DYSPEPSIA GENERATION

We have seen the future, and it sucks.

This Just In: Light Rail Fails to Relieve Congestion

19th November 2015

Read it.

The Los Angeles Time seems surprised to report that Los Angeles’ 9-mile-long Expo Line has failed to relieve congestion in the corridor it serves. Rail and bus boardings increased about 6 percent after the line opened in 2012 (at least some of which would be due to transfers of passengers from bus to rail who previously could go the entire distance of their journey by bus), but the rail line had no “significant or consistent impact” on auto traffic.

Many people believe rail transit depends on population density, and if so then the Expo Line should be a perfect candidate, as the area it serves has 26,000 people per square mile (about the same as New York City and nearly ten times the average urban density in the United States). On one hand, even that’s not dense enough for rail to attract a lot of riders. On the other hand, light rail is really low-capacity transit, so is truly the wrong solution for areas of high transit demand.

The problem with trains is that they take you from where you aren’t to where you don’t want to be at times convenient to the train but not necessarily to you. People always choose cars if they can. But politicians don’t like to let people choose their own way, with results as you see them.

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