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 Home > Opinion > Story

Published - Tuesday, July 01, 2008

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Column: Blame for high gas prices? Count the stoplights

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In 1977, when my family arrived in Baraboo, the community (including West Baraboo) had three stoplights.

In 1978, it added a fourth, and it stayed at four for roughly the next dozen years.

Today, Baraboo and West Baraboo have 10 stoplights. That doesn’t include the three stoplights on Highway 12 between Baraboo and Lake Delton, none of which existed 20 years ago.

All those new stoplights might explain the high price of gasoline.

Today, a gallon of gasoline costs more in both absolute and inflation-adjusted terms than ever before. Most of us seem perplexed by this, as though $1 per gallon is the natural price of gas and anything above that can only be explained by collusion and manipulation.

Sorry, but the real explanation is simple: accelerated consumption of a finite resource. Until very recently, Americans were putting more miles on their automobiles than ever before, and we were doing it with bigger vehicles than ever before (you just weren’t a real man unless you drove a big honkin’ pickup truck or SUV). In Wisconsin, for example, “vehicle miles traveled” have risen five times faster than population growth over the past three decades.

Just so readers don’t think I’m cherry picking stoplight data (Baraboo lies on the fringe of a tourist area), consider Tomah. In 1978, when I made my first trip to Tomah as a member of the Baraboo High School tennis squad, Tomah had two stoplights. When I began working for the Tomah Journal in 1987, it had four. The city now has seven, including the one at the I-94 bridge.

Or how about Necedah? Here’s a community of 880 people that recently installed stoplights at its main downtown intersection because mere stop signs could no longer effectively regulate traffic.

These aren’t communities experiencing explosive growth like Miami, Austin, Phoenix or Las Vegas -- these are central Wisconsin communities that are losing population relative to the rest of the country but still must contend with a substantial increase in traffic flow. Even slow-growth areas are clogged by more cars.

It’s hard to be optimistic about gas prices falling any time soon. The rest of the world has long envied America’s hyper-mobility and wants to consume petroleum just like we do. Even worse, nearly all the easy-to-get oil has either been discovered or extracted. While there may be as much as two centuries of oil left in the ground, much of it lies deep under the ocean, under frozen wastelands or locked inside of rocks. To paraphrase Greg Easterbrook from eight years ago, the era of oil isn’t over, but the era of cheap oil has come to an end.

It almost certainly means less consumption, but is that such a horrible thing? Would it be so terrible if we just turned the clock back to, say, 1988 in terms of vehicle miles driven? Has all this time we’ve spent in our vehicles made us any richer or any happier, or has it increased congestion and scarred once beautiful landscapes with the blight of exurban sprawl?

We don’t need a revival of the horse-and-buggy era to maintain a reasonable lifestyle that allows for a modest level of mobility. How about the days when four stoplights were sufficient to get traffic through Baraboo and Tomah? That’s not austerity; that’s sanity.

Steve Rundio is the Perspective Page Editor of Tomah Newspapers.
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REre four way stop wrote on Jul 6, 2008 3:25 PM:

" I got it. Just was venting on lack of driving skills. Tired of everyone staring at one another at 4-way stops. Maybe they could ask the person on the cell phone call they are on. "

re four way stop wrote on Jul 3, 2008 7:11 PM:

" I think this went swish over your head. The need for lights mean more cars and trucks and more consumtion. Means more urban living and developement not anything about having lights or stop signs. "

Four-way stop wrote on Jul 2, 2008 10:59 PM:

" Stoplights are a result of more traffic. So something has to control it. If you are suggesting the use of four way stops I would ask you to watch the next the time your at a busy inersection being controlled by a four way stop. Most the people don't know who has the right of way, others wait too long, others go regardless if the have the right of way. It would be a mess "

Brian wrote on Jul 1, 2008 3:57 PM:

" I'm stunned! I actually agree with Chris King when he says, "Everything is Bush's fault." By invading a country that did not attack us, Bush removed Iraqi supply from the market and our army's needs increased demand big time. Cut supply and increase demand, voila, prices shoot up. India and China also help with demand. So does the steep decline in the dollar in international trade. This is caused by the staggering deficits run up when Bush and his cronies thought it was peachy keen to have a war and institute tax cuts at the same time. If I recall, when Bush grabbed office, he inherited a surplus (remember Al Gore and the "locked box" for surplus social security funds?) Under Bush's reckless fiscal policies, our gas and good prices have soared, incomes are stagnant, and housing prices are in "free fall" in many areas of the country. Even Republican banking head Alan Greenspan has admitted that the Iraq war was all about oil. Chris claims that oil has "only recently started hitting record prices." Wrong. When Bush took office, the average price of a gallon of gas was $1.39. It has been a continual increase over several years fueled by international growth and international uncertainty about supply, caused in large part by the neocons love of war. It is easy for Chris to forget when his head is buried in the sand of right wing talking points. "

Chris King wrote on Jul 1, 2008 2:39 PM:

" Bring the troops home, save on gas, abandon a people to genocide and terrorist influence, and provide for the loss of a war that we can win with the right resolve...yeah, good idea! Yes, folks all of the world's problems would reverse themselves and the world would be at peace if only Bush didn't attack Iraq. Everything is Bush's fault, everything!

The war in Iraq actually has very little to do with current oil prices. The predominant factor is the rise of demand in China and India. If it were because of Iraq, why did oil only recently start hitting record prices, 4 or 5 years into the occupation of Iraq?

If the sole reason for high gas prices was the war in Iraq, I would be willing to make that sacrifice, but that is not the only reason, or even the dominant reason. "

Bring the Troops Home and Save on Gas wrote on Jul 1, 2008 12:00 PM:

" The policies of President Bush are more to blame for high prices than the number of stop lights between Baraboo and Tomah. Before the war, Iraq sold 4 million barrels a day to the world market. That oil completely disappeared for several years and has yet to reach pre-war levels. On top of that, Public Radio reported this morning that the military burns 1.5 million barrels each day in Iraq. Bring the troops home and oil prices will decline. It is quicker than drilling off-shore and will allow stability to return to the monopolistic oil market...an instability caused by our unnecessary war in Iraq. "

Brian wrote on Jun 30, 2008 4:18 PM:

" Society certainly can go backwards. Look what has occurred during the last 8 years of conservative Republican government. "

Chris King wrote on Jun 30, 2008 12:51 PM:

" How do you intend to limit mobility, while continuing to grow an economy? I don't think attempting to live in 1988 is going to solve our problems.

When alternative fuels are developed, while increasing oil production in the short term, driving more will not be a problem. With the alternatives we will be able to go farther on less coin, with less use of non-renewable resources.

Society can not go backwards, but industry and invention, driven by consumer demand, with the right incentives (tax breaks and grants) will find a way forward! "


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

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