Return to Virginia Business - November 2003

Virginia Ideas

Are tolls the answer? First, let us get all the issues on the table

by Ed Risse
For Virginia Business
November 2003

"Fixing Interstate 81" in the October in the Virginia Business is a well-presented story but only addresses a fragment of the picture. In an examination of the ways to "fix" Interstate 81, adding asphalt is at most only one quarter of the story. Mobility in the urban corridor composed of five subregions between Bristol and Winchester is far too important to be just a roadway expansion story.

Here are additional points that any coverage of mobility and access in the corridor should address:

Every decision about reducing congestion on I-81 must consider the alternatives to the unsustainable, dead-end scenario of more and more trucks and asphalt. The first option, of course, is to shift freight "from roads to rail." Rail is far more efficient and should include roll-on-roll-off and piggyback service to every community in the corridor's multiple subregions. There are a number of stakeholders who champion roads-to-rail on grounds of energy consumption, noise, safety and environmental impact.

To be competitive from a business perspective, Virginia must give the same subsidy per-ton mile to rail as it does to roadways and let competition determine the balance. Speaking of competition, shifting transport demand from roads to rail is exactly what the commonwealth's major competitors for high-value, inter-regional goods and services are doing.

Freight is not the only thing that should go via rail-or in shared vehicles. Critical agglomerations of passenger trips under 10 miles and those going between 30 and 500 miles should have shared-vehicle and/or rail alternatives.

While we are on the topic of moving people and lowering congestion in the corridor, the transport system should come to the rescue of citizens who now must "resort to a vehicle" to gain access because there is no comprehensive pedestrian system. Yes, that is right: A pedestrian network will reduce vehicle travel, including vehicle travel on I-81.

There are many good reasons to develop non-vehicle systems beyond health and energy consumption. Viable subregional tourism in the corridor cannot be based on driving a private vehicle from attraction to attraction, venue to venue or facility to facility. Such a strategy violates the laws of physics and economics. When private vehicles are relied on, just when the volume of tourism approaches the break-even point, the system crashes. Take a close look at Lancaster County, Pa., for a stunning example of this reality.

Successful tourism is based on visitors walking, biking, riding or floating for a day, weekend, week or more in places that offer a range of housing, services, recreation and amenity. Look at successful Urbanside or Countryside tourism anywhere in the First World. As luck would have it, many of the Urbansides in the Bristol-Winchester urban corridor are home to colleges and universities which are great places to anchor pedestrian systems.

Roadways, railways and pedestrian systems are still only half the story about reducing congestion on the I-81 and in the Bristol to Winchester corridor.
No story about transport and mobility is complete that does not address the other side of the coin: the human settlement pattern (aka, pattern and density of land use) that generates the demand for travel in the first place.

There may be a need for more asphalt on I-81 and other roadways, but more asphalt alone will only make matters worse. This is a matter of physics, not policy, politics or lobby group posturing.
The Bristol to Winchester corridor must evolve into functional subregions made up of Balanced Communities. "Balance" here means a balance of jobs/housing/services/recreation/amenity in every village and community in every subregion. Opening the story with an example of someone using I-81 to get to work illuminates the core of the problem.

The urban corridor from Bristol to Winchester is composed of five +/- subregions. Most are subregions of the Appalachian Urban Support Region. For this reason, the balance required within the subregions and within the communities and villages (aka, towns) is a relative balance. However, this synergistic distribution of activities must be far closer to a comprehensive balance of jobs/housing/services/recreation/ amenity than now exists.
When the idea for an "Interstate" system was first hatched following World War I (yes, WW I not WW II), it was called the "Interregional" system. We should still think of it that way because it is not possible to build an interregional system that is also a major intra-urban system. Belief that such a system is possible is a variant of the Private Vehicle Mobility Myth that is:

Citizens can live wherever they can afford a house, work wherever they can find a job, and seek services and recreation where they want. Further, having made these choices, it is possible for government to provide a mobility system so citizens can go wherever they want, whenever they want to travel and arrive in a timely manner.

The rolling disaster that is I-81 demonstrates the futility of believing this myth or the parallel one about entrepreneurs being able to open a business wherever they choose and expect the government... You get the idea.

The cover of the October issue asks the question: "Are Tolls the Answer?" They are part of one aspect of the answer. Tolls are a way to start to level the playing field. Not just tolls but variable, smart tolls. Tolls should not just pay for more asphalt; they should help create a balanced transport system to serve a balanced distribution of land uses.

There are other issues that are important but no review of "fixing" I-81 should omit the important topics covered here. They may be new to some but that is because of the abject failure of the Commonwealth of Virginia to create a real transportation agency that focuses on mobility and access. A real transport strategy will only emerge when citizens demand this fundamental change. The reason that many governance practitioners are pleased with the status quo is that many of their supporters at the top of the economic and political food chain are making a lot of money from business-as-usual. The ones who suffer are those residents who have to use I-81 and the other congested roadways in the state.

Ed Risse, AICP, is the principal of SYNERGY/Planning Inc., in Fauquier County.

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