It's Not Always a Bad Idea to Expand a Highway
Critics of adding road capacity ignore its benefits while proposing solutions that won't fix traffic congestion.

The much-discussed bipartisan infrastructure bill might get a vote in the House of Representatives later this week, paving the way for $500 billion in new spending on a broad array of infrastructure projects and priorities, including $110 billion for roads and bridges.
The prospect of more federal highway spending is proving controversial with environmentalists and public transportation advocates, however. They argue that expanding existing roadways will only create more pollution while failing to address traffic congestion.
"Road expansion projects have failed to deliver the promised benefits. In fact, the evidence shows that they actually make traffic and pollution worse," said Ben Holland, the manager of the Urban Transformation Program at the Colorado-based environmental non-profit RMI, last Thursday to Reuters.
The phenomenon he's describing is called "induced demand." It is the idea that adding new lane miles only encourages people to drive more, thereby erasing any congestion relief the new asphalt was supposed to provide.
Last week, RMI, alongside environmentalist group the National Resource Defense Council and the public transportation advocacy outfit Transportation for America, released a calculator that lets users estimate how much induced demand would be created by adding lanes of roadway in a particular metro area.
This calculator is only the latest broadside against the concept of highway expansion as a means of relieving congestion. In September, Bloomberg CityLab published a long piece by David Zipper, a fellow at Harvard University's Kennedy School, criticizing the false promise of road widening in general and an ongoing project to widen I-35 in downtown Austin, Texas, in particular. Zipper argued that the realities of induced demand and requirements that (some) states spend all gas tax dollars on highways incentivize state departments of transportation to build endless freeways, despite the minimal effects that such building has on congestion.
This line of thinking is starting to get a hearing in Washington. A transportation bill pushed by House Democrats earlier this year, for example, would have made it harder for states to spend federal transportation dollars on roads. It also would have given cities, which are more transit-friendly, more say over how transportation dollars are spent.
Meanwhile, the Biden administration, while pushing for more spending on roads, has used some novel means to delay particular highway projects.
Back in April, the Federal Highway Administration asked that the Texas Department of Transportation pause soliciting contracts on a downtown highway widening in Houston because of civil rights concerns raised by local activists and politicians.
To be sure, the idea that building more roadways results in more car trips is not generally a controversial idea. There is, however, some heated disagreement about whether that extra auto travel is necessarily a bad thing. There is also debate about whether induced demand is really an inescapable "iron law" that makes every highway widening futile.
"Much of what happens when a freeway is widened is explained by latent demand—trips that were previously made on other roads or by other modes that shift to the expanded freeway when it becomes available because the freeway is now a better alternative," wrote Robert Poole, director of transportation policy at the Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that publishes this website), earlier this month.
Those extra highway trips, Poole has argued, shouldn't be considered an evil given that they involve people voluntarily changing their route from a nearby arterial road (or bus line) to the highway. There is a reason those people are making the switch and it is probably not because traveling on the now-expanded highway makes their commute worse.
Poole argued in a 2019 newsletter that much of the evidence for the futility of highway widenings comes from projects that marginally expanded already congested roads. More aggressive highway widenings, he pointed out, have resulted in considerable reductions in traffic congestion.
It's worth noting that one of the solutions that the critics of highway widenings offer as an alternative—expanding public transit—would also fail at reducing congestion. People switching from being motorists to being transit riders would also open up spare capacity on roadways that would, presumably, be gobbled up by other motorists thanks to that same induced demand phenomenon.
That doesn't mean more transit spending is a bad idea, but it also doesn't make more spending an obvious fix for urban gridlock.
A more effective solution to traffic congestion—one that both Poole and BMI have offered—is congestion pricing. This is where motorists are charged a variable toll to enter certain areas of a city or to travel on tolled express lanes.
By rising and falling depending on traffic demand, congestion tolls give people the option of paying a money price to travel during peak hours if they really need to. Those who can be more flexible with the timing of their trips can pay less or nothing at all to travel during off-peak hours.
