
Road contruction won't eliminate traffic
congestion in Northern Virginia, according to the Piedmont Environmental Council. |
The
Big Picture
Spending money on road improvements is only part of the solution
to Northern Virginia's conjested traffic and urban sprawl.
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By Robert Burke
A 12-lane-wide Beltway. A new Woodrow Wilson Bridge. Metrorail from West Falls Church to
Dulles International Airport.
By any measure, the current proposals for fixing Northern Virginias traffic
mess are ambitious and expensive. But according to the Transportation Coordinating
Council, the regions top transportation planning group, the $16 billion the state
plans to spend in Northern Virginia isnt enough. Another $11 billion is needed over
the next 20 years but even that amount wont end the congestion.
Even though $16 billion is more money than is available for new transportation projects
statewide for the next 10 years, business groups have begun lobbying for even more highway
improvements, projects they say are essential to the regions economic health.
Theyre also pushing for even bigger plans two new bridges across the Potomac
River into Maryland and new bypasses through countryside to the west and east of
Washington, D.C.
No one is disputing the need to relieve Northern Virginias traffic congestion.
But the high cost of all these plans is creating an opening in the debate for
environmentalists, community activists and those in the business community who want to
change the sprawling development patterns that have defined Northern Virginia for decades.
"The predominant thinking on how to solve traffic congestion is a demonstrated
failure. We cannot build enough lane miles to accommodate all the vehicle trips weve
created by our pattern of land use," says Chris Miller, president of the Piedmont
Environmental Council, a conservation group based in Fauquier County and one of the member
organizations in the Coalition for Smarter Growth. "But the answers are not out of
our reach. Some Virginia businesses already have invested in the solutions right here in
Northern Virginia, and they are the leaders we should look to."
One of the businessmen taking the lead on the issue of smart growth is John B. Adams
Jr., CEO of Spotsylvania Countys Bowman Distilleries and chairman of the Virginia
Manufacturers Association. Last year, he formed the New Dominion Business Council to give
business leaders outside the development industry a way to express their dissatisfaction
with sprawl.
"Were not against growth, but for ordered growth and some sense of what
Virginia is going to look like 30 to 50 years from now," Adams says. "Were
all concerned about this beautiful state. Once its asphalt, its pretty well
asphalt."
Over the past year, the Coalition for Smarter Growth has focused its efforts on
identifying opportunities for cooperation with the business community. Discussions have
taken place with the Prince William Chamber of Commerce, the Reston Chamber of Commerce,
the Greater Washington Board of Trade and other business leaders.
"Our message is an economic message," Miller says. "We are simply trying
to find a more effective, more efficient and more environmentally safe way to grow in the
21st century. To do that, this region needs smart-growth policies and practices that seek
to create communities and connections between those communities in the most efficient ways
possible."
* * *
A critical first step in the right direction is to make better use of the regions
mass transit systems, says Miller and others. Fairfax County, for example, could make its
Metrorail stations more attractive places to build commercial, retail and residential
projects by allowing transit-supported development there. The same is true at stations
along the two lines of the Virginia Railway Express, which extends to Manassas and
Fredericksburg through Fairfax, Prince William and Stafford counties.
The construction of major office, retail and residential centers near public transit
would mean fewer vehicle trips and less clogged highways. "And it wouldnt take
10 years for that to happen, which is the minimum time required for any of these proposed
highway projects," Miller says. "You can rezone land and build buildings a lot
faster than you can plan, finance and build transportation improvements."
The state and local governments also could encourage the recycling of older areas in
the inner suburbs. Arlington County did it with the redevelopment of Wilson Boulevard
along the Ballston to Rosslyn corridor. Once an aging, low-density retail area, the
boulevard is now the countys main commercial corridor with a pedestrian-friendly mix
of office, retail and residential space.
Supporters of new road construction in outer suburbs like Loudoun and Prince William
counties say new highways will be needed there because thats where the majority of
new jobs will be in the future. But urban region designer Ed Risse says that is a myth.
Recent data from the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments predicts that in 2025,
the outer suburbs still will have only a minor share of the metro areas jobs.
"The [vast majority of the regions] jobs are not moving out to Loudoun.
Theyre essentially going to be where they are now."
