The Problem with Cars…. and with Mass Transit

Today’s e-zine contains two essays, one penned by E M Risse and one by myself. In “What is the Problem with Cars?”, Ed argues that automobiles (he calls them “autonomobiles” to emphasize their distinctness from shared vehicle transportation systems) are economically and environmentally unsustainable. Cars are getting increasingly expensive to drive, they are aggravating traffic congestion, they kill thousands of people every year, they pollute, they engender dependency upon volatile sources of overseas petroleum, encouraging military adventurism overseas… (pant! pant! take a breath, there’s more)… they induce a change in human settlement patterns that uglify the built landscape, strain the fiscal resources of municipal governments, lengthen commutes and generally keep people Running as Hard as They Can.

In this column, the first of four parts, Ed also explores how we got ourselves into such a predicament. He points to three causes. First, by designing our communities around automobiles, we have effectively locked out transportation alternatives. The prevailing pattern of scattered, disconnected, low-density development is inimical to people reaching their destinations on foot, on bicycles, in buses or on rail. Short of tearing down trillions of dollars of real estate investment and public infrastructure and starting over, there is no way back. Second, auto-centric human settlement patterns are perpetuated in new development projects thanks to advertising by those who benefit from automobility. Third, the Mainstream Media has failed utterly in its Fourth Estate responsibilities to inform the public of the complex reality.

I might quibble with a few details and I might emphasize one thing over another, but by and large I subscribe to Ed’s understanding of the problem. There will always be a role for cars, but our society cannot afford to maintain its abject dependence upon the automobile. We simply must find transportation alternatives.

The most obvious alternative is mass transit. Intuitively, the public, the punditry and the politicians understand that fact — hence, Virginians who were once content to throw vast amounts of money blindly at highways, now are willing to throw huge amounts of cash blindly at mass transit, too. Witness the $5 billion Rail-to-Dulles project that came within a whisker of happening. Unfortunately, mass transit has problems all its own. The most obvious one is that mass transit requires certain levels of density and pedestrian connectivity to be financially sustainable — conditions that are rarely found in Virginia.

There is a less obvious problem as well, which I have spotlighted in my column, “The Innovation Gap.” One reason that people continue, despite all the reasons not to, to shift from shared ridership to driving solo in cars stems from the competitive structure of the automobile industry. The auto industry is continually reinventing itself, constantly innovating, and learning to move faster. By contrast, the mass transit industry sector (in the U.S. at least) has the metabolic dynamism of a flatworm.

The jumping off point for my column is a presentation that Jim Buczkowski, a senior executive with Ford Motor Company, made the other day in Richmond as part of the company’s launch of its Sync, voice-activated technology for hands-free driving. Young people today, said Buczkowski, are deeply attached to their devices — their cell phones, BlackBerries, iPods, whatever. They like to take their stuff with them. Ever attentive to changing tastes and trends, Ford is converting its cars into mobile computing platforms that can accommodate all those devices. Plus, it’s throwing in GPS technology to boot.

It gets better: According to Buczkowski, Ford hopes to mesh the rapid product-development cycle of consumer electronics with the slower product-development cycle of the automobile. Instead of buying a new car to acquire the latest new electronic gadgets, you’ll be able to drive to your dealership and download new applications — just like you do with your PC. That is serious change. That’s what happens when you have a globally competitive, private-sector industry.

Compare the commitment to innovation at Ford, an also-ran in the auto industry, to that of the mass transit sector in the Virginia and the rest of the U.S. Mass transit enterprises are owned by governments or quasi-government agencies. They enjoy monopoly protections. Relying upon public subsidies, they have few resources to invest in innovation — and no one is rewarded for risking taking anyway. Is it any surprise, then, that the mass transit experience of 2008 is pretty much the same as the mass transit experience of 1958?

(I don’t want to diminish the efforts of a few inspired leaders in Virginia who want to drag mass transit kicking and screaming into the 21st century. But they have to struggle against overwhelming forces of inertia.)

If we want to revitalize Virginia’s mass transit sector, we need to undertake two Herculean challenges: (1) Create balanced communities capable of supporting mass transit economically, and (2) Restructure the mass transit industry to make it more competitive, innovative and market driven. Unless we do both of those things, the cars will win…. Until things all fall apart, and then we all lose.


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Comments

  1. Anonymous Avatar

    “It remains an utter mystery to me why buses and rail cars don’t all come equipped with Internet connectivity and electric sockets to plug in laptops. “

    They don’t even come equipped with sufficient seats. Let’s put first things first.

    ————————-

    Yep, it is true that mass transit carries only a fraction of trips, and even less of freight, but it is unfair to compare transit to autos where transit doesn’t run. If you compare auto use only in the areas where transit is available to transit use, then transit looks a little better.