Furthermore, because there is a money price being charged to drivers, new capacity isn't automatically filled by another motorist.
The D.C. metro area features congestion-priced lanes on sections of I-66. New York City is currently in the long, slow process of implementing congestion pricing for drivers entering lower Manhattan. International cities including London and Singapore have successfully used congestion pricing to reduce traffic in their downtowns.
One possible takeaway is that congestion pricing obviates the need to expand road capacity. Instead, higher tolls could be applied to existing lanes to manage demand.
But that could get expensive fast for drivers, particularly those of low or modest incomes. Expanding highways along with congestion pricing, alternatively, could lower the value of the tolls necessary to ensure freer flowing traffic.
Regrettably, the infrastructure bill that might soon pass Congress does very little to move the needle on the adoption of congestion pricing, which is already very difficult because of a general federal prohibition on tolling interstates.
Worse still, the $100 billion for new roads and bridges included in the bill would come from the general fund, effectively making it one big subsidy. That approach moves highway funding further away from the "user pays, user benefits" approach that prevailed when federal gas taxes (paid by road users) covered all federal highway spending.
Highway expansions can be a worthwhile endeavor. But those expansions should be funded by the drivers who will benefit from them—through gas taxes or, better yet, tolls and mileage fees. The latest congressional infrastructure bill recognizes the value of expanding road capacity, even if it doesn't go about paying for it in the right way.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Highway articles are tiresome.
The wheels on the bus go round and round ....
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The lion on the bus goes roar, roar, roar...
Stop right there. Please yield the floor to someone with knowledge on the subject. Go back to writing puns.
Whoa Betsy! You need to yield to someone with a working punometer.
Does it measure smiles per hour?
Stay in your lane, buster.
But I’m driving a Puntiac.
J. H. Chrysler!
See you were able to Dodge actually cursing.
the multiple lanes of arguments just stretch out endlessly to the horizon
At least we don't get much mileage out of them. It's like with schools: As long as the state operates them, it's a long trip from there to our policy preference, and then it's a matter of wrangling over details that may not interest us, and yet present superior and inferior choices, and result in unpredictable political alignments and detours.
worse than that. I find them exhausting.
The problem with Congressional hearings is that they are all dog and pony (or donkey and elephant) shows. The speakers are not accountable for lies. Even when truth is told, Congress is not bound to go by it. Whatever they do afterwards is pre-ordained beforehand.
What is needed is a legal requirement that speakers be liable for perjury, and that Congress's actions be voided if incompatible with whatever truthful was said during the hearings. Neither is at all plausible. So they will continue to be donkey and elephant shows.
Complimented a guy's shirt in the grocery store the other day.
It showed a donkey and an elephant in red, white and blue.
Caption said "Don't feed the animals."
was the donlkey's name Hodie?
The only improvement would be if they were in black and white stripes, where most of our elected officials belong.
He said "Donkey Show".
I cruise into North Austin every day on a toll only road. It costs me $4/day and it is worth every penny.
The HOV/toll lanes I experienced in Portland and Utah sucked, they get bogged down nearly as bad as the rest of the lanes.
$15 to go the same speed. Garbage.
Progressives oppose expanding highways for the same reasons they oppose fracking. Fracking enables us to use natural gas. While burning natural gas releases 40% less carbon into the atmosphere than coal and is less expensive than coal, progressive oppose using natural gas, too, because it means not learning to live without.
Again, the whole purpose of progressivism is to use the coercive power of government to force Americans to make sacrifices against their will for what progressives consider to be the greater good. And if you're burning cheaper natural gas to save money, you're not really sacrificing anything at all.
The only solution they'll consider is the one that forces us to sacrifice for the greater good, as they see it, and artificially pushing the price of energy up to force Americans to live without it their ultimate solution. It's the same thing with traffic jams.
