"You're not stuck in a traffic jam, you are the jam."
--German public transport campaign,
Urban Transport International
"It was the thing that I most regretted leaving behind."
--President Bill Clinton surveying a Mustang in Phoenix
"It's not a car. It's an aphrodisiac."
--Infiniti advertisement launched on the
twenty-fifth anniversary of Earth Day
The nation's wake-up call goes like this: "Some of the usual rough
stuff out there." "It's a mess." "Don't even think of trying the
expressway this morning." "You'll find a stack-up at the intersection,
where a tractor trailer truck has turned over, so avoid...."
It's morning in America and avoid is the imperative word. But
avoiding is impossible. Traffic reports post warnings for specific
locales, but why bother? The hits keep coming. At rush hour, A.M. or
P.M., it's the usual: "heavy traffic in the usual places"; it's "the usual
twenty-minute delay." The radio blares a chorus of stalled cars and
jammed bridges, of car fires backing up interstates, of vapor lock
bolting traffic into a motionless mass. Everywhere the commuters'
clock ticks off the 8 billion hours a year Americans spend stuck in
traffic.
The commuter's trip should jar us to a realization of the auto-bound
life that penalizes both nondrivers and drivers of our 200 million motor
vehicles. From the jammed tunnel under the Continental Divide to the
Cross Bronx Expressway, movement is stymied on the nation's
corridors. On the coasts that hold two-thirds of all Americans, the
long-suffering "BosWash" and the newer "Los Diegos" freeways greet
their share of the day's 80 million car commuters, and, with a screech
of brakes, the love song of freedom and mobility goes flat. Freedom?
Mobility?
We have heard these complaints before but never for so long a
stretch of the day. A generation or so ago, in the complacent fifties, the
motion was not so perpetual. The powerhouses of an earlier auto age
rested between the hours of the commute. At midday roads emptied
out. After darkness, too, there was respite as the steel chargers of the
postwar boom, all those fin-tailed Buicks, those fang-grilled Chevies
and Fords were corralled for the night in the nation's ranch houses.
Now, though, with four times the 50 million vehicles of that era and
far more dispersed trips, the traffic never ceases. Highways become
sealed chambers of isolation as commuters put in an average of ten
forty-hour weeks behind the wheel each year. Back roads and arterials
stall during our three-plus daily trips on errands. Steaming and waiting
in traffic, we pay penance for the growth in cars and trips. Trading
time behind the wheel for space in the exurbs, work-bound
Americans travel from before daybreak to after dark to ever
more sprawling homes.
No wonder aerial views show arteries that look like a chain of
cabooses, bumper to bumper across the nation. In the last two
decades we have doubled the mileage of the nation's highways and
promptly filled these new roads by traveling twice as many miles.
Seattle's traffic, for example, rising 121 percent in the past decade,
matches most regions whose growing populations clog their roads.
The chorus of complaints on congestion is hardly confined to any one
place. A front-page Labor Day photo depicts a bulb-lit sign at a traffic
jam near the tollbooth on the New Hampshire Turnpike. Its message
emphasizes the irony: "ENJOY YOUR HOLIDAY!"
Generating Traffic
For decades traffic experts have observed the capacity of more
highways to simply breed more traffic. "If you build it, they will
come," the popular phrase, is the bleak truth confirmed by science and
history. "Generated traffic" is the professional phrase used to describe
the traffic generated by increased roads. "Triple convergence,"
another term, describes how more road space promotes more traffic in
Anthony Downs's Stuck in Traffic, that is, if you have more road at
peak hours, more cars will converge for three reasons: Some will
converge for the improved roadway (spatial convergence), some for
the more convenient time (temporal convergence), and some from
public transportation (modal convergence). Equally glum and
mathematical, the so-called Braess's paradox confirms that "by adding
capacity to a crowded [highway] network you could actually slow
things down." Add the experience of history, and you see why our
road building prompts even some federal highway officials to predict
that congestion will quadruple in the next twenty years.
