its home stadium since being promoted and will play at Stade Jean-Bouin, which is literally across the street from defending champion Paris Saint-Germain's Parc des Princes stadium. ___

Offbeat NYC graffiti tour survives despite predicted drop in foreign tourism thanks to visitors from this country: ‘They're obsessed with street art'
Offbeat NYC graffiti tour survives despite predicted drop in foreign tourism thanks to visitors from this country: ‘They're obsessed with street art'

New York Post

time5 hours ago

  • New York Post

Offbeat NYC graffiti tour survives despite predicted drop in foreign tourism thanks to visitors from this country: ‘They're obsessed with street art'

These tourists see the writing on the wall. French art lovers are flocking to industrial Brooklyn in droves for quirky walking tours of warehouses sprayed with graffiti and street art. Advertisement The niche fascination is still going strong despite a major industry group projecting a nearly 20% drop in overall foreign tourism to the Big Apple this year. 5 Audrey Connolly of Graff Tours leads a tour of street art and graffiti in Bushwick, Brooklyn. Stephen Yang 'There are so many people in France that are obsessed with graffiti and street art: It's been a huge part of our business for years,' Bushwick-based Graff Tours tour guide Audrey 'Byte' Connolly told The Post. Advertisement Connolly, who has led walking tours of the hipster neighborhood's urban art for nearly a decade, attributing trailblazing cultural similarities in New York and Paris for the grand amour. As tour guides across the city report an absence of usual visitors from Canada, Australia, Germany and other nations — possibly over political boycotts and tariff-related economic fears — French tourists are largely unbothered, Connolly said. 'They're obsessed with street art — hopefully, they keep coming.' 5 Connolly leads a group of tourists — two French families and one group from Kansas City, Missouri — on a tour through industrial Bushwick. Stephen Yang Advertisement Germans and Israelis — who also represent large swaths of Graff Tour patrons — have not booked nearly as much this year, and school groups from Canada and China have also dwindled, Connolly said. Antoine Jacquet, a 23-year-old Graff Tours customer from Dijon, France, said its been more difficult to clear immigration hurdles under the Trump administration. But he was able to make the overseas trip himself, and even predicted foreign tourism will 'probably pick up with the new mayor Zohran [Mamdani],' referring to the Democratic mayoral nominee, a socialist, because 'his policies are more based out of Europe than to America.' New York City Tourism + Conventions, the city's tourism authority, recently said that some 2 million fewer visitors from other countries are expected to make the trip to the Big Apple in 2025, a loss of roughly $4 billion in foreign tourism dollars. Advertisement August is typically one of the busiest months for tours, Connolly said, but during weeks this year when she would've typically been working for seven days straight, she's spent entire days off without a booking. 'Tourism has big-down market effects: it affects hotels, it affects small businesses, it affects [the] local economy,' said Graff Tours president Gabe Schoenberg. The impact has been felt in trendy Bushwick, from thrift shops to restaurants that cater to Euro families in the hipster shopping district, added Schoenberg. 5 Antoine Jacquet, 23, of Dijon, France, expects that tourism to the US will tourism will 'probably pick up with the new mayor Zohran [Mamdani].' Stephen Yang As French tourism to the biz remains strong, Schoenberg still reports a roughly 10% drop in overall foreign visitors since last year — and is now trying too woo domestic tourists and locals with targeted social media ads. 'We did better this year with domestic tourism than years past,' he said. But 'a lot of domestic tourists don't see [graffiti] as art,' Connolly said. 'They're being told to fear New York and everything about it.' Schoenberg also attributed the reluctance of foreign tourists to visit New York City to 'backlash' over President Trump and his policies, as well rising transportation and food costs and fears over tariff-related price increases. Advertisement 'Even for a New Yorker, prices are going up and prices are going up exponentially,' he said. 'But locally, either exemptions for tourism or some type of incentive for tourism could also help.' 5 While French tourism remains steady, Graff Tours has still seen a roughly 10% drop in overall foreign visitors since last year — and is now trying too woo domestic tourists and locals. Stephen Yang 5 Graffiti writer The Ghostface Mims teaches a workshop at Graff Tours. Stephen Yang Advertisement The president of the tour company — which has a Los Angeles outpost as well — attributed diversity in its offerings as its key to staying afloat in uncertain times. Aside from industrial walking tours, Graff Tours' Bushwick site also offers spray painting classes and has hosted corporate events for the likes of Meta, L'Oréal and even hosted an influencer-filled launch party for Samsung this summer. 'The class revenue is significant compared to the tour revenue,' Schoenberg said. 'If I was relying on tours in general, I don't think I would still be in business.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store