NETWORK WORLD TONI KISTNER'S TELEWORK BEAT
09/21/04
Today's focus:  Prisoner of the driveway

Dear [EMAIL PROTECTED],

In this issue:

* Texas Mobility Study (and I) find road congestion tough to 
��escape
* Links related to Telework Beat
* Featured reader resource
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Today's focus:  Prisoner of the driveway

By Toni Kistner

Last week, we hit the high notes of the Texas Transportation 
Institute's annual Urban Mobility Report. Since, I've pored 
through the whole thing, pages and pages of charts and tables 
all supporting one undeniable fact: We're stuck in traffic 
pretty much wherever we live, at all hours of the day. 

If you've got some time, take a look: 
<http://mobility.tamu.edu/ums/media_information/>. You can 
search on your city and see exactly how much money and gas 
you're wasting, how many hours you could spend doing something 
meaningful, and other fun facts.  

Then again, you've already eaten up any free time you had for 
this project sitting in traffic, so never mind. Trust me, the 
study is upsetting. Congestion's getting worse and worse and we 
can't build enough roads, add enough busses and trains, or build 
enough HOV lanes to keep pace, let alone actually ease it. 

More telework would ease things, sure. But only the full-bore 
everybody lock themselves up in their home offices three or four 
days a week kind. Instead, today's telework is making things 
worse. It's got us off the road to work a day or two a week, but 
on the road to wherever else at all hours. 

Because I could work from anywhere, in 2000, I'd moved my family 
to Portland Me (pop 70,000) from New York. Affordable houses, 
bigger supermarkets, smaller grocery bills, better schools, 
small class sizes. Except, in the four years we spent there, 
traffic congestion forced our little city to expand a number of 
intersections, including one just up the street from my house, 
and spoiled a lot of the fun.    

The house sits on a relatively busy country road. I was unfazed 
by road noise, but who knew traffic congestion would keep me 
prisoner of the driveway? Getting out involved backing out into 
heavy two-way traffic. Early on, this wasn't so bad, but over 
time - and these things are subtle, insidious - it became 
impossible to make a left hand turn without getting creamed by 
pick up trucks barreling down from both directions. Ever 
adaptable, we learned to always make a right hand turn, 
regardless of whether that put us in our destination's direction 
or the opposite. 

Even so, I continued to gloat over morning coffee watching the 
traffic line up outside my kitchen window - at least I don't 
have to deal with that. The trouble was, congestion wasn't 
confined to rush hour. Rush "hour" spanned from 7 a.m. to 10:30 
a.m., then picked up again through lunch time, then bled into 
school dismissal time, team practice pick up time, right up to 
5:30 p.m. when all Portlanders thankfully sit down to eat.

Like any teleworker, I'd try to schedule errand runs for off 
hours - but that window became increasingly, ridiculously 
narrow. Eventually I started walking everywhere like I used to 
in Manhattan, joining the ranks of one or two homeless men 
pushing shopping carts full of cans, car-less teenage boys in 
Army boots, and Scary Mary, our always walking always muttering 
resident madwoman.    

The punch line comes when I try to sell my house. Turns out, 
nobody else wants to deal with my traffic problems either. My 
realtor said, I could have sold your house - which was full of 
charm and Victorian details "in a heartbeat had it not been on 
Washington Avenue."

Of course, I eventually sold it - but for a lot less than 
comparable houses tucked neatly into quiet side streets. So much 
for suburban quality of life. Back to the city - this time 
Cambridge, Mass - for us.   
_______________________________________________________________
To contact: Toni Kistner

Toni Kistner is managing editor of Net.Worker. Contact her at 
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
_______________________________________________________________
This newsletter is sponsored by Nokia 
NW Special Report: Preparing an Infrastructure for Mobile 
Applications. 

Mobility, properly done, increases productivity and decreases 
operating costs. So get up to date information about building a 
mobile infrastructure, dealing with security issues, the latest 
networking options, connectivity alternatives and operational 
support enhancements.  
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=81457
_______________________________________________________________
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