January/February
1999, p.9
Metropolitan
Highways
New Highways Don't Boost Economy
An analysis by Professor Marlon Boarnet of the University of California found
that "Highway infrastructure contributes little to state or national
productivity... Yet the idea that highways add to the economy is common."
Boarnet argues that what many planners see as growth is actually highways
shifting economic activity from one part of a region to another. See: www.scweb.uci.edu/faculty/boarnet.html.
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New York
NY Senate Transportation Chair Pans East River Bridge Tolls
Owen Johnson, the Babylon, Long Island Republican who chairs the New York
State Senate Transportation Committee, spoke out in the last issue of AAA's
New York Motorist against East River Bridge tolls because of his concern that
they will add to traffic congestion. Senator Johnson seems unaware of non-stop
tolling systems in place around the world. These can easily be adapted to work
with existing EZ-Pass technology. Nobel prize winning economist William
Vickrey showed decades ago how "congestion pricing" on the bridges
would actually reduce, not increase, traffic congestion. Reconstructing the
East River Bridges has consumed the lion's share of federal transportation aid
to NYC and will eventually cost more than $3.4 billion.
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New Jersey
Commuter Rail Stalls
While the $600 million Trenton-Camden light rail project whistles along, a
study of adding new commuter lines along the west shore of the Hudson River in
northern New Jersey has been bogged down in planner land. One problem is that
NJ is using state funds unencumbered by red tape for its Camden project and
more ponderous Federal funds for the Hudson study. A north-south conflict has
emerged in Jersey where about $133 million in transportation funding will
shift south in 1999.
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Connecticut
CT Shell Game Exposed
The Connecticut Bicycle Coalition (CBC) is preparing to launch a lawsuit
against the Connecticut Department of Transportation for misusing Federal
Transportation Enhancement funds. CBC says ConnDot has failed to meet ISTEA
and TEA-21 mandates to have a full-time bike/ped coordinator and a Statewide
bike/ped plan, and for illegally allocating TEA-21 Enhancement money towards
funding gaps incurred during ISTEA. Of the $41 million in Enhancement funds
available during TEA-21, ConnDOT has grabbed $18 million for ISTEA era project
funding.
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Transit
Subway Crime Continues to Plummet
Police report that serious crime on the subways has fallen another 24%, to
levels last seen in the early 1960's. Only one person was murdered on the
system this year.
--Compiled from Mobilizing
the Region, a publication of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign. www.tstc.org;
and The Ride magazine
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