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There seems to be 2 prevailing viewpoints in Chicagoland (with large areas of gray in between, but to simplify I'll discuss 2 extremes):
1. The "Have it your way" city, as supported by suburbanites, the Tribune, and..well..most people. In this model, the city caters to the people who have chosen to live in auto-oriented communities, and provides the cheapest, most user-friendly way to transition them from car to foot while giving them access to the city's amenities and resources. All the while, the city has to foot the bill in some way, shape, or form. This includes not increasing the cost of parking, providing free trolleys, and doing maintenance work on all of the roads and bridges suburbanites use as they drive through the city but don't pay the tax to support. The assumption is, "I'm working and shopping downtown, hence I am contributing taxes anyhow", often also with the belief that any attempt on the part of the city to raise rates at their expense is a result of cronyism, and such monies will be horribly misspent. 2. The "Let suburbanites fend for themselves" model. The city, faced with the exorbitant cost of running services (and paying union pensions), and with the burden of maintaining infrastructure, feels that it has reached a point where it has enough critical mass of goods/resources to no longer require subsidization of its suburban customer base. It assumes that it has enough underutilized transportation infrastructure in place that people will either a) forego conveniences that were previously taken for granted (ie driving & parking), perhaps even eventually forget about them, yet still recognize the value of the city enough to make efforts to access it by these alternative routes; or b) be willing to pay extra for these conveniences. This is a less "safe", riskier model, but can work in a city that has a bright future and for which national models of urban development are expected to trend in its favor. Okay, I had a bit of free time this afternoon so I thought I'd throw those two out. I think most American metros fall under #1, with the exception of New York and perhaps San Francisco, with Chicago somewhere in between #1 and #2 (and moving towards #2, apparently). Which group do you belong to? |
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Furthermore, the cost of parking is one of the automobile's greatest economic externalities, and the raised cost to park in the city hardly compensates for the costs incurred to everyone by the development of parking space, especially those who don't own vehicles. I happen to be one of those who doesn't own a vehicle, and despite the fact that I understand the economic benefit of having parking available and how much of a beneficiary I am of that, it is still a tyranny of the majority to me in many ways. Punishing people for parking downtown? Hardly; I'd say that drivers will be closer to paying their fair share of the costs. |
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Previous experience suggests that when it comes to commuting, people respond more readily to negative incentives (increased costs for the status quo arrangement) than to positive incentives (less costly alternatives). Sometimes negative incentives are used to force people into considering new alternatives. Take Hyde Park, where U of C has for some time been trying to dissuade people from driving to work through a mix of positive and negative incentives: while it has been increasing employment in the central campus area, it has generally reduced parking and replaced it with free shuttles to lots south of the midway, free Hyde Park circulator buses, etc. I wonder if service improvements to the Loop would similarly require some negative changes to encourage people to look around at the alternatives. |
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But consider the managing partner of a 30- or 50-person firm who's already on the fence about downtown vs. a suburban office park. For him, a punitive fee that comes directly out of his pocket may well change his behavior. The way he chooses to avoid the pain of downtown parking may not be the way we want. |
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The fact of the matter is, downtown Chicago has already been a far, far, far, far, far more expensive place to park (to the 10th power) than anyplace in suburbia--so if businesses were going to turn heel and run they should have done so long ago. I can see from your posts that the cost of parking downtown disturbs you, but whan can be said? I know this sounds cliche, but it's a city, after all. There are plenty of other forms of transportation available, and as I mentioned in my post above, the majority of downtown office workers have just one commute to make. The more I think about it, I can't think of a single better source to draw funding for transit from than the people who forego transit and choose to drive (and no, I'm not on a witch-hunt as you implied in a previous post, I'm just trying to make a point that seems logical to me). On the other hand, why increase the tax on downtown property owners when, if anything, the city should reward them for wisely investing in the urban center? |
Yeah, calculation error on my part Mr.D, I missed the point in .3%, thought you said 3%.
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This is absurd. Mr Downtown predicates his entire argument on the difficulty of commuting to the Loop by rail. But there's a Metra stop in nearly every suburb! Am I missing something? What's stopping people from parking at the nearest suburban train station and "really flying" to their office downtown?
