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Transportation Solutions News
For Immediate Release:
2009-07-08
Contact:
John Krieger, (202) 546-9707 John Krieger, 202-546-9707 x333 Washington, D.C. Washington, D.C.: Congested Roads Cost Billions in Wasted Hours and DollarsNationwide Study Shows Need
for More Public Transit to Fight Congestion
Washington, July 8 –American
commuters are wasting 4.2 billion hours, nearly an entire work week per
commuter, stuck in traffic.
According to data released on
Wednesday, traffic congestion also wastes 2.8 billion gallons of gas, which
costs consumers $87.2 billion.
The Urban Mobility
Report, produced by the Texas Transportation
Institute, also points to investment in public transportation as an important
solution for congestion, showing that drivers would have suffered 646 million
more hours of road delays were it not for public
transportation.
“Traffic congestion is like a
tax that we all pay, sapping our time and money,” said John
Krieger, Federal Transportation Policy Analyst for the U.S. Public
Interest Research Group. “American commuters need better alternatives,
particularly more and better public transportation. Each full bus can get fifty
cars off the road; each full rail car would remove hundreds
more.”
Recent trends show that more
and more Americans are riding public transportation to avoid traffic congestion
and high gas prices. Public
transportation ridership has
increased nearly 40 percent nationwide since 1995, and according to a Brookings
Institution study, 2007 was the first year that per-capita driving miles
declined.
“For decades, government has
tried to fight traffic congestion by building more and wider roads, which just
increases congestion at choke points. This report is further evidence of the
folly of that approach,” said Krieger.
“We need to prioritize
expanding bus and rail systems that reduce the number of drivers on the road.
Doing so will address congestion problems that are crippling our metro areas and
will reduce our nation’s dependence on dirty fossil fuels,” Krieger
added.
Congress is scheduled to
address funding for transportation priorities this summer before the current
six-year federal transportation bill expires.
Through its nationwide
Transportation Solutions campaign, U.S. PIRG is working for more and better
transit by encouraging public support for new projects and improved
service.
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