Return to Virginia Business - September 2003

Letters to the Editor

Road improvements needed for Northern Virginia to remain "liveable"

Road improvements needed for Northern Virginia to remain “liveable”
Virginia’s 800-pound gorilla (a story in Virginia Business’ July issue ) highlighted many valid points about Fairfax County past, present and future.

However, stating as the article does, “Simply paving more roads won’t do much to solve the problems confronting Fairfax or the planned Urban Center” is comparable to writing, “Simply curing cancer won’t solve the world’s complex health problems” or “Simply increasing literacy funding won’t ensure that every Johnny and Janie can read.”

No one suggests that building new roads and bridges and improving existing ones will solve all of Fairfax County’s/Tysons Corner’s problems. However, Tysons Corner, the Capital Beltway, I-66 and other major activity centers and transportation corridors are heavily congested much of the day precisely because highway capacity planned decades ago to accommodate this demand has not been built.

Adding such long-planned capacity will go far to improve mobility and accessibility and make life more livable for the 1.1 million residents projected to live there in the next decade or so.

Put another way, without such improvements Fairfax County and Tysons Corner have no chance of achieving a transportation system that works or continuing to function as “the fiscal engine that powers the state.”

Bob Chase
President
Northern Virginia Transportation Alliance

Virginia Business - September 2003