Quote:
Originally Posted by Austinite
Serious question for you and the people who made similar posts before you:
Why?
I think I understand why someone would want urban rail in Austin, but I don't understand why someone would think Austin needs urban rail.
At least as I've understood the rail debates in Austin over the past 10 or 15 years, neither side thinks that rail would lower congestion and pollution. Instead, the pro-rail side thinks--reasonably enough--that rail is an important quality-of-life feature and a symbol of what the city aspires to be, while the anti-rail side thinks--again, quite reasonably--that those quality-of-life projects and civic-status-symbols don't justify the cost.
Isn't that right? Isn't rail something that's nice if you can afford it, but unnecessary in any event?
Fire away.
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No transportation investment will permanently reduce congestion (and resulting pollution) in a fast growing metro like Austin. As M1EK replied earlier, any expansion of roads (if that was even feasible), would quickly fill up again with new drivers. Since expansion is largely infeasible (especially in the urban core), we have to find ways to move more PEOPLE in the same amount of space. The recently released Central Austin Transit Study explains it well: (
http://www.austinstrategicmobility.c...n-rail-project)
"Central Austin’s existing transportation network is at capacity during peak hours and there are few opportunities to expand roadways, yet Austin's continued vitality – social, environmental, and economic – depend on mobility. Central Austin needs improved mobility – person‐moving capacity – in the form of new and expanded modal options to meet the demands of continued economic and population growth.
Investing in transit is one of the most effective ways for Austin to meet its mobility needs given the significant obstacles to expanding its roadway network serving Central Austin."
Transit investments in Austin might not reduce congestion from existing levels, but they will slow the growth of congestion that would otherwise occur with the rapid population growth we are experiencing. Since existing levels of congestion are already bad, we need to do everything we can do to not make them worse.