    RH

  2. Anonymous Avatar

    “If we want to revitalize Virginia’s mass transit sector,…”

    Why should that be a goal, ipso facto?

    Shouldn’t we just start with balanced communities that work? Then, if they turn out to be dense enough to support rail, so be it.

    But why build a whole community in what might be a less than optimal situation, just so you can revitalize rail transport? Sure, there is an argument to be made that autos have made our present density both possible and necessary, but I don’t see that as a justification for arguing that we should go out and re-build some other pattern just to make rail both possible and necessary.

    RH

  3. Jim Bacon Avatar

    Kevin Grierson, of Hampton, submitted these remarks by e-mail:

    I enjoyed your piece on innovation (or lack thereof) in the public transportation sector. Although I think you have a point about the lack of innovation being an impediment to ridership, the real problem, IMHO, is that the current pain/cost/convenience equation still favors cars–and heavily so.

    I believe that these are the most important variables when people consider public transportation as an option:

    1. Pain: How much of a pain is it to drive where you’re going, in terms of aggravation/delays etc.? This part of the equation is slowly getting worse for cars. Unfortunately, it’s also getting worse for buses, which are stuck in the same traffic jams. And except for NoVa, light rail is pretty much a non-factor.

    2. Cost: How much does it cost to get from here to there? Even with increased gas prices, taking a car remains one of the cheapest ways to get around, particularly for longer trips.

    3. Convenience: Here, the car wins hands down, and public transportation isn’t even close. In order to be convenient, public transportation must (1) get you where you need to go with a minimum of walking and/or changing modes of transportation, (2) be available often enough (and for long enough hours) that commuters won’t have to sit around waiting for the bus/train/whatever for too long.

    For comparison, let’s consider a hypothetical trip from my house in downtown Hampton to my job in downtown Norfolk. Distance: about 18 miles. Time: average 35 minutes in the morning, 40 minutes at night, with occasional nightmare stoppages at the HRBT (but not as many as you’d think). Cost: about $2.50 in gas each way.

    Now, let’s see our public transportation options. Light rail? Nope, no transportation to Southside that way. That leaves the bus. Cost: $1.50, so that, at least, is better than the car. Here’s the itinerary from the HRT web site: Walk from house to Bus station in Hampton (12 mins). Bus from Hampton to Ward’s Corner (21 minutes). Wait for next bus (14 minutes). Take bus from Wards Corner to Charlotte and Monticello (21 minutes). Walk from there to Commercial Place (12 minutes) Total time as estimated by HRT (via Google Maps): 1 hour 20 minutes. To make matters worse, the closest time they’ve got to my requested 7 am departure is 7:45, meaning my earliest arrival is 9:00. In fact, most days I’d arrive in my car before the bus even left Hampton.

    To top it off, I have to walk over a mile. That’s OK if the weather is nice, but if it rains/snows/etc., I arrive wet, tired and unhappy.

    Jim, I don’t care how many doodads they put on the bus, I’m not taking it, even though I’m a big supporter of public transportation. Other people’s commutes may not present the same dilemmas for public transportation, but the fundamentals still tip so heavily in favor of automobile use–even with sky-high gas prices and increasing congestion–that innovations in public transportation aren’t going to make dent in the automobile’s share of the commuter populations unless those innovations make it faster, more convenient and less painful to use the public transportation.

  4. Anonymous Avatar

    And another problem with Mass transit.

    “There are single sex colleges and bathrooms so I guess it makes sense to have single sex buses. This New York Times article focuses on a cost of urban density. In a city filled with anomie, there are potential gropers lurking and they know that they are unlikely to be caught in the act by any cop. In response to this quality of life threat, Mexico City has introduced “all women’s” buses. The article claims that the presence of men on the bus reduces a women’s expected quality of life on a bus ride in Mexico City. The women do not pay more for the “all women’s bus” and they receive a “win-win” of less expected harrassment and a greater probability of getting a seat conditional that the bus shows up.

    Women are quoted below that hint that the old system introduced “adverse selection” in terms of what types of guys rode the bus. Transport economists would say that bus riders are likely to poorer than the average person due to the value of time and the full cost of commuting by different modes but transport economists have not taken a stand on the morality of the average bus rider.”

    RH

  5. Anonymous Avatar

    “The Mainstream Media” has failed utterly in its reponsibilities to explain the car-dominant society?

    Huh?

    Can you define their “responsibilities” other than see land development and cars; influence through your specific lenses? Is there some dogma test you put the Mainstream Media through? Must they be True Believers?

    Peter Galuszka

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