Relieving traffic jams is part of the problem for progressives, because the ultimate solution is to force people to move closer to where they work, telecommute, and learn to live without cars. By alleviating their problem, you're lessening the need for sacrifice, and forced sacrifice is the only solution progressives care about to most any problem.
Shorter Ken: Progressives are pure evil with bad intentions, while Republicans are "mere" authoritarians. Vote authoritarian!
Ken never mentioned Republicans. You did. Guess which one is the partisan hack.
He didn't have to. He lives in a binary world where you're a Progressive or a Republican. Most if not all of his posts are blatantly partisan. He can't even watch a movie without finding a Progressive political agenda in it. I feel sorry for they guy. He can't even be entertained without getting enraged about politics.
He's the partisan hack.
It's not my fault that you see any criticism of your team as support for the other team. I'm on the sidelines, hoping you both lose.
You are so deep into team blue you should change your handle to Smurfcasmic.
Tooth in advertising.
It is, however, your fault that you project your binary image of the world on others.
What binary image is that?
There are 10 kinds of people in the world.
and 9 of them are Chinese.
Your hope is irrational and stupid. The two party system is an emergent property of the U.S. Constitution, it's not going away until that does. Your policy preferences will either be furthered or hampered by one of the two major parties, at all times.
Unless you've got a master plan to obliterate the Republicans so the glorious Libertarian Phoenix can rise from their ashes (an equally irrational and stupid plan), you're just carrying water for the Democrats. So the only question is, are you doing it out of stupidity or malice?
they also view "induced demand" (i.e. more traffic) as a negative, without admitting that allowing more people to move about freely might have some positive value.
Personal choice is not in the progressive dictionary.
I don't think "sacrifice" is the word for it, because that implies a concomitant gain of some sort. The way you describe it, it's really about asceticism: all loss for no gain — at least, not any of material nature.
The gain is that they're saving the world from certain destruction.
The science is settled.
It's rare indeed, but every once in a while the government actually does do something good. The Panama Canal is an example, and so is the Interstate Highway System. Roads are a tremendous benefit to every single person in this country, even the ones who don't own a car. So it's kind of hilarious that the lefties want to completely turns their backs on one of the government's greatest projects in American history.
quote: "progressive oppose using natural gas, too, because it means not learning to live without. " Meanwhile, then they are not on a winge, they drive their stupid electric cars and live in wareshouses converted i into what passes for "residences". While signalling their own "virtue" loudly and contnually. They also, as a class, stand very strongly agasint things like "mixed use zoning" that allows for home based businesses, or the old time model of shop at street level door off sidewalk, dweling back and upstairs. Some areas if they even catch you selling off your old non-used stuff in eBay they will shut you down. "That's commercial use". Whatever...... They also press for bike lanes that take away car lanes, incresign congestion. (I am a SERIOUS cyclist, somewhere near 200,000 miles on a road bike ON the road) so don't try and throw that rotten egg at me... One more fault with most of these.. they also strongly oppose the permitting of "Accessory Dwelling Units"< often called Grannie Flats by the Aussies. WHY CAN"T another family share my property if there's enough room for we who will be living here for an extended time, what is it to them except they get to satisfy their sick penchant for checking everyone else's shorts.
Bizzieboddiez gotta bizzzie.........
The phenomenon he's describing is called "induced demand."
Also known as bullshit.
Sort of like the one where the evil advertisers force us to buy stuff we don't want.
Sounds better than induced labor.
>> including $110 billion for roads and bridges.
lol were you not on Earth for the Shovel-Ready Job Revolution?
110 billion out of 2.1 trillion? That's over 5%! We told you it was infrastructure. No more crumbling roads and bridges now for sure.
the only thing shovel ready during the reign of the kinyun was the massive quaintity of caca de vaca he consitnually piled high and deep. He could find no sommunity to come round and organise theproject, either. So the brown stuff sat and festered.
