User talk:Congpric
A lengthy welcomeWelcome to Wikipedia. I've added a welcome message to the top of this page that gives a great deal of information about Wikipedia. I hope you find it useful. Additionally, I hope you don't mind if I share some of my thoughts on starting out as a new editor on Wikipedia: If I could get editors in your situation to follow just one piece of advice, it would be this: Learn Wikipedia by working only on non-contentious topics until you have a feel for the normal editing process and the policies that usually come up when editing casually. You'll find editing to be fun, easy, and rewarding. The rare disputes are resolved quickly and easily. Working on biographical information about living persons is far more difficult. Wikipedia's Biographies of living persons policy requires strict adherence to multiple content policies, and applies to all information about living persons including talk pages. If you have a relationship with the topics you want to edit, then you will need to review Wikipedia's Conflict of interest policy, which may require you to disclose your relationship and restrict your editing depending upon how you are affiliated with the subject matter. Regardless, editing in a manner that promotes an entity or viewpoint over others can appear to be detrimental to the purpose of Wikipedia and the neutrality required in articles. Some topic areas within Wikipedia have special editing restrictions that apply to all editors. It's best to avoid these topics until you are extremely familiar with all relevant policies and guidelines. If you work from reliable, independent sources, you shouldn't go far wrong. WP:RSP and WP:RSN are helpful in determining if a source is reliable. I hope you find some useful information in all this, and welcome again. --Hipal/Ronz (talk) 20:24, 17 September 2020 (UTC) Congestion PricingHi, I'm honoured to get your invitation to contribute, but I'm a bit wary of wading in to Wikipedia in an area I'm qualified in. Transport Engineering is a wide area and I'm no expert in an academic sense in congestion pricing. The orthodoxy that is being taught in universities these days is that you can't build your way out of congestion with "free to travel" roads, the roads will never be wide enough, it's a vicious cycle. On the other hand congestion is actually a healthy sign in a city that shows that the existing resources are well utilised. You might want to build more roads if the economy of the nation in which you build it will be improved after taking into all direct and externalised costs. But you'll still have congestion, if you don't you've built too much infrastructure. Anyway that is what is taught on a theoretical level, we live in a complex society not run by engineers :) Alex Sims (talk) 12:20, 1 October 2020 (UTC)
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