Moderated by Tom Sabulis.
In the wake of the failed transportation tax, Gov. Nathan Deal has declared the door slammed shut on rail expansion. Georgia’s likely future seems to be for roads, roads and more kinds of roads. A think tanker below talks up tolling arterials such as Roswell Road. The Sierra Club, which helped defeat the T-SPLOST and its rail component, doesn’t believe this is a good idea.
Commenting is open below Mark Woodall’s column.
By Robert Poole
When transportation experts compare Atlanta’s congestion problem with that of comparable large urban areas, one major difference leaps out of the data. Atlanta relies far more on its expressways to handle rush-hour traffic than comparable areas.
In Orlando, major roadways called “arterials” handle more traffic than expressways, and Denver’s arterials handle nearly as much as its expressways.
By contrast, Atlanta’s arterials handle only one-fourth as much traffic as its expressways. That’s a major reason why Atlanta’s expressways are among the nation’s most overloaded.
It’s probably way too late to build a modern grid of major arterials in Atlanta, but if some way could be found to make existing arterials like Roswell Road work better, those roads could reduce the burden placed on expressways, easing everyone’s daily commute.
The most obvious way to improve arterials is to widen them, but that is costly and can be politically contentious if landowners don’t wish to sell the needed right of way.
Another good idea is to synchronize traffic lights, so that motorists in the peak direction at rush hour get mostly green lights. Traffic engineers know that delays at intersections can be as big a limit on an arterial’s traffic capacity as the number of lanes.
What if it were possible to increase an arterial’s traffic capacity by more than would happen by adding a lane each way — but without having to widen it? Miami and Fort Myers, Fla., are both looking into this idea. It’s called converting an arterial into a “managed arterial.”
The basic idea is to give motorists a way to bypass traffic signals, by adding overpasses or underpasses to major arterials. Because those “grade separations” are costly to build, a small toll (e.g., 25 cents) would be charged, electronically, for each underpass a motorist used.
Those who didn’t want to pay would use the intersection just as they do today — to go straight or make a left turn or right turn.
It’s the same principle used around the country for express toll lanes on expressways, like the ones now working well on I-85 in Atlanta. You pay only the toll, using Peach Pass, if the value of the faster and more reliable trip is worth it to you.
Could the improvements that convert a regular arterial into a managed arterial pay for themselves? Preliminary studies in Florida cases suggest that as much as 75 percent of the cost of adding a set of overpasses or underpasses could be financed by the toll revenues, leaving the balance to come from conventional transportation revenues (mostly gas taxes).
By contrast, if the alternative of adding lanes each way were pursued, 100 percent of the cost would have to come from gas taxes.
Managed arterials offer metro Atlanta a way to relieve the area’s overburdened expressways, funded largely by voluntary payments by motorists. It’s an option transportation planners should seriously consider.
Robert Poole is director of transportation for the Reason Foundation, a libertarian think tank.
By Mark Woodall
Fresh off the disastrous rollout of “managed lanes” on I-85, the highway lobby is back with its latest innovation for Atlanta — “managed arterials,” the idea of transforming our familiar surface streets into a grid of junior expressways, allowing cars to zip along where now they must wait for lights at intersections.
This transformation would be accomplished by converting existing intersections into “grade-separated” facilities, with underpasses and overpasses that are to be built and maintained by electronic tolls on the drivers who use them. Similar to the I-85 managed lanes, two classes of drivers will result: those willing and able to pay a toll to bypass the intersection, and everyone else, who will sit in traffic on the “unmanaged” lanes that may in fact be worse than it was before.
Lost in this discussion is the fact that these intersections would become stark, industrialized environments once the projects are complete. Residential and commercial properties that have existed for decades could see their access severely curtailed. Pedestrian and bicycle accessibility, already poor on many of these corridors, will become even worse. The only redevelopment options will be intensely automobile-oriented uses, resulting in even more car trips — a perfect example of induced demand. How is this going to reduce congestion?
Time and again, Atlanta has fallen victim to the simplistic notion that the solution to traffic congestion is to build new roadway capacity. Many of our most congested roadways — Interstate 285, for instance, or the current 14-lane incarnation of the Downtown Connector — were originally pitched as “congestion-relief” projects. Such an approach provides short-term relief at best. Eventually, it only serves to perpetuate a development pattern that depends on cars, which quickly overwhelm the new capacity.
