Reject Caltrans So-Called Mitigations to I-80 Widening & Support Rail Transit Investment Instead
June 06, 2023
I urge residents to attend the City Council meeting this evening to speak against the Davis City Council supporting the widening of I-80, and instead supporting investment in the parallel intercity rail corridor. [The item comes up at 8:15 pm]
An Open Letter to the Davis City Council
2023-06-06
Dear City Council Members:
I am writing to you today as a citizen of Davis.
You are being asked to approve three letters of intent with the State of California, regarding supposed 'mitigation' for the increased air pollution resulting from the widening of I-80. I urge you not to sign these letters and instead send a strong message to the State of California opposing the widening of I-80, and instead to actively support a massive investment in intercity rail transit.
Davis lies on the Capitol Corridor rail line between Roseville and San Jose. Plans are being developed for a new rail crossing between the East Bay and San Francisco that would allow Capitol Corridor trains to access the Peninsula directly. Plans are in the works for a new tunnel between Martinez and Richmond to allow the removal the curvy section of the rail line along the Bay to protect the corridor from sea-level rise and speed up that section by ten minutes. Plans are in the works for hourly and half-hourly rail service within an 18-hour service window. Plans are in the works for 110 m.p.h. trains using hydrogen, overhead electric, or battery-hybrid electric equipment.
What these plans lack is funding and state commitment. The State of California's stated policy is to fund alternative transportation and reduce VMT & GHG. Yet actual State policy speaks through its funding allocations in expanding highways under the guise of adding 'managed lanes' which the State admits will add to air pollution in the case of the I-80 widening project. Under what reasoning can Davis support this?
The so-called mitigation to fund infrastructure for Davis developments is called 'support' in the documents. That any given development will actually contribute to a reduction in pollutants is a theoretical exercise based on models that are not specific to Davis. The true effect can only be known once such developments are occupied and the transportation choices of residents known.
The so-called transit mitigation is to fill a need that may or may not exist. The need for a micro-transit program in our small town, or the need for a vague 'increase' in public transit has not been studied, nor has the overall effect on pollutants. Davis is being asked to support questionable, theoretical and insufficient mitigation for a project that the State admits will increase pollution. This goes against Davis' values.
Transportation is the #1 cause of air pollutants. This is largely because of automobile dominance. It can be difficult as City Councilmembers to turn down 'free' State money, but in this case you indeed must turn that money down. To give support to the I-80 widening would be to support the continued mass funding of road widening and automobile supremacy.
Instead, I urge the City Council to make a strong statement to the State of California against growing the auto-centric transportation status quo. I urge rejecting the mitigation and 'partnership' in highway-widening and instead writing a letter to the State in support of massive investment in intercity rail transit.
Tell the State to leave I-80 over the Causeway as it is, retaining two shoulders on each side in each direction for safety. Then ask the State of California to divert the billions of dollars in current and future highway funds intended for Interstate 80 expansion to instead fund the expansion and improvement of the parallel Capitol Corridor passenger rail service from Roseville to San Jose.
I thank you for hearing me,
Alan C. Miller