And yet, the fact is slow to puncture the mythology of the traffic
engineer. Highway departments in, say, St. Louis, whose relatively
clear roads would be the envy of many a traffic manager, ask for
widening. So do those in smalltown Sauk Centre, Minnesota, the
tree-shaded model for Sinclair Lewis's Main Street. "It doesn't seem
to penetrate," says an official in Atlanta, whose "Spaghetti Junction,"
the largest interchange in America, jams the district of House
leader Newt Gingrich. The "spaghetti" proliferates, and so do the
nicknames for the junctions of the expressways nationwide. "Long
Island Distressway" is the one used by New Yorkers. Orlando's
Interstate 4, already six lanes choked to a standstill, will need
twenty-two more lanes by the millennium, regional planners insist. New
Jersey's ex-Governor James Florio says, "our highway 287 is a parking
lot." Everywhere roads expand, and so does traffic.
So, of course, have cars and the miles they travel. In the two
decades after 1970, vehicle miles increased 90 percent and the
registrations of those who drove them by more than 70 percent. In that
time, wrote Downs, "The number of cars and trucks in use increased
nearly 50 percent, twice as fast as the number of households in
absolute terms and one-third faster in relative terms, faster, too, than
the number of licensed drivers." The momentum has yet to subside.
At Home as We Range
So it is that we spend our lives behind the wheel. With almost two
motor vehicles for every household, the car has become the ship of the
highway desert. A multipurpose vessel, the automobile is outfitted to
allay our hours sequestered there, a home away from home. The motor
vehicle is a private chamber to telephone a buddy or boss with one
hand and little concentration, a powder room to put on makeup, a
cafeteria for lunching--at times simultaneously. We play Moby Dick
or Stephen King on tape, and run a cellular phone or fax. Otherwise
tidy human beings smoke and toss their cigarettes; otherwise decorous
ones floss their teeth. Self-professed safe drivers take notes, talk to
their clients, fight with their mates, or, incredibly, read or watch TV.
Our backseats and trunks have become the attics of America.
In artist Anthony Natsoulas's sculpture a ceramic man is tucked into
a real car seat. He is shoeless, his cigar in one hand, his phone
attached to his ear in the exhibition Los Angeles Drives Me Wild. The
artist has stationed a pizza in the figure's lap, a book between his legs,
and a crumpled soda can on the floor. Life imitates art. "Going
for a ride just isn't what it used to be," another sculptor in the exhibition
labeled his piece. His "urban assault mobile" brandished a pistol and a
ball and chain above a collection of license plates. It isn't all
imagination. "You look up and see brake lights in your face, and you
just have to jam on the brakes," a real-life driver described an accident
in Washington, D.C. Down falls the computer, if not the driver. These
are the hazards of trying to make up for lost time. But there are worse
ones, like the Virginia commuter who crashed and died as he was
consuming his lunch with fork in hand on a dog day in August traffic.
Automobile advertising goes to great lengths to befog these
unnerving events. In the vast, untenanted scenarios delivered by
Madison Avenue, the red racer swirls across an empty landscape. The
great escape machine, built into the American dream of the getaway,
beckons. No mountain or prairie, no desert or glacier is beyond
four-wheel drive. In endless hours of television, the nation's quest for
mobility is dramatized by such views. Commercials sell our shared
imagery of the ninety-mile-an-hour roads less traveled. American
corporations spend $40 billion a year to promote the car, $1 billion from
GM alone.
With the ring of the cash register, advertisers concede the animosity
and virtual warfare bred by the frantic search. "WLDNCRZY" (wild
and crazy), said a Subaru commercial; "Presenting A Car Well
Prepared To Take On Your Fellow Driver." A photo of license plates
bore still other words: "NASTY1," "EAT DUST," "NUTS 2U," and
"IG02XS." It's a jungle out there. As gridlock frays nerves and
distances increase, driving accelerates aggression. "Look at it this
way. Since the next guy is capable of almost anything, shouldn't the
same be true of your next car," the advertisement concludes.
