Do Roads Pay For Themselves? Setting the Record Straight on Transportation Funding

From U.S. PIRG

Executive Summary

Highway advocates often claim that roads “pay for themselves,” with gasoline taxes and other charges to motorists covering – or nearly covering – the full cost of highway construction and maintenance. They are wrong.

Highways do not – and, except for brief periods in our nation’s history, never have – paid for themselves through the taxes that highway advocates label “user fees.” Yet highway advocates continue to suggest they do in an attempt to secure preferential access to scarce public resources and to shape how those resources are spent.

To have a meaningful national debate over transportation policy – particularly at a time of tight public budgets – it is important to get past the myths and address the real, difficult choices America must make for the 21st century. Toward that end, this report shows:

· Gasoline taxes aren’t “user fees” in any meaningful sense of the term – The amount of money a particular driver pays in gasoline taxes bears little relationship to his or her use of roads funded by gas taxes.

· State gas taxes are often not “extra” fees – Most states exempt gasoline from the state sales tax, diverting much of the money that would have gone into a state’s general fund to roads.

· Federal gas taxes have typically not been devoted exclusively to highways – Since its 1934 inception, Congress only temporarily dedicated gas tax revenues fully to highways during the brief 17-year period beginning in 1956. This was at the start of construction for the Interstate highway network, a project completed in the 1990s.

· Highways don’t pay for themselves — Since 1947, the amount of money spent on highways, roads and streets has exceeded the amount raised through gasoline taxes and other so-called “user fees” by $600 billion (2005 dollars), representing a massive transfer of general government funds to highways.

· Highways “pay for themselves” less today than ever. Currently, highway “user fees” pay only about half the cost of building and maintaining the nation’s network of highways, roads and streets.

· These figures fail to include the many costs imposed by highway construction on non-users of the system, including damage to the environment and public health and encouragement of sprawling forms of development that impose major costs on the environment and government finances.

To make the right choices for America’s transportation future, the nation should take a smart approach to transportation investments, one that weighs the full costs and benefits of those investments and then allocates the costs of those investments fairly across society.

Continue reading “Do Roads Pay For Themselves? Setting the Record Straight on Transportation Funding”

Evaluating the Safety Effects of Bicycle Lanes in New York City

Li Chen, M.S., Cynthia Chen, Ph.D.1, Raghavan Srinivasan, Ph.D., Claire E. McKnight, Ph.D.2, Reid Ewing, Ph.D. and Matthew Roe, M.S.3
1 university of washington
2 City College of New York
3 New York City Department of Transportation
Correspondence: qzchen@uw.edu
Objectives. We evaluated the effects of bicycle lanes on different categories of crashes (total crashes, bicyclist crashes, pedestrian crashes, multiple-vehicle crashes, and injurious or fatal crashes) occurring on roadway segments and at intersections in New York City.
Methods. We used generalized estimating equation methodology to compare changes in police-reported crashes in a treatment group and a comparison group before and after installation of bicycle lanes. Our study approach allowed us to control confounding factors, such as built environment characteristics, that cannot typically be controlled when a comparison group is used.
Results. Installation of bicycle lanes did not lead to an increase in crashes, despite the probable increase in the number of bicyclists. The most likely explanations for the lack of increase in crashes are reduced vehicular speeds and fewer conflicts between vehicles and bicyclists after installation of these lanes.
Conclusions. Our results indicate that characteristics of the built environment have a direct impact on crashes and that they should thus be controlled in studies evaluating traffic countermeasures such as bicycle lanes. To prevent crashes at intersections, we recommend installation of "bike boxes" and colored lane markings at intersections. (Am J Public Health. Published online ahead of print November 17, 2011: e1-e7. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2011.300319)
Continue reading “Evaluating the Safety Effects of Bicycle Lanes in New York City”

The High Cost of Cheap Roads

from Streetsblog Capitol Hill by Angie Schmitt

According to a recent article in Gizmodo, it didn’t have to be this way. Writer Rachel Swaby says America’s predicament has its roots in a fateful decision made more than 50 years ago: to pour asphalt over packed dirt rather than concrete.
This made roads cheap to build — encouraging the proliferation of car transportation and freight trucking. But it also made roads very expensive to maintain.

https://streetsblog.net/2011/11/16/the-high-cost-of-cheap-roads/

Your Black Friday Alternative: Station North Black Friday Art Market

[Something to bike to:]
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From Baltimore Brew:

Others may be marching you off to the mall on Friday (no kidding!) to start your holiday shopping, but why do that when you can go to Baltimore’s Station North and check out unique gifts made by local artists and crafters and hear crazy banjo music live, instead of soul-killing holiday Muzak?

The Station North Black Friday Art Market is what they’re calling this art and craft bazaar, one of the Station North “Final Fridays” events. It starts at 3 p.m., Nov. 25.

Held at the North Avenue Market, at 16 W. North Ave., the market promises prints, paintings, photographs, crafts, jewelry, books, and more from Station North artists, members of Charm City Craft Mafia and the Baltimore Etsy Street Team. Load of Fun, at 120 W. North Ave., will host its own art & craft market featuring the work of Load of Fun artists.

