Friday, April 13, 2007

ITR Discount Plan Discriminates Against I-Pass Users

The Illinois Tollway authority plans to complain to the E-Z Pass Interagency Group that the Indiana Toll Road's plan to give discounts to I-Zoom users, but not other E-Z Pass users, including I-Pass users, is discriminatory. Illinois gives Indiana I-Pass users a discount, but Indiana won't reciprocate.


Writes Keith Benman in the Northwest Indiana Times:

A bone thrown to northern Indiana legislators during the dogfight over privatization of the Indiana Toll Road has become a bone of contention between Illinois and the Toll Road's private operator.

The Illinois Tollway authority is protesting the fact that users of I-Pass transponders will not get a discount on the Indiana Toll Road, while users of Indiana Toll Road transponders, called I-Zoom, will get a discount when using the Illinois Tollway.

"The Illinois Tollway has never drawn a line between its residents and drivers who live in Indiana and travel in Illinois for daily commutes or leisure trips," Illinois Tollway Executive Director Brian McPartlin said.

The Illinois Tollway authority says 90,000 I-Pass transponders are owned by Indiana drivers who save $9 million in tolls annually.


Copyright 2007, ChristopherHedges.com, All Rights Reserved.


Labels: , ,

Greatest Hits | Illiana Expressway News:

  • New Anti Illiana Expressway Coalition Forms
  • Illiana Expressway Toll Road Study Area Map
  • Gov. Mitch Daniels Drops
    Plans to Extend The Illiana East Of I-65.
  • I-80/I-94 Part Of Mexico-Canada Superhighway
  • Illiana Makes Fed's 'Corridors' List"
  • Wednesday, April 11, 2007

    Illiana Expressway Study Approved By House 91-5

    The Indiana House in an overwhelming majority -- 91 in favor to 5 opposed -- has approved a study of the Illiana Expressway in a mass transit study bill, reports the Northwest Indiana Times.


    Reports the Indianapolis Star:

    The House also voted 91-5 to pass SB 105, which would direct the Indiana Department of Transportation to study numerous mass transit projects statewide, including a commuter rail line from Indianapolis to Muncie. The bill also directs further study of the western portion of the Illiana Expressway in Northwest Indiana by a legislative committee.
    The Indiana House's approval of the Illiana Expressway study comes on the same day as Scott Ford, a member of the LaPorte County Economic Development Commission, wrote that Indiana's leaders should study the Illiana Expressway proposals in an opinion piece in the Herald Argus.

    Our economic future is tied to Chicago and the ability to move our products and people quickly and effectively. The world will continue to shrink and our region’s ability to generate income for its citizens will continue to be directly linked to cost-effective transportation and highways. The economic reality is that there isn’t enough funding to repair our current infrastructure. No one wants to pay more taxes to build new highways and public/private partnerships may be the answer to these funding issues.

    We have to have vision and look toward the future. Many of La Porte’s leaders over the last four decades have focused on short-term results that would be visible during their terms of office. Look at where short-term thinking got us today -- a city and county that lags behind state and national averages in income and education. Our best and brightest young people move away because of limited opportunity.

    We can’t afford to say no to the Illiana Expressway until every detail and fact is studied extensively. The next 40 years will be impacted by our vision or lack of it.

    Copyright 2007, ChristopherHedges.com, All Rights Reserved.

    Labels: , , , , ,

    Greatest Hits | Illiana Expressway News:

  • New Anti Illiana Expressway Coalition Forms
  • Illiana Expressway Toll Road Study Area Map
  • Gov. Mitch Daniels Drops
    Plans to Extend The Illiana East Of I-65.
  • I-80/I-94 Part Of Mexico-Canada Superhighway
  • Illiana Makes Fed's 'Corridors' List"
  • Tuesday, April 10, 2007

    Northwest Indiana Transit Brain Storming

    The debate about the Illiana Expressway has gotten me thinking about alternatives to current modes of transportation. Most Americans today use cars and trucks to travel to and from work, leisure activities, and other locations. What alternatives to automobiles are available?


    The Small Urban & Rural Transit Center has some ideas about operating mass transit in western states. Of particular interest is an article that studies how to serve elderly populations who live in rural areas.

    As population across rural regions of the United States consolidates around trade centers, the proportion of elderly remaining in small towns and rural areas continues to grow. Their growing proportion and increasing average age is bound to have an influence on their mobility, and a new SURTC study should help researchers and policy makers assess the situation.

