But look at all the things you can do in your car now,(except of course pay
attention to the road)
play with your palm pilot

talk on the phone
check your email on your laptop in the passenger seat, maybe watch a DVD
eat fast food
rotate through your 12 disc CD player

I drive a 4 cylinder compact car with a broken radio and no air-conditioning
and I'd rather be on a bike any day!


-----Original Message-----
From: Wong, Tim [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 08, 2001 2:20 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: FW: [carfree_cities] Motorists spend 36 hours a year in
traffic, study says


that's what I want to do when I grow up . . . . buy a car and sit in
traffic.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ronald Dawson [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Monday, May 07, 2001 6:43 PM
> To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:      [carfree_cities] Motorists spend 36 hours a year in traffic,
study says
> 
> From http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2001-05-07-traffic.htm Dawson
> 
> Motorists spend 36 hours a year in traffic, study says
> 
> By Scott Bowles, USA TODAY May 7th, 2001
> 
> WASHINGTON (AP) > ->  Congestion on the nation's highways has gotten so
bad that
> the average person spends 36 hours a year sitting in traffic, a new report
> says.
> 
> Two years earlier, the national average was 34 hours. In 1982, that same
> person spent 11 hours in traffic annually.
> 
> The findings were released Monday by the Texas Transportation Institute,
> part of Texas A&M University, which studied congestion in 68 urban areas.
> The data was compiled by 11 state highway departments.
> 
> Congestion costs an estimated $78 billion a year in wasted time and burned
> gasoline, the institute said.
> 
> The most congested highways in the country were found in Los Angeles,
where
> residents in 1999 averaged 56 hours a year > ->  more than a work week's
worth
> of time > ->  in bumper-to-bumper traffic.
> 
> Stuck in traffic
> 
> The 10 urban areas with the heaviest traffic:
> 
> 1. Los Angeles
> 2. San Francisco
> 3. Seattle
> 4. Washington
> 5. Chicago
> 6. San Diego
> 7. Boston
> 8. Portland, Ore.
> 9. Atlanta
> 10. Las Vegas
> 
> Study co-author Tim Lomax, a research engineer, said new highways, buses
and
> trains are not keeping up with new housing and new businesses.
> 
> "It's a whole lot easier to start a manufacturing company or a software
firm
> or build new housing than it is to put in a new highway or new street or
> even a new bus route or ridesharing program," Lomax said. "Virtually all
of
> the things we're trying to do to improve the mobility are not growing as
> fast as the cause of the problem."
> 
> A research group funded by the construction industry warned that growing
> congestion could hurt the economy.
> 
> "Increasing traffic congestion nationwide threatens to put the brakes on
the
> nation's economic growth," said William Wilkins, executive director of The
> Road Information Program. "The high quality of life that Americans enjoy
> today is jeopardized because our highway system is inadequate to meet the
> growing need for the reliable movement of goods."
> 
> While most residents of the Los Angeles area have little choice but to
drive
> to work, people living in some other congested areas can leave the driving
> to someone else, according to an advocacy group that favors alternatives
to
> highway construction.
> 
> The Surface Transportation Policy Project, a coalition of public interest
> and professional organizations, says that while San Francisco, Washington
> and Chicago may be three of the five most congested areas, residents there
> also can avoid the highways by taking mass transit. Residents of other
> cities, like Las Vegas and Detroit, have no choice but to sit in traffic.
> 
> "The burden imposed on the Washington region by congestion is actually
much
> lower than a lot of other cities, even though our rush hour is pretty
bad,"
> said Roy Kienitz, the group's executive director. "If you live in Detroit,
> you tolerate it, you sit in your car and steam comes out of your ears. If
> you live in Washington, you have lots of choices."
> 
> 
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