Who
is designing our state’s transportation future?
Urban planners? Academic visionaries? Highly trained engineering and
planning professionals at CDOT? No,
unfortunately the state is leaving those decisions to you and me via a website,
www.TransformCT.org
The
idea is to give everyone in Connecticut a chance to voice their opinions about
what roads and rails should be built, then debate and “vote” on others’
proposals. The top vote-getters will help determine what gets built. Some call it “crowd-sourcing” though I prefer
to think of it as a popularity contest for amateurs.
(True confession: 45 years ago I wanted to be a civil engineer
and help design “the train of the future”.
I attended Lehigh University but quickly discovered that I wasn’t cut
out to be a Civil Engineer. Instead, I
got into broadcasting and journalism.
And
while I have opinions about transport in the future, I’m smart enough to know I
am not an engineer. I can dream about
things that just won’t happen. As my
daughter used to say, “We all want
things, Daddy”. But wants, needs and
practicalities are all very different.)
In
2000 our legislature created a Transportation Strategy Board with subcommittees statewide (on one
of which I was elected to serve). The
TSB’s mandate… to develop a 20-year vision for CT’s transportation future. And that they did, calling for many improvements
including the long-overdue order of new rail cars for Metro-North.
But
the Transportation Strategy Board is now gone, wiped out of existence by
Governor Malloy. Why? Because its priorities did not match his.
Instead
of a statewide citizen / expert panel, now our Governor wants you to vote (and
pay for) your transportation dreams.
So
far TransformCT has attracted 13,500 visits and 2000 different ideas. Check the
website and you’ll
find such revolutionary concepts as… “spend the gasoline tax on
transportation”, “make our streets walkable”, provide “a quicker commute on
Metro-North” and “bike lanes everywhere”.
But
buried further down the list are some real gems: “build a subway from Bridgeport to
Waterbury”, “add an upper level over (double-deck) our highways”, “high speed
rail Hartford to NYC in one hour” (vs 3.5 hr today) and “hovercraft along the coast”.
But
what also showed up in many “suggestions” was one key word describing what I
think is the raison d’etre of this entire silly endeavor: “tolls”.
There
isn’t a politician in this state with the guts to support for the single best
solution to our transportation money needs… tolling motorists.
But mark my words: that is what
TransformCT is all about… building a citizen-wish-list of transportation
projects and then telling us, “you asked for it… but now you have to pay for it…
with tolls.” The CDOT is already priming
the pump for the inevitable, bringing in out-of-state experts to sell us on the value of tolls.
In
an e-mail to me the CDOT said “It is the job of the DOT to execute the will of
our stakeholders.” Really? (Tell that to the 750 daily parkers at
Stamford station who will lose their spaces to a secret deal with a developer
putting up a high rise… with zero public input.)
I
would much rather leave the planning for our transportation future to the professional
planners, engineers and experts who know what they are doing. But if our pols would rather let you dream
big, realize it comes with a price tag.
Be
careful what you wish for.
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