Well, folks, I’ve returned from a pleasant, week-long vacation to find that the General Assembly has not come to any agreement on the transportation budget. It looks like we’re facing a special session of the General Assembly.
As I’ve written before, the Axis of Taxes strategy will be to portray the tax-averse GOP in the House of Delegates as obstructionist and uncompromising. I would argue that that pro-tax forces are the unbending ones, utterly committing to a strategy of tax-and-build and totally uninterested in exploring alternative strategies to addressing traffic congestion. (Weak nods to land use “reform” will not bring about meaningful change.)
The House could strengthen its hand in the upcoming public-relations battle if it showed itself willing to entertain alternative approaches to coping with traffic congestion — approaches that the Axis of Taxes will dismiss out of hand. Over the past year, Bacon’s Rebellion and the Road to Ruin project have systematically explored these alternative strategies.
In yesterday’s edition of the Bacon’s Rebellion e-zine, I touched upon the potential to reignite mass transit ridership by giving the private sector a greater role. Municipal transit monopolies and taxicab franchises dampen the ability of the private sector to adapt to changing settlement patterns, implement new technologies and introduce innovations into the marketplace. By re-thinking the way we approach shared ridership, we could reinvigorate this alternative to One-Man-One-Car. (See “Liberate Mass Transit.”)
In a similar vein, we’ve written about NuRide, an Internet-based service that allows commuters to identify other carpoolers traveling the same route at the same time — a technology that offers the potential to revive the declining practice of carpooling. (See “Carpool Comeback.”)
We’ve explored the potential for telecommuting (working from home) and telework (working outside the main office and staying connected through cell phones, BlackBerries and laptops). (See “Rush Hour Will Never Be the Same.”)
We’ve shown how local governments can work with developers to create real estate projects with a smaller “traffic footprint” through better urban design and creative use of shared ridership. (See “Traffic Buster.”)
We’ve shown how new zoning codes and new templates for urban design can reduce the length and number of car trips and reduce traffic on congested thoroughfares. (See “Albemarle Place,” and “Street Cars and Zoning Codes.”)
We’ve shown how it’s possible, with modest investments, to significantly increase the capacity of existing thoroughfares without expensive widening projects. (See “Seeing the (Traffic) Light” and “Aroused about Roundabouts.”)
We’ve argued in favor of congestion-pricing tolls as a way of rationing scarce peak-highway capacity and encouraging commuters to change their driving behavior, whether carpooling more, riding buses, or resorting to telecommuting and telework. (See “Congestion Pricing” and “Roads and Reason.”)
There is no “silver bullet” for addressing Virginia’s congestion woes. But there are many narrow-bore policies, each of which can address a piece of the problem and all of which together can make a huge difference. Sadly, we have seen another session of the General Assembly come and go with none of these ideas being discussed seriously. The House has not embraced any of the ideas I’ve been pushing but, unlike the Senate, it has at least been willing to think outside the box, aggressively exploring ideas such as privatization.
In the PR battle to come, the House suffers a big disadvantage. The Governor has the power of the bully pulpit, the working journalists have defined the transportation debate as a tax-and-spend issue, and editorial writers across the state are salivating at the prospect of another big tax increase. But it will be difficult to portray House Republicans as the obstructionists if they are the ones embracing new ideas and their pro-tax foes are the ones nixing everything but big spending plans and tax increases.
That’s my story, and I’m sticking to it.

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