Skip to Content
Streetsblog USA home
Streetsblog USA home
Log In
Streetsblog.net

Questioning Obama’s Transpo Legacy as Fresno County Sprawls

By introducing new initiatives like the TIGER grant program, the Obama administration has been signaling that the car-is-king, slash-and-burn mentality that has dominated transportation policy since Eisenhower is coming to a close.

At the same time, however, the situation on the ground looks awfully familiar in much of America. As New Jersey Governor Chris Christie has amply demonstrated, all it takes is one guy in the wrong position to wreck a huge investment in transit. And with US DOT Secretary Ray LaHood touting recovery act projects, there are plenty of reminders that the stimulus bill is still funding business-as-usual when it comes to transportation. Network blog Systemic Failure brings us this case from Fresno County, penning a requiem for California's State Route 180. The two-lane road is being expanded east of Fresno with federal stimulus dollars at the expense of the local farming community:

false

Fresno County is blasting a super highway through some of the most famous California agricultural land. Already, the old farmhouses are boarded up and/or demolished. The ‘For Sale’ signs are springing up, in preparation for the Fresno metropolitan area to sprawl 10 miles east.

Literally “a road-to-nowhere”, this 2-lane highway runs through very remote orchard and ranch land, before heading up into the Sierras and dead-ending at Roads End in Kings Canyon National Park. This project was funded through the American Recovery Act (“stimulus” dollars). Unless the Obama Administration makes radical shifts in its transportation priorities, auto bailouts and sprawl highways will be its legacy.

Elsewhere on the Network today: Publicola details how public education on bicycle and pedestrian safety helped reduce driving by 15 percent in Bellingham, Washington. World Changing outlines Philadelphia's plan to capture the energy released by breaking subway trains for sale and internal use. And The City Fix analyzes the spatial distribution of bike sharing stations in Europe and the United States, in context of Washington D.C.'s new Capital Bikeshare.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog USA

You Wouldn’t Like Monday’s Headlines When They’re Angry

Which state has the worst road rage? Consumer Affairs magazine looked at a variety of factors to come up with an answer.

May 6, 2024

When it Comes to Federal Infrastructure Grants, Size Does Matter

Cities and municipalities with larger budgets and staff are more likely to win competitive federal infrastructure grants, the Urban Institute has found.

The E-Commerce Explosion is Making Roads More Dangerous

And can advanced technology stop the bloodshed?

May 6, 2024

Are Friday’s Headlines the New Normal?

Transit ridership hasn't come all the way back from the pandemic, and they're going to need more federal help, along with other changes, says Governing magazine.

May 3, 2024

Friday Video: How to Make Places Safe For Non-Drivers After Dark

A top Paris pedestrian planner, a leading GIS professional, and Streetsblog's own Kea Wilson weigh in on the roots of America's nighttime road safety crisis, and the strategies that can help end it.

May 3, 2024
See all posts