Study says Richmond traffic congestion not getting worse
Published: July 8, 2009
Updated: July 8, 2009
The Richmond area’s traffic congestion is holding steady, with the average driver wasting about 20 hours per year, according to a national traffic study released today.
The report by the Texas Transportation Institute, published annually since 1982, shows the 20-hour figure applied to travelers in peak drive times in the Richmond area in 2007, the most recent year of the study. That represented the fourth consecutive year the figure stood at 20 hours.
The annual delay figure was as low as six hours in 1982, hit 10 in 1986 and peaked at 23 in 1996. After falling to 16 hours in 2000, it crept back up to 20 in 2004 before leveling off at that number.
Those numbers pale in comparison to the Washington metro area’s traffic, which ranked second only to Los Angeles in congestion, with the average driver wasting about 62 hours a year in 2007.
“Some of that is related to the good general economy in Washington, with the expansion of government and government services,“ said Tim Lomax, a research engineer for the institute and the study’s co-author.
The Washington metro area has undertaken some expensive road projects. They include the Springfield interchange, Woodrow Wilson Bridge, the HOT lanes on the Capital Beltway in Virginia, the planned widening of Interstate 66 in Virginia and the Intercounty Connector being built in Maryland.
Experts agree that no one approach — building more roads or commuter rail lines — will reverse the traffic trend.
“The best solutions are going to be those in which actions by transportation agencies are complemented by businesses, manufacturers and commuters,“ Lomax said. “The problem is far too big for transportation agencies alone to address it adequately.“
Washington-area drivers wasted three more hours in the car compared with the previous year, the study discovered.
Adding in the price of gas and lost productivity, Lomax’s study concludes that sitting in traffic cost the Washington area almost $2.8 billion in 2007. Ninety million gallons of gas and 133 million hours were wasted.
In the Richmond area, sitting in traffic cost $202 million in 2007. There were 6.6 million gallons of gas and 10.2 million hours wasted.
Elsewhere nationally, Houston, Las Vegas, Charlotte and Raleigh-Durham, N.C., had worse or equally bad traffic compared with the previous year, victims of a fast-growing population that outpaced roadway capacity.
In Montclair, Va., the 30-mile commute to Washington, D.C., has always been so bad that Ray McInerney, 29, and three co-workers decided years ago to car pool. He has no major complaints about the ride to their jobs at the Interior Department — so long as they leave by 6 a.m. and head home at 4 p.m., taking advantage of high-occupancy vehicle lanes along I-95.
Shuttling around the region for his 12-year-old son’s baseball practice and tournaments is a different story, but McInerney says he endures the traffic along with everyone else because cutting back on trips is not an option.
“It’s definitely something that came to mind when gas prices came close to four dollars,” he said. “But we would have to have serious cutbacks for him not to be able to play.”
The Texas Transportation Institute analyzed state and Federal Highway Administration data for 439 urban areas. It estimated:
—The overall cost of U.S. traffic congestion in 2007 reached $87.2 billion, more than $750 for every traveler.
—The amount of wasted time in traffic totaled 4.2 billion hours, nearly an entire work week for every traveler.
—After Los Angeles and Washington, the most congested metro areas were Atlanta, Houston, San Francisco, Dallas-Forth Worth, San Jose, Calif., and Orlando, Fla.
—The least congested metros were Lancaster-Palmdale, Calif., and Wichita, Kan., where drivers were delayed an average of six hours a year.
The report urged state and federal governments to act now to develop highways or mass transit, since these programs can take 10 to 15 years to complete. It said short-term fixes such as rapidly removing crashed vehicles and timing traffic signals also would help, while employers can offer flexible work hours and telecommuting to reduce travel during traditional rush hours.
The findings come as the Obama administration has signaled that it wants to keep transportation funding at current levels for 18 months, rather than move forward on a proposed six-year, $500 billion bill that would increase highway aid 40 percent and double transit funding. There are questions about how to pay for that.
Robert E. Lang, co-director of the Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech, said while the recession is altering how many people work, live and travel, that won’t be enough to hold back traffic congestion. With the U.S. growing by three million people each year, the nation’s aging infrastructure won’t be able to keep up without broad upgrades — especially once the economy picks up again.
“It’s the lull before the coming storm,” he said.
