| This is a lengthy article, yet the author fails to address any of the concerns he claims to be countering. He claims only the rich use light rail. But what is it about a light rail that causes a poor person to look at it and walk away deciding it's not for them? It simply doesn't make sense. Build LRT to a poor area, people will use it. He then shows an infographic of a hypothetical city covered in bus routes, alongside the same city covered by one LRT route through a gentrified area. This is unfair. How about comparing equivalent LRT routes with bus routes? Money sunk into buses is money no longer spendable on LRT. There's an infographic that shows bus route ridership compared to LRT route ridership but we learn only the what, not the why. Also, the article makes no mention whatsoever of Melbourne, an example of LRT working very well for over a century. I'm disappointed to say that I learned exactly nothing reading the article. |
Perhaps in part because of the cost, the people riding urban rail in Austin are definitely more often professional class, and the people on buses are more often not. I can't say for sure why, but the rail tickets are a little more expensive, and that is the most obvious reason. I have to think that at least part of why the tickets are more, is that the rail lines cost more to get up and running.