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"Odd hours"? The train schedule is pretty accommodating. "Carrying packages and purchases"? Wait... seriously? |
urban, I think you nailed it. This is something I've been saying for a while. Chicago has clearly flipped the switch in its mindset about the type of city it is. It no longer views itself like a normal American city, where particular care needs to be taken to keep the core healthy. Rather, it thinks of itself more like New York, London, or Paris, where people will pay any price, bear any burden for the privilege of visiting, working, or living in central Chicago. Time will tell if this works out or not. The real question is how elastic the demand for being in Chicago is.
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For example, just a few weeks after news that parking meter rates are going up, news comes out that Daley is pushing for higher parking rates on top of that, just as everybody is losing their job or taking a pay cut. Not to mention that only a few weeks ago the city also announced that it will completely cease running its highly popular free trolley service. It would have been better to pursue the extra parking tax perhaps another year or two from now, and to continue the trolley service at a surcharge of $1 per person (kids ride free, etc) for a little bit longer. Ultimately I think the city should end this trolley service because it takes business away from established venues (the taxicab industry, CTA, car service, businesses in the loop that would benefit from tourists simply walking by them on the way to their destination, etc), but I don't think suddenly stopping a highly popular service is the way to go about it. |
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Even Blair Kamin is an ardent preservationist, but I wonder if he uses transit? I imagine the downtown garage/lot he parks in must have replaced a century-old treasure. Change starts from the bottom up. |
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I have tried to use mass transit as a primary form of transportation, and the equation simply never works. Even if only one of the above points applied to me, it just wouldn't be feasible. I'm also in the income bracket where I would never be able to pay for parking on a regular basis downtown. In fact, even today I never pay for parking unless I'm carpooling with four people or more. But I can certainly see how the prices are near the tipping point and there will be spill-over - some of this will spill into transit, which would be good, and some of this will spill into people who simply give up on the city. The other thing I can tell you, I interface with contractors and other working class types most every day, and I meet people at least once per week who talk about leaving Chicago due to the high prices of daily living. I just met another one yesterday. You might laugh this off, telling me that they are suburban-minded or not fit for city life, but these are real issues that have real impact. It's far too important, complex, and dynamic to just make some demands based on theoretical ideals and ignore the true dynamics of the situation. I'll grant that these are usually not the people who are paying to park downtown, but some of the downtown people surely feel similarly. The preservation issue is a loaded question, and it's more complex than you make it. But I try to deal with the situation at hand, and the fact at this point in time is that much damage has been done - but aside from strip-malls, I don't see a lot of development happening that strictly caters to automobiles. Most of what's been going on are developments that have a parking component, but I believe most of these would have happened in either case. |
^ I appreciate your argument, Honte, and I want to start off by saying that I was not intending to be smart-alec-ish at all in that post. My point was mostly a conceptual one, not a personal attack.
To the rest of your argument, let me hit you with this: You talk about people who can't afford to live in the city and are considering leaving. It's unfortunate that such a thing is happening, but that clearly is due to a complicated range of factors besides Daley's proposed rush hour parking tax. So I'll leave it at that. Regarding your point about personally travelling to all neighborhoods of the city, that's a separate issue. It has to be emphasized that this is an increased tax on parking within a certain part of downtown during certain hours of the day Monday through Friday. This should not affect Hyde Park, Kenwood, the west side, Lincoln Park, Uptown, yada yada yada. There will be no increase in the cost of parking in these neighborhoods at any time from this particular proposal. The areas that are affected by this tax, ie Chicago's loop and near north side, are some of the most well-served by transit in the North American continent. We all know this--a huge plethora of trains and buses extending perhaps 80 miles out from the core serve this small area. I can see almost NO reason, whether one is a suburbanite or whether he or she lives in the city, one cannot get to Chicago's downtown during rush hour fairly easily without a car. Even if one is poor but still works downtown, how should this affect them? In fact, if this plan is implemented in earnest and such monies indeed are used to fund the CTA, regular transit riders should actually see an improvement in their service. The only exception is the point Mr. D made--people who work at several sites per day. They either have to suck it up or some provisions perhaps can be made for them (ie exemptions, although I'm not sure how this can be implemented). I'd like to close by saying this: I believe that increasing the cost of parking in the core will indirectly preserve existing real estate (to this day, NW University is still clearing historic buildings for parking--so it's not a 1970's problem), increase the value of land, and increase the pressure for development of housing/park-n-ride facilities near transit stops outside of the core. Finally, lets observe this--if you look at the most successful, well-preserved cities of the modern western world, pretty much all of them have an economic arrangement that somehow discourages driving. I'd like to see a major western city in which excellent historic preservation and cheap parking go hand-in-hand. |
^ Yeah, I was mixing the issues a bit by first responding to why I drive at all (which obviously is not something I am proud of), and then trying to relate it back a bit to what you're discussing on the downtown parking. Sorry if that was a touch confusing.