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Reader Reactions
If we didn’t have to support the carpetbaggers in NVA we would have plenty of funding for our needs. Just think what was spent on the “mixing bowl” would have built a lot of roads in the rest of the state.
NVA us more akin to California than the “Old Dominion”. The political and citizen mentality are about equal.
The best thing for Virginia is for NVA is to succeed and become part of D.C.
Ahh… maybe so. But then, where would Richmond gets all of its road funding? Or any other funding for that matter?
Signed,
Not a transplant, a Born and Bred Virginian
posted by ( Libby ) on July 08, 2009 at 12:56 pm
Jack: You’ve got that all wrong. If any past governors are to blame for VDOT and its funding woes, it would be both Allen and Gilmore.
And that little tax idea to which you refer was introduced by Dave Albo, Republican. Stop the partisan bullsh*t—it’s getting us nowhere. Unless you are a Richmonder, and then you can freely travel without the traffic from which we suffer up here in NoVa…
Just for the record I am a Richmonder and have been for 66 years now. Albo is a RINO more aligned with the liberal socialist democrats than republicans. You want to stop the partisan bullsh*t because you know it reflects directly negatively on the democrats especially the carpetbagger clown we now have as governor.
I don’t have much sympathy for the transplants in NVA. Mostly democrat liberals who have managed to screw up the commonwealth with their agenda into transforming Virginia into clones of the screwed up states they fled from. The best thing for Virginia is for NVA is to succeed and become part of D.C.
Jack: You’ve got that all wrong. If any past governors are to blame for VDOT and its funding woes, it would be both Allen and Gilmore.
And that little tax idea to which you refer was introduced by Dave Albo, Republican. Stop the partisan bullsh*t—it’s getting us nowhere. Unless you are a Richmonder, and then you can freely travel without the traffic from which we suffer up here in NoVa…
Posted by ( BMW ) on July 08, 2009 at 12:26 pm
Richmond has one of the most efficient and well planned interstate systems I have seen. I will say that they don’t seem to be keeping up the roads as well as they used to, don’t know who is to blame for that.
You can blame ex governor Warner and present part-time governor Kaine for the mess our highway system is in.
Their huge tax increase strategies for social programs were mostly blocked by the General Assembly so both went on a crusade to punish the citizens they are supposed to represent. Warner crippled the DMV forcing them into raising fees for even entering the DMV office to conduct business, raised all fees like license plate renewal and other services. Kaine didn’t get his pre-school funding so he went on a campaign to punish VDOT and the services the people want and expect. Notice he did not cut any of his high paid supporters (lackeys) he gave positions to.
Kaine is the puppet of the DNC and Obama Socialist party. They pull the strings and Kaine does the dance.
Richmond shouldn’t have any traffic woes, considering VDOT spends all of the money locally that they should be spending in Northern Virginia and Virginia Beach. Strangle the cash cows… smart!!
BMW,
Its not about the interstate grid, although it doesnt hurt. Case in point, ATL. interstates 20, 75,85 all go through it and its nicely surrounded by 285, the loop. But its a living poop hole traffic wise, and it can be 3am on a sunday morning and you’ll have traffic. Its the volume of people. This is a small city.
Richmond has one of the most efficient and well planned interstate systems I have seen. Compared to cities like Orlando, DC, or LA no comparison. You have east/west and north/south interstates with beltways. If you understand the traffic grid rush hour here is nothing more then a nuisance. Having moved back here after spending a few years in Orlando, I will say that they don’t seem to be keeping up the roads as well as they used to, don’t know who is to blame for that.
frojunk stole my thunder on that comment. The MAIN roads aren’t bad due to proper planning.
Developers who moved to certain areas, and increased the amount of houses on a small two lane road, without including road expansion, can cause a 30 minute commute to become 3 hours if their is a wreck, and it’s the only road INTO your neighborhood.
When comparing to cities like ATL, LA, DC of course the small delays in RIC sounds silly. But having lived in many cities and during my travels for work, RIC still has it better than all of them. Except for Vicksburg, MS. And even those people complained of traffic. Its all relative. If you dont get the opportunity to be in another city during rush hour (more than once, lets say for a week) you have nothing to compare it to. You can only compare your 20 minute commute at 8pm to the 30 commute at 5pm and say there’s traffic and actually have the ignorance to complain about it. I find for the most part people here are smart enough to know there isnt traffic in RIC. But there are some that just dont have a clue.
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