Transforming transportation

Originally Posted on The Yale Herald via UWIRE

On Monday night in the back room of BAR, tucked behind the craft beer list and the dimly  lit  pool  tables  of  the  main  hall,  a group of middle-aged New Havenites gathered to discuss the future of public transit.

A bright green PowerPoint presentation flashed pictures  of  buses  and  slides  of  transportation  statistics.  Tidbits  of  transportation-themed  trivia  in-formed attendees of the fastest operating speed of Japanese trains and more. Doug Hausladen, director of transportation for the City of New Haven, along with presenters from the Connecticut Association of Community  Transportation,  Young  Energetic  Solutions, among others, described the transit situation in New Haven. The event, titled “Transportation on Tap,” was one of a series of events that make up the core push of a new initiative meant to decrease reliance on cars in New Haven and, more broadly, to re-examine the use of public transportation in the city.

The initiative, GoNewHavenGo, will comprise a yearlong resource for how businesses and individuals in New Haven can commute without a car—and how, on a broader level, the city can take a renewed look at sustainable steps in public transit that pro-mote  health  and  wellbeing  of  residents,  too.  Not only  the  City  of  New  Haven,  but  also  a  coalition of  partners,  from  CTrides  to  the  New  Haven/León Sister City Project, have come together around the initiative, which is currently holding its first annual September campaign to rally support and increase public discourse around public transit.

GoNewHavenGo is only one of a series of organizations that, citywide, are pushing for greater access to public transport. While the benefits are manifold—from reducing carbon footprint and increasing environmental  awareness,  to  decreasing  pollution and combatting obesity—it is the intersection of the issue of public transport with another central question that arises when taking the future of New Haven into consideration that, it becomes clear, makes efforts like these vital to the city’s future.

Nearly a third    of    New Haven residents do    not    have cars. A majority of    households have fewer cars than  adults.  If residents    can-not commute to work reliably, or at all, their jobs will be imperiled. New  Haven’s  14  percent  unemployment  rate  is persistently high, and nearly twice the national aver-age. Hausladen, and those who have thrown their efforts  behind  GoNewHavenGo,  are  doing  so  with  the hope that it could serve as an avenue for combating this  trend.  The  efficacy  of  these  initiatives,  though, remains in question.

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The intersection of unemployment and transportation is an area that has received consider-able focus in the past. A Dec. 2014 DataHaven re-port on job access and transportation in New Haven led  with  a  quote  by  New  Haven  Mayor  Toni  Harp: “Transportation  is  a  civil  rights  issue,  it’s  an  economic development issue, it’s a job issue.”

The report pointed towards the reality that many jobs in Greater New Haven are based in workplaces outside of the city limits, where transportation infrastructure  is  more  limited.  In  the  City  of  New Haven, 13,000 households have no car. Nearly 90 percent of those who seek work through CTWorks cite lack of suitable transportation as a chief impediment in being able to find a job. This lack of transportation  is  by  far the most commonly    cited    barrier that those seeking work identify.

Even  though three-quarters    of New   Haven   residents   live   within walking distance of a bus stop, the DataHaven re-port found that, during rush hour, nearly three quarters of jobs are inaccessible within an hour-and-a-half commute. As these findings make clear, even when the infrastructure ostensibly exists, it still frequently proves ineffective. In the absence of a reliable public transportation infrastructure, residents have been forced to use cars as their primary form of transportation.

Here,  the  split  that  motivated  the  creation  of GoNewHavenGo  arises.  In  the  City  of  New  Haven, 69 percent of residents reported that they did not have access to a car when they needed it; this statistic drops to 14 percent for all residents of Greater New Haven. People are unable to get to job inter-views and, if they are hired, may well be rendered unreliable. Their time is faultily expended, and leisure time drops. A chief aim of GoNewHavenGo, in turn, is to make access to a car irrelevant to the ability of New Haven residents to find and hold employment.

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Hausladen knows that, in terms of public transportation,  New  Haven  is,  in  and  of  itself,  an  irony.  It  boasts  a  robust transportation infrastructure that makes it a hub along the eastern seaboard. But while it serves as the chief connector between Boston and New York City, the transportation within the city has, historically, been anemic at best. He described the GoNewHavenGo project as “low hanging fruit”—it is, primarily, concerned with promoting and marketing  around  the  infra-structure that currently exists, and comes at little cost to the City itself.

Laurence Grotheer, Director of Communications for the Mayor’s   office,   agreed.   He made clear that GoNewHavenGo  is  “simply  an  awareness campaign.”    Grotheer    said that  the  month-long  marketing  and  events  push  is  “organized encouragement” that is  aimed  to  lead  residents  to consider, and use, alternative means of transit.

Hausladen   made   clear, though,   that   the   city   can by  no  means  stop  here.  The broader mission that he identified, and that GoNewHavenGo promotes, lies in the push to shift from a car-reliant sys-tem to one that supports the existing   infrastructure,   that moves away from cars and to-wards public transit that is accessible for all.

“We are continuing to develop downtown based on the geometries of roads. Downtown is exploding with development,” Hausladen said. “But you can only fit so many cars into a downtown.”

He described “terrific bus reach” and “amazing access to transit.” But, he acknowledged that service levels—the frequency and accessibility of transit options—are lacking. And as Jacob Wasserman, SY ’15, who spent the summer interning at and coordinating GoNewHavenGo’s work as a Dwight Hall fellow, acknowledged, there has been resistance to even these these steps. “There are some people who push back, who ask, ‘Why are we investing so much in bikes, in walking infrastructure, when we could be investing more in our roads?’”

But  Wasserman  said  that  GoNewHavenGo’s  work  is  essential, and  is  far  from  an  anomaly.  “It  is  part  of  a  national  movement,” Wasserman said. “People are moving back to cities, and people are ditching their cars, or using them less and less. We are right in that movement, at the cutting edge of it—” he pauses, and backtracks with a chuckle. “At least, I’ll claim.”

Wasserman  made  clear,  though,  that  the  coalition  that  has formed around the movement all come to it from different angles, but all believe in the centrality of improved access to effective trans-port. “It’s how you hold a job. It’s how we keep our city from being under water,” Wasserman said. “When the city is in a jobs crisis, to help the city get back working, being able to get to work consistently is really important.”

Wasserman  described   the   outreach that GoNewHavenGo is doing to businesses, to provide  incentives  for their employees to use public  transport,  and to  set  up  infrastructure—as   small   scale as  bike  racks  in  front of  the  businesses—to encourage these transportation practices.

This  month  is  the coalition’s  second  annual  push  to  engage the    community    on transportation   issues. Over   30   businesses and   400   individuals have signed up to participate  in  the  month-long competition to transport using bikes, walking, carpool, or train; the competition will be decided based on reduction in carbon emissions and money saved. The metrics they use to track the competition make clear that they are approaching the marketing of this push through  the  lens  of  sustainability.  But  the  promise  that  this  push holds to help tackle the jobs crisis in New Haven makes clear that GoNewHavenGo may well be a component of molding a brighter future for the New Haven itself.

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