MoDOT Is Proud of Their Highways. Missourians, Not So Much.

 

The Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) is one of the nation’s most incoherent. I’ve not kept up with the most recent numbers, but a few years ago, they had one of the most expansive highway systems in the nation, with 239 feet of highway per Missouri resident.

Back in 2015, we reported on how MoDOT was throwing a tantrum, telling taxpayers their highways would fall apart without additional funding. They even prepared a nifty apocalypse video titled “Tough Choices Ahead” to go along with a public relations campaign that included a staged scene of a piece of concrete falling from a failing bridge onto a school bus (not joking). 

Of all the state DOTs, I find MoDOT to be particularly loathsome. Institutionally, they embody the mindset put forth by Bill Schnell who, in 2015, was the assistant district engineer at the Missouri Department of Transportation. 

“It’s MoDOT’s job to figure out what the transportation needs are and how much those cost. It’s really up to the legislature and the people to figure out how to pay for it.” In other words, according to Schnell and MoDOT, you work for us.

It’s in full recognition of this spirit of aloof myopia that I read this absurd tweet from MoDOT celebrating the highway projects that gutted downtown Kansas City and led to an era of intense wealth destruction. 

Congratulations, downtown Kansas City. Hope you like parking lots.

At Strong Towns, we’ve written about the enormous levels of wealth destruction in downtown Kansas City, sharing data prepared by our partners at Urban3, showing how the downtown loop cost the community billions of dollars in investment. In fact, where wealth still persists in any productive capacity, it’s largely a legacy of the streetcar era, enduring in neighborhoods despite the destruction of Kansas City’s freeway construction.

Parking lots are the story of downtown Kansas City, post downtown loop construction. It’s difficult to overstate the amount of wealth destruction the loop induced in pursuit of more and more parking. Kansas City has 18.8 square miles of buildings but 41.4 square miles of roads and parking, a fact dramatically illustrated by a post from Hayden Clarkin, aka @the_transit_guy.

Hayden isn’t the only one reacting to MoDOT’s cluelessness. Jacob Shepherd (@jnspep4) pointed out the negative impact this “improvement” had on the population of downtown Kansas City.

Still others were willing to state the obvious to the emperor with no clothes:

Our friend, Jason Slaughter from Not Just Bikes, also weighed in:

The modern cadre of American traffic engineers do seem incapable of learning from their mistakes, if not individually than certainly as a collective institution. That is why it is so important that we have a broad, bottom-up resistance to further highway expansions and the ongoing destruction of local streets in the name of traffic flow. 

They won’t stop until we make them. We can’t do that as individuals, but as a movement of people demanding this change, we can make it happen—in Kansas City and where you live.