HIGHWAY BOONDOGGLES 5 Big Projects. Bigger Price Tags. Limited Bene?ts. FIRE HIGHWAY BOONDOGGLES 5 Big Projects. Bigger Price Tags. Limited Benefits. WRITTEN BY: GIDEON WEISSMAN FRONTIER GROUP MATTHEW CASALE U.S. PIRG EDUCATION FUND JUNE 2019 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The authors wish to thank Azhar Chougle of Transit Alliance Miami, Bakeyah Nelson of Air Alliance Houston, Bryn Lindblad of Climate Resolve, Jeff Speck of Speck & Associates LLC, Joe Cortright of City Observatory, Kim Hunter of Southern Environmental Law Center, Maia Hutt of Southern Environmental Law Center, Michelle Cookson of Sunshine Citizens, Ron Burke of Active Transportation Alliance, Emily Rusch of CALPIRG Education Fund, Peter Skopec of WISPIRG Foundation and Charlie Fisher of OSPIRG Foundation for providing review or insights for this report. Thanks also to Tony Dutzik, Jonathan Sundby and Susan Rakov of Frontier Group for editorial support, and Trevor Stankiewicz, formerly of Frontier Group, for work on early drafts of this report. The authors bear responsibility for any factual errors. Policy recommendations are those of U.S. PIRG Education Fund. The views expressed in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of our funders or those who provided review. Project maps included in this report should be considered approximations based on publicly available information and not used for planning purposes. ! 2019 U.S. PIRG Education Fund. Some Rights Reserved. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 3.0 Unported License. To view the terms of this license, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0. 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Layout: Alec Meltzer/meltzerdesign.net Cover: Texas Department of Transportation C   ONTENTS  EXECUTIVE SUMMARY............................................................................................................................... 1 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................................... 5 THE PROBLEM WITH HIGHWAY BOONDOGGLES .................................................................................... 6 HIGHWAY EXPANSIONS ARE EXPENSIVE AND SADDLE STATES WITH DEBT ............................... 6 HIGHWAY EXPANSION DOESN’T SOLVE CONGESTION .................................................................... 8 HIGHWAY EXPANSION DAMAGES THE ENVIRONMENT AND OUR COMMUNITIES ....................... 8 BUILD OR DON’T BUILD? FIVE COMMUNITIES ILLUSTRATE THE CONSEQUENCES ......................... 10 I-275 IN TAMPA: A HIGHWAY WAS CANCELLED AND A COMMUNITY IS THRIVING.................... 10 PORTSMOUTH BYPASS AND CLEVELAND OPPORTUNITY CORRIDOR: BOONDOGGLES PUT OHIO IN A BUDGET HOLE .............................................................................. 11 I-94 NORTH-SOUTH: A CHANGE OF HEART IN WISCONSIN FREES TRANSPORTATION FUNDS........ 11 DALLAS TRINITY PARKWAY: CANCELLING A HIGHWAY CREATED NEW OPPORTUNITY FOR NATURE IN DALLAS .................................................................................................................... 12 ALASKAN WAY VIADUCT: TRAFFIC “DISAPPEARED,” REVEALING AN EXPENSIVE NEW HIGHWAY AS UNNECESSARY .................................................................................................. 13 2019 HIGHWAY BOONDOGGLES ............................................................................................................. 14 “COMPLETE 540,” NORTH CAROLINA ................................................................................................ 15 NORTH HOUSTON HIGHWAY IMPROVEMENT PROJECT, TEXAS .................................................. 17 HIGH DESERT FREEWAY, CALIFORNIA ............................................................................................. 19 INTERSTATE 75, MICHIGAN ............................................................................................................... 20 TRI-STATE TOLLWAY WIDENING, ILLINOIS ...................................................................................... 22 CONNECTING MIAMI PROJECT (I-395/SR836/I-95), FLORIDA ....................................................... 23 I-83 WIDENING, YORK COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA ............................................................................ 24 I-5 ROSE QUARTER WIDENING, OREGON ......................................................................................... 25 INTERSTATE 81, VIRGINIA ................................................................................................................. 27 CONCLUSION .............................................................................................................................................29 APPENDIX: STATUS OF PREVIOUSLY COVERED BOONDOGGLES ........................................................ 30 NOTES ........................................................................................................................................................32 E  XECUTIVE SUMMARY AMERICA’S AGING ROADS AND BRIDGES need fixing. Our car-dependent transportation system is dangerous, harms our communities, and is the nation’s leading source of global warming pollution. And more than ever before, it is clear that America needs to invest in giving people healthier, more sustainable transportation options. Yet year after year, state and local governments propose billions of dollars’ worth of new and expanded highways that often do little to reduce congestion or address real transportation challenges, while diverting scarce funding from infrastructure repairs and key transportation priorities. Highway Boondoggles 5 finds nine new budget-eating highway projects slated to cost a total of $25 billion that will harm communities and the environment, while likely failing to achieve meaningful transportation goals. ◦ From 2008 to 2015, the highway debt of state transportation agencies nearly doubled, from $111 billion to $217 billion.1 ◦ New roadway is expensive to maintain, and represents a lasting financial burden. The average lane mile costs $24,000 per year to keep in a state of good repair.2 • Highway expansion doesn’t solve congestion. ◦ Highway expansion costs transportation agencies billions of dollars, driving them further into debt, while failing to address our long-term transportation challenges. • Highway expansions are expensive and saddle states with debt. ◦ In 2012, the latest year for which data is available, federal, state and local governments spent $27.2 billion on highway expansion projects – sucking money away from road repair, transit, and other local needs. Expanding a highway sets off a chain reaction of societal decisions that ultimately lead the highway to become congested again – often in only a short time. Since 1980, the nation has added more than 800,000 lane-miles of highway – paving more than 1,500 square miles, an area larger than the state of Rhode Island – and yet congestion today is worse than it was in the early 1980s.3 • Highway expansion damages the environment and our communities. ◦ Highway expansion fuels additional driving that contributes to climate change. In 2017, transportation was the nation’s number one source of global warming pollution. 4 PAGE 1 ◦ • After years of devoting scarce transportation dollars to unnecessary road expansion projects, including the Portsmouth Bypass and Cleveland Opportunity Corridor covered in past reports, Ohio found itself in a deep budget hole. Now, even with new fees and taxes in place, the state is falling billions of dollars short of being able to fix aging roads and adequately fund transit. Highway expansion can also cause irreparable harm to communities – forcing the relocation of homes and businesses, widening “dead zones” alongside highways, severing street connections for pedestrians and cars, and reducing the city’s base of taxable property. A look back at five projects from past reports shows the consequences of following through with boondoggle projects and the benefits of rejecting them. • For years, Wisconsin’s reckless highway spending strained the state budget. But in 2018, then-governor Scott Walker made an about-face, cancelling one “boondoggle” project, and announcing his support for a fix-it-first spending strategy – and dedicating modest new funding for transit and local infrastructure maintenance. • In May 2018, local groups stopped a plan to add toll lanes along I-275 through the neighborhood of Tampa Heights, in Tampa Bay, Florida. Now, the community is thriving, with new restaurants and businesses, and even efforts to reduce traffic capacity on local roads to improve walking and biking. FIGURE ES-1. THE HIGHWAY DEBT OF STATE TRANSPORTATION AGENCIES HAS DOUBLED SINCE 2008 (NOMINAL)5 $250 $200 Billions Highway Debt of State Transportation Agencies $150 $100 $50 PAGE 2 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 $0 • The six-lane Dallas Trinity Parkway would have run alongside the city’s most prominent natural feature, the Trinity River. But local opposition eventually stopped the project – and now Dallas is planning new parks and open spaces for the river corridor, and creating the promise of a greener, healthier and more enjoyable city. • Prior to the closure of Seattle’s old Alaskan Way Viaduct highway, critics suggested that the three-week wait until the opening of an expensive new highway would see horrible commutes and endless traffic jams. Instead, observers were surprised to see most of the traffic simply melt away – a real-life lesson that many urban highways are more disposable than they seem. States continue to spend billions of dollars on new or expanded highways that fail to address real problems with our transportation system and will create new problems for our communities and the environment. Questionable projects poised to absorb billions of scarce transportation dollars include: • Complete 540; North Carolina; $2.2 billion: North Carolina’s plan to complete the southern half of a loop highway around Raleigh would generate sprawl while destroying wetlands and threatening endangered wildlife. • North Houston Highway Improvement Project; Texas; $7+ billion: A massive highway project in Houston would harm communities, displace residents and destroy businesses, while sucking billions of dollars away from important transportation priorities. • High Desert Freeway; California; $8 billion: In stark contrast to California’s efforts to reduce state global warming emissions, L.A. County’s first new highway in 25 years would lead to more driving and more pollution, along with sprawling desert development. • I-75 Widening; Michigan; $1 billion: In a region that has experienced little population growth over the last 20 years, a needless widening project would exacerbate sprawl and harm the communities through which it runs. • Tri-State Tollway Widening; Illinois; $4 billion: The Tri-State Tollway outside Chicago is testament to the fact that you can’t build your way out of congestion. It has been widened twice, and still suffers from heavy traffic. Nevertheless, the Illinois Tollway is still moving forward with a $4 billion expansion project. • “Connecting Miami” Widening Project; Florida; $802 million: Florida is widening I-395 and SR836 in Miami, highways that have long divided communities. Local groups have identified far more promising ways to benefit the neighborhood, including improving transit or even converting I-395 to a street-level boulevard. • I-83 Widening; Pennsylvania; $300 million: A widening project in southern Pennsylvania is being touted as a way to improve traffic flow, but project documents reveal that traffic congestion is not a problem to begin with, and that resources would be far better spent on operational improvements to reduce crashes and improve accident response. • I-5 Rose Quarter Widening; Oregon; $450 million: In Portland, a city that has taken great strides toward more sustainable transportation, an expensive highway project would constitute a step PAGE 3 backward to the car-dependent policies of the past. It would also likely fail to meaningfully improve safety compared with other investment strategies. • Interstate 81 Widening; Virginia; $2.2 billion: Virginia argues an expensive widening project is necessary for safety, yet recently increased speed limits along the route – a move that likely made the road more dangerous. Rather than widening, solely implementing the operational improvements included in the current plan would be a far cheaper and more effective way to improve safety. Federal, state and local governments should stop or downsize unnecessary or low-priority highway projects. Specifically, policy-makers should: • Invest in transportation solutions that reduce the need for costly and disruptive highway expansion projects. Investments in public transportation, changes in land-use policy, road pricing measures, and technological measures PAGE 4 that help drivers avoid peak-time traffic, for example, can often address congestion more cheaply and effectively than highway expansion. • Adopt fix-it-first policies that reorient transportation funding away from newer and wider highways and toward repair of existing roads, bridges and transit systems. • Use the latest transportation data and require full cost-benefit comparisons, including future maintenance needs, to evaluate all proposed new and expanded highways. This includes projects proposed as public-private partnerships. • Give priority funding to transportation projects that reduce growth in vehicle miles traveled, to account for the public health, environmental and climate benefits resulting from reduced driving. • Invest in research and data collection to better track and react to ongoing shifts in how people travel. Introduction FOR THE BETTER PART OF A CENTURY, America has looked toward the car as the primary solution to its transportation challenges – and toward highway expansion as the primary way of dealing with the congestion that inevitably results from automobile dependence. The consequences of this strategy have become increasingly clear to people across the political spectrum. Fiscal conservatives recoil at rising taxes and debt resulting from exorbitant spending on highway expansion projects that deliver few public benefits. Environmentalists, motivated by the increasing urgency of responding to climate change, increasingly see highway expansions as fueling more driving, making the nation’s transportation system – already America’s number one source of carbon pollution – even more polluting. Even commuters, fed decades of promises that the next highway expansion will solve traffic in a way that previous expansions did not, increasingly recognize the futility of highway expansion and clamor for more transportation choices. Yet, when it comes to the spending priorities of local, state and federal transportation