'Let's go with promoting the status-quo' would seem to be the new administration's slogan for the upcoming Secretary of Transportation (Elaine Chao is transportation pick). There is a tremendous lack of vision in establishment politics but, lots of room for the tradition of useless politically motivated pork barrel projects. What tragedy will be burdened on the American public with more vision-less politicians adhering to political enrichment? It is a sad and tragic step for the head of US Transportation to be one embraced in political corruption instead of holding a vision to know the economic value of efficient transportation.
One has to follow and participate in the advanced transit industry to understand the industry. Maglev technology is a necessary part of successful US transportation. Automobile centric land-use design is un-sustainable, repairing America's road infrastructure is as useless as a band-aid to repair a broken neck.
On a positive note: a seed has to die for it to transition into a living plant. The US transportation infrastructure is on its death bed. Perhaps this political appointment will result in the final death blow to the US transportation infrastructure and the result will be a new life to efficient growth with modern transportation technology.
Tuesday, November 29, 2016
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
High Speed Rail Curious
To the proclaimed cost of $68billion as the price tag for California's escapade into the past with the proposed 200 year old transportation technology, its promoters are still clueless on how to attain the money for it. With the change of political regimes, who will now support CA's proposed HSR? If there was a lack of $40billion and a vision to have the government pay the first $18billion, what is to happen now that the $18billion is soon going to disappear? Dan Walters has an enlightened view with his article in The Sacramento Bee .
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
The Toll of Sprawl
A recent article posted at cnu.org/publicsquare raises questions about mankind's evolving intelligence in regards to transportation.
The leading cause of death in the US (according to the CDC) is heart disease, followed by cancer, then chronic lower respiratory disease, with the fourth leading cause of death as unintentional injuries. Of the 136,000 accident deaths in 2015, 38,000 were by the automobile (Newsweek) .
This raises a question. As mankind population expands, has it always been normal for mankind to die as a result of the mode of transportation? When the only form of travel was walking, was it normal to trip and fall, killing the traveler? Then, as animals were used as a common mode of transportation, was it common for people to fall off the animals to their death?
The question expands: is it common and acceptable for transportation to cause death? Has transportation always been a common source of death? Why then are train deaths and airplane deaths as a percentage of miles traveled so much less than the automobile?
The conclusion of the unanswered questions is that the presumption shows more examples of the automobile being unsustainable. In a related study, financial aspects to automobile wrecks were found by the NHTSA in 2014 to show an annual economic loss of $836 billion.
A society based on an unsustainable foundation will collapse. Philosophically, in a realistic way; the nature of growth is to expand. The course of automobile politics has stifled advances in transportation innovation. The automobile centric land-use design is unsustainable environmentally, economically and socially. This political procedure has to end for mankind to grow. It is the nature of man to grow and explore. Confinement harbors restriction and control which is the nature of slavery.
Monday, August 15, 2016
It Is Time For Innovation
In a recent transportation newsletter this statement was
made: “The Hudson Valley is a centrally located region with abundant fresh
water that could absorb millions of new urban residents. By 20th century
thinking, this would mean more highways and parking lots to accommodate
auto-dependent living. Nobody wants major urban growth. People prefer green
valleys and hills with low-density development. So Cuomo’s staff aren’t even
thinking about this, let alone devoting planning resources to an APM-centered
future.” Since; “Nobody wants major
urban growth. People prefer green valleys and hills with low-density
development” how can this type of urban growth continue? The statement that followed “Nobody wants
major urban growth” proves a very problematic conclusion that government planning
staffs are doing the opposite. How is
this legitimized? In the world of government, politic's campaign contributors are considered the players and receive favors
for their contributions. These favors
are free deeded properties, grants and zero interest loans.
California legislators have drawn attention to their environmentally
strict policies while the status-quo of deteriorating infrastructure is a
malignant cancer. Rather than purifying
the quality of the State’s well-being, it has caused a malicious growth of
financial favoritism which diminishes its citizen health. Under Governor Reagan the CA EPA was
established to provide protection to the environment. All public jobs are now required to adhere to
a EIS (Environmental Impact Study) with a maximum 300-page report (EIR,
Environmental Impact Report). The
politicians have twisted the significance of this report to make the inclusion
that if the project is unable to comply with environmental requirements, due to
a myriad of reasons, then it doesn’t have to comply, upon the approval of the
project’s governing body.
As an example; CA HSR project spent over $800-million to
produce a useless and incomplete 12,000 page EIR. The project was ruled by Jerry Brown to be
exempt from CA environmental rules and regulations. His friend and husband of CA’s Senator is the
largest single shareholder of the firm that held the EIS contract.
The travesty is damage done to the decaying infrastructure. Automobiles are fundamental to urban growth in
the automobile centric design. Within
the government planning agencies there is a self- gratifying term used called: “Smart
Growth”. Lipstick on a pig. When planners use this term they consider
themselves smart.
