America's Worst Commutes, Most Traffic Congested Cities

rockin'robin

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Rush Hour Is a Bit Faster These Days, But Don't Tell That to the Drivers in D.C

There is at least one positive thing about the recession: it's making Americans' morning and evening commutes a bit more tolerable.

For the second year in a row, rush hour traffic has fallen, easing the commutes of many Americans, according to a new study by the Texas Transportation Institute, part of Texas A&M University.

The ebb in traffic started in the last half of 2007 as gas prices started to climb. Then the recession took hold. Fewer trucks were transporting good and fewer people were driving to and from jobs they no longer had.

Travelers spent one hour less stuck in traffic in 2007 than they did the year before and wasted one gallon less gasoline than the year before. The differences are small, but they represent a rare break in near-constant growth in traffic over 25 years.

"This is a very small change," researcher David Schrank said in a statement. "No one should expect to be driving the speed limit on their way to work because of this."

Have You Changed Your Commuting Habits? Tell ABC News

The average U.S. driver languished in rush-hour traffic for 36.1 hours in 2007, down from 36.6 hours in 2006 and a peak of 37.4 hours in 2005.

The report does not look at 2008 when job losses really started to pile up, but those losses – despite lower gas prices – are likely to further ease congestion.

But the authors of the study warn that the slowdown in traffic growth will be temporary.

"When the economy rebounds, expect traffic problems to do the same," they wrote.

America's Worst Commutes
The research also pointed up other effects of the nation's traffic problems.

The overall cost (based on wasted fuel and lost productivity) of congestion reached $87.2 billion in 2007 – more than $750 for every U.S. traveler.

The total amount of wasted fuel topped 2.8 billion gallons – three weeks' worth of gas for every traveler.

The amount of wasted time totaled 4.2 billion hours – nearly one full work week (or vacation week) for every traveler.

Traffic in Los Angeles is getting better but is still the worst in the nation. Washington's is getting worse, now overtaking Atlanta for second-worst in the nation.

The least-congested metro areas were Lancaster-Palmdale, Calif., and Wichita, Kan., where drivers were delayed an average of six hours a year.

In order, here are the worst metropolitan areas for commutes:

Los Angeles: Motorists spend an average of 70 hours a year stuck in traffic

Washington, D.C.: 62 hours in traffic

Atlanta: 57 hours in traffic

Houston: 56 hours in traffic

San Francisco: 55 hours in traffic

Dallas: 53 hours in traffic

Detroit: 52 hours in traffic

Miami: 47 hours in traffic

New York: 44 hours in traffic

Phoenix: 44 hours in traffic

Seattle: 43 hours in traffic

Boston: 43 hours in traffic

Chicago: 41 hours in traffic

Philadelphia: 38 hours in traffic

America's Worst Commutes, Most Traffic Congested Cities - ABC News
 
Rarely get stuck on the traffic in DC, because there's a lot of loopholes. :)
 
:shock: I've never been to LA.

I've been to Chicago many times and gonna tell you I hate their traffic, people drive insane!
 
Been to LA's nightmare traffic b4. It aint so pleasant esp with a 5 speed stickshift like I had with my 1984 Audi back in 1993. However I learned a lot of different ways to get to LA without the freeways esp the PCH from Malibu to Santa-Monica. Saved me much time and gas that way.
 
My hometown, I rarely spend over a minute stuck in traffic... Actually almost never.

However when I was in LA it was not that bad as I thought because my wife knew the backroad and the scheduling of traffic. It is just that if you use your head in LA, you will be able to figure out if it is good time to go that freeway or not. If it is bad timing, then don't go there and go other way.
 
Baby....

Now I don't remember the back up roads...:( Rush hours are usually in the morning and afternoons...gotta ask my best friend IF we return back to Los Angeles. :)

My hometown, I rarely spend over a minute stuck in traffic... Actually almost never.

However when I was in LA it was not that bad as I thought because my wife knew the backroad and the scheduling of traffic. It is just that if you use your head in LA, you will be able to figure out if it is good time to go that freeway or not. If it is bad timing, then don't go there and go other way.
 
How long ago was it that you've been to LA? ;)

The introduction of GPS, googlemaps, alternate routing, city-data.com, smart people living in LA that research roads have grown a lot exponentially since the 80s-00's.

Nowadays everywhere is packed. It's more of like a game of luck now to figure out where is going to get you home 10-20minutes early.

Otherwise, hope and pray that the oil tanker spill you're hearing/seeing from the news is behind the freeway entrance you take so you can hog all the road to yourself.
I have been driving here for about 12 years now, and residing over 25 years and counting. The earlier 90's were the last time roads were actually fun to drive home from work.

It is typical, to get home from work anywhere, it is usually about 1.5-2.5x the amount of miles you have to drive on average if you aren't on the heart of the freeways such as 5, 101, 10@ Santa Monica, etc. On bad days times it by 3.
IE: 20 miles > ~35-50 minutes average days, 1 hour on a bad day.

