I just created this graph for the wikipedia article on the
Effects of the automobile on societies. (It's based on a similar graph in the book Transportation for Livable Cities By Vukan R. Vuchic, a great read for anyone interested in sustainable development.) The article still needs a lot of work, but I wanted to share what I added today.
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Sales tax can be bad, but gas tax is a must. It's too low and not paying for the highways as it is let alone all of the other problems cars cause. These problems really hit the poor more, you should see the asthma rates in the Bronx-- it's awful.
And eveyone ends up paying for the highways, even those without cars.
Ditto for parking lots. We need to get rid for the laws that force busineses to build them. Eveyone pays for that too in higher prices and urban sprawl that forces more people to drive.
As for urban planning, making the cities more affordable to live would be a great idea, I just don't think our current law makers really give a damn about that.In general this is true, but there are exceptions. We're building a lot of public housing in New York these days, and it's not the old kind, but rather income integrated, so it won't isolaote people ( ... )
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I rode the bus one summer to take classes - to save gas and parking money. It was cost effective, but I get summers off so the 1and a half to get there and 2 hours home (including the waits for the bus) wasnt an issue.
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I tried to put a thin little hairline in there, but the cost per-person, per-ride are literally so small that on this scale they vanish.
2) Same question for social costs and rail.
Ditto.
3) The out-of pocket sections for auto should include depreciation on the vehicle, insurance and maintenance.
There are captured in the below the line costs called "indirect user costs" -- I guess some people think about these things when they get ready to use a car, but there's a lot of evidence that people only really consider the direct cost of gas.
4) Time. I commute 45 miles a day. On good run, it takes me about 45 minutes. On a bad run, about an hour. I have often thought a high speed rail would be great up the corridor I drive. Today I calculated it out and realized that a rail system would probably not save me time and, in fact, would cost me more time unless I parked a car at the other end. Time may not be ( ... )
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Frankly, I get sick of being the only one doing the back and forth and I wish others would jump in and say something, but perhaps they rightly realize that it's pointless.
What do you think?
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