Mungkin dengan menaikkan gas-price, jumlah kendaraan akan menurun?

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http://money.cnn.com/2008/07/28/news/economy/driving/index.htm?cnn=yes

Americans ditching the car
Commuters are driving less, the federal government says. Workers are
leaving their cars at home and finding other ways to get to work.
Highway funds at risk.
By Kenneth Musante and Aaron Smith, CNNMoney.com staff writers
Last Updated: July 28, 2008: 4:07 PM EDT

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Americans drove 9.6 billion fewer miles in
May compared with a year earlier, according to a report Monday from
the Federal Highway Administration.

"We have seen the longest decline in vehicular miles traveled since we
started collecting this data," said U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary
E. Peters in a conference call with reporters.

Peters said that in the first four months of this year, Americans
traveled 40.5 billion miles less compared with the same period in
2007. She said the decline in usage means less tax revenue for highway
system.

Many of these commuters are flocking to trains, buses and bikes, or
telecommuting from home.

Rising gas prices are to blame for the driving decline, and the use of
public transportation is soaring, said Virginia Miller, spokeswoman
for the American Public Transit Association, a private trade group.

"It does seem that we are on track to beat last year's record [public
transportation] ridership," she said, noting that the 2007 tally of
10.3 billion public transit trips was a 50-year high.

"That can really only be explained by the large increase in gas
prices," said Miller.

Gasoline prices soared in May, rising for 24 consecutive days in the
month, and breaking the psychologically significant $4-a-gallon
barrier in many states, according to data from motorist group AAA.

The FHA said that driving in May experienced the third-largest monthly
drop since the agency, a division of the U.S. Department of
Transportation that manages the nation's highways and bridges, began
collecting data 66 years ago. It was the largest drop for any May, a
month that usually sees driving increase due to the Memorial Day
holiday, the agency said. Three of those largest monthly declines have
occurred since December, as unusually high fuel prices take a toll on
drivers.
Trains, buses, bikes, telecommuting

Many of these drivers switched to public transportation. Usage jumped
in the first three months of the year by 88 million trips from a year
ago, for a total of 2.6 billion, according to the most recent figures
available from the APTA.

Some of the most dramatic increases occurred in the light rail systems
in Baltimore, Minneapolis and St. Louis, the commuter rails of Seattle
and Harrisburg, Penn., the buses of San Antonio and Denver, and the
subways and elevated rails of and Boston.

The Boston Globe reported Monday that the Massachusetts Bay
Transportation Authority broke a ridership record of 375 million
passengers in fiscal year 2008, which is 21 million more than the
prior year.

Other commuters, like Eric Creese, a senior database administrator in
Eagan, Minn., switched to muscle power for commuting. Creese, a former
triathloner, said that high gas prices inspired him to "get back" into
biking.

"I asked myself, 'Why drive 150 miles a week when I can save my car,
my money and do something good for my body and environment,?'" said
Creese, who said he has biked 1,000 miles to work since May and saved
about $250 in gas.

Now Creese runs a Web site - GasFreeCommute.com - for bike commuters,
with calculators to estimate calories burned and gasoline saved. His
co-workers have logged their miles on his site, totaling 5,400 so far.

And if commuters really want to save money, they'll stay at home, said
Chuck Wilsker, president and co-founder of The Telework Coalition.
Wilsker estimates the nationwide tally of telecommuters to increase by
4 or 5 million workers this year, from an estimated 28 million at the
start of 2008.

"If you want to quickly reduce your commuting costs by 20%, leave your
car at home one day a week; if you want to reduce your costs by 40%,
leave your car at home two days," said Wilsker, who telecommutes from
his suburban Maryland home to Washington, D.C.

Not only does Wilsker save on gas, but he said he saves on automotive
wear and tear, lunch and dry cleaning.

"You know what I'm wearing?" said Wilsker. "I'm wearing shorts,
sandals and a tank top. I'm sitting here working from home. My dry
cleaning bill is none."
Feds get squeezed on taxes

As high fuel costs led many to rely on other forms of transportation,
such as mass transit, and to cut back their miles on the road this
year, the reduced driving also sliced tax revenue that would normally
go toward highway maintenance, the FHA said.

The federal tax on gas generates 18.4 cents per gallon of regular gas
sold and 24.4 cents per gallon for diesel fuel, which gets pumped in
to the federal Highway Trust Fund. Some states also add a tax of their
own to fund various projects.

The FHA budget totaled $42.18 billion in fiscal year 2008. The Bush
Administration has requested $40.14 billion for fiscal year 2009.

As Americans drive less, new ways are needed to fund the national road
system, the highway agency said. Even though fewer drivers are using
the highways, funding is still critical, party because of a backlog in
highway projects.

Peters said she would unveil a new plan on Tuesday to "fundamentally
reform our nation's transportation." She said much of the plan will
focus on calculating a better cost-benefit analysis for maintaining
the national highway system, as well as "weaning ourselves from the
gas tax over time."

First Published: July 28, 2008: 9:45 AM EDT

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