Transportation
Mobility
continues to bedevil the Houston region. For more than a generation,
transportation planning has been almost exclusively focused on driving.
The result is civic places, businesses, shopping centers, schools, sports
facilities, and everything else designed first and foremost to accommodate
cars, and often not at all for the benefit of people, who are - generally
speaking - creatures with two legs who begin and end all trips by walking.
Freeways have divided and even destroyed dozens of neighborhoods, and
instead of their purpose being city-to-city transportation conduits, they
have become the urban main streets, where retail and offices are
established, and where moving from one place to another really requires a
car. Even in urban areas, it is not uncommon for people to drive from the
parking lot of one strip center across the street to another strip center,
and vehicle accidents are the leading cause of death among young people.
The
Costs of Driving
The average
household in the Houston region spends 22 percent of its income on
transportation - more than in any other metropolitan area in the United
States, according to Driven to Spend, a report produced by the
Surface Transportation Policy Project and the Center for Neighborhood
Technology. Houstonians pay more money to get around than they do on
housing, food, health care, or education. Highly expansive development
forces families to rely on automobiles, an expensive mode of
transportation. In fact, each household in the Houston area spends $8,740
of its $8,840 annual transportation budget on buying, operating, and
maintaining vehicles.
Automobile-based
transportation comes with a host of other problems. On-road vehicles are
responsible for 24 percent of the region’s volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
and nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions - both precursors to ground-level ozone
formation, according to TNRCC data (see Air Quality section). Expansive
roadways increase runoff and flooding, and destroy open space and wildlife
habitat.
Highway
Expansion
Despite the
high price area residents pay to own and operate vehicles - in time,
money, and pollution - the region continues to focus on highways rather
than significantly improve public transportation or implement land use,
pedestrian, and bicycle measures to reduce motorized transportation needs.
A growing conviction among transit experts says that adding freeway lanes
actually increases congestion.[i]
One study shows that motorists can lose more time during road construction
delays than they will ever save in years of driving on the
"improved" road.[ii]
California’s governor announced in 2001 that his state would build no
more highways, and several other cities are beginning to remove highways
instead of expanding them.
In Houston,
though, business and political leaders plan to expand every major local
freeway and add several new highways. Most notably, Texas voters approved
a constitutional amendment in 2001 that allows the state to borrow money
to finance highway construction; Harris County has an aggressive plan to
establish toll roads all over the county – without any public input.
Although
there is almost a panic to construct as many lane miles of highway as
possible as fast as possible, the emerging national consensus about more
diverse directions for mobility are beginning to be taken seriously in
Houston regional planning. Connecting land use to transportation planning,
accommodating bicyclists and pedestrians, transit-oriented development,
and many other more sustainable concepts are being advocated within the
vast transportation planning community that is centered at the
Houston-Galveston Area Council, where the Transportation Policy Council
oversees federal transportation money spend in the eight-county area.
Katy
Freeway (I-10)
The most
imminent major project is the $1 billion-dollar expansion of the Katy
Freeway. Because 80 percent of the traffic between Loop 610 and the
Beltway is local, suburbanites have to fight their way through incredible
congestion, which now endures nearly all day long, in both directions. The
TX-DOT solution: widen the 11-lane freeway to 18 lanes, adding another HOV
lane, one freeway lane in each direction, and another frontage lane in
each direction. Harris County has now proposed that the freeway be
expanded even more, to 20 lanes, including two toll road lanes in each
direction to replace the HOV lanes altogether. The Harris County plan
would push the high-speed bus service into “diamond” lanes where they
would mingle with other traffic, and essentially strip Metro of its right
of way and possibly end any plans for future rail in the corridor.
Grand
Parkway
Plans continue to construct
a 177-mile loop circling the city approximately 40 miles from its center.
Its original purpose, and some say its continuing purpose, was to spur
development in environmentally sensitive areas far from the city.
Opponents of the Grand Parkway are concerned it will promote urban sprawl
and destroy prime open space. The proposed route slices through wildlife
habitat near Lake Houston State Park and Brazos Bend State Park. It also
destroys the center of the Katy Prairie and some of the remaining wetlands
and bottomland hardwood forests in the region. In the southern portion,
the road would essentially form a 10-foot-high dam across the lower
watershed. The project made Taxpayers for Common Sense and Friends of the
Earth’s top 50 most wasteful roads in America in 1999, and that report
set the cost for the complete Grand Parkway at almost $2 billion.[iii]
Recent estimates have that cost approaching $4 billion. Environmental
Impact Statements are due on a number of segments of the highway.
Recent Progress
High-capacity transit
Metro’s new
“Metro Mobility 2025” plan outlines a broad plan for improving
mobility, including studies of three corridors for “advanced
high-capacity transit.” It is widely assumed that Metro will propose
expanding the Main Street light rail system, but it will not be clear
until late in 2002 what options will be weighed. One of the central issues
is whether Metro will use advanced high capacity transit to serve suburban
communities as it does with its Park and Ride bus programs, or will focus
more on dense inner city areas before expanding to the suburbs. For
example, one of the study corridors would go from Main Street to Hobby
Airport, serving two Universities and several neighborhoods, and another
would go from downtown to Bush Airport, serving the Near Northside and the
Greenspoint District. The former would be about seven miles long and is
all inner city, whereas the latter is about 30 miles and would begin to
deliver service to distant suburbs – possibly including the Woodlands.
