Editor:
Remember the great “honk in” in 1994 to protest paid parking? That City Council cared what citizens thought and they actually empowered us to write a plan and then allowed people to vote on it. Then, council thought government’s purpose is to enhance the lives of its citizens.
So what is this government’s purpose?
The tightening of parking rules and fees aren’t about “congestion pricing,” or parking would be free in the off-season. The plan won’t reduce traffic levels during season because there are 25,000 people staying in Aspen and Snowmass.
Their plan double taxes residents and visitors, sets up a surveillance system the Bush administration would be damned for, and is based in a fictional traffic blame game. The plan ignores the fact that the bus system can’t handle the increased volumn and that high-occupancy vehicles are a cost effective way to move people.
If this were a sincere effort, the proposal would include HOV in the new bus lanes. Congestion would be managed by issuing HOV parking permits based on ridership.
This plan is about causing as much misery as possible so we will be forced to increase taxes by 11 percent to fund a $120 million bus rapid transit plan. Visitors will sidestep the increase by mailing purchases, but we will have to pay this increase even when we shop on-line. And the BRT will mean more growth to house drivers, mechanics and more buses.
The Transportation Plan of 1994 is overdue for updating. But the city and county need a comprehensive plan — not this hodgepods of clubs and big brother surveillance.
It’s time for another honk in. I just hope someone can hear the beeps.
Shellie Roy
Aspen
Comments
traffic blight
KNCB Moore
Back in the late 1940's and '50's, cars contributed to unsightly main
street development like that seen on Colfax Avenue in Denver or in Manitou Springs. These worst case scenarios were drilled into the
community's collective conscious. Around 1955-6, university student planners figured out that Aspen's horse and buggy, small lot layout
could not supply its future traffic and parking demand. The students
concluded that the town should plan to park all its cars between the two bridges west of the town. Re-visiting Aspen's transportation planning reminds me that it's human to make mistakes, the problem is that there are so many of us.
Be Brave Comrades.