Thursday, October 11, 2007

A Road Less Traveled....


As I was returning to my office this morning from the Urban Land Institute meeting in the Grove Hotel I noticed something. After a full morning of discussions regarding how we are going to fund more transportation infrastructure (i.e. raising this tax or that fee) I suddenly realised that I seemed to be going almost twice as fast going back to the office at 11:00 am than when I came to the meeting at 7:30 am...


We discussed local option sales tax increases of up to 1 cent, increasing registrations, increasing fuel taxes, increasing property taxes... the "increasing" discussions seemed to be never ending. Everyone seemed to have a plan to fix our woes with some sort of increased taxes. We know that we have issues that need to be funded, but it was not until Gov. Otter's Chief of Staff (Jeff Malman) got up and mentioned that we are now also working on how we can better spend the dollars we do have... I know it's easier to just raise a tax here or there and throw money at the issue, but if we are not spending the money we have wisely, aren't we putting a band aid on the real problems?


Getting back to my drive back to the office... why was it that I had a much easier commute back to Meridian later in the day than I had to Boise in the Morning? Well anyone and everyone knows it's because we all need to get to work in the morning and then come home at night at about the same time.


This lead me to think that we might also have "social engineering" issue that compounds our infrastructure issue. Why do we all (repeat... ALL) need to use our roads at the same time? Typically it's due to local business desires to have their folks change shift or start their work day all about the same time.


We do have infrastructure issues that need funding and we are going to have to find those dollars somehwere. Within the mix of "increased tax solutions" that are on the table, shouldn't we consider some "social engineering solutions" as well? Just how much would it cost the state to provide incentives to business encouraging/requiring "flex" hours or a change their shift schedules to times outside of the standard morning and evening commutes? Can we compare this cost of influencing our social behavior to the millions we are talking about spending for (in the Treasure Valley) 4 to 5 hour period each day that our roads are jammed with traffic... ?


As an example, how many people at Micron alone are beside us in traffic the mornings trying to get to work? What if a company the size of Micron were to move their shift change from 7:00 am to 7:00 pm to say... 9:00 am to 9:00 pm? And what if they were to encourage their normal "8 - 5'rs" into a more flexible schedule? That single action alone could take thousands of cars out of the early morning and evening commutes and spread the higher utilization of the roadways over a larger period of time. Less time commuting means less impact on our air quality, better fuel economy and happier drivers.


Employers aren't going to resolve our lack of funding issues, but do play a major role in why we have traffic issues at certain times of every day. I hate to see us pay for and build a huge infrastructure that will only be flexed 4 to 5 hours of every day because we choose to be inflexable in our travel requirements.


We need to put some "social engineering" options on that table to resolve our transportation issues... it's going to take a package of things, this needs to be one that's considered.


Thoughts?



3 comments:

Bubblehead said...

Micron shift work is not the problem; most shift workers are in by 7 am, before the real rush starts, and don't get on the road until 7pm, when the worst traffic is over. (Night shift people go the opposite direction of main traffic, so they have no contribution). When I'm on day shift, I'm never slowed down as I go from Exit 44 to 57 starting at 0600. If you're talking about 1st shift people, though, who's going to decide who has to work late and miss their kid's games? Or do we just assume that families won't eat together before the game?

Sen. Marv Hagedorn said...

I used Micron as an example just because they have a large workforce in the valley.

There are folks that are in positions to work a more flexable schedule out there... maybe another example would be state and federal government offices where folks who's job doesn't have to start right at 7 or 8 in the morning could have the flexability to come in earlier or later...

These suggestions aren't proposed as a final solution, but as stimulation for thought regarding our ability to change our habits. Right now the only solutions are to increase all Idahoan's individual costs for transportation... Should the folks in Potlatch Idaho pay more for morning/afternoon Boise rush hour traffic infrastructure? The more ideas the better as far as I'm concerned.

Thanks for your comments, I haven't driven the road for shift change in quite a few years, I just clearly remember running with the 1st shift folks down I-84 daily...

slfisher said...

Actually, that's the point of a local options tax -- it would just tax the affected area that votes to approve it, as opposed to, say, increases in fuel taxes or registrations.