Now is the time for Austin to dive headlong into a serious mass transit plan. We are in (and have been in) and huge growth spurt and the sooner they can lock down plans and begin on a multi-year plan the better.
The things that oppose or compromise this currently are:
1. The city's reluctance to move away from car-based/highway-based transportation planning (ie. building more and more highways; assuming that we can all just keep driving cars into the city)
2. The car-based mentality that is pervasive among Austinites/Texans.
3. The fact that the city is -- so far -- only willing to invest in a lame rail thing initially, which is only going to serve to validate everyone's worst assumptions about rail-transit. It follows an illogical path and will be slower than driving for the overwhelming majority of potential riders (at least for the next for years it will). If they want to get people on board (yes, pun) they need to put something in place that will actually be MORE efficient than what is currently available.
I've lived in cities where I and many people do not have or need a car. That seems to blow people's minds down here, but it's really easy to get around without one as long as the infrastructure is there to support that lifestyle. As we become more a dense urban center -- combined with the fact that WE JUST WILL stop relying on oil so much -- we need to start jumping on some mass transit plan now before it gets too late. Building highway after highway won't help this. It doesn't even have to be rail (although I love subways and rail systems), but other global cities have come up with interesting ways to deal with this urban growth (ie. that Brazilian city, with thei bus system that runs on it's own highway -- awesome).
Mike, if you have any influence on this stuff, this is the biggest thing.
Regarding all the "this place is getting too big, maaaaan" -- this is inevitable. It's how we decide to deal with and plan for this change that we DO have control over.
nadine wrote:Too corporatized.
Er, don't you work for a massive corporation?