![]() ![]() That’s generally true, but it doesn’t fully explain the phenomenon. You might think it’s a simple matter of size: Big cities lean liberal and also tend to be more walkable. What explains the correlation? Don’t conservatives like to walk? The lowest-scoring major cities, by comparison, tilt conservative: Three of the bottom four - Jacksonville, Fla., Oklahoma City, and Fort Worth, Texas, - went for McCain. In fact, the top 19 are all in states that voted for Obama in 2008. New York, San Francisco, and Boston, the top three major cities on, are three of the most liberal cities in the United States. Reading Tom Vanderbilt’s Slate series on the crisis in North American walking, I noticed something about the cities with the highest “walk scores.” They’re all liberal. Show me the way, bike commuters.This article was published (3852 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current. *I know what you’re thinking: Ride a bike! And I hate to say it but I’m too scared. I love biking and would love to be a bike commuter but I’m scared of cars. What I’m saying is that given my personal situation and the choices laid out for me, I can’t believe I don’t choose walking more.Īm I the only one willing to confess to driving embarrassingly short distances? Please say no. Not everyone has a choice in transportation. If I get stranded, I can call someone to pick me up or pay for a ride to where I’m going. I make enough money to pay rent in the center of the city where I have access to fairly walkable sidewalks and intersections. I am physically able to walk and also to bypass inaccessible barriers along my route. It is, of course, a luxury to even consider my options of car versus foot versus bike versus public transportation and so on. Rather than view walking as a slow-moving time suck, I’d like to focus on what it adds to my life–45 minutes of exercise, 45 minutes to get up in my head and think, 45 minutes to immerse myself in the place I call home. So I’ve decided time can’t be the metric by which I measure the value of walking versus driving. When I walk around town I feel energized and connected in a way that other modes of transportation don’t deliver. Sure, driving is a clear time-saving winner for me freeing up a solid hour and 10 minutes roundtrip compared to walking, but I question whether or not that hour and 10 minutes is really wasted on a walking commute.Īt the risk of sounding like Oprah declaring her love for bread, I really love walking. As our population booms and we add more cars to the road, people like me with the option of alternate modes of transportation should take it. Last year, Charlotte drivers spent an average 43 hours stuck in traffic and an extra $963 on gas while idling along. But in Charlotte I drive. Why do I do this? I think it’s habit and I don’t think I’m alone.Ĭharlotte ranks first in worst traffic in the state. In any other large city in the world, I would walk that 45-minute commute without flinching. (Yes, I could bike or take the bus but I’m talking about walking here.) It takes me a solid 45 minutes to walk the two-mile commute to the office that would normally take me 10 minutes by car. Sure, I frequently have to visit places beyond that distance, but how do I justify driving such a short lengths most of the time? ![]() This is especially absurd when you consider that I really enjoy walking and also that my office, gym, grocery store, doctor, dentist and basically anything else I could need are all located within two miles of my house. I live in Cherry, the literal geographic center of Charlotte, and still it took a snowstorm that shut down the entire city to force me out on foot that day. Leaving public transport aside for now, I’m questioning whether I drive around Charlotte because I can’t walk to where I’m going (some commutes really are unwalkable) or because I won’t. The walk was more of a leisurely stroll to escape cabin fever and avoid dangerous driving conditions than a practical mode of transportation towards any real end destination or basic life necessity.īut it was fun and forced me to reevaluate my daily car dependence. ![]() When the big snowstorm hit back in January, I strapped plastic sandwich bags onto my seasonally inappropriate footwear and trudged out into the elements towards Uptown. ![]()
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