Quote:
Originally Posted by maccoinnich
From the RFP:
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I really do hate documents like this. I understand that I may be operating from an "it's all so obvious" position that misses finer details, but a regional transportation document needs to get the big picture right first. Otherwise, the finer details are a waste of time to worry about.
Metro Portland needs, like, 3 big things to shift mode share. In order of decreasing difficulty:
1. Better, more transit-oriented land use. No more suburban--or at this point, ex-urban--sprawl. Infill and densification, of housing, jobs, and retail, are what most west coast cities need to start doing (the east coast needs more of that, too). This is a cultural issue, too; especially given how elevated real estate prices of various kinds are all over the west coast, it's clear that more people want to live and work in these places than we currently make possible. The nice thing is this is a three-birds-one-stone solution, if we can do it: encourage transit use, (eventually) reduce real estate prices, and allow more people to live where they want to.
2. A city-center MAX tunnel, and other grade separation or speed-abetting projects throughout the MAX system. The bones of a good transit system are already there, we just need (1) to structure our growth around it and make use of it better.
3. Better bus/bike infrastructure, especially the former. The city's bus network is pretty well used; how much better-used might it be if we had actual BRT anywhere? Likewise, Portland remains one of the best American bike cities; how many more people would bike around with more extensive protected lanes? (I know I'm one who would). Of course, fixing these problems could also improve MAX ridership.
I'm not sure how much more
extensive we need our rail transit to be given current ridership levels. It doesn't make sense to expand our most expensive implementation of fixed-route transit when what we really need viz a vis that transit it's not very intensively used in the first place (though I know that sometimes expansion
can abet that; it's just a risk that our current anti-transit culture can't really afford. Pretending otherwise is a pointless misdirection.