New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio has always billed himself as a progressive. Back in February, in his State of the City address, he boldly announced that he鈥檇 transform this town of $1-million studio apartments and 聽into 鈥渢he fairest big city in the world.鈥 But here鈥檚 the thing:
You can鈥檛 have a truly fair city unless you start beating back all the cars.
鈥淣onsense!鈥 you might say. 鈥淒enying me the unfettered use of my Freedom Machine is the very antithesis of fairness!鈥 Well, sure, it may seem unfair to you and your SUV鈥攅specially when you鈥檙e looking for a parking space. But letting people in private vehicles run roughshod over the city causes crushing traffic jams, delays public transit, pollutes the air, creates noise, wastes public resources, and takes up an obscene amount of space in a city that doesn鈥檛 have enough of it. Oh, and there鈥檚 also all the people these automobiles聽kill.
To de Blasio鈥檚 credit, under his administration the city has continued to add bike lanes, even defying certain cyclist-hating community boards when necessary. The city has also been experimenting with dockless bike share, as well as with dedicated car-share parking spots. By American standards, we鈥檝e done a lot to provide and promote alternatives to car ownership. In fact, you could even go so far as to say that in this country, we鈥檙e on the very forefront of enacting bold car-free policy.
So does that mean we鈥檙e doing an excellent job when it comes to cutting back on cars? Sadly, no. We鈥檙e great at a lot of stuff here in New York (making bagels and complaining about stuff both come to mind), but having the most progressive transit policy in the U.S. is like having the best bagels in Topeka: the competition is not exactly cutthroat. Then there鈥檚 climate change. Shit鈥檚 getting real out there and :
Scientists described the quickening rate of carbon dioxide emissions in stark terms, comparing it to a 鈥渟peeding freight train鈥 and laying part of the blame on an unexpected surge in the appetite for oil as people around the world not only buy more cars but also drive them farther than in the past鈥攎ore than offsetting any gains from the spread of electric vehicles.
Indeed, when you see what other cities in other countries are up to, you see that New York City doesn鈥檛 even come close to real bike-centric progress. Here are just a few examples:
Paris
In Manhattan, cars with Jersey plates choke the streets and throngs of pedestrians are so starved for sidewalk space they spill over into the bike lanes. In Paris (where car trips have since 1990), Mayor Anne Hildago is hacking away at car dominance by pedestrianizing swaths of the city, on the first Sunday of every month, and announcing plans to of gasoline-powered cars by 2030. So how would Parisiens get around in this socialist Hemi-free hellscape if she gets her way? Why, on bikes, scooters鈥攁nd , of course. 聽
Copenhagen
聽of Copenhageners commute by bike. In New York, the fancy new protected bike lane you鈥檙e riding on will eventually just , leaving you to slug it out with truck traffic. In Copenhagen, they鈥檝e got connecting the suburbs to the city. Mayor Frank Jensen wants to from entering the city by 2019; Denmark is moving to eventually the sale of fossil fuel cars entirely. They鈥檝e even got in Copenhagen, for chrissakes! Here, the closest you鈥檒l get to that kind of amenity is perching yourself on the running board of a Cadillac Escalade at a red light.
Madrid (and Beyond)
Madrid 聽in some parts of the city by setting tough new vehicle emissions standards. Elsewhere in Spain, Seville turned itself into a cycling city in four years鈥攜ou know, by . And the city of Pontreveda has after realizing the following:
鈥淗ow can it be that the elderly or children aren鈥檛 able to use the street because of cars?鈥 asks C茅sar Mosquera, the city鈥檚 head of infrastructures. 鈥淗ow can it be that private property鈥攖he car鈥攐ccupies the public space?鈥
Meanwhile, in America we call not being able to use public outdoor space 鈥渇reedom.鈥
London
New Yorkers suffer from a bad case of exceptionalism; 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 [insert lesser city here]!,鈥 we cry whenever someone proposes a new idea. 鈥淭hat shit ain鈥檛 gonna fly in this town.鈥 And yes, some of these other cities are somewhat diminutive compared to our mighty metropolis of over eight million people. But you can鈥檛 say that about London, a fellow global power聽that鈥檚 equally huge in population and cultural and commercial clout. Sure, they鈥檝e got their just like we do, but they鈥檝e also got cycling superhighways, motor-vehicle-congestion pricing, and soon, an . Here in New York, the best we鈥檝e come up with so far is 鈥,鈥 which is basically a handful of days a year we politely ask people not to drive.
Tokyo
In New York City, space is at a premium, and this is some of the most expensive real estate in the country鈥攜et we give away much of our curb space for private vehicle storage. This glut of cars has a seriously negative impact on our quality of life. Yet if I owned fifteen cars I could park them all out on the street for free, and while some might say I was simply exercising my rights as an American, what it really makes me is an asshole. But in Tokyo (another gigantic global power city), you can鈥檛 even buy a car without showing proof that you鈥檝e secured a parking space for it鈥攁nd , because overnight parking is illegal.
So basically, our international peers have had it up to their unshaven armpits with cars, and they鈥檙e doing something about it. Meanwhile, back in New York City, our mayor wouldn鈥檛 even move the needle on the International Progressive-O-Meter. 鈥淚 just don鈥檛 like the idea, personally,鈥 he of e-bikes and e-scooters. He鈥檚 also resisted congestion pricing on the basis that it鈥檚 a 鈥渞egressive tax鈥 on low-income New Yorkers, even though who are driving into the proposed congestion pricing zone聽and even though it would help fund the transit system on which lower income New Yorkers (and really all New Yorkers) depend.
As for climate change, de Blasio,聽eager to show the world that he was ready to help lead the fight, kicked off 2018 by that the city would sue the big oil companies鈥攁 case that has since been . So much for that. He also continues to travel from Manhattan to Brooklyn in order to work out on a stationary bicycle.
For better or for worse, some may think New York City is an aberration in this land of pickup trucks and firearms, but it doesn鈥檛 get much more American than that.