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New Paradigms to Address Southwest Floridas Mobility Challenges

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Innovative highway investments will be key to addressing these problems. Congestion could strangle Southwest ... Not just ambulances, not just heart attacks ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Paradigms to Address Southwest Floridas Mobility Challenges


1
New Paradigms to Address Southwest Floridas
Mobility Challenges
  • by
  • Robert W. Poole, Jr.
  • Director of Transportation Studies,
  • Reason Foundation
  • www.reason.org/transportation

2
Congestion is a huge national problem
  • Congestion threatens to strangle our urban areas.
  • Transit can help, but is not the answer.
  • Innovative highway investments will be key to
    addressing these problems.

3
Congestion could strangle Southwest Floridabut
its a solvable problem
  • Under current plans, congestion will get
    worseand the cost of congestion is far more than
    you think.
  • Expanding highway capacity is essentialbut can
    also facilitate better transit.
  • The benefits of this approach are far greater
    than the costs.

4
Lee Countys congestion picture
  • Travel time index now 1.18 nearly 50 higher
    than average for small urban areas.
  • Projected TTI in 2030 1.36, same as Tampa
    today worse than Orlando today (1.30).
  • Annual congestion cost now 46 million, 2.7
    million hours of delay.
  • By 2030, cost would be several times higher.

5
Congestion hurts all kinds of businesses (1)
  • Deliveryfrom pizza to parcels
  • Wasted gas
  • Paying people to sit in traffic
  • Cement business
  • Sat deliveries. Pay overtime

6
Congestion hurts all kinds of businesses (2)
  • Blue collar
  • Plumber
  • Landscaper
  • Air conditioning repairman

7
Congestion hurts all kinds of businesses (3)
  • White collar
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salesman
  • Staffing headaches
  • High Tech
  • Accounting

8
Congestion Shrinks the Pie
Your Job Choices
Your Potential Partner
Your Customers
9
Congestion slows emergency care
  • 67,000 deaths from savable cardiac arrest.
  • 6 min.
  • Not just ambulances, not just heart attacks

10
True national cost of congestion much higher than
usual estimates
  • Jack Wells, chief economist, US DOT
  • TTIs time/fuel cost, 86 cities63.1B
  • Add other cities of 50K 12.8
  • Add productivity losses 38.0
  • Add unreliability 38.0
  • Add cargo delays 3.8
  • Safety environmental costs 12.8
  • Total annual cost 168.3B
  • (More than 2.5X TTIs 63B figure)

11
Lee Co. transportation planning is better than
most
  • Pioneer in value pricing (on bridges)
  • Have invested in capacity nearly matching growth
    (past 2 decades)
  • Plan to continue doing so . . . but problems
    loom
  • Serious lack of freeway/expressway lanes
  • Inadequate, overburdened arterials
  • 4 billion funding shortfall thru 2030

12
Why the transit/smart growth model doesnt reduce
much congestion
  • Southwest Floridas density is far too low for
    transit to be viable for most trips.
  • Jobs are increasingly in the suburbs, not the
    central business district.
  • Most commuting today is suburb-to-suburb (see
    Commuting in America III).

13
Comparative population densities in 46
metropolitan areas
14
Transit mode share vs. density
15
How do we reduce congestion?
  • Incident-related congestion (about half)
  • Faster response and clearance of incidents
  • Video cameras, telecommunications
  • Freeway service patrols
  • Legal changes
  • Better management of work zones

16
Recurrent congestion (about half)
  • Better system management operations
  • Ramp metering on freeways
  • Arterial signal timing
  • Bottleneck removal
  • More lane capacity

17
More capacity does reduce congestion
18
Where can we add new capacity?
  • Go outwiden existing roadways
  • Go upadd elevated lanes above existing freeway
  • Go underbored tunnels under sensitive areas
    (e.g., for missing links)
  • Re-use untraditional ROW for new routes
  • Rail lines
  • Flood plains
  • Power line corridors