Companies that do move to the outer suburbs can make life more difficult for their
workers. Look at MCI WorldComs new Loudoun campus and America Onlines new
facility in Prince William. These seem like big catches for the counties, Miller says, but
those corporate location decisions shifted thousands of employees away from areas served
by Metrorail and onto crowded roads.
Glen Besa, director of the Sierra Clubs Virginia chapter, points out that new
road construction in the outer suburbs will drain money away from transportation solutions
in the inner suburbs. And Northern Virginia always has to compete with other regions for
state money. "All this money comes out of the same pot, and it really points out that
were not going to be able to spend ourselves out of this problem."
Nobodys suggesting the counties be left without a commercial tax base. Besa and
others argue that the same community designs and densities that work in urban areas can
work in outer localities as well. Those areas should concentrate their major office,
retail and residential development in mixed-use "town centers" that can be
served by existing and future mass transit.
Stewart Schwartz, executive director of the Coalition for Smarter Growth, says the
outer suburbs should be cautious about supporting transportation improvements such as a
widened Interstate 66. A project like that may offer temporary relief, but the extra
capacity eventually will be eaten up by commuters who buy homes in developments created by
home builders capitalizing on cheaper land.
That caution is fine for less-developed areas, but it doesnt sit well with people
in Fairfax, according to Sharon Bulova, a member of the Fairfax County Board of
Supervisors and the Transportation Coordinating Council. She rankles at criticisms of
Fairfax communities. "I bought a house in a neighborhood of 1,800 homes, all sprawled
out. So for someone to come in and say, Thats all wrong well,
thats not really helpful. Were here, and we like it. Somehow we need to
recognize that we have existing growth patterns that need to be supported by
transportation improvements."
But "transportation improvements alone will not solve the problem," says
Miller. "In fact, the proposed highway improvements supported by political leaders in
Fairfax, such as widening the Beltway, will take far more land and houses than would
redevelopment and infill near Metro stations. While the existing pattern of housing is
part of the problem, what has exacerbated congestion in Fairfax is the poor location of
commercial, retail and community services."
* * *
Changing direction in Northern Virginia will require changing the business of politics,
as well. The development industry has a long record of influence at the General Assembly
in Richmond. And the industry is making a significant push this year to sway
transportation decisions. According to the Virginia Public Access Projects donor
data, the development industry has contributed thousands of dollars to the Northern
Virginia legislators who spent the summer openly backing new public expenditures for
transportation.
The 1999 re-election campaigns of eight Northern Virginia senators and delegates
leading the summer debate were heavily funded by "real estate/construction"
donors, according to VPAP donor data. More than a third of the industrys $360,000
has arrived since early summer. The building industry also poured cash into the New
Majority Project PAC that Gov. Jim Gilmore used to win a Republican majority in the House
of Delegates. Most of that $343,000 was given after he announced his $2.5 billion
transportation proposal in late August.
Though money is a powerful tool in state politics, votes are what count on Election
Day. And growth control supporters feel they have public opinion on their side. A
September Mason-Dixon poll asked the states registered voters whether growth control
or transportation improvements should be given a higher priority in addressing traffic
problems. Sixty-four percent favored controlling growth; 14 percent wanted more money
spent on roads and transit. Voters in Loudoun County, the third-fastest-growing county in
America, expressed that sentiment at the polls Nov. 2 in smart-growth Republican Scott K.
Yorks landslide victory over incumbent Board of Supervisors Chairman Dale Polen
Myers. Prince William County Chairman Kathleen Seefeldt also was replaced by a Republican
opponent who targeted her growth record. And the issue cost Bob Dix his Fairfax County
seat.
But Virginia is still a conservative state, and smart growth proponents have to fend
off criticism that they are trampling on the property rights of people to live where they
choose. "Weve been labeled by the road proponents as trying to deny people
choices, but in fact its quite the opposite," Besa says. "Right now
were all restricted to using a car because theres no other way to get
around."
Adams says that behind the headlines is a real concern about quality of life. "I
think people are really questioning whether this whole thing is worth it," he says.
"Its not always the almighty dollar. What good is the dollar if I dont
have a decent place to live and Im not happy in my life? Whats it all
for?"
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