Home
ArticlesDepartmentsEventsThe SceneRelocation GuideSubscribe FreeNewsletterseBrochuresContests
Leading Question
Making Waves
Money Matters
My First Job
On the Job
Problem Solver
Quarterly Analysis
Saving Money
Shop Talk
Stuck in the Past
The RV Life
What People Make

advertisement


Articles > Past Issues > 2007 > March 2007 > Leading Question

Leading Question

Is traffic as bad as we think?

Lori Johnston

>>It all depends on your perspective. Folks who have moved from cities like Atlanta or Los Angeles, where drivers spent hours each year stuck in traffic, say the congestion in Southwest Florida is nothing.

But expectations are different as well. As Tom Quinn, president and CEO of Fifth Third Bank (South Florida), who moved to Southwest Florida in late 2005 from upstate New York, puts it: "The last thing they want to do on the way to the beach is get stuck in traffic."

Experts who worked on the Texas Transportation Institute's 2005 Urban Mobility Report say that, among the 16 cities they studied with fewer than 500,000 residents, the Cape Coral metropolitan statistical area, which includes Fort Myers, ranks fourth-behind Colorado Springs, Colo., Charleston, S.C., and Pensacola-in terms of congestion cost and delays resulting from traffic.

According to the TTI's data, drivers here experience 15 hours of time lost per year. With 250 workdays a year, or 500 work trips, that adds up to only an extra minute or two, says David Schrank, study co-author.

The study also found a 1:18 travel time index-the ratio of travel time in the peak period to travel time at free-flow conditions-for the Cape Coral area. In other words, it takes 18 percent longer to complete the trip because of congestion.

When you start putting a price tag on it in terms of wasted time and fuel, it comes to about $260 per driver per year. "People would like to have something else to spend their $260 on, so there is an economic side to it," says Schrank.

One difference in smaller cities is that drivers might face congestion on one road, but they can cut over to another street that could be free of traffic, he says.

"Depending on what road you're having to make your trip on, you may or may not be facing a similar situation to an Orlando, a Miami or a Jacksonville," he says.

Page 1 of 2
 |<  < 1 - 2  >  >| 

 

 

 


********************************************************************************************************

Subscribe to Gulfshore Business now ยป

********************************************************************************************************

Current rating: 0 (0 ratings)

Send this to a friend...
Your message (click here):


Bookmark this page to:

Add to Yahoo Bookmarks Add to Facebook Add to Ask Add to Blogmarks Add to MyAOL Add to Delicious Add to Multiply Add to Faves Add to Twitter Add to Live Add to Furl Add to Segnalo Add to Reddit Add to Terchnorati Add to StumbleUpon Add to Digg Add to Slashdot Add to Spurl Add to Yahoo MyWeb Add to Newsvine Add to MySpace Add to Diigo Add to Backflip Add to Google Bookmarks

advertisement


advertisement


Bookmark This Site | Contact Us | About Us | Magazine Advertising | Privacy Policy | Legal | Site Map

© 2011 Gulfshore Media, LLC., All Rights Reserved

The information contained within this site is provided by us as a service for our readers.
Although this website strives to provide the most accurate and reliable information, this site cannot and does
not guarantee the accuracy, sufficiency, completeness, correctness or timeliness of such information.
You are responsible for confirming the accuracy and reliability of all information
provided on this website prior to making any decisions based on such information. 

Sarasota Magazine | BIZ941 | Gulfshore Life | Gulfshore Business | Homebuyer Magazine
 

This site is a member of the City & Regional Magazine Association Online Network

CRMA