19
Tampas elevated express toll lanes
20
Elevated Tollway with Sound Tube (Melbourne)
21
Rail ROW for LAX-to-Downtown Express Toll/BRT
Lanes
22
Express Toll Lanes
  • Variable pricing
  • Keeps traffic moving
  • 65mph vs 20mph
  • Electronic Toll Collection
  • 50 greater throughput at rush-hour
  • Popular
  • Equitable

23
Priced Lane Projects, 2008
24
Synergy of priced lanes and Bus Rapid Transit
(BRT)
  • Value-priced lane is virtual equivalent of an
    exclusive fixed guideway.
  • Pricing limits vehicle flow to whats compatible
    with LOS C conditions.
  • Reliable high speed is sustainable long-term,
    thanks to pricing.
  • Houston implementing first such project on Katy
    Freeway managed lanes.

25
Advantages of rubber-tire transit in 21st-century
metro areas
  • Can use all of existing highway infrastructure
  • Highway system is a network, with many network
    benefits
  • Links every origin to every destination
  • Much greater potential for single-vehicle trips,
    nearly door-to-door
  • Less vulnerable to breakdowns, damagelike the
    Internet, can route around trouble
  • Can adapt and change as land uses change.

26
Network benefits
  • Network of priced lanes facilitates region-wide
    express bus/BRT service.
  • But that means construction of new lanes and
    flyovers.
  • Hence, toll revenues needed for major capital
    costs.

27
Applying these ideas to Lee County
  • Add more capacity
  • Express toll lanes on I-75
  • Express lanes/queue jumps on major arterials
  • Improve system operations
  • Ramp meters on I-75
  • More signal timing
  • Better incident response (cameras and service
    patrols)

28
Increase transportation funding
  • Toll new lanes on I-75 and on major arterials,
    wherever possible.
  • Bond toll revenues, to raise up-front sums for
    construction.
  • Consider area pricing, countywide.
  • Look into other funding sources (local-option gas
    tax, transportation sales tax, etc.).

29
Improveproject delivery
  • Mega-projects (e.g., express toll networks) are
    costly and high-risk.
  • Could we afford a Big Dig fiasco in Southwest
    Florida?
  • New alternative can raise large sums and shift
    risk to private players.

30
Long-term concession model
  • Private sector finances, designs, builds,
    operates, and maintains for long period (e.g. 50
    years).
  • Used for decades in Spain, Italy, France,
    Australia.
  • Used for existing US toll roads (Chicago Skyway,
    Indiana Toll Road).
  • Now being used for major new projects in Texas,
    Virginia and Florida (Miami port tunnel, I-595
    express lanes, Jacksonville beltway).

31
Advantages of long-term toll road concessions
  • Large-scale source of new highway funding
  • New capacity in place many years sooner
  • Faster project delivery
  • Transfers construction risk and revenue risk to
    investors
  • Changes design incentives
  • Design it to be buildable.
  • Design it for lowest life-cycle cost.
  • Dont cut corners.

32
Concessions can raise more funding from a given
toll revenue stream
  • Traditional toll agency finance
  • 30-year tax-exempt bonds
  • Stringent coverage ratios
  • Global toll finance model
  • Equity
  • Bank loans
  • Taxable long-term debt
  • Depreciation benefits

33
Federal encouragement via SAFETEA-LU
  • Companies in PPP deals can now use tax-exempt
    toll revenue bonds, same as state toll agencies
  • Two pilot programs for building/rebuilding
    Interstates with tolls
  • Continuation of Value Pricing Pilot Program (15
    states)
  • New Express Toll Lanes pilot program (15
    projects, any state)
  • No limits on converting HOV to HOT
  • TIFIA and SEP-15.

34
Conclusion
  • Congestion is not a scientific mystery, nor is
    it an uncontrollable force. Congestion results
    from poor policy choices and a failure to
    separate solutions that are effective from those
    that are not.
  • Norman Mineta, Secretary of Transportation,
    2001-2006

35
Addressing South Floridas Mobility Crisis
  • by
  • Robert W. Poole, Jr.
  • Director of Transportation Studies,
  • Reason Foundation
  • www.reason.org/transportation
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