I have the solution, Biden voters aren't allowed to drive anymore... To save the enviroment
The number one priority of DOT is getting the Secretary his maternity leave.
I recall hearing the "induced demand" argument nearly 40 years ago when I moved to this particular suburban hell from a supposed "environmentalist". The logic made no sense then, and makes none now; people are going to move about regardless of how wide the road is. The best thing to do is set up conditions to allow them to do it efficiently.
The local schtick is that every new, or improved, road needs to have not just more traffic lanes, but bike lanes, and pedestrian lanes too. Even if if means widening a 40 foot swath of pavement into a 100 ft wide prarie of lanes and barriers.
For anyone thinking of moving to Massachusetts, I have just one word: "Don't!".
but induced demand IS a valid principle. Back when the Tacoma Narrows Bridge was one span, four lanes commutes were always nasty because the traffic backed up on both sides. Once folks actually crossed it took them a few miles to realise they are no longer riding Gertie, so they can relax and start driving normally again.
SO they threw a hunge wrench in the whole works and built a second crossing same capacity as the old one. Took them something like five years, and guess what? Since the "second crossing" is no nice and spacious and can accomodate more cars, why not join them? The price of real estate on the west side of the span went through the roof, as "its just a short commute now".... which in reality took at leat 95% as long as the old one.
THAT is induced demand.
Except these people are moving away from other routes.
That's the problem with "induced demand" as a concept. It has its blinders on, failing to look at the bigger picture.
Yes, having a better Tacoma Narrows bridge increases traffic across it. However, it reduces traffic on the other side of town.
Yes, having an expressway downtown increases the number of people that will commute downtown for work. However, it reduces the congestion in housing downtown as people can now move to get better schools and a yard for their dog rather than be forced to live in downtown efficiency apartments.
I would suggested that a congested traffic flow is likely to cause more pollution than a larger traffic volume moved more quickly through an area. While I don't subscribe to the notion that traffic volume alone creates more pollution (I think it is volume and congestion together), I can appreciate that added lanes alone will not stop congestion. It does seem to be the case that "if you build it (more lanes), they will come (more cars)". I would therefore favor a market approach of using congestion tolling. The fact is that technology provides better methods of tolling that do not require any stopping. I although think that there will be a change in the make up of the vehicle fleet that will render the gas tax insufficient to address roadway funding requirements. Like it or not tolling seems to be the best option.
Maybe just require electric car users to pay for the roads that gas and diesel vehicles bought. And the funding gap would lessen if not disappear. As former President Obama once said, “You didn’t build that.”
President Obama was inartful in the remarks quoted. So are you, what are you trying to say here?
I understood clearly. Are you stupid?
Exactly. The HOV lanes should be opened to all cars, to reduce traffic jams. And if there are HOV lanes, electric vehicles should be banned from them, since they will pollute less if they get stuck in traffic jams.
Not only is the reduced gas tax revenue a foreseeable issue as more people switch to hybrids and electric cars, the tolled lanes work pretty well. There is one into/out of DC on I-95 and it makes a noticeable difference. It still sucks, but it sucks a little less.
I also think that as battery technology improves and ranges increase, electric cars will become the norm. I know that I resent getting less than 50 MPG when I have to drive my partner's dad's Jeep. At some point I'll probably resent getting only 55 MPG and switch to electric (once I do a cost per mile analysis to see if it actually costs less because I'm geeky like that).
So the tolling approach could help pick up the slack as gas tax revenues drop and, being optional with congestion-dependent pricing, it wouldn't shut out people who couldn't afford it from the main highway (like toll roads can). Seems like a win-win to me.
Getting on my bicycle soon and heading home from work. I expect little traffic (80% bike path) on the 5 mile ride home.
I'm about ready to call it a day myself. It's about 18 steps to my couch. Working from home is great. Christmas parties suck though.
It is a great way to commute did it many years.
