News Roundup: June 10, 2013


How To Calm The Urban Parking Wars (Slate)
Matt Yglesias notes that one of the most contentious issues with new development is the real or perceived loss of parking for current neighborhood residents, and proposes to solve the problem by granting existing residents parking passes that can then be traded on the open market among all residents, new and old. The theory is that this would placate existing residents by giving them an asset that would actually appreciate as new development brought more drivers into the community.
A new report by the Competitive Enterprise Institute highlights the differences between safety regulations in the U.S. and EU, and how despite our more onerous requirements we actually end up with much less safe trains; this is related to something I've written about in the past.

Benefits of the Grid (Great American Grid)
Spun off from a discussion at this year's conference of the Congress for the New Urbanism in Salt Lake City, Paul Knight explores the the impact of highly ordered, rectangular blocks and the benefits derived from them, including: walkability (when blocks are properly sized), navigability, adaptability, and efficient use of space (sustainability, if you will).

The Power Inversion (New York Times)
In an op-ed piece, conservative columnist David Brooks argues that federal influence is waning while municipal and regional government power is on the rise, and that local governments may be better suited to responding to many of the prominent issues of our time, including education and infrastructure funding.

Federal Gas Tax Passes Another Milestone: What Is The Future? (Forbes)
The federal gas tax turned 81 years old this Thursday (June 6), and Kelly Phillips Erb has an interesting history of its introduction, its growth under various administrations, and the reasons and justifications behind those increases.

Canada to adopt U.S. vehicle emissions standards, 80% cleaner than current ones (Treehugger)
Michael Graham Richard reports on Canada's adoption of the United States' EPA tier 3 vehicle emissions standards--which include requirements for lower particulate emissions and sulfur content--highlighting the impact of the new EPA standards beyond just the changes in the U.S. market.

The New Urbanist Renaissance of Downtown Redwood City (CNU Salons)
Dan Zack recounts the rejuvenation of downtrodden, economically depressed Redwood City over the past decade into a vital, growing city. Zack outlines the three phases of redevelopment that took place in the city, and his role in the renaissance as the city's Downtown Development Coordinator and a proponent of New Urbanist principles.

...and today, some activism:
Petitioning U.S. DOT to Recognize That City Streets Should Prioritize Walking (Streetsblog)
Current Federal Highway Administration standards for road design are split, rather crudely, between "rural" and "urban" designations, but urban includes everything from McMansion-filled outer suburbs to thriving, active downtowns. A team of planners (and anyone with a bit of sense) think this is not just silly, but genuinely damaging to the effort to make cities safer and more walkable for their residents. They've created a petition to try to convince the FHA to improve their standards, which can be signed here.

News Roundup: June 06, 2013

Now is the time to be an infrastructure hawk, not a deficit hawk (Washington Post)
Ezra Klein makes the case for delaying deficit reduction in favor of focusing on our infrastructure needs. The reasons have been covered many times in the past several years, but this paragraph really nails it: "This, then, is the difference between spending the next two years investing in infrastructure and spending the next two years sharply reducing the deficit. Both of them need to be done eventually. Delaying either means saddling the future with debts we declined to pay off in the present. But this is a particularly good time to invest in infrastructure and a particularly bad time to cut deep into the deficit. And yet we’re ignoring infrastructure and rapidly reducing the deficit. We’ve got it backwards."

It’s Not Just Nice to Share, It’s the Future (New York Times)
Tina Rosenberg discusses the rapid evolution of the sharing economy, in which the long-time availability of some shared resources, like hotel rooms, DVDs, and gym equipment is expanding to things like cars, bikes, tools, clothes, textbooks, etc. She goes on to catalogue some of the reasons for the shift from ownership to access, including the recession, the sustainability movement, and improvements in technology.

