I’m Selling My Car When Gas Reaches $5 a Gallon

6 06 2008

I grew up in Houston, and then lived in Atlanta for 8 years before I lived in Chicago. One  of the biggest reasons I moved here was so I could live in a city that had viable public transportation, which is so minimal in southern cities, it may as well be considered almost non-existent. In the south, I had to drive EVERYWHERE, and didn’t flinch at driving upwards of 50 miles a day.

It’s funny to think about it now, but when gas starting approaching $2 a gallon in Atlanta, about 3.5 years ago, I decided I was going to move to a city where I didn’t need to drive. $2 A GALLON!  What I wouldn’t give to pay $2 a gallon now!!

The only cities that I really knew of in America where public transit was an option were San Francisco, Chicago, and New York City, and so I chose Chicago.

NOW, 3.5 years later, gas has reached stunning  heights, coming up on nearly $5 a gallon.

I can’t believe it.

I still own a car, which I use for huge grocery runs, to take several loads of laundry to the laundromat, to take paintings to an art show, etc, but I’ve decided to sell my car once it permanently tops $5 a gallon.

That is just too much money.

I now own a lovely bike that looks something like this (sorry for the stolen pic)  

schwinn sprint

I live right by the blue line train, and right by several major bus lines, and I got two feet in damn good working order…so, yeah. If you know anyone who wants a cute, silver Toyota Rav4…it gets good gas mileage! But at 5+ dollars a gallon…



Why is Chicago Transit in Such a Crisis?

8 01 2008

This is taken from savechicagotransit.com:

“A multi-faceted crisisChicago area transit faces a capital funding crisis (PDF). The RTA has identified $10.3 billion of capital investments required over the next 5 years just to keep the existing system from deteriorating. Of this total, only $3.1 billion is funded by presently identified sources. RTA has also identified an additional $5.8 billion in enhancements and expansions that are needed to accommodate growth. The state typically covers a large portion of transit capital needs, but it has not had a capital investment program in place for 4 years and has not passed a capital funding bill in 8 years.

Chicago area transit faces an operating funding crisis (PDF). Illinois Auditor General Bill Holland found that transit operating costs increased by 6.5% over the last 5 years, while revenues increased by just 2.2%. And since 1985, sales tax revenues increased by a paltry 0.59% annually. This is not a case of poor management and runaway costs—transit agencies nationally were affected disproportionately by skyrocketing energy and healthcare costs. Instead, the reality is that available funding is and has always been insufficient at a structural level to fund transit operations.

Meanwhile, the costs of providing paratransit service—essentially door-to-door for the disabled required under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)—have skyrocketed. At the same time, the aging population has put additional demand on the paratransit system.

A side effect of years of inadequate transit funding is the unfunded liability in the CTA pension fund. In order to avoid service cuts over the last 15 years, the CTA talked itself into optimistic investment return projections and therefore lower contributions to the pension fund. This strategy seemed OK during the bull market of the tech bubble, but came crashing down along with the dot-coms. At the same time, the collective bargaining process between the CTA and its unions, which is by law stacked against the CTA, resulted in dramatic pension benefit increases without additional contributions from workers. In 2006, a state law was passed requiring the CTA to pay more than $200 million into its pension fund starting in 2009. This could mean another round of massive service cuts.

Finally, it’s likely that the transit resources that we do have are not managed in the most efficient way. For example, Pace and CTA in places offer overlapping service, and all agencies compete for scarce capital dollars to fund projects that are not measured against regional planning goals. For example, CTA, Metra, and Pace competed fiercely for which agency would provide service from O’Hare to Schaumburg along the Northwest Tollway. This lack of coordinated planning is wasteful and counterproductive.

Chicagland transit faces a multi-facetted crisis that requires immediate attention. But fixing the problems won’t be easy; regional cooperation is essential. Remember this issue isn’t about city vs. suburb; it is a matter of Chicagoland vs. congestion, Chicagoland vs. air pollution, and Chicagoland vs. economic decline. Transit is vital to the entire Chicago region. Tell your legislators not only to Save Chicagoland Transit, but to make it better.”




CTA Bus Cuts on January 20th 2008

8 01 2008

(January 10 Update - The House narrowly approved a bill that will raise $500 million dollars for the CTA by raising the sales tax by a quarter of a percent and by raising real estate taxes. Lawmakers are hoping that this will be a permanent, “regional” solution to what they are calling a regional problem.)

