Why would you build a billion-dollar bridge and include a 19th century transit solution?
St. Petersburg, Fl
Opinion by: E. Eugene Webb PhD
Author: In Search of Robin, So You Want to Blog.
The light-rail lobby is once again poking its nose
around the Tampa Bay area with FDOT, including a light-rail path on the
proposed new Howard Franklin bridge.
The problem is light rail is a last century technology,
environmentally inefficient and single purpose limited.
For example, take emergency evacuation. Quoting from
Sharon Clavert from Eye on Tampa Bay: Drain the Regional "Swamp" Before Its Filled. “Expensive
rail systems must shut down days before an approaching hurricane or major
storm. Trains can do nothing to help any evacuation effort in Tampa Bay and it
takes days or a week or longer after the storm for trains to come back in
service.
Evacuation routes must be considered with any proposed mobility solution in Tampa Bay. If taxpayer big bucks are being spent on transportation in Tampa Bay, it better include accommodating evacuations.”
Evacuation routes must be considered with any proposed mobility solution in Tampa Bay. If taxpayer big bucks are being spent on transportation in Tampa Bay, it better include accommodating evacuations.”
Would you ride a train across the bay if a storm was coming?
A rail track is a rail track and nothing, but a train can run
on it. We will pour millions into a single purpose, decades old, high-cost solution.
Another solution is well along in
development – The Autonomous bus. Check
out Aarian Marshall, Transportation: DON'T LOOK
NOW, BUT EVEN BUSES ARE GOING AUTONOMOUS.
And by Andre J Hawkings, This
adorable driverless bus will soon be making stops at the University of Michigan
A lane or lanes on the new Howard Franklin dedicated to
autonomous mass transit vehicles would not only look into the future it would
also provide flexibility in those moments when we need it most such as the ever-increasing
need for evacuation.
Dedicated roadways and autonomous vehicles make a lot
more sense than dedicated rail paths. They allow for more flexibility, Uber
like pickup, smaller stations, less
taking of private property, lower overall cost and upkeep. As technology morphs
the dedicated roadway can adapt much more easily and inexpensively to new
advances.
In the longer view, dedicated interstate and secondary
road lanes for autonomous mass transit would meet the salivating needs of the
relators and developers who put so much value in transit-oriented redevelopment.
Let’s not waste the opportunity to solve the Tampa Bay
Public Transit problem by taking a big leap into the past and build a bridge
with a rail line that will usually be empty when we drive across the bay in our
electric cars and automated vehicles while costing a fortune to operate and
maintain.
I for one do not want to drive over the “new” Howard
Franklin bridge and look out the window of my self driving electric car at
rusted rails and dilapidated semaphore signals.
E-mail Doc at mail to: dr.gwebb@yahoo.com or send me a Facebook (E. Eugene Webb) Friend request. Be sure
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See Doc's Photo
Gallery at Bay Post Photos.
Disclosures:
Contributor to Rick Baker for Mayor
Campaign
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