The stalled traffic has also given us a new breed of entrepreneur.
On the Cross Bronx Expressway, highway peddlers cruise from lane
to lane hustling mobile phones to the immobilized vehicles. In Boston
vendors sell coffee by the tollbooth at jam-packed Callahan Tunnel
during rush hour. Hawkers of newspapers at exits and stoplights share
space with pushers for charities, bogus or real; street merchants sell
cellophane-wrapped day-old roses. Entrepreneurship also lives on the
road in the perceived menace of window washers wielding
squeegees. Some drivers find intimidation in the strong-arm
aggression. Others have sympathy for the pathos of "Will Work for
Food" signs as the homeless stake out exit ramps in Manhattan, Los
Angeles, or West Palm Beach.
In the desolate world of the parking lot, criminality grows. Stores
distribute antitheft pamphlets in supermarket lots. Thefts, vehicle
snatchings, and other hostile acts of our violent society swell on the
highway. Actor Michael Douglas, the iconic angry white man in the
movie Falling Down, was driven to rampage by L.A. traffic. Sexual
symbol, getaway vehicle, or status object, the car has also become the
weapon of choice, say some behaviorists and police. "The ideal vehicle
for `type A' personalities," a Mitsubishi ad crowed. "Aggressive on the
outside. Uncompromising on the inside." Given the anonymity of tinted
glass windows, isolated highways, and sidewalks emptied by a driving
population, the car culture sets the stage for antisocial behavior.
The Los Angeles freeways looked like a shooting range as fierce
motorists took potshots in the early 1990s, about the time "drive-by
shooting" entered the lexicon. By 1992 "carjacking" was another new
phrase added to the dictionary of automobile crime. Don't look the
other driver in the eye, the cautious advised as tempers rose.
"Aggression Gets Wheels" was the headline used by one article
describing a deadly incident that resulted from a "mistake." "The
`mistake' in Brighton (Massachusetts) was not accelerating fast
enough for a green light," the Boston Globe began its compilation of
car-bred Christmas violence. "In Brockton last Friday, the mistake was
tailgating. In Peabody, Monday night, it was passing in a no-passing
zone." In Miami rent-a-car companies installed "panic buttons" to be
used to call for help. The device came from Avis for a $5 a day
charge, "a safety and security issue," said the company. Sales of
cellular phones record both busy, car-bound lives and the nighttime
fears of drivers on the lonely roads of an asphalt nation.
Dancing with Cars
Along with these dirges, we hear and read odes to the automobile. The
romance of the road pervades our fantasies. "Americans love
their cars" echoes with numbing regularity. Who has not heard or
uttered a tale of the rite of passage that begins with the first license or
the first set of wheels? Who has not expressed the inclination to go
"on the road," in a swoon to the automotive dalliance of Jack Kerouac.
The flexibility of car travel, the instant gratification, the indispensability
of an automobile in a world designed for driving--all resound. And
the one-million-plus cars sold every month attest to their imperative.
So bound are we to the sentiments--and the sentimentality--so
dependent are we on this singular style of movement, that we must
sometimes strain to hear or acknowledge the alternative view: that our
culture's submission to a car-dependent way of life will only get
worse. Listen to Madison Avenue and you hear the inconveniences
amid the lore: "The 19th unwritten law of driving: the shortest distance
between two points is always under construction," says an Isuzu
Trooper advertisement.
"You're an hour from work. You can't change your job. You can
change your space," a Lexus commercial goes on. Personal space, the
advertisers mean, as the camera closes in on the driver's cornucopia
of interior fittings, from cup holder to stereo. Yes, this is an enticement
for a pleasure vehicle. But it is also an acknowledgment that fancy
fittings are the best we can do to ease the commute.
Gridlocked Lives
When sales reps concede the car's inconvenience, something is
askew. The nation is in gridlock. And not just on the road. The nation
is in "lifelock" to the automobile as the dominant means of
transportation. It is in its grip so securely that we can barely perceive
how both the quality of mobility and the quality of life have diminished.
