Sunday, July 08, 2007

FOR WHOM THE ROAD TOLLS

Wealth brings privilege. It’s the American way. So if you can afford a better seat at the Ahmanson, mazeltov, enjoy the show. But there is a point at which we must draw a line, not in the sand but in the road.

MTA plans for “congestion pricing”, a euphemism if ever there was one, will offer special access to carpool lanes for single occupancy drivers in exchange for costly tolls. The distance between upper and lower classes, already large, is about to get larger.

“It’s just like flying first class,” MTA board member, David Fleming, suggested cheerfully. Apparently suffering from delusions of adequacy, Mr. Fleming’s analogy is seriously flawed. Driving a luxury car instead of a compact is like flying first class. Paying a toll for exclusive use of public freeway lanes is more like taxiing to the head of the line in your private jet and taking off, while all the little people are trapped on the tarmac in crowded planes, unable to travel. See the difference, Dave?

Exactly how far is the MTA willing to take this butt-in-line principle? Will surface streets have special “W” lanes for the wealthy? Will supermarkets have “R” lines for the rich? Will public rest rooms have “P” lines for the privileged? When the ship starts to sink, will we abandon the principle of women and children first, in favor of selling lifeboat seats to the highest bidders? We are selling our souls.

The auto and oil industries have had southern California by the throat (to put it politely) for 75 years. The solution to traffic congestion is not special access for the privileged few. The solution is less traffic via a world class, public transportation system aimed at the entire public: clean, fast, quiet, comfortable, and affordable. Can you say, monorail? That’s the real American way.

a foot on either side

1 Comments:

At July 11, 2007 10:32 AM, Blogger LovePug said...

I'm with you completely here, Bart. Of course, I'm mostly against it because I know I'm too cheap and will never fork over the money to use those elitist lanes. However, if the city made some coin off of these things and then in turn used that money to build more roads (or better yet, mass transit), then I could see it benefiting us all. But that's a bid IF.

 

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