TRANSIT
EXPERT: CAST OUT AUTOS
Cutting traffic brings happiness,
former Bogota mayor tells gathering
By Eric N.
Nelson - May 31, 2007 - Inside
Bay Area OAKLAND — With
the fervor of a preacher inciting his fallen
flock to
turn away from
their addictions, Enrique Penalosa told a
crowd of adoring alternative transportation
advocates
Wednesday at Oakland City Hall that shunning
their cars and SUVs could bring happiness
to East Bay cities.
Continuing to cater to our dependence by building
more highways and allowing cheap and easy parking
would lead to more traffic, more misery and
cities that few people would want to live,
work or play in, said Penalosa, who served
three years as mayor of Bogota, Colombia, and
now proselytizes for the way of the foot, bike
and wheelchair.
"A great city is not one with great highways," he
told the forum sponsored by AC Transit, "but
one where any child with a bicycle could
safely go anywhere."
Although
he said he was not a "car-hater," Penalosa
posited that "cars are to children today
what wolves used to be in the Middle Ages," taking
young lives with society's resignation.
The salt-and-pepper bearded New York University
visiting scholar was interrupted several times
with enthusiastic applause from the group,
gathered ostensibly to hear about the advantages
of AC Transit's new Bus Rapid Transit project.
Planned to start construction as early as late
next year and open by 2011, the line would
pick up prepaid passengers from raised platforms,
similar to a light rail line, and serve an
estimated 25,000 riders in Berkeley, Oakland
and San Leandro.
Penalosa's administration in Bogota rallied
the city to buck consultants who urged new
eight-lane highways
and instead built wide, brick-paved promenades
attached to bikeways away from car traffic.
The city also built the TransMilenio, a bus
system much like AC Transit's BRT, which serves
1.4 million riders in a city about the same
size as the metropolitan Bay Area.
But most controversially, Penalosa declared
virtual war on private vehicles in his teeming
Third World metropolis. Each day, half of all
cars, alternating according to odd- or even-numbered
license plates, were prohibited from driving
during rush hour, cutting peak-hour traffic
by 40 percent. The first Thursday of every
year became Car-free Day, forcing Bogota residents
to turn to buses, bikes, taxis and their own
two feet for mobility.
"This is very difficult, because those
that have political power have cars," he
said, relating his uphill battle in freeing
sidewalks
from parked cars.
"I was almost impeached for getting tens
of thousands of cars off sidewalks and making
sidewalks bigger," he said.
By the same token, he urged his audience to
stand firm for such changes in the Bay Area,
which he said would make it more livable, make
housing more affordable and promote a more
egalitarian society.
"Let us not be terrorized by shop owners
who say, 'Oh, we'll go broke if we don't have
parking.'
I don't see many shops going broke in Manhattan," Penalosa
said.
Although it is more of a baby step toward societal
transformation, the AC Transit plan would use
dedicated lanes along Telegraph Avenue from
the University of California, Berkeley, and
run south into downtown Oakland, then turn
southeast, running mainly along International
Boulevard and East 14th Street to reach the
Bayfair BART station in San Leandro.
The line would incorporate some of the ideas
Penalosa preached Wednesday, such as providing
a parallel bikeway, easy pedestrian access
and a revamped streetscape with landscaping
to make the route more inviting to pedestrians. Contact Erik N. Nelson at enelson@angnewspapers.com or
(510) 208-6410. Read his Capricious Commuter
blog at InsideBayArea.com.
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