A Better Way to Go: Meeting America's 21st Century Transportation Challenges With Modern Public Transit
Executive Summary
America’s
automobile-centered transportation system was a key driver of the nation’s
economic prosperity during the 20th century. But our transportation infrastructure
is increasingly out of step with the challenges of the 21st century.
Rising fuel prices, growing traffic congestion, and the need to address
critical challenges such as global warming and America’s addiction to imported oil
all point toward the need for a new transportation future.
Rail and other forms of transit must play a more prominent role
in America’s
future transportation system. Clean, efficient transit service already saves billions
of gallons of oil each year, reduces traffic congestion in our cities, and
curbs America’s
emissions of pollutants that cause global warming. Transit also generates a
host of other economic and quality-of-life benefits for our communities –
indeed, every dollar we invest in transit generates approximately two dollars
in benefits.
Every American can benefit from expanding the reach and
improving the quality of transit in the United States. By making a bold,
national commitment to expand and improve transit, the United States can address many of
our greatest challenges and create a transportation system built for the needs
of the 21st century.
America’s transportation system is broken.
America
has grown more dependent on car travel with each passing year. America
has more cars per capita than any other nation in the world. The number of
miles driven on America’s
highways has doubled in the last quarter-century. And our reliance on cars for
transportation is at the root of many of America’s most intractable
problems.
·
Oil
dependence – Two out of every three barrels of oil the United States consumes each year
are used to fuel our transportation system. Personal cars and trucks account
for 40 percent of our oil consumption. The United States remains by far the
world’s largest consumer of oil, leaving our economy vulnerable to oil price
spikes and our national security vulnerable to dependence on unstable nations
for critical energy supplies.
·
Traffic
congestion – Gridlock on America’s
highways gets worse with each passing year. The average American living in an
urban area spent 38 hours – nearly a full work week – stuck in traffic delays
in 2005, twice as much time as in 1982. Traffic congestion costs America’s
economy approximately $78 billion and results in 4.2 billion lost hours – or
nearly 480,000 lost person-years of time – each year.
·
Global
warming – America’s
transportation system produces more carbon dioxide – the leading global warming
pollutant – than the entire economy
of any other nation in the world, except China. America must reduce emissions from
its transportation system if the world is to avoid the most catastrophic
impacts of global warming.
Other problems caused by our current transportation system
include:
·
The extraordinary expense of building and
maintaining highways, which requires more than $150 billion in government
expenditures each year, and the cost of owning and operating private vehicles,
which costs American households $900 billion annually.
·
Damage to the environment from air pollution,
water pollution, and fragmentation of wildlife habitat.
·
Damage to public health from air pollution,
traffic accidents and sedentary, car-dependent lifestyles. Traffic accidents
alone claim more than 40,000 American lives each year, more American lives than
were lost in the Korean War.
·
Lack of access to transportation for the growing
elderly population, as well as the disabled, children and others who cannot
operate or afford vehicles.
·
Encouragement of sprawling development patterns
that consume open space and increase the cost of providing public infrastructure
and services.
Transit already plays
a key role in addressing the serious problems facing America.
·
In 2006, transit saved an estimated 3.4 billion
gallons of gasoline in the United
States – enough to fuel 5.8 million cars for
a year. In monetary terms, transit saved more than $9 billion that would
otherwise have been spent on gasoline.
·
In 2005, transit averted 540.8 million hours of
traffic delay, according to the Texas Transportation Institute, equivalent to
more than 61,700 person-years of sitting in traffic. The monetary value of
those savings was $10.2 billion.
·
Transit reduced global warming emissions by nearly
26 million metric tons in 2006. In New York
state alone, transit avoided 11.8 million metric tons of carbon dioxide
pollution – more than was produced by the entire economies of Rhode
Island, Vermont or the District of Columbia in
2004.
·
Transit also delivers a range of other benefits,
including opportunities for economic development, mobility for those without
access to cars, public health benefits, and reduced expenditures on vehicles
and fuel.
States and communities that invest more in
transit enjoy greater benefits.
·
The 14 cities that have built wholly new light
rail transit systems since 1980 saved more than 200 million gallons of gasoline
through those services in 2006. These cities span the nation, from Baltimore to Sacramento and
from Dallas to
Minneapolis-St. Paul, showing that rail transit can work in a variety of
cities.