Eliminate electric car subsidies, or at least put the "show us your mileage and pay the tax" rule in effect for them. You know, fair share and all that jazz. Make the electric/hybrid manufacturers put in a computer chip that is linked to the odometer through the charging cord, and they have to charge at a public station at least once a month, and pay the mileage surcharge for road maintenance.
Then add a surcharge tot he cost of bicycles to pay for the bike paths, because no bike ever actually replaced a car. The ones who do commute by bike are going to do it no matter what. (except a certain bureaucrat who only bikes "the last mile" for show)
Or best of all possible worlds, get the feds out of the transportation sector all together.
Why not get ride of the gas tax all together and just have all vehicles pay by the miles used? As you noted this could be done by chip. Even easier just report your mileage when you renew your plates. You might cheat, but the error will catch up with you when the vehicle is traded or scraped. You only report 1000 miles a year but at tradeout you have an extra 70K miles to pay.
I would still favor congestion tolling to address high use times on the roadway. But again with technology that can be easily accomplished.
And no one will ever tamper with their odometer.
Low income, disenfranchised and “other” folks will receive rebates or waivers. Some may even receive compensation from the common pool.
Do they get a break on the gas tax now? Or on the licensing?
It is illegal to do so, even now, and I very much doubt any dealership is going to want to deal with a car with suspect odometer.
can't tamper with the electronic odometers. The old number roll units can be taken apart and put back together "differently". Mine would be easy, I'd only have to change the leading three to a one. Or maybe even a zero, as its close enough to turning over 400K it won;t be long. Except for tired shocks it runs like its only got 82K.
Cash flow, General; don't forget cash flow.
They have to have a way to get at our money much more often than once a year.
Not a problem because some percentage of the vehicles have licenses come up every month.
but that is still once per year on that month, thus Long to be Free is correct. I'm glad its not all comeing home to roost on the same day of the year.. all my trailers would come due at the same time with the crazy expensive van tags... not spread out around the year.
hy should I be forced to pay for the stupid bike paths> I rude thousans of miles (somewhere near 200K in my lifetime so far, and counting) and have put no more than a couple hundred on the paths . I hate them and avoid them ilke the pplague they are. The only benefit they are to me is "induced load" tends to concentrate most of the bikes on the paths, leaving the roadways gloriously free of yahoo bike riders. We serious cyclists mostly don't like the paths. Mulitple reasons, but roads work far better most times/places.
The poohbahs insist on adding nonsense things that nearly double the cost and complexity, and make the bike paths more a nusance touse. I've cycled in Idaho a fair bit, and all the bike paths I see there are very simple and basic. Take a blade, level and fill, tamp, then a strip of macadam. Pack up and go home, NO signs, stop signs, paint markings, steel barricades to keep the motos out, no milemarkers, no road signs, no Disneyland arrows and guides...
I finally came to the conclusion that cyclists in Idaho area whole lot smarter than in most other states. Idaho cysists are intelligent enough to realise that the wide patch of macadam they are approaching to cross just MIGHT be a road, as in, a place where CARS and TRUCKS might be travelling, and that it just might be a decent idea to at least slow down enough to see if anything big enough to hurt is travelling upon that highway. it drives me nuts to be barreling along and see the maze of bolards, signs, speed strips, fake curves built in to slow you down, when I can see the entire higheay for half a mile in either direction and there is NOTHING ON IT, yet the "law" still mandates that I come to fa "full and complete stop" (which the coppers, not state law, interpret as taking your foot out of the clip and leaning with the bike onto it for a full three second count) else I violate the law.
I personally think it is the contractors that build the infernal tnings decide all the extras are "necessary" and press to include them all, jacking the price way up and thus their earnings at the same time. A racket if ever there was one.
I'm not sure what the population density is in the area of Idaho you are talking about, but in my area there are a bunch of "rail to trail" paths that cross a bunch of streets and the idea that there might not be traffic is absurd. There is always traffic. So it makes sense, especially with the number of kids who ride the paths, to give a warning when approaching a road.
