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Waze and Other Traffic Dodging Apps Prompt Cities To Game the Algorithms (usatoday.com) 469

KindMind writes: USA today reports that Waze and others are causing traffic planners to try to figure out how to gain control back. From the article: "While traffic savvy GPS apps like Waze and Google Maps have provided users a way to get around traffic, it has caused massive headaches for city planners. With highways frequently congested, navigation apps like Google Maps and Waze started telling drivers to hop off the freeway at Fremont's Mission Boulevard, cut through residential streets and then hop back on the highway where things were clearer -- much to the distress of the people who lived there. 'The commuters didn't live or work in Fremont and didn't care about our residential neighborhoods,' said Noe Veloso, Fremont's principal transportation engineer. Fremont instituted commute-hour turn restrictions on the most heavily used residential cut-through routes. The city also partnered with Waze through its Connected Citizens Program in order to share data and information, such as the turn restrictions, so that the app takes them into account. The result has been effective, but Veloso is worried the changes may simply reroute commuters into other neighborhoods."
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Waze and Other Traffic Dodging Apps Prompt Cities To Game the Algorithms

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  • I'm hungry (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:23PM (#53988449)

    God forbid that someone gets off a freeway and discovers a local establishment while passing through.

    • Excellent point. Interstates destroyed many communities due to their limited access nature. In recent years some roads formerly designated as Interstates have actually been torn down in some areas bringing back traffic (the good kind) to some communities that deperately need it.

    • Re:I'm hungry (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DerekLyons ( 302214 ) <fairwater.gmail@com> on Monday March 06, 2017 @08:21PM (#53989385) Homepage

      God forbid that someone gets off a freeway and discovers a local establishment while passing through.

      Having owned a business along such a commuter route... All I can say is ROTFLMAO. You have no idea what you're talking about.

      All those commuters care about is getting the hell out of Dodge and back onto the freeway and getting home. They're not even looking at the local businesses.

    • by radiumsoup ( 741987 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @08:24PM (#53989409)

      Nobody wants to stay at your hotel anyway, Norman.

    • "God forbid that someone gets off a freeway and discovers a local establishment while passing through."

      I live in a neighborhood affected by this: there is a narrow road connecting our town to the next town over, that gives commuters a handy shortcut. This road runs through the middle of our town, past three schools and a kindergarten. Commuters - in their blind rush to get from A to B - are not interested in stopping at a local restaurant. They're interested in driving as fast as possible through town, mayb

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:23PM (#53988459)

    Oh, you mean we're just supposed to sit in gridlock instead? Our highways have been an inadequate crumbling mess for decades. The proper response here is to fix them, not gripe that there's an inadequate workaround.

    • by xevioso ( 598654 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:36PM (#53988567)

      By "fixing" do you mean widen? Which usually actually ADDS to congestion on many cases?

      • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
        Improving roads doesn't add to congestion. It reveals the extent of the neglect, but that's a different issue. Most of the studies into "adding" to congestion were looking at roads operating at 500% capacity, which then add 10% to capacity, and see an increase in throughput. This is by design. Roads can be congestion free. But if they were, the greens wouldn't have any traffic to complain about, so they don't want it, and the capitalists/politiicans wouldn't have an endless supply of ineffective billio
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Another point of view would be that highways are more than adequate for decades, it's selfish people who don't use mass transit and idiots living one hour away from work that are the problem.

      • it's selfish people who don't use mass transit

        If you live in a city that doesn't run its buses from 8:45 PM to 5:45 AM (source [fwcitilink.com]), and you're given hours at night, you need a car in order not to have to spend the majority of your paycheck on a taxi or lose your job. If you live in a city that doesn't run its buses on Sundays, and you're given hours on Sunday, you need a car in order not to have to spend the majority of your paycheck on a taxi or lose your job.

        and idiots living one hour away from work that are the problem.

        A lot of jobs don't pay enough to rent a place to live closer to work. How are people "idiots" for taking advantage of a sharp gradient in annual housing costs? Perhaps the real "idiots" serve on the city's zoning board that created this situation.