Even the weekends, the freeways have become packed now.

The hours to drive to skip all the traffic is about 10:30am - 1:30PM, 8:30PM-4:00AM. Though sometimes they still pop in.
 
Due to job, there is slim chance I would ever able to move down there.

If job is better and security is excellent, then I can leave that door open.

Baby....

Now I don't remember the back up roads...:( Rush hours are usually in the morning and afternoons...gotta ask my best friend IF we return back to Los Angeles. :)
 
The last time I was in Los Angeles was in 2006 I think...My best friend wrote down the directions where I needed to go etc with her car. Since I was taking care of her kid to go summer school etc. We plan to get GPS of course...:)
How long ago was it that you've been to LA? ;)

The introduction of GPS, googlemaps, alternate routing, city-data.com, smart people living in LA that research roads have grown a lot exponentially since the 80s-00's.

Nowadays everywhere is packed. It's more of like a game of luck now to figure out where is going to get you home 10-20minutes early.

Otherwise, hope and pray that the oil tanker spill you're hearing/seeing from the news is behind the freeway entrance you take so you can hog all the road to yourself.
I have been driving here for about 12 years now, and residing over 25 years and counting. The earlier 90's were the last time roads were actually fun to drive home from work.

It is typical, to get home from work anywhere, it is usually about 1.5-2.5x the amount of miles you have to drive on average if you aren't on the heart of the freeways such as 5, 101, 10@ Santa Monica, etc. On bad days times it by 3.
IE: 20 miles > ~35-50 minutes average days, 1 hour on a bad day.

Even the weekends, the freeways have become packed now.

The hours to drive to skip all the traffic is about 10:30am - 1:30PM, 8:30PM-4:00AM. Though sometimes they still pop in.
 
I remember going to LA often in the 90s...traffic there scared me!
 
It is NUTS on the Beltway, that's for sure! My poor hubby has to commute from Baltimore to Northern VA daily...ugh!
Ouch! BTW, I recall the Beltway road rage incident, sometime in 2006, with the woman that threw her fast food cup through the window and hit another driver. I believe she received 6 month jail sentence. :hmm: Then there was the I-95 incident with a body on the roadway; several people ran over it and continued their trip, without stopping or reporting it....
 
Then there was the I-95 incident with a body on the roadway; several people ran over it and continued their trip, without stopping or reporting it....


:shock: !!!
 
Then there was the I-95 incident with a body on the roadway; several people ran over it and continued their trip, without stopping or reporting it....


:shock: !!!
I know. Maybe they were putting makeup on and didn't notice. :lol:
 
Then there was the I-95 incident with a body on the roadway; several people ran over it and continued their trip, without stopping or reporting it....


:shock: !!!

In the DC area? When?
 
I certainly don't miss driving in DC and in Chicago as well.

DC isn't that bad to me but driving in Chicago, It feels like it's a forever-never-ending construction zone, especially when there's a lot of tolls around. It is just a pain in the neck.

Whenever I go to Chicago, I try to avoid those areas but if I happen to, I gotta suck it up and brave through it, ha.
 
In the DC area? When?

Several Drivers on I-95 Strike Human Body but Keep On Driving

Several Drivers on I-95 Strike Human Body but Keep On Driving
Monday morning several drivers on I-95 in Maryland drove over a human body and didn’t bother to stop.
A state police trooper responding to a call early Monday morning came upon a gruesome scene on Interstate 95 in Howard County, Maryland. A human body had been torn apart by being struck by several drivers on the highway, none of whom stopped to see what they had hit. The corpse was recovered from the northbound lanes of the highway around 5:00 a.m.

According to police, the body was taken to the Medical Examiner’s office in Baltimore to attempt to determine the cause of death. State police Sgt. Rob Moroney said, "We’re not exactly sure what occurred that led to this person being in the roadway. They could’ve wandered on the interstate, they could have been pushed out of a vehicle, they could have jumped out of a vehicle, we just don’t know at this time." Moroney said the case is being investigated as a death investigation, "in case something sinister was involved."

The Maryland State Police Academy sent more than 40 cadets and instructors to search the shoulder and adjoining roadside areas for clues as to what might have happened and where the person may have come from. Moroney said that the first responding trooper had found a body that "had been hit multiple times by vehicles." He said one witness came forward with information.

State police closed a stretch of I-95 for more than seven hours Monday morning so they could investigate and try to find clues to help them determine the identity and circumstances of the body. A helicopter took aerial photographs and an army of officers scoured the area meticulously. "We have very little to go on at this point in time," Moroney said. "It’s very unfortunate. We have investigators here, our crash team is here, and behind us, the 125th candidate class is getting ready to do a shoulder-to-shoulder area search of the scene."

Anyone who has information regarding this case is urged to contact the Maryland State Police Waterloo Barrack at (410) 799 – 2101.

By Buzzle Staff and Agencies
Published: 1/10/2006
 
My gosh...in 2006, I was living in Rockville and I am surprised I didnt hear about this. Odd!
 
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