"Poole argued in a 2019 newsletter that much of the evidence for the futility of highway widenings comes from projects that marginally expanded already congested roads. More aggressive highway widenings, he pointed out, have resulted in considerable reductions in traffic congestion."
I mean, this is the dumbest thing I've read here. No shit it worked. Give it 10 years and it'll be packed to the brim again though.
Once again Reason writers are just sucking off Koch who makes his money on oil. Public transit is a far better and more efficient investment. Not to mention the immense benefits to otherwise shuffling funds to transit, bike lanes, etc. like cleaner air, less deaths, less destruction of cities for ever widened highways, etc.
Same thing with your ilk. You think this website is free? Too slow? Speed it up and you'll be posting twice as much brain-free crap.
But will the public transit bus go over a block to stop and wait at the CVS while I run in to get something? I don't know about you, but I ran all sorts of errands, almost daily, on the way home from work - library, supermarket, gas station, home improvement store, etc.. If I take the bus, I've then got to get in the car and make an extra trip, maybe re-tracing my route. Even with traffic jams, most of us find autos are liberating and so much more convenient and efficient than public transit.
… autos are liberating …
And there is the core of the problem.
"Public transit is a far better and more efficient investment. Not to mention the immense benefits..." of controlling the population's freedom of movement, making them ever more reliant on the government and reducing their ability to assemble.
Fixed that for you.
Public transit? You got to be kidding. Maybe where YOU live, but not where I live. The nearby (2 miles away) city is home to aVERY expensive and masive bus "system". The nearest stop to where I live is a full two miles away, And the near downtown section of the city is two more blocks. The bus runs n hour apart. It is far faster to WALK then to walk to downtown's edge, wait for the stinking bus,take it a quarter mile, get off do my business, wait again, take it back to the end of the line, get off, and walk two miles back home, al taking close to three hours. I can walk there and back on twenty minutes.
They used to have a run that came to a bus stop a mile away. If I missed that one I had to wait an hour. Meh.. walking is faster. Not to mention healthier.
You must not value your time much. Public transit has to stop periodically while private cars keep moving. A fifteen minute drive could be an hour ride on public transit.
Despite my bicycle commute today and most days, I own 3 cars. I have probably passed my overall cycling mileage with driving mileage in the last 5 years. But, yes, the bike lane thing is overdone so much evev I get pissed about it. Yes, get the feds out of the highway/road business.
I80 through Iow has been updated recently. Bridges now have extra lanes to allow diversions when repairs mus be made to the either bridge. High traffic areas have additional lanes added. Rare to see jams. There are now 4 lane roads in parallel to I80 all the way across Iowa. Thankyou to all your grandchildren who will be enslaved to pay for this.
Actually not sure who is paying for this, but I think last report Iowa had a balanced budget. So I suspect you all are getting billed for it in some way.
I believe all states have to balance their budgets.
I tried out the calculator for I-10 in my area of Tucson, AZ. I added 50 lane miles, which is about 11% of existing lane miles. The calculator says it will add 25,000 cars to the road. I did notice that the calculator doesn't account for the stop-n-go conditions that currently exist and increase pollution, nor the traffic that is pushed onto surface streets from freeway congestion. I suspect that adding the additional lane miles would prove a wash when all factors are considered.
Does SimCity know they are using their simulator?
how can you be CERTAIN that calcultor has not been rigged by bogus formulae, incorrect data, poor understanding of actual commute behaviour?
The Kennedy School's researchers are also against opening new checkout lanes at the supermarket when the lines get too long, presumably.
The argument that people always miss with the induced demand is that the purpose of cities isn't to have uncongested streets. The purpose is produce agglomeration benefits by providing speedy access to a variety of industry and services. Complaining about induced demand is like Starbucks complaining they get extra customers when they put down more stores (rather than dividing their existing customer base). Trips are a sign that the transportation system is working well. If you have such a crappy transportation infrastructure that people would rather stay home than visit friends/family, go out to eat, volunteer, etc. solely because getting across town is too much of a pain in the rear, that is a sign a city's transportation infrastructure is failing its residents. Reduction in suppressed trips is a sign of success, not failure.