It is time for Atlanta to move beyond the idea that traffic congestion is a problem that must be “solved.” Yes, traffic is bad in Atlanta, but so is it in any economically vibrant region where people want to be. In fact, Atlanta doesn’t even rank in the top 10 most-congested metropolitan areas in the country. Traffic in many of the cities we worry about competing with is even worse.
So what are other successful places doing that we aren’t? The answer is not building “managed arterials.” Instead, they are building the multimodal transportation systems the 21st century requires. They are investing in proven options such as commuter and intercity rail. They are addressing issues of regional transportation governance and are creating efficient, integrated systems. They are making the most of their existing transit infrastructure. In other words, things Atlanta has been failing to do.
Make no mistake — Atlanta still has great potential. But we must stop repeating the mistakes of the past and look toward the future and the transportation system we want — one in which residents have choices and one that attracts the businesses and job seekers of today.
Fresh off the disastrous rollout of “managed lanes” on I-85, the highway lobby is back with its latest innovation for Atlanta – “managed arterials,” the idea of transforming our familiar surface streets into a grid of junior expressways, allowing cars to zip along where now they must wait for lights at intersections.
This transformation would be accomplished by converting existing intersections into “grade separated” facilities, with underpasses and overpasses that are to be built and maintained by electronic tolls on the drivers who use them. Similar to the I-85 managed lanes, two classes of drivers will result: those who are willing and able to pay a toll to bypass the intersection, and everyone else, who will sit in traffic on the “unmanaged” lanes that may in fact be worse than it was before.
Lost in this discussion is the fact that these intersections would become stark, industrialized environments once the projects are complete. Residential and commercial properties that have existed for decades could see their access severely curtailed. Pedestrian and bicycle accessibility, already poor on many of these corridors, will become even worse. The only redevelopment options will be intensely automobile-oriented uses, resulting in even more car trips – a perfect example of induced demand. How is this going to reduce congestion?
Time and again, Atlanta has fallen victim to the simplistic notion that the solution to traffic congestion is to build new roadway capacity. Many of our most congested roadways – Interstate 285, for instance, or the current 14-lane incarnation of the Downtown Connector – were originally pitched as “congestion relief” projects. Such an approach provides short-term relief at best. Eventually, it only serves to perpetuate a development pattern that depends on cars, which quickly overwhelm the new capacity.
It is time for Atlanta to move beyond the idea that traffic congestion is a problem that must be “solved.” Yes, traffic is bad in Atlanta, but so is it in any economically vibrant region where people want to be. In fact, Atlanta doesn’t even rank in the top 10 most congested metropolitan areas in the country. Traffic in many of the cities we worry about competing with is even worse.
So what are other successful places doing that we aren’t? The answer is not building “managed arterials.” Instead, they are building the multimodal transportation systems the 21st century requires. They are investing in proven options such as commuter and intercity rail. They are addressing issues of regional transportation governance and are creating efficient, integrated systems. They are making the most of their existing transit infrastructure. In other words, things Atlanta has been failing to do.
Make no mistake – Atlanta still has great potential. But we must stop repeating the mistakes of the past and look toward the future and the transportation system we want – one in which residents have choices and one that attracts the businesses and job seekers of today.
Mark Woodall is chairman of the Georgia chapter of the Sierra Club.
44 comments Add your comment
Morning Reads for August 7th, 2012 — Peach Pundit
August 7th, 2012
7:00 am
[...] to cure Atlanta’s traffic, Atlanta Forward debates a 1950′s prescription [AJC] [...]
MM
August 7th, 2012
2:27 am
Look at Peachtree Industrial outside the Perimeter for a local preview of the “managed arterials.” What a soulless non-place! A transportation economist’s concrete dream and a human nightmare.
We need fewer road-building fantasies in Atlanta and begin accept that the failure of decades of bad transportation policy is too expensive to fix at this late date. The rubes under the Golden Dome and their short-term thinking masters have made a mess that is too expensive to clean up at a reasonable cost. Failure to intelligently build infrastructure has caused a mess here as it has for the nation as a whole. Atlanta is a city ruined for substantial growth by a lack of vision and willingness to pay for a good future. Fiscal conservatism has brought the city proper to its knees. As noted, no city better illustrates the folly of “free market” libertarian “freedom” than Atlanta.
Many people realized some time ago that Atlanta has been allowed to evolve into a special purpose area for government and educational services. Rope it off for other purposes. The chosen means should be congestion which imposes its own costs on further development.
