• HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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    13 hours ago

    Sure, you can get from Savannah–a major city–to Boston–also a major city just by taking trains. That’s a great case for public transport.

    But as someone else pointed out, can you get from one side of Savannah to the other efficiently, at off-peak times? I lived in Chicago for over a decade, and while the transit system isn’t great, it’s not bad. I lived in the Austin neighborhood (if you know Chicago, you know that’s not a great area); if I went to see a concert at downtown without driving, I had to walk about a mile and a half to get home, because that was the closest train stop to my home, and busses in my area stopped running at 11p.

    Where I live now, even if trains ran to my town (and they technically do, but it’s only freight), I would have to travel 15 miles to get to the train. And that 15 miles from where I live to the train is also about 1500’ of elevation loss. That’s pretty great for riding a bike there, and really, really sucks for getting home. Especially if I have groceries of any kind.

    I agree that we should have better public transit, and I agree that the cost is a net public good. But that doesn’t solve all transportation needs. It may take a large bite out of them, but it doesn’t fix all of them.

    • Corn@lemmy.ml
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      1 hour ago

      busses in my area stopped running at 11p.

      Continuing to run some transit late at night is one of the few things NYC and Chicago actually do better than most cities.

      Even Tokyo runs some of its last trains before midnight. Some stations don’t get their first trains until 6 am. Missing the last train because of an event that let out at 2AM or 11 and it took awhile to get to the station isn’t that uncommon. It’s not terrible to walk 5km in a more walkable city. But also that’s where ebike and scooter shares, and even taxis fill the gap. You don’t need to destroy the city with parking lots and wide roads to support that.

    • grue@lemmy.worldM
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      12 hours ago

      But as someone else pointed out, can you get from one side of Savannah to the other efficiently, at off-peak times?

      Savannah is a planned city designed in the 1700s. It’s probably the most walkable large city in Georgia.