The Most Expensive Housing Markets Are Becoming Even Less Affordable (Atlantic Cities)
Home prices have been rapidly increasing, with a roughly 10% average increase year-over-year across the nation. But while this is good news for many homeowners, the gains are not uniform, and the least affordable markets are the ones experiencing the fastest gains in value while cheaper markets like Houston and Indianapolis are lagging behind the national average, exacerbating already-large disparities between metro areas.

Study: AASHTO Guidelines for Bikes Outdated, Not Based on Research (Mobilizing the Region)
A report by the Harvard School of Public Health reveals that the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO), "the go-to resource for transportation engineering guidelines," is using guidelines from as far back as 1972 to inform their bike facilities recommendations, and that they continue to advocate against their use despite their unmitigated success in increasing ridership and improving safety for all road users.

And lastly, a little more fun at the expense of Citi Bike haters:
Why Conservatives Hate Citi Bike So Much, in One Venn Diagram (NY Mag)

Dual court rulings reaffirm Bloomberg taxi service goals, consumers benefit

Taxi service in NYC just got a lot better thanks to a couple of appellate court rulings, clearing the way for an additional 18,000 livery cabs to serve northern Manhattan and the other boroughs, and the use of smart-phone apps to better connect riders to drivers. From the New York Times:

As early as next month, thousands of the newly designated taxis — bearing fresh apple green paint, new roof lights and taximeters — will begin to descend on neighborhoods where yellow cabs rarely visit, addressing an inequity that has existed for decades. [...] 
The ruling, which overturns a lower-court ruling that had stalled the action last year, also clears the way for the city to generate as much as $1 billion by auctioning off 2,000 medallions for wheelchair-accessible yellow taxis; the measure required that 20 percent of the livery vehicles be wheelchair-accessible.

Predictably, the Metropolitan Taxicab Board of Trade, which represents taxi fleet owners who benefit financially from caps on the total number of taxi cabs, does not approve. More from the NYT:

And many yellow-taxi operators, disinclined to share street hailing with livery cabs, have challenged the plan since its inception. The Metropolitan Taxicab Board of Trade, a plaintiff in one of the suits, called the decision “a crushing blow to New Yorkers who loathe the brand of end-run politics that created this law.” 
“The court’s finding that somehow hailing livery cabs in the Bronx is a ‘matter of substantial state interest’ — code words that were used to bypass the New York City Council — is alarming,” the group said in a statement. “The ruling kicks open the door for systematic abuses for future executives in cities throughout the state, but particularly in New York City.”

Their arguments refer to how the Bloomberg administration brought their case to the state when the city council shut down their plans to expand taxi service, and it certainly is unfortunate that things had to go that route. But note something very important: there's nothing in the Metropolitan Taxicab Board of Trade's complaint about the impact of these rulings on consumers--all they talk about is "end-run politics" and "open[ing] the door for systematic abuses".

And why is that? Because this is a huge win for consumers and the taxi fleet owners know it. They can't very well say, "Shucks, people in Queens are definitely going to get better service and the drivers are going to be better paid at more consistent rates, but... but... our profits!!!" The fleet owners are the only ones who really benefit from an artificially limited supply of cabs, so doom-saying it is.

The taxi business is one of the most highly (and unnecessarily) regulated and uncompetitive service sectors in the country, and this is introducing a little bit of competition into that system, in New York at least. It's very likely that fleet owners will lose out a bit as a result of these rulings, and perhaps even taxi drivers themselves, who already make far less money than they deserve. I think most people would agree that the benefit to the 8 million people living in NYC and the millions more who vacation or work in the area exceeds the losses of the taxi industry--and if you're concerned about the taxi drivers themselves (as you probably should be), then your real qualm is with the medallion system.

Taxi medallion price appreciation since 2004, from Carpe Diem.

Taxi medallion price appreciation since 2004, from Carpe Diem.

News Roundup: June 05, 2013

Slow news day...

