The following is an Op-Ed piece written by the Coalition for Transportation Choices' (CTC) Sheila Dormody, who is the Rhode
Island director of Clean Water
Action, and John Flaherty, who is is the director of research and communications for
Grow Smart Rhode Island. The two serve as co-chairs of the CTC.
Dealing with transit issues in Rhode Island is a lot like riding a
bike on a hilly road. To get to the top of each rise is a long haul and a
lot of work. While you are successful in reaching your immediate
objective, you know there are still going to be other hills to climb.
But each one conquered gets you closer to your goal.
That is pretty much the way transit and transportation legislative
efforts played out at this year's session of the General Assembly. The
Coalition for Transportation Choices (CTC), a partnership of 37 diverse
public advocacy groups, achieved two legislative victories at the 2010
session: winning the creation of a Senate Study Commission on
Sustainable Transportation Funding; and legislative support for federal
funding for basic and innovative Rhode Island transportation projects.
One of the remaining hills to climb in the next session of the
General Assembly will be the creation of the Rhode Island Transportation
Trust Fund, which failed to win approval this year. The CTC, along with
more than a dozen advocates for funding alternatives, presented a show
of force at Statehouse hearings and let legislators know this is a
challenge that will not go away.
The Study Commission on Sustainable Transportation Funding will delve
deeper into the funding recommendations from Gov. Donald Carcieri's
2008 Blue Ribbon Panel on Transportation Funding. The report warns about
the dire "consequences of inaction," predicting a continued downward
spiraling of our economy and forfeited opportunities. The report
concludes that "we must act now, for if we do not, the future costs to
rebuild our infrastructure, as well as the cost to our economy, will
only be higher."
The ritual of proposed transit fare increases and reduced service is
once again emerging -- as it is for most transit agencies across the
nation -- because of outdated and unsustainable funding mechanisms.
Continued inaction is simply not an option.
On the bright side, there is a growing recognition by civic and
business leaders that investments in transit and transportation
infrastructure represent a catalytic opportunity to address multiple
pressing issues that affect Rhode Island's economic and environmental
well-being and overall quality of life, as witnessed during the recent
visit to the state by U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.
There are a host of positive ancillary impacts that would accompany
improved transit and transportation planning and funding, including:
· Putting people to work immediately in strengthening Rhode Island's
capacity for efficient and sustainable economic growth.
· Reducing the state's dependence on foreign - and not-so-foreign -
oil, and retaining some of the estimated $1 billion that leaves Rhode
Island annually for oil-producing regions of the world.
· Mitigating climate change -- the transportation sector is the
leading source of greenhouse-gas pollution in the Northeast.
· Stemming the severe and accelerating deterioration of Rhode
Island's roads and bridges, which impedes economic development.
· Exploiting opportunities to more fully leverage and capitalize on
private investments in our urban and town centers, contributing
substantially to their continued revitalization, and reducing the public
subsidy of sprawl and inefficient use of taxpayer dollars.
Rhode Islanders are fortunate that significant planning is already
done or now underway for vastly improving transportation. This includes
the recently completed Metropolitan Transit Enhancement Study, the
Aquidneck Island Transportation Study and a nascent study of
transportation improvements by officials in the densely populated
Blackstone Valley corridor. These studies position the state well to
take advantage of new federal funding opportunities. But they must be
acted on right now to maximize the edge they afford.
Rhode Island is also fortunate to have civic, business and
institutional leaders such as Ed Cooney of Nortek, Dick Spies of Brown
University and Tom Magliocchetti of Rhode Island Hospital, who are
spearheading Providence Mayor David Cicilline's vision for improved
public transit in the Metro Region. GTECH and Blue Cross have given
transit issues a boost with consolidated operations in downtown,
choosing to subsidize bus passes -- instead of parking spaces -- for their
employees.
As a result, nearly 50 percent of Blue Cross employees commute to
work on public transportation.
With the successes of this year's legislative session, Rhode Island
is building momentum for a transportation strategy that will move us to a
more sustainable and shared prosperity. Yet more steep hills remain to
be climbed to change old conventions and achieve a 21stcentury
transportation system for Rhode Island. Dozens of groups and civic
leaders have joined since the CTC began this ride. In the coming year,
the General Assembly will decide whether the state will get on the road
to sustainable transportation.