WED., JUN 25, 2008 - 12:52 PM

Eggleston: Speeding ahead with bad brakes

By Rich Eggleston

It 's only coincidence that communities across Wisconsin are required to have 
their much vaunted comprehensive plans completed just about the time the last 
SUV rolls off the General Motors assembly line in Janesville.

But it 's no coincidence that our best efforts to peer into the crystal ball 
and map our future could end up just as ungainly a dinosaur as the Chevy 
Suburbans that made big money for GM in the era of $1.15-a-gallon gasoline. 
That 's because we 're drafting plans for a future that promises us $4-, $5- or 
$6-a-gallon gasoline under parameters established by the state when gas was 
$1.15 a gallon.

By the time most communities even thought about comprehensive plans, gas was 
heading toward $2 a gallon, and urban density was still the poor stepchild of 
development. It never got invited to the ball. At $6 a gallon, density might be 
the life of the party. But government is a dinosaur all its own, and a lot of 
time and effort has been invested in planning for a future of $2-a-gallon gas.

Written only 10 years ago, the comprehensive planning law uses terminology that 
today is hopelessly outdated as a road map to the future. It tells us to plan 
for transportation and utilities, but it doesn 't say a word about climate 
change, energy conservation or sustainability.

As a result, we 're driving full speed ahead into the past, and our brakes are 
bad. Wisconsin communities approved marvelous developments that were well 
suited to $2-a-gallon gasoline. But as the words "subprime mortgage " became 
unacceptable in polite company, mini-mansions for the masses still rose on our 
skylines. 

The surest way to ease the pinch of high energy prices is to reduce energy 
consumption. Make the kids walk or bike to soccer practice. Pick up the phone 
instead of the car keys. Take a train or bus. 

Around the country, transit saves 3.4 billion gallons of fuel each year, saves 
us 541 million hours that otherwise would be spent in traffic jams and cuts 
greenhouse gas emissions by 26 million tons. 

According to USA Today, Americans drove 22 billion fewer miles from November 
through April than during the same period in 2006-07. We are doing it.

And it 's happening in a society that until yesterday was transit unfriendly. 
At $4 a gallon, it may be possible to get people out of their cars without 
prying their cold dead hands off the steering wheel. At $6 a gallon, it's a 
sure thing. 

As communities across Wisconsin finalize their comprehensive plans, they must 
plan to do more with less energy. If they don 't, we 're going to have to 
settle for a lot less in terms of quality of life and economic growth.

Rich Eggleston is communications coordinator for the Wisconsin Alliance of 
Cities.

Copyright © 2008 Wisconsin State Journal

http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/column/other/293295




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