What We Need to Do
Millicent Middleton, Sea Island Unit Transit Advocate |
The people of Ladson, Lincolnville and Summerville have the
rights to demand a Bus Rapid Transit Line to Charleston which runs in its own,
dedicated lanes, has comfortable stations and completes the trip in 59 minutes
as promised in the I26 alt study . We must demand that now, before July 10, 2020
through their “LCRT
online meeting” and our own socially distanced advocacy. We’re asking you
to submit your comments at their online meeting and paste copies of what you
tell them into the comments here so we can share it with other.
Transit Advocates Discover Unrest in the Land of the Cars
Pendarvis Campaign working on Rivers Ave. |
Despite the fading exurban landscape (now turning into subdivisions
and apartments) and abundance of pickup trucks, people along Highway 78 were
ready for transit. In Lincolnville, we met people who had moved here from New
York to take care of elderly family members and become imprisoned in immobility.
We found the area’s largest business incubator, not in a shiny government
subsidized building downtown, but in the Ladson Flea Market. They were ready.
Nobody had even talked to Lincolnville about the project which was to pass
through their town, but they were ready. They reminded us their town had been
founded by African Americans who sought freedom with their own, independent
town and mobility through their connection to the Railroad. In downtown
Summerville we found a business district struggling with parking and traffic
issues full of people ready to ride.
Transit Advocates in downtown Summerville. |
Autocentric Oppression
Carol Dotterer with BRT Survey mark |
For the elderly, poor, disabled, and young who don’t have
access to the automobile. Survival is a humiliating marathon of begging for
rides, calling Uber and doing without. There are desperately needed affordable
apartments in Lincolnville sitting empty because you cannot survive there
without a car and many elderly people have outlived or live far from their families.
For the carless of Ladson, trip the grocery store is a goal requiring days of
planning for the starts to align. A trip for pleasure or to explore the
landscape tourists travel from around the world to see is an unimaginable
luxury. The precious begged for rides must be conserved for the doctor, pharmacy
and store. If you can walk to the LINK route, the bus may not show up at all or
simply drive past. There is no bench or shelter to wait.
LinLadSum Does Not Have to be this Way
It does not have to be this way. Ladson, Lincolnville and
Summerville have public transit which would embarrass a third world country. We’ve
met people who know from personal experience that it is inferior to what they
have in Ethiopia. Our Latino friends in Ladson assure it Brazil is better.
BLFT staff with transit planning activity |
The voters of Charleston County have already appropriated
250 million dollars to build and operate a Bus Rapid Transit Line to Summerville
in their 2016 half penny sales tax referendum. The people of Ladson and
Lincolnville have been paying for it with higher sales taxes since May of 2017.
In Summerville, the tiny section needed probably doesn’t require a bond
referendum.
We were promised a trip from downtown Charleston to
Summerville in 59 minutes. Recently the Convil of Governments has proposed a
system which runs in ordinary traffic from Charleston Southern to the edge of
Downtown Summerville. Politicians in Summerville have proposed a Park and Ride
lot on 5th Avenue which would be five long blocks from Hutchison
Square. The fact that someone might want to walk to or from the Bus Rapid
Tranist system to downtown Summerville doesn’t seem to matter to them. They’re
building a system for people to drive cars to parking lots to fit in the car
saturated world they feel secure in.
Failure Alert
Lincolnville Town Hall |
A few weeks ago, Lowcountry Up is Good, a locally based
political action committee leafleted parts of Ladson in a lightening storm with
the help of young volunteers organized by Linda Saylor. It was the last day
before the election. When we told the kids there was no tomorrow, to just come
back in. They asked if their efforts might decide the election. I told them
they could. They hurled the doors of the van open and visited 250 houses in the
driving rain while thunder and lighting blasted around them.
Those young people deserve a world they can grow in, explore,
and prosper in. It we build a world which doesn’t do that, they’ll destroy us
and build their own. The tired priorities of old men who like things as they
are, slow, isolating and dysfunctional, need to get out of the way.
What LinLadSum Residents Need to Do Now
Go to their online LCRT meeting.Demand what you have paid for and been promised:
Rapid transit operations in dedicated lanes on Highway 78 from River’s Ave to the edge of Downtown Summerville.Help us get their attention - Safe, comfortable, lighted stops which can be reached safely from the side of the road.
- A system which can complete the trip from Line Street in downtown Charleston to downtown Summerville in 59 minutes.
- Service all the way to Hutchison Square in Downtown Summerville with a stop in the business district near there.
- Connecting Service in downtown Charleston at a safe, comfortable station on Line Street which connects to Folly Beach and the Isle of Palms.
If you want something more, don’t stop there. If you are in Ridgeville,
tell them it needs to come to where you live. Linda Saylor and the lightning
crew are working for you in Summerville, but they need a lot of help.
We have other blogs with more information on this project:
- Dhaka BRT Line 3 (Gazipur to Airport) If you think USA is #1, get a stiff drink before watching this. This is state of the art BRT.
- Transit Enable the Lowline A look at the big mistake being planned for the South end of the BRT line.
- Progress is Possible (General Overview)
- Lowcountry Futurescape
- Christian King answers 10 questions about transit, the best Candidate response we've ever received.
Proterra Electric Bus made in SC |
Written by
William J. Hamilton, III
Executive Director, Best Friends of Lowcountry Transit
(843) 870-5299
wjhamilton29464@gmail.com