        • by bickerdyke ( 670000 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @07:10PM (#53988883)

          it's selfish people who don't use mass transit

          If you live in a city that doesn't run its buses from 8:45 PM to 5:45 AM (source [fwcitilink.com]), and you're given hours at night, you need a car in order not to have to spend the majority of your paycheck on a taxi or lose your job. If you live in a city that doesn't run its buses on Sundays, and you're given hours on Sunday, you need a car in order not to have to spend the majority of your paycheck on a taxi or lose your job.

          And if you're paying for a car anway, you don't want to pay the same amount again for a month pass, even if your usual hours are not at night or on sunday.

      • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @07:22PM (#53988969) Journal

        it's selfish people who don't use mass transit and idiots living one hour away from work that are the problem.

        Yes, those inconsiderate bastards that can't find a job that's only 5 minutes away from where they live! Who do they think they are??

        Newsflash, dumbfuck: EVERYONE would love to live close to where their job is, but it doesn't always work out that way.

        Shockingly, some people change jobs once in a while, and even more shockingly, some people can't afford to move or find it impractical to do so.

        Should I move away from the home I've lived in for 20+ years just to be a little closer to wherever it is I work? No fucking way.

    • Fixing could mean removing as I pointed out above. The predecessor to the Interstate system was the US Highway system which didn't have the drawbacks of Interstates and quite honestly aren't necessarily slower than an Interstate.

    • Obligatory oldie...
      https://xkcd.com/277/ [xkcd.com]
    • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

      Oh, you mean we're just supposed to sit in gridlock instead? Our highways have been an inadequate crumbling mess for decades. The proper response here is to fix them, not gripe that there's an inadequate workaround.

      If I had to choose between you and 1000 other commuters racing down my small residential street and you sitting in traffic, I'd pick having you sit in traffic. I didn't move within walking distance of work to have to deal with commute traffic on my own street.

      There's no easy "fix" to congested freeways around here -- the freeways have already expanded to the center as far as they can go, and they are surrounded by homes and businesses to each side, so any expansion would be prohibitively expensive.

  • by LeftCoastThinker ( 4697521 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:29PM (#53988503)

    Or, you know, politicians could spend the gas tax funds to improve the freeways and stop pissing them away on mass transit buses that have a 15% utilization rate...

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Or, here in Austin, 20-30 mile long bike paths for 100+ million dollars, while there has not been a -single- highway improvement, other than making an existing road a toll road, since 1995.

      Even without Waze, I can save 30-45 minutes on a commute by exiting, going down 10-20 blocks, and getting back on an exit north of the university. A city trying to stop that is in dereliction of their duties... these are public roads, and people using Waze are free to use them. If they don't like it, fucking fix the hig

    • How about finding ways to push the utilisation rate of those mass transit buses instead?

      • by johanw ( 1001493 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:50PM (#53988707)

        Mass transport is going from where you aren't to where you don't need to be.

        • Mass transport is going from where you aren't to where you don't need to be.

          That's funny. Two local buses and an express bus gets me from my front door at 6AM to the front door of my job 30 miles away at 7AM. Best commute I ever had in 30 years of taking public transit.

          • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @07:32PM (#53989061)

            That's funny. Two local buses and an express bus gets me from my front door at 6AM to the front door of my job 30 miles away at 7AM. Best commute I ever had in 30 years of taking public transit.

            And you probably represent a small fraction of a small percent. In many areas of the county, the mass transit simply doesn't work well because everyone is going everywhere and there are not enough routes or connections. Nobody is going to trade crawling in a traffic jam for an hour (in their own car) to standing outside multiple times in the rain, jumping from one bus to another, dealing with smelly and loud people for 1.5 hours.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2017 @07:43AM (#53991495) Homepage Journal

              Is that a problem with public transport in general or just your poor implementation of it?

              In Tokyo you can get everywhere on public transport, which runs every few minutes. It's often faster than driving. They build the tracks and over and under, even though it costs more, because they need them and 50 year ROI is fine.

              the mass transit simply doesn't work well because everyone is going everywhere and there are not enough routes or connections

              Personal transport simply doesn't work because everyone is going to the same place and there are is not enough capacity on the main trunk roads.

