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Topic: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...

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847badgerfan

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #196 on: March 17, 2021, 06:24:16 PM »
Here too, but the population probably went up 40% in November (Covid spike!!).
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MrNubbz

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #197 on: March 17, 2021, 08:12:47 PM »
Major changes in our lives over the next decade

So you're saying the Browns bring home the bacon for the 1st time in almost 60 yrs?
"Let us endeavor so to live - that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." - Mark Twain

betarhoalphadelta

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #198 on: March 17, 2021, 08:19:30 PM »
Major changes in our lives over the next decade

So you're saying the Browns bring home the bacon for the 1st time in almost 60 yrs?
Let's not get crazy.

MrNubbz

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #199 on: March 17, 2021, 08:31:15 PM »
Let's not get crazy.
So you're saying there's still a chance?
"Let us endeavor so to live - that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." - Mark Twain

MaximumSam

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #200 on: March 17, 2021, 08:39:13 PM »
It all stinks a little too much of social engineering to me. A lot of people continue to CHOOSE to drive their cars because they like it. It's their personal space, it gives them freedom, it avoids having to deal with others' schedules, etc.

It seems like a lot of transit policy is designed to make it artificially painful to drive a car, rather than making transit itself desirable.
I mean, to some degree I suppose it is. But the economics of the situation are what they are.  We build roads, expand roads, build parking lots, code land to ensure parking spaces, while typically neglecting other modes of transportation (walking, biking, mass transit, etc.) What does that get you? Incentive to own a car, definitely. Which means we need more roads and more parking. Things get more spread out, which only gives you more incentive to have a car.  Which leads to...

The other side of the coin is that while cars are expensive, maintenance is fairly cheap. If you have a car, and in many places it's difficult to go without one, the costs differences between public transportation and driving your car are negligible.  For example, I could take the bus route to work, but that would take longer, be more uncomfortable, and much less flexible, all while barely reducing the cost. I still need a car, because while there are some beautiful parks and a giant lake by my house, the only actual store within convenient walking distance is a gas station. It would be pretty dumb of me to actually use the available public transportation.

I find when people are calculating the "economics" of mass transit, they are actually just talking about whether it turns a profit. But that isn't the economics, that's just whether it turns a profit. The economics of the situation also include what we have given up by making cars a near necessity and how much we value that, as well.

OrangeAfroMan

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #201 on: March 17, 2021, 10:52:54 PM »
I don't like that car ownership has such a high floor to it.
You can't get normal financing for cars under around $10K.  So you have to outright purchase a cheap car, realistically for at least $2K.  So someone who is poor and has no savings is kind of stuck.  They can't buy a $8K car and make payments over 60 months (something that they could actually afford and do) and they can't save up $2K to outright purchase a car.
So hours/days/years of their lives are spent waiting at bus stops.  Riding buses.  Walking.  Riding the damned light rail.  Only able to look for a better-paying job nearby or along bus routes, etc.  It's shitty.
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Poor people pay more than rich people do for the same item, when it cannot be purchased outright.  They take longer to buy it and thus, it costs them more. 
Poor people's time is the saddest part of what they sacrifice.  It's not the lack of pretty green grass or HP under the hood or even respect.  It's time.  They're forced to take 3 hours to do what a car-owner does in 20 minutes.
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

bayareabadger

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #202 on: March 17, 2021, 11:44:41 PM »
It all stinks a little too much of social engineering to me. A lot of people continue to CHOOSE to drive their cars because they like it. It's their personal space, it gives them freedom, it avoids having to deal with others' schedules, etc.

It seems like a lot of transit policy is designed to make it artificially painful to drive a car, rather than making transit itself desirable.
So, this feels to me, just sort of observing, like it kinda puts all the onus on the idea of transit policy and not very much on the reality of cars.