The general point I'm trying to make is that all of these headaches, taxes, etc, make life more complicated for everyone. I see a lot of increasing headache but not a lot of attempts to make life better, so it seems... which is a shallow argument in some regard, disregarding increasing costs of running the city and what-have-you, I'll admit. But that's how most people see it. My job does require quite often that I go downtown and into the surrounding city on the same day. It's a pain in the butt, driving and then parking, taking the el downtown, etc, then having to go back to your car only to sit in traffic - but it's a complexity I'll accept as one of the myriad difficulties of living in a great city. The problem is, most people I know would never put that much effort into it and would very grudgingly just put up, and that is the root of the problem. Are these people lazy, uncreative, even greedy? Probably yes. But unfortunately we need them to keep the city healthy; there are just too many to ignore. It makes me sad to run into people all the time who are literally dreaming of being somewhere else. ____ On the preservation issue, I think you're mixing the two a touch too much. The preservation of older, dense areas of older cities obviously leads to decreased parking and higher costs because they were not built to include parking and preservation generally results in increased values and land costs, driving up development pressure on vacant land etc. It's a pretty simple equation. But would preservation of many communities in western states or newer communities have the same effect? Probably not. Would increasing the cost of parking preserve anything in downtown Chicago? I highly, highly doubt that. It could theoretically reduce the number of stories of buildings being built and reduce the parking podium effect, but I don't think it's going to stop any developer from eventually replacing his building. As I said, I haven't seen much of anything in the core area recently torn down solely for parking. I can think of maybe three or four examples over the last several years, and I think those buildings would, unfortunately, have come down for some other reason if not for parking. |
Wikipedia has a neat little article about congestion pricing here, which I found interesting:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congestion_pricing A great thing for the city to do would be to completely exempt the parking tax for all Hybrid vehicles and motorcycles/scooters |
double post :(
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However, I will say that Metra isn't the model of convenience you make it out to be. The system of rail lines is adequate, but capacity is really starting to be strained on certain lines. The nature of commuter rail places a cap on the total number of riders - 1) since it serves suburban locations, riders usually have to drive to the station and park there 2) since conductors and boarding/exiting passengers need to move through the aisles, riders need to be in a seat. Because of limited quantity of parking spaces at the stations and seats on the train, this basically makes Metra into a kind of lottery. Whoever is able to get to the station early in the morning and happens to live in a far-flung suburb can use Metra (if you live closer in, the train is already full when it gets to you) . If, for whatever reason, you can't get to the station early, and/or you live in a closer suburb, you're out of a parking space or a seat. Staying in your car and driving downtown, then, offers a appealing alternative. Many people have agreed to pay $25 for parking to avoid the stress of waiting in a Metra parking lot for a space to open up, or standing in an aisle all the way downtown. If you raise that price of parking, then these people are liable to simply give up on downtown and find a job somewhere in the suburbs. The "dangerous neighborhoods" point is valid, although it applies more to city dwellers using the CTA. Getting in your car, safely stored in your alley garage, and driving downtown seems a lot safer than walking a distance through this dangerous area to a train or bus stop and waiting for that train/bus to come, then dealing with the dangers that present themselves once you're on the train or bus. Many people who live in dangerous neighborhoods can't afford to park downtown and so they will take CTA anyway, but if any of them could afford this price, then they would drive. Again, the Metra schedule at off-peak times is inconvenient and the hassles of parking at off-peak times are terrible. As for packages and purchases - have you ever returned on Metra from a shopping trip with lots of bags and boxes? You set the parcels down on the seat beside you, but as the train fills up, the conductor orders you to carry all that stuff in your lap to make way for another passenger to sit next to you. Or even worse, on CTA, where somebody could easily swipe one of your bags while you were looking the other way? Throwing the stuff in your trunk and driving starts to look appealing. I realize that I sound like a typical suburbanite here, but think about this rationally. When transit offers so many drawbacks and very few advantages besides price, why would I choose transit? (In fact, transit isn't even cost-effective for people traveling in groups.) The only reason I would choose it is either out of a sense of environmental responsibility or out of sheer habit. Refusing to add capacity to the transit system while making driving more expensive only makes downtown itself less attractive, and increases the attractiveness of places where driving is unfettered, i.e. the suburbs. |