Report: The New Majority is Pedaling Toward Equity (League of American Bicyclists)
The League of American Bicyclists and Sierra Club released a joint report on the state of American bicycling, and the news is mostly good. Between 2001 and 2009 biking trips have increased from 1.7 billion to 4.0 billion per year(!) and the growth in ridership has been especially strong among minority groups;  they also found that lower-income and minority neighborhoods--those which could often benefit most from a better bicycling culture--are often least well-served in terms of bicycle facilities.

Behind the Rise in House Prices, Wall Street Buyers (New York Times)
Large investment firms are responsible for upwards of 30% of home purchases in some regions of the country, and it's driving many smaller investors and potential homeowners out of the market, or at least driving up home prices. While this no doubt has contributed to a relatively rapid recovery in home values, there is concern for what might happen when and if large-scale investors begin to pull out of the market.

Infrastructure investment is about safety and mobility, not construction jobs

The Columbia River Crossing proposal, in Portland, Oregon.

The Columbia River Crossing proposal, in Portland, Oregon.

Any time someone makes the case for new infrastructure investment you can count on two things: 1) use of the word "crumbling," and 2) an enthusiastic remark about the number of construction jobs created. Jobs are always important, but in the case of investment in roads, rails, bridges, sidewalks, etc., there are few things less relevant to a project's value. We build and maintain our transportation infrastructure to provide for the movement of people* and goods and to ensure the safety of the users of that infrastructure. These are the primary measures by which we should judge the virtue of such investments; job creation doesn't even belong on the list.

Just as an example, take the proposal for the Columbia River Crossing bridge between Vancouver, Washington and Portland, Oregon. This controversial project would cost at least $3.1 billion (and as much as $10bn) and would provide an average of 1,900 construction jobs per year while being built. Even if costs came in at the low-ball figure of $3.1 billion, that works out to more than $1.6 million per new job, and those are jobs that would only last a few years at most. If the goal is cost-effective job creation then this proposal fails spectacularly.

The obvious point here is that the purpose is not cost-effective job creation. Rather, the value of the bridge itself is what will make this pencil out as a good investment, or not. The cost of the bridge must be weighed against its ability to improve mobility (for both economic and social purposes) and/or increase safety; those measurements, along with the much more speculative and therefore secondary considerations of "added value" or " private investment potential," are the only things that can yield a good return on investment for a product of this nature, or any transportation project for that matter.

The value of 1,900 jobs--or even 10,000--is insignificant relative to the cost of construction, and if keeping those costs low is one of the goals of the project (as it should be), fiscal prudence may work at cross-purposes to maximum employment. And that's okay. Construction jobs may be a nice bonus, but they're only worthy of consideration and celebration after the value of the project itself has been evaluated and maximized. If cost-effective job creation was the goal, we'd be better off paying people $50,000 a year to dig and refill holes all day or pick up garbage off the side of the road.

*The people in question may vary significantly from neighborhood to neighborhood and region to region--this will be dependent on the values of those communities. Some will prioritize the movement of cars and trucks while others will prioritize transit, walking, and/or bicycling. Among these sets of priorities there will certainly be differences in return on investment that should be evaluated critically, but the point is that mobility and safety still must be the primary considerations regardless of who the users of that new or improved infrastructure might be.

News Roundup: June 04, 2013

Matt Yglesias, in response to the WSJ editorial above, asks "Why would a city like Washington (or New York), most of whose residents don't commute to work in a car on a daily basis, want to allocate its space" in a way that rewards the most space-inefficient mode with the most public land?

New York's Bike Share Is Brilliant, And Every Complaint About It Is Bogus (Business Insider)
Alex Davies addresses every concern from the WSJ's Citi Bike editorial, and then some. Topics include the supposed lack of public involvement in bike-share planning, the amount of danger bicyclists actually pose to drivers and pedestrians, and the impact of Citibank's sponsorship of the program.

