Equilibria
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 6, 2007
- Messages
- 6,959
- Reaction score
- 8,038
This is absolutely true. In my estimation this is at the core of the conflict driving the "yellow vest" protests in France - and pushing too far, too fast can get extremely ugly. But I should also point out that France/Paris are way, way, way further down the road in terms of doing "harmful" things (like raising fuel taxes and/or closing highways) in the name of principles (like fighting climate change and enabling more active lifestyles) than anywhere in the US is.
The setpoint for what might trigger real unrest in the US may well be lower than that of France, nor would I imply that we should try to push things to the brink - but in my estimation, as of January 2019, we're not anywhere close. Not even remotely in the ballpark. This is mostly because our political system makes it very difficult to make broad, sweeping policy changes that you see overseas. For that reason, when an opportunity (like this!) presents itself, I think it is all the more important to seize it - or at least look into it, rather than fatalistic preemptive resignation to maintaining the status quo.
One of the issues here is that SFR just isn't the focus of this project - dealing with I-90 is (FWIW, I'd expect that the Turnpike itself is the most expensive part of the project even at grade, and by a wide margin). MassDOT started with a simple bridge replacement project and, for a lot of valid reasons, has had scope creep explode on them already with this project. Already, it's become about straightening the road, rebuilding the whole ramp system, laying out surface streets for redevelopment by Harvard, building a whole new separated intersection with SFR to help with the horrible intersection of SFR and Cambridge Street, building a Taj Mahal West Station before service is ready to make it useful, building a "Peoples' Pike" mixed-use path through the whole site, expanding the Charles River reservation parkland, and building the MBTA a new South Side layover yard.
On top of all of that, there's just not room in this effort to rethink the whole western access strategy for Boston's employment centers. I'm not complaining about the mission creep here - everything I listed above either will immediately or potentially be awesome for the city, but planning out a retirement plan for Storrow Drive is simply beyond what MassDOT can handle here. I certainly wouldn't call this project "resignation to the status quo." There is nothing status quo about this - it is transformative and without precedent in the design of Massachusetts highway projects.