              Part of fixing this requires designing your cities so that it is possible to walk or cycle around them, so that when you get off the train or bus it's no problem to walk a short way to your destination.

          • by Migraineman ( 632203 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @08:34PM (#53989473)
            Awesome. Trying to take public transportation for my 39-mile commute would take 2 hours 49 minutes. I had a 30-mile commute for my previous job, which would have required almost 4 hours of public transportation. Sometimes, it's just not a viable option. My biggest complaint is that the two available train options don't have an "express" that runs the bulk of the distance directly. They insist on running as local-only service, which really limits the people-hours bandwidth. I'm already going to have a car to get to the station. Collect the commuters at a regional station and haul them directly to the next big hub. Stop with the at-grade crossings to pick up 3 people every 2 miles.
      • >"How about finding ways to push the utilisation rate of those mass transit buses instead?"

        Will it start with you? Everyone wants EVERYONE ELSE to use the buses/train/whatever. That is the problem. Here, the buses are slow, smelly, loud, and EXTREMELY inconvenient. With 7 interconnected cities, there is no standard commute, everyone is going everywhere, making it a logistical nightmare. You would spend MORE time getting home while hating the experience even more than sitting in your own car crawling

    • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:46PM (#53988669) Journal

      The buses have a 15% utilization rate? Sound here the buses hold 90 off people when full. At 15%, that's about 10 people. They take up the space of little more than a car when travelling at speed: the safety gap you need to leave is far longer than the bus. Sounds like a net win for making more space available for cars.

      I'll also bet that like here, the utilization is MUCH higher at rush hour, when demand for space on the road is heaviest, meaning the gains are much better.

      Or, you know, politicians could spend the gas tax funds to improve the freeways and stop pissing them away on mass transit buses that have a 15% utilization rate...

      They could, but I always find it strange when drivers make these kinds of complaints. The most effective thing for improving things for drivers is to get fewer people to drive. That way the roads will be clearer for you. Objecting to politicians spending money on non-car forms of transport seems to be like cutting off your nose to spite your face.

      • Promote motorcycles and make filtering legal.

        Motorcycles, as a general rule, get better gas mileage than most four-wheeled vehicles (less pollution). Each motorycle weighs significantly less than a four-wheeler, reducing wear and tear on the road (less maintenance). Each motorcycle sitting in between lanes is one more car that's not taking up a lane (more room for four-wheelers). Anybody who's idiotic enough to filter illegally at a high rate of speed might just end up as an viable organ donor, which helps

  • Public roads? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 0100010001010011 ( 652467 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:30PM (#53988513)

    Are the roads paid for by public taxes? They're public roads. I used to do this all the time with the old paper maps. Looks like a road stoppage? Find a parallel city or state road. Follow the speed limits and other rules of the road and you're legally allowed to drive on them.

    Want a gated community with private roads? Pay to live in one.

    • Re:Public roads? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:53PM (#53988739) Journal

      That's a bad attitude frankly. Just because something is legal doesn't mean it's a good idea. In fact more or less everything has been legal at some point, which is why there are now so many laws. Because if there's no law against it, then some idiot will do it, no matter how ill conceived.

      Yes, it's legal to do that. Yes people have always skipped busy areas with local knowledge. However large numbers of people going down a rat run (see there's even a phrase for it now) makes life miserable for those on the rat run. It's the sort of thing that prompts local authorities to put in traffic restrictions, entirely reasonably, because residential streets are designed for access, not throughput. And if they get misused, then that's bad.

      It's now getting worse because of the increased convenience.

      Anyway it's a classic case of "this is why we can't have nice things". People will abuse the residential roads and eventually the authorities will intervene. Then those abusers will whine and the locals will grumble a bit about the restrictions, but not that much because of the reduced traffic on unsuitable roads.

      • However large numbers of people going down a rat run (see there's even a phrase for it now) makes life miserable for those on the rat run. It's the sort of thing that prompts local authorities to put in traffic restrictions, entirely reasonably, because residential streets are designed for access, not throughput. And if they get misused, then that's bad.

        It's not the drivers' fault that there is insufficient highway capacity. What are they supposed to, just suck it up?