agencies, little has changed. State and local governments continue to spend billions each year on highway expansion projects of dubious benefit to the public. For the last five years, U.S. PIRG Education Fund and Frontier Group have released a series of Highway Boondoggles reports identifying tens of billions of dollars’ worth of projects – in every region of the country – that strain transportation budgets, harm the environment, and deliver little in the way of durable public benefits. Today, transportation funding is even more scarce, maintenance and transit needs are even greater, evidence of the failure of highway expansion is even clearer, and global warming is even more urgent than it was when the first Highway Boondoggles report was published in 2014. But there are also signs of change. In some cases – as in examples of cancelled boondoggle projects in Dallas and Milwaukee – high-profile supporters of highway expansion publicly changed their positions. And among the broader public, as has been documented by this and previous reports, the public is subjecting highway expansion projects to more scrutiny. In the first Highway Boondoggles report, we wrote that the “projects highlighted in this report illustrate a problem but also represent an opportunity – the amount of money that can be saved by cutting or downsizing these projects and others like them is more than enough to make a down payment on America’s 21st century transportation needs.”6 Today, that is still true. This report tells the story of communities that, in rejecting highway expansion, embraced promising new possibilities for the future, as well as those that have been burdened, financially and otherwise, by the decision to go through with a major highway project. It also tells the story of nine projects that pose a choice to local and state leaders – a choice between doubling down on the expensive and failed transportation investment practices of the past and making a bold shift in direction toward a more fiscally and environmentally responsible vision of the future. PAGE 5 The Problem with Highway Boondoggles EVERY YEAR, THE UNITED STATES SPENDS billions of dollars expanding our existing highway network. These new highways typically impose financial, social and environmental costs – even as their claimed benefits, such as reduced congestion, often fail to materialize. Highway Expansions Are Expensive and Saddle States with Debt Highway expansion costs the United States tens of billions of dollars each year. In 2012, federal, state and local governments spent $27.2 billion expanding the highway system – including new roads, new bridges and widening of existing highways.7 Those expansion projects absorbed more than one out of every four capital dollars spent on highways in 2012, a lower share than previous years, but still a massive investment. At the same time, the traditional sources of funding for highway programs – gas taxes and other so-called “user fees” – are increasingly failing to keep up. The real value of fuel tax and vehicle tax revenue actually declined between 2000 and 2016, the result of slower growth in driving, more fuel-efficient cars, inflation, and the unwillingness of the federal government and many states to increase gasoline taxes.8 The result has been increased borrowing for highway expenses and a growing dependence on revenue from general funds supplied by taxpayers, regardless of how much or how little they drive. Continued highway expansion amid stagnating gas tax revenues mean that limited funding is available for other transportation needs – including needs that are increasingly urgent in the 21st century. PAGE 6 • Road repairs – As many of the roads and bridges the nation built in the mid20th century near the end of their useful lives, local governments are struggling to meet day-to-day infrastructure maintenance needs and often defer necessary repairs. This has led to a roughly half trillion-dollar backlog of highway and bridge repair and rehabilitation.9 As streets, roads and bridges continue to age, the cost and urgency of maintenance and repairs can only be expected to grow. • Transit repair and expansion – Similarly, the nation faces a nearly $90 billion repair and rehabilitation backlog for its public transportation systems.10 Americans also are increasingly demanding expanded access to public transportation. According to a 2014 ABC News poll, Americans favor transit improvements over road expansion as a solution to congestion by a margin of 54 to 41 percent.11 The desire for transit access is particularly true among millennials. A 2016 poll found that 70 percent of millennials would be willing to pay more for rent or mortgages to live in close proximity to public transit.12 And in November 2016, voters across the country approved $170 billion in new investment in transit on local ballots.13 • Local needs – Local governments also clamor for funding to expand bike lanes, improve conditions for pedestrians, fix potholes, and engage in “complete streets” transformations and other improvements to local streetscapes. Often, these improvements cost just a tiny fraction of the cost of a major highway project, but deliver significant improvements in quality of life and expand the mobility options available to local residents. three constitutional amendments allowed the Texas Department of Transportation to borrow approximately $18 billion over the course of a decade for highway building, while also diverting additional state tax revenue to transportation.16 By the end of 2015, Texas had $29 billion in total highway debt, 30 times more than at the end of 2000 – and is now paying nearly $5 billion each year to service that debt, 90 times more than in 2000.17 In 2014, Texas voters approved Proposition 1, which diverts more than $1 billion per year of state revenue to spending on road construction and maintenance.18 Costly highway expansions also saddle states with debt. High spending for road expansions and other projects, combined with stagnant revenue from gas taxes and other sources, has led to ballooning state highway debt. From 2008 to 2015, the highway debt of state transportation agencies nearly doubled, from $111 billion to $217 billion.14 As a result, the cost to retire old debt has become increasingly steep. In 2016, $14.4 billion or 6.6 percent of all highway spending was spent just to retire old debt, compared to $5.1 billion in 2000.15 Highways built using public-private partnerships (PPPs), in which private companies build roads, often in exchange for the right to raise and collect toll revenue, are sometimes presented to the public as a way to build new highways without Some states have borrowed for highways more aggressively than others. In Texas, FIGURE 1. THE HIGHWAY DEBT OF STATE TRANSPORTATION AGENCIES HAS DOUBLED SINCE 2008 (NOMINAL)23 $250 $200 $150 $100 $50 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 $0 2000 Billions Highway Debt of State Transportation Agencies PAGE 7 public costs.19 Yet while some privatized toll roads do cover their own costs, PPP projects can require new spending when they must be propped up or rescued in cases where tolls do not generate enough revenue to pay off investors or cover costs, as has been the case with State Highway 130 and the Camino Colombia toll road in Texas.20 In deals where the public does not receive fair value for future toll revenues, PPP highways can also result in decreased long-term revenue for the state – resulting in either increased debt, or the need to raise new revenue.21 farther away in pursuit of cheaper housing. Commuters who had left early for work in order to avoid traffic might travel at rush hour once again. People who had taken transit might get back into their cars. This “induced travel” (sometimes referred to as “induced demand”) takes up additional space on highways, ultimately resulting in the return of congestion. This phenomenon is so predictable that it has been called the “Fundamental Law of Road Congestion.”26 The new roadway created by highway expansions is also expensive to maintain, and creates a lasting financial burden. The average lane mile costs $24,000 per year to keep in a state of good repair.22 Highway expansion fuels additional driving that contributes to climate change. Americans drive more per capita – and produce more carbon pollution from transportation per capita – than any major industrialized nation.27 In 2017, transportation was the nation’s number one source of carbon pollution.28 Highway Expansion Doesn’t Solve Congestion Building a new highway or widening an existing one is often billed as a way to reduce traffic congestion. Nearly a century of highway construction in the United States, however, suggests that it does not work. Since 1980, the nation has added more than 800,000 lane-miles of highway – paving more than 1,500 square miles, an area larger than the state of Rhode Island – and yet congestion today is worse than it was in the early 1980s.24 For decades, transportation researchers have understood why building and widening highways does not eliminate congestion.25 Expanding a highway sets off a chain reaction of societal decisions that ultimately lead the highway to become congested again – often in only a short time. Businesses may choose to move or establish new locations on the outskirts of the city in order to take advantage of the new highway. People may choose to move PAGE 8 Highway Expansion Damages the Environment and Our Communities By encouraging more people to take to the roads, highway expansion makes it more difficult for the nation to meet its clean air and greenhouse gas emission reduction goals. In order to achieve the dramatic reductions in carbon pollution needed to prevent the worst impacts of global warming, the United States and the world must promote low-carbon forms of transportation wherever possible. Highway expansion does just the opposite. Highway expansion can also cause irreparable harm to communities – forcing the relocation of homes and businesses, widening “dead zones” alongside highways where street life is unpleasant or impossible, severing street connections for pedestrians and cars, reducing the city’s base of taxable property, and creating noise, pollution and disruption that degrade quality of life. According to former U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx, roughly 1 million Americans were displaced by highway construction during the first 20 years of the Interstate Highway System.29 Many of those who were not displaced found their community life disrupted. A 2006 study found that U.S. cities would have added 8 percent to their population between 1950 and 1990 if urban freeways had not been built, compared to the 17 percent decline that occurred amidst the urban highway boom.30 Such displacement and disruption continues. In Houston, the North Houston Highway Improvement project threatens to displace four houses of worship, two schools, 168 single-family homes, 1,067 multifamily units and 331 businesses with 24,873 employees.31 (See page 17.) PAGE 9 Build or Don’t Build? Five Communities Illustrate the Consequences THE LAST FOUR EDITIONS of Highway Boondoggles have highlighted 41 projects. The following stories take a look back at five of them, showcasing the choices communities face once a boondoggle has been proposed, and the consequences of the decisions they ultimately make. In some cases – like in Ohio, which followed through with two misguided projects – states continued down a road of needless highway spending, ultimately finding themselves in a budget hole. Other cases – like two stories of successful community efforts to stop bad projects in Tampa Bay and Dallas – show that the decision to reject a highway can lead to new possibilities for community improvement. I-275 in Tampa: A Highway Was Cancelled and a Community Is Thriving In 2016, the Florida Department of Transportation was moving forward with a $3.3 billion plan for new toll lanes to let drivers bypass congested traffic on I-275, I-75 and I-4 in Tampa, despite acknowledging that the planned project would not solve the region’s problems with congestion.32 The plan was not only expensive and unnecessary, but it was also set to roll through the community of Tampa Heights, destroying historic homes and businesses, centers of culture and community life, and even part of a popular water park the city spent millions to build and open in 2014. In response, community groups like Sunshine Citizens worked to stop the project by holding marches, attending public PAGE 10 meetings, and going to the press.33 Their work paid off: In May 2018, the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) announced that it was no longer intending to put toll lanes along I-275, citing “community opposition.”34 Today, the community that was threatened is thriving. A newspaper column published in the Tampa Bay Times notes that “Tampa Heights is exploding” with bars and restaurants, and with more pedestrians and bicyclists than ever (although not enough crosswalks).35 Rather than a bigger highway, the neighborhood has been working to slow traffic. Palm Avenue, which runs across I-275, was put on a “road diet” with more space for pedestrians and bicyclists, and slower speeds.36 And Sunshine Citizens is currently building support for a project to convert the raised I-275 highway to a more peopleand city-friendly boulevard.37 In May 2019, the Hillsborough County Metropolitan Planning Organization voted to conduct a feasibility study on the project, which would turn the highway into a multimodal boulevard supporting walking, biking and light rail. Even as Tampa Heights thrives, so far, FDOT has continued to push forward with other aspects of its expensive and disruptive “Tampa Bay Next” program. As of April 2019, the agency was considering a flurry of new highway projects in the area, including widening I-75 from six to eight or even 10 lanes, building new interchanges, and adding new highway extensions.38 Portsmouth Bypass and Cleveland Opportunity Corridor: Boondoggles Put Ohio in a Budget Hole Previous Highway Boondoggles reports covered two Ohio projects: the Portsmouth Bypass, a $429 million project that we noted was “in an area where driving has declined and existing roads desperately need funding for repairs,” and the Cleveland Opportunity Corridor, a $331 million project that critics noted was “unnecessary since there are several routes in the area that connect the two points already.” At the same time, as we wrote in 2015 with regards to the Portsmouth Bypass, its costs would “encumber future budgets, eating up money that could be used in the future for education, health care and other necessities.”39 Despite tight funds and questionable rationales, those projects moved forward. Today, after years of reckless highway spending, Ohio is struggling to fund its transportation budget. In 