|
NYC Adults |
Do you think New York City should add more bike lanes, keep the number of bike lanes the same, or decrease the number of bike lanes? |
Add more bike lanes |
Keep the number of bike lanes the same |
Decrease the number of bike lanes |
Unsure |
Row % |
Row % |
Row % |
Row % |
NYC Adults |
27% |
44% |
23% |
6% |
NYC Borough |
Bronx |
31% |
49% |
13% |
7% |
Brooklyn |
25% |
44% |
28% |
4% |
Manhattan |
40% |
36% |
23% |
2% |
Queens and Staten Island |
21% |
47% |
22% |
11% |
Income |
Less than $50,000 |
23% |
51% |
20% |
6% |
$50,000 or more |
32% |
37% |
27% |
4% |
Race |
White |
33% |
34% |
26% |
6% |
African American |
20% |
48% |
28% |
5% |
Latino |
28% |
54% |
15% |
3% |
Education |
Not college graduate |
21% |
52% |
20% |
7% |
College graduate |
36% |
34% |
25% |
5% |
Age |
Under 45 |
28% |
44% |
24% |
4% |
45 or older |
26% |
43% |
22% |
8% |
Gender |
Men |
35% |
39% |
22% |
4% |
Women |
21% |
48% |
23% |
8% |
Households with children under 18 |
Household with children |
27% |
45% |
21% |
7% |
No children in household |
28% |
44% |
22% |
6% |
Interview Type |
Landline |
29% |
43% |
23% |
5% |
Cell Phone |
23% |
48% |
21% |
9% |
NY1-Marist Poll NYC Adults Split Sample: Interviews conducted July 20th through 27th, 2011, N=413 MOE +/- 5%. Totals may not add to 100 due to rounding. |
|