Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Streetsblog

Mayor of Fort Worth: Autocentric Design “A Mistake”

The theme of today's post from the Streetsblog Network is mayors who talk sense. First, at Fort Worthology, Kevin Buchanan files a report on what Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief had to say in his State of the City address:

Moncrief_forprintmedia_229x300.jpgMayor Mike Moncrief of Fort Worth: "Friends, we cannot continue to focus solely on building more roads for more vehicles."

[O]ne of
the items he discussed was the city’s transportation and planning.  The
mayor stated in no uncertain terms that Fort Worth is facing severe
transportation challenges, that they stem from too many years of
car-first planning, and that Fort Worth can no longer be designed and
built in a car-centric fashion -- topics certainly familiar to Fort
Worthology readers:

"Commuter rail, streetcars and other alternative modes
of transportation also remain a priority for me and this City Council.
Unfortunately, Fort Worth and other major metropolitan areas are
finding out the hard way what a mistake it was to design and build
cities around automobiles years ago. Friends, we cannot continue to
focus solely on building more roads for more vehicles. That’s counterproductive at best. Business as usual is dead! North Texas requires a transportation overhaul. No more Band-Aids, no more patches -- a complete overhaul!"

That's pretty strong talk coming from the mayor of a major city in Texas. Mayor Moncrief's words come on the heels of the Fort Worth City Council's unanimous approval of the sweeping Bike Fort Worth plan, which will add hundreds of miles of cycling infrastructure to the city's streets.

Then, from Car Less Ohio, we hear that the mayor of Columbus, Ohio, has his own plans to boost active transportation:

In the annual State of the City address last night, Mayor MichaelColeman said he is determined to make Columbus “Bike City USA.” To helpget there, the city will set aside $6 million from its capital budgetto connect the Alum Creek Trail to the city’s bikeway system and buildan additional 24 miles of bike paths and bike lanes on city streets.

Do we see a trend here?

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Today in Placard Abuse: The ‘Lieutenant’s Girlfriend’ Who Parks Illegally

Meet a driver who gets the gold medal for placard corruption.

March 3, 2026

Sunbelt Cities Rank Last in National Street Safety Index

Cars and drivers continue to dominate the newest and sunniest cities in the United States.

March 3, 2026

Today’s Headlines: Super Bowl Tuesday Edition

We've been talking about it for weeks, but today is the Big Game. Plus other news.

March 3, 2026

DOT Re-Ups With Speed Camera Operator But Temp Tags Are Still Unticketable

The city has lost tens of millions in unpaid fines because the company that runs our speed- and red-light cameras can't catch cars with temp tags. But that company just inked a new $1-billion five-year deal.

March 2, 2026

Americans Demand Congress Fund Active Transportation In Next Infrastructure Bill — And Not Just The Bike/Walk Advocates

A "back to basics" surface transportation bill — as Republicans are seeking — would be devastating for road safety and small businesses.

March 2, 2026

City Revokes Armored Car Firm Garda’s Idling Law Exemption

DEP found the company "non-compliant" with fleet electrification benchmarks set as a condition for its exemption.

March 2, 2026
See all posts