CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BET ON IT:
CALIFORNIANS WON’T WILLINGLY GIVE UP CARS”
Since
the early 1970s time of ex-Gov. Jerry Brown’s first term in office, California
officials from the top down have tried to coax Californians out of their cars.
It
began with Brown’s installing as his highway czarina the highly touted
“transportation genius” Adriana Gianturco, a Harvard Graduate School product
whose first step was to turn two existing lanes of the world’s busiest roadway
– the I-10 Santa Monica Freeway in Los Angeles – over to carpools only.
This
won her the determined enmity of most local motorists, who soon hounded
Gianturco from office and away from California, while the lanes went back to
general use and the “Giant Turkey” became a cautionary tale for bureaucrats who
followed.
This
44-year-old lesson appears all but forgotten today, as state and local
governments obsess over the notion that mass transit and dense development can
somehow lessen traffic gridlock.
That’s
one rationale behind all the bicycle lanes appearing in cities large and small
today, often at the expense of traffic lanes and parking spaces. It’s also the
reasoning that drives efforts to force dense housing near light rail stations
and heavily used bus routes, on the presumption that new occupants will not add
to traffic, using mass transit instead.
The problem:
Among California cities, only San Francisco has anything like the comprehensive
public transportation system needed to accomplish this. As a result, gridlock
is now worse than ever in most cities, including San Francisco, where one
recent study showed ride-sharing vehicles from outfits like Uber and Lyft make
up 30 percent of all traffic.
Which
means some residents have indeed been driven from their cars – right into other
cars. There is no reduction in smog from this; in fact, narrowed streets produce
more greenhouse gases than before as cars idle far longer at stoplights because
of slower traffic flow caused by transformed traffic lanes. The current
profusion of sport utility vehicles doesn’t help, either, as they take up
significantly more space than sedans and slow things even more.
Even
the presence of new rail lines doesn’t guarantee more mass transit riders. Last
year, the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Southern California (MTA) found
opening the new Expo Line from downtown Los Angeles to the beach increased
train ridership – but bus occupancy on parallel routes was down by similar
amounts. A net of virtually no cars were taken off the road by this huge
investment, leaving the I-10 as congested as ever.
But the
anti-automobile campaign persists. In San Diego, city officials voted to eliminate
parking requirements in new construction, even large apartment and condominium
projects. Their theory is that residents will use buses, ride-sharing and
bicycles if they don’t have their own parking spaces. This ignores the reality
that in cities with parking shortages, a lucrative rental market already exists
for what spaces there are.
Meanwhile,
state government, spurred by the same unproven theories, pushes cities to
dedicate more and more land for new housing, even where developers have expressed
little or no interest in starting new projects.
Local
governments which know the preferences and needs of their residents best are
taken to task for failing to report progress toward the state’s housing goals.
One recent state report singled out 31 Southern California cities for failing
to file such reports. The same study showed that 100 out of 539 cities
statewide filed no such reports over the last five years.
At the
same time, MTA directors ordered their staff to write a regional analysis of so-called
“congestion pricing.” That’s a concept used in a few cities worldwide – London
among them – which sees drivers charged either a per-mile use tax or an entry
fee for heading into the most congested areas. The study will also try to
determine what might happen if for-hire ride-share vehicles had to pay fees for
using city streets.
The
politicians pushing all these measures ought to heed some of California’s political history and see for
themselves what happened to Gianturco, who pioneered in their mode of thinking.
Along with her boss, then-Gov. Brown, she learned painfully that letting
unproven theories or ones known to be false determine public policies and
actions can prove personally and politically disastrous.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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