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Doug Kanter wrote:
"Dave Hall" wrote in message ... We do things backwards. Fact: When we widen or build new highways from major urban centers, we make sprawl worse. So, we end up with cities like NY & Boston which are surrounded by dense suburbs. In many cases, the population hasn't grown, either. It's just relocated. For good reason. Many people do not like living in cities. In places like this, trains are ideal. And for the rest? The rest should be forced to have trains and use them. Left wing storm troopers, trained by the Sierra Club, will hunt down violaters and make them live in ponds with endangered frogs. You may have stated that tongue in cheek, but there are those radical enviro-wacko's who would favor such mandatory compliance, regardless of the economic pitfalls and lyfestyle sacrifices it would push on people. It certainly makes no sense to NOT build light rail systems if only SOME people think it's expensive. Lots of people in big cities feel no need to own a car. It costs me about $12 a week to put gas in my car and drive it to work. Factor in other costs like insurance and maintenance, and it's still less than $20 a week. When you have to pay $10 a day ($50 per week) for train fare, how is that anything but more expensive? What would be my incentive to ride the train then (Assuming they would actually build one out to where I live)? Gee. I guess the geographical arrangement of your neck of the woods makes mass transport impractical. Logically, that means it's impractical and pointless everywhere, even in places where is works like a charm right now, or in places where the citizenry is asking for it, but their elected officials aren't responding. You are attempting to isolate my situation as a rare exception, when in fact it is a very popular situation. Unless you live in a city, or a dense suburban area, it is impractical and cost ineffective to provide rail service. Say what you will about suburban sprawl, it is a fact of life for many Americans. Another one of my "hobbies" is interurban traction service (trolleys) back in the early 1900's through the end of WW2 and into the 50's and 60's. At that time, it was a very practical and efficient method of transportation. Roads back then were sparse and often not very well constructed. People lived and commuted between major population centers, which was ideal for rail service. Once the end of WW2 came about, roads had improved, people had embraced the individuality of the automobile, and corporate exces at companies like GM started pushing busses onto metro areas at discount prices, in order to compete with rail service. These factors, combined with sprawl, put the nails in the coffin of the interurban rail service. The economic climate has not changed, so it is still not a favorable climate for the rennaisance of interurban rail service, except for established urban areas. Most of the old interurban rail right-of-ways have been converted into bike paths in my area. Dave |
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