        • Re:Public roads? (Score:4, Insightful)

          by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2017 @04:07AM (#53990937) Journal

          It's not the drivers' fault that there is insufficient highway capacity. What are they supposed to, just suck it up?

          Yep. Or you know, live somewhere which doesn't require huge commutes. So that means probably living in a smaller house, but that's basically trading your lifestyle against externalities imposed on other people.

          Traffic congestion is a problem which needs to be fixed. A small percentage increase (the residential roads don't have much capacity) which makes a huge number of people miserable is a poor solution.

      • Re:Public roads? (Score:4, Informative)

        by dfghjk ( 711126 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @09:04PM (#53989655)

        "It's the sort of thing that prompts local authorities to put in traffic restrictions, entirely reasonably,..."

        Not "entirely reasonably", not reasonably at all. What causes authorities to put in restrictions is the endless complaints of an entitled few, not concern over improper use.

        "...because residential streets are designed for access, not throughput. And if they get misused, then that's bad."

        BS. All roads are designed for "throughput", some for higher throughput that others. No road, however, is optimized for throughput since it's speed limit is set intentionally too low, at least in the US. Driving on a public road to get somewhere is NEVER misuse.

        "Anyway it's a classic case of "this is why we can't have nice things". People will abuse the residential roads and eventually the authorities will intervene."

        No, we can't have nice things because a few ruin it for others. The few in this case are not the drivers, it's the residents who think that public roads are their private property.

        "Then those abusers will whine and the locals will grumble a bit about the restrictions, but not that much because of the reduced traffic on unsuitable roads."

        The way to "reduce traffic on unsuitable roads" is to fix the roads which are intended to handle that traffic. No discussion of that though! Who cares just so long as the residents get the roads reserved for their use only.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Not "entirely reasonably", not reasonably at all. What causes authorities to put in restrictions is the endless complaints of an entitled few, not concern over improper use.

          No you're the entitled one thinking you have the right to use residential roads for commuting. Typical of car users, it's all "mine mine mine". No mater if you make roads not designed or use more dangerous, and subject people to large amounts of noise pollution.

          BS. All roads are designed for "throughput", some for higher throughput that

    • Re:Public roads? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by swb ( 14022 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:53PM (#53988743)

      That's mostly my attitude.

      In Minnesota, MNDOT decided to close all of US-169 to replace a bridge/causeway and now a whole bunch of people are trying to cut through side streets versus taking the MNDOT-approved detours, which are on parallel freeways miles away.

      What's funny is that the city they're driving through, Edina, is probably the wealthiest one in the whole state and the residents are MELTING DOWN over the cut-through traffic. They're organizing vigilante slow traffic, the city has been cracking down hard on traffic violations and has put up all manner of "calming" obstructions to discourage people.

      It's so hard to not link their economic privilege with their apparent sense of geographic privilege. I think they believe they ARE living in a gated community and somebody left the gate open.

    • Re:Public roads? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by AthanasiusKircher ( 1333179 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @07:06PM (#53988855)

      Are the roads paid for by public taxes? They're public roads.

      Well, for one, commuters frequently are cutting through roads which aren't in their own community. So, unless it's a state road or something, they may not be paying taxes for these roads.

      Second, neighborhoods are often planned and zoned based on assumed traffic patterns. For example, they may choose to put a school or tight residential areas farther away from heavy traffic commuter highways -- for safety reasons. If you suddenly start routing rush-hour traffic through there, it can create hazards with pedestrians, driveways, kids playing, etc.

      The problem isn't new, though -- and many towns and cities even have policies on the books to deal with it. The difference is that in years past traffic patterns would change over years or decades, whereas now they can be altered quite suddenly with a map app's algorithm. Long before stuff like Waze, the city I used to live in had a series of progressive restrictions it would make on streets that exceeded their designed traffic load for the zoning, etc.

      They'd put in more one-way streets to make it more difficult to navigate the area without a lot of turns, then introduce things like raised crossings to slow people down (and help point out places where pedestrians might be very common), eventually they'd covert some streets to cul-de-sacs, and in a worst case scenario might even put a mid-block barrier to stop traffic going through entirely.

