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Transportation United States

Has the Love Affair With Driving Gotten Stuck in Traffic? (washingtonpost.com) 332

America's love affair with the automobile and those dreams of roaring off on open highways are on the wane as the nation grapples with too much stop-and-go traffic and too many hours spent behind the steering wheel. From a report: Those findings are contained in a report to be released Thursday by Arity, a technology research spinoff created two years ago by Allstate Insurance. Arity underscored the growing disillusionment by using an illustration: Americans, on average, spend more time in their cars -- mostly driving to and from work -- than they receive in vacation time. Arity researchers said most people average 321 hours in the car each year and get 120 hours of vacation [Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; an alternative source was not immediately available.]. "To me, that really crystallizes the issue," said Lisa Jillson, who leads Arity's research and design department. "I get a certain amount of vacation time, and I spend almost three times that in my car just getting back and forth to a job."

Her research showed a notable difference between millennials and baby boomers. Unhappiness with driving becomes more pronounced, with 59 percent of millennials saying they'd "rather spend time doing more productive tasks than driving," while only 45 percent of baby boomers make that same statement.

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Has the Love Affair With Driving Gotten Stuck in Traffic?

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  • I've been over driving for years. I commute about an hour each way, wasting 2 hours of my life each day, or 2/16 of my woke life. I'm actively trying to move to a place where I don't have to waste hours sitting in a car every day.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      I'm in my late 30's and never made a drivers license, and one of my reasons is that driving a car just to get from X to Y, especially when done daily for commute, is a waste of time. Using public transportation I am free to make use of the time as I see fit. It's also healthier, because there's always some walking involved to move to the stations.
      Of course I can afford that, living in an area of Europe that is very well connected with public transportation, I really feel like owning a car is unnecessary. I

      • by DogDude ( 805747 )
        I agree with you 100%. I'm actively trying to move from the US to Europe primarily for this reason.
        • I agree with you 100%. I'm actively trying to move from the US to Europe primarily for this reason.

          I lived in Europe for almost 10 years, but not for this reason. Public transit in Germany, where I lived, actually sucks. Don't get me wrong, it's great compared to the U.S., but that's not saying much. Trains were way overpriced, almost always overfilled, and often cancelled. Local transit was a bus service that took almost an hour to go from work to home, even though a direct route would be 10 km, because the only bus took a very circuitous route to where I lived. I started riding a bike to work instead,

      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        I'm in my late 30's and never made a drivers license

        I take it you don't have kids? Even the last buddy of mine who never got his license finally succumbed at age 30 because with three kids the schedule just didn't add up anymore, even though his wife drove. I've taken public transport to work more years than I've driven and not always owned one either, but being stuck without the possibility to borrow/share/rent/lease one and depend on taxis and public transport for everything that would be terrible. I mean I could obviously manage like if I for some medical

  • It doesn't help that there's now a stop light or roundabout at nearly every intersection that gets more than 20 cars a day. For example, the city I live in put a stop light IN THE MIDDLE OF A STEEP HILL because there's a small factory on the, otherwise completely empty, side street. So even though there's only cross traffic for about an hour each day, the light continues all day. I'm just waiting for this winter when someone goes sliding through the light and T-bones someone. I hope both parties sue the cit
    • we spent a few hundred on a sensor that only trips if a car pulls up. Your city's being cheap. The sensors work and work well. They're not even that expensive.
      • Please let me know where these sensors are that work well. Most of them I've dealt with change the light for nobody and then fail to detect cars. I can't tell you how many red lights I've sat through unnecessarily waiting for a left turn arrow that no one was waiting for...

    • A big reason for this is because cities don't want to foot the bill for installing a light at a street for a new development. So they frequently negotiate for the developer to pay for purchasing and installing the traffic signal at the street (it becomes part of the cost for the development project). The developer does so but times the light to be most favorable for people going to/from their development project, to the detriment of through-traffic. So if they install a light for a new road leading to a
  • But commuting sucks. It just becomes a routine you have to do like brushing your teeth and taking out the garbage. Heavy traffic of course just makes it worse. Sadly, as good as public transport can be for a lot of reasons, it's not much fun either and in many cases won't save you any time.

    I now live 10 minutes walk to the office and it still kind of sucks when it's very cold and/or rainy. On those days I can just stay in and work from home though :D

    • by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:11PM (#57613376)
      Sadly, as good as public transport can be for a lot of reasons, it's not much fun either and in many cases won't save you any time.

      I can't do anything else while I'm driving. I can do all sorts of stuff (work, relax, etc.) while on public transit.
      • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

        Still, if the traffic sets you back 1 hour, but public transit sets you back 2.5 hours, most people will drive. There's simply not enough hours in the day to devote 5 hours of it to the commute.

      • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:22PM (#57613470) Journal
        Even here in the Netherlands, with a very dense and well managed public transport network versus congested roads, commuting by car is still faster than public transport in many cases, and a lot of people prefer to spend less time commuting over taking longer but being able to work or read. Public transport is great when you have an efficient single leg journey with a short-ish distance to walk or cycle at either end. But it starts to suck hard once you have to change lines: the chance of missing your connection adds stress to the journey. Even worse when you're on a crowded train: good luck working, relaxing or even just reading a book in that case.

        There's a psychological aspect to it as well. As soon as you get in your car, the workday's done in your mind. With public transport, the day ends only when you're at your front door.
      • And in my city, you'll have plenty of time to do those other things, because the transit system assumes all trips are going downtown, so it takes 3x as long to get where you are actually going than if you just drive.

        I can do all that stuff you mention with the time I save by not using the shitty transit system here.

