At least two big rail transit measures are on the ballot around the country this November, maybe more. In Seattle, voters will be asked to approve light-rail expansion. And in California, there's a truly transformative measure to build a high-speed rail network.
Both will probably fail, both due to the financial crisis but, sadly, also to the pervasive myths and muddled thinking that keep America frozen with an increasingly unworkable 1965 transportation network. This post will attempt to take a few of these on:
- Buses: Many people who claim to support transit advocate expanding bus service, saying buses are cheaper and more flexible. Unfortunately this is also the bait-and-switch position of anti-rail, anti-transit forces — they will initially support bus transit but then oppose actually funding it. In any event, while buses have their place, they are not enough for a balanced, multi-modal 21st century transportation system.
- More roads: Pave, Baby, Pave. That's what we've been doing for years, and traffic congestion just keeps getting worse. Metro Phoenix is a laboratory example of this. But the phenomenon was first noted with the parkway construction and other car-based projects of Robert Moses in New York in the 1930s: these roadways actually become "congestion generators." Nevertheless, this is the American mindset. In supposedly "green" Washington state, the Republican candidate for governor promises to build and widen roads, and he's neck-in-neck in the race.
- Cost: The news media and the conservative "think tanks" obsess about the price tag of transit projects (an exception is this LA Times endorsement). They never talk about the real costs of freeways and roads — not just the nominal price of paving, etc., but the huge embedded expenses associated with increased pollution, increased warming, loss of farmland and natural habitat to sprawl and the destabilization of neighborhoods and urban cores.
The more troubling aspect of this argument brings us back to the poisonous and decadent myth that has been foisted on the American people since 1981 that tax cuts are free and they can get something for nothing. If previous generations had followed this bread-and-circuses illogic, we wouldn't even have a nation. Public works are the foundation of an advanced civilization, and "the free market" alone won't provide for the public good. Government intervention, starting with Abraham Lincoln, created the transcontinental railroad. It built the airline system, even as passenger railroads were taxed to death. It built the Interstate highway system. All this without a second peep about that extra dime or quarter from the average taxpayer. Now we face entirely new competitive and indeed civilizational survival realities, but "it costs too much."
Another aspect of cost that gets no attention is how well-funded (and well concealed) the opposition is. The sprawl, road-building, oil and auto industries have been successfully defeating transit initiatives for decades. Conservative "think tanks" (i.e., advocacy groups grinding out fake research that always supports their position), also very lavishly funded, have a fetish against transit — something about the fear of maybe riding in the same rail car as a brown person. On the other hand, there is no big money pro-transit lobby in this country.
- It's not perfect: Seattle never misses a chance to miss a chance to build a great mass transit network — all the while bemoaning how far behind Portland it is. And no measure put before voters reaches the desired perfection — as if that happens anywhere. Large public works usually have to make political and other compromises. That happens in democracies. The TVA could have been "better" — but it turned out pretty damned good. Now, the Sound Transit measure takes a long time to build-out. Well, that's because backers are terrified of asking voters to approve more money to build it faster. At least it's a start.
- People won't ride it. Huh? Amtrak ridership is at records, and this with a vastly underfunded system. It was amazing watching the every-other-day train stop at 3 a.m. in Cincinnati — once a major passenger rail hub — and a crowd of people waiting to get on. Imagine how it would work with a convenient and frequent set of trains on high-speed roadbed. Amtrak corridor service in such places as California, the Northeast, the Northwest, even Michigan, is doing especially well. Light-rail systems routinely break ridership projections. This is not 1965. America is denser, more urban and many people are sick of driving. They long for alternatives.
So here we go again? Can we still build a 21st century civilization in the United States? Maybe a President Obama will start to turn things around. A President McCain promises to defund Amtrak, and that's just the start.
UPDATE: Happily, transit passed in Seattle and California approved high-speed rail. Indeed, voters around the country approved a variety of transit initiatives. It may be a sign that people are starting to understand. And Obama-Biden should portend well for Amtrak.
There’s a reason “conservatives” oppose mass transit and rail projects: they help create density. And density creates cities. And cities are “liberal”.
Car travel fosters an illusion of independence and autonomy. It’s why so many benighted citizens think they’re “rugged individualists” when in fact they’re simply lonely. America’s luxury – lots of personal space – comes with a tragic cost. It’s the loss of urban amenities and community for many Americans. Also, the expense of owning and maintaining an automobile runs around 20% of the average citizen’s income.
Imagine increasing your disposable income by 20%. Until recently, most Americans wouldn’t take that bait. It’s an argument that seems to fly in the face of the American Dream. But the economic cost of this Dream is becoming harder to ignore. Eventually, even Joe Sixpack will pay attention.
A week ago — after the Dow fell below 9000 — the Seattle measure was still polling at 58%. It will surely narrow, but there is stil a chance of it passing.
Hi! I write for the Seattle Transit Blog.
I think we’re going to pass here this year. But I want to point out – Sound Transit can’t ask for more money than they’re asking for now – they’re limited by state law to a total of 0.9% sales tax, and they currently collect 0.4% (mostly reserved for bonds), so they can only ask for 0.5%.
There’s also subarea equity – that tax has to be spent in the same one of five areas in the district that it was collected in – so we can’t target large projects for completion quickly one at a time.
That said – the package is kind of a worst case scenario. It assumes very little federal money, and we’re likely to get quite a bit more, so we should be able to knock a couple of years off most of those project times.
I grew up in Oslo, Norway, but now make my home in Portland, Oregon. For the past year I have been a light rail operator for TriMet, and am passionate about our transit system.
Anybody who works actively to stop public transit, especially light rail, has NOT looked honestly at the numbers.
I was very happy to read your article about this – great work!
The animosity of some people against public transit and in particular light rail/Amtrak/street car service, never ceases to amaze me. I just posted an article that you may already have found: https://pdxtrains.blogspot.com/2008/10/cost-savings-of-light-rail-over-bus.html
We need to look at this in the way this article does: bus service is good, but light rail is BETTER. It is more cost effective, something several studies have shown. Our ridership in Portland has grown by leaps and bounds, and we see no end in sight. Read here https://pdxtrains.blogspot.com/2008/10/trimet-ridership-continues-to-set.html
You make a good point about freeways and the upkeep of our “excellent” infrastructure – which, by the way, seems to be falling apart. We NEED light rail to take the load off the roads. In all the years that we have so diligently poured money into new roads, our traffic congestion and time wasted commuting in our cars has only gotten worse.
I enjoy bringing people to and from work – and to and from entertainment, sports events and shopping; every one of the passengers on my train helps make our communities more livable. We need MORE people to use public transit.
Sigh… I will get off my soap box now 🙂
Thanks again for a good read!
Eva
Whenever I see a proposal like the “Subway to the Sea” in Los Angeles, I have the following question. How many more route miles could we get for the same dollar amount if the route were built as an elevated system instead of as subway? To the extent that we could get more miles and therefore more passenger use from an elevated system, is there active influence from the oil/automotive interests to cause the rail transit dollars to be spent for the fewest miles?
I think it’s funny when I get off the bus a mile or two before my stop and walk. Sometimes the bus catches back up to me for a minute. I love to exchange glances with the riders whom I was just sitting next to. I like to believe that they know I’m racing them. I always win.