For your information, I delivered the following comments at the LRTPC's meeting last 
month, and in doing so, requested the city to include, within the City of Madison's 
comments on the project environmental impact statement (EIS), a recommendation that 
the EIS on the project include a "transportation demand reduction" (TDR) alternative, 
that is of sufficient scale to encourage significantly less auto driving into Madison 
everyday, as an alternative to building more highway capacity on Verona Road and the 
West Beltline.

A decision on the City's comments on the Verona Road/West Beltline highway expansion 
DEIS was deferred to the next committee meeting, scheculed for August 19th, 4:45 p.m., 
Room LL-110 MMB of the Municipal Building on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. 

Mike Neuman    

-------------------------------------------------------------
Testimony to City of Madison Long Range Transportation Planning Committee, July 15, 
2004

Climate change is without question an urgent problem now -- for all governmental 
jurisdictions.  Its impacts are already being felt by many jurisdictions, in the form 
of drought, flooding, deadly heat waves and rising seas.

Yet governmental leaders at all levels continue to delay action in confronting global 
warming's primary cause - too much fossil fuel burning by the human population. 

Wisconsin is not immune from the effects of global warming.  As columnist Bill Wineke 
states in today�s Wisconsin State Journal:  �If global warming is manmade, or even 
man-influenced, the we owe it to future generations to try to reduce our production of 
greenhouse gasses.�

Today�s global warming is a consequence of the buildup of extra quantities of 
greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and other 
heat-trapping gases, in the atmosphere from humans burning fossil fuels for energy and 
transportation over the past century and one-half.  

The earth has in fact warmed more than 1 degree Fahrenheit over the last century, with 
most of that warming occurring toward the end of the century. It is forecasted to warm 
up by possibly 10 times more during this century than it did last century, unless 
major actions to reduce greenhouse gas production are taken all over and by everyone 
and every jurisdiction.
 
Emissions from motorized transportation constitute roughly one-third of the carbon 
dioxide emitted from fossil fuel burning in the U.S.. The amount of driving done in 
Dane County, having increased at the rate of 3 times its rate of population, is not an 
insignificant contributor to global warming.  For every gallon of gasoline burned in 
motor vehicles today and throughout this century, approximately 25 additional pounds 
greenhouse gases is sent to the atmosphere, where they will remain this century and 
into the next century, adding to the solar heat-trapping capability of the Earth�s 
atmosphere. 

In 2000, I proposed a strategy that would pay financial incentives (monetary rewards) 
to households to reduce activities that lead to increased greenhouse gas emissions 
from public money proposed to be spent on widening roads, expanding airport capacity 
and in building power plants.  

Such a plan is needed now than ever in Madison, Dane County and Wisconsin to encourage 
people to reduce their motor vehicle driving, jet travel and energy needs, because 
conservation of energy together with improvement in energy efficiency is the way to 
minimize the global warming threat the fastest.

Mike Neuman
Resident of Madison


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