Minnesota Environmental Partnership Minnesota Environmental Partnership
arrow
MEP Programs
Public Web Site Information
Site Search

Help Support MEP


Loon Commons: The MEP Blog
A forum for current and emerging environmental and conservation issues in Minnesota.

Why Complete Streets matter for the environment

by Fresh Energy

By Ethan Fawley, transportation connections coordinator, Fresh Energy

Complete Streets means that our roads are designed and operated to be safe and accessible for pedestrians, transit riders, bicyclists, and drivers–all users, regardless of age or ability. Why is this important? Because too often we build roads that simply aren’t safe for pedestrians, people with disabilities, bicyclists, transit riders, and older drivers. Everyone is impacted by “incomplete” streets, which lead to more injuries, fatalities, and very real barriers in our transportation system.

Complete Streets is mostly about safety and accessibility, but it is also a very important step for health, supporting aging in place, transportation efficiency, economic development, and the environment. Complete Streets helps support public health by giving people safe options to walk and bike as part of daily life, which can help combat obesity (the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends Complete Streets). Complete Streets supports mobility for seniors that helps allow active and independent aging in place. It helps support an efficient transportation system by eliminating gaps in road networks for non-drivers and allowing roads to move more people with less concrete and, therefore, less money. Complete Streets spur economic development by supporting community vitality and quality of life, which attracts people to shop on a street or live in a neighborhood.

There are also numerous environmental reasons why Complete Streets are important. In Minnesota, our transportation system contributes 25 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, accounts for two-thirds of oil consumption, and is the largest contributor of most air toxics and particulate matter that cause increased cancer rates and childhood asthma. While transitioning to cleaner cars and cleaner fuel sources are important steps to reduce air pollution, global warming pollution, and dependence on foreign oil, we also need to take steps to support clean transportation options that reduce the need to drive.

Walking and biking are the cleanest forms of transportation, but right now, too many Minnesotans do not feel safe walking or biking in their neighborhood and they do not feel safe letting their kids walk and bike to school. In Minnesota, 15 percent of trips are shorter than 1 mile and 40 percent of trips are shorter than 3 miles, but currently people drive for more than 75 percent of these trips within short walking or biking distance. There is a huge potential to support more short trips by walking and biking, but that cannot be achieved without safe streets.

Complete Streets can also help reduce stormwater runoff (less need for impervious surfaces), reduce the urban heat island effect (less impervious surface and more trees and plantings), help connect parks, trails, and open space while reducing the need for recreation-related parking, and support more compact communities that reduce the need to consume farmland and open space for new urban development.

If you are interested in learning more or helping to promote a statewide Complete Streets policy for Minnesota, check out the Minnesota Complete Streets Coalition or contact Ethan Fawley with Fresh Energy (fawley@fresh-energy.org).

Leave a Reply

Comment Guidelines

Copyright © 2012 Minnesota Environmental Partnership.
546 Rice Street, Suite 100, St. Paul, MN 55103
394 Lake Avenue South, Suite 415A Duluth, MN 55802   All rights reserved.
Some photos courtesy of David-Lorne Photographic, Copyright 2000.
HomePrivacy PolicyContact Us • Phone: 651.290.0154 Fax: 651.290.0167

This site is sponsored by the Minnesota Environmental Partnership (MEP), a coalition of over 80 conservation and environmental organizations working together to protect our Great Outdoors. As a nonprofit public policy 501(c)3 organization , MEP does not endorse candidates or participate in political campaigns. MEP encourages informed and open discussion of environmental issues on LoonCommons.org. However, views expressed on this blog may not necessarily be the views of MEP or its member organizations.

Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).