The Guardian (USA)

US spends billions on roads rather than public transport in ‘climate time bomb’

- Oliver Milman

Roads, roads and more roads. The US is continuing to spend billions of dollars on expanding enormous highways rather than fund public transport, with a landmark infrastruc­ture bill lauded by Joe Biden only further accelerati­ng the dominance of cars at the expense, critics say, of communitie­s and the climate.

Since the passage of the enormous $1.2tn bipartisan infrastruc­ture law in 2021, hailed by Biden as a generation­al effort to upgrade the US’s crumbling bridges, roads, ports and public transit, money has overwhelmi­ngly poured into the maintenanc­e and widening of roads rather than improving the threadbare network of bus, rail and cycling options available to Americans, a new analysis has found.

Of reported funds dispersed to states, more than half – around $70bn – have been spent on the resurfacin­g and expansion of highways, a process that researcher­s have consistent­ly found only spurs greater use of cars and therefore more congestion.

Just a fifth of the money has gone so far to public transit, with much of the remainder also facilitati­ng more car driving, such as the refurbishm­ent of bridges.

This spending is a “climate time bomb”, according to the new Transporta­tion for America analysis, which calculates that more than 178m tons of greenhouse gases will be emitted due to planned highway expansions by 2040, only slightly offset by emissionsr­educing measures that also stem from the bill.

“We’re seeing investment­s that are not too conscious of the climate across the board from states,” said Corrigan Salerno, policy associate at Transporta­tionfor America, a transport policy group.

“Nothing is fundamenta­lly changing in terms of modes of transport. This much money going into highway expansion is, for one, a liability into the future, and two, it just doesn’t work. We’ve been expanding highways for decades on decades, and everyone consistent­ly finds themselves stuck in traffic.”

Funding from the federal government has been given to states with broad flexibilit­y on how to use it and state authoritie­s, by and large, have chosen to persist with car-centric infrastruc­ture. The Biden administra­tion’s department of transporta­tion did advise states to prioritize road repair, rather than expansion, and to bear in mind communitie­s, usually of color, that have been severed by highways and are subjected to the resulting air pollution.

However, this stance prompted a backlash from Republican­s in Congress and been mostly overlooked by states such as Texas and even California, considered a progressiv­e bastion of climate policy, that have pushed ahead plans to add more and more lanes to highways.

“So much of the decision making falls to state department­s of transporta­tion,” said Mary Buchanan, research and policy manager at TransitCen­ter, a foundation that aims to improve public transit in the US. “There are essentiall­y 50 opportunit­ies to get this right, I guess, or to potentiall­y get it wrong, in terms of how money is being spent.”

The result is that the US will generate more emissions from transport, already its largest source of planetheat­ing gases, as a result of the infrastruc­ture bill than if it hadn’t passed, according to Salerno. “You have to essentiall­y walk down this giant cliff of emissions that we’re creating into the future because once these highways are built, there’s not really an easy way back from that,” he said.

The US’s fixation with hulking roads – along with the growth of supersized cars that are responsibl­e for about 40,000 deaths a year in accidents, a toll that has ticked up in recent years – has led to calls for a rethink. This month, around 200 climate, biking and walkabilit­y groups called for a national moratorium on highway expansions due to the ills they bring.

“The highway system we have built in our country is unsustaina­ble, both financiall­y and environmen­tally, and disproport­ionately harms low-income and Black and brown communitie­s,” an open letter from the coalition says.

There is little sign of improved fortunes for public transport, however. Rail and bus services were badly hit during the Covid pandemic, with a lack of commuter revenue causing headaches for several city systems seeking to cover their basic operationa­l costs.

Some jurisdicti­ons, meanwhile, appear openly hostile to non-car options. Lawmakers in Indiana this week moved to ban dedicated bus lanes in Indianapol­is, while officials in Miami Beach recently rejected a plan to extend a rail line to help alleviate congestion. It was also recently announced the 2026 World Cup final will be held at the MetLife stadium in New Jersey, a facility to which patrons are advised not to walk because the approaches are too dangerous because of cars.

Buchanan said the coverage of public transit remains “disparate” across the US and the funding of it requires a new approach from states.

“If states continue to spend this new money in the same ways that they’ve spent it in the past, we will continue to expand highways and really cement ourselves to our car oriented kind of way of getting around,” she said.

“So it’s a very pivotal moment. There’s definitely an opportunit­y for our emissions from the transporta­tion sector to really increase as a result of these infrastruc­ture bills, which would be really bad.”

A US department of transporta­tion spokesman said the Biden administra­tion has taken the “strongest actions of any administra­tion in history to reduce carbon pollution in transporta­tion with the largest investment in public transit in American history, the largest investment in passenger rail since the inception of Amtrak, record levels of funding to support active transporta­tion – like walking and biking – and historic investment­s in zero-emission buses, electric vehicles, and charging infrastruc­ture.”

 ?? Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA ?? Of reported funds dispersed to states, more than half – around $70bn – have been spent on the resurfacin­g and expansion of highways.
Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA Of reported funds dispersed to states, more than half – around $70bn – have been spent on the resurfacin­g and expansion of highways.

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