How Better Traffic Models Can Lead to More Mixed-Use Development (Streetsblog)
Angie Schmitt interviews Reid Ewing, a transportation engineering professor at the University of Utah, on his improved metrics for measuring the impact of mixed-use development on local traffic. He notes that the current standard of measurement ignores the reduction in driving trips (up to 50%) associated with mixed-use development, and how this leads to onerous impact fees and offsite mitigation improvements that can turn a profitable investment into a nonstarter.

German researchers create a lithium-ion battery that retains 85% of its capacity after 10,000 charges (Treehugger)
Michael Graham Richard reports on the development of an extremely durable battery that could be used in electric vehicles: Being able to retain 85% of its capacity for 10,000 charges "means that an electric car with those batteries could be fully charged every day for about 27.4 years and still be going strong."

And finally, some humor. In honor of the Wall Street Journal editorial freakout over the "totalitarian" introduction of Citi Bike in New York City, Instagram user sbma44 "snapped some photos on [his] way from Penn Station" and compiled them for your enjoyment. Check it out here. (I'd just put the image here but don't want to take the time to ask his permission and don't want to violate any personal copyright-whatever.)

News Roundup: June 03, 2013

This is new! I already curate news for @PCNtransit, so now I'm going to start sharing the most interesting posts on my blog. I'll try to keep the details informative and helpful as long as I can find the time. Enjoy!

Study: Walkability Linked to Much Lower Risk of Default on Housing Loans
University of Arizona professor Gary Pivo looks at over 37,000 mortgage loans and finds that homes in walkable neighborhoods are much less likely to default. Shorter commutes, and those that depend on rail or walking in particular; and nearby retail, parks, and affordable housing all contribute to lower default rates, whereas proximity to freeways is correlated with increased rates of foreclosure.

Ryan Avent looks at the factors behind the incredible cost of housing in London, including regulations that impose a "shadow tax" rate (above construction costs) of 500%; this is compared to a 50% rate in Manhattan. He goes on to describe how this discourages business investment in the city and sends the surplus value of London's high productivity straight into the pockets of property owners.

Where’s the National Business Voice for Transit?
Transit has significant local and regional support from businesses, but doesn't receive the same backing at the national level. Tanya Snyder compares the two political spheres and asks why there is such a significant disparity between the two.

The One About the Parking-Pinched Merchant…
Ian Sacs looks at the claim that business is dependent on (ideally free) parking and finds the evidence lacking. He finds that business owners tend to overestimate the share of their business patronized by drivers, and that creating more human-oriented spaces often leads to more successful stores, not less.

New train technologies are less visible and spread less quickly than improvements to cars or planes. But there is still plenty of innovation going on, and ideas are steadily making their way out onto the rails.

Tesla announces huge expansion of Supercharger network, upgrade to cut charging time in half
Tesla has already begun building supercharger stations to help increase the range of electric car drivers. Now they're improving the charging speed by 100%, and they have plans to expand that network to reach nearly every bit of land in the contiguous United States.

Utah Develops Wireless Charging for Buses
Updates on the University of Utah's wireless inductive chargers, which have already shown success at keeping electric buses running without the need for overhead wires or disruptive breaks to recharge the battery.

John Norquist, the Most Interesting Man in the World

I'm attending the Congress for the New Urbanism conference in Salt Lake City this year as part of a Streetsblog Network training/workshop/networking event, and on Wednesday afternoon we had several guest speakers address our group. The last of them was John Norquist, current CNU president and former mayor of Milwaukee, who's urbanist cred as mayor includes the the removal of the Park East Freeway and a decline in poverty coincident with a boom in downtown housing.

Early in his talk he spoke highly of Streetsblog and his own use of the site. He mentioned that, at 63 years old, he doesn't use the computer much, but when he does he regularly drops by Streetsblog to get the news. Clarence, the man responsible for Streetfilms and a big Norquist fan, said that might be the best endorsement Streetsblog has ever received; as such, I thought I'd commemorate the event with a suitable meme.

