[Congressional Record Volume 170, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 9, 2024)]
[House]
[Page H2147]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STREETCARS: THE FOUNDATION OF CITIES AND SUBURBAN AREAS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, streetcars are still the foundation of
cities and suburban areas across the country, establishing a pattern
that guided development for over a century.
By 1910, you could travel from Boston to Chicago entirely on
streetcar lines, just transferring from one to another. Sadly, 60 years
later, the streetcar had largely disappeared. Only the St. Charles
Streetcar Line in New Orleans remained of this vast network.
We had a different vision in the city of Portland. In 1987, I called
for the development of a circulator system in the central city that
built around the streetcar.
I worked with the late Bill Naito, a visionary Portland businessman
and developer, who bought old streetcars from Portugal. He brought them
to town, thinking that if people actually saw them, it would help
promote his concept of their reintroduction.
I worked with a gentleman named Rick Gustafson to bring this to
fruition. We had a 10-member citizen steering committee, who worked
with the city to fashion an approach going forward, and it worked.
Within a decade, we had a loop in downtown Portland connecting it.
That loop of streetcars was the focus for much of our affordable
housing. It changed the dimensions of downtown, where people used the
streetcar for short trips rather than vehicles. It guided development
in modern Portland.
This is part of a national movement reintroducing streetcars. I am
proud to have helped lead that with the Portland model. We now have
streetcars in over two dozen cities across the country, with more on
the way. There is hard work in Omaha, Nebraska, which might be the next
major development.
This is human-scale technology. It is proven. It is cost effective.
People love streetcars. They are energy efficient and help promote a
development pattern that is human oriented.
We have an opportunity, Mr. Speaker, to be able to continue this
effort at mobilizing efforts to promote livable communities, another
transportation alternative, and guide development.
I was pleased to, 10 years ago, be in Tucson, Arizona, for the
opening of their streetcar. Before it even opened, the streetcar
redefined its downtown development, relationship to the university, and
promoted additional housing opportunities.
The streetcar is a chance for us to be able to use this proven
technology and mobilize patterns of growth and development in a low-
cost, high-energy initiative. The modern streetcar has the opportunity
to help communities across the country.
I was pleased to be at the Streetcar Summit in Charlotte, North
Carolina, this last week. People from around the country gathered to
share their stories of streetcar development. This is a new wave of
urban development, proven transportation technology, and an opportunity
to reshape our central cities.
Mr. Speaker, I strongly urge my colleagues to look at these examples
in so many of our communities. The streetcar is making a difference in
a way that saves money, saves time, improves the planet, and makes
people feel good about their urban environment.
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