Traffic Congestion: Friend or Foe?
by Dom Nozzi
It is a serious
strategic blunder for sprawl-busters and other community and environmental advocates
to oppose traffic congestion. The fact that there is a national consensus that
congestion is bad shows that the sprawl and highway lobby has achieved an
incredible public relations victory.
By unintentionally
joining promoters of sprawl and highways by fighting congestion,
environmentalists and smart growth advocates are indirectly promoting wider
highways and other road capacity increases -- not to mention supporting the
thousands of desperate, ruinous tools being used to "make cars happy."
Wider highways are
promoted because they are the default "solution" we use to fight
congestion.
Communities with
free-flowing traffic and big roads provide high-octane fuel for suburban
sprawl, environmental destruction, and the loss of transportation and lifestyle
choice.
What are the results of
traffic congestion?
1. Congestion is a
powerful disincentive for suburban sprawl -- sprawl that steamrolls outlying
natural areas. With congestion, the market for development in outlying areas
withers. Without congestion, such sprawl markets blossom cancerously.
2. Congestion leads to
a regional reduction in air pollution and fuel consumption (because
"low-value" car trips are reduced).
3. Congestion leads to
a reduction in average motor vehicle speeds (higher average speeds promote
sprawl and a downwardly-spiraling quality of life).
4. Congestion creates a
more healthy retail and residential environment in the core area of a community
(because infill development, mixed use, and higher densities are more likely).
5. Congestion leads to
strong political pressure to have elected officials create a quality transit,
bicycle, and walking system (because large numbers of citizens become enraged
by the congestion and demand that their officials do something -- ANYTHING --
to alleviate it).
Congestion is also a
sign of a healthy community which has resisted the ruinous temptation to build
its way out of congestion with MONSTER roads. It is only dead, stagnant, dying
cities and downtowns that do not have congestion.
Note that I do not
necessarily encourage congestion in and of itself. As any economist would point
out, the most efficient, effective way to ease congestion is to charge fees
(i.e., tolls) for use of the road -- particularly during rush hour. But because
American motorists have been spoiled for so many decades by motorist welfare
subsidies, we have come to expect that free roads are our birthright and
therefore that any suggestion to charge fees for use of roads would be
furiously opposed.
Given this condition,
we are left with a "second best" option for discouraging the
"low-value" car trips that crowd our roads (for example, driving
across town on a major road during rush hour to, say, rent a video). And that
option is congestion -- a condition that does not impose a FINANCIAL tax or fee
on driving, but does impose a TIME tax or fee.
Does this mean that we
must resign ourselves to the aggravation of being "stuck in traffic"?
No.
It simply means that we
must engage in the struggle to restore transportation and housing choices in
our communities. We must create travel options so that those of us unwilling to
tolerate the congestion can opt to use transit, a bicycle, or a sidewalk to
avoid the congestion. Or we have the choice to live in a location that is close
enough to our daily destinations so that we can reduce our need for being
dependent on car travel.
So why do we all oppose
congestion? Are we our own worst enemies?
It is extremely naive
to think that successful transit, bicycle and walking systems will reduce
congestion. It only takes a TINY number of cars to congest a road, and since
there will always be a need by a number of community residents to use a car for
travel (particularly when car travel is so strongly enabled and subsidized), a
growing community will always see its roads congested if it is a healthy,
attractive place. The "triple convergence" assures this, as road
space that is freed up when a person opts to walk, use the bus, or ride a bike
will quickly be used up by other motorists who converge on that newly-created
space by being attracted to the road, being attracted to that rush hour time,
or being attracted to traveling by car.
Smart growth advocates
and environmentalists must start looking upon congestion as a FRIEND.
Otherwise, they unintentionally ally themselves with the sprawl lobby agenda.
They play right into the hands of their ideological enemies.
Note that
"libertarians" or other "free marketeers" claim that
Americans "freely choose" to drive everywhere and live in sprawl
locations. That it is a restriction in freedom to discourage such a lifestyle
-- ignoring the fact that such a lifestyle REDUCES the ability of a community
to provide other lifestyle and travel choices, and thereby FORCING people to
only be able to live the auto-dependent lifestyle.
An important condition
that these sprawl apologists conveniently fail to acknowledge is that this
large consumer demand for auto-dependent sprawl is fueled, significantly, by a
market heavily distorted with HUGE government subsidies (such as free roads,
free parking, underpriced gas, and unpaid emergency services). End those
subsidies (totaling over $174 BILLION each year in the early 1990s), and the
"price signals" that Americans get will no longer be screaming so
loudly that it is rational to pursue auto-dependent sprawl.
The great irony is that
the "libertarian" supposedly abhors government subsidies. Yet they
are happy to overlook auto/sprawl subsidies. Why the double standard?
http://user.gru.net/domz/index.htm