Local folk artists Her Fantastic Cats will serenade shoppers in the North Avenue Market, starting at 5 p.m.. Then at 8 p.m., you can clock out on the shopping and head over to the Windup Space as they host Femi the DriFish & the Out of Water eXperience, Wendel Patrick, and DJ Dubble 8.

(The first 150 people to arrive will receive a Sta-Note, worth $2 at any participating Station North business. You can find more details on StationNorth.org or RSVP to the event and invite your friends to join you on Facebook.)

https://www.baltimorebrew.com/2011/11/23/your-black-friday-alternative-station-north-black-friday-art-market/

Top 10 Destinations for Holiday Lights

[Of course there is no better way to see this then by bike, as traffic is a mess.]
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Via Yahoo travel:


10. Baltimore, MD

When it comes to Christmastime magic, it seems that “34th Streets” across the country are a bona fide breeding ground for just that. Just look to Baltimore’s Hampden neighborhood each holiday season, where for more than 60 years, a charming block of row houses on 34th street has been transformed into what’s been dubbed “Christmas Street” and the “Miracle on 34th Street.” Residents come together in a labor of love to bedeck their properties with a holiday hodgepodge of larger-than-life snow globes, flashing angels, musical trains, and blinking lights galore – a handful of the homes will even allow visitors inside to peek into their indoor Christmas wonderlands, as well (November 26–January 1; free; www.christmasstreet.com).

Try and coordinate your visit with the colorful “Parade of Lighted Boats,” an event where more than 50 vessels festooned with holiday lights illustrate Baltimore’s nautical and Christmas spirit on December 3 (free; www.fpyc.net). Plus, new for 2011, the harbor-front Power Plant building will shine with holiday lights, lasers, and 3D effects during early evening hourly show times (now–December 31; free; www.itsawaterfrontlife.org).
Continue reading “Top 10 Destinations for Holiday Lights”

Prince Georges advisory group asks MDOT for Alternatives Analysis for WB&A Crossing

from TheWashCycle by Jim Titus
Prince George’s County’s bicycle and trail advisory group (BTAG) has asked state officials to meet with them about a possible state role for resolving a decade-old disagreement between Prince Georges and Anne Arundel counties over the best location for a proposed trail bridge across the Patuxent River.
In a November 10 letter to Don Halligan, MDOT’s Director of Planning and Capitol Programming, the advisory group said that Prince George’s County wants the trail linking Bowie to Odenton to cross the Patuxent River “on, or very close to, the abandoned railroad right-of-way” of the former Washington, Baltimore, and Annapolis (WB&A) Railroad. BTAG opposes a northern detour, which was originally proposed by the late Buz Meyer, a naturalist and hunting safety expert who lived along the proposed route of the trail. Anne Arundel has long favored the northern detour to accommodate the wishes of Mr. Meyer that no trail be built near his land.

Read more: https://www.thewashcycle.com/2011/11/prince-georges-advises-mdot-wba-trail.html

City has 80 lane miles of sharrow installation planned

[B’ Spokes: Note that the Baltimore metro area has spent $0, not’a, zilch on bike/ped projects from CMAQ (which will fund 80% of the project costs.)]
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By Alix Bryan
RICHMOND, Va. (WTVR)—
The city has begun it first installation of bicycle sharrows. Over the next year approximately 80 lane miles of sharrows will be installed, said the city.
The pavement markings are part of the city’s capital improvement plans and are intended to improve bicycling conditions on Richmond roads. The project is funded mostly by both the Commonwealth Transportation Board and Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ).
Total costs of the project are estimated at $775,000, said the city in a press release.

Specifically, sharrows are markings placed on pavement to indicate that bicyclists are also allowed full use of the lane.

Unlike bicycle lanes, the symbols do not designate a particular part of the street for the exclusive use of bicyclists.

Continue reading “City has 80 lane miles of sharrow installation planned”

Traffic Makes Us Dumber: Scientists Say Car Exhaust Causes Brain Damage

By Brian Merchant

On a local level, discouraging traffic has already been shown to have a tangible impact on some communities: The decongesting of Times Square, for instance, reduced air pollution by 63% in the area. And now, it’s increasingly looking like such traffic-curbing policies will be vital not just to improving the livability of communities — but to protecting both the lungs and the very mental health of those who reside in them. The case for more and better public transportation, more aggressive congestion pricing schemes, and, yes, improved biking and pedestrian environments, has never been stronger.
https://www.treehugger.com/cars/your-brain-traffic-fumes.html

ICC puts strain on Maryland’s transportation funds

By Katherine Shaver, Monday, November 21, 5:19 PM
The 18.8-mile Intercounty Connector, scheduled to open in full Tuesday, could be the last publicly funded highway built in Maryland for a generation, as the state’s tolling agency, which financed its $2.56 billion construction, reaches its debt limit, local transportation experts said.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/icc-puts-strain-on-marylands-transportation-funds/2011/11/15/gIQAb2k7iN_story.html