False Promises: Light Rail Reduces Congestion |
D oes Rail Reduce Congestion-1?
From the Oregonian
october
29, 1998 (just after the Westside line opened): Tri-Met based its number on a count of buu riders between 6 and 9 a.m. on an average of five mornings in October 1997 compared with a similar count of bus and rail riders this month in the same corridor. The agencys transportation consultants counted 3,642 riders both directions in October 1997 and 5,415 this month.
Analysis: This is a real count, not a projection and is from the transit
agency itself!
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Does Rail Reduce Congestion-2 ? A Trimet FactSheet (year 2006, 8 years after the Westside line opened) claims that:
Logical Conclusion:
Comment:
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Does Rail Reduce Congestion-3? The Portland/Vancouver I-5 Transportation and Trade Partnership used 18% and 31% as the percentage of rail riders that would be in cars if light rail wasn't built. See here for the method used. |
Conclusion: The above two methods produce answers consistent with the Portland/Vancouver I-5 Transportation and Trade Partnership and we can be fairly confident that Portland's MAX only removes less than 1/3 of one lane worth of traffic from a three lane freeway. LRT costs about 10-19 as much as freways for the same capacity. |
Final Conclusion: LIGHT RAIL COSTS TOO MUCH AND DOES TOO LITTLE |
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