It's familiar fare for much of the country
and the world, but new territory for car-crazy Los Angeles County:
freeway lanes that aren't free.
For the first time starting Saturday night, LA County will try
"congestion pricing," charging individual drivers who want to pick
up their pace and use carpool lanes.
The one-year pilot program will start with a stretch of the 110
Freeway spanning 11 miles southward from downtown LA, the Los
Angeles Times reports.
The express lanes could cut up to three minutes per mile off the
trip, but the trip could cost more than $15.
Toll roads and lanes have existed for years in neighboring Orange
County and are standard on the East Coast but a novelty in Los
Angeles County, and one that advocates say is long overdue and
should reduce congestion for drivers in other lanes, too.
"It's about time," said Donald Shoup, a UCLA urban planning
professor who has long lobbied for toll lanes and other methods of
using markets to reduce congestion. "They work in San Diego; they
work in many other cities. We have the worst congestion and it's odd
that we're one of the last cities to try it out."
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News Column
LA Enters New Territory With Express Lanes
Nov. 12, 2012
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Source: (C) 2012 Tulsa World. via ProQuest Information and Learning Company; All Rights Reserved
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