Opinion Nondrivers Are the Future

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Nondrivers Are the Future​

The thought of living without driving terrifies many adults in the United States because car dependence defines so much of our built environment and culture. But in every community there are people who can’t drive. And not just places where not driving is relatively convenient, such as Capitol Hill or Portland.

In fact, more than one-third of people living in the United States don’t have a driver's license. This includes people like me who can’t drive because of our disabilities. It also includes young people, immigrants, people with suspended licenses, and people who have aged out of driving. Additionally, there are many people with licenses who can’t afford to own a car, pay for insurance, parking or gas.

But despite how many of us there are, the narrative we’ve been sold is that without a car you are not a person who has valid mobility needs. That story is particularly alarming when you consider the equity implications of who is considered a nonentity.

People without driver's licenses, both who identify as disabled and those who do not, are more likely to be Black, indigenous, or people of color. People with disabilities are four times more likely to be unable to drive, and two to three times more likely to live in a zero-vehicle household.

Wanting to address our erasure as nondrivers, in the fall of 2020, we began organizing other nondrivers as part of the Disability Mobility Initiative to insist that our voices be included. This looks like showing up to testify at transit board meetings where service cuts are being considered, or sharing stories in op-eds and TV interviews about how broken sidewalks and fast-moving traffic make it difficult for us to access our neighborhoods.

We’ve also invited elected leaders, transportation planners, and everyone else who normally drives most places to spend a “Week Without Driving,” where they experience what it’s like to try to get around their own communities and patterns of daily community life without the privilege of driving themselves. When it comes time to allocate resources and make plans, we hope this challenge helps them remember how inconvenient or just simply impossible it is to get places without driving right now.

And while our work at the Disability Mobility Initiative primarily addresses the gaps in access for nondrivers, car dependency has other environmental, climate and societal costs that are externalized to low-income and Black and brown communities. From neighborhoods segregated by highways, housing costs exacerbated by parking minimums, exposure to air and noise pollution, vehicle crashes and pavement-induced heat islands, our decision to build communities centered around the ability to drive yourself in a vehicle everywhere you need to go was and is a failure.

Rather than minimizing the mobility needs of those of us who can’t or don’t drive, we should be celebrating and encouraging nondrivers, especially those young people who understand the extraordinarily high costs of car dependence and who are choosing not to feed into this dysfunction.

For people who have spent decades centering their lives around vehicle ownership, it may be impossible to imagine our country without car-dependent mobility. But those of us who are nondrivers are already working towards a different future. A future where you don’t need to worry that your car payment eats one-third of your paycheck, where you can let your kids walk to school on their own because there are sidewalks the whole way, where the light rail station is surrounded by affordable apartments rather than parking garages. A future where you could get from one rural community to the next because we run rural bus routes or rebuild our rail network, where you can still get to all our national parks even if you don’t have a car.

Also, critically, the world nondrivers inhabit is one where you build connections across your community as you wait together at the bus stop, or when someone offers you a seat on the train. None of this happens when you’re hermetically sealed in a private vehicle.

Nondrivers can see a different future, and we want you to join us.


Anna Zivarts is a low-vision mom and nondriver who was born with the neurological condition nystagmus. Since launching the Disability Mobility Initiative (DMI) at Disability Rights Washington in 2020, Anna has worked to bring the voices of nondrivers to the planning and policy-making tables. Anna serves on the board of the League of American Bicyclists and the National Safety Council’s Mobility Safety Advisory Group.
 
A future where I have to work within 10 miles of where I live. A future where my abilty to keep my job and show up depends on inconsistent public transport. A future where I spend hours a day waiting for buses. A future where I can't just go anywhere I want anytime. A future where I have to live like people did 150 years ago. A future where it's a day trip to a town 40 miles down the highway. A future where mentally ill crackheads harass me in an enclosed space with no exit.

