Atlanta’s mobility and congestion problems are well known. It has the seventh-worth congestion in the country. The area’s residents waste 51 hours a year sitting in traffic, and those delays cost the region $3.1 billion a year. In this article Reason Foundation transportation policy analyst Baruch Feigenbaum describes a strategy to help alleviate those woes.
Reprinted from the September 17 Atlanta Journal-Constitution
By Baruch Feigenbaum
Atlanta’s mobility and congestion problems are well known. It has the seventh-worth congestion in the country. The area’s residents waste 51 hours a year sitting in traffic, and those delays cost the region $3.1 billion a year.
Metro Atlanta agencies plan to spend $84 billion over the next 30 years on transportation. Unfortunately, the transportation plans treat far too many prospects as stand-alone ventures intended to address single-problem spots.
Atlanta needs a connected transportation network to fix today’s congestion and handle the demands of looming population growth. Right now, Atlanta, with 7,500 lane miles, has one of the most underdeveloped surface street networks of any major U.S. area. With a similar population, Dallas has 10,000 lane miles. Detroit has a smaller population, but more lane miles – 8.600.
Surface streets, or arterials, are key to traveling within cities and also provide alternatives to congested freeways. Today, an accident on I-285 creates major congestion in part because there is no alternative route.
A new Reason Foundation plan, “Practical Strategies for Increasing Mobility in Atlanta” would build 11 primary arterials throughout the metro area. One would connect Marietta with Norcross, creating a quality alternative to I-285 on the Northside. Another would connect Union City with Smyrna, forming a north-south route to complement I-285 on the Westside. A third would connect Doraville with Johns Creek.
The surface streets, combined with managed lanes on the area’s highways, would form the basis of a network connecting key parts of the city and region.
A tunnel would run from the intersection of I-675 and I-285 to the intersection of Georgia 400 and I-285. Managed lanes, variably-priced toll lanes like those on I-85 in Gwinnett County, would be built on most Atlanta freeways including all of I-285, I-20 east and west of downtown, and Georgia 400 from Atlanta to McFarland Road. This would give the area’s drivers and buses congestion-free trips 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
With a beefed-up network of connected streets and managed freeway lanes, metro Atlanta could build a comprehensive Bus Rapid Transit and express bus network at a fraction of the cost of proposed light rail lines.
But how does Atlanta pay for these transportation improvements? The Reason Foundation report finds that public-private partnerships could be used to build and operate the toll lanes. The private sector would deliver more than $7 billion to help build the lanes in metro Atlanta.
Atlanta also should look at the transportation funding it is spending on non-transportation projects. The region could get nearly all the money it needs by no longer diverting a portion of the gasoline sales tax to the general fund; making sure all the local special purpose sales taxes paid on gasoline similarly go to transportation, and eliminating gas tax exemptions.
Focus transportation funding on building a comprehensive network to increase mobility and economic activity, making metro Atlanta a better place to live.
(Baruch Feigenbaum is an Atlanta-based senior transportation policy analyst for the Reason Foundation and also a transportation policy advisor to the Georgia Public Policy Foundation. Watch Feigenbaum discuss this report on the Foundation’s YouTube channel.)
Reprinted from the September 17 Atlanta Journal-Constitution
By Baruch Feigenbaum
Atlanta’s mobility and congestion problems are well known. It has the seventh-worth congestion in the country. The area’s residents waste 51 hours a year sitting in traffic, and those delays cost the region $3.1 billion a year.
Metro Atlanta agencies plan to spend $84 billion over the next 30 years on transportation. Unfortunately, the transportation plans treat far too many prospects as stand-alone ventures intended to address single-problem spots.
Atlanta needs a connected transportation network to fix today’s congestion and handle the demands of looming population growth. Right now, Atlanta, with 7,500 lane miles, has one of the most underdeveloped surface street networks of any major U.S. area. With a similar population, Dallas has 10,000 lane miles. Detroit has a smaller population, but more lane miles – 8.600.
Surface streets, or arterials, are key to traveling within cities and also provide alternatives to congested freeways. Today, an accident on I-285 creates major congestion in part because there is no alternative route.
A new Reason Foundation plan, “Practical Strategies for Increasing Mobility in Atlanta” would build 11 primary arterials throughout the metro area. One would connect Marietta with Norcross, creating a quality alternative to I-285 on the Northside. Another would connect Union City with Smyrna, forming a north-south route to complement I-285 on the Westside. A third would connect Doraville with Johns Creek.
The surface streets, combined with managed lanes on the area’s highways, would form the basis of a network connecting key parts of the city and region.
A tunnel would run from the intersection of I-675 and I-285 to the intersection of Georgia 400 and I-285. Managed lanes, variably-priced toll lanes like those on I-85 in Gwinnett County, would be built on most Atlanta freeways including all of I-285, I-20 east and west of downtown, and Georgia 400 from Atlanta to McFarland Road. This would give the area’s drivers and buses congestion-free trips 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
With a beefed-up network of connected streets and managed freeway lanes, metro Atlanta could build a comprehensive Bus Rapid Transit and express bus network at a fraction of the cost of proposed light rail lines.
But how does Atlanta pay for these transportation improvements? The Reason Foundation report finds that public-private partnerships could be used to build and operate the toll lanes. The private sector would deliver more than $7 billion to help build the lanes in metro Atlanta.
Atlanta also should look at the transportation funding it is spending on non-transportation projects. The region could get nearly all the money it needs by no longer diverting a portion of the gasoline sales tax to the general fund; making sure all the local special purpose sales taxes paid on gasoline similarly go to transportation, and eliminating gas tax exemptions.
Focus transportation funding on building a comprehensive network to increase mobility and economic activity, making metro Atlanta a better place to live.
Baruch Feigenbaum is an Atlanta-based senior transportation policy analyst for the Reason Foundation and also a transportation policy advisor to the Georgia Public Policy Foundation. Watch Feigenbaum discuss this report on the Foundation’s YouTube channel.