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 Home > Opinion > Story

Published - Thursday, May 08, 2008

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Editorial: Eight-lane highway drains infrastructure dollars, encourages sprawl

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Lawmakers in Racine and Kenosha counties want to expand 35 miles of Interstate 94 from Mitchell Field to the Illinois border from six to eight lanes.

Here’s a better idea: Encourage people in Racine and Kenosha counties to live closer to their places of employment.

It’s estimated that adding one lane in each direction would increase the cost of the I-94 repair/resurface project from $1.7 billion to $1.9 billion. As a percentage of the project, $200 million may not sound like much, but $200 million could certainly fill a lot of potholes around the state. But the expansion from six to eight lanes suffers from a more fundamental flaw -- the idea that society can pave its way out of congestion problems.

There’s little doubt that urban highways are congested. The problem, however, isn’t more people; the problem is an explosive increase in total miles driven. From 1974 to 2004, total vehicle miles of travel in Wisconsin more than doubled, while Wisconsin’s population increased just 21 percent during that same period. The conclusion is obvious: discretionary driving has rapidly outpaced population growth. Included in those discretionary miles are longer and longer workplace commutes.

Why should Wisconsin divert $200 million in precious infrastructure dollars to subsidize excessively long commutes to work? An eight-lane highway will simply encourage more residential sprawl and eventually lead lawmakers to demand that I-94 be expanded to 10 lanes.

For all the allegations that Wisconsin is neglecting its highways, numerous expressways and freeways have been completed in the past 10 years. Most Wisconsin cities are now connected by four-lane, limited-access highways, and major four-lane projects connecting Dubuque to Green Bay, Green Bay to Menomonie, Appleton to Stevens Point and Chippewa Falls to Superior are complete or almost complete. It’s difficult to conceive of any new highway expansion project that’s needed at this time.

It is, however, easy to conceive of roads that need to be maintained, patched and repaired. That must be the focus of infrastructure spending, and it can be done with the same Department of Transportation budget that exists now. The new motto at the DOT -- and in the state Legislature -- should be “maintenance first.” It makes sense for the environment, and it makes sense for taxpayers.
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Taxpayer wrote on May 9, 2008 11:42 AM:

" I hope the governor and state legislators read your editorial - its right on the mark. "

Taxpayer wrote on May 9, 2008 11:28 AM:

" Best editorial that I have read on the transportation topic in many years!! I hope our legislators and the governor are reading this. "

Mr. Logic wrote on May 8, 2008 4:26 PM:

" I think the high gas prices will alleviate any need for larger roads, and it will nearly put an end to urban sprawl. Who in their right mind would want to live far from work when gas prices reach 6.00 - 8.00/gallon, after we attack Iran? "


The comments above are from readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Tomah Journal.

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