      These weren't actions undertaken by citizens -- this was official stuff in the municipal code of the city, authorized by the city's governing council, elected by the city's taxpayers who paid for the city's road maintenance. If you're a commuter who doesn't like those policies... drive on somebody else's "public roads."

      • By the way, the actions I mentioned were obviously things done only after "normal" traffic control mechanisms (stop signs, traffic lights, speed zones, etc.) failed to decrease traffic volume.
    • Are the roads paid for by public taxes? They're public roads. I used to do this all the time with the old paper maps. Looks like a road stoppage? Find a parallel city or state road. Follow the speed limits and other rules of the road and you're legally allowed to drive on them.

      Want a gated community with private roads? Pay to live in one.

      There are legitimate reasons not to want high volumes of traffic cutting through neighbourhoods. That's why many new subdivisions are unnavigable, so people can't use them as short-cuts.

      I don't like the idea of an app expediting the tragedy of the commons.

    • by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
      Typically most of the road maintenance comes from local taxes meaning those who actually live or work in that area. Plus residential neighborhoods are typically not designed to be used as highway bypass routes. I understand the need to occasionally disperse grid locked traffic on the side roads but it just seems to me that the more people who use Waze (or an equivalent) the less of a benefit everyone will get.

      I think the local residents have a valid reason to be upset. Best thing they can do is put a s
  • by davidwr ( 791652 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:31PM (#53988525) Homepage Journal

    but Veloso is worried the changes may simply reroute commuters into other neighborhoods.

    Rerouting traffic to the best available route is a feature, not a bug. Seriously, it's a feature. Don't mess with it.

    If you really don't want people cutting through neighborhoods during rush hour, then put up temporary traffic-flow restrictions in ALL neighborhoods during those hours and make sure Waze, Google, etc. know about them.

    • but Veloso is worried the changes may simply reroute commuters into other neighborhoods.

      Rerouting traffic to the best available route is a feature, not a bug. Seriously, it's a feature. Don't mess with it.

      If you really don't want people cutting through neighborhoods during rush hour, then put up temporary traffic-flow restrictions in ALL neighborhoods during those hours and make sure Waze, Google, etc. know about them.

      But is it legal for a city to restrict public roads like that? I think there would be some legal road blocks with that concept(pun intended).

      Ultimately, it comes down to needing a better design of city infrastructure to combat the use of non-highway routes if they want to prevent that from happening.

      Either that or we change the business-day concept in a way where traffic isn't at a standstill at key hours in the morning and afternoon.

      • by AthanasiusKircher ( 1333179 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @07:26PM (#53989003)

        But is it legal for a city to restrict public roads like that? I think there would be some legal road blocks with that concept(pun intended).

        Yes, it is legal for a city to do such things, particularly in the name of public safety. Residential areas are frequently zoned, parcelled, and otherwise designed with an expected traffic volume. Increase that volume significantly with a bunch of frantic rush-hour drivers, and suddenly your school is no longer located on a "safe" street, and hazards are created by pedestrians, frequent driveways, kids playing, etc.

        Controlling traffic on streets to try to keep it to its designed volume for safety reasons is no different from prohibiting you from parking near an intersection or next to a fire hydrant or whatever on a "public road," also in the name of safety.

    • If you really don't want people cutting through neighborhoods during rush hour, then put up temporary traffic-flow restrictions in ALL neighborhoods during those hours and make sure Waze, Google, etc. know about them.

      So basically the city needs to spend ass loads of money because people are dickheads. I do believe that this is why we can't have nice things.

      • by Ksevio ( 865461 )
        I don't think signs with time restrictions cost that much...
      • So basically the city needs to spend ass loads of money because people are dickheads.

        It's called social engineering. Want people to use light rail to get to work? Build mixed developments — stores and high density housing — around each light rail station, providing the incentives for people to live closer to a station and take the light rail to work.

  • Bandaid (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:32PM (#53988543) Journal
    This is a bandaid on the much deeper problem. Inadequate highway infrastructure. Fix the root cause, not the symptom.
    • This is a bandaid on the much deeper problem. Inadequate highway infrastructure. Fix the root cause, not the symptom.

