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IPFS News Link • Transportation

Massachusetts Dems Advance Bill to LIMIT How Far You Can DRIVE In Your Own Car

• https://modernity.news, Steve Watson

Massachusetts lawmakers are barreling ahead with a bill that would force the state to slash the total miles residents drive, all under the banner of cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

The proposal, Senate Bill S.2246, doesn't slap a hard cap on your daily commute… yet – but it orders the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) to set binding goals for reducing statewide vehicle miles traveled (VMT). It also creates a new government council tasked with pushing people onto public transit whether they like it or not.

A local Boston report highlights the move:

"The bill proposed in Massachusetts would limit how far you can drive in your own car. So lawmakers say it would help reduce the state's greenhouse gas emissions. Now, while no specific mileage limit was listed, the bill would require MassDOT to set goals to reduce the number of statewide driving miles. It would also establish a new council to find ways to make public transportation more accessible for residents. Now, critics say A cap on personal vehicle miles would directly impact those in rural parts of the state."

The committee gave it a favorable 4-1 vote and shipped it to the Senate Ways and Means Committee, keeping the radical plan alive on Beacon Hill.

This isn't some fringe idea cooked up in isolation. It's part of a broader push to ration mobility under the twin excuses of "climate" and "equity." Similar thinking powers the 15-minute city concept – the urban planning fad sold as "convenience" but designed to make driving anywhere outside your little neighborhood a bureaucratic nightmare.

1 Comments in Response to

Comment by PureTrust
Entered on:

Don't drive. You have no need to drive. Rather, Travel by Right - First Amendment allowed - so that you can get to places to vote if you live far away, and government grievance meetings, etc. T by R gets you out from under any driving laws. It's a right. Having a drivers license doesn't mean you are using it. So, hand it over to the cop who stops you, and tell him/her that you weren't driving. Rather, you were traveling by right. Since they both look the same, everybody has to go by what you say, because only you know what you were doing, even though it might look like you were doing something else.



Zano