4 track service is now in effect on the brown line. Belmont opened both SB lines this weekend. :o
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In a free, affluent society, it's not generally a successful approach to tell grownups that they're evil for making choices that are rational to them. When your objective is to attract people to a particular place, loudly announcing that they will be punished for coming in a certain way or at certain times of day is a very curious market strategy. |
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The problem the city's trying to address is congestion, which is partially caused by too many people trying to get down, so I don't think that they really need to attract people to the loop. The strategy is to take the people who are already coming downtown, and to try and convince them to cause less stress on the system. There is enough demand where even if some of those people choose not to come downtown, it won't have much impact, and they can be replaced by people who want to come downtown but don't because of the current situation. |
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In short, there's nothing wrong with 100,000 people driving for 100,000 different reasons - but they should be prepared to pay the full cost of their decision. |
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I walk from the Red Line every day to Wells street and have seen maybe one of these people doing their job, once. It should piss everyone off that our taxes go to pay for these things. So rather than charge people extra to drive, why don't we look at the system in place now and make a few changes so that it works the way it was intended. |
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ummm the part I highlighted lol
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I see an incredible amount of incompetence in the TMA workers... and laziness. In their defense, they are usually in the middle of the intersection, but that's only half the battle.
Most of the time, I stop at the light or stop sign anyway, just because they are motioning so carelessly, it's almost impossible to know what they're directing you to do. Other times, they are joking with one another, or so completely disorganized that you get mixed signals. Then when you are confused about whom to obey, they just yell at you and make themselves feel powerful. It's pretty bad. |
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It does have a drawback. You come up to an intersection, your crosswalk signal is 'Go' and just about the time you get around the thick crowd of slow walking out of towners and get ready to cross, you get a bloody earful from Susie yellow jacket because she decided to clear the turning lane of traffic. On paper, it sounds great. Rely on human judgment to handle the situation, but it's like screaming 'Good dog' to a puppy while you simultaneously beat his ass with a rolled up Trib. I'm not complaining really. It just took some time to catch on to watch Susie first before the crosswalk guy. |
^ if you ever hit an out of towner crossing the cross walk, at least you can blame the TMA and the inability to manage traffic. lol
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One thought I had is that they could control the lights at their intersection. Let's say they had a device that could shorten or lengthen a light in a given direction and the corresponding walk signal. Not total control, mind you, but enough so that if, say, a lot of cars were backed up trying to turn, they could lengthen the light and shorten the walk signal. Something tells me that operating such a device would be a nightmare in practice, though. Especially with the quality of employees the TMA seems to hire... Taft |
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Rather than TMA staff, I'd rather the city spend some of the infrastructure dough to: 1) put in left turn signals at many of the incredible multitude of intersections where there are currently none, and thus approximately 1-2 cars can turn left in each light cycle, 2) install loops in the roadway to perform the task you suggest (tweaking signal timing in real time depending on traffic volume). Chicago's dearth of both of these is fairly striking when compared to most other cities' traffic control systems. They make a huge difference - when Houston's intelligent traffic systems broke down after the hurricane, much of the city was in gridlock during peak times, whereas otherwise traffic generally flows smoothly. (Not that I wish Chicago to be Houston, I'm just using the anecdote to point out that intelligent signalization should receive more attention in this town, particularly out in the neighborhoods). |
I have seen the TMA people completely fail, but they are usually helping IMO especially on Michigan during rush hour. The biggest problem is the stupid tourists walking like a heard of buffalo and paying no attention whatsoever to the walk signals. When they do that and block traffic a TMA person usually quickly responds and makes them stop.