For the startling fact is that it is not just the journey to work, not only
the dashboard-pounding commuter, who creates the bulk of traffic and
logs in the lost time, but all of us. In fact, the commute itself consumes
less than one-quarter of our trips, a smaller percentage than two
decades ago. Specifically, work-bound travel devours only 22.5
percent of the pie graphed by the Nationwide Personal
Transportation Study of the Federal Highway Administration.
Statistically, most of our expanding hours behind the wheel, nearly
eight of every ten vehicle miles we travel, have nothing to to with
work. Neither are these miles vacation trips or long-distance travel, the
reasons Americans give for buying the first--or second or
third--automobile. Such holiday trips consume fewer miles than might
be expected, a scant 8 percent of our total mileage.
What sets the odometer reeling is something else. It is something
less critical than life, liberty, or the pursuit of happiness. And that is
errands. According to the highway administration study one-third of
the miles we travel go to consumption and family chores. A bottle of
milk, a tube of toothpaste, a Little League game, taking grandma to the
hospital or junior for eye glasses spin the miles. The ministuff of life
clogs the nation's roads. Another third falls under the "social and
recreational" category. These are the hours of amusement and
friendship reached by wheel: a workout, a movie, a dinner. Total these
lifestyle choices and tally the chores to consume, survive, and
fraternize and we have covered two-thirds of our driving miles, more
than half of the ten to twelve thousand miles of travel per car per year.
"Trip chaining" is the traffic engineers' word for these serial pickup
trips. They come to six round-trips a day per household to cover the
so-called family and personal category of our car-dependent lives. This
eternal need for a ton of steel creates the shop and drop cycle that
runs us ragged. To-ing and fro-ing, we spend our time and our
horsepower on an endless round of errands. And we don't much like it.
"I live in car country," a man from Rapid City, Iowa, said to me. "I
need to use my car to buy a bar of soap," he complained.
Where has this rush of travel come from? Why are we so
subservient to it? Some of it is demographics. Census figures tell us
that we have shrunk the size of households, multiplied the number of
them, and added cars for working women. Some of it is car-fed
sprawl. We have sent drivers outward to settle their homes and
two-car garages ever further into the hinterlands. We have deserted
the compact cities and inner suburbs that offer varied housing,
walkability, and public transportation. Housed at the periphery, half of
all Americans own more than one car, one-third purchase a second
car, and one-fifth own yet a third. Twin movements in housing and
highways support and encourage movement to the outskirts in
single-family dwellings.
We still build this free-standing Ozzie and Harriet house on the lone
lot at the end of the road. Despite the fact that families with children
under eighteen constitute only 26 percent of the population, we build
for bygone demographics. In the years since Leave it to Beaver, the
nuclear family of working dad and stay-at-home mom has halved in
numbers, while the number of working women has risen to 46 percent
of the workforce and hit the road. Thus the count on licensed drivers
is 20 percent higher, and the women accounting for that increase have
doubled the miles they drive.
In the great diaspora after World War II, Washington paid for the
American dream and it was fulfilled. With the federal government
financing 90 percent of the interstate system, the nation took to the
highways, and the moving vans headed to the hills. The population of
the suburbs tripled; the number of dense, walkable, transit-based cities
shrank. "I want," Erma Bombeck, the bard of the lawn culture, wrote
as she bought the second family car, "to go to the store, join a bowling
league, have lunch downtown with the girls, volunteer, go to the
dentist, take long drives in the country." She recorded her weekly
ethos in the seventies. "I want to whirl dizzily in a cloud of exhaust,
rotate my tires with the rest of the girls. Don't you understand? I want
to honk if I love Jesus!"