In any event, the age of heavy transit has begun in Houston.
Westheimer
Corridor
One
of the most promising planning exercises is along the Westheimer corridor
west of Loop 610, one of the most prominent “traffic sewers” in the
region. The Houston-Galveston Area Council is conducting a study about
redevelopment there, and early plans are for true urban redevelopment that
would transform Westheimer into a street conducive to pedestrians and
streetside retail.
Rail
METRO
recently broke ground on Houston’s first light rail line in 2001.
Despite the fact that construction was underway, rail opponents were able
to gather enough signatures to require a vote in November 2001 on whether
or not to hold a special election to determine the future of the project;
that measure was defeated.
The 7.5-mile,
$350 million route will run from downtown to Reliant Park. Officials
expect construction to be completed by 2004. By itself, the rail line will
do little to solve Houston’s traffic or air quality problems, but it is
intended to be the starter line for a more extensive rail system. In fact,
the US Congress’s recent transportation spending appropriations included
$10 million for a travel study to determine the potential for future
high-capacity transit in the region, among other transportation options;
Representative Tom DeLay (R-Sugarland) initially banned federal funding
for the original light rail line, so that project is being paid for
entirely by local dollars.
Houston-Galveston
Traveler Choice Plan
In October
2001, the Houston Regional Group of the Sierra Club, the Galveston-Houston
Association for Smog Prevention (GHASP), BikeHouston, and Just
Transportation Alliances released their Houston-Galveston
Traveler Choice Plan. The document calls for changes in funding
priorities and transit development to improve air quality and public
health, as well as improve quality of life by offering more choices to an
auto-dependent city. The complete plan is available at http://www.ghasp.org.
Bicycle
and pedestrian
Traveling by
foot or bicycle reduces air pollution, relieves traffic congestion,
improves physical fitness, and offers independence to those who cannot or
do not want to drive. The region’s warm climate and flat terrain make it
ideal for year-round cycling and walking. However, the lack of bicycle and
pedestrian facilities, the distance between destinations caused by urban
sprawl, and a car-only design approach make biking and walking difficult.
The
Comprehensive Bikeway Plan, developed in 1993, provides for the design and
construction of 367 miles of bikeways in a citywide network of on-street
bike lanes, rail-to-trails, and bayou trails. Once completed, Houston will
be ahead of most cities in miles of bikeways. The Houston-Galveston Area
Council has also drafted a Regional Bicycle and Pedestrian Plan for the
eight-county area, which proposes 2,800 miles of bicycle and pedestrian
trails.
Early on,
actual construction of planned bicycle routes was slow, bogged down by
funding and interagency disputes. Problems with poor design and
maintenance of several on-street routes continue to anger motorists and
cyclists. However, the situation is expected to improve as more bikeways
are completed and more cyclists use them.
To date, 207 of the 367 miles of Houston bikeways are
complete and 50 more have been approved by city council for design. A map
of planned routes and project progress can be found at http://www.houstonbikeways.org.
In 2001, the City of Houston hired a new
Bicycle-Pedestrian Coordinator, who is charged with coordinating the
Houston Bikeway Program and pedestrian education activities.
Texas bicyclists also celebrated several legislative
victories last session. The Matthew Brown Act creates a Safe Routes to
Schools program and allows cyclists to take the entire lane, rather than
share it with an automobile, if it is less than 14 feet wide, among other
provisions. SB 238, which would have allowed counties to arbitrarily ban
bikes from certain roads, died in committee.
In
2001, bicycle advocates launched BikeHouston, a coalition organization
meant to represent the collective interests of the entire Houston area
cycling community. BikeHouston is to serve as as a collective voice for
all cyclists, bicycle clubs, bicycle retailers, and bicycling
professionals at the local and regional level, in order to safeguard
bicycle access to safe roads and trails.
What You
Can Do
Take
public transportation
Contact METRO
at (713) 635-4000 for bus routes, schedules, and fares. METRO also
coordinates carpool and vanpool options.
Ride
your bike or walk
Take
advantage of the city’s growing network of hike and bike trails.
Report
bikeway problems
To report
maintenance problems on the off-street network, contact the Parks &
Recreation Department at (713) 645-HELP. To report problems associated
with the on-street network, call the Department of Public Works &
Engineering, Office of the Bicycle-Pedestrian Coordinator, at (713)
837-0003.
[i] Noland,
Roland B. Relationships Between Highway Capacity and Induced Vehicle Travel.
US Environmental Protection Agency, 1999, www.epa.gov/oppetptr/trb-rn.pdf.
[ii] Road
Work Ahead - Is Construction Worth the Wait?. Surface
Transportation Policy Project, www.transact.org.
[iii] Road
to Ruin: The fifty most wasteful roads in America, Taxpayers for
Common Sense and Friends of the Earth, 1999.