Text Only
Search

Spiraling Gas Prices Have People Talking Transit


30 June 2008
Landphair report - Download (MP3) audio clip
Landphair report - Listen (MP3) audio clip


Long commutes and harrowing traffic jams were once a lot more tolerable than they are today, when gasoline is twice as expensive as it was early last year
Long commutes and harrowing traffic jams were once a lot more tolerable than they are today, when gasoline is twice as expensive as it was early last year
Faced with ever-rising gasoline prices, more and more Americans are cutting back on driving.  We're taking shorter vacations and turning to buses, subways, light-rail trains, motorcycles – even bicycles – to get around town.  
    
We are, that is, if we live in a city like San Francisco, with its famous cable-car system and trolleys, plus lots of bike paths and pedestrian walkways.  Or New York, whose venerable subways serve every part of town.  

No wonder those cities finished first and second in a survey by the economic-development group Common Current, which ranked 50 U.S. cities on their ability to cope with the oil-price crisis.

But those who live in Oklahoma City, Okla., which finished dead last, or nearby Tulsa, Okla., which was 49th, are not so lucky.

Even in regions where the car culture is deeply ingrained, people are buying fewer gas-guzzlers.  But often there's not much public transit as an alternative
Even in regions where the car culture is deeply ingrained, people are buying fewer gas-guzzlers.  But often there's not much public transit as an alternative
In oil-rich Oklahoma and neighboring Texas, gasoline was plentiful and cheap, and cities spread so far across the prairie that people scoffed at the notion of building tracks for slow-moving streetcars. Folks in that free-wheeling culture wanted to go where and when they wanted in their powerful automobiles.  They didn't want to ride smelly buses, either.  

But you should hear these folks now.  Tulsa's transit manager told CNN.com, "You've got people coming out of the woodwork, screaming for more bus service."
People who live in cities like San Francisco, which has lots of trolleys and buses as well as its famous cable cars, have many transit options
People who live in cities like San Francisco, which has lots of trolleys and buses as well as its famous cable cars, have many transit options
Trouble is, the Tulsas and Oklahoma Cities don't have the buses or express highway lanes on which to run them.  And most big American cities don't have subways.   

Even in the auto-loving patch of America, carpooling – in which people take turns driving to work – is catching on.  Workers are setting up home offices if their bosses allow it.  Sales of gas-gorging pickup trucks are down.  And contrary to their conservative nature, some Oklahomans and Texans are even muttering that it may take the dreaded T word to bring mass transit to the land where the car is king: T for taxes. 

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
Bush: Top Economic Powers Will Cooperate on Economic Crisis  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Obama Thanks McCain for Urging Supporters to be Respectful
Israeli Jews and Arabs Clash in Acre for Fourth Day
Suspected U.S. Missile Strike Kills At Least 3 in Pakistan
US, North Korea, Reach Deal to Salvage Nuclear Accord   Audio Clip Available
Reports: GM, Chrysler Discuss Merger
Alaska Inquiry Concludes Palin Abused Power  Audio Clip Available
Turkish Military Attacks Kurdish Rebels in Northern Iraq
Afghanistan Welcomes NATO Crackdown on Narcotics Infrastructure  Audio Clip Available
Zimbabwean Opposition Says Power-Sharing Deal under Threat  Audio Clip Available
Thousands Welcome Indonesian Separatist from Exile  Audio Clip Available
Austria 's Far Right Leader Dies in Car Crash  Audio Clip Available
Niger Delta Philanthropist Seeks Better Deal for Oil Communities