Tag Archive for: No More Highways

Project Location 101-92 Interchange

Opposition Grows to San Mateo Highway Widening

Almost a year ago, Transform signed on to a letter opposing a project to build new highway lanes connecting State Route 92 from the San Mateo Bridge to Highway 101. The project — first proposed in 2016 by the San Mateo County Transportation Authority (SMCTA), City/County Association of Governments of San Mateo County (C/CAG), and Caltrans — recently gained powerful new opponents: the San Mateo City Council.

Building a movement against new lanes, one project at a time

The 101/92 connector project is particularly fraught because it would require taking more than 30 properties by eminent domain, including public parks. Bus service across the San Mateo Bridge was discontinued during the pandemic and hasn’t been restored; making more space for cars instead of resuming suspended transit service is the wrong approach.

Advocates have been building a movement against this project, and it paid off at a recent City Council meeting, where Streetsblog SF reported that there was overwhelming public comment in opposition to the new connector, with no one speaking in favor.

Members of the San Mateo City Council criticized the project for prioritizing car travel over other forms of transportation and contributing to the pollution burden in the affected communities. The highway expansion would come at the expense of homes, including senior housing, and public parks that provide recreational space for children. 

Transform is working with our allies to encourage planners, engineers, agency staff, and elected leaders to look beyond highways for solutions to local and regional transportation issues. Building new highway miles in a time of accelerating climate crisis is effectively pouring gasoline on a burning building. Change is hard, but we believe there are transportation and housing options that will work better for everyone while mitigating climate change.

Our budget should reflect our values

The enormous expenditure required for even a few miles of new highway could be more productively spent. For example, civic leaders could use the expected $300 million price tag for this highway expansion to restart the transbay public transit service or build workforce housing on the Peninsula, so workers aren’t forced into long commutes by high housing prices.

The San Mateo City Council will write a letter requesting that the involved agencies redirect the funds to projects that will truly benefit the community. In the face of such strong opposition from both residents, advocates, and elected officials, we hope SMCTA, C/CAG, and Caltrans will scrap this project. 

Read the letter:

The Illogic Behind the Drive to Widen Highways

If you’ve lived in the East Bay long enough to remember I-80 before Caltrans added lanes, you know that the congestion now is…about the same as it was before the new lanes. Only, now more cars and trucks inch along, producing more greenhouse gas emissions and deepening the climate crisis.

The failure of this particular highway widening to achieve its stated goal of relieving congestion is no surprise. Engineers have known for decades that wider roads lead to more driving — induced demand — that soon erases any gains from the additional capacity. But knowing and acting on that knowledge are two different things. New “congestion relief” projects on I-680 near Walnut Creek, US 101 along the Peninsula and Highway 37 in the North Bay will throw more money and resources into additional lanes, providing temporary congestion relief while worsening climate change and air pollution. So it’s worth taking a deeper dive into highway widening, the science behind induced demand, and effective solutions to traffic congestion.

Why doesn’t widening relieve congestion?

Induced demand is the concept that if you build more road capacity, more people will drive until congestion reaches the same levels as before you widened the roadway. UCLA postdoc Amy Lee, in a recent interview with Yale Climate Connections, said her research shows that what she calls “induced travel” brings congestion back to pre-widening levels in five to 10 years.

Several factors lead to induced demand. With less congestion initially after a highway is widened, existing drivers make more frequent trips and travel at peak hours when congestion is the worst. Additionally, people who would have traveled by other modes, such as walking, biking, or public transit, shift to driving. A wider highway could encourage developers to build more housing or businesses to locate jobs in far-flung suburbs because the commute appears short enough. And studies show that wider highways don’t shift traffic from other roads; they lead to more driving overall.

So induced demand leads to more driving and more vehicle miles traveled (VMT), which slowly ratchets congestion back up, at which point the solution is to…add even more lanes?

Highway widening to reduce congestion seems logical on its face. If 1,000 cars an hour want to move through a section of roadway that can only handle 500 cars per hour, the extra traffic will cause backups that slow everyone down. If you widen the highway so it has a capacity of 1,000 cars an hour, traffic flows freely, and the problem is solved.

Then drivers see traffic flowing freely, and some who previously avoided the congested section decide to drive on it. Before long, the traffic exceeds the capacity of the highway. Versions of this scenario have been repeated multiple times throughout the United States since the advent of driving.

We can push our bloated highways to their maximum width, funneling more people into single-occupant vehicles and worsening the climate catastrophe California has committed to ameliorate. Or we can accept that highway widening isn’t a truly viable solution for traffic congestion. Instead of waiting until we’ve paved every possible square foot of land, we could look in a different direction now.

