Transportation
Sustainable Transportation
Many communities have reached a crossroads. If they build a new highway, traffic will stop backing up--at least that’s the initial rationale. Citizens will stop calling to complain. Everyone presumably will be satisfied--for a while. This "solution," however, is short-lived.
When pavement is laid, more vehicles come. With more vehicles, comes more smog. Autos are a major contributor to global warming. Their pollution also causes severe health problems for many. Traffic congestion, already costing us $ billions annually in lost productivity, is expected to triple in coming years, wasting more productivity and fuel and worsening our air quality.
Our auto habits have caused increasing dependency on oil imports, much of it coming from unstable parts of the world. And in addition to the cost of oil imports, the cost of productivity loss, and the cost of congestion, we must add other social costs of transportation, such as traffic deaths and injuries, and pollution
Some communities have found a promising new course for handling growth and their transportation problems. Planners refer to these ideas as "livable" or "sustainable" communities. By whatever name, these plans focus on people, rather than on cars.