2018 the Columbus Dispatch wrote that “the incoming DeWine administration will start off the new year staring down a huge transportation-budget problem: The state has run out of money for major new road-construction projects.”40 And a 2017 spending analysis found that Ohio’s annual spending on public transit was falling more than $650 million short of what was needed to meet market demand, noting that the “Ohio Department of Transportation itself has found the state’s public transit network fails to meet market demand by 37.5 million rides.”41 In recognition of the budget hole, Ohio was able to muster the political will to raise gas and diesel taxes, which will raise an estimated $865 million in revenue per year.42 Yet even with the new revenue, Ohio still faces big transportation budget problems – problems that will only worsen if the Ohio Department of Transportation uses the new revenue for yet more highway expansion projects, as the agency has indicated it intends to.43 As news site WCPO Cincinnati asked, “will Ohio keep widening highways when it can’t afford to maintain what it has already built?”44 And while the state’s long underfunded transit systems will receive some money under new legislation, fuel tax revenue in Ohio can only be spent on roads and bridges.45 To fix its budget and achieve a better transportation future, Ohio will have to let go of wasteful and unnecessary highway projects. I-94 North-South: A Change of Heart in Wisconsin Frees Transportation Funds “There are some groups out there that want to spend billions and billions and billions of dollars on more, bigger, wider interchanges across the state. I actually think we should be fixing and maintaining our infrastructure. I don’t know that we need bigger and better and broader right now when we have a changing transportation system.” These words were spoken in 2018 by then-Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, soon after cancelling plans to rebuild the east-west stretch of I-94 in Milwaukee following a warning from the federal government that it would withdraw authorization for the project without a new state funding plan.46 Walker’s decision to forgo the I-94 expansion paid immediate dividends to Wisconsin’s transportation system. Without including a costly boondoggle, Walker’s transportation budget that year was able to include modest increases in transit funding and local infrastructure maintenance.47 His words also reflected a surprising, and encouraging, change of heart. Walker’s transportation department had overseen expensive and unnecessary highway projects for years. In 2013, WISPIRG Foun- PAGE 11 dation released its report Road Overkill, which examined six completed highway expansion projects in the state, finding that most had failed to reach the projected traffic levels used to justify their construction.48 One year later, WISPIRG Foundation’s Fork in the Road examined the costs of four highway expansion megaprojects being championed by the Walker administration and highlighted better ways to spend that money.49 And the costly and unnecessary I-94 project cancelled by Walker was covered in the first Highway Boondoggles report in 2014. Today, Wisconsin still has not left highway boondoggles behind. Work still continues on a capacity expansion for another stretch of I-94, which was covered in last year’s Highway Boondoggles 4.50 And new governor Tony Evers’ March 2019 budget proposal included new money to move forward with a $500 million widening project of I-43 north of Milwaukee.51 But Evers has also stated his intention to shift money away from big highway projects toward local road maintenance projects.52 Dallas Trinity Parkway: Cancelling a Highway Created New Opportunity for Nature in Dallas By ending one bad highway project, Dallas has created an opportunity to provide future generations with a greener, healthier and more enjoyable city. In 2014, Dallas was moving forward with plans to build the six-lane Dallas Trinity Parkway. As we wrote that year, the $1.5 billion project had a number of troubling elements. Documents suggested it would fail to solve congestion. It was susceptible to flood damage. And the project was squarely at odds with the city’s emerging priorities, PAGE 12 including expanding public transit and improving quality of life. The project also would have meant a major new highway running along the Trinity River Corridor, a wide swath of green that runs through the heart of Dallas. The Trinity River is an important ecological area, sustaining the nation’s largest urban hardwood forest.53 It is a floodplain that absorbs floodwaters and transforms into an area of wetlands during flood events. And just as the project threatened to cut off Dallas from the river, the area was becoming an increasingly important piece of life for city residents, providing them with parks, trails and other amenities. But as plans for the highway moved forward, increasingly skeptical city leaders and residents began to speak out against the project. In August 2017, following years of work by local activists, and three years after the Trinity project appeared in the first Highway Boondoggles report, the Dallas City Council killed the project with a 13-2 vote.54 Today, with highway plans out of the picture, Dallas is beginning to look toward a future in which it can develop the river area not as a piece of road infrastructure but as a special open space that the whole city can enjoy. The Trinity Park Conservancy is planning a new series of parks along the river.55 Planners are also looking to ensure that the river can continue to serve its natural role as protection against future floods.56 As D Magazine wrote, the idea behind the new plans is for “fulfilling that very old Trinity River Project ambition of reconnecting Dallas to its river and repositioning it as a civic centerpiece, and not a barrier.”57 “Disappeared,” Revealing an Expensive New Highway as Unnecessary After a 2001 earthquake damaged the Alaskan Way Viaduct, an elevated highway along Seattle’s downtown waterfront, the city began planning a replacement tunnel that would increase total traffic capacity.58 In 2014, we wrote that the tunnel project not only came with an exorbitant price tag, but it was also unlikely to reduce congestion according to the state’s own data. Rather, the city could create more cost-effective and sustainable transportation with a “streetsand-transit hybrid alternative, a combination of a four-lane urban-scaled street on the waterfront, one additional lane on a nearby interstate highway, and hundreds of millions of dollars in improvements to city streets and area bus service.”59 Nevertheless, Seattle moved forward with the tunnel. After falling more than three years behind schedule and running more than $200 million over budget, the tunnel opened in February 2019. But before the tunnel opened, the closure of the old Viaduct highway provided a “real-time experiment” of what happens when a city removes an urban highway, as Streetsblog wrote.60 The Viaduct was closed three weeks before the new tunnel was set to open, an event termed “Viadoom” by the local media, with predictions of interminable traffic jams in the period between the closing of the old highway and the opening of the new. But the predicted traffic never appeared. Instead, with both highways closed, the traffic seemed to melt away. The Seattle Times asked: “What happened to the 90,000 cars a day the viaduct carried before it closed?”61 There wasn’t just one answer. More people commuted by bus, bike and water taxi, with transit riders benefitting from expanded service made possible by a recent boost in local public transportation investment.62 Others changed their commutes or just worked from home. The phenomenon was induced demand in reverse: Remove highway capacity, and people find ways to drive less. As Mark Burfeind of INRIX, a traffic analytics company, told the Times: “For lack of a better term, the cars just disappeared.” Today, the new tunnel is up and running. Many commuters have resumed their old habits, and peak time traffic counts are already slightly higher than they were on the viaduct.63 With the project finished, Seattle is now facing a future of more cars and traffic. But Seattle’s experience of removing an urban highway – and watching traffic just disappear – should serve as a lesson for future projects in the area. PAGE 13 2019 Highway Boondoggles Boondoggle (n): Work or activity that is wasteful or pointless but gives the appearance of having value. — GOOGLE DICTIONARY64 AMERICA’S CONTINUED CONSTRUCTION of ever-wider highways costs tens of billions of dollars each year – money that is diverted from more pressing needs such as highway repair, transit repair and expansion, and local street improvements. These highway expansion projects often fail to do the job they are intended to perform: reducing congestion. They also create new infrastructure with high maintenance costs, and are often funded with reckless borrowing that creates a debt burden for future generations. In this report, we identify nine highway “boondoggles” slated to cost $25 billion – projects with large price tags that are unnecessary and/or threaten to damage the communities surrounding them. Some of these projects were originally proposed decades ago, at a time when concepts such as induced travel and the impact of driving on the global climate were less well known. Others represent more recent trends, such as the use of tolled “express lanes” to expand highway capacity in areas where widening would otherwise be politically or financially impossible. PAGE 14 In this report, we address three types of projects: • New highways or relocations of existing highways. • Projects that add new lanes to existing roads. • Highway expansions that are unnecessarily tacked onto needed highway reconstruction and repair projects. Many highways are currently reaching the end of their useful lives and require major reconstruction. In many cases, however, highway agencies have added expansion onto these reconstruction projects, making them more expensive and disruptive than they could be. While not every state or region is included in the list of misguided highway projects below, nearly every state has one or more highway expansion projects whose wisdom is questionable. The projects highlighted in this report are not necessarily the worst highway boondoggles in the nation, but they are representative of the costs of proceeding with disruptive projects that do not have a compelling transportation rationale. “Complete 540,” North Carolina Estimated Cost: $2.2 billion The proposed “Complete 540” highway through the southern suburbs of Raleigh would divide neighborhoods and encourage sprawl. Image: North Carolina Department of Transportation North Carolina transportation officials are moving forward with plans for a new six-lane highway around the southern half of Raleigh that would cause sprawling development and troubling environmental damage. The plan is called “Complete 540,” and would form the southern half of Raleigh’s 540 beltway, approximately seven miles from downtown Raleigh.65 At a cost of more than $2 billion, the highway, likely to be paid for with a mix of state funds and toll revenue, will be the most expensive in North Carolina history.66 According to the Southern Environmental Law Center (SELC), Complete 540 would encourage “unplanned growth to sprawl out of Raleigh and into Southeast Wake County.” Those changes would be consistent with the impacts of other bypass highways around U.S. cities, including in the Southeast. A 2000 study, Economic Impact of Freeway Bypass Routes in Medium Size Cities, concluded that negative impacts of bypass routes “include increases in sprawled, low density commercial and residential development entailing high environmental and infrastructure costs.”67 That study included an assessment of the I-295 bypass around Richmond, Virginia, which found that “relocations of retailing, local industries, offices, and residents facilitated by the outer belt have weakened the city’s downtown business district. . . Without the bypass, local planners agree there would have likely been more redevelopment at high densities in the downtown area.”68 Even in the suburban towns it is meant to help, the state has concluded that Complete 540 “would have negative impacts on existing neighborhoods.”69 The highway will bi- PAGE 15 sect at least two neighborhoods, Woodcreek and Deerfield Park, and cut through land owned by six churches.70 It will also cross over the scenic Neuse River Trail, “a 28-mile pedestrian and bicycle path that is part of Raleigh’s Capital Area Greenway System.”71 ical habitat for federally listed threatened mussel species.73 In an attempt to compensate for the potential devastation of a threatened species, the state has proposed spending $5 million to grow mussels in a lab for five years.74 Environmental groups have raised extensive concerns and filed legal challenges over the project’s environmental impacts. According to SELC, Upper Neuse Riverkeeper, the Center for Biological Diversity, and Clean Air Carolina, which jointly filed complaints against the project, it will “pave over 70 acres of wetlands, destroy more than 55,000 feet of streams, and cut through the area’s few remaining green spaces.”72 The project will also destroy crit- The highway expansion conflicts with North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper’s commitment to fight climate change. In October, 2018 Governor Cooper signed Executive Order 80, committing North Carolina to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent and meet the targets established in the Paris Climate Accord.75 According to a state estimate, the highway would increase driving by more than 484 million vehicle miles traveled in 2040.76 The “Complete 540 project would pave over dozens of acres of wetlands and destroy habitat for threatened mussel populations. Image: North Carolina Department of Transportation PAGE 16 North Houston Highway Improvement Project, Texas Estimated Cost: $7+ billion The North Houston Highway Improvement Project will expand already vast swaths of highway through the middle of Houston, displacing homes and businesses and dividing communities. Image: Texas Department of Transportation Houston, the nation’s fourth-largest city, is fast-growing and sprawling, and as of 2012 had more highway lane-miles per person than all but two cities in the country.77 The city’s overreliance on cars has created big problems for residents. Long trips on congested highways mean that Houston workers have the second-most expensive commutes in the country.78 The metro area’s roads are also the deadliest in the nation, and according to the Houston Chronicle the “death toll is the equivalent of three fully-loaded 737s crashing each year at Houston’s airports, killing all aboard.”79 Vehicle