Solving for climate and congestion

The solution to our congested roadways is twofold: internalize the true cost of driving and provide better alternatives. The all-lane tolling and road user charge options currently being studied by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and piloted at the California Transportation Commission would make driving more expensive in a way that drivers will feel directly, as opposed to the costs of gas, insurance, maintenance, and parking, which people often discount when they’re calculating the economics of their commutes. Any revenue generated from pricing could be reinvested in driving alternatives and discount programs that lessen the burden for lower-income people who still need to drive.

Offering viable alternatives to driving also relieves congestion. Riding a BART train through the tunnel under the bay is faster than driving across the bridge, and passengers don’t have to pay for parking at their destinations. For transit to be an appealing option, however, it needs to be frequent and reliable. When trains or buses come every few minutes, people know they can show up at the station or stop and hop on. If there are long gaps between trips, taking the bus could add significant travel time, making driving more appealing. People — especially vulnerable passengers such as women, people of color, and seniors — also need to feel safe taking transit. Reliable, frequent buses and trains contribute to safety.

Instead of planning for new highway widening projects that take years to design and build, cost millions of dollars, and don’t solve congestion, California should be focusing on providing better transit, walking, and biking options for all.

A longer-term solution that’s equally critical is to reverse the sprawl that highway widening facilitates and build affordable, dense infill housing near transit, jobs, schools, and community amenities. Rather than forcing low-income residents farther and farther to the edges of the Bay Area, infill development reduces commute times and saves money. BART is moving forward with transit-oriented developments on top of several stations in the East Bay. The regional housing bond measure Transform championed in 2024 would allow many shovel-ready affordable housing projects to break ground; it was pulled from the November ballot, but we hope it comes to voters soon. 

Building more compact neighborhoods and cities is a long-term project but a necessary one. Housing policy can have as big an impact on climate as transportation. Combined with fees or tolls to reduce VMT and enhanced public transit, these solutions will create healthier, more appealing neighborhoods instead of inhospitable cement wastelands of ever-widening highways.

Transform and Allies Call Out Plan to Streamline Highway 37 Widening

In late August, Transform joined with 24 environmental, transportation, and other advocacy organizations to send a letter to California Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire opposing a plan to amend a 2023 law. The law provided special streamlining privileges under California’s endangered species laws to certain clean energy and water infrastructure projects. This year’s amendment would have extended those special streamlining privileges to a project to widen State Route 37 between Vallejo and State Route 121 in Sonoma County, which will have significant impacts on a sensitive salt marsh habitat. 

SR 37 does often experience traffic congestion, but decades of research and lived experience have proven that adding lanes does not solve congestion. And, at its core, the proposal to widen the highway is the wrong solution to a very complicated but completely different problem.

How to drown $500 million

The project to add lanes to SR 37 is described as “interim.” That’s because the $500 million the state proposes spending to add capacity to this highway segment, which is right at sea level and is regularly inundated during king tides, will likely be underwater due to climate change within 15 years. The long-term proposal is to raise the roadbed to accommodate future sea level rise, a much more expensive and involved undertaking.

The irony of building additional lanes that will increase driving, thus increasing greenhouse gas emissions, on a roadway that is likely to be submerged by climate change appears to be lost on planners.

Real problems—real solutions

The reason for the congestion on SR 37 is rooted in economics as much as transportation policy. Sonoma County has a dearth of affordable housing, so many of the people who work in its vineyards and tourist industry live in more affordable communities in Solano County. Those workers must drive to their jobs in Sonoma County towns and cities because of a lack of public transportation options.

Widening the highway is an acceptance of an unacceptable status quo, where working-class people are forced into long, expensive commutes.

The solution is two-fold. Sonoma County must build more housing, particularly more affordable housing, so employees have the opportunity to live closer to their places of work. This is a long-term project that won’t be easy, but it’s essential.

The second solution is to provide more frequent and reliable transit options between Solano and Sonoma cities. This could be accomplished fairly quickly. In our letter, we recommend tolling on the existing lanes of SR 37. The revenue this generates could support expanded public transportation. The tolling scheme could be designed to minimize the cost to low-income households and would cost substantially less than $500 million to implement. 

Over the long term, passenger rail is planned for this corridor to connect to the Capitol Corridor service between Sacramento and the Bay Area, which will provide another alternative to driving in the future.

Facing the realities of climate change

Highway expansion should no longer be a default solution to congestion. In congested corridors like Highway 37, widening will only serve to increase driving and ultimately worsen congestion. Choosing to invest in alternative solutions will not be easy; California has entrenched administrative structures and industries built around expanding highways, so change must include just transitions for workers and businesses. 

But, despite the challenge, we must change the way we think about transportation planning. Our freeway mentality has driven us to the brink of climate catastrophe. A future focused on infill housing development, housing affordability, and a broad array of low- and no-carbon transportation options is the only way to move toward a more stable and liveable planet.

Read the full letter.

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