Today everybody is honking at once. Distance and spatial
segregation--here housing, there stores, elsewhere work--make
every trip a separate car trip to a separate place. And inconvenience,
mileage, and traffic multiply. On Cape Cod summer shoppers have to
hit the stores before 7 A.M. or after 9 P.M. to do their errands. Crossing
Cape Cod's main artery, Route 28, on foot in July can take ten
minutes. "This morning at a shopping mall, I spent 20 minutes looking
for a sweater and half an hour looking for my car," writer Ralph
Schoenstein described parking panic in New Jersey. "Looking for my
car is even better exercise than looking for my glasses, because the
average parking lot is bigger than my house--or my neighborhood."
The trying lifestyle that has evolved from the automobile is the truth
of fact and the subject of fiction. Mary Cahill's novel Carpool
described one woman's life on wheels. "5:30--Take Phil to swim
practice.... 7:00--Hurry home to make breakfast and get everyone
up.... 7:15--Push Phil out door into school bus.... 8:00--Pick up Crista
Galli.... 8:10--Drop Crista Galli and ..." "Mental, physical and spiritual
cruelty," Cahill called it. Forget car pooling. With the mileage of the
lone commuter up 35 percent in the past two decades, driving
togetherness fell an almost equal amount. Some 91 percent of all
households own a car.
Mom at the Wheel
The single-occupancy vehicle is a staple. And the driver of its miles
remains disproportionately a she. "So where is Mom? Didn't she help
Dad turn the American wilderness into a cement desert bright with
golden arches?" Gore Vidal has asked. She is putting more hours
behind the wheel than Russian women spend in food lines. Women not
only chauffeur the bulk of America's children but also care for the
nation's dependent elderly, stock the shelves of America's kitchens,
and have jobs.
In a society that still apportions family chores to women, today's
carburb mom, if she is lucky, is dropping the kids at the day care
center, putting in a full day's work, caring for grandma and grandpa,
and running errands. So, of course, is dad, but not by as many
multiples, since women drivers are putting in twice as many miles as
the norm. In less than ten years after 1983, women's travel
guadrupled. And, by dint of those numbers, their lives became frantic.
"It is women who do the driving," says Sandra Rosenbloom, of the
Drachman Institute Land and Regional Development Studies at the
University of Arizona, who has studied gender differences and what
the traffic engineers call "transportation demand management," how to
travel back and forth to a job in an orderly fashion. How to manage
the unmanageable may be a woman's issue, but the transportation, the
demand, and the management in this new field also apply to men, says
Rosenbloom.
Rosenbloom's study of why working women drive alone and the
implications for travel reduction programs underscored their household
chores. Women do not take the direct route; their path is littered with
errands and drop-offs because of the fact that "working mothers
are much more dependent on driving alone than comparable
male parents." How to solve the problem? Do environmental
measures and travel reduction programs hurt working women?
Rosenbloom's study asked. Her conclusion was yes. Penalties on
automobiles penalize the female driver far more than the male.
Isn't that depressing? I ask her. It is dismal that positive programs to
help the environment and reduce travel hurt female drivers. More than
that, how shortsighted to make women and the environment
adversaries. How grim that the report, funded by the U.S. Department
of Labor's Women's Bureau, concludes that the environment, the
economy, and even the personal life of women have to suffer to ease
the way for this vehicular bondage.
"You wouldn't believe how owning their first car frees women," is
Rosenbloom's response.
Ah, Freedom, mobility, Ah, the open road. I mull over her words.
How familiar ... how romantic ... how like a--man.
A woman in Hillsborough, Missouri, near St. Louis, discussing day
care on a National Public Radio series, described her agonizing
decision to quit work and stay at home with her young child. She
recalled the hassles, the chaotic life, the clock without stop in her
earlier life as a working mother. Then she described the piece de
resistance that sent her out of the job market and home: the
forty-five-minute drive to and from her day care pickup. The Child
Care Action campaign newsletter phrased it concisely: "Time famine a
national issue." Sociologist Arlie Hochschild of the University of
California has put it another way: working mothers "talked about sleep
the way a hungry person talks about food." But the cartoon character
Sylvia tells it better in words in From the Journal of the Woman
Who Never Wastes a Moment of Her Day:
This morning, while stopped at a traffic light, did some embroidery
using the pre-threaded needle I keep on the passenger seat,
dashed off a note to a shut-in on the stationery I keep above the
visor, and partially filled out some medical insurance claim
forms.... Later, caught in rush-hour traffic, I rolled down my
window and screamed at the man next to me, "Your wife is
cheating on you with a flight attendant," which always relieves
any tension I'm carrying in my neck.