Outside the spheres of the government’s malignant tumors is
a tool called innovation. It is time for
a revolution in thought, creativity and fairness. First task: modern transportation.
Saturday, August 13, 2016
Time To Grow Out of the Car
As a society, we are at the point to grow beyond reliance
upon the automobile as our single source of transportation.
To see what is ahead, there is a need to find where we
are. In the study of discovering where
we are; comes an identification to the term: Car Culture. Specific to that: the automobile is wholly
unsustainable. To build a society upon
an unsustainable foundation predicts its outcome.
http://debily.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/dallas-highway-interchange.jpgpicture
A road intense urban land-use design removes the social
component for human interaction. How
much time does it take to walk across intersections like this? Freeways are built for cars, not people.
LA set a bad precedent; the automobile centric land-use
design isn’t designed for people. How many homes have been destroyed to build freeways? How many neighborhoods have been shredded to
build freeways throughout the country?
The automobile requires a land-use design mechanism of maintenance
intensive roadways. Land-use required
for the automobile transportation system demands large quantities of vehicle area
use which eliminates huge sections of land for any other use. This transportation system is terribly
designed due to its unsustainable land-use consumption, heavy economic burden,
and negative social impacts.
When a person walks, the energy consumed is calories burned
from food eaten. For an automobile to
carry a 200-pound load, this transportation system requires massive structures of
roads and a 3,000-pound vehicle. From a
practical application of physics this is inefficient.
Of the argument that automobiles are used by people, the
automobile centric land-use design in urban growth is a design strictly to accommodate
the automobile. The automobile that a licensed
driver operates is not a single source transportation device. It follows a specific design provided by the
automobile centric urban land-use design.
This form of development is completely arbitrary with a Hodge-podge dysfunction
whose sole purpose is set by individual land developers who seek profit in real
estate. More than conjecture, this is a statement
of the way things are.
To the point again; we of this society have reached the point
in our development to grow into the next step of transportation.
There are many new transportation alternatives, predominantly
transportation systems in the category of PRT (personal rapid transit) show the most promise to meet society’s demands.
All urban transportation plans require planning. It is imperative for the government planning
agencies to turn from their focus on the closed sighted demands of politicians
and welcome alternative transportation sources beyond the automobile transportation
system.
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Land Use
On the subject of land-use, this author in his search for relevance on the topic is dumbfounded by lack of interest from people. Even the know-it-alls have no interest in a discussion about land-use of urban growth. How is such a serious subject reduced to such a terrible state of ignorance? The general look on a person's face is "Why are you talking about this or, this is beyond my perspective." There are those who listen with intense ears, never having heard such conversation; others slide into a mire of slumber.
Of the philosophical stance. observation is truth; majority stand not always maintaining factual reality. Strength also not always allowing the reality of facts to stand as truth.
How does this relate to land-use? The fact that automobiles are not sustainable and our car-culture is based on this unsustainable foundation. This fact is problematic.
Of the philosophical stance. observation is truth; majority stand not always maintaining factual reality. Strength also not always allowing the reality of facts to stand as truth.
How does this relate to land-use? The fact that automobiles are not sustainable and our car-culture is based on this unsustainable foundation. This fact is problematic.
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
Legislative Questions
For people following CA’s HSR (high speed rail) there is
another newspaper article April 6, 2016 in the LA Times. The article is titled: “Senators share their
doubts about bullet train financing with rail officials” and includes details of
conversations with train project members.
The first 29 mile section has begun construction. So far there are more than 300 change orders,
the price tag is an additional $100million.
Regarding government work, change orders often exceed the original bid
price; that is, double or triple the original cost. For a government project these change orders,
just a few months into the project are minuscule in comparison to what this
project has in store. In the article, rail
authority Chairman Dan Richard emphasized the agency does not necessarily have
to pay them. Then goes on to acknowledge
that the state’s failure to deliver parcels on time to the contractor gives
them “the right to charge for delays.”
One of the State Senators asked about the authority’s response
to not adopt a higher cost estimate. The
story goes on to explain that declaring the mischaracterization is not in the
public interest.
Still the most astonishing aspect of CA’s train has to do
with the recent judicial decision. How
could the State attorney build its defense by stating no one can make the assertion
that the CA HSRA isn’t able to adhere to voter demands because they don’t have
project plans? That’s exactly the same thing
as building a skyscraper without blueprints.
Some people who closely follow this project are knowledgeable
about the construction industry and related costs. This post shows rising interest into the
financial concerns that CA’s HSR project does not have the necessary funding to
accomplish its directive. Prior to the
2008 vote which initiated the $9.9billion bond, a Stanford peer group study was
put together by industry and knowledgeable leaders. Their financial estimate for the project is
$212billion. The state says it will cost
$64billion. Already, just barely getting
started on the first 29 miles and only a few months into it, the 300 change
orders come with the $100million addition.
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