HomeMy WebLinkAboutTIC 2020-04-06 Item 2F - Report - Transportation for America - The Congestion Con ReportCity of Tukwila
Allan Ekberg, Mayor
INFORMATIONAL MEMORANDUM
TO: Transportation & Infrastructure Committee
FROM: Laurel Humphrey, Council Analyst
DATE: April 3, 2020
SUBJECT: Transportation for America: The Congestion Con
ISSUE
At the 2020 National League of Cities Congressional City Conference, Councilmember
Kruller attended a presentation on "The Congestion Con," published by Transportation
for America, and requested to add it to the next committee agenda. The Committee
agreed to do so.
The report summary from the Transportation for America website:
In an expensive effort to curb congestion in urban regions, we have overwhelmingly
prioritized one strategy: we have spent decades and hundreds of billions of dollars
widening and building new highways. We added 30,511 new freeway lane -miles of
road in the largest 100 urbanized areas between 1993 and 2017, an increase of 42
percent. That rate of freeway expansion significantly outstripped the 32 percent
growth in population in those regions over the same time period. Yet this strategy
has utterly failed to "solve" the problem at hand —delay is up in those urbanized
areas by a staggering 144 percent.
Those new lane -miles haven't come cheap and we are spending billions to widen
roads and seeing unimpressive, unpredictable results in return. Further, the
urbanized areas expanding their freeways more rapidly aren't necessarily having
more success curbing congestion —in fact, in many cases the opposite is true.
This report examines why our strategies to reduce congestion are failing, why
eliminating congestion might actually be the wrong goal, and how spending billions
to expand highways can actually make congestion worse by encouraging people to
drive more than they otherwise would, a counterintuitive but well -documented
phenomenon known as induced demand. The report also has five simple policy
recommendations to make better use of our billions of dollars without pouring yet
more into a black hole of congestion "mitigation."
http://t4america.org/wp-content/uploads/2O2O/O3/Congestion-Report-2020-FINAL.pdf
RECOMMENDATION
Discussion only.
Attachment
The Congestion Con Report
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Transportation
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
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THE CONGESTION CON RJ Transportation
for America
Those new lane -miles haven't come cheap. We know that states alone spent more than $500 billion on
highway capital investments in urbanized areas between 1993-2017, with a sizable portion going toward
highway expansion. And the initial construction costs are just the tip of the iceberg. For roads that area I ready
in good condition, it still costs approximately $24,000 per year on average to maintain each lane -mile in a
state of good repair, creating significant financial liabilities now and for years into the future.
We are spending billions to widen roads and seeing unimpressive, unpredictable results in return. In
those 100 urbanized areas, congestion has grown by a staggering 144 percent, far outpacing population
growth. (For this report, congestion is measured as annual hours of delay using data from the Texas
Transportation Institute's Urban Mobility Report). Further, the urbanized areas expanding their roads more
rapidly aren't necessarily having more success curbing congestion —in fact, in many cases the opposite is true.
Why aren't we reducing congestion?
First, the average person drives significantly more each year in these 100 urbanized areas. Vehicle -miles
traveled (VMT) per person increased by 20 percent between 1993-2017. This
increase in driving is partially
due to how we have allowed these urbanized areas to grow: letting development
sprawl, creating greater
distances between housing and other destinations, and forcing people to take
longer and longer trips on a handful of regional highways to fulfill daily needs.
We are spending
We should be addressing those sources of congestion, but instead, we accept
billions to widen
more driving and more traffic as unavoidable outcomes that we must address
through costly highway expansion. This is a significantly more expensive and
roads and seeing
less effective approach than reducing the need to drive or length of trips.
unimpressive,
And unfortunately, spending billions to expand highways can actually make
unpredictable
congestion worse by encouraging people to drive more than they otherwise
results in return.
would, a counterintuitive but well -documented phenomenon known as
induced demand.
Eliminating congestion is also simply the wronggoal. While severe congestion can have real negative
impacts, congestion is also generally a symptom of a successful, vibrant economy —a sign of a place people
want to be. Instead, we should be focused on providing and improving access.
What does that mean? The core purpose of transportation infrastructure is to provide access to work,
education, healthcare, groceries, recreation, and all other daily needs. Congestion can become a problem
when it seriously obstructs access, but may not be a major problem if it doesn't. Car speeds don't necessarily
tell us anything about whether or not the transportation network is succeeding at connecting as many people
as possible to the things they need, as efficiently as possible. Yet a narrow emphasis on vehicle speed and
delay underlies all of the regulations, procedures, and cultural norms behind transportation decisions, from
the standards engineers use to design roads to the criteria states use to prioritize projects for funding. This
leads us to widen freeways reflexively, almost on autopilot, perpetuating the cycle that produces yet more
traffic.
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THE CONGESTION CON 09 Transportation
for America
What needs to happen: Five policy recommendations
We need to face the music: we are doubling and tripling down on a failed strategy. We cannot keep relying
on the same expensive and ineffective approach. With discussions underway about the next federal
transportation legislation —a process that only happens every five years —now is the critical time to make
changes before we pour billions more into a solution that doesn't work. This report recommends five key
policy changes, many of which could be incorporated into the upcoming transportation reauthorization:
1) Reorient our national program around access —connect people to jobs and services. The only viable
way to reduce traffic is to tackle the issue at the source: bring jobs, housing, and other destinations closer
together to shorten and reduce the number and length of car trips people need to take. We need to reorient
our national transportation program around advancing that goal instead of focusing narrowly on vehicle
speed and delay.
2) Require that transportation agencies stop favoring new roads
over maintenance. Existing federal law gives states substantial
flexibility in how they spend highway dollars. As a result, states
continue to spend a significant portion of funding to build new
roads at the expense of repair needs. These highway expansions
ultimately induce yet more traffic, while simultaneously increasing
the cumulative annual price tag to keep the nation's highways in
good repair. Congress should require that states focus available
funding on our substantial repair backlog.
3) Make short trips walkable by making them safe. Wide, high-
speed roads force people to drive for even very short local trips.
When local streets —not just highways —are designed to move
We need to face
the music: we are
doubling and tripling
down on a failed
strategy. We cannot
keep relying on the
same expensive and
ineffective approach.
vehicles at the highest speed possible, it denies people the healthy and affordable option to bike or walk.
The 2020 transportation reauthorization should include a policy that roads surrounded by development be
designed for speeds of 35 mph or under to create safer conditions for walking and biking.
4) Remove restrictions on pricing and allow DOTS to manage congestion. Instead of treating congestion
as a foregone conclusion and spending billions of dollars trying to mitigate it —focusing solely on increasing
supply —we should be putting policies in place to help manage demand for driving.
5) Reward infill development and make it easier for localities. Developing on the fringes of urban areas
results in a preventable "need" to expand roads to accommodate additional traffic. Yet we are essentially
rewarding sprawl when we use limited transportation dollars to try to fix the congestion that results over
the longer term. We should instead be orienting transportation funding to reward localities that seek more
efficient ways of moving people —by bringing destinations closer together through land use decisions,
managing driving demand, and making it easier to travel by other modes.
IJ
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