"Liberation" is the word commonly used to describe how the
automobile has released women from social control and geographical
confinement. Taking the Wheel, one recent history, assessed the
freedom that arrived with the internal combustion machine in the early
twentieth century. Mobile? Maybe. Yet, it is a false form of
consciousness that fails to assess women's enslavement to the motor
vehicle in the auto-dependent households and society it has helped
install.
Most Americans lack stay-at-home options. The single-parent head
of one-third of our households with children under eighteen, the less
affluent, the households "daylighting" and moonlighting to survive
cannot afford to do so. With two wage earners now joined by
three-job couples working fifty hours a week, life behind the wheel
becomes ever more relentless.
Parenting comes in both sexes, and at 5 A.M. on a brisk fall morning
a Maryland widower backs one of his three cars out of the driveway
of his modern Colonial and heads to his job in Washington, D.C.
Harried on departure, he leaves work early to return equally distraught
to complete the life of the after-hours chauffeur: one son to basketball,
another to home, a daughter to music. It is typical of the Beltway,
where the average home houses three cars, one for mom, one for dad,
and one for junior of driving age. It is typical of suburban America too.
In Ties That Stress, David Elkind, a professor of child development,
describes the modern home as a "railroad station" for Mr. and Ms.
America's comings and goings. More likely it's a cabstand.
Time-starved parents chauffeur immobilized children to sports and
chores, and genuine sociability goes. The dining room table is more a
revolving platform than a nuclear family idyll as one parent arrives
home late while the other finishes the rounds of pickups at piano
lessons and Scouts. In her book The Overworked American, Juliet
Schor allotted a seventy- and eighty-hour workweek for the adults
serving as the economic mainstay of the American household. She did
not separate the automobile component, but considered the car factor
in her categories for "care of the sick and elderly," "acquisition of
goods and services," social and recreation time, and churchgoing
hours. Go beyond these time drains to include the specific "transportation
of people." Add "car maintenance and repair," from the normal oil
change or inspection to registration. Then ponder the hours for the
random accidents of a broken window, run-down battery,
snowstorm, or overheated engine. The breadwinner-cum-buyer
behind the wheel has lost not just leisure but life.
The Automotive Playpen
When autonomy depends on the automobile, all suffer. And those
served--the children in the backseat--are as deprived as those
who serve. Transported every which way from childhood through
adolescence, young people lose their independence. They fail to
expand their horizons, to see new surroundings, or to acquire
independence and liberty on their own. The outside world dominated
by the road bores, and television or computer games beckon. A
study comparing ten-year-olds in a small, walkable Vermont town
and youngsters in a new Orange County suburb showed a marked
difference. The Vermont children had three times the mobility, i.e.,
the distance and places they could get to on their own, while those in
Orange County watched four times as much television. To
paraphrase the architectural verity, we shape the land and the land
shapes us.
Given our far-flung, single-family, single-use suburban environment
that purges pedestrians, given our urban environment drained of life
by flight, given landscapes lacking sidewalks and multilane roads that
terrorize parents and children alike, impaired mobility is more than
inevitable. It is a social tragedy. "I am writing this while seated on the
stoop of my house in one of Boston's inner suburbs," historian Clay
McShane observes in his Down the Asphalt Path. "I am watching a
parent two houses up the street teach his eighteen-month-old
toddler, who is not yet toilet trained, how to walk. Every time she
steps off the curb, he swats her.... In motor age America, children
require street discipline at an early age. They have since the coming
of traffic," he writes. Children are "probably the biggest losers."
Our auto-dependent mobility denies the child's. Across America
children and young people are the victims of declining transit
services, suffering not only from the debasement of walking and
bicycling by the car but also from its depletion of public transportation.
