While Steve is cooking up a really cool new build of the board software, please consider posting a new topic. There's all sorts of things going on in the Louisville area — get us started talking about them!
March 1- Oct. 30, 2010 Norton Healthcare Get Healthy Walking Club for Zoo Walkers The Norton Healthcare Get Healthy Walking Club is a free program that promotes walking and healthy lifestyles. As a partner, the Louisville Zoo offers safe and invigorating walking privileges during the year...
This sounds like a very interesting event for neighborhoods throughout Louisville to get together to share ideas. Here's information from their Facebook event: The Grassroots Gala is an authentic gathering and celebration of all Louisville neighborhoods, providing the opportunity to showcase their...
Here's the release I received from the Oldham County History Center: Spirits of LaGrange Ghost Tour Kick-Off Ghost Stories at the Oldham County History Center Sept. 11, 2010 starting at 7:30 p.m. Sponsored by Discover Downtown LaGrange The Oldham County History Center Bedford Bank Queen...
Following is the release I received from Bernheim Arboretum and Research Forest. Sounds intriguing. CONNECT at Bernheim Returns September 11CONNECT at Bernheim is a nighttime collision of art, music, science and technology around Lake Nevin. Artists, scientists, naturalists...
Just got this release from Historic Locust Grove... HLG Executive Director Carol Ely will describe the two years of intensive scientific and historic research that went into Locust Grove's brilliant restoration — along with stories of what we learned about the Croghans' life at Locust Grove...
Apparently, this resolution is being introduced tonight, despite some opposition to it there. It may not be overwhelmingly approved like a similar resolution was in the New Albany City Council. Jeffersonville Mayor Tom Galligan is on the record as gung ho for the Bridges Project, warts (tolls...
For the past 50 years, we’ve been relying on the gas tax to pay for U.S. roads, bridges, tunnels, and more. And as we’ve been reiterating for, well, ever since this blog was launched, that method of payment is no longer working. Infrastructure in the U.S. is fast approaching critical levels of disrepair and technological obsolescence, The gas tax is too low to make any serious dent in these problems, and the political barriers to raising it are too high to achieve any real gas-tax coup. Meanwhile, the dogged lack of funding sources has kept the federal surface transportation bill — which is already nearly a year overdue — stalled in its tracks.
LM Contributing Citizen
Joined: Sun 11 Jan 2009
Posts: 46
Topics: 1
Location: The Highlands — Deer Park
As a filthy treehugging hippy, I say enough is enough. At what point do we stop feeding this beast. Tolling roads will only mean the inevitable toll increases that go with all government run entities. And, as tolls rise we will be paying to drive on crappy roads or have our trip times and gas usage increase while we detour around highways and roads that will take years to fix. I would say raise the gas tax by a dollar, put it in a fund that couldn't be raided for road taxes, and build an infrastructure that is user friendly and employs different alternative transportation methods. There are a number of peripheral positives that go along with this, also. A friendlier and healthier city would be two of those. It would take a while to have this theory become reality, but I think no more than what it would take to enact a toll system, save that money and then suffer the ponderous process/infighting/hearings, etc that would go along with allotting funds to the never-ending supply of problems we have currently and in the near future with the archaic system we have now. We will be trying to fix something that is terminally broken at this point in time.
Road systems have historically been the biggest fund suckers in the country.
It needs to end now.
Just my opinion, not meant to offend.
Bert Contributing Citizen
Joined: Fri 10 Oct 2008
Posts: 409
Topics: 14
Location: Hikes Point
I would have assumed people dislike tolls just as much as they dislike higher gas taxes and both would be equally difficult to pass. Atleast with a gas tax your trip is not interrupted by the toll booth. Also, at a toll both there is the potential that you will be sitting there idling, when an engine burns gas the least efficiently and you will also have to accelerate back to highway speeds, a process the results in very low miles per gallon compared to when the car is at a constant speed. If more funds are really needed, I would assume just paying an extra quarter (or whatever the amount is) per gallon of gas purchased.
Does anyone know off the top of their heads what the amount of federal tax we pay per gallon of gas? Someone once told me it was a quarter but I assume it is really more than that.
Last edited by Bert on Wed Jul 28, 2010 2:03 pm; edited 1 time in total
That chart on that site is really nice in seeing what we are paying in state taxes. I wonder what the federal government charges for those taxes, particularily gas taxes. Again, a friend of mine said the federal government charges a quarter a gallon but my gut is telling me it is probably higher.
Some of the cigarette taxes are pretty awesome. $3 per pack in Connecticut.
Back on topic — I agree with the general consensus to quit feeding the beast before it gets even more out of control. While cars are here to stay for another 50+ years it is time to quit thinking in terms of cars and move towards something bigger and better. However — with current sprawl patterns that won't happen without some serious mojo at the federal level amending design standards and taxing the hell out of greenfield development and / or giving massive credits and tax breaks to rehabilitation and infill projects. Tolls heading out to the 'burbs could be a very subversive (and brilliant if I do say so myself ) way to fund things and push building back in without coming out and saying "quit doing what you are doing."
Mass transit doesn't work without density levels to support it. Louisville does not have the density level to support much beyond a bus system right now, at least on a local level. A regional rail to other major cities would work but a local rail system just wouldn't make it except at a few major roads.
Louisville History & Issues: An open, nonpartisan public discussion space for metropolitanLouisville (including suburbs in Kentucky and Southern Indiana) where concerned citizens talk about the area's rich local history, current political/community issues and ongoing events