Also, the other thing that makes them very handy is when vehicles (especially busses) break down they come and wave all the busses that would normally just sit there until they realized the other bus is broken around the obstructing vehicle... |
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Agreed on all counts. They do control the signals quite often around Sox Park and it usually seems pointless. Why is there not a greater push toward improving the technological aspects of the road system? Are the things you mentioned being discussed? Technology seems important when it generates revenue (red light cameras and fancy parking meter machines) but otherwise it must have no purpose. |
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People can make it work, our lifestyles aren't set in stone. It's time to get over ourselves and stop forcing our rigid routines onto overly burdened transportation infrastructure. Given time, the market may ultimately correct some of these problems (more parking built around Metra stations, supermarkets built near the stations to accommodate the growing number of riders driving home from them, etc) |
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Side note, though, when talking about people on Michigan there appear to be three distinct categories: workers like me - slightly aggresive/focued and all of that, tourists ... meandering/clueless/having a ball, and then Michigan Avenue ladies ... who are brilliant. Chanel and stilettos in 8 inches of snow and the way they move through a crowd is poetry. I love them. |
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You keep talking about some sort of rush-hour congestion pricing. That's not what the mayor is proposing. In fact, I'm at a loss as to how such a thing could be implemented in Chicago. He's proposing an indiscriminate punishment of people who park downtown. |
From what I understand, this fee would only be levied on people who park their cars downtown during the morning rush. Almost all garages now have electronic ticketing systems, which record entry time. If the entry time falls within the morning peak period (say, 6-9:30) then the fee will be added to the price the driver pays as they exit.
Parking during evening rush hour is a different ballgame, since obviously one would be driving in the countervailing direction and parking in a garage that is emptying out. One would assume these people are either downtown for leisure purposes, or they are working at night. However, these drivers still add to congestion, since reverse-commuters returning to the city cause traffic congestion going inbound as well. My sense is that the evening congestion fee would be much less than the morning fee, considering a) transit is optimized for getting people OUT of downtown in the evening, making it a poor alternative, and b) punishing leisure visitors to downtown seems to run counter to the ever-increasing appeal of downtown as an entertainment destination. Incentive plans like this that aim to alter behavior always have side effects. It's impossible to predict the side effects of this one, but this might foster the creation of private park'n'ride lots near CTA stations close to downtown, on the less-crowded lines. For example, near the Western-Forest Park station on the Blue Line, or the Halsted station on the Orange Line. The cost of parking in these neighborhoods in a lot plus CTA fare plus time spent on the train is bound to be less than the congestion fee which, knowing the boneheaded planners at City Hall, will be steep. (Actually, why haven't private park'n'ride lots sprouted up already?) By the way, nice choice of the Heritage Corridor, the lightest-used of all 11 Metra lines with a whopping 6 trains per day, to illustrate your point. ANY other Metra line would have a more robust schedule that could accommodate your parent-of-sick-child scenario. Of course, it would be great if Mom could work in a suburban office park just 20 minutes away from her child's school, right? Working downtown has its drawbacks for suburbanites, including a long trip home no matter what time of day or mode of transportation is chosen. |
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As far as the parking goes, I'm pretty skeptical of the claim that would-be Metra users are discouraged by a dearth of parking around their suburban train stations. I know firsthand this couldn't be further from the truth along the Union Pacific North Line, for example. Especially in this economy, I doubt the "inconveniences" of standing or brushing shoulders with the hoi polloi are enough to deter someone from sticking with their downtown job. God knows if triple-figure salaried North Shore businessmen are able to do it the rest of us shouldn't have a hard time, either. The "dangerous neighborhoods" argument is not valid and I'm so shocked to see any kind of defense of this antiquated and borderline racist superstition that I almost think merely acknowledging it lends it more credence than its due. But suffice it to say, you're more likely to encounter danger on the road than danger on the sidewalk, unless of course the danger is careening from the road onto the sidewalk. You know, the shopping thing reminds me of my mom's situation. She currently drives an SUV despite repeated pleas from me and my brother to trade it in for a more compact, fuel efficient vehicle. Her constant refrain is that she needs the space for the one or two times a year when the items she's transporting are so large or numerous they wouldn't fit in a trunk. It seems like an awfully flimsy defense of continuing to drive something so wasteful and costly, especially when alternatives (renting a van, asking a friend for help, etc.) abound. The shopping thing is analogous. And I would venture to guess the kind of people who are making these large trips so frequently as to render the alternatives too inconvenient probably wouldn't even bat an eye at a five or six or ten dollar increase in parking. |