      Not every congested location has space to add new freeway lanes (or new freeways). Take I-5 through downtown Seattle sometime, then figure out where you'd put the new "infrastructure".

      • This is a bandaid on the much deeper problem. Inadequate highway infrastructure. Fix the root cause, not the symptom.

        Not every congested location has space to add new freeway lanes (or new freeways). Take I-5 through downtown Seattle sometime, then figure out where you'd put the new "infrastructure".

        Never been to Seattle, but every other major city has pretty much the same answer. Build another layer above.

        Don't have the funds in the city coffer and can't stomach the tax hike for fear of citizen revolt? Fine. Make the next layer a toll road to pay for it. People hate traffic and are impatient enough these days they'll pay, believe me.

      • by boskone ( 234014 )

        bad example. the transportation "planners" in Seattle, a region growing by leaps and bounds, is REDUCING freeway capacity by removing the 6 lane Alaskan Way Viaduct and REMOVING the two express lanes across I90 to put choo choo trains on them in a region that already has some of the worst gridlock in country.

        • Why are you terrified of light rail? Bad childhood experience with Thomas the tank engine?

        • You do realize that the "choo choo trains" can transport more people than a freeway, because they hold hundreds of people per vehicle rather than the typical 1 person in a car on the freeway?

      • No. For densly populated areas, adequate infrastructure would be better public transport. ("better" in terms of capacity, price and safety)

    • by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
      Inadequate mass transportation infrastructure.

      I'm in Ohio, I'd love to have a rail line installed in the median of all our interstates that connect the main cities with stops along the way.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:39PM (#53988611)

    Q: How does water get where it's going?

    A: Any way it has to.

    Commuters and drivers are like water. Put up a barrier and the "water" will adapt, and rather faster than a creaky bureaucracy can keep up.

  • When a freeway is congested, good old-fashioned Supply & Demand says it's because the price is below market equilibrium. That's easy to fix, and as a bonus it provides a revenue source to pay for freeways that's less regressive than the sales tax.

    • When a freeway is congested, good old-fashioned Supply & Demand says it's because the price is below market equilibrium. That's easy to fix, and as a bonus it provides a revenue source to pay for freeways that's less regressive than the sales tax.

      Won't that just push more people onto the side streets? Besides, it might even be more regressive as a lot of working poor do have jobs that require a lot of driving to get to them.

      • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

        Won't that just push more people onto the side streets?

        More than Waze already does?

        Besides, it might even be more regressive as a lot of working poor do have jobs that require a lot of driving to get to them.

        If they can't afford to get to work, their employers will have to pay more if they want their toilets cleaned and their grass cut.

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      People need to work in order to live, and they need to commute in order to work. At one point you stop taxing "convenience" and are in fact taxing survival. Governments are parasitic by nature but it's never in the parasite's best interest to kill the host. You might tell yourself you're real smart when you start thinking about the inelasticity of demand in this case and how wonderful a tax would be. Then you wonder why the mob with pitchforks and torches is battering down the town hall door. Fix the probl
  • How they dare! City mayors must send them back to the traffic jams where they belong!

  • by wickerprints ( 1094741 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:48PM (#53988701)

    The real root of the problem is that people are either unwilling or unable to live within a short distance to their workplace. Many large cities were not designed to handle the volume of commuters that we have had for at least 20 years. People live in the suburbs (for a variety of reasons; some due to economics, others due to a desire to live in areas with lower population density), and commute to the city centers to work. This was okay when suburban sprawl was not as extreme as it is now. In the Bay Area, people can't afford to live close to work due to the insane real estate market. And they don't want to live in shoebox apartments, either.

    The problem can only be solved by reducing the need for people to commute. There are a lot of ways to do this:

    1. Encourage employees to work remotely where possible.
    2. Decrease the cost of living in the city center or areas close to work.
    3. Provide financial incentives for employees to live near their job site.
    4. Allow more flexible working hours so that traffic volume can be distributed over a longer period of time.
    5. Self-driving cars have the potential to reduce accidents and increase traffic flow efficiency.