We need to start over with a cleaner sheet of paper with better political leadership (questionable in a state that elected Tom Watson, Lester Maddox, and Sonny Purdue) and move the energetic growth centers to new greenfields on which more compact and sustainable urban cores can be constructed from scratch. We have already started.
Bernie
August 7th, 2012
1:03 am
As predicted and expected Georgia’s political Leadership walks away frustrated and angry. Like a petulant child that did not have his way. Gov.Deals refusal to expand rail transportation when we have miles upon miles of already established rail lines going to and from every direction possible. His non-action further demonstrates the level of failure of imagination to make a decision in area where the basic infrastructure of the Rails are already in place.
Good Ole Boy Georgia politics fails us again! Where are all of those wonderful corporate cheerleading CEO’s when their input is truly needed and warranted?
I would say its time for a corporate and political summit to move this issue forward and you can keep the 8 million dollars!
KM
August 6th, 2012
9:49 pm
Managed arterials would be a disaster. Agreeing with the poster above who said that metro Atlanta is probably willing to pay for progress, but we’ll actually need to see potential progress in a plan before we vote for it.
I’d like to send a few of our legislators to the UK to see how people there get around… trains (both subways and intercity rail) are convenient, efficient, affordable, and MANAGED BY A SINGLE ENTITY. We need ONE agency to govern transportation, not the multitude we have now.
zeke
August 6th, 2012
8:50 pm
Where do you left wing nuts come up with these people? More tolls? More limited access caused by tolls or failed hov lanes? More marta? GOD FORBID! The ONLY solution to Atlanta’s traffic congestion is to ROUTE TRAFFIC WITH NO REASON TO BE IN THE 285 FOOTPRINT AWAY FROM IT NOT INTO IT! No reason whatsoever for someone going from Ky to Fl to have to go on the connector or for that matter 285! The OUTER LOOP, THE NORTHERN ARC MANY ARCS, ARE THE ONLY SOLUTION!!! You think the “traffic experts” at the DOT can do anything intelligent or efficient? Just look at spaghetti junction or the mixing bowl! That should quickly change your mind!
SAWB
August 6th, 2012
8:26 pm
We need to slow down a minute here before we start talking about toll bridges with State approved trolls collecting money.
T-SPLOST failed not because people oppose change or paying more money for progress. It failed because it was too large and did not offer enough perceived benefit. We see evidence where people already have voted to tax themselves for various improvements via SPLOST projects. Also, there are a growing number of TADs around town where people volunteer to pay more tax. These initiatives differ from the recently defeated T-SPLOST in that they include projects that people feel will have a real impact on their lives.
ScottNATL
August 6th, 2012
8:07 pm
Managed arterials…give me a break. Not only would they hurt the businesses on the route (can you see businesses on Roswell Rd going for this?), but they would be nothing but more concrete blight.
Transit going where people need to go with increases frequency is they only way to make this better, but Gov. NO Deal aint havin’ that!
Hillbilly D
August 6th, 2012
6:49 pm
It’s the same principle used around the country for express toll lanes on expressways, like the ones now working well on I-85 in Atlanta.
Working well?
Patrick
August 6th, 2012
6:42 pm
The idea that traffic congestion in Atlanta is going to lead to the metro’s economic collapse is a canard. Over and again, traffic congestion in all its forms (car drivers, pedestrians, transit users) is a sign of the economic vibrancy of an area.
The only people who have a serious interest in lowering traffic congestion in a region with a healthy economy like Atlanta’s are people with a libertarian bent like Robert Poole and others at the Reason Foundation. That’s because libertarians are such strong defenders of sprawling development styles and the so-called “freedom” to live anywhere you want regardless of where your job is located.
Well, that’s also the “freedom” to make a dumb decision. Traffic congestion hurts you most if you have a long commute from living an unreasonable distance from your job. Expecting taxpayers to band together to provide a fix for your long commute is selfish and — ironically — sounds like the exact kind of public expenditure a libertarian should oppose instead of embrace.
Yes, you are free to live wherever you want. But you should accept the consequences of a long commute if your housing decision brings one upon you. And you should accept that consequence without the expectation that taxpayers at large are somehow required to bail you out of the mess of a long, congested car commute.
Next
August 6th, 2012
6:26 pm
Managed arterial’s are a terrible idea. They would look terrible, as they do everywhere they exist. As mentioned, these would definitely be a disaster for pedestrians and cyclists, and in turn would cost $$ just to use. Next idea please. This one is a complete loser.