We Need a Permanent Solution

I am majorly depressed. If the proposed bus routes get cut on January 20th, the buses that remain are going to be even more overcrowded than they already are, making them practically useless, at least for me!

I use the Chicago Avenue bus for school and work, and already I have to sandwich myself between people to get on, if the bus even stops for me at all! And once the Division and Grand buses get cut, most of those riders will be cramming onto the Chicago bus as well!

A List of Routes Getting Cut

82 Routes total are proposed to be cut, many more than were proposed in the fall, in many more areas of town. The list is as follows:

  • 1 INDIANA/HYDE PARK
  • 2 HYDE PARK EXPRESS
  • X3 KING DR EXPRESS
  • X4 COTTAGE GROVE EXPRESS
  • 8A SOUTH HALSTED
  • 11 LINCOLN SEDGWICK
  • 14 JEFFREY EXPRESS
  • 17 WESTCHESTER
  • 19 UNITED CENTER EXPRESS
  • X20 WASHINGTON/MADISON EXPRESS
  • 26 SOUTH SHORE EXPRESS
  • X28 STONY ISLAND EXPRESS
  • 38 OGDEN/TAYLOR
  • 43 43RD
  • 44 WALLACE/RACINE
  • X49 WESTERN EXPRESS
  • 49A SOUTH WESTERN
  • 50 DAMEN
  • 53AL SOUTH PULASKI LIMITED
  • 54A NORTH CICERO/SKOKIE BLVD
  • X54 CICERO EXPRESS
  • X55 GARFIELD EXPRESS
  • 55A 55TH/AUSTIN
  • 55N 55TH/NARRAGANSETT
  • 56 MILWAUKEE
  • 56A NORTH MILWAUKEE
  • 59 59TH/61ST
  • 62H ARCHER/HARLEM
  • 63W WEST 63RD
  • 64 FOSTER/CANFIELD
  • 65 GRAND
  • 68 NORTHWEST HWY
  • 69 CUMBERLAND/EAST RIVER
  • 70 DIVISION
  • 73 ARMITAGE
  • 76 DIVERSEY
  • 78 MONTROSE
  • X80 IRVING PARK EXPRESS
  • 81W WEST LAWRENCE
  • 86 NARRAGANSETT/RIDGELAND
  • 88 HIGGINS
  • 90N NORTH HARLEM
  • 91 AUSTIN
  • 92 FOSTER
  • 93 CALIFORNIA/DODGE
  • 94 SOUTH CALIFORNIA
  • 96 LUNT
  • 97 SKOKIE
  • 100 JEFFERY MANOR EXPRESS
  • 103 WEST 103RD
  • 106 EAST 103RD
  • 108 HALSTED/95TH
  • 112 VINCENNES/111TH
  • 120 OGILVIE/WACKER EXPRESS
  • 121 UNION/WACKER EXPRESS
  • 122 ILLINOIS CENTER/OGILVIE EXPRESS
  • 123 ILLINOIS CENTER/UNION EXPRESS
  • 124 NAVY PIER
  • 125 WATER TOWER EXPRESS
  • 126 JACKSON
  • 127 MADISON/ROOSEVELT CIRCULATOR
  • 129 WEST LOOP/SOUTH LOOP
  • 130 GRANT PARK TREASURES
  • 134 STOCKTON/LASALLE EXPRESS
  • 135 CLARENDON/LASALLE EXPRESS
  • 136 SHERIDAN/LASALLE EXPRESS
  • 143 STOCKTON/MICHIGAN EXPRESS
  • 144 MARINE/MICHIGAN EXPRESS
  • 145 WILSON/MICHIGAN EXPRESS
  • 146 INNER DRIVE/MICHIGAN EXPRESS
  • 147 OUTER DRIVE EXPRESS
  • 148 CLARENDON/MICHIGAN EXPRESS
  • 152 ADDISON
  • 156 LASALLE
  • 157 STREETERVILLE
  • 165 WEST 65TH
  • 200 MAIN SHUTTLE
  • 201 CENTRAL RIDGE
  • 205 CHICAGO/GOLF
  • 206 EVANSTON CIRCULATOR







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