Conference Live 2005
Conference Live
2001
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Build more roads? Maybe not
Build more
roads? Maybe not
Leaders, public look at solutions
to transit woesBy Leah L.
Culler
Deseret News staff writer
Mayors,
legislators, governmental associations, transit professionals, advertisers,
disabled groups, taxpayers — all gathered at the Salt Palace for three days
to focus on finding solutions to the growing problem of congestion along the
Wasatch Front.
In that time, the 90-plus people "really got honest
about the transportation challenges we have for our region," said Roger Borgenicht,
chairman of the Future Moves Coalition, a public interest transportation coalition.
The purpose of the conference was to envision a future
for transportation and transit in Utah, and those attendees will take ideas
generated back to their agencies or towns and begin to put them to work.
Utah Transit Authority general manager John Inglish
said they tried to invite "a real broad cross section" of individuals to the
Future Search Urban Mobility Conference last week.
"The idea is to see what happens if people without
a transportation background come together and present their own ideas," Inglish
said.
Inglish said his biggest surprise was that the public
is becoming more and more sophisticated about the application of communication
technology.
"You ought to be able to be standing somewhere and
have your cell phone tell you where the nearest bus stop is and when the next
bus is coming," he said.
While UTA has been looking at information technology
for a while, Inglish said he was surprised how many at the conference had similar
ideas.
"That says to me we need to put a greater emphasis
on information technology," he said.
A focus on information technology is a big switch
from the focus just a few decades ago.
When Inglish started in the transportation industry
31 years ago, there was no UTA. Everything was highway construction, and environmental
concerns were just becoming hot issues.
"Freeways were finally being voted on and turned
down," he said.
UTA was formed in the early 1970s, and, about 20
years ago, began to envision a basic light-rail system.
"It was so out-there kind of thinking," he said.
"At that time, I thought that would be a career objective. I would spend my
life doing that. Now, I rode it in here today."
Borgenicht said he sensed an eagerness at the conference.
"The kind of transportation investments we make in
the next 10 years are really going to set a pattern," he said. "People here
recognize freedom will come out of more choices."
Those choices include more than just deciding which
car to drive, he said. Rail transit, biking and walking will be essential alternatives.
"Just building more freeways and widening roads is
a dead-end street," he said. "I think the momentum's changed 180 degrees in
the last year and a half. The attitude of most people is we need to develop
state-of-the art transit.
"That doesn't mean I'm going to give up my car. I'm
just not going to have to use it for everything."
E-mail: lculler@desnews.com
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