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And, TUP, you hit the nail on the head about lifestyle change. A huge element of our society has been lulled into a sense of entitlement. For the majority of Chicago drivers, viable alternatives exist. It's just a matter of change, which is always hard. But it's worth remembering that as rosy a perception some people have about the car's place in downtown Chicago, it does not come without its own set of costs: great personal expense, gridlock, accidents, pollution and tons and tons and tons of tax dollars to keep the system afloat. |
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NYC has express trains, where are the CTA's (purple line excluded, because it really the brown line after Belmont)? The Bus system in the town is horrible. I have read all the posts, from everyone who is on both sides of this issue and the truth is that people have the right to drive if they want to. Until the city fixes the problems that it has, it shouldn't look to create a new system of taxing its people, that will in all reality end up being just as broken as what we have now. Fix what you have Mayor Daley, and if or when that doesn't work, then look for alternatives. |
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I'd also like to remind you that absolutely none of this came out of the blue. Ever since the BRT plan was first announced several months ago, it was made known that the program was going to go hand-in-hand with increased peak hour parking fees. |
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Once again, in the current environment in which State and Federal money (at the behest of our elected officials) underfund transit year after year, I can think of no better suitable source to fund transit than the drivers themselves. That's right--decade after decade drivers have hidden behind their elected officials, getting them to do the dirty work to somehow subsidize their highways at the expense of trains. But now Daley is getting rid of the middle man--he's reaching directly into your pockets to get that money. It's about friggin time.. |
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I rarely drive into the loop durning the week, but when I decide to make the 7.5 mile trip, it usually takes me about 35 minutes. Conversely that same trip via the CTA takes an hour! Can you do that math? 7.5 miles in one hour, averages 7.5 miles an hour. I might be better off jogging on some days... Again, I blame Daley because while I have 5, count them 5 freaking parks within two blocks of my house, I still have to deal with crappy public transportation. Sure part of the problem is from G-Rod (asshole), and his seniors ride for free crap, but Daley and his other pet projects to help make the city "nicer" to live in are a waste of money. That money is what should pay for updated CTA/Metra service. Let me ask you how smart it is to update the Brown Line so that it can utilize 8 car trains now instead of 6 car trains. This isn't going to speed up the time it takes to get to the loop by more than 5 minutes. Instead, they should have started working on express lines or something else. My point in all of this is that Daley and whoever else is running the show should fix what they have before forcing others to pay for their short falls. |
topix.net
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And I live off the brown line. During rush hour, the brown line trains would become so congested that they had problems getting people on and off the train as people tried to pack more in. This slowed the line at every stop. For the most part, it is much better now with 8 car trains. If there was one project in the city that needed to be done, it was improving the brown line service. And don’t even bring up ridership. All riders at Belmont and Fullerton are counted towards red line ridership when the reality is it’s likely 60/40. |
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Currently, my commute takes me from the Diversey stop (Wellington is closed) to the Merchandise Mart stop on the brown line. I can count on one hand the number of times in the last year where my commute takes longer than 30 minutes, door-to-door (that includes 10 minutes of walking). Compare that to a much-less-reliable driving commute which, door-to-door takes me anywhere from 15 minutes to 40 minutes (an hour and a half in a snow storm...yikes!). If I do drive, the time of my commute matters much more, as do weather conditions. Sure, it is more comfortable, but the higher cost (about 10 bucks a day, if I get a monthly parking permit, 12-15 if I don't) and the variable travel time just aren't worth it to me. The brown line rehabbing certainly wasn't perfect (train delays and packed trains during construction, value engineering at the stops, etc.), but the effects of having 8 trains on the brown line during rush hour are very noticeable. Trains are much easier to get on during rush hour and the entire commute seems to move much more smoothly. As a regular brown line rider, I see the improvements as very necessary and a very wise allocation of resources. That said, I realize that not all commutes on the CTA are as convenient as my own. Buses can be much less reliable and a commute from a far-flung stop on any line to the heart of the loop *does* take a long time. Express trains might help that, but at what cost? And aren't the myriad of Metra lines already serving a similar purpose? Everyone likes to play Monday morning quarterback, but do you REALLY know the best places to use the CTA's dwindling cash? Taft |
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Now, if everyone were to eliminate their cars and walk along the street, that might be fine. If we take the Jane Jacobs fantasy even further, so that every porch has a grandma sitting on it reading a romance novel and a shotgun by her side, that would be even better. |
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And while driving may be a right, it is also an overly subsidized luxury shouldered, as I detailed above, by many people who choose to exercise their right to an alternative mode of transportation that gets pittances by comparison, and an artifact of collusion between unduly influential auto/real estate lobbies and defense officials who thought a decentralized population stood greater chance of surviving an A-bomb. |
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