←back to thread

472 points Brajeshwar | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.193s | source
Show context
JumpCrisscross ◴[] No.46220095[source]
I'm curious how congestion pricing became a national issue. The strength of conviction people have about this policy–almost either way, but certainly among those against–seems to scale with distance from the city.

Nobody in Idaho gets uppity about New Jersey's tolls. But they have strong, knowledge-free, almost identity-defining opinions about congestion charges.

Is it because it's a policy that's worked in Europe and Asia and is thus seen as foreign? Or because it's New York doing it, so it's branded as a tax, versus market-rate access or whatever we'd be calling it if this were done in Miami?

replies(14): >>46220138 #>>46220140 #>>46220243 #>>46220335 #>>46220405 #>>46220410 #>>46220420 #>>46220553 #>>46220668 #>>46220978 #>>46221390 #>>46221973 #>>46223663 #>>46229483 #
1. venturecruelty ◴[] No.46220140[source]
It's because everything is a culture war issue now, and anything remotely seen as helpful or benefitting society or taking even an inch from cars is "bad" for the people who live in places like Idaho (and Staten Island).