From Better Government Association: Biden’s infrastructure push
challenges Illinois’ car-centric approach
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[June 25, 2021]
By DANIEL C. VOCK
Better Government Association
If President Joe Biden gets his
infrastructure package through Congress, it could prompt Illinois and
other states to reconsider how much of its transportation networks are
built for cars and trucks.
Biden’s $2.3 trillion American Jobs Plan is far from becoming law, and
its details remain in flux. But much of the Democratic president’s
vision runs counter to decades of transportation officials’ car-centric
thinking by emphasizing public transit, cutting pollution and helping
modernize existing neighborhoods over providing incentives for suburban
sprawl.
“It’s been decades since President [Dwight] Eisenhower created the
interstate highway system, so we have decades to overcome in terms of
transit [spending] versus highway spending. That’s because we have a lot
of catchup [to do],” said Jacky Grimshaw, the vice president for
governmental affairs at the Center for Neighborhood Technology. “But we
[in Illinois] are on the road to doing that catchup.”
Still, the state’s focus remains overwhelmingly on preserving — and in
some cases expanding — its road networks.
One telling example is the $45 billion public works bill Illinois Gov.
JB Pritzker signed three years ago. Some activists praised the Rebuild
Illinois capital plan because it provides more reliable state funding
for public transit and sets aside funds for bicycles and walking routes.
But more than half of the plan’s spending is for roads and highways.
Roads get $25.3 billion under the state plan compared to, for example,
$4.7 billion for mass transit.
Rebuild Illinois depends on $9 billion in federal transportation funding
that regularly flows to the states from the U.S. government. Biden’s
American Jobs Plan would come on top of that.
But the federal government and the state of Illinois need each other to
make major changes in transportation policy. The federal government
supplies most of the money for big highway projects, but state
governments determine how that money is spent. Both are instrumental in
other facets of transportation, too, whether it’s paying for new “L”
lines in Chicago, building bike paths in the suburbs or adding Amtrak
services downstate.
Even if Biden gets a bill through Congress, its success will rest with
states such as Illinois. The Illinois Department of Transportation,
after all, controls 16,000 miles of state highways. IDOT and the
Illinois State Toll Highway Authority together control nearly 2,000
miles of interstates, the third biggest interstate network of any state
in the country.
“This is the beginning of the discussion of fundamentally rethinking
what we invest in,” said Kevin Brubaker, the deputy director of the
Environmental Law & Policy Center. “Biden is suggesting that the era of
just building more highways is over. It’s time to establish societal
goals — mobility, fairness, addressing climate change — and then have
our investments follow those goals. [We can’t] just throw more money at
highways.”
Cars and trucks are now the biggest source of greenhouse gas pollution
in the United States. They produce even more of the harmful gases than
the electric power industry, which has been at the center of debates in
Springfield this year over its carbon dioxide emissions.
Christian Mitchell, Pritzker’s deputy governor who oversees public
safety, infrastructure, energy and the environment, said the Rebuild
Illinois program helped shift Illinois’ infrastructure spending. It
raised the state’s gas taxes for the first time since 1990 to pay for
improving roads, improving transit services and building more bike lanes
and assets for pedestrians. The Pritzker administration also has
encouraged people to buy and drive electric vehicles, especially those
made in Illinois.
“We got a head start on a bunch of this stuff,” Mitchell said. “Frankly,
the American Jobs Plan would accelerate that work and expand it to
additional opportunities.”
But some advocates in Illinois still see a disconnect between the
president’s goals and the state’s transportation priorities.
“From our perspective, IDOT has not yet shown they’re genuinely
interested in prioritizing climate and racial equity in their build-out
of the transportation network across the state,” said Kyle Whitehead, a
spokesperson for the Active Transportation Alliance, a Chicago-based
advocacy group for pedestrians and cyclists.
Whitehead has a long list of frustrations, both large and small, with
IDOT and other large transportation agencies in the state. Sometimes
it’s outrage over a new highway project. But there also are plenty of
irritations over the difficulty of installing sidewalks, bus routes or
bike lanes on state-owned roads.
“One of the benefits of the federal package prioritizing equity and
climate is it could help bring IDOT along, and the region along, in
terms of how we’re looking at transportation and the impacts that it has
on society at large,” Whitehead said.
What’s more, Brubaker said, it is hard to determine how well IDOT is
prepared to meet the goals of the Biden infrastructure push because the
state agency’s criteria for choosing projects are a “black box.”
IDOT’s six-year plan states it uses a “data-driven” approach to measure
how projects further its goals of improving the economy, livability,
mobility, resiliency and stewardship. But it doesn’t reveal what data it
uses to judge those projects, Brubaker said.
“Whether the state is well prepared to pivot to transportation
investments that address climate change, racial equity and other goals
of the Biden administration is an unknown,” he said.
That could change soon, though. The legislature just passed a bill this
spring that would require IDOT and transit officials in the Chicago area
to evaluate new projects on performance metrics starting next year. The
bill still needs Pritzker’s signature.
Paul Wappel, a spokesperson for IDOT, said the agency “looks forward to
working with the Illinois delegation and other stakeholders on a federal
infrastructure plan that advances long-term, sustained investment while
simultaneously supporting users across all modes and diverse
populations, building equity, respecting the environment and encouraging
innovation.”
Last month, IDOT officials said the agency planned to spend $2.58
billion on roadway expansions over the next six years, which is
one-sixth of its overall spending. Among the projects are rebuilding
Interstate 190 near O’Hare International Airport, replacing the
Interstate 270 bridge over the Mississippi River near St. Louis and
widening Interstate 57 in southern Illinois.
