• @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      259 months ago

      Roads that are safer for pedestrians and cyclists get more people out of their cars. Longer car commute times make people consider alternatives such as public transit, walking, or biking. Every additional person who isn’t in their car has an exponential decrease in automobile congestion. This is all relatively well understood within urban planning and traffic engineering.

      • @ZzyzxRoad
        link
        English
        89 months ago

        This is all relatively well understood within urban planning and traffic engineering.

        I feel like someone neglected to tell this to every American urban planner then

        • @spacecowboy
          link
          English
          99 months ago

          Politics and money quite often make the decision, not sound urban planning.

    • @threelonmusketeers
      link
      English
      49 months ago

      In the long term, this won’t be an issue, since EVs don’t idle.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        59 months ago

        I’m still waiting for the day EV’s will be reasonable for people who don’t own a home that they can charge their vehicle at. It’s a humongous population and people don’t seem to have great ideas to incentivize people to tackle the problem.

        • @threelonmusketeers
          link
          English
          29 months ago

          Yeah, there definitely needs to be more incentives for apartment owners and condo managers to install Level-1 and Level-2 changers in tenant parking spots. The question is how to fund it, of course. Perhaps some sort of increased petrol tax could help accelerate the implementation of EV infrastructure?