NETWORK WORLD TONI KISTNER'S TELEWORK BEAT
11/23/04
Today's focus:  Traffic jams kill, Part 3

Dear [EMAIL PROTECTED],

In this issue:

* Suburban sprawl linked to health problems, premature aging 
* Links related to Telework Beat
* Featured reader resource
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Today's focus:  Traffic jams kill, Part 3

By Toni Kistner

With the first issue of Network Life put to bed, I'm back home 
again. Yet, I can't shake this feeling I'm missing something for 
not being in the office. I'll go in tomorrow to see for myself. 

But today, instead of whizzing to work on my reverse commute, I 
got a taste of genuine gridlock, attending a 9 a.m. conference 
on consumer cybersecurity at Bentley College in Waltham, Mass. 
In the car for 90 minutes; arrived half an hour late. The worst 
part? Behind their wheels people seemed complacent, even 
enjoying themselves -  reading the paper, eating a muffin, 
chatting on the phone, no doubt listening to enlightening radio. 


What was I missing? Where was the road rage? Didn't they have 
better places to be? Or is the car just the place they want to 
be - a refuge from work-life disequilibrium?

Would it anger them to know eating a muffin at 5 mph costs 
$2,100 per year? 

Indeed, a recent study by a Metro D.C. transportation research 
group, the Road Information Program, found traffic congestion 
costs the average Washington commuter $2,100 annually. That 
breaks down to $1,278 per year in lost time and fuel, $353 in 
added car maintenance and $500 for "serious accidents caused by 
inadequate roads," the study says. Can't be much less in metro 
Boston, I'm sure.

A recent poll by the National Association of Realtors and Smart 
Growth America restored my faith somewhat. Among respondents 
planning to buy a home within the next three years, 87% said a 
shorter commute was top priority. Seventy-five percent want easy 
access to highways; 72% want sidewalks and places to walk. 

Teleworking is great - but what I really want is to walk to 
work. All this sitting around - in the house, the car, the 
office - just to carve out 5 or 10 hours weekly at the gym for a 
hamster wheel workout - just makes no sense.

Sure, lots of people love their big houses, lawns, a bedroom for 
each kid - a kitchen the size of my apartment. But look - a 
recent Rand Corporation study found people who live in 
high-sprawl areas are more likely to report health  problems - 
high blood pressure, arthritis, headaches and difficulty 
breathing - compared to people who live in more compact areas.

The study found a person who lives in a high-sprawl city such as 
Atlanta will have similar health problems to someone four years 
older living in a more compact city like Seattle.

The findings appear in the October issue of the journal Public 
Health ("Suburban sprawl and physical and mental health"). For 
the study, Rand researchers used info from Healthcare for 
Communities, a survey that analyzed physical and mental health 
information from 8,600 people in 38 U.S. metro areas.

The report found sprawl affected the poor and elderly 
disproportionately, but no difference in mental health problems 
- depression, anxiety and psychological well being - between 
urbanites and suburbanites.

Regions with the worst sprawl include Riverside-San Bernadino, 
Calif; Atlanta; Winston-Salem, N.C.; West Palm Beach, Fla.; 
Bridgeport-Danbury-Stamford, Conn.; Knoxville, Tenn.; Rochester, 
N.Y.; and Detroit. Regions with the least amount of sprawl 
include New York; San Francisco; Boston; Portland, Ore.; Miami; 
Denver; Chicago; and Milwaukee. 

RELATED EDITORIAL LINKS

The Road Information Program
http://www.tripnet.org/

2004 American Community Survey
National Association of Realtors
http://www.nwfusion.com/nlnetwork852

Rand Study Finds First Link Between Suburban Sprawl and an 
Increase in Chronic Health Ailments 
http://www.rand.org/news/press.04/09.27.html
_______________________________________________________________
To contact: Toni Kistner

Toni Kistner is managing editor of Net.Worker. Contact her at 
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
_______________________________________________________________
This newsletter is sponsored by Intel 
IT Productivity; Increasing ROI 

Learn how to effectively measure employee productivity, manage 
IT investments and reduce the Total Cost of Ownership in 
enterprise data management.  Visit Intel's IT Productivity 
center.  Click here to download white papers, books and IDC 
Research. 
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=88604
_______________________________________________________________
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