Page added on September 18, 2007
WASHINGTON (AP) — Drivers waste nearly an entire work week each year sitting in traffic on the way to and from their jobs, according to a national study released Tuesday.
The nation’s drivers languished in traffic delays for a total of 4.2 billion hours in 2005, up from 4 billion the year before, according to the Texas Traffic Institute’s urban mobility report. That’s about 38 hours per driver.
“Things are bad and they’re getting worse,” said Alan Pisarski, a transportation expert and the author of “Commuting in America.”
“We’ve used up the capacity that had been bequeathed to us by a previous generation, and we haven’t replaced it,” Pisarski said.
The study summed it up this way: “Too many people, too many trips over too short of a time period on a system that is too small.”
The study estimates that drivers wasted 2.9 billion gallons of fuel while sitting in traffic. Together with the lost time, traffic delays cost the nation $78.2 billion, the study estimates.
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