Stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic the other day on I-95 I grumbled to myself “Where is all this traffic coming from?” And then I remembered:
If you’re stuck
in traffic, you are the traffic!
Guilty.
But what’s being done to
reduce all that traffic?
In New York City they’re about
to embark on a daring test: Congestion Pricing. Barring any last minute legal moves by
opponents, it will soon cost $15 to drive your car into Manhattan below 60th
street.
Though this will be a first
for the US, congestion pricing has been tried in other big cities going back
fifty years. Singapore has been doing it
since the 1970’s and is still fine-tuning the system. In London, where a congestion zone fee (now almost
$19 per day) was instituted in 2003, traffic dropped by 18% in the first year
but has since returned.
The idea of congestion pricing
is to discourage driving while raising billions of dollars to support mass
transit. Just like highway tolls, those
who pay (to drive) should also see some benefit (less traffic) and better mass
transit alternatives.
But now NYC wants to add
another twist: lowered speed limits. As part of that state’s budget package,
smaller streets in the city would see speed
limits reduced from 25 to 20 mph in the name of pedestrian safety. So… maybe less traffic (thanks to the
tolling) but maybe slower trip times?
And what is Connecticut doing
to battle our traffic congestion and improve highway safety? Not enough.
The CDOT has been marking Work Zone Safety Week with an awareness campaign reminding all who drive to slow down where work is being done roadside. Even when sober, we drive too fast. Since the introduction of just three experimental speed cameras in work zones last year, 20,000 drivers were issued warning tickets.
Lawmakers have apparently
again killed
a bill that would lower the legal blood alcohol limit from .08 to .05. This was tried last year and also failed
despite the fact that Connecticut ranks #4 in the US in fatal accidents.
Also reportedly killed was a
bill which would have allowed municipalities to limit
the sales of “nips”, those small airline-style booze bottles found littering
our highways. A nickel-a-nip bottle deposit
returned $11 million to towns and cities, giving you a sense of the popularity
of the booze-to-go bottles: just quaff
and toss.Just quaff and toss
According to NHTSA traffic
data, from 2017 to 2021 there were almost 2000 Connecticut drivers involved in
fatal crashes and 40%
of them were legally drunk. And of
those who were the drunkest of the drunk (with a blood alcohol limit over
0.15), Connecticut ranked #1 in the nation. Congratulations.
This failure by lawmakers to
keep our highways safe by keeping drivers sober just sends the wrong message,
starting with their own members. You’ll
remember State Rep Robin Comey who was “reeking
of alcohol” after rolling her car in front of the Capitol last year. Her BAC reading was 0.1446.
While being processed by
police, Comey was informed of the consequences if she refused a blood test. Police body cam footage shows her joking “That
doesn’t make sense. I guess we’ll
have to change the laws.”
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