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What if Roads Really Did Have to Pay for Themselves?

pittsburgh_bus.jpgPittsburgh's bus system is far from the only subsidized transportation in Pennsylvania. Photo: Port Authority

Pittsburgh
area residents are reeling from the news this week that their transit
agency, the Port Authority of Allegheny County, may cut 35 percent of its total service in January
-- and raise fares -- unless the state of Pennsylvania can come up with
new funding for transportation. The massive amputation would come on
top of a 15 percent cut three years ago, reducing the transit network to
a shadow of its former self.

The funding crisis has intensified since April, when the feds rejected a bid from Governor Ed Rendell
to raise money by tolling Interstate 80. The solutions Rendell is
floating now, including a tax on oil company profits or raising the
state gas tax a few cents, are meeting resistance from rural legislators
who don't like the idea of spending part of the revenues on transit.

Streetsblog Network member the East Busway Blog says bring on the transportation starvation, as long as it cuts both ways:

I am 100% in support of pulling all statefunding from the Port Authority (and SEPTA for that matter) with thecaveat that the state no longer maintain any roads or fund any newroads. Counties and municipalities would be onthe hook to maintain all existing roads and fund any new roadconstruction or expansion, to include limited access highways withoutthe help of state funds.

It’s hard to hypothesize what this wouldbe like because it is unprecedented.  It's even harder to imagine howit would be all funded; not a pretty scenario given our auto-centricsociety.

The Busway blogger's thought experiment, which involves a look at
Colorado's privately financed and managed highway, E-470, and an
assortment of new tolls and taxes that motorists would have to absorb,
leads him to this conclusion:

So,once again, anyone willing to trade privatized transit for privatizedroads, I’m all for it.  That way everyone can finally see that no formof human transportation, be it automotive, rail, air, or bus isun-subsidized.

More from around the Network: The Congress for the New Urbanism's report on replacing New Orleans' Claiborne Expressway with an urban boulevard is generating a stir in St. Louis and Seattle, where the future of downtown freeways is a hot topic. Transit in Utah links back to an important Citiwire story about the benefits of mixed-use development for city tax revenues. And Transit Miami is watchdogging a Florida DOT project that should make a commercial corridor more walkable and bikeable.

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