    Any transit study done locally will have to assess the demographics of our rural areas to ensure that the elderly aren't left behind in policy decision making since they are often the ones who remain behind in smaller towns as younger people leave to seek employment and opportunities in the suburbs and urban areas.

    Another idea that could work in smaller towns could be a "bike share" concept that allows people to pay a fee to borrow bikes located in areas around the town. Toronto has this type of bike share program, but it could be modified to address the needs of people wanting to get exercise and avoid driving their cars short distances.

    Of course, there's always a problem with "bikes missing in action." Maybe private bike ownership could be encouraged, instead of a communal-style ownership model, so prevent the inevitable waste and fraud that will occur when people aren't fully responsible for their bicycle.

    I wonder if an Indianapolis-style "people mover" or another monorail system like the Las Vegas system could work someplace in Northwest Indiana? Maybe lines could be run along Broadway starting at the South Shore Line south to the Methodist and VA Hospitals. Branch lines could run from the central Broadway line to Porter Hospital and downtown Valparaiso, the Lake County Government Center, and the lakefront casinos.

    Maybe car sharing could be an option? Dave Brook blogs about the service that allows members to borrow cars as they are needed. Of course, ride sharing could be an option as well.



    Copyright (C) 2007, ChristopherHedges.com, All Rights Reserved.

    Tech Tags:

    Labels: , , , , , ,

    Greatest Hits | Illiana Expressway News:

  • New Anti Illiana Expressway Coalition Forms
  • Illiana Expressway Toll Road Study Area Map
  • Gov. Mitch Daniels Drops
    Plans to Extend The Illiana East Of I-65.
  • I-80/I-94 Part Of Mexico-Canada Superhighway
  • Illiana Makes Fed's 'Corridors' List"
  • Monday, April 9, 2007

    Time To Make Land Use Plans

    No matter if the Illiana Expressway or Westlake Rail Corridor extending South Shore rail service to Lowell and Valparaiso are built or not built, now is the time for Northwest Indiana to look at comprehensive land use plans to maximize the living conditions and economic development for the whole region, says the Northwest Indiana Quality of Life Council.

    Writes Meg Haller, Northwest Indiana Quality of Life exec. director, in today's Post-Tribune:

    So, speak your peace as you will regarding SB1. But do not miss the forest for the trees.

    The time is now to learn how to capture the benefits of major infrastructure developments, such as the Illiana, while mitigating the risks to our three-county area's sustainable future.

    The time is now to study, design and implement a comprehensive land-use plan.

    Learning how to make the most of the infrastructure we have and plan to build might be the first step toward making Northwest Indiana a model for other communities across the nation. Maybe the debate about the Illiana Expressway will result on comprehensive planning within the various governmental agencies in the region so that we can think about protecting the past, as well as planning for the future.


    Copyright 2007, ChristopherHedges.com, All Rights Reserved.


    Tech Tags:

    Labels: , , , , , ,

    Greatest Hits | Illiana Expressway News:

  • New Anti Illiana Expressway Coalition Forms
  • Illiana Expressway Toll Road Study Area Map
  • Gov. Mitch Daniels Drops
    Plans to Extend The Illiana East Of I-65.
  • I-80/I-94 Part Of Mexico-Canada Superhighway
  • Illiana Makes Fed's 'Corridors' List"
  • Illiana Expressway Foe Fears Violence If Toll Road Is Approved

    Illiana Expressway opponent Rosemary Gard of Crown Point fears conflict could occur if the proposed toll road from I-65 to I-57 is approved.


    From her letter to the Post-Tribune's editor:

    We are supposed to be in a democracy; when the people say "no," it should mean something. ...

    Those against the Illiana Expressway are in a war, one that I fear will end in conflict. Some will not leave their land. What are the powers going to do? Beat them? Drag them away? Shoot them? ...

    I may well be one of the old ladies who won't budge. Perhaps I will chain myself to the porch of my son's home.

    I hope that people keep cool heads no matter what happens with the proposed Illiana Expressway legislation.

    It is inevitable that change will occur because new people continue to move into Northwest Indiana from Illinois, as well as a continual southward migration away from the urban core.

    If the Illiana Expressway bill isn't approved, the highway supporters will have to live with the legislature's decision. The same thing will be true if the Illiana Expressway is approved.

    Copyright 2007, ChristopherHedges.com, All Rights Reserved.

    Tech Tags:

    Labels: , , , , ,

    Greatest Hits | Illiana Expressway News:

  • New Anti Illiana Expressway Coalition Forms
  • Illiana Expressway Toll Road Study Area Map
  • Gov. Mitch Daniels Drops
    Plans to Extend The Illiana East Of I-65.
  • I-80/I-94 Part Of Mexico-Canada Superhighway
  • Illiana Makes Fed's 'Corridors' List"
  • Did Democrats Fail I-69 Foes?

