Galt Mile - Fort Lauderdale 2020 |
By Jane Feehan
South Florida traffic issues have commanded headlines for decades, offering little more than hope that roads will catch up to population.
During the 1950s the worst traffic jam in Florida was reported to be the bridge over Fort Lauderdale's New River at U.S. Highway 1, where it took 45 minutes to cross. The Henry E. Kinney Tunnel opened in 1960, helping to ease the traffic problem. That year Broward County’s population was counted at about 343,000, up from 83,000 residents in 1950.
Mega hotels & condos Fort Lauderdale Beach 2021 |
Expectations pointed to about one million Broward County residents
by 2000. That estimate was wrong. According to the U.S. Census, 1.6 million
lived in Broward that year. In 2022, the population jumped to nearly 1,984,000 residents with 1.623 million auto vehicle registrations, according to Florida Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles. (Broward County reported 1.9 million
registered vehicles but probably included all vehicles, including mobile homes and vessels.)
Downtown Fort Lauderdale is booming with one project after
another getting a green light from the Fort Lauderdale commission. A reported 40
projects to include 16,000 condos and apartments were in the pipeline in July
2022. New projects are announced each month—sometimes weekly. It’s already a problem
getting emergency responders through downtown. Fort Lauderdale is now a vertical
city. And, residents are leaving downtown as fast as they can. Quality of life issues,
I’m told.
A Broward County 30-year one-penny sales tax passed a vote in 2018 and is expected to raise $16 billion for transportation projects, including rapid transit options.
Miami-Dade passed a half-penny tax in 2002 for
transportation improvements. Let’s hope Broward County’s one-penny tax is better
directed. Miami-Dade’s tax has been diverted to maintenance and operations and
special projects. “A lot of the transportation promises of two decades ago have
not been fulfilled,” reported WLRN.
As with California, it’s doubtful Florida drivers in this
big state will be using mass transit. The problems (and additional expense) always
seem to be getting riders from rail stops to final locations. There is no
synchronization of north-south initiatives with east-west follow-through.
And “rising seas?” When are engineers and government
officials going to get brave enough to admit that developing mega hotels and
mega condos on nearly every square inch of Broward County affects water
runoff and adds to flooding problems? And of course, traffic is worse than
ever (visualize evacuating in an EV when a hurricane threatens or returning in one when there's no electricity). As Sherlock Holmes used to say, “It’s elementary, my dear Watson.”
Copyright © 2023. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan
Downtown Fort Lauderdale 2022: the vertical city |
Other Sources:
Fort Lauderdale News, Jan. 7, 1979
Florida Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
The Real Deal, July 1, 2022
South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Jan. 28, 2023
Broward County (Broward.org)
Tags: Broward County traffic problems, Broward County
history, Fort Lauderdale history, Fort Lauderdale traffic, Fort Lauderdale
downtown, downtown Fort Lauderdale