Shaping our future

Expanding freeways doesn’t remove congestion.

This should not be a controversial statement. But somehow, urban planners, transit advocates, and climate activists still have to point this out to local government and provincial leaders, who have for the most part replied by saying some version of “Yeah, but this one is different”. Denial is an expensive vanity in light of the Climate Crisis.

The world around, growing cities have added capacity to congested road networks to find that the larger road networks are just as congested, and the surrounding areas made less livable because of that congestion. This is not conjecture or legend, it is a measurable certainty well established in the literature. Continued application of lanes has never, ever proven to solve the problem. I risk belaboring the point here, but if you need convincing, spend 5 minutes (or 5 hours!) Googling “The Fundamental Law of Road Congestion”, or your pick of paradoxes: Braess Paradox, Jevon’s Paradox, Downs–Thomson paradox. They all, from different angles, explain that adding road lanes makes congestion worse for everyone. Always.

So, taking those things as read, I don’t have to go into the myriad of reasons why the 10-lane bridge plan for the Massey crossing was a bad idea. As I may have mentioned in the past, it was an idea built on a foundation as shaky as Fraser Delta silt. This was obvious during the Environmental Assessment of that lamentable plan. It was found wanting, and required such a contraction of inferred impacts that it literally ignored traffic impacts 100m from the intersection pictured above. It was clear that the only benefit to building it was a political one in a riding held by an independent on the south side of the link. It was no surprise that when the political imperative went away, that half-baked mutli-billion dollar scheme needed to be cancelled.

Here we are two years later. A very-slightly-less-terrible option is being legitimately floated (immersed?), and the same arguments for expanded road capacity are being trotted out like they are long-held truths. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.

I’m engaging in a bit of wrathful Patsplaining here because I have been banging this drum for a long time, as an advocate for sustainable transportation, as a professional who worked on the Environmental Assessment process of the previous 10-lane bridge proposal, and as an elected official expected to show leadership in my community. This project has been part of my life for almost a decade, and I lament we still have completely failed to address the underlying issues. After all of this time, the political conversation is no more truthful than it was almost a decade ago. Same as it ever was.

The plan to replace the Massey Tunnel with an 8-lane immersed tube is a bad one. Every bit as bad as the 10-lane bridge. Fundamentally wrong for all the same reasons as the bridge, such that they are effectively the same project. There is no defensible reason to oppose the big bridge and now support the big tunnel. To point: it is a massive waste of money that will not solve the problem it is alleged to solve, but will instead take away from efforts to address real crises in our region.

The current tunnel does not meet current seismic codes, that is not a point of debate. Like a shocking amount of our public infrastructure, even life-critical infrastructure, it was not built with a 21st century understanding of seismic risk. There is something very visceral about being one of the unfortunate dozens in the tunnel at the time of a major earthquake that does not have the same effect when we think about the dozens of schools, office buildings, bridges and other structures that are at risk, so this makes a compelling case for doing something. Upgrading or replacing a piece of infrastructure to meet current risk standards should be a priority, no argument there. We may quibble about where to prioritize a tunnel over, say, the 270 schools still on the “to do” list. However, to continue the unfortunate whataboutism of using schools as a comparison, building a much larger facility to accommodate future growth is a different discussion than whether we should replace or fix up a school. Seismic upgrades do not require doubling capacity.

If building more lanes doesn’t fix congestion, you may ask, what does? Experience from around the world tells us there are only two models to significantly reducing road congestion. The Detroit Model (massive economic collapse and depopulation) is probably something only a few fringy cranks want to promote and I want to be clear I disagree with this model for the Lower Mainland.  That leaves the Nordic Model: road pricing and serious investment in the alternatives. Invest in rapid expansion of rapid transit, and price the roads to pay for it. One will not work without the other, you need to do both. This combination is the only thing that we know will work, anyone telling you otherwise is lying. No government can claim to be progressive, to be addressing road congestion, or to be committed to climate action unless they are doing these two things.

Why do I care, here in New Westminster, and why should you care? I assert that aside from the Port Mann fiasco, this project will be the most important region-shaping project of our generation. More than SkyTrain to UBC or rapid transit to Fleetwood (and likely at much higher a cost), the expansion of road capacity and entrenchment of a Motordom-oriented development model South of the Fraser will define our region. And the current definition makes us look antiquated and negligent. The tunnel will not only shape our region in a less sustainable way, it will take away limited resources that can must be applied to sustainable transportation approaches if we can ever hope to reach our regional livability goals, or Paris climate targets. But who is going to stand up in our region, and show the leadership needed to push back against this bullshit-driven boondoggle?

6 comments on “Shaping our future

  1. Hi Patrick: For the record, what is your preferred solution? Replace the seismically-poor 4 lane tunnel with a seismically-good 4 lane tunnel? Or a 4-lane bridge? Or a 6-lane tunnel/bridge with two dedicated HOV lanes? With or without future ability to accommodate a future LRT or SkyTrain extension? I was never a fan of the mega-bridge, myself.

    1. I’m not an engineer, the difference between a new tube, a new bridge, or a refurbished tube are engineering considerations. The idea of building extra lanes “with the ability to accommodate LRT” was a bullshit idea used to expand road capacity in the past. It was used for the Alex Fraser Bridge (the idea abandoned less then two years later when induced demand caused congestion on the new bridge), it was floated for the Port Mann replacement, and it will no doubt be used here. That doesn’t make it truthful. My solution? It is right there in the post – road pricing and massive expansion of transit services. Its the only thing that works.

      1. I also agree that mobility pricing is an idea whose time has come. And the funds raised should support new transit infrastructure. But what about the seismic issues?

  2. What is the narrative from the perspective of someone commuting from Delta right now though? They have no real viable transit options, they have invested in the vehicle based lifestyle, and they have to compete with traffic from both the ferries and the border. They see 8 lanes being compressed into 4 everyday, and the simple fix looks like turning 4 lanes into 8.
    We need an alternate narrative to change minds. “But what about the children?” helps.. (nice roundabout way of doing that by the way with the schools reference), but if you’re going to trash the simple fix solution, then we need to recognize the problem, and present an alternative solution (or data to tell us why it’s a less important problem than we might think). I’m lucky. I don’t have to use the tunnel on any sort of a regular basis… I would love to be able to take my bike on the skytrain, and ride to the Tsawassen ferry for the occasional visit to the island(s). For those who both like the way of life that south of the Fraser offers, and need to commute regularly to the North, it sucks.
    So why are those people less important? or what are alternatives to ease their pain? I can agree abstractly that adding more expensive vehicle based infrastructure isn’t helping to meet regional climate objectives… unless there is a movement to combine the new tunnel with incentives to go electric (i.e. tolled with price reductions for electric). Of course, we also need to consider the equity lense… the argument that we’re further disadvantaging people that are already pushed out by expensive housing.

    1. “What is the narrative from the perspective of someone commuting from Delta right now though?” not to put to fine a point on it, but who gives a shit? The 100K people in Delta have made a deliberate choice to live in Delta, and have done so knowing that tunnels and bridges are their life if they need to access the region North of the Fraser. They “like the way of life” of living in a community where they are traffic constrained (which, obviously, made that “way of life” more affordable to buy into) from where they work, and now want to burn the planet to build a fake solution? Again, back to the top, expanding the tunnel will not fix congestion, but it should add to their land value. And read a little further down, there Cameron, I did offer the solution, the only solution known and proven to work. But that solution requires leadership and vision. And alas, we are lacking both.

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