This deprivation extends throughout adolescence. In all but a dozen or so
cities, the streetcar or bus taking the teenager to a lively urban core
beyond the limits of the everyday has atrophied or disappeared.
Walkers or even bicyclists who traveled freely to school, sports, or
friends in times past can no longer make their way without peril.
Sidewalks are few, cars many; even the mall is asphalt wrapped. We
fear for children of all ages. From the toddler wobbling off the curb at
his or her peril to the teenager on a bicycle forced to vie for space
with the speeding internal combustion machine, our children's
roadwarped lives fill us with dread.
Teenagers drive while parents shudder. The media records the
death and mutilation of the gun culture, but the car culture is
statistically more threatening. According to figures from the Federal
Highway Administration and the Justice Department, an adolescent
suburban male is more likely to be killed by an automobile than his
urban peer by a gun. Teenagers, of course, relish the rite of passage
to freedom. Our communal memories hold the anxiety, then the
pleasure of securing a license, the first glide alone and out the
driveway on one's own. We seem to forget that the "freedom" is
reduced by the servitude of a car-bound society that denies
movement any other way. Forced to own an automobile to see friends
or get around, teenagers are hostage to paying for it by working at
low-wage jobs, forsaking studies and even socializing to flip burgers in
a mall--in order to move around in the suburbs--to the mall.
A reporter from the Pilot in Norfolk, Virginia, doesn't accept my
negative view. He has called to discuss the positive side of life in the
sanctuary of the driver's seat. "People have told me it's their only time
to themselves," he said, describing an article he was writing on its
joys. Yes, I said. Yes, I understand the lure of the road, the stillness
of this chamber of isolation. I acknowledge--I remember--the
world of mom happy to finally find a few moments to catch up with
her small passengers or dad, at last able to exchange a word or two
en route to soccer practice. Isn't it life on the road that busies their
days, that deprives them of healthier moments of peace and privacy,
prohibits neighborly interaction and denies eye-to-eye contact, though?
Trashed Mass Transit
The alternate, of course, is not so easy. A few summers ago, in a rash
moment of research frenzy, I decided to make my way a hundred or
so miles from Massachusetts to Maine: first to Portland, then to a
Casco Bay island by public transportation. If I had been taking a Trip
to Bountiful on A Streetcar Named Desire, my friends couldn't have
clucked more. The trip involved a bus, a ferry, and a van, in sequence.
All of these worked well enough, but even the director of Maine's
Campaign for Sensible Transportation gave me the feeling that I
wasn't altogether--well--sensible.
Returning to her native New England from Europe, writer Alice
Furlaud shared my experience as a nondriver. A trip from Boston to
Cape Cod took as long as the trip across the Atlantic, she reported.
"On the telephone, the Plymouth and Brockton bus company had given
us three different versions of their schedule. All official, none correct.
We waited, standing up, for an hour in the Peter Pan bus terminal.... It
was cold." The same sense of rural America as a place where people
without cars have a shadowy, shamefaced existence pervaded her
arrival. "In that Cape Cod village, where the bus finally let us off, the
post office is three-eighths of a mile from the house where we were
staying." Laden with a shopping bag, doused by the rain, she made her
way on foot, ignored on the packed highway.
Driving into Old Age
Autonomy depends on the automobile. And in an aging population, this
dependence is no small matter. "I do not like to drive past pretty
houses in the lovely New England countryside," writes Paula Boyer
Rougny in Maine's TrainRider, "with the knowledge that within the
walls sits an elderly person of wit and compassion who, due to slight
physical frailty, is denied a driver's license. I approve the state's
denying her a license; I deplore the national tragedy of drive-fly-or-rot
that turns vital human beings into prisoners with no one to talk to and
nowhere to go." In rural America, where nearly half the elderly are in
poor health and 60 percent are not licensed to drive, there are many
such prisoners. At least half the rural elderly live in areas with
no public transportation, but the urban and suburban elderly, for all
the better facilities, have problems too.
