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

Dallas City Council Member: Adding Highway Lanes Is Pointless

Dallas City Councilman Scott Griggs says additional car capacity won't solve Dallas' congestion problem. Photo: ##http://transportationblog.dallasnews.com/archives/2012/04/another-downtown-highway-is-po.html## Dallas Morning News##
false

We've written about the seedy good-old-boy network in Texas that, with naked self-interest, has lobbied for and built more, more, and MORE highways, even as public budgets and household pocketbooks struggle under the burden.

So it is with great admiration today that we recognize a voice of reason out of the Lone Star state: no, not Pedestrian Pete -- Dallas City Council Member Scott Griggs.

Griggs set himself apart by criticizing plans to ram through a major new highway in downtown Dallas -- which would add to the existing roster of six.

Rodger Jones at the Dallas Morning News' Transportation Blog interviewed the self-styled "progressive pragmatist" this week:

Building the Trinity parkway would merely guarantee another congested highway, he said. "I'm not a supporter of the toll road."

Several times Griggs referenced the phenomenon of latent demand -- i.e., that free-flowing lanes attract cars like ants to a picnic. "Wherever you build, people will go."

He said that makes it folly for central Dallas to try to build itself out of traffic gridlock.

"We are so addicted to the automobile," Griggs said. "Adding lane capacity is like an obese person buying a bigger belt and saying he doesn't have a weight problem."

The key to tortured traffic is to balance out transportation among the various modes -- car, trains, buses, walking, bicycling, etc.

"We've seen in city after city that people will use those choices," Griggs said. "We need balanced capacity, not added capacity."

Well said, council member!

Elsewhere on the Network today: The Transport Politic reports on the political balancing act that goes hand in hand with transit expansion in Atlanta. Mobilizing the Region reports that there's a development boom going on around stations for the new busway planned for Connecticut. And Google Maps Bike There defends cyclists' right to ride two abreast.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Council Members Put Everything But Riders First at ‘Bus Oversight’ Hearing

The Council spent its last bus oversight hearing of its term asking the MTA and city to pull back on bus lane enforcement.

November 14, 2025

Community Board Defies Parents in Vote to Reopen Forest Park to Cars

The Parks Department appears to have given in to a vocal group of Queens drivers. Paging Mayor Mamdani!

November 14, 2025

Daylighting Isn’t Anti-Driver — It’s Pro-Common Sense

Listen to a Republican: "The Department of Transportation's negative report on daylighting is like judging the effectiveness of lifeboats on the Titanic by studying the ones that never left the ship."

November 14, 2025

Friday’s Headlines: More Agenda Items Edition

Transportation Alternatives laid out, in 85 chunky bullet points, what the next major should do. Plus other news.

November 14, 2025

SHAMEFUL: Pro-Parking DOT ‘Forced’ Lawmakers To Scale Back Daylighting Bill, Says Queens Pol

A parking-first City Hall has thrown up road blocks against pedestrian safety.

November 13, 2025

House T&I Chair Vows ‘No Money for Bikes or Walking’ in Fed Transportation Bill

The outlook for active transportation won't be good if advocates don't stand up.

November 13, 2025
See all posts