    Notice I did not include public transit. Public transit is only good for people who already live sufficiently close or do not need the flexibility of traveling by car. In Los Angeles, public transit is a complete joke. To commute from a suburb to downtown can take over 90 minutes, whereas driving by car--even in traffic--is at least 30 minutes faster, simply because train frequencies and network densities are too low. Sure, it's great if you only need to travel two or three stations and the trains run every five minutes...but for the vast majority of commuters this is not realistic. Commuters want and need to drive cars.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 06, 2017 @06:54PM (#53988757)

    As an expat who has lived all over the planet, the best organized cities make it really hard to drive *through* neighborhoods by which a neighborhood is maybe one 8x8 block region divided from other similar neighborhoods by a main artery road.

    Germany is perhaps the best at this city planning skill. One learns fast to never try to drive *through* such a neighorhood block because you will go mad. Dead end obstacles, trees planted in the middle of the road that you must slooooow down for, super narrow roads (despite wide sidewalks and ample parking), and raised platforms at crosswalks(think of a 5 yard thick speed bump) make going around them the only sensible choice.

    They do it because they believe if cars are going fast enough to kill children in small neighborhoods, it is a street design problem so they are often solving high traffic rates by intentionally making it impossible to drive fast with the above car thwarting techniques. Side effect is that waze is moot here and neighborhoods all remain quiet and safe.

    Also makes it so they have no police enforcing speed limits in such neighborhoods. The streets are made super narrow and convoluted exactly to the degree necessary to keep you at or below the intended speed limit. The attitude is also something like "If you dont like it, then get on public transit" , which by the way is also fantastic in Germany.

    Traffic and speeding are both just engineering problems waiting to be fixed if you see it clearly.

  • Easiest way to get control back to the traffic planners would be to provide waze with highly dynamic information where traffic planners would like to send the cars to to minimize congestion. And if traffic planners would like them to be stuuck in a traffic jam they should look up their job description or for other jobs.

  • where there aren't any HOAs/housewives that can take time out of their day to lobby city councils. It's amazing the difference in public service between well-to-do neighborhoods and the poor ones.
  • Wait (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Monday March 06, 2017 @07:10PM (#53988879)
    So town planners are mad that people avoid sitting in traffic and want to find a way to force people to sit in traffic? I didn't realize that generating traffic jams was the actual goal of the transportation people.
  • How come every major new technical commercial venture we talk about seems to crap all over a lot of people in some way?
  • Charge for crossing certain points during peak hours, give locals a transponder to wave the fee. It's basic supply and demand.

  • by stevew ( 4845 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @07:55PM (#53989237) Journal

    I happen to live exactly within the affected neighborhood. Last week we had the first of what we're calling "Car-Magedon" occur here. Cal Trans in their infinite lack of wisdom chose to fix a large pot-hole in the 680 Freeway right as rush hour was starting block 2 of 4 lanes that leaves the Silicon Valley. This is the major artery that everyone is talking about in the article. Anyway - traffic was SO BAD that it took me 15 minutes to move 5 houses from the corner to get into my driveway. I snuck in to the traffic having luckily met up with my wife who had been waiting on our street for 45 minutes inching her way to our house - she let me cut in front of her! We had a linear parking lot in front of our house for around 4 hours.

    As it goes now - we are seeing mile long lines queueing up to get on the 680 before it goes through the hills at the last couple of on-ramps. That is a nightly occurrence.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Monday March 06, 2017 @10:32PM (#53990043)

    I take instructions Waz gives me with a grain of salt these days, because something tricky it's telling you to do might give you an extra MINUTE vs. just stating on the highway... also Wze traffic understanding is inherently a little delayed. So now when I think about Waze detours I look carefully at what ahead is triggering going around - if it's an accident more than 30 minutes old, that's probably gone and it will be better to stay on. If rush hour is winding down, the predictions of heavy traffic may evaporate. Conversely, If rush hour had just started the rosy prediction about how awesome the freeway will be is probably wrong.

    Also anymore if I do decide to take the Waze side street detour, I take a side street parallel to the one Waze suggests - because after all Waze is sending a lot of people down that street and increasing traffic more than it knows!

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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