CBBarnett
Senior Member
I agree. Changes are needed for sure. The city has their mind in the right place, and they've done some good things, but obviously not enough. Usually money is the one thing that people respond to.
The city's options are:
1) increase the new development levy some more. I know they increased it from something like 7K to 15K, maybe it needs to be up around 30K?
2) incentives for inner city development, whether, that means a tax break for owners, or a break for the developer, I don't know, but that's a possibility.
3) third possibility would be to change zoning in many areas to allow higher density.
4) Limit roads budget to maintenance only and reduce right-of-way easements to make all future lane-kilometre additions prohibitively expensive. Road expansion helps make suburban sprawl commuting affordable (roads are "free" to use) while helping reinforce the things that make it unsustainable (low-density car-oriented land uses can proliferate). As the network effects pile on, the "need" to expand inner city road capacity emerges which helps restrict redevelopment by reducing attractiveness of the areas nearby, through creating barriers and numerous negative effects. Noise, pollution, access issues and easements all discourage redevelopment in areas that otherwise would have great location advantages over the burbs.
This is a good example of Calgary trying to have it's cake and eat it too. Perhaps surprisingly, this has been done quite successfully so far. Transit projects are always paired with road expansion, capacity and travel time improvements, thus undermining the competitiveness of the very transit project that triggered the infrastructure investment in the first place. T. Crowchild's LRT, NE LRT and the West LRT are all examples of this. For the billions we have spent on LRT, we have spent nearly as much on road capacity in direct competition to that LRT option. This is good politics (everyone wins) and results in both more traffic and transit riders, but exacerbating the problems in the future as costs increase (restricting TODs as all adjacent land to the LRT is take up by highway infrastructure, plus auto-oriented landscape stretches out distances that increase the costs of all linear infrastructure).
In cities without an out-sized roads department and budget, the only cost would be the transit project (which would have been comparably more effective due to driving times remaining the same while transit improves). In conclusion, our road expansion projects not only directly increases the cost of serving sprawl, it undermines the investment in transit and helps support the restriction of land uses in both the burbs and the inner city.