    Bloomington Alternative's editor Steven Higgs laments the fact that recent opposition to the Illiana Expressway and the Indiana Commerce Connector was able to stop or at least change the Governor's plans, but the proposed I-69 route from Indianapolis to Evansville continues to roll on as it has for 16-years with Democratic legislative support.

    A remarkable event occurred in Indiana politics on March 24, when an Indiana governor actually listened to the people and responded to their concerns. ...

    Add to that the fact that (Mitch) Daniels’ sudden respect for the democratic process involved a pair of proposed highways, the most fertile grounds for political pork, and it was indeed a historic day.

    It was also a development that offers some sobering lessons for citizens whose opinions on new-terrain Interstate 69 were treated like contaminated soil by local and state Democrats for 16 years.

    It's interesting to note that much of the opposition to creating new interstate highways has been from the GOP, according to Steven Higgs.

    Locally, the Citizens Against the Privatized Illiana Toll Road began in traditionally Republican Porter County.

    If the Illiana Expressway plan from Michigan City to the Illinois stateline was proposed by a Democrat governor, I wonder if the results would have been different?

    Copyright 2007, ChristopherHedges.com, All Rights Reserved.

    Labels: , , , , ,

    Greatest Hits | Illiana Expressway News:

  • New Anti Illiana Expressway Coalition Forms
  • Illiana Expressway Toll Road Study Area Map
  • Gov. Mitch Daniels Drops
    Plans to Extend The Illiana East Of I-65.
  • I-80/I-94 Part Of Mexico-Canada Superhighway
  • Illiana Makes Fed's 'Corridors' List"
  • Will Wheel Tax Be Political Third Rail?

    Opponents to the Illiana Expressway have called for greater investment in mass transit, notably extensions of South Shore Line service to Lowell and Valparaiso.

    But, will a proposed wheel tax of $50 per car to be collected by the Northwest Indiana Regional Development Authority be too hot for Lake and Porter County legislators to support as an alternate to building another highway connection to Illinois?

    The idea to levy the "train tax" was proposed by Rep. Chet Dobis, (D-Merrillville) who says in a Northwest Indiana Times article that he was trying to "plant the seed." The wheel tax proposal has yet to be adopted.

    Other Northwest Indiana legislators spoke out against raising vehicle taxes, according to The Times.

    "That is one of the most hated taxes -- our plates on our vehicles, " said state Rep. Linda Lawson, D-Hammond. "The people in my community, my neighborhoods, they would be just outraged if we gave them another tax." ...

    But the wheel tax is perhaps one of the "most onerous" funding options, said state Rep. Charlie Brown, D-Gary.

    "I don't think it would be well received by my constituents," Brown said.

    Porter County representative Duane Cheney, D-Portage said "If there is no other way to do it, I would certainly consider raising taxes" to build the South Shore Line extensions.

    Increasing rail service to Northwest Indiana communities is a commendable ideal and could be a solution for some of the transportation needs that would be addressed by the Illiana Expressway, but the unanswered question is what to do with all of the predicted increases in truck traffic on the Borman Expressway?

    Copyright 2007, ChristopherHedges.com, All Rights Reserved.

    Tech Tags:

    Labels: , , , , ,

    Greatest Hits | Illiana Expressway News:

  • New Anti Illiana Expressway Coalition Forms
  • Illiana Expressway Toll Road Study Area Map
  • Gov. Mitch Daniels Drops
    Plans to Extend The Illiana East Of I-65.
  • I-80/I-94 Part Of Mexico-Canada Superhighway
  • Illiana Makes Fed's 'Corridors' List"
  • Sunday, April 8, 2007

    Anti Illiana Expressway Opponents To Attend Hobart Global Warming Rally?

    A message on the Citizens Against the Privatized Illiana Toll Road asks members to show up wearing "No Illiana" T-shirts to a noon-time rally against global warming in Hobart, Indiana on April 14 at the Hobart First Unitarian Church.

    Labels: , , , , , , ,

    Greatest Hits | Illiana Expressway News:

  • New Anti Illiana Expressway Coalition Forms
  • Illiana Expressway Toll Road Study Area Map
  • Gov. Mitch Daniels Drops
    Plans to Extend The Illiana East Of I-65.
  • I-80/I-94 Part Of Mexico-Canada Superhighway
  • Illiana Makes Fed's 'Corridors' List"