I live and work in the suburbs and go into the city itself so rarely it might as well not exist. By the time I get off work and would get downtown, it is too late to do anything. The inadequate highways are gradually splitting the metro, which can't be a good thing economically or socially.
Brilliant response. It is amazing how often this progressive mindset looks at signs of success and thinks it a sign of failure. It’s like when they look at a surplus of food being grown and call it waste- as if the alternative (famine) would be a measure of success.
The complaint of citizens is about congestion and increased commute time. It is viewed as a problem by those who use the roads, not progressives. What they are trying to figure out is how to solve the problem. It isn't a manufactured crisis like election integrity that has a political purpose.
Can't the government just mandate thinner cars?
What do you think the CAFE standards are for?
My 72 Chevelle was a mid sized car when it was new. It is bigger than the luxury cars sold now.
I got on the turnpike with a bad cold. I was subject to high congestion pricing. I paid through the nose.
Don’t have to be so snotty about it,
WTF does this have to do with the Union of States Government????
Is there a Constitutional Authority for multi-lane highways? I'm just not seeing the Postal Service's needing such extravagant roadways.
Tell the 'feds' to get the F-OUT of their monarchy monopoly they created by their UN-Constitutional 'fiat' money printing ability. They were NEVER granted authority for Infrastructure.
"Induced demand" has been long since disproven. Show me induced demand and I'll show you demand that has wrongly gone unmet for decades at least.
The original social contract for highways was that cities and states would always build enough of them to keep them moving despite population growth. When governments stopped honoring this deal about 50 years ago, but retained planning vetoes over anyone else building them, they started the deliberate destruction of modern life, a process that has only gotten worse since.
It's time to redesign our infrastructure model so that anyone who is willing to pay for the roads and other services he needs is free to get the job done privately, with no way for NIMBYs to prevent it.
Miller:
The more you drive, the less intelligent you are.
https://thepiratebay.org/search.php?q=repo+man&all=on&search=Pirate+Search&page=0&orderby=
Bottom line, more roads, more jobs, more tax payers. All are bad for China and good for the USA. Now do you have any question what our leaders will do?
lol.... Right; With all the more roads, more jobs, more tax payers promises the Nazi-Regime has promised over the last 100-years; You'd think the rest of the world would look stale compared to here.
And in the end; the only place going stale is the USA.
"a general federal prohibition on tolling interstates"
Except in the Northeast, apparently. Jeez.
The induced demand thing is real — demand for real estate development.
I’ve seen this happen multiple times in Maryland; (1) Two-lane country road gets congested; (2) government widens existing road or creates a new highway roughly parallel to it; (3) traffic flows much better for a few years; (4) builders see an opportunity, buy up all the available land, and develop the shit out of the place; (5) traffic unsurprisingly gets just as congested as it was in step 1; (6) a clamor for more road expansion to alleviate the new congestion.
If you really want to tax the people who are benefiting from new roads, tax the developers and retiring farmers. There are suburban sprawl neighborhoods around here with classy names such as “Dunloggin” and “Dunfarmin.” Names like some asshole would have on his vanity plate, and people actually move into these places.
I fully believe in "induced demand" and have a wonderful solution. If we really want to reduce congestion, we should block and reduce all freeways, highways, and roads to one lane. This is the opposite of "induced demand" and should dramatically reduce congestion. This will also reduce deaths from speeding on our roads.
Highway traffic is a measure of prosperity.
The more trips, the more prosperity.
The best quote on this I have read was by a civil highway engineer,
"You can't engineer your way out of congestion."
If you don't believe him, try leaving an NFL game without encountering congestion.
proplem
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