This is an archive of a past election.
See http://www.smartvoter.org/oh/hm/ for current information.
Hamilton County, OH November 8, 2005 Election
Smart Voter

Transportation is a Service, Not a Business

By Robert Wilson

Candidate for Council Member; City of Cincinnati

This information is provided by the candidate
This paper presents some of Robert Wilson's views on public transportation.
The Cincinnati area has become an urban nightmare sprawling over eight counties in three different states where regional cooperation seems almost impossible. The city has depended on automobile usage to a frightening level, which has ultimately perpetuated this style of growth. Even our single form of public transportation runs on a combustion engine. It is now time to quit thinking of public transportation as a business and rather as a service provided by a municipality to help its citizens navigate through its borders. Let us open our eyes to new forms of transportation that have worked in other cities - particularly light rail systems.

In 2002 a plan for a light rail system in Cincinnati was on the ballot and failed miserably. It failed with 68% opposed and 31% in favor of the light rail plan for Cincinnati (http://www.lightrailnow.org/news/n_000006.htm.). The main reasons for its failure on the ballot were the lack of understanding of light rail by the public and much the idea that the light rail proposal was unprofitable.

Well sorry to burst the bubble, but public transportation is truly a service similar to police and fire that helps bring ease and convenience to its citizens. Imagine if police and fire were meant to be profitable. Would police charge the citizens every time they called? Or every time the police came to help catch who stole John Doe's Chevy Suburban? What if the fire department charged the citizens per gallon of water used to put the fire out on their house and then required a bonus for saving their daughter from the blaze? They may argue that police and fire already do charge because these departments are paid by their taxes.

But is that fair? Think of all the money from citizen taxes that are poured into streets, roads, and highways to help them navigate the city. Are those profitable? The answer is no, they are a service provided by the municipality once again. So why would they consider light rail any different from this? The answer is more than likely because it is not the conventional American way of thinking.

Americans have fallen in love with the automobile, and have closed their minds to other modes of local transportation. I believe it is time for Cincinnati to step up and start thinking a bit more progressively, or we will die buried by Mark Twain's infamous quote about Cincinnati that "when the end of the world comes, I want to be in Cincinnati because it's always twenty years behind the times."

I personally practice what I preach. I truly enjoy public transportation. I have given up my auto dependent lifestyle in the suburbs and moved to the city where I have saved more money than I ever could have imagined. I no longer pay for gas, parking, insurance, car payments, inconvenient breakdowns, license tags or the time wasted sitting in traffic wondering what more productive things I could be doing. It is time to open the smart business of a light rail system that will ultimately set Cincinnati apart from the rest of its Rust Belt partners. Let's be progressive and support public transportation.

Candidate Page || Feedback to Candidate || This Contest
November 2005 Home (Ballot Lookup) || About Smart Voter


oh/hm Created from information supplied by the candidate: September 23, 2005 07:09
Smart Voter <http://www.smartvoter.org/>
Copyright © League of Women Voters of California Education Fund.
The League of Women Voters neither supports nor opposes candidates for public office or political parties.