The Norwalk Hour

Time to get real about clean transporta­tion

- By Samantha Dynowski Samantha Dynowski is state director for Sierra Club Connecticu­t.

Climate change is on everyone’s mind. How could it not be? We see one news story after another about climate catastroph­e around the world. We can literally feel the impact of the climate crisis as summers get hotter and winters get warmer, like on Jan. 11 when record high temperatur­es of 68 degrees hit Hartford and brought people out into the streets in their shorts and flip-flops.

At the same time, we’re spending way too much of our time in congested and unsafe traffic. Mass transit options are limited and often inaccessib­le, especially on evenings and weekends. Alternativ­es to driving, including safe bike lanes and pedestrian routes, are mostly nonexisten­t.

Rather than having safe, cross-city bicycle routes for all ages, we have disconnect­ed bike lane orphans and short segments that end abruptly.

These dismal realities of our transporta­tion system, climate change and threats to our safety and well-being are inherently interconne­cted. In addition to worsening our daily commutes and polluting the air we breathe, our cars and trucks are the largest source of climate-disrupting greenhouse gases in Connecticu­t. Given the dirty and ineffectiv­e status quo, it is not surprising that Connecticu­t residents across rural, suburban and urban communitie­s have demonstrat­ed widespread support for a multistate program in the works that could give our transporta­tion systems a massive makeover. Known as the Transporta­tion and Climate Initiative, or TCI for short, the program would reduce transporta­tion pollution and invest in clean, modern transporta­tion options.

Multiple polls in Connecticu­t and across the region have shown broad, bipartisan support for a cleaner, safer, healthier, more equitable and modern transporta­tion system to reduce pollution, create thousands of new jobs and save consumers billions of dollars in health care costs.

Right now, the federal administra­tion is going in the opposite direction by pursuing an unpopular and dangerous rollback of clean car standards. By working with other states in the region to cut emissions from motor fuels, Connecticu­t can succeed in moving forward on climate progress while delivering the clean transporta­tion that people in our state want and need, especially communitie­s that have suffered the most from transporta­tion pollution and are underserve­d with accessible and affordable options. Beyond Connecticu­t, this regional program will result in a nationally significan­t reduction in greenhouse gases, while increasing the resilience of the region’s transporta­tion systems with much-needed infrastruc­ture investment­s.

These policies will do more than deliver on climate action. The states’ draft plan projects big benefits for public health and the economy; a 25 percent reduction in motor fuel emissions could prevent more than 1,000 premature deaths and 1,300 asthma attacks per year across the region. It would generate up to $7 billion annually that could be invested into expanding transporta­tion choices for rural, urban and suburban communitie­s. Imagine the benefits under a stronger emissions reduction target, such as 45 percent.

This approach to transporta­tion has widespread support in Connecticu­t and throughout the region, except from polluters. Dirty energy companies and their mouthpiece­s are keen to spread negative messages so that they can keep profiting by polluting our communitie­s and destroying our climate. It is time that Connecticu­t residents, not dirty fossil fuel companies, have the final word for a future that benefits them. Gov. Lamont and fellow governors working on the Transporta­tion and Climate Initiative should finalize a strong and just regional policy this spring. We can’t afford to let this opportunit­y to address our most polluting sector pass us by.

 ?? File photo ?? Metro-North commuter trains arrive and depart from the Stamford train station.
File photo Metro-North commuter trains arrive and depart from the Stamford train station.

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