Car-centric Austin is building transit. Will anyone ride it?
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[October 19, 2021] By
Tina Bellon
AUSTIN (Reuters) - In 2019, Diane Guerra and her husband moved out of
their two-bedroom apartment in trendy East Austin to buy a house in one
of the city's booming northern suburbs. The move doubled their commutes
- hers to 40 minutes, his to 30 - but they have no regrets.
"We simply couldn't afford any of the larger houses in the city," said
Guerra, a 35-year-old executive assistant.
Like three in four Austinites, they commute solo. Traffic here has
become increasingly gridlocked, pain that's likely to intensify with the
metro area's population of 2.3 million people set to double over the
next two decades.
To lure drivers out of their vehicles, Austin is pushing light rail and
electric buses. Residents last year agreed to fund part of it with a
property tax hike expected to raise more than $150 million annually, a
figure that will increase as property values rise.
The Biden administration and Democrats in Washington, meanwhile, are
proposing spending billions on public transit across the country to
create construction jobs and fight global warming. The transportation
sector is the single-largest contributor to U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions.
But convincing Americans who live outside dense coastal cities to give
up their cars won't be easy, even in a place like Austin, which fancies
itself a forward-thinking, progressive bastion in the middle of
conservative Texas. In 2019, prior to the COVID-19 crisis, just 4% of
residents used public transit to get to work, and ridership remains 40%
below pre-pandemic levels, according to city data.
(Graphic on Austin commuter modes:
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-INFRASTRUCTURE/AUSTIN/
lbpgnoganvq/chart.png)
Transit fans blame a skeletal system; build it and they'll come, the
argument goes.
Some transport experts, however, are dubious of the ambitious plan,
dubbed Project Connect.
Kara Kockelman, a transportation engineering professor at the University
of Texas at Austin, said her research shows the new rail lines will
handle just 1% to 2% of current trip demand, with ridership limited to
people who live or work within a quarter of a mile of stations.
"Project Connect is a drop in the bucket," Kockelman said.
Also unknown is how permanently the pandemic may have altered Americans'
living and working arrangements. Transit ridership has declined in
cities nationwide as former strap-hangers lost jobs, worked from home or
hopped into their cars to avoid crowded buses and subways. Others fled
teeming cities and apartment blocks, rejecting the higher density
prescribed by planners to fight urban sprawl.
In Austin, rush-hour traffic is still 13% below pre-pandemic levels, a
change that, in part, reflects the enduring popularity of telecommuting,
according to Rob Spillar, director of the city's transportation
department, which oversees roads, traffic management and related issues
like parking.
Still, transit backers say Austin is at an inflection point. The 28th
largest U.S. metro area, Austin ranked as the 18th-most congested U.S.
city prior to the pandemic, according to transportation data provider
INRIX. The portion of Interstate 35 that runs through the city routinely
ranks among the nation's worst bottlenecks.
Telecommuting alone can't unclog Austin's roads given the explosive
growth ahead, said Randy Clarke, the chief executive of Cap Metro,
Austin's transit agency.
"We need to talk about moving people versus moving cars," he said.
(Graphic on Austin transit ridership:
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-INFRASTRUCTURE/AUSTIN/
zdpxordbwvx/chart.png)
MASSIVE SPENDING
Austin provides a case study for the kind of spending required to update
the nation's transportation networks, buildings, energy systems and
communications. Over the next decade, with broad support from the
Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce, officials hope that about $20
billion in federal, state and city funds can be invested in
infrastructure here, including $7.1 billion for Project Connect and
nearly $5 billion to expand I-35.
By comparison, the bipartisan infrastructure bill currently stalled in
Congress would commit $39 billion in new funding for transit projects
nationwide. Democrats want to add a further $10 billion through a
separate budget reconciliation bill.
[to top of second column] |
Downtown Austin and the
portion of Interstate 35 running through the middle of the city are
seen in this aerial image, Austin, Texas, U.S., October 14, 2021.
REUTERS/Tina Bellon
Austin has a lot riding on the outcome. Half of Project Connect's funding is
supposed to come from the federal government. Even with that potential windfall,
some critics lament what they see as a waste of taxpayer money.
Among the most vocal is Gerald Daugherty, a former Republican commissioner in
Travis County, the overwhelmingly Democratic county in which Austin resides.
Daugherty believes residents' penchant for suburban-style living makes Austin
unsuitable for large-scale transit programs, particularly the fixed rail lines
that account for most of Project Connect's price tag.
"You're never going to have the density here that you have in the Northeast
because we've never lived that way," Daugherty said.
He favors solutions centered on pavement: road expansion, clean vehicles,
carpooling and dedicated bus lanes. He believes such a system would provide more
flexibility to get riders to employment centers blossoming around the county.
New area employers such as Tesla Inc underscore the challenges. The company's
planned vehicle and battery factory is under construction in a transit desert
east of the city near the airport. Most of its promised 10,000 workers are
expected to drive to work, according to Spillar, Austin's transportation
director.
Local officials appear cognizant that's not a good look for the city or an
electric vehicle maker intent on cutting carbon emissions. Spillar said Austin
may look at transit options to ferry workers to the plant. Mayor Steve Adler
said this month that Tesla CEO Elon Musk has expressed an "intent" to help build
housing near the facility's campus.
Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.
TRANSIT ATTITUDES
Clarke of Cap Metro contends drivers will embrace trains and buses once the
system becomes more robust and reliable. Three new rail lines are expected to be
completed over the next twelve years, connecting Austin's south, north and east.
Plans call for a tunnel downtown where passengers can catch all those trains. In
addition, Austin intends to expand bus service significantly with new routes
throughout the city.
Clarke previously was an executive at Boston's transit agency, which provided
some 1.2 million daily trips pre-pandemic - around 14 times the daily average
seen in Austin in 2019.
"People in places like Austin don't necessarily know the value of transit
because proportionately so many fewer people use transit," said Clarke, adding
that those attitudes were slowly changing with more East Coasters moving to the
Texas city.
He said residents who approved the property tax hike had understood that the
city's growth was not sustainable without public transit.
Convincing them to ride it is another matter.
Austin's only existing commuter rail line, connecting the northern suburbs to
downtown, has seen no lasting ridership increase even as growth in those suburbs
has surged. Trains run just once every 30 minutes, and the trip takes 20 to 30
minutes longer than a comparable journey by car.
Transportation researchers say Austin ultimately must tackle zoning to reduce
car trips by allowing more commercial development and apartment buildings in
residential neighborhoods.
The city has been working to rewrite its land-use code for nearly a decade,
arguing it would increase housing supply and lessen congestion. But just as in
other U.S. cities, Austin has faced opposition from local residents and property
owners, leaving the reform tied up in court.
New homeowner Guerra, meanwhile, is enjoying her family's move to Cedar Park,
about 16 miles northwest of Austin. She and her husband have a yard and no
longer share walls with other apartment dwellers.
"It's so nice to have our own space in a quiet neighborhood," she said.
(Reporting by Tina Bellon in Austin, Texas; editing by Marla Dickerson)
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