So without further ado, the Most Interesting Man in the World:

You have to admit, there is a resemblance.

The repatriation-financed infrastructure bank plan, as structured, is a TERRIBLE idea

The new iPad, and a bunch of money, from appadvice.com.

The new iPad, and a bunch of money, from appadvice.com.

By now everyone's heard of Apple's incredible network of tax shelters, which just in the last several years has saved them tens of billions of dollars in corporate taxes. Pretty much everyone except Rand Paul finds this reprehensible, but while Apple may be the best in the game when it comes to tax avoidance, they're far from the only player. Other big companies like Amazon and Microsoft do the same thing, keeping profits overseas so that they don't have to pay US taxes on them.

In many cases those companies would really like to bring that money back stateside, either to invest in their business here or (more commonly) to pay out dividends or buy back stock from investors. To do that, however, they'd have to pay 35% of those repatriated profits as tax. And no one wants to do that unless they have to.

Fortunately for these mega-corporations, they often don't have to. In 2004, under the Bush administration's leadership, Congress passed a law allowing a tax repatriation holiday, meaning that for a short period of time any profits brought back into the country would not be taxed. The purpose was to ensure that something productive would be done with that money--that it would be reinvested in US jobs and business needs. As the Treasury describes, however, this is not what happened:

In assessing the 2004 tax holiday, the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service reports that most of the largest beneficiaries of the holiday actually cut jobs in 2005-06 – despite overall economy-wide job growth in those years – and many used the repatriated funds simply to repurchase stock or pay dividends. Today, when U.S. corporations have ready access to cash they have accumulated and are holding here in the United States, it is even harder to make the case that a repatriation holiday will unlock new investment and job creation.

And perhaps even worse than all that, now that we have a history of allowing businesses to repatriate their earnings tax-free they have far more incentive to keep their money overseas as long as they can bear, waiting until the next time we forget ourselves and give them another opportunity to cheat the system--and the American public.

"Hey."

"Hey."

On cue, in steps Congressman John Delaney (D-Md.).

His proposed legislation, the Partnership to Build America Act, would create a federal infrastructure bank funded by $50 billion of repatriated corporate profits. Companies would bring their money back to the US, buying infrastructure bank bonds that pay out a low yield over fifty years, and they would pay full taxes on the money repatriated to purchase those bonds. This sounds great because it would take money that's currently sitting overseas doing nothing and use it to fund up to $750 billion in infrastructure projects (via leverage) with a heavy focus on loans and public-private partnerships. It almost sounds too good to be true!

And of course it is, because the catch is that this is much more a repatriation tax holiday than it is an infrastructure fund. Although the ratio sounds somewhat up in the air, Delaney suggests that for every $1 brought back, taxed, and used to purchase bonds, $4 could be repatriated tax free*. In effect, this would reduce the tax burden of repatriated funds by 80%; instead of paying the full 35% corporate tax rate (which is admittedly too high), they would pay a mere 7%. This is exactly what companies like Apple have been waiting for, and would be an utter validation of their tax avoidance strategies.

I obviously care a great deal about funding the infrastructure investment this country needs, and it's difficult to pass up nearly any opportunity to further that cause. But the fact is that if an infrastructure bank is a good idea with repatriated funds then it's also a good deal with taxed or borrowed money. Especially in an era of rapidly falling deficits and near-zero borrowing costs, there's no reason to reward US corporations' dishonesty with a $14 billion windfall just to try to keep the lights on.

Hopefully this proposal will be seen for the stealth repatriation tax holiday that it is and get shut down quickly, and we'll find a more reasonable way to fund the maintenance and mobility investments we require.

*It's hard to be sure if this is exactly how it would work--the description at Transportation Issues Daily, the linked article that describes this proposal is not 100% clear. It might actually allow businesses to buy bonds with money already in the US so that they're actually not paying tax on any repatriated money.