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I do believe more people would use mass transit if the schedule was predictable. I leave on this train at this time, and exactly get there at this time. The light rail is a joke. Just put more crap with traffic. It should be elevated and independent of all vehicles. Light rails are on a schedule, and are not on the same grade as cars. Denver trains are punctual down to the minute, every time, and my experience was the same in SF. Obviously the Houston public is not informed very much on how these kinds of things work. They assume the train is sitting in 290 traffic I guess.
Its a losing battle though. The only way to impact your life is to move. I get much more time with my family now, see my kid practice, and can be almost anywhere I need to be in a very reasonable time. I am a much happier person with a shorter commute. A long commute does add to stress, but for some people, they just don't care. I calculated that if I worked 20 more years, I would be on the road 1.5 years driving straight thru 24/7, had I stayed in the burbs. No thanks. I see this argument so many times, but no one ever responds to my rebuttal: what happens when you leave that job, or get laid off, and what about your spouse? You gonna sell the house and have spouse find a new job every time this happens? Not everyone's wife is stay at home. I personally believe it's better to live where you want to live and raise kids, and attempt to work nearby if a long commute isn't desirable. My first home, I worked for 3 different employers, one at 290/tidwell, one at westheimer/BW, and one in Tomball.. I'd hate to uproot my life every time I changed employers. And I can see you staying at a job you aren't happy with or don't have advancement potential, just because you like the commute and it's close to home. Honestly, your method only works in perfect world.. wife doesn't work, and you have the same job (or one in the same area) from college until retirement. One could also argue that to achieve what you desire, then get the f out of houston, because it's too big. It was a big reason behind our move. There are a ot metros in the US where the furthest burbs are 10-20 miles from downtown.
Couple items:
1. The light rail in Houston is a joke seeing that it is mixed in with traffic. I understand Denver is independent of traffic, but Houston's idea of a light rail is terrible in the sense that cars get in the lanes to turn, etc. It's a joke - that's what I'm referring to. They would need it to be independent was my point.
2. Your rebuttal:
what happens when you leave that job, or get laid off, and what about your spouse? You gonna sell the house and have spouse find a new job every time this happens? My response to this is stack the odds in your favor. My new home is surrounded by the Energy Corridor, Galleria, and Downtown. I'm within 15 - 25 minutes of any of these. If I choose Kingwood or the Woodlands, or Katy, my options are limited to where I would select my next Employer. In your example, of 290 / Tidwell (easy commute for me), Westheimer / BW8 (easy commute for me), and Tomball would be the most challenging, but a reverse commute (which I know can be bad at times). With that said, I am zoned to good public schools but we sacrificed living in a 60 year old home to do that. My thing is buy location and the jobs are all around you.
Honestly, your method only works in perfect world.. wife doesn't work, and you have the same job (or one in the same area) from college until retirement. I disagree strongly here. Buy location and the rest will follow (i.e. job flexibility of potential future employers). On top of this all, the thing that made me most upset (outside the commute) was my "investment" in a home. The homes with the better locations were appreciating much quicker than my burbs home. While I did well on the burbs home, the appreciation closer was much greater because of LOCATION (90-100% appreciation to my 35% burb appreciation). I would put my current home against any burb home from an investment perspective.