Traffic and parking problems are a reality of urban living. As much as one might argue public transit is a boondoggle (oft true), wide roads and massive amounts of parking ain't free, especially in some cities. Explaining that someone chooses to drive because they like to do it sort of sets aside the fact that many people choose not to drive when given the option for a litany of reasons. Traffic is unpleasant. Parking in urban centers is expensive. If the choice is to be on someone's schedules or be at the whim of a daily traffic flow, some people like schedules. Some people like the idea that if they get on the 8:15 train, they'll very likely be near their office at 8:50. 

This idea that it's there to "enlighten" folks is hogwash. If it's not there, no one chooses at all. They just suck it up with fewer options. I suppose the argument is “making one choice worse is social engineering” but I don’t understand how we equate fewer options with actually more freedom.

Many moons ago (too many), I had a summer job in the city. Some days I could borrow my parents’ car to drive in. More often, I took public transit. And I sometimes got to choose. The train ride (there were two legs) was about an hour 15. The drive, 45 minutes on a good day, a little longer on a bad day (and worse now). I’d pay about 1/8 of my daily pay to park and still walk up a hill, if there was room in that lot. Otherwise, I could pay $4-$5 more for the garage. Transit was about 60 percent of that cheaper price, without worrying about gas or milage or bumping someone while drowsy at 6:15. Depending on the day and when the shift started, I guessed and made choices. I had choices to make.

I understand there are many issues with rail. It’s often unfeasible, impractical or shortsighted. But I’ve also sat in a hot car for two hours trying to cross Chicago when I timed a drive wrong. This is neither freedom of choice nor is it the joy of operating on my own schedule. And if the El and all those trains stopped existing, Chicago and everywhere else wouldn’t suddenly figure out a way to make that trek easier.

OrangeAfroMan

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #203 on: March 18, 2021, 01:50:45 AM »
Well it's kind of funny.  
We build clusters of 12-story buildings and 40-story buildings and 6-story buildings and surround them with a flat plane of roads.  That's enough in the largely 1-2 story, 2-dimensional suburbs and country.  
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It's a failure of imagination that we haven't built big-city, downtown transportation more 3-dimensionally.  A road AND a subway AND a train AND....something else.  Downtowns should basically have floors of transportation.  You're driving into a big city, at some point, you're faced with stacked roads and you pick a level.  You get closer to the city center and maybe a third level up and/or a tunnel.  
.
It would have been a more intelligent evolution.
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

847badgerfan

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #204 on: March 18, 2021, 07:33:40 AM »
Chicago has some multi-level streets.
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FearlessF

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #205 on: March 18, 2021, 08:41:35 AM »
and trains
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847badgerfan

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #206 on: March 18, 2021, 09:01:29 AM »
Lots of trains. It's actually a pretty good system, when you combine Metra Rail with the L trains and busses. Someone thought that out pretty well.

Metra:



CTA L:



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medinabuckeye1

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #207 on: March 18, 2021, 09:24:48 AM »
Traffic and parking problems are a reality of urban living. As much as one might argue public transit is a boondoggle (oft true), wide roads and massive amounts of parking ain't free, especially in some cities. Explaining that someone chooses to drive because they like to do it sort of sets aside the fact that many people choose not to drive when given the option for a litany of reasons. 
The difference and the complication is that the roads and parking lots are needed first so when they a built it is for current needs and maybe a little overbuilt for projected growth. 

As discussed at length in this thread, public transit needs density to be worthwhile. Until that density is reached, it is highly inefficient. 

That creates another issue. Once the requisite density is reached it is either too late to go back and retrofit light rail or subway onto the existing infrastructure. I shouldn't say "too late", it isn't impossible, just massively expensive. It would be fairly cheap to build a subway or light rail in the middle of nowhere but that would also be useless. It is vastly more expensive to build a subway or light rail in a high density area where it would actually be useful.

Brutus Buckeye

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #208 on: March 18, 2021, 09:54:53 AM »
Lots of cities have multi-level roads, trains, etc. In addition to never travelling internationally, I appears that Fro has not done much domestic travel either.

FearlessF

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Re: Major changes in our lives over the next decade ...
« Reply #209 on: March 18, 2021, 10:10:06 AM »
why does it always have to be about the AfroMan?
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

 

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