In the 1995 hit film French Kiss, actress Meg
Ryan said she preferred to get around as nature
intended: in my car. Though rarely stated so
explicitly, this attitude sums up the typical
Americans approach to travel.
As anyone living in the Washington metropolitan area can
attest, the result of this view is a commuting nightmare.
Northern Virginia alone has more than 1.4 million cars,
which an AAA mid-Atlantic spokesman recently described as
a transportation crisis that robs people
of hours every day they could spend with their
families but now have to spend behind the wheel.
The impact goes beyond gridlock. Fairfax County is ranked
12th-worst in the nation for air pollution. Alexandria,
and Arlington, Prince William, and Stafford counties
likewise received failing grades. The
Baltimore-Washington area is ranked 7th-worst in the country.
Though everyone agrees that something should be done,
there is little consensus. Environmentalists even joined
Republicans in opposing a 2002 transportation referendum
in Virginia, indicating the failed vision of current
political leaders.
This impasse can be broken, but it will require
the regions voters and lawmakers to ask themselves
some tough questions about personal travel. The first is:
do people have a right to roads? More important, is
transportation even a government problem, and might
government involvement actually be contributing to the
mess?
To suggest that driving is not a right comes as a shock
to most people. A free person has the right to
travel, but this does not include a corollary
obligation on the part of anyone to provide the means to
do so. Americans have the right to free speech, but not a
right to a government-funded newspaper service.
Since travel does not morally require government
intervention, the second issue is easier to understand.
Like food, computers, housing, and the many other goods
and services that Americans enjoy in abundance, roads
should be built and maintained by the private sector
for profit.
Legislators in Richmond and Annapolis should consider
selling existing roads in the metropolitan area to
private owners, and leave future road projects to be
negotiated between roadbuilders and area landowners. This
would have immediate and unexpected positive
consequences.
First, gridlock would very likely become a thing of past.
At present, the use of roads is effectively
socialized, with everyone paying virtually
the same amount for the roads despite how often or when
he drives. Like any other publicly owned commodity,
overuse becomes the norm.
Profit-minded road owners, however, would want traffic to
move smoothly to avoid losing paying customers. During
peak travel times, the price for driving could go up to
reflect increased demand, essentially pricing large
numbers of potential drivers out of the market, freeing
up road space, and cutting down on traffic jams. Fewer
cars would also mean less automobile pollution and
better air quality.
The rising price of travel would undoubtedly increase the
popularity of mass transit systems, as well. People will
still need to travel, but Metro rail and bus services
would appear much more attractive. Carpooling, too, would
gain popularity to offset rising driving costs, and
bicycle paths could be further developed. Walking might even make a comeback! In addition, urban
sprawl might be slowed as
demand for more localized housing escalated to avoid
expensive commutes.
Northern Virginia and the surrounding area would not be
the first to experiment with pricing mechanisms to
control traffic. Both London and Singapore have
implemented pricing systems that charge additional fees
to enter specific high-congestion districts at peak
times. Increasing the number of toll roads and high-occupancy
lanes is another popular idea.
Unfortunately, such solutions are really
window dressing. Over the next few years, the number of
cars in Fairfax County alone is expected to rise by 15
percent. A profit-driven approach would offer meaningful,
lasting alternatives.
With government in charge, nothing is likely to change
at least not for the better. The issue is
politicized, so competing interests
constantly jockey for control to impose their view on
everyone else. Passionate factions form, making progress
nearly impossible. Meanwhile, the traffic snarls continue
and commuter tempers rise.
Instead, local commuters should begin taking individual
responsibility for their use of travel resources. Road
users shouldnt be forced to subsidize rail travel,
and passenger-rail advocates shouldnt have to pay for
roads to be built.
Highways in the Washington-area could run smoothly and
efficiently, Metro could (finally) turn a profit, and air
quality in the region could radically improve, and all
without any tax hikes or political battles. Private roads
are the route forward. All thats needed is the
political will; the free market will show us the way.
Scott McPherson is a policy advisor at The Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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