Transportation Policy
Streetsblog LA
Metro in 2010: More Rail, BRT and Highways. Less Bus Service
Even with Measure R, not even Metro is immune to bus service cuts.
May 20, 2009
Congress Reluctant to Shine Light on Transportation Earmarks
The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee is about to
unveil a massive bill that will re-authorize federal transportation
programs for the next six years. The bill will also include funding for
a large number of "earmarks," the congressional pet projects that can include everything from bike trails to Bridges to Nowhere.
May 19, 2009
Will Barbara Boxer Stand Up for Sustainable Transportation?
Behind the scenes, we're hearing a lot of sustainable transportation advocates sounding alarms over California Senator Barbara Boxer these days. As chair of the Senate's Environment and Public Works committee, Boxer is going to play a critical role in this year's federal transportation funding effort. Environmentalists want to see transportation policies and funding formulas that encourage reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. But the highway lobby, AASHTO and the EPW committee's ranking Republican and vocal climate change denier, Senator James Inhofe, don't want anything get in the way of their pork-tastic federal highway projects. Environmentalists have come away from meetings and conversations with Boxer and her staff with the sinking sensation that she's going to cave to Inhofe and friends when it comes time to write the transportation bill.
May 6, 2009
New Video Series Tells the Story of Sprawl
As livable streets advocates work to make headway in breaking the cycle of American auto dependence, the folks at Planetizen have put together a video narrative that explains how we got here. "The Story of Sprawl," a double DVD set produced by Managing Editor Tim Halbur, is a compilation of historical films dating from 1939 to 1965, documenting the confluence of factors that fostered the quintessential land use motif of the 20th century: far-flung, low-density, driving-intensive residential and commercial development. The discs include commentary from planning notables including Andrés Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, John Norquist, Neal Peirce, James Howard Kunstler and Robert Cervero, featured in the clip above.
April 21, 2009
California Transit Association Recommends Long-Term Funding Ideas
Flickr photo: pbo31 The California Transit Association has submitted a list of recommendations (PDF) to the Commission of the 21st Century Economy, a “bipartisan” panel mostly appointed by Governor Schwarzenegger, that call for establishing a “stable, predictable source of long-term funding” for the state’s public transit agencies. “The latest budget shell game only reinforced what … Continued
April 17, 2009
Obama Falls Prey to Ribbon-Cutting Syndrome
Obama greets construction workers at a DC photo op. Photo: AFP via Infrastructurist. At a press event in DC yesterday, President Obama touted the two thousandth transportation project to receive federal stimulus funds. I’m speculating a bit here, but the White House probably had some discretion when choosing which item to highlight for this milestone. … Continued
April 14, 2009
“Do as We Say, Not as We Do” = No Model for Sustainability
Environmentally-conscious citizens of India aren't alone in their concern about the rollout of the Tata Nano, the "world's cheapest car." But in an op-ed piece for Forbes, Projjal Dutta, the director of sustainability initiatives for the MTA, writes that American critics should look to their own example if they expect developing nations to follow a more sustainable path.
April 9, 2009
California is Setting the Stage for a Tax on Vehicle Miles Traveled
When
USDOT Secretary Ray LaHood last month suggested that the country should
consider replacing the gas tax with a tax on vehicle miles traveled
(VMT) to compensate for the dwindling Highway Trust Fund, which is
primarily supported from gas taxes, the White House immediately
rebuffed him, assuring the public and angry editorial boards that Obama
had no such priority. With a sluggish economy and greater fuel
efficiency in new vehicles, a VMT tax would replenish the Highway
Trust, though it would also allow planners and policy makers to develop
solutions for reducing greenhouse gas emissions through better land use
policies.
March 31, 2009