The average American now age sixty-five will live to be
eighty-two, five more years than the predicted life span two decades
ago, and the number is rising. More Americans will live into their
eighties; the number of ninety-year-olds will increase. Throughout
the country the very elderly comprise the fastest growing portion,
with some 3.3 million people over age eighty-five, and their number
will rise sevenfold in the next quarter century, according to the
Bureau of the Census. Of course, these citizens are healthier, livelier.
But putting more miles on their cars will produce more accidents.
Nondrivers will proliferate. So will difficulties for them.
"Neck stiff from arthritis?" asked one article. "Use your mirrors
more carefully to check traffic," it quoted an instructor of the senior
set. "Deteriorating vision? Avoid driving at night," the instructor
recommended. That word "avoid" again. Nevertheless, accidents
happen. One spring such accidents seemed to collide with one
another. There was the seventy-four-year-old motorist who skidded
into Washington Square Park in New York City, slaying five people;
soon after, in the same city an eighty-seven-year-old man hit seven
people, leaving one dead. It was a bad month but not unique.
The Driving Skills Timeline of the American Automobile
Association is enough to make a pedestrian take cover. A
sixteen-year-old male leads their chart of risk versus experience in
his tendency to take chances beyond knowledge. On the other end
of the lose-lose situation, drivers over age sixty imperil themselves
and others when they overestimate their physical abilities. Visual
acuity drops from the age of thirty, and drivers grow sensitive to
glare, it reports. Night vision begins to decline at age forty. From age
fifty-five, more than half of all people need glasses. The majority of
those over age seventy cannot focus thirty-one inches from their
eyes. And, by that point, the AAA chart says dourly, "night vision
almost vanishes."
In response, traffic safety officials want to set age limits, requiring
tests and relicensing. But such solutions penalize as much as
one-third of the driving population. Autonomy demands mobility and
mobility demands a car. Even before America got grayer, we can all
recall the personal incidents of older Americans killed by chance or
incompetence on the road. The memory of my mother-in-law's elderly
friend, fatally wounded by the guardrail that pierced her car on the
Merritt Parkway and killed her two grandchildren as well, clings to my
mind twenty-five years later when I ride that route. Middle-aged sons
and daughters shake their heads at parents who keep their cars
garaged even as old age incapacitates them. Drive or not, they cling to
their automobiles and pay the insurance, excise taxes, and parking
fees, since selling them symbolizes captivity and social death.
"I know my vision is impaired but I still have good reflexes," says a
World War II vet, not yet seventy, who forfeited driving to take the
train. "Also," he goes on, a bit defensive about this vanishing symbol of
manhood, "three hours driving with my knee collecting fluid...." Still, he
confesses, apologizing for his machismo, "I didn't want not to do it."
Why should he apologize? It is a society whose driving policy is cruelly
calculated to deny alternatives that should apologize.
The Gray Panthers, the venerable activists for the rights of senior
citizens, have attacked the federal government for creating "severe
accessibility disadvantage" in highway-dependent development. By
funding freeway growth that stimulated sprawl and diminished public
transit, Washington discriminated against millions of Americans, the
Panthers declared in 1992. Nonmotorists must get equal treatment.
Those concerned with the "graying of America" plan only for life on
the road. "Fifty-Five Alive" and "Mature Drivers" courses grow.
Suggestions evolve. Create larger signage. Change colors and
directions, advocates suggest. Road strips have widened from four
inches to six. These are palliatives, however. The prescriptions never
include looking at the source of the problems: the single-minded way of
mobility--the private car.
Why not instead prescribe the creation of housing within a walk of
the old corner store? Or ensure public transit by bus or van to
downtown? Rarely do the prescriptions call for a public expedient like
installing elevators or making escalators work in impoverished public
transit stations. Seldom do we hear anyone suggest easing pedestrian
street crossings or incorporating services within a walk or public transit
ride--not any of the approaches that defined movement humanely in
the youths of many of those now elderly.