·
Thirty-seven states and the District of Columbia reduced their oil
consumption with transit in 2006. States that have invested more in transit,
however, reap greater benefits. The 10 states that made the greatest financial
investments in transit in 2004 accounted for 85 percent of the oil savings
delivered by transit service in 2006.
For every dollar
invested in transit, America
receives nearly two dollars in economic benefits.
·
In 2005, federal, state and local governments
spent $30.9 billion to provide transit services (not including fares). These investments
yielded at least $60 billion per year in benefits from reduced vehicle
expenses, avoided congestion, global warming emission reductions, reduced road
expenditures, reduced spending on parking, and avoided traffic accidents. In
other words, investment in transit more than pays for itself.
Americans support
expanded transit and desire more transportation alternatives.
·
Transit ridership increased by 28 percent
between 1995 and 2006. Since 1995, public transportation ridership has been
increasing at a faster rate than vehicle travel.
·
Approximately three out of four Americans now
believe that improving transit and building communities that require less
driving are the best solutions for reducing traffic congestion. Many cities
nationwide are considering new or expanded commuter rail or light rail
networks.
Despite transit’s
many benefits, America
has historically underinvested in transit.
·
Highways have received the vast bulk of public
investment over the last half century. Since 1956, federal, state and local governments
have invested nine times more capital funding in highway subsidies than in
transit.
·
While the federal government invests more in
transit than in the past, the process for securing funding for new transit
lines is far more onerous and less certain than for highway projects, with the
federal government generally picking up a smaller share of the tab for new
transit lines than for new highway projects.
·
State funding is even more out of line with 21st
century transportation priorities. In 2004, state governments spent nearly 13
times more public funds on highways than on transit.
·
A lack of federal and state investment has left
local governments to pick up the tab for transit investments – with voters
approving approximately 70 percent of transit referendums appearing on ballots
between 2000 and 2005, committing approximately $70 billion to transit
projects. But an overreliance on local funding can make financing projects more
difficult. It also allows people living outside of the local area benefit from
transit without paying their fair share of the costs.
America must move
toward a new transportation future for the 21st century, with clean,
efficient transit at its core. To get there, America needs to make transit as a
national priority, articulate a roadmap for the future of transit, and commit
the resources necessary to build a 21st century transportation
system.
The vision: Transit
as a national priority. Policy-makers at the state and federal level must
realize that transit doesn’t just benefit those who ride it. Transit
benefits all Americans through improved energy security, reduced
pollution and reduced traffic congestion, among other benefits.
The plan: A roadmap
for transit. Policy-makers must develop and articulate a bold plan for the
expansion of transit in the 21st century. That plan could include a
commitment to:
·
Build or expand rapid transit networks in every
American city with a metropolitan population of 1 million or more by 2020.
Twenty-seven of America’s
50 largest metropolitan areas have some form of rapid transit service in
operation or under construction.
·
Expand transit options in small and medium-sized
cities, as well as in rural areas.
·
Link cities via high-speed rail. The United States
should commit to building high-speed rail along the 11 federally designated
high speed corridors and increasing regional rail links elsewhere.
·
Improve the transit experience through improved
amenities on trains and buses, including on-board wireless Internet service; information
technology to provide real-time information about pickup times; giving transit
vehicles priority in mixed traffic and creating more dedicated lanes for
transit vehicles; and providing on-time service and clean, comfortable vehicles.
·
Serve suburban users through infrastructure
investments – such as ring lines and commuter rail extensions – as well as
flexible transit services such as vanpools and community shuttles.
·
Serve the transportation disadvantaged through
affordable and convenient bus and demand-response services.
·
Keep fares affordable, match transit investments
with appropriate land-use planning, and promote other transportation
alternatives, such as bicycling, walking, carpooling and telecommuting.
The resources: Paying
for a 21st century transportation system by more efficiently
allocating costs. Federal and state governments should dedicate a greater
share of transportation funding to transit. States with anachronistic
prohibitions on the use of gasoline tax revenue for transit should remove those
restrictions. In addition, governments should identify a portfolio of funding
sources – including highway taxes and user fees, and general state and local
taxes – to fairly allocate the costs of transit system expansion among those
who will reap the benefits.
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