by Timo » Fri 27 Apr 2012, 16:48:54
I find this thread oddly entertaining, reading about planning and forethought and the public good.......... As one who entered the profession specifically to improve the future for the lot of us, i can tell you all in no uncertain terms that "common sense" is extremely uncommon. Personal liberties trumps the common good. Private property rights trumps insightful preparation for known and expected disasters. In some cases, sure, the individuals rights should prevail against unwanted and unnecessary public intrusion. There are lots of examples where public projects are carried out for all the wrong reasons. BUT, the broader public assumes, then, based on only a few of these examples, that ALL public projects are evil and wasteful, and they demand legislation that specifically prohibits governments from considering the much larger purpose of serving the public good, under any circumstances. One umbrella does not fit all. As an unfortunate example of this description, on Monday, i sat in a meeting of our local MPO (that uses fed$$ for transportation projects), and a City Council member asked what the payback period was for installing GPS tracking devices on our local busses so users could track them on-line to know where they were relative to the bus stop. This council member then proceeded to ask what the payback period was for CNG busses, then bus shelters for patrons, then even the planning for future bus services at all. His expectation was that PT is a business and it should make money. Someone in the room (a planner) returned the question to ask him what the payback period was for an arterial road, then a collector, then a residential street, then a sewer line. The Council member was forced to realize that not everything governments do can, or should be run as a business. Some government functions serve the public, for the public good, and they are paid for by the public through taxes. Without these services, our very civilization would be unrecognizable. Now, not every city has the same needs or abilities. Melbourne may have a fantastic PT system. However, Auckland, for example, does not. Auckland is built on a series of old dormant volcanoes with lots of naturally occuring variations in the shoreline, making for a very large number of peninsulas that have been developed for their 2 million(?) people. It would be physically impossible to attach all of the various parts of Auckland via light rail, above or below ground. Well, if possible at all, it would cost billions in any currency. Point being, again, one umbrella does not cover every situation. Characterizing one problem or one solution as the panacea for all is counterproductive. As far as $9/gal gas is concerned, the only way to know for sure is to see it in the rear view mirror.