Four new City Councilors |
There are other, even better gladiatorial notions too! |
Lucky with the personal chauffeur service! |
A note about drinking and driving - but maybe we need also to talk more about the way we have a monoculture of autoism that makes it difficult not just to get home after you've clearly had too many, but also makes it problematic if you've just had a pleasant amount with dinner at a restaurant or with friends. Impairment comes at low levels and blowing .08 isn't actually all that difficult. At the threshold levels you won't swerve and weave dramatically, but your reaction time is just slowed enough that if something bad happens while you are driving, the odds of catastrophe are magnified - and you will meet the legal threshold for a DUI.
The column about a brewery adventure by bike never saw print! |
Aside from the new crop of Councilors, and our detour on the big party, only one minor note of interest here.
Why on Church? |
Mission obviously needs to be configured for bike lanes, so that part is no mystery.
Not at all on Council agenda, but relevant here, the Hospital's propaganda machine is trying to rebrand the project as "the Church Street Property." They have a new website. The new name should be resisted! We should continue to call it "the Blind School property" at least until the debate, controversy, and legal maneuvering is done. And maybe still afterwards. Once Howard Hall is gone, retaining the name will be an important way of remembering history. Calling it the "Church Street Property" erases that history - like airbrushing and photoshopping people out of photographs - or gratuitously cutting down old trees.
Notes on the current Blind School plan |
- It's all parking lot, really.
- Next to the two red arrows are two small buildings. That's it.
- The arrows and b/w inset photo suggest that the building footprints may extend below high water for the 1964 flood. Buildings might better be scootched up to higher ground on the parcel's benchland.
- The tree canopy coverage is an illusion, representing what it might look like in 20 years or so. The tree crowns represent maturity. The site will be super bare and asphalty for a more than a decade.
Since there's a light Council agenda, let's talk about transportation funding and the Legislature.
Friday there was a note about jockeying for a big transportation package in this year's session. The headline said "new roads, bridges," but there wasn't enough talk about maintenance vs. new.
Over at a new periodical and think tank on cities, City Observatory, economist and critic of the CRC Joe Cortright has a number of wise things to say about transportation funding. He says
- Don’t tax houses to subsidize cars
- End socialism for private car storage in the public right of way
- Reward behavior that makes the transportation system work better for everyone
- Prioritize maintenance
- Don’t play “bait and switch” by bonding revenue to pay for shiny, big projects
- Promote fairness through the “user pays” principle
- Don’t buy the phony safety card
- Don’t write off the gas tax yet
Update, Sunday
Here's a very pleasant thought!
A revenue-neutral gas tax hike is a serious proposal |
7 comments:
Can you tell us how the Cortright article applies to the proposed streetlight fee? I don't get it.
This seemed like a wholly uncontroversial claim.
Nevertheless, here's an answer.
In at least in two broad ways it applies: To the extent that streetlighting is part of the transportation system, the general points about funding the transportation system seem relevant (some more than others, of course). Also, in the last iteration of the fee, as i understand it there was a component that was going specifically to street maintenance.
The City's own slide deck called it "Proposed Options for Funding Streetlights and Neighborhood Street Maintenance." The charts were all about the gas tax and transportation revenue.
Your question is a bit baffling, so maybe you're coming at it from a totally different angle? I'm sorry for the confusion.
Added Krauthammer column on gas tax this morning - might circle back to it once the State and US Legislatures get going on transportation funding again.
SBOB, there is a new proposal for a streetlight fee. It was presented by a City staffer at my neighborhood association meeting in December. It is no longer for street maintenance, just streetlights, but it frees up state gas tax money that the city gets so that it could be used for street maintenance. The fee would be billed with our water bills. It still has the same problem as the last proposal of being very regressive. For example, the rates for all single family residential properties are the same ($2.80 a month) and the rate for all commercial buildings of any size are less than 5 times that ($13.50 a month).
Thanks!
Has the City published a document with the details? I haven't seen one yet, so your details were new, though I had heard that the City was going around talking to folks again.
But I don't see how a change in the proposal alters how the Cortright bit does or does not apply.
For example, the proposal you cite still doesn't score very well on #1 "Don’t tax houses to subsidize cars."
Items #2, #3, #6, and #8 also look especially relevant in scoring the proposed fee.
Here's a quote in the Cortright piece - "We ought to structure our user fee system to encourage...car-free modes of transportation, and provide a financial reward to those who drive less. The problem with a flat-household fee or an income tax is it provides no incentive for people to change their behavior in a way that creates benefits for everyone."
Seems relevant.
He also says "But for something like transportation (as with water rates, sewer rates, or parking meter charges), fairness is best achieved by tying the cost to the amount of use, or what economists call the “benefit principle.” Charges tied to use are fair for two important reasons: higher income people tend to use (in this case, drive) more than others, and therefore will end up paying more. Also, charges tied to use enable people to lower the amount they pay by changing their behavior."
That's the progressive structure you're looking for, isn't it?
Anyway, it seemed like there was lots in the Cortright piece that was relevant to Salem's streetlight fee concepts.
The major complaint to the streetlight fee - as discussed at our December SCAN meeting - seemed to be that businesses were not paying a large enough share. But before I could agree with that conclusion, I'd like to understand what our streetlights are for. Are they for the roads, so that people can drive places at night? Or are they for pedestrians, so that they can travel at night?
Last time I checked, cars have headlights and don't need streetlights to get somewhere in the dark. And stores that are open at night tend to solve their own lighting needs. People want to be outraged that Walmart, Home Depot, Lancaster Mall, and other large businesses aren't being asked to pay more, but why should they? Just because they can? It seems to me like those businesses don't benefit much from streetlights. I would argue that those businesses should be paying much more in system development charges since those businesses depend on their customers travelling by car. And those SDSs should be a lot larger than any amount of money brought in by a street light fee!
I'm certainly not going to solve this issue in the comments section here, but we as a city should step back and try to describe the benefit that streetlights provide, and then describe who benefits. Just suggesting that businesses pay more because they can might be progressive, but I'm not sure it is fair.
Good questions!
The working theory is probably here in the SCI Report linked to at the city's streetlight page. It says:
"Salem’s streetlights represent a pure public good, from which all residents and businesses derive indistinguishable utility."
-and-
"According to economic theory, streetlighting is a pure public good. The use of a streetlight by one individual does not preclude another’s use (it is non-rival), nor is it possible to limit the benefits to only those individuals who have paid for them (it is non-excludable) When individuals cannot be prevented from enjoying the benefits of a good, there is little incentive for private provision. Consequently, the provision of streetlighting falls within the scope of city government."
Citations are deleted from these passages, and I don't know if the sources cited would say that roads are also "pure public goods" or if they would say, as we hold here, that roads are not pure public goods and that motorized vehicles and their drivers derive the most utility from them.
At any rate, the theory here does not draw a strong connection between road users and street lighting.
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