
On Wed, 2 Jul 2014, Michael Scott wrote:
People don't want to pay tolls but then they whinge about having to pay taxes.
If there were tolls on the road you have the choice of using it or not and paying or not. Without tolls and with taxes funding roads you have no choice. It comes out of general revenue. I don't know that tolls on roads is the problem.
The gridlock will occur because of increases in population and more cars on the road. The idea is to create a road system that alleviates gridlock. Does this alleviate gridlock or not?
But it doesn't. Everywhere around the world, the average commute time is 45 minutes. Regardless of where you are. It's fundamental, because no one wants to commute more than that, so they create whatever conditions are necessary to achieve that commute time. Live closer in. Build more dense housing. Find a job closer to home. Get a motorbike. Building freeways just induces demand. In 10 years time if the link is built, the projections are that traffic will be absolutely no different than it is today. Given that it's not even going to shift 150,000 per day, wouldn't it be more worthwhile wasting that $18B ($120,000 each for those 150,000 regular users! Bet they've not paid that much tax in 10 years) on something long term useful instead of getting the army to dig ditches and fill them back up again? Like perhaps train and freight links (since this freeway is just for Lindsay fox, build him a dedicated train line!). -- Tim Connors