pollution is also harming air quality in Houston, which in 2019 was ranked ninthworst in the country for high smog days by the American Lung Association.80 Improving Houston’s transportation system means reducing reliance on cars. But today state officials are moving forward with a massive and expensive project that would result in more concrete and asphalt through the middle of Houston. The North Houston Highway Improvement Project (NHHIP) would involve widening and rebuilding nearly 25 miles of highway and numerous interchanges, with much of the project taking place in the middle of the city. As the Houston Chronicle wrote, the “most radical changes come downtown, where relocating I-45 to the central business district’s east side also means remaking every freeway it touches — Interstate 10, Interstate 69 and Texas 288.” And the project comes with the high price tag of $7 billion before even accounting for right-of-way costs.81 The miles of new highway created by the project will widen barriers between neighborhoods, crisscross over parkland, and make transportation more difficult for com- PAGE 17 muters without access to a car.82 The project will require expanding the right-of-way of the existing highway by hundreds of feet. Some sections through downtown Houston will grow from 220 feet to 570 feet, resulting in highways nearly as wide as the length of two football fields.83 Communities could potentially benefit from green spaces built on caps over sunken sections of highway. However, as the project’s Draft Environmental Impact Statement notes, the “green space cap is conceptual and not part of the proposed project, and it would require separate development and funding.”84 The state’s own documents contain stark language on the harm that the project will do to Houston’s communities:85 • The project’s “proposed recommended” routes would displace four houses of worship, two schools, 168 single-family homes, 1,067 multifamily units and 331 businesses with 24,873 employees.86 “Potential impacts to community resources include displacement of residences and businesses, loss of community facilities, isolation of neighborhoods, changes in mobility and access, and increased noise and visual impacts. . . All alternatives would require new right-of-way which would displace homes, schools, places of worship, businesses, billboards, and other uses.” • “All [build] alternatives would result in displacements that would reduce the size of the communities and potentially affect community cohesion… Proposed alternatives that include elevated structures may create physical barriers between neighborhoods or affect the existing visual conditions of the communities.” • The project’s “[c]onversion of taxable property to roadway right-of-way and displacements of businesses that are PAGE 18 significant sources of sales tax revenue would have a negative impact on the local economy.” And while at present the downtown area and surrounding neighborhoods “are experiencing various degrees of redevelopment,” the state notes that “growth trends indicate redevelopment would continue independent of the proposed improvements to project facilities.”87 • The project will “cause disproportionate high and adverse impacts to minority or low-income populations.” And the project’s “[d]isplacement of bus stops could affect people that do not have access to automobiles or that are dependent on public transportation.” Even as it harms Houston, the project will also likely fail to achieve its basic goal of reducing congestion. When it comes to congestion impacts, Houston can look to its own Katy Freeway as an example of the phenomenon of induced demand. Following that highway’s $2.8 billion widening, 85 percent of commute times actually increased.88 Even as the NHHIP would further reinforce Houston’s dependence on cars, some parts of Houston’s own local government are working for the opposite goal. Houston’s Complete Communities program is working to improve neighborhoods, including with programs for safer streets and bike lanes.89 The city’s Walkable Places project is working to “create more vibrant, walkable streets that support alternative modes of transportation.”90 And Houston is creating big plans for a fast and reliable transit system for the future.91 Houston can achieve a more sustainable, affordable, and better functioning transportation system – but only by avoiding harmful and costly expenditures like the North Houston Highway Improvement Project. High Desert Freeway, California Estimated Cost: $8 billion The High Desert Freeway has the potential to encourage sprawl in fragile desert ecosystems, where development could alter the landscape and strain scarce water resources. Image: California Department of Transportation California officials are moving forward with plans for the “High Desert Freeway,” an $8 billion, 63-mile freeway 40 miles north of downtown Los Angeles that would connect the cities of Palmdale and Lancaster with Victorville, Apple Valley and Adelanto. L.A. County’s first new highway in 25 years would lead to more driving and more pollution, along with sprawling desert development.92 The plan – building a massive highway to connect mid-sized exurbs of Los Angeles – has inherent problems. The highway’s numerous offramps as it runs through rural, undeveloped areas suggest its potential to encourage sprawl in fragile desert ecosystems, where development could alter the landscape and strain scarce water resources.93 And while officials have not yet found full project funding, the high cost of the highway may mean less money for other state or local transportation priorities.94 The project will also increase California’s global warming emissions, an impact in direct opposition to state goals. When it comes to taking on global warming, in most ways California is on the cutting edge. The state has more solar panels and more electric vehicles than any other in the country, by far. In 2018, California adopted legislation requiring the state to generate 100 percent of its electricity using clean energy sources by 2045.95 But for California to truly become a low-carbon state, it must work to reduce driving. Transportation is responsible for 46 percent of state carbon dioxide emissions, and the 151 million metric tons of on-road transportation emissions released in 2016 were more than the total, economy-wide emissions of states like Georgia, North Carolina and New Jersey.96 While electric vehicles are an important tool to reduce transportation emissions, electrifying the existing 35 million vehicle fleet will take time, and walking, biking and transit can cut emissions immediately and play a role in the state’s long-term emissions reduction strategy.97 According to the California Air Resources Board, to hit 2030 climate goals the average PAGE 19 Californian needs to reduce driving by 1.6 miles per day.98 The High Desert Freeway will achieve the opposite. According to the most conservative scenario in the project’s Final Environmental Impact Statement, building the new highway would increase driving by at least 2.5 million vehicle miles traveled each year and increase annual carbon dioxide emissions by 240,000 metric tons per year, equivalent to burning 262 million pounds of coal.99 In a nod to California’s climate goals, the project’s environmental impact statement claims the project will have emissions benefits, as a result of helping passengers use future rail routes and its inclusion of “green energy features.” Neither claim makes sense. First, the document claims a benefit of providing “improved access and connectivity to” the proposed XpressWest high-speed rail route, which would be on a route parallel to the proposed highway.100 Such a rail route could, on its own, be an effective way to promote low-carbon travel. In contrast, the highway would promote sprawling development less amenable to rail travel, and will also compete with, not provide service to, those rail stations. The document also claims the highway project will contribute “to state greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction goals through the use of green energy features.”101 Yet it is unclear how green energy features like solar panels would benefit from the construction of a highway, or why existing highways could not provide similar building opportunities. PAGE 20 Interstate 75, Michigan Estimated Cost: $1.4 billion The Detroit area, where population has shrunk over the past 20 years, suffers from costly sprawl, roads and bridges that are in poor condition, and a woefully inadequate transit system.102 Such a situation seems to call for reinvestment in the current system, not road expansion. Nevertheless, Michigan is currently undertaking project to expand the capacity of Interstate 75 through suburban Oakland County, north of Detroit – a project that is both unnecessary and will exacerbate the region’s problems.103 Although some sections of the project have already begun, as of April 2019, the $1.4 billion last segment of the project, which stretches from M-102 to north of 13 Mile Road, was not slated to begin construction until the fall of 2019.104 In describing the need for the project, the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) has pointed to population growth in Oakland County as the reason the area needs a larger highway. But even in Oakland County, one of the few areas of the region that has not seen recent population decline, projected growth is slow and spread out: Current projections show the whole county adding fewer than 100,000 people between 2015 and 2045, across an area nearly four times as large as Chicago.105 The current growth rate projection of 7.7 percent from 2000 to 2030 is also far also lower than the 12.7 percent growth rate MDOT cited in it is justification for the project, published in 2005.106 And according to a Streetsblog analysis, shifting demographics and travel preferences in Oakland County “will likely shift perceptions” resulting in more, not less, support for transit in the coming years.107 Michigan argues that the highway is necessary in part because “Oakland County residential development is too dispersed to support a high level of transit service.” However, such logic risks creating a vicious cycle of road development and sprawl: If the only way to meet the transportation needs of sprawl is by building more roads, that will in turn encourage more sprawl, which will once again require more roads.108 In contrast, more transit and support for transit-oriented development could lead to less dispersed neighborhoods that could support greater transit use over time. According to some supporters of the expansion, the resulting sprawl would not be such a bad thing. As Brooks Patterson, the executive of Oakland County, wrote in an online essay, “let me state it unequivocally: I love sprawl. I need it. I promote it.”109 But sprawl imposes high costs on society. Sprawl leads to loss of open space, more air pollution and water overconsumption.110 And low-density development requires far more spending on infrastructure including roads, sewers and power lines – all of which must be maintained.111 According to one study, sprawl costs the U.S. economy $1 trillion each year.112 For Southeast Michigan, the cost of highway expansion – and the sprawl it will promote – will also make it harder to pay for important transportation priorities that already face an uncertain future. Through 2045, the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments (SEMCOG) estimates the region needs to spend $20.9 billion on transit, but will have only $9.2 billion available.113 SEMCOG also notes that estimated spending through 2045 will “not be sufficient to restore Southeast Michigan pavement to a state of good repair.”114 The I-75 expansion will also likely fail to provide meaningful congestion relief. In arguing that a transit line will not sufficiently reduce traffic, MDOT explains the reason why: induced travel. As MDOT writes, “demand in the I-75 corridor exceeds capacity, so any diversion to transit would be quickly replaced by others wishing to use I-75.”115 Just as with transit, new road capacity will also be filled by new driving. The phenomenon is known as the “Fundamental Law of Road Congestion”– traffic grows to fill the available space. Yet while MDOT uses the phenomenon of induced travel to argue against transit, it does not consider induced travel in its road expansion analysis, merely noting that “the tools to analyze induced travel are not fully developed at this time” and that “there is no requirement to account for this at this time.”116 Despite the project’s supposed economic benefits for communities along the route north of Detroit, some of those communities oppose the project. In 2013, the city of Royal Oak, through which the southern section of the Modernize 75 project runs, adopted a resolution opposing the highway expansion project. The resolution declared that the highway expansions of I-75 (and a separate project on nearby I-94) “threaten significant negative impacts to the communities they traverse, including displacement of residents, destruction of local tax base, loss of property value, increases in traffic noise, aggravated air pollution, and continued disinvestment…”117 The resolution also declared that the money for the project “would be far better spent addressing our region’s desperate need for a comprehensive regional transit system to meet the needs of residents.” 118 PAGE 21 Tri-State Tollway Widening, Illinois Estimated Cost: $4 billion The Tri-State Tollway (I-294), which runs through the western Chicago suburbs up to O’Hare Airport, is a testament to the fact that you can’t build your way out of congestion. Despite already having been widened twice, in the 1970s and 1990s, the Illinois Tollway is currently moving forward with a $4 billion project to widen the road from four lanes in each direction to five and in some places six lanes.119 Although some construction has already started, main construction is expected to take place between 2021 and 2025.120 The highway’s own history of widening suggests that it will not achieve its intended goal of reducing congestion, yet “congestion relief” is exactly what the Illinois Tollway argues the project will accomplish.121 As Chicago’s Active Transportation Alliance notes, “roadway expansion in urban areas like ours only exacerbates traffic congestion in the long run by inducing more driving that over time fills in additional road space.”122 In and around Chicago, the more than 1,000 lane-miles of new highways and arterials added since 1996 have been associated with more traffic and more sprawl, with negative impacts for communities and residents. PAGE 22 Between 1980 and 2017, the number of vehicle miles traveled in the region grew nearly four times as fast as population.123 As a result, from 1990 to 2015, the number of hours lost to congestion per commuter rose by nearly 40 percent.124 Highway expansion has also encouraged sprawling development. A study by the Center for Neighborhood Technology found that from 2000 to 2010 Chicago “saw a decline in development around transit relative to growth in the broader region” resulting in higher transportation costs and reduced access to jobs.125 As reported by the Chicago Sun-Times in 2017, the village president of Hinsdale, a community along the route, worried that the widening could have a “devastating impact” on property values and noise levels.126 In a letter he read aloud at a community event he noted that “despite this potential to cause serious damage to Hinsdale, the Tollway Authority had put forth no hard evidence to justify widening I-294 through Hinsdale.”127 In the Chicago area, new and expanded highways have failed again and again to relieve congestion. As the region builds its transportation system of the future, there is no reason to think that applying the same flawed logic to the same transportation problems will work this time. Connecting Miami Project (I-395/SR836/I-95), Florida Estimated Cost: $802 million Rendering of a proposed park under the expanded I-395 highway project, showing parkgoers Image: Florida Department of Transportation In Miami, highways slice through almost every section of the city, cutting neighborhoods off from one another, and creating sprawl that threatens the surrounding environment.128 Those highways include I-395 and SR836, which were originally built through the segregated black community of Overtown, destroying much of the community and forcing thousands from their homes.129 ity are marketing the “Connecting Miami” project as a community enhancement project, pointing to the raised road height that “will allow for the connection of Overtown, Downtown Miami, Omni, and Edgewater to each other by a contiguous trail,” and the project’s signature skyline bridge (which the Miami Herald describes as resembling a “high-tech tarantula”).131 In 2012, Congress for a New Urbanism suggested a remedy to help the community finally recover as a neighborhood: converting the highway to a street-level boulevard. That year, the group included I-395 on its list of “the top opportunities in North America to replace aging urban highways with boulevards.”130 Yet today, Miami is instead doubling down on highways by undertaking a five-year, nearly billion-dollar project to rebuild and add capacity to large sections of I-395 and SR-836. But project images and details make it clear that truly significant community improvement from the project is likely a pipe dream. Project renderings of the I-395’s proposed underdeck park show the unlikely scenario of people happily strolling just feet from high-speed traffic under I-395. The usability of the park will also depend on the city being able to fund continued maintenance, including for the park’s extensive lighting and other ambitious design elements.132 On the other side of the interchange, SR 836 will be converted to a raised double-decker highway, creating a giant concrete wall through the city. The Florida Department of Transportation and the Miami-Dade Expressway Author- PAGE 23 In the I-395 environmental impact statement, the only note of any community benefit is the “savings in time and fuel provided by the increased capacity” – yet those benefits, if they materialize at all, would primarily go to those people driving over the neighborhood rather than those living in it.133 A project analysis from 2007 estimated that 10 families or individuals, and five businesses, would have to relocate for the I-395 section of the project.134 For the nearly billion dollar project cost, Miami could undertake far better options to improve the district surrounding I-395.135 The city or state could invest in street safety, transit, parks and more, in line with the county’s long-range plan, which suggests an “emphasis on rapid transit, land use, densification, connectivity, [and] multimodal mobility.”136 One project that could benefit the community by the Connecting Miami project would be the creation of a dedicated bus lane on the MacArthur Causeway, which connects the area with South Beach, and could save the corridor’s 15,000 daily bus riders 6 to 10 minutes each way during peak traffic conditions.137 Miami also needs funding to accelerate progress on Miami’s SMART Plan for a “world-class transit system” of bus rapid transit and rail.138 Today, decades after being cut in half by a highway, the Overtown neighborhood is showing signs of renewal. As one project document states, an infusion of Caribbean immigrants “along with recent efforts to direct Community Redevelopment Authority funding to this area, is beginning to create new businesses that meet the ethnic needs, such as small groceries, restaurants and shops along NW 3rd Avenue.”139 Miami has the chance to help the community finally recover some of what it lost decades ago – but only by focusing on real community needs, and by forgoing expensive and unnecessary highway projects. PAGE 24 I-83 Widening, York County, Pennsylvania Cost: $300 million Pennsylvania is moving forward with a plan to spend $300 million to widen I-83 in York County from four to eight lanes. But project documents fail to show how the project will solve any problems or bring clear benefits to the region. According to the project website, aside from the vague primary goal of achieving “a more functional and modern roadway,” the main goal of the project is to “improve future traffic flow.”140 But the initial project study conducted for PennDOT notes that “the existing I-83 mainline corridor as well as the ramp merge and diverge areas operate with reasonable free-flow operations.”141 The study also found the road in decent condition, with “no significant defects … noted during a field inspection conducted in July of 2017.”142 The study’s only mention of bad congestion in the corridor is that resulting from traffic incidents, which “cause long-lasting gridlock given the high volume of traffic.”143 These findings suggest that improving operations, including incident management, would be a better and cheaper strategy than expanding capacity. Indeed, the I-83 Master Plan notes that “[a]ny improvements made to this corridor should consider and evaluate” new strategies to improve system management and operations. These include new incident detection cameras to fill coverage gaps in the existing system, “speed management, and queue warning systems,” road weather information systems, and more. For a rural and suburban highway outside of a major metropolitan area, a low-cost strategy of improving operations rather than making massive capital investments makes sense. It would also align with strategies preached by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). According to the FHWA, using so-called “transportation systems management and operations” strategies can help “make the most of the infrastructure already in place,” and the FHWA has sought to help transportation agencies reorient “from construction to management of the transportation system.”144 By forgoing road expansion, and instead opting for a cheaper and likely more effective focus on better management and operations, Pennsylvania could both save money and better serve the needs of the region. I-5 Rose Quarter Widening, Oregon Cost: $450 million The “I-5 Rose Quarter Improvement Project” would widen the urban freeway to more than 120 feet, bringing more driving and pollution to Portland. Image: Oregon Department of Transportation Portland, Oregon, has made bold moves toward becoming a good place to get around without a car. New funding will soon create new bus rapid transit routes.145 The city has a widely used bikeshare program.146 The city has plans to remove parking spaces and use the space for new bus, streetcar, and bike lanes.147 Portland has also set a goal of 25 percent of trips to be made by bicycle by 2030, and from 2000 to 2015 the share of people who commute by bike increased from less than 2 percent to 7 percent.148 PAGE 25 But even as Portland shifts toward a safer and more sustainable transportation system, the state is planning a $450 million project to widen and add new lanes to I-5 through Portland’s Rose Quarter. The project will increase the number of lane-miles of freeway in the project area by 50 percent, with extra-wide shoulders that could fit an even higher-capacity freeway in the future.149 If built, the project will mean more driving, more pollution, and a step backward for the city. According to the state, the project is needed because of poor safety, high congestion and poor street-level service for bicyclists and pedestrians.150 But there is little evidence that the first two needs will be served well by the project. And the local advocates and official city advisors who have long pushed for better streets argue that street-level plans are both inadequate and outweighed by the adverse impacts of a bigger highway. Project documents claim that I-5 in the Rose Quarter “experiences some of the highest vehicle crash rates in Oregon.”151 Yet according to Oregon Metro, a regional government agency, the state has not actually proven that the section of road in questions is particularly unsafe, and has not provided “information on how the project area compares for serious crashes.”152 Indeed, other ODOT highways in Portland have higher crash rates.153 Metro also notes that the state has not explained how the project “will reduce the number and severity of serious crashes occurring.”154 The state’s crash analysis cites driver behavior as a primary factor in all crashes, but as Metro writes, it is “not clear how the design solutions in the Build Alternative will address behavior.”155 When it comes to the goal of increasing traffic flow and improving freight traffic, the strategy for expanding I-5 through PAGE 26 the Rose Quarter is to fix what has been termed a “bottleneck” in the highway.156 But according to local think tank City Observatory, Portland’s own history of fixing an I-5 traffic bottleneck exemplifies why the strategy is likely to fail. After a nearby 2010 project to widen I-5 between Lombard Street and Victory Boulevard, the widened highway simply delivered “more traffic, faster, to the next bottleneck in the system.”157 As a result of changes to traffic flow, congestion (along with the crash rate) actually increased.158 A better solution for reducing congestion along I-5 could be congestion pricing, which an ODOT study concluded could lead to “major improvements in travel times.”159 Despite ODOT’s own finding, the agency does not appear to have seriously considered pricing as an alternative to the widening project. On the streets around I-5 in the Rose Quarter, improvements for walking and biking are indeed badly needed. But current proposed plans for city streets have been criticized for being inadequate improvements for those on bike or foot. Portland’s official walking and biking advisory committees both oppose the project.160 Portland’s Bicycle Advisory Committee wrote that “the Build Alternative would fail to achieve the stated project goals and objectives, especially in critical areas related to bicycling, but also including the resulting conditions for walking and transit. . .” City Observatory noted that the “freeway widening project creates a bike- and pedestrian-hostile environment” in which wider turning radiuses would encourage faster vehicle speeds through crosswalks.161 And Metro observed that the “width of Broadway between Williams and 1st is shown as five (5) one-way motor vehicle lanes, which is incompatible with a multimodal, mixed-use environment, and may increase in poor driver behavior.”162 Local groups like Bike Portland have challenged the street-level alterations included in the I-5 project, which make up just a small fraction of total costs, as being used by the Oregon DOT for “green-washing, bike-washing, and safety-washing yet another massive investment in automobile-oriented infrastructure.”163 An expanded highway will also likely increase carbon emissions, hindering Portland’s ability to achieve its emission reduction goals. ODOT’s own environmental assessment actually projects that the project will result in slightly reduced emissions compared to a “no build” option.164 Yet an analysis by City Observatory found the opposite, estimating the project will increase annual greenhouse gas emissions by 4,700 to 7,900 tons as a result of increased driving.165 Local researchers have noted they are unable to assess the validity of ODOT’s findings, because the state has not made underlying traffic data available.166 Portland has set a goal of reducing carbon emissions by 80 percent from 1990 levels by 2050, and a corresponding objective of reducing per capita vehicle miles traveled by 30 percent by 2030.167 The proposed I-5 expansion would make it harder to achieve both goals. Even as the Oregon Department of Transportation seems to be overstating the ability of expanding I-5 to achieve its transportation goals, the agency seems to be understating its environmental impacts. At a public hearing, critics of the project presented evidence that ODOT failed to fully account for increases in traffic and pollution that would result from the project.168 Interstate 81, Virginia Estimated Cost: $2.2 billion Virginia’s I-81 corridor runs through the Shenandoah Valley and primarily rural areas in the western part of the state. Aiming to increase freight capacity and improve safety, Virginia is moving forward with a plan to widen and rebuild sections of the highway.169 A recently adopted, $2.2 billion “I-81 Corridor Improvement Plan” consists of 63 individual projects including lane additions, shoulder widenings, and curve improvements, along with operational improvements and some funding set aside for rail and transit enhancements.170 Officials have pointed to safety problems as a key reason for the need to expand the highway, which are largely the result of heavy truck volumes.171 Yet in 2010, state officials raised speed limits to 70 mph along much of I-81 – a move that likely exacerbated the corridor’s safety issues.172 According to one national study, rising speed limits were responsible for nearly 37,000 deaths in the U.S. from 1993 to 2017.173 State officials have noted that the bulk of congestion problems in the corridor are “non-recurring” – resulting from crashes and construction incidents that vary in location, as well as long-distance travel on holidays.174 As a result, simply expanding the highway will not solve the corridor’s problems. The Corridor Improvement Plan does include operational improvements that could substantially improve safety and traffic conditions in the corridor for less than 10 percent of the cost of the total plan. Identified solutions include better speed enforcement, new traffic cameras, change- PAGE 27 able message signs, expanded safety service patrols, and more emergency clearance services.175 According to state documents, 70 percent of people polled at public meetings related to the project supported additional speed enforcement.176 Better options also exist for increasing freight capacity, including improved freight rail service.177 The state is already investigating increasing capacity of the freight rail route that runs parallel to I-81, building off of the significant environmental and economic benefits that have resulted from its previous investments in freight rail in the I-81 corridor.178 Among other things, the state has noted that these investments have “helped PAGE 28 to reduce emissions and costs that stem from accidents, congestion, and pavement maintenance,” and that through “benefit cost analysis, the Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation calculated an annual economic benefit [of the rail investment] to Virginia of $1.2 billion, saving nearly $34 million in annual pavement maintenance costs” by reducing vehicle travel.179 The I-81 widening project will also impose societal and environmental costs, including impacts on historic civil war landscapes, increased air and water pollution, and if the highway is tolled, impacts on communities that would experience new truck traffic from trucks avoiding tolls.180 Conclusion BOONDOGGLE HIGHWAY PROJECTS continue to absorb billions of dollars of scarce public funds while delivering few benefits. But cities and states can choose a different path. From Tampa to Milwaukee to Dallas, cities and states that have rejected boondoggle highway projects have opened up new opportunities to build vibrant, sustainable communities and freed up resources to reinvest in true transportation priorities. Officials at all levels of government – local, state and federal – should reexamine proposed highway expansion projects in light of changing transportation needs and adopt a series of other policy changes to prioritize real transportation improvements. Specifically, they should: • Invest in transportation solutions that reduce the need for costly and disruptive highway expansion projects. Investments in public transportation, changes in land use policy, road pricing measures and technological measures that help drivers avoid peak-time traffic, for instance, can often address congestion more cheaply and effectively than highway expansion. • Adopt fix-it-first policies that reorient transportation funding away from high- way expansion and toward repair of existing roads and investment in other transportation options. • Use the latest transportation data and require full cost-benefit comparisons for all projects, including future maintenance needs. This includes projects proposed to be completed via public-private partnerships. • Give priority funding to transportation projects that reduce growth in vehicle-miles traveled, to account for the public health, environmental and climate benefits resulting from reduced driving. • Invest in research and data collection to better track and react to ongoing shifts in how people travel. • Revise transportation forecasting models to ensure that all evaluations of proposed projects use up-to-date travel information, reflect a range of potential future trends for housing and transportation, and incorporate the impact of all transportation options, from public transit, biking and walking, to newer options such as carsharing, bikesharing and ridesharing. PAGE 29 Appendix: Status of Previously Covered Boondoggles Status Project Year Included in Boondoggles Report Cancelled181 Dallas Trinity Parkway, Texas 2014 I-94 East-West Expansion in Milwaukee, Wisconsin 2014 710 Tunnel, California 2016 Completed182 Alaskan Way Viaduct, Washington 2014 I-11, Nevada 2014 I-77 Express Lanes, North Carolina 2016 Portsmouth Bypass, Ohio 2016 Route 20 Widening, Iowa 2016 Illiana Expressway, Illinois and Indiana 2014 Tesoro Extension, California 2014 Paseo del Volcan Extension, New Mexico 2016 On Hold 183 Study and Review 184 PAGE 3 0 Effingham Parkway, Georgia 2014 I-11, Arizona 2014 I-26 Connector, North Carolina 2014 Mon-Fayette Expressway: Route 51 to I-376, Pennsylvania 2016 Puget Sound Gateway, Washington 2016 Tampa Bay Express Lanes, Florida 2016 Illinois State Route 53/120 2017 Interstate 30, Arkansas 2017 Interstate 73, South Carolina 2017 Interstate 75 North Truck Lanes, Georgia 2017 Interstate 84 Expansion, Connecticut 2017 Madison Beltline, Wisconsin 2017 “Traffic Relief Plan,” Maryland 2018 I-49 Inner City Connection, Shreveport, Louisiana 2018 Interstate 35 Expansion, Austin, Texas 2018 LBJ East Expansion, Dallas, Texas 2018 Status Project Year Included in Boondoggles Report Under Construction185 C-470 Express Lanes, Colorado 2014 Cleveland Opportunity Corridor, Ohio 2014 State Highway 249 Extension, Texas 2016 Texas: State Highway 45 Southwest 2016 Widening I-70 in Denver, Colorado 2016 Interstate 4 “Beyond the Ultimate,” Florida 2017 Interstate 405 Improvement, Orange County CA 2017 Interstate 66 Expansion “Within the Beltway,” Virginia 2017 I-285 & SR 400 Interchange Rebuilding, Atlanta, Georgia 2018 I-94 North South Expansion, Wisconsin 2018 North Spokane Corridor, Spokane, Washington 2018 Pennsylvania Turnpike Expansion 2018 U.S. Highway 101 Expansion, San Mateo, California 2018 Under Revision 186 Widening I-94 Through Detroit, Michigan 2014 Widening I-95 Across the State, Connecticut 2016 PAGE 3 1 Notes 1 U.S. Department of Transportation, Highway Statistics (2008 and 2015), available at https:// www.fhwa.dot.gov/policyinformation/statistics/2008/sb2.cfm and https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ policyinformation/statistics/2015/sb2.cfm. 12 HNTB, America THINKS 2016 Survey Compilation, September 2016, archived at https://web. archive.org/web/20190516150015/http://www. hntb.com/HNTB/media/HNTBMediaLibrary/ AT_Compilation_1.pdf. 2 Rayla Bellis et al., Transportation for America, Repair Priorities 2019, May 2019. 13 Aarian Marshall, “U.S. Cities, Spurned by Washington, Fund Transit Themselves,” Wired, 10 November 2016. 3 1,500 square miles based on expansion of public road lane miles from: U.S. Department of Transportation, Highway Statistics 2015, Table HM260, December 2016, and a conservative assumption of 10-foot wide traffic lanes. 4 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks, 1990 – 2017, 11 April 2019. 5 U.S. Federal Highway Administration, Highway Statistics Series Table SB-2 (for years 20002016), available at https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/policyinformation/statistics.cfm. 6 Jeff Inglis and Phineas Baxandall, U.S. PIRG Education Fund and Frontier Group, Highway Boondoggles: Wasted Money and America’s Transportation Future, September 2014. 7 U.S. Department of Transportation, 2015 Status of the Nation’s Highways, Bridges and Transit: Conditions and Performance Report to Congress, December 2016. 8 U.S. Department of Transportation, Highway Statistics, Table HF-10, versions 2000 and 2016; real value measured using available at https://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl. 9 See note 7. 10 Ibid. 11 ABC News/Washington Post poll conducted September 4-7, 2014, archived at web.archive. org/web/20170314141558/http://www.langerresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/1162a4Transportation.pdf. PAGE 3 2 14 See note 1. 15 U.S. Federal Highway Administration, Highway Statistics 2016,Total Disbursements for Highways, By Function 1956-2016, 26 September 2018. 16 American-Statesman Staff, “As Federal Road Money Ebbed, Texas Filled Gap with Borrowing,” American-Statesman, 22 February 2015. 17 U.S. Department of Transportation, Highway Statistics (tables SB2 and SB3, from years 2000 and 2015), available at https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ policyinformation/statistics/2008/sb2.cfm and https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/policyinformation/ statistics/2015/sb2.cfm. 18 Ballotpedia, Texas Transportation Funding Amendment, Proposition 1 (2014), archived on 7 November 2018 at http://web.archive.org/ web/20181107133621/https://ballotpedia.org/ Texas_Transportation_Funding_Amendment,_Proposition_1_(2014); Gordon Dickson, “Texas Road Debt: $23 billion,” Star Telegram, 14 September 2014. 19 Robert McCartney, Faiz Siddiqui and Ovetta Wiggins, “Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan Proposes Widening the Beltway and I-270 to Include 4 Toll Lanes,” The Washington Post, 21 September 2017. 20 SH 130: Aman Batheja, “Report: SH 130 Toll Road Company in Danger of Default,” Texas Tribune, 19 June 2014, accessed at www. texastribune. org/2014/06/19/report-sh-130- toll-road-danger-default/, 8 March 2015; Camino Colombia: Texas State Auditor’s Office, Audit Report: The Texas Department of Transportation’s Purchase of the Camino Colombia Toll Road, 2 June 2006. 21 Phineas Baxandall, U.S. PIRG Education Fund, Kari Wohlschlegel and Tony Dutzik, Frontier Group, Private Roads, Public Costs, Spring 2009. 22 See note 2. 23 See note 5. 24 See note 3. 25 See, for example, Gilles Duranton and Matthew A. Turner, “The Fundamental Law of Road Congestion: Evidence from US Cities,” American Economic Review, DOI: 10.1257/aer.101.6.2616, 2011. 26 Ibid. 27 Tony Dutzik and Alana Miller, Frontier Group, A New Way Forward: Envisioning a Transportation System without Carbon Pollution, May 2016. 28 See note 4. 29 Alan Pyke, “Top Infrastructure Official Explains How America Used Highways to Destroy Black Neighborhoods,” Think Progress, 31 March 2016, archived at web.archive.org/ web/20170314142030/https://thinkprogress.org/ top-infrastructure-official-explains-how-america-used-highways-to-destroy-black-neighborhoods-96c1460d1962?gi=2ff8b3982a42 . 30 Nathaniel Baum-Snow, “Did Highways Cause Suburbanization?” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 122 (2): 775-805, May 2007, DOI: 10.1162/ qjec.122.2.775. 31 Texas Department of Transportation, Draft Environmental Impact Statement - North Houston Highway Improvement Project, Houston District, April 2017, archived at http://web.archive.org/ web/20181228184226/http://ih45northandmore. com/docs7/NHHIP_Draft_EIS_April-2017.pdf. 32 Jeff Inglis, Frontier Group, and John C. Olivieri, U.S. PIRG Education Fund, Highway Boondoggles 2: More Wasted Money and America’s Transportation Future, January 2016, archived at http://web. archive.org/web/20180112004439/https://uspirg. org/sites/pirg/files/reports/US_Boondoggles2_ scrn_0.pdf. 33 Sara DiNatale, “Protesters March Through Tampa as They Call to Stop TBX Toll Road Project,” Tampa Bay Times, 24 April 2016, available at https:// www.tampabay.com/news/transportation/protesters-march-through-tampa-as-they-call-to-stop-tbxtoll-road-project/2274448. 34 Adam Winer, “FDOT: No Toll Lanes Coming to I-275 in TAMPA, but I-75 Toll Lanes Now on the Table,” ABC Action News Tampa, 2 May 2018, available at https://www.abcactionnews.com/ news/local-news/fdot-no-toll-lanes-coming-to-i275-in-tampa-but-i-75-toll-lanes-now-on-the-table. 35 Sue Carlton, “Carlton: Tampa Heights is Exploding! And We Can Learn from It.,” Tampa Bay Times, 2 May 2018, available at https://www.tampabay.com/news/Carlton-Tampa-Heights-is-exploding-And-we-can-learn-from-it-_167803937. 36 Philip Morgan, “Palm Avenue Slows Traffic, Promotes Walkers, Bicyclists,” Tampa Bay Times, 2 September 2016, available at http://www.tampabay. com/news/publicsafety/palm-avenue-slows-traffic-promotes-walkers-bicyclists/2292022. 37 Sunshine Citizens, untitled Facebook post, 7 April 2019, available at https://www.facebook. com/SunshineCitizens/videos/344766343053357/. 38 Bill Smith, “I-75 Express Lanes – and Tolls – Could Be Coming to Southwest Florida,” Naples Daily News, 23 April 2019, available at https://www. naplesnews.com/story/news/2019/04/23/expresslanes-toll-booths-and-new-interchanges-couldcome-75/3547305002/. 39 See note 32. 40 Jim Siegel, “Money for Major Ohio Road Projects Is Gone; Gas-Tax Hike Proposed,” Columbus Dispatch, 13 January 2019, available at https://www. dispatch.com/news/20190113/money-for-major-ohio-road-projects-is-gone-gas-tax-hike-proposed 41 Wendy Patton and Victoria Jackson, Policy Matters Ohio, How Ohio Funds Public Transit, 26 May 2017, archived at http://web.archive.org/ web/20170709055217/https://www.policymattersohio.org/research-policy/sustainable-communities/ transit/how-ohio-funds-public-transit. 42 Rich Exner and Laura Hancock, “Is the Gas Tax Increase Enough for Ohio’s Crumbling Roads?,” Cleveland.com, 5 April 2019, available at https:// www.cleveland.com/open/2019/04/is-the-gas-taxincrease-enough-for-ohios-crumbling-roads.html. PAGE 3 3 43 See list of “examples of the types of projects that would not happen” without more gas tax revenue: Rich Exner, “What Kinds of Road Projects Are at Stake in Ohio’s Gas Tax Debate?,” Cleveland. com, 6 March 2019, archived at http://web.archive. org/web/20190402090204/https://www.cleveland. com/datacentral/2019/03/what-kinds-of-road-projects-are-at-stake-in-ohios-gas-tax-debate.html. 51 Patrick Marley, “Wisconsin Gas Tax to Go Up By Nearly a Dime a Gallon under Gov. Tony Evers Plan,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 26 March 2019. 44 Pat LaFleur, “Will Ohio Keep Widening Highways When It Can’t Afford to Maintain What It Has Already Built?,” WCPO Cincinnati, 25 March 2019. 53 Trinity Park Conservancy, The Park, archived on 16 May 2019 at https://web.archive.org/ web/20190516141655/https://trinityparkconservancy.org/the-park/. 45 Laura Bischoff, “10.5-Cent Gas Tax Increase Signed By Gov. DeWine,” Dayton Daily News, 3 April 2019, available at https://www.daytondailynews.com/news/local/ohio-drivers-set-paycents-per-gallon-gas-tax-increase/58FYUkaPpHgIF1PSlMuj9M/. 54 Krystina Martinez, “Dallas City Council Kills The Trinity Parkway Once And For All,” KERA News, 9 August 2017, available at https://www. keranews.org/post/dallas-city-council-kills-trinity -parkway-once-and-all. 52 Mark Sommerhauser, “Tony Evers Says His Budget to Seek More Money for Local Roads, not ‘Big Highway Projects,’” WiscNews, 21 February 2019. 55 46 Patrick Marley, “Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker Suggests Highways Don’t Need More Lanes When They Are Rebuilt,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 4 September 2018, available at https:// www.jsonline.com/story/news/politics/ elections/2018/09/04/scott-walker-suggestshighways-dont-need-more-lanes-when-they-rebuilt/1192867002/. 47 WISPIRG, No To Expansion of I-94 East-West “A Big Win for Taxpayers” (press release), 21 September 2017, archived at https://web.archive.org/ web/20190516140849/https://wispirg.org/news/ wip/no-expansion-i-94-east-west-%E2%80%9C-bigwin-taxpayers%E2%80%9D. 48 Tom Van Heeke and Tony Dutzik, Frontier Group, and Bruce Speight, WISPIRG Foundation, Road Overkill: Wisconsin Spends Big on Questionable Highways, Even as Driving Declines, May 2013, available at https://frontiergroup.org/reports/fg/ road-overkill. 49 Tom Van Heeke and Jeff Inglis, Frontier Group, and Bruce Speight, WISPIRG Foundation, Fork in the Road: Will Wisconsin Waste Money on Unneeded Highway Expansion or Invest in 21st Century Transportation Priorities?, September 2014, available at https://frontiergroup.org/reports/fg/fork-road. 50 Wisconsin Department of Transportation, I-94 North-South Freeway Project, accessed on 1 May 2019 at https://projects.511wi.gov/i94northsouth/ overview/. PAGE 3 4 See note 53. 56 Peter Simek, “It’s Time to Bury the Old Trinity River Hatchets,” D Magazine, 11 December 2018, available at https://www.dmagazine.com/ frontburner/2018/12/its-time-to-bury-the-old-trinity-river-hatchets/. 57 Ibid. 58 The SR-99 tunnel was designed to have the same capacity as the Alaskan Way Viaduct, and new surface streets will add capacity. Daniel Demay, “’Business Is not as Usual’: What’s Changing During, After Seattle’s Viaduct Closure,” Seattle PI, 9 January 2019. 59 See note 6. 60 Angie Schmitt, “Seattle’s Viadoom: The ‘Carmageddon’ That Wasn’t,” Streetsblog, 24 January 2019, available at https://usa.streetsblog. org/2019/01/24/seattles-viadoom-the-carmageddon-that-wasnt/. 61 David Gutman, “‘The cars just disappeared’: What happened to the 90,000 cars a day the viaduct carried before it closed?,” Seattle Times, 24 January 2019, available at https://www.seattletimes. com/seattle-news/transportation/the-cars-just-disappeared-what-happened-to-the-90000-cars-a-daythe-viaduct-carried-before-it-closed/. 62 Jeff Switzer, “Water Taxi Surged, Bus Ridership Climbed During The Epic SR 99 Closure,” King County Metro Metro Matters, 8 March 2019, archived at http://web.archive.org/web/20190410052007/ https://kingcountymetro.blog/2019/03/08/ water-taxi-surged-bus-ridership-climbed-during-the-epic-sr-99-closure/; Jeanne Clark, “Here Are The #Seattlesqueeze Numbers You’ve Been Waiting For,” SDOT Blog, 18 January 2019, archived at http://web.archive.org/web/20190426050652/ https://sdotblog.seattle.gov/2019/01/18/ here-are-the-seattlesqueeze-numbers-youvebeen-waiting-for/; increased local transit spending: Stephen Fesler, “Looking Back on Three Years of Transit Investment in Seattle,” The Urbanist, 24 January 2019, available at https://www.theurbanist. org/2019/01/24/looking-back-on-three-years-oftransit-investment-in-seattle/. 63 Laura Newborn, “How’s Traffic in Seattle’s SR 99 tunnel?”, WSDOT Blog, 5 April 2019, archived at http://web.archive.org/web/20190407174246/ https://wsdotblog.blogspot.com/2019/04/ hows-traffic-in-seattles-sr-99-tunnel.html. 64 Based on Google search conducted on 16 May 2019. 65 North Carolina Department of Transportation, Complete 540, archived on 21 April 2019 at http://web.archive.org/web/20190421204128/ https://www.ncdot.gov/projects/complete-540/ Pages/default.aspx. 66 Southern Environmental Law Center, Groups Ask NCDOT to Re-Think $2.5 Billion “Complete 540” Toll Road – Most Expensive in NC History (press release), 11 January 2016, archived at https://web. archive.org/web/20190510180825/https://www. southernenvironment.org/news-and-press/press-releases/groups-ask-ncdot-to-re-think-25-billion-complete-540-toll-road-most-expens; project will be paid for with mix of taxpayer funds and toll revenue: North Carolina Turnpike Authority, Annual Report Fiscal Year 2018, no publication date given, archived at http://web.archive.org/web/20190226050941/ https://www.ncdot.gov/divisions/turnpike/Documents/2018-annual-report.pdf. 68 Ibid. 69 H.W. Lochner, Inc. prepared for North Carolina Department of Transportation, Community Impact Assessment for Administrative Action Environmental Impact Statement, June 2015, archived at http:// web.archive.org/web/20180830063142/https:// xfer.services.ncdot.gov/PDEA/Web/Complete540/ reports/C540_CIA_0615.pdf. 70 North Carolina Department of Transportation, Final Environmental Impact Statement, December 2017, archived at http://web.archive.org/ web/20180830055816/https://xfer.services.ncdot. gov/PDEA/Web/Complete540/final-eis/_C540_ FEIS_Dec_21_2017_online.pdf. 71 Ibid. 72 Southern Environmental Law Center, Conservation Groups File New Claims against NCDOT, 540 Toll Road (press release), 25 June 2018, archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20190516175617/ https://cleanaircarolina.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/2018.06.25-Complete-540-Press-Release-Final.pdf. 73 See note 70; Lisa Sorg, “Complete 540 Gets Go-ahead From Fish and Wildlife Despite Likely Death of Some Threatened Mussels,” NC Policy Watch Blog, 20 April 2018, available at http://pulse. ncpolicywatch.org/2018/04/20/complete-540-getsgo-ahead-from-fish-and-wildlife-despite-likelydeath-of-some-threatened-mussels/. 74 Richard Stradling, “New Highway Will Threaten Endangered Mussels. NC Promises $5m to Breed Them,” News & Observer, 29 January 2018, available at https://www.newsobserver.com/news/ traffic/article197189949.html. 75 North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, Executive Order No. 80: North Carolina’s Commitment to Address Climate Change and Transition to a Clean Energy Economy, 29 October 2018, available at https://governor.nc.gov/documents/executive-order-no-80-north-carolinas-commitment-address-climate-change-and-transition. 67 Margaret Collins and Glen Weisbrod, Economic Development Research Group, Economic Impact of Freeway Bypass Routes in Medium Size Cities, September 2000, archived at http://web.archive. org/web/20171118001956/http://www.edrgroup. com:80/pdf/Urban-Freeway-Bypass-Case-Studies. pdf. PAGE 3 5 76 Daily VMT in thousands would increase from 86,545 to 87,873, a difference of 1.3 million VMT per day, or 484.7 million VMT per year. See table 2: H.W. Lochner, Inc. prepared for North Carolina Department of Transportation, Air Quality Analysis Report (update), December 2017, archived at http://web.archive.org/web/20180830055857/ https://xfer.services.ncdot.gov/PDEA/Web/ Complete540/final-eis/technical-reports/C540_Air_ Quality_1217.pdf. 77 Angie Schmitt, “Cities With the Most Highway Miles: a “Who’s Who” of Decay,” Streetsblog, 20 April 2012, available at https://usa.streetsblog. org/2012/04/20/cities-with-the-most-highwaymiles-a-whos-who-of-decay/. 78 “Houston has Nation’s Second Most Expensive Commute,” ABC 13 News, 13 December 2018, available at https://abc13.com/traffic/ houston-has-nations-second-most-expensive-commute/4885913/. 79 Dug Begley and St. John Barned-Smith, “Out of Control - Houston’s Roads, Drivers Are Country’s Most Deadly,” Houston Chronicle, December 2018, available at https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/investigations/article/Houston-sroads-drivers-are-nation-s-most-12865072.php 80 American Lung Association, State of the Air 2019, accessed on 29 May 2019 at https://www. lung.org/our-initiatives/healthy-air/sota/. 81 See note 31. 82 Dug Begley, “Houston, Highway Builders Have a Lot Riding on I-45 Widening Project,” Houston Chronicle, 15 March 2018, available at https:// www.houstonchronicle.com/news/transportation/ article/Houston-highway-builders-have-a-lot-riding-on-12755632.php#photo-15236276. 83 Texas Department of Transportation, Conceptual Layout 1-45 North, 21 September 2015, archived at http://web.archive.org/ web/20170202213931/http://ih45northandmore. com/docs5/20150922_NHHIP_Seg3_Updates.pdf. 84 See note 31. 85 Ibid. 86 Based on sum of displacements from all three segments: Texas Department of Transportation, Draft Environmental Impact Statement - North Houston Highway Improvement Project, Houston District, April 2017, archived at http://web.archive.org/ web/20181228184226/http://ih45northandmore. com/docs7/NHHIP_Draft_EIS_April-2017.pdf. 87 88 Jennifer Reyna, “Houston Commute Times Quickly Increasing,” Click2Houston, 4 February 2014, archived at web.archive.org/ web/20151221161745/http://www.click2houston. com/news/houston-commute-times-quickly-increasing_20151123154243235. 89 City of Houston Complete Communities, Complete Communities Updates (email newsletter), April 2019, archived at https://web.archive.org/ web/20190516182809/https://myemail.constantcontact.com/Complete-Communities-Newsletter--April--2019.html?soid=1118751441959&aid=wfhjRYFMqqI. 90 City of Houston, Planning & Development – Walkable Places, archived on 28 September 2018 at http://web.archive.org/web/20180928165803/ http://www.houstontx.gov:80/planning/Commissions/committee_walkable-places.html. 91 Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County, TX, METRONext: Vision Plan, archived on 16 May 2019 at https://web.archive.org/ web/20190516183025/http://metronext.org/about/ then_now_next.aspx. 92 Louis Sahagun, “L.A. County Set to Build Its First New Freeway in 25 Years, Despite Many Misgivings,” LA Times, 10 February 2018. 93 Jonathan Parfrey, Climate Resolve, New Freeway in LA? No, You’ve Got to Be Kidding Me., 11 February 2018, archived at http://web.archive. org/web/20180717031414/http://climateresolve. org:80/new-freeway-la-no-youve-got-kidding/; highway design and offramps: California Department of Transportation, Proposed High Desert Corridor & High Speed Rail, 3 July 2013, archived at http:// web.archive.org/web/20170212064745/http:// www.dot.ca.gov/d7/projects/HDC/docs/hdc_footprint_071813.pdf. 94 PAGE 3 6 See note 31. See note 92. 95 California State Senate, SB100 FAQs, archived on 29 November 2018 at https://web. archive.org/web/20181129171341/https://focus. senate.ca.gov/sb100/faqs. 96 State comparison emissions: U.S. Energy Information Administration, State Carbon Dioxide Emissions Data, downloaded from https://www. eia.gov/environment/emissions/state/ on 1 May 2019; California emissions: California Air Resources Board, California Carbon Dioxide Inventory for 20002016 — by Sector and Activity, 22 June 2018, archived at http://web.archive.org/web/20181130145835/ https://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/inventory/data/tables/ghg_inventory_sector_sum_2000-16co2.pdf. 97 State of California, Department of Motor Vehicles Statistics for Publication January Through December 2018, March 2019, archived at http://web.archive. org/web/20180509075540/https://www.dmv. ca.gov/portal/wcm/connect/5aa16cd3-39a5-402f9453-0d353706cc9a/official.pdf?MOD=AJPERES. 98 California Air Resources Board, SB 375 Target Update, 23 March 2017, archived at http://web. archive.org/web/20171108061512/https://www. arb.ca.gov/board/books/2017/032317/17-3-7pres. pdf. 99 Coal calculation: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Greenhouse Gas Equivalencies Calculator, accessed at https://www.epa.gov/energy/greenhouse-gas-equivalencies-calculator on 1 May 2019; emissions data: California Department of Transportation, High Desert Corridor Project - Final Environmental Impact Report, June 2016, archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20171222192605/ http://www.dot.ca.gov/d7/env-docs/docs/hdc/ HDC%20FED--Vol%201--062016_FINAL.pdf. 100 California Department of Transportation, High Desert Corridor Project - Final Environmental Impact Report, June 2016, archived at https://web. archive.org/web/20171222192605/http://www. dot.ca.gov/d7/env-docs/docs/hdc/HDC%20FED-Vol%201--062016_FINAL.pdf. 101 Ibid. More details: California Department of Transportation, Green Energy Feasibility Study Report, June 2014, archived at http://web.archive.org/ web/20171222193441/http://www.dot.ca.gov/d7/ env-docs/docs/hdc/The%20Physical%20Environment/HDC%20Green%20Energy%20feasibility%20 Study-June%202014.pdf. 102 Angie Schmitt, “Metro Detroit’s Highway Fixation Explains Why Our Infrastructure Is Broken,” Streetsblog, 13 March 2018, available at https://usa.streetsblog.org/2018/03/13/metro-detroits-highway-fixation-explains-why-our-infrastructure-is-broken/ 103 Mark Cavitt, “I-75 undergoing $1.6 Billion Worth of Improvements Over Next Five Years in Oakland County,” Oakland Press, 23 January 2019. 104 Michigan Department of Transportation, Modernize 75 – Segment 3, archived on 16 May 2019 at https://web.archive.org/web/20190516185359/ http://www.modernize75.com/segment3/; cost of Segment 3: U.S. Federal Highway Administration, , accessed on 31 May 2019 at https://www.fhwa.dot. gov/ipd/project_profiles/mi_i75_modernization_ segment_3.aspx. 105 Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, Southeast Michigan - 2045 Forecast Summary, accessed at https://maps.semcog.org/Forecast/ on 1 May 2019. 106 Ibid. 107 Angie Schmitt, “Racial Change Is Shaking up the Transit Landscape in Detroit, Atlanta,” Streetsblog, 30 May 2019. 108 Angie Schmitt, “How Sprawl Got Detroit Into This Mess,” Streetsblog, 22 July 2013, available at https://usa.streetsblog.org/2013/07/22/howsprawl-got-detroit-into-this-mess/ 109 L. Brooks Patterson, Oakland County Executive, Sprawl, Schmall... Give Me More Development, date not given , archive on 16 October 2016 at https://archive.org/wayback/available?url=https://www.oakgov.com/exec/Pages/brooks/ sprawl.aspx. 110 Leonardo R. Grabkowski, SF Gate, Nega, 18 June 2018, archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20190516185855/ https://homeguides.sfgate.com/negative-effects-urban-sprawl-1716.html. PAGE 3 7 111 Todd Litman, Victoria Transport Policy Institute, written for The New Climate Economy, Analysis of Public Policies That Unintentionally Encourage and Subsidize Urban Sprawl, March 2015, archived at https://web.archive. org/web/20180411034345/ http://static.newclimateeconomy.report/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/public-policiesencourage-sprawl-nce-report.pdf. 112 Ibid. 113 Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, 2045 Regional Transportation Plan, March 2019, downloaded from https://semcog.org/rtp. 114 Ibid. 115 Michigan Department of Transportation, Final Environmental Impact Statement - I-75 From M-102 to M-59 Oakland County Michigan, April 2005, archived at http://web.archive.org/ web/20170502034421/http://www.michigan.gov/ documents/mdot/MDOT_FEIS2005_420753_7.pdf. 116 Ibid. 117 James B. Ellison, Mayor, Royal Oak Office of the Mayor, A Resolution for Responsible Spending of Transportation Funds in Southeast Michigan, date not given, archived at https://web.archive.org/ web/20190516190810/https://www.romi.gov/ AgendaCenter/ViewFile/Item/2363?fileID=2431. 118 Ibid. 119 Mary Wisniewski, “$4 Billion Plan to Widen Tri-State Won’t Require Tax Money, Toll Hike: Officials,” Chicago Tribune, 27 April 2017, available at https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-tollway-board-294-widening-0427-20170427-story.html; Marni Pyke, “8 Years?!? Behemoth Tri-State Widening Project About to Begin,” Daily Herald, 7 May 2018, available at https://www.dailyherald.com/ news/20180507/8-years-behemoth-tri-state-widening-project-about-to-begin. 120 Mary Wisniewski, “$4 Billion Plan to Widen Tri-State Won’t Require Tax Money, Toll Hike: Officials,” Chicago Tribune, 27 April 2017, available at https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-tollwayboard-294-widening-0427-20170427-story.html. 121 Illinois Tollway, Central Tri-State Tollway (I294) Project, accessed at https://www.illinoistollway. com/projects/tri-state/central-tri-state-reconstruction on 1 May 2019. PAGE 3 8 122 Active Transportation Alliance, Tri-State Tollway Expansion Will Only Lead to More Driving, 28 April 2017, archived at https://web.archive.org/ web/20190516193754/https://activetrans.org/ blog/tri-state-tollway-expansion-will-only-lead-tomore-driving. 123 Active Transportation Alliance, Regional Mode Share Report, August 2018, archived at https:// web.archive.org/web/20190529154143/http://activetrans.org/sites/files/2018modesharereport.PDF. 124 Ibid. 125 Center for Neighborhood Technology, Transit-Oriented Development in the Chicago Region, April 2013, http://web.archive.org/ web/20180507215706/http://www.cnt.org/sites/ default/files/publications/CNT_TODInChicagoRegion.pdf. 126 Stefano Esposito, “$4 billion plan to improve, widen Tri-State Tollway approved,” Chicago Sun Times, 27 April 2017, available at https://chicago.suntimes.com/politics/4-billion-plan-to-improve-widen-tri-state-tollway-approved/. 127 Ibid. Also note that in May 2019, Hinsdale ended its opposition to the highway after an agreement with the Tollway that included new sound walls and park improvements, with the village president telling the Chicago Tribune “it makes the best of a bad situation.” See: Kimberly Fornek, “Hinsdale and Illinois Tollway near an agreement over widening of I-294,” Chicago Tribune, 2 May 2019, available at https://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/hinsdale/news/ct-dhd-tollway-expansion-agreement-tl0509-story.html. 128 Sierra Club, Miami Group – Urban Sprawl, archived on 16 May 2019 at https://web.archive. org/web/20190516194350/https://www.sierraclub. org/florida/miami/urban-sprawl. 129 Florida Department of Transportation, Final Environmental Impact Statement - Interstate 395, 18 February 2010, downloaded from https://etdmpub. fla-etat.org/est/index.jsp?startPageName=Project%2520Description&tpID=7701; Andres Viglucci, “Rival I-395 Plans Would Bring Iconic Bridges, Parks, Sunlight to Downtown and Overtown,” Miami Herald, 25 May 2017, available at https:// www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/ miami-dade/article152713624.html 130 Congress for a New Urbanism, Freeways Without Futures 2012, 2012, archived at https://web. archive.org/web/20140701223449/http://www. cnu.org/sites/www.cnu.org/files/final_2012_freeways_without_futures_3.pdf. 131 Florida Department of Transportation, Connecting Miami Project, accessed at http://www. i395-miami.com/ on 1 May 2019; tarantula resemblance: Linda Robertson, “Buckle up for The Mother of all highway construction projects. It’s about to start,” Miami Herald, 14 January 2019. 140 Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, I-83 North York Widening Project, accessed at https://www.i83northyork.com/ on 1 May 2019. 141 Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, I-83 Master Plan, August 2018, archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20190403212626/ https://www.ycpc.org/DocumentCenter/ View/1166/I-83-Master-Plan-PDF?bidId=. 142 Ibid. 143 Ibid. 132 See attached documents: City of Miami, Resolution R-19-0083, 28 February 2019, available at http://miamifl.iqm2.com/Citizens/Detail_LegiFile. aspx?Frame=&MeetingID=2188&MediaPosition=&ID=5386&CssClass=. 144 Jeff Paniati, U.S. Federal Highway Administration, , December 2004, archived at http://web.archive.org/ web/20161124061345/https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ publications/publicroads/04nov/01.cfm. 133 See note 129. 134 Ibid. 135 John Charles Robbins, “Miami OKs Deal for Lighted Park Under I-395,” Miami Today, 5 March 2019, available at https://www.miamitodaynews. com/2019/03/05/miami-oks-deal-for-lighted-parkunder-i-395/. 136 Miami-Dade Transportation Planning Organization, 2045 Long Range Transportation Plan, archived on 1 September 2018 at http://web.archive. org/web/20180901085932/http://miamidadetpo. org/long-range-transportation-plan.asp. 137 Transit Alliance Miami, MacArthur Causeway Bus Lane, date not given, archived at https:// web.archive.org/web/20190528213046/https:// transitalliance.miami/content/2-commentary/1-macarthur-causeway-bus-lane/causeway. pdf. 138 SMART Plan: Miami-Dade Transportation Planning Organization, Strategic Miami Area Rapid Transit (SMART) Plan, 2018, archived at https://web. archive.org/web/20190516195543/http://www.miamidadetpo.org/library/smartplan-brochure-2018. pdf; unsafe streets: Angie Schmitt, “Miami Hosted ‘Safe Streets Summit’ — Yet Hasn’t Fixed Its Unsafe Streets,” Streetsblog, 26 February 2019, available at https://usa.streetsblog.org/2019/02/26/miamihosted-safe-streets-summit-yet-hasnt-fixed-its-unsafe-streets/. 145 Meerah Powell, “Lawmakers Announce Funding For Portland Bus Rapid Transit Project,” OPB, 10 April 2019, available at https://www. opb.org/news/article/portland-oregon-division-bus-rapid-transit-project/. 146 John Metcalfe, “Portland’s New Bike Share Marks Some Early Triumphs,” CityLab, 19 January 2017, available at https://www.citylab.com/ transportation/2017/01/portlands-new-bike-sharemarks-an-early-success/513608/. 147 Angie Schmitt, “Portland Will Grow — But Without Adding Cars,” Streetsblog, 16 November 2018, available at https://usa.streetsblog. org/2018/11/16/how-portland-plans-to-grow-itsdowntown-without-adding-cars/. 148 Bike goal: Portland Bureau of Transportation, Bicycle Counts, archived on 19 November 2018 at http://web.archive.org/web/20181119223149/ https://www.portlandoregon.gov/TRANSPORTATION/44671; mode share: Jonathan Maus, Bike Portland, City Reverses Course, Will Maintain 25% Bike Mode Share Goal, 11 September 2017, archived at http://web.archive.org/web/20190129015911/ https://bikeportland.org/2017/09/11/city-reverses-course-will-maintain-25-bike-mode-sharegoal-242530. 149 Joe Cortright, “The Hidden Rose Quarter MegaFreeway,” City Observatory – City Commentary blog, 13 March 2019, available at http://cityobservatory.org/the-hidden-rose-quarter-megafreeway/. 139 See note 129. PAGE 3 9 150 Oregon Department of Transportation, I-5 Rose Quarter Improvement Project Environmental Assessment, 15 February 2019, archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20190516202355/ https://www.i5rosequarter.org/wp-content/ uploads/2019/03/508_20190225_I5RQ_Draft-EA_ SCREEN_508_RELINK_TAGGED.pdf. 151 Ibid. 152 Elissa Gertler, Oregon Metro, Re: I-5 Rose Quarter Improvement Project Environmental Assessment Comments, 1 April 2019, archived at https:// web.archive.org/web/20190516202500/https:// bikeportland.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/ EA-Review-Comment-Letter-040119.pdf. 153 Joe Cortright, “Safety: Using the Big Lie to Sell Wider Freeways,” City Observatory - City Commentary blog, 19 March 2019, available at http://cityobservatory.org/odots_big-lie/. 154 See note 152. 155 Ibid. 156 Andy Matarrese, “$500 Million ODOT Plan Addresses Rose Quarter Bottleneck Issue,” Columbian, 25 March 2019, available at https://www. columbian.com/news/2019/mar/25/500-millionodot-plan-addresses-rose-quarter-bottleneck-issue/. 157 Joe Cortright, “Backfire: How Widening Freeways Can Make Traffic Congestion Worse,” City Observatory - City Commentary blog, 26 February 2019, available at http://cityobservatory.org/backfire_ wider_worse_traffic/. 158 Ibid.; crash rate increase: Joe Cortright, “A Wider Freeway Won’t Reduce traffic,” City Observatory - City Commentary blog, 2 November 2019, available at http://cityobservatory.org/a-wider-freewaywont-reduce-traffic/. 159 Oregon Department of Transportation, Portland Metro Area Value Pricing Feasibility Analysis Final Round 2 Concept Evaluation Technical Memorandum 4, 7 May 2018, archived at http://web. archive.org/web/20180527232219/http://www. oregon.gov/ODOT/Value%20Pricing%20PAC/ TechnicalMemo4_Evaluation.pdf; ODOT has not seriously considered a pricing option: Joe Cortright, “Congestion Pricing Is a Better Solution for the Rose Quarter,” City Observatory - City Commentary blog, 26 March 2019, available at http://cityobservatory.org/congestion-pricing-is-a-better-solutionfor-the-rose-quarter/. PAGE 40 160 Jonathan Maus, Bike Portland, PBOT’s Biking and Walking Committees Oppose I-5 Rose Quarter Project, 26 March 2019, available at https://bikeportland. org/2019/03/26/pbot-biking-and-walking-advisorycommittees-oppose-i-5-rose-quarter-project-297374. 161 Joe Cortright, “Distorted Images: Freeway Widening Is Bad for Pedestrians,” City Observatory - City Commentary blog, 14 March 2019, available at http://cityobservatory.org/distorted-images-freeway-widening-is-bad-for-pedestrians/. 162 See note 152. 163 Jonathan Maus, Bike Portland, Backers Say I-5 Rose Quarter Widening Could Be Model for Future Freeway Projects, 31 August 2017, available at https://bikeportland.org/2017/08/31/backers-say-i-5-rose-quartercould-be-model-for-future-freeway-projects-240988. 164 See note 150. 165 Joe Cortright, City Observatory, Widening the I-5 Freeway Will Add Millions of Miles of Vehicle Travel, 3 April 2019, available at http://cityobservatory.org/widening-the-i-5-freeway-will-add-millions-of-miles-of-vehicle-travel/. 166 Blair Stenvick, “I-5 Rose Quarter Expansion Could Increase Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Researchers Find,” Portland Mercury, 4 March 2019, available at https://www.portlandmercury.com/ blogtown/2019/03/04/26101818/i-5-rose-quarterexpansion-could-increase-greenhouse-gas-emissions-researchers-find. 167 City of Portland, 2015 Climate Action Plan, June 2015, archived at http://web.archive.org/ web/20181123133310/https://www.portlandoregon.gov/bps/article/531984. 168 Jeff Mapes, “Opponents Dominate Hearing On Portland Rose Quarter I-5 Expansion Project,” OPB, 13 March 2019, available at https://www. opb.org/news/article/portland-oregon-interstate-5-rose-quarter-expansion-hearing/. 169 Virginia General Assembly, HB 2718 Interstate 81; Interstate 81 Corridor Improvement Fund created, etc. - Summary as Enacted With Governor’s Recommendation, accessed at https://lis.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/ legp604.exe?191+sum+HB2718 on 16 May 2019. 170 Virginia Department of Transportation, I-81 Corridor Improvement Plan, December 2018, available at http://www.ctb.virginia.gov/projects/major_ projects/i-81_study.asp. 171 Ibid. 172 Dwayne Yancey, “Speed Limit on I-81 through Botetourt Being Raised to 70 mph,” Roanoke Times, 20 October 2010, available at https:// www.roanoke.com/community/botetourt_view/ speed-limit-on-i--through-botetourt-being-raisedto/article_3f36f333-50a1-5521-8023-05f6268f40b0. html; Virginia Department of Transportation, Interstates - Locations for Posting at 70 MPH, date unknown, archived at https://web.archive.org/ web/20110119002219/http://www.virginiadot. org/news/resources/Statewide/70MPH_FINAL_ RECOMM.pdf. 173 Charles Farmer, Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, , April 2019, available at https://www.iihs.org/topics/bibliography/ref/2188. 174 See non-recurring delay: Virginia Department of Transportation, I-81 Corridor Improvement Plan, December 2018, available at http://www.ctb. virginia.gov/projects/major_projects/i-81_study. asp. 175 See note 170. 182 Alaskan Way Viaduct, Washington: Washington State Department of Transportation, The New SR 99 Tunnel Under Downtown Seattle, archived on 6 June 2019 at https://web.archive. org/web/20190606211319/https://99tunnel. com/; I-11, Nevada: Nevada DOT, Interstate 11, archived on 1 April 2019 at http://web.archive.org/ web/20190401224117/https://www.nevadadot. com/projects-programs/road-projects/interstate-11; I-77 Express Lanes, North Carolina: Mobility Partners LLC, I-77 Express, accessed on 6 June 2019 at https://www.i77express.com/; Route 20 Widening, Iowa: Iowa Department of Transportation, U.S. 20 Construction, accessed on 6 June 2019 at https:// iowadot.gov/us20construction. 183 Illiana Expressway, “Illinois and Indiana: Bob Okon, I-80 and Other Local Issues Await Gov. Pritzker,” The Herald News, 14 January 2019; Tesoro Extension, California: California State Parks Foundation, Landmark Agreement Ends 15year Dispute Over Sr 241 Toll Road Extension (press release), 10 November 2016, available at http:// www.calparks.org/media/press/2016/landmarkagreement-ends.html; City of Albuquerque, Paseo del Volcan, archived on 25 March 2019 at https:// archive.org/wayback/available?url=https://www. cabq.gov/council/projects/current-projects/paseodel-volcan. 176 Ibid. 177 Southern Environmental Law Center, Interstate 81 (VA): Background, archived on 16 May 2019 at https://web.archive.org/web/20190516181311/ https://www.southernenvironment.org/cases-and-projects/fact-sheets/interstate-81-va-background. 178 See note 170. 179 Ibid. 180 See note 177. 181 Dallas Trinity Parkway, Texas: Trinity River Corridor, Trinity Parkway, archived on 6 June 2019 at https://web.archive.org/web/20190606210845/ http://www.trinityrivercorridor.com/resourcess/ Pages/Trinity-Parkway.aspx; I-94 East-West Expansion in Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Patrick Marley, Bill Glauber and Don Behm, “Wisconsin Abandons I-94 East-West Project in Milwaukee County for Lack of Funds,” Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, 4 October 2017; 710 Tunnel, California: Carol Cormaci and Laura Nelson, “Caltrans Effectively Kills 710 Freeway Extension After Decades-Long Battle,” LA Times, 29 November 2018. 184 Effingham Parkway, Georgia: Mark Lastinger, “Effingham Parkway Project Hits Pothole,” , 15 April 2019; I-11, Arizona: Interstate 11 Corridor, Interstate 11 Corridor Tier 1 Environmental Impact Statement, Nogales to Wickenburg, archived on 12 November 2018 at http://web.archive. org/web/20181112005415/http://i11study.com/ Arizona/; I-26 Connector, North Carolina: North Carolina Department of Transportation, Asheville I-26 Connector, archived on 21 April 2019 at http:// web.archive.org/web/20190421202302/https:// www.ncdot.gov/projects/asheville-i-26-connector/ Pages/default.aspx; Mon-Fayette Expressway: Route 51 to I-376, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania Turnpike, PA Route 51 To I-376 of the Mon Fayette Expressway, archived on 6 June 2019 at https://web.archive. org/web/20190606212721/https://www.patpconstruction.com/monfaysb/News.aspx; Puget Sound Gateway, Washington: Washington State Department of Transportation, Puget Sound Gateway Program, archived on 4 June 2019 at http://web.archive. org/web/20190604033822/https://www.wsdot. wa.gov/Projects/Gateway/default.htm; Tampa Bay Express Lanes, Florida: Florida Department of Transportation, Tampa Bay Next, accessed on 6 June 2019 at http://www.tampabaynext.com/; Illinois State Route 53/120: Tri-County Access Project, Tri- PAGE 41