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The thought of living without driving terrifies many adults in the United States because car dependence defines so much of our built environment and culture.
Instantly wrong. The thought of living without driving terrifies people because driving represents freedom of movement. Without cars you are completely at the mercy of the government to determine where you can and cannot travel.
 
For fuck's sake. I really don't want to have to 'git gud' with organic chemistry. That said the more I read article like this the more I wish I started assembling a cat-cracker already.
 
I'm not giving up my driver's license just because the bugmen who read "the Stranger" never figured out how to parallel park.
 
I will not give up my car
I will not eat the bugs
I will not rent everything
I will not live in a pod with 30 others

I will eat steak
I will drive a f350
I will own land
I will live I will own things and be happy!
 
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A future where I have to work within 10 miles of where I live.

I quite like that bit, TBH. I'm not there at the moment, but there was a time when the vege and fruit gardens were 30 seconds from the back door, the fish pond and chicken run were 50 seconds, and I worked in a pub 3 minutes away.

Sadly, rural UK was overrun by niggers. But I know how I can live.
 
Public transit is where you pay to sit in a cramped tube that smells like piss and cigarettes with mentally ill homeless people who will either bother you for change or stab you after waiting an extra 15 minutes because the bus/train was late.

I'd love not having to drive, but we need evidence that the United States is capable of decent public transit.

I'd also like the option to drive as well, even if said public transit was incredible.
 
Also, critically, the world nondrivers inhabit is one where you build connections across your community as you wait together at the bus stop, or when someone offers you a seat on the train.
Fucking bullshit. There is zero percent the author has ever talked to someone in the bus stop rather than being stuck on her phone.
Also the only people who'll I give my seat is pregnant women.
 
Instantly wrong. The thought of living without driving terrifies people because driving represents freedom of movement. Without cars you are completely at the mercy of the government to determine where you can and cannot travel.
It's both. The U.S. does have a lot of legitimate issues with how it's developed post-WWII while driving also represents freedom of movement.
 
Public transit is where you pay to sit in a cramped tube that smells like piss and cigarettes with mentally ill homeless people who will either bother you for change or stab you after waiting an extra 15 minutes because the bus/train was late.

I'd love not having to drive, but we need evidence that the United States is capable of decent public transit.

I'd also like the option to drive as well, even if said public transit was incredible.
No matter how good public transit is, you'll never convince me that it's more efficient for an individual to take public transportation, especially outside the crime-ridden hellholes that are urban centers, than just drive. A 20 minute drive turns into half a day's trip even on "good" public transportation.
 
As much as I would like to say this isn't true. I have to say this is at least somewhat true. There are more women with a driver's licenses than men now. Back when I was in high school it was still kind of a rite of passage to go get your learners permit when you turn 15. By 16 or 17 you would have a driver's license. From what I have heard a lot of millennials chose to get their driver's license later in life and some chose not to even bother. I only know what goes on in my state but here in Maryland it got harder to get license. Harder and more expensive. When I was in High School in the early 2000's a lot of teens were going to "live" with their relatives in another state for the summer and they would get their license there because it was just easier. I didn't have that luxury, so I had to jump through all the hoops in my state. When I did it you had to get your learners permit by taking a test and hold onto that for almost a year you have to attend a driving school which could cost $350-$400. I think the cheapest one I found was $250 and that was a long time ago. Then after you passed driving school you could go to the DMV and take a driving test to get your license. Then sometime in the late 2000's they worked a provisional license into the process. You still have to go through all that and take a test to get a provisional license and hold onto it for I believe like a year or so then you have to take another test to get an actual real license. You can't commit any driving related infractions while you have the provisional license.

I didn't get my learners permit till I was 18 and I didn't get a license till I was almost 20. I was voting before I could legally drive. Registering to vote was way easier. People gave me shit back then for not having my learners permit when I was 15 and driving when I was 16. I didn't even get a car till I was 20. I had to pay for driving school myself. My parents couldn't afford to help me.

People just don't seem to realize how hard it is for young people these days. All the boomers and the older Gen X people sure as hell don't or they don't give a shit.
 
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