Two-thirds of IDOT’s planned spending would be used for maintaining
existing roads and bridges. Another 8% would go toward “safety and
modernization,” and the remaining 9% would pay for support.
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Construction work continues for the Jane Byrne
Interchange, a project that has been ongoing since 2013. President
Joe Biden's proposed infrastructure plan runs counter to decades of
transportation officials’ car-centric thinking. (Better Government
Association photo by Madison Hopkins)
“Even in a pandemic — especially in a pandemic — our
transportation systems connect the lives of our residents and our
communities,” Pritzker said while unveiling plans to improve more
than 3,300 miles of road last July. “Our roads and bridges deliver
Illinoisans to work and home again, to school, to the pharmacy, to
the doctor’s office.”
Kate Lowe, a professor of urban planning and policy
at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said she hasn’t seen major
changes in how the state designs transportation projects, despite
all the talk at the state and federal level about traffic safety,
racial equity and non-automobile forms of transportation.
“We [in Illinois] still have projects in the pipeline that don’t
center those goals and still prioritize automobile speed,” she said.
Lowe pointed to the seemingly endless reconstruction of the Jane
Byrne Interchange in Chicago, where the Eisenhower Expressway meets
with the Kennedy and Dan Ryan expressways. The work started in 2013
and is still ongoing, and the result will be that “it will save cars
a few seconds,” Lowe said.
Similarly, Lowe said plans by IDOT and the Chicago Department of
Transportation to rebuild North Lake Shore Drive are focused too
much on catering to rush hour drivers who are already well served by
infrastructure in the Chicago region.
The average commute time each way for Chicago-area drivers is 29
minutes, while it is 43 minutes for “L” riders and 44 minutes for
those taking buses.
“Illinois is losing population, so I don’t think we have much of a
case for expanding automobile infrastructure of any type,” Lowe
said. “And we know more lanes attract more cars, and you end up with
congestion.”
Wappel, the IDOT spokesperson, said road construction projects
improve safety and reduce air pollution from stalled traffic. They
don’t just improve travel times.
The Jane Byrne Interchange, for example, is considered one of the
biggest freight bottlenecks in the nation, he said. It was built six
decades ago, and sections still had ramps with single lanes with no
shoulders. Wappel also said the North Lake Shore Drive project is
still in the planning phase, and all options have a transit
component.
Erin Aleman, executive director for the Chicago Metropolitan Agency
for Planning, said communities in the Chicago area are running out
of room to keep expanding their roadways.
“There are some strategic needs to enhance the roadway system for
safety reasons,” said Aleman, whose agency coordinates federal
transportation spending in the region. “But we’re landlocked.”
Still, she said she’s seen authorities come up with clever ways to
use existing infrastructure.
Pace, the suburban bus agency, now runs buses on the shoulders of
interstate highways when the roads are congested, she noted. Future
projects could include improving suburban rail crossings so trains
don’t delay traffic and add to local air pollution or enacting
congestion pricing on Chicago-area toll roads to encourage drivers
to travel outside rush hour, Aleman said.
The Regional Transportation Authority, which oversees transit
operators in the Chicago area, is shifting its focus from finding
state money to pay for overdue repairs to bigger societal goals,
said Leanne Redden, the agency’s executive director.
There are many reasons for the shift, including the inequities that
were highlighted during the COVID-19 pandemic and new state funding.
But Biden’s infrastructure plan played a role, too.
“The environment, equity and accessibility were always on our minds,
but now it’s coming to the forefront,” Redden said. “It’s
encouraging and exciting to see the federal government is now also
talking about those as a formal part of their agenda. The benefits
and the impact of transit systems fit squarely in that, and we want
to be ready to use as many of those dollars as we can.”
The pandemic forced some area transit agencies to quickly change how
they worked. Metra ran fewer trains, and Pace began running fewer
buses to Metra stations and more buses to UPS and Amazon facilities
to ferry people to their jobs there. The Chicago Transit Authority,
though, was one of the only transit agencies in the nation that did
not reduce bus or train services during the pandemic.
If there’s one project advocates hold up as a model for how Biden’s
infrastructure proposal could change lives in Illinois, it’s the
effort to extend the CTA’s Red Line on the far South Side of
Chicago.
The Red Line now ends at 95th Street, at the southern end of the Dan
Ryan and 4 miles from the city’s southern border. The 95th Street
stop is at the edge of Roseland, a Chicago neighborhood that is 96%
Black and often referred to by urban planners as a transit desert.
For Andrea D. Reed, the executive director of the Greater Roseland
Chamber of Commerce, the situation limits residents’ options for
jobs in other parts of the city and makes it harder for Roseland to
attract businesses.
Residents who live in Altgeld Gardens at the very southern edge of
the city, for instance, must travel an hour and take three buses to
shop at a nearby Walmart. By car, it takes less than 10 minutes. A
Red Line extension could solve that problem — and many more.
In December, the federal government gave the CTA the go-ahead to
plan the Red Line extension, which is expected to cost $2.3 billion.
The federal government could provide up to half of the funding, but
the CTA will have to find local money to match. Chicago officials
hope Biden’s infrastructure bill, if it passes, could make it easier
to pay for the Red Line extension.
The project could be a boon not only for residents’ transportation
needs but also for any construction jobs, Reed said.
“We need the Red Line to be done,” she said. “It’s not just about
the train. It’s about how it can improve the quality of life for
residents in the area.”
This story was produced by the Better Government
Association, a nonprofit news organization based in Chicago, and
distributed by Capitol News Illinois, a nonprofit news organization
covering state government and funded by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |