By Tim Keller
I would like to briefly weigh in on one of the elements of the debate currently being waged online regarding Measure V.
Opponents complain that the new residents will clog our streets with “traffic” while supporters of the project point out that Village Farms will pay for “traffic improvements” that will mitigate or perhaps even improve traffic.
It is my distinct impression that both sides of that debate are missing the most important question: What exactly are “traffic improvements”?
In practice, “traffic engineering” is usually shorthand for constructing LARGER intersections: adding pavement, turn lanes, traffic lights, slip lanes, and other infrastructure intended to move more cars through an area more efficiently.
You can optimize signal timing to some degree, but beyond that, most “traffic improvements” simply mean making more room for automobiles. This is not necessarily something we should be cheering for.
As urban planner Lewis Mumford warned all the way back in 1955:
“Adding lanes to deal with traffic congestion is like loosening your belt to cure obesity.”
Consider these two downtown intersections here in Davis:














