The Texas Transportation Institute report estimates U.S. highway
congestion costs $160 billion a year, including from lost
productivity, gas burned while idling in traffic and additional wear
and tear on vehicles.
"The higher congestion levels are clearly the downside of increased
economic activity," said Bill Eisele, senior researcher for the TTI,
which put together the annual Urban Mobility Scorecard along with
traffic tracking company INRIX. TTI is part of Texas A&M University.
Eisele said Americans drove a record number of miles in the last 12
months, surpassing the previous peak set in 2007, before the start
of the massive economic downturn.
"Congestion is mirroring the national trend," he said.
In 1982, motorists spent an average of 16 hours a year sitting in
traffic jams, by 2010, that time had grown to 38 hours, TTI said.
Tim Lomax, a report co-author, said Washington, D.C., has the worst
gridlock in the country, with commuters wasting 82 hours a year
stuck in traffic, nearly twice the national average.
The other most congestion-plagued cities include Los Angeles, San
Francisco, New York and San Jose.
Six of the country's 10 most congested stretches of highway are in
metro Los Angeles, with two each in Chicago and New York City. The
"worst" highway in the country is US 101 in the San Fernando Valley
area of Los Angeles.
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During the rush hour, it can take 91 minutes to travel 26 miles (42
km) on the 101, at an average speed of 17 mph (27 kph), it said.
"Our growing traffic problem is too massive for any one entity to
handle," Lomax said.
"Businesses can give their employees more flexibility in where, when
and how they work, individual workers can adjust their commuting
patterns, and we can have better thinking when it comes to long-term
land use planning."
Eisele said big-city level traffic congestion is trickling down to
smaller metro areas.
"Nationwide, the average travel delay per commuter is more than
twice what it was in 1982," he said. "For cities of less than
500,000 people, the problem is four times worse than in 1982."
(Editing by Jon Herskovitz and Eric Beech)
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