Tsakumis’ loose facts

Your tie is cutting off the oxygen again

Your tie is cutting off the oxygen again

Like I do with most Alex Tsakumis rants, I didn’t stop laughing and shaking my head while reading his latest, found in today’s edition of the 24 Hours newspaper.

Tsakumis starts off with his best impression of Fox News’ Glenn Beck, whose anti-global warming pontifications are far more eloquently worded, but on par with Tsakumis’ love of all things big, dirty and self-polluting (I’m talking about his vehicle, not the driver).

If Alex doesn’t like the Burrard Bridge trial, or the people that ride bikes in this city (a group he affectionately refers to as cycling fascists), then that is fine, because he isn’t alone in his complaints.

What I do take issue with is Tsakumis’ use of false data, sloppy math, and flawed arguments.

First, to clarify, average commute times for vehicles traveling south bound from Georgia Street to West 12th during rush hour have NOT gone up by 6 minutes.  In the morning, they have increased (not to the extent that Tsakumis claims), but during the afternoon they have decreased.  For vehicles taking the same stretch north bound, both morning and afternoon wait times have dropped.

For a confirmation of this, you can visit the City of Vancouver’s webpage of statistics, which currently has been collected up until August 30.

Tsakumis also refers to these figures as the “mayor’s own numbers,” as if Gregor Robertson is out there every day collecting and obfuscating the data.  The information is compiled by the City of Vancouver engineering department, and if Tsakumis has a better or more accurate system of data collection, maybe he should give them a call directly to offer his pearls of wisdom.

Finally, Tsakumis talks about how increased congestion leads to higher greenhouse gas emissions, and decides that “as a green initiative the Burrard Bridge bike trial is already a MASSIVE failure.”

Well, by that kind of reasoning, we should have highways throughout the City of Vancouver to ease congestion and reduce pollution.

That kind of logic is why the NPA’s former “brain trust” is sitting around trying to figure out how to become relevant again.

The theory of induced demand when it comes to highways is simple – if you build it, they will come.  Each new highway or highway lane draws more cars until it, too, is congested.  Some of these cars are drawn from other roads, but many represent trips that otherwise would not be made.

There are numerous sources that back up this concept, but a good one to reference is Urban Transportation Economics by Kenneth Small, pp. 113-117, which states that “50-80% of increased highway capacity is soon filled with generated traffic.”

Tsakumis is a commentator that is most often full of hyperbole and gusto without the facts to back up his vitriol.

Speaking of which, I am fully prepared for some of that vitriol to come my way now that this post has been written – once again, in typical Tsakumis fashion.

3 Responses to “Tsakumis’ loose facts”

  1. Vardip Dhaliwal says:

    I agree!

  2. Vardip Dhaliwal says:

    I think Alex needs to take a break from politics…he’s losing too much hair over it.

  3. Thanks for pointing this out. The average delay is only around a minute and a half. Northbound, travel times average a minute faster while southbound, the delays average just a bit over two minutes. The interesting thing is that delays are only experienced over 4 of the hours southbound and none of the hours northbound meaning that more drivers experience faster travel times than slower travel times. Even among motorists, there are more winners than losers with the trial.

    He also forgot to include the emissions reductions due to more people cycling instead of driving as well as the decrease in traffic delays and emissions due to fewer cyclists falling onto the bridge.

Leave a Reply

Sun Mar 14, 2010

March 2010
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
  
 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31  

FACT OF THE DAY

An article titled Vancouver Politics by Paul Tennant in The Vancouver Book (1976), describes the entry of TEAM onto the civic political scene in 1968. TEAM, wrote Tennant, “sought to be a moderate reform group appealing to persons of all political ideologies.”

On their left was COPE (the Committee of Progressive Electors), also formed in 1968, and on their right was the NPA (the Non-Partisan Association), which had been a power in city politics for nearly four decades, and which “held that the affairs of the city should be run by those with the necessary knowledge and experience, i.e., those with a professional-managerial background, in order to run the city in a business-like way.”

The reformers, on the other hand, “felt that civic decision-making should be open to the public, with leadership coming from a cross-section of the population, and rule going to the working class majority. This group was concerned about land use, they advocated city control, and preferred to structure politics around the neighborhood concept.”

Quote OF THE DAY

“It was very diverse, and we got together by word of mouth. There were professors, business people, labor, lawyers and from all across the city. It was a coalescing of people around the idea we should do something.” – former City Councillor Setty Pendakur on the formation Vancouver’s reform movement and its political manifestation – TEAM – came into being in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s.

Archive

Tags