        • by sconeu ( 64226 )

          Let me guess. You live in Los Angeles. That's one of my beefs with the transit system here.

          • Could also be Atlanta. It doesn't help that there is no unified regional transit system (though that is in the works). But if you want to go from suburb to suburb, figure on it taking half a day if it can even be done at all.

  • It takes about 15 minutes to work (I have to drop off the kid) and 10 minutes home, so about 25 minutes per day * days per week * 50 weeks ~ 105hours. So not quite.

    On the plus side my car is nearly 50 years old, stick shift, and fun as heck to drive. So the drive can be by the seat of your pants which can be pretty enjoyable. There is about a three mile stretch where the road curves back and forth several times that most people don't like to take. That stretch alone is a joy to take at 10-15 mph above
    • Re:Not all (Score:4, Interesting)

      by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:20PM (#57613456) Homepage Journal

      On the plus side my car is nearly 50 years old, stick shift, and fun as heck to drive. So the drive can be by the seat of your pants which can be pretty enjoyable. There is about a three mile stretch where the road curves back and forth several times that most people don't like to take. That stretch alone is a joy to take at 10-15 mph above the speed limit. On the way home there is about a 1 1/2 mile street that is straight as an arrow with no lights or stop signs and very little traffic, ie pure fun to rake the shifter through.

      Sadly, for some reason, a lot of people, particularly the younger ones, don't think of a car as something that can be 'fun' or 'exciting'...it is merely a commodity, or necessary evil to get from A->B.

      Not me...I've owned nothing but 2 seat sports cars all my life...I worked and saved before HS so I could get one in HS, and have saved and traded up since then (kinda like I did with my stereo)....

      I too love to hit the gas and down/up shift on stretches of road when no one is around.

      But sadly, not as many people appreciate that anymore.

      Hell, it is getting nigh impossible to find a new car with a manual transmission anymore.

      • by bob4u2c ( 73467 )
        It is getting hard to find old ones as well. Those who like stick don't want to give them up.

        Like I've told my wife, if I wreck my car I'll just fix. If I total the car, I'll take what I can from mine, transplant to a new less wrecked car and drive that. I'm either giving my car to my kids or dying in it.
      • A manual-gearbox used to perform better, get better gas mileage cost less and be more reliable. All of this has changed with modern automatic transmissions. About the only reason left for manual is the "fun factor," which is only really fun in long stretches of empty road, stuck in traffic it just adds to the stress
    • Re:Not all (Score:4, Insightful)

      by R3d M3rcury ( 871886 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:59PM (#57613736) Journal

      It is an interesting point...

      I used to hate driving. But after saying, "Y'know, if I'm going to spend an hour-and-a-half a day in my car, five days per week, I'm going to get a car that I don't mind being in." So I went and bought a nice car. And I didn't hate driving anymore.

      There are plenty of people who look at a car as a necessary evil--"I just need something that will get me from Point A to Point B." They buy that and then they complain that it isn't comfortable to drive for two hours. Well, maybe you should have included that in your requirements.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:13PM (#57613386)
    I didn't have one in high school. By the time I did it was an expensive nuisance and constant source of stress mostly used to get me to work.

    That said if I had one in high school (along with the increase in social standing that comes with one) my opinion would probably be very different.

    Meanwhile I drive home against traffic each day and it's terrifying to me how bad things are. Traffic will be backed up several miles on surface streets. Freeways are at least a half mile. Meanwhile all those cars are spewing toxins and we're wasting gas and getting into wars we can't afford to feed our hungry engines.

    Why do we live like this?
    • Why do we live like this?

      If you have viable alternatives, I'm sure we'd all love to hear them.

      • It's one of those questions I always ask people: "Have you looked into alternatives? Tried them out?"

        Many times, using the car is a path of least resistance. "Yes, I could take the bus or the train and maybe bike the rest of the way, but that just seems like too much work and, in the mornings, I just don't want that hassle."

        There's also the expense. "I have a $400 a month car payment and you want me to spend $100 a month on bus/train fare just to do the same thing I could do with my car?"

        My roommate was

        • I used to live in a situation where I had a 30-45 minute commute to work by car. I lived right next to a bus stop and my office had a bus stop next to it. The estimated time for a public transit trip from my home to work was over 2-1/2 hours. This is metro Atlanta and unless your commute is within the city or from the suburbs to the city, good luck. I lived in one suburb and worked in another and the two transit systems were only connected downtown.

          Now I live out in the cow fields and have a 30ish minute co

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by PPH ( 736903 )

      Why do we live like this?

      Because owning your own flexible mode of transportation gives you the option of bypassing all of the crappy businesses that transit-bound people are stuck with. I don't mind taking the bus or riding a bike. But once the local stores figure that they have a significant captive market in their little urban villages, their prices go up and their quality goes down. While all the carless people are stuck shopping within a raduis dictated by how far they are willing to lug groceries on a bus, I'll just jump in my

      • On the other hand, you probably go shopping for groceries once a week at best and have to buy stuff that can be stored for a long time. I just use a shop on my way and go almost every day there so my groceries are actually fresh.

        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          On the other hand, you probably go shopping for groceries once a week at best

          Maybe for major re-stocking at the local Costco. But I do stop by and pick up fresh fruit and whatnot almost every day. With a car, it's a 10 minute side trip. Too many people living in urban villages have no such option. It's junk food at the corner bodega or hours on the bus (at which point it's not really 'fresh') . The USA doesn't have traditions like a neighborhood bakery or butcher. We do have some nice farm fruit stands. But these are usually out of town a ways (good luck without a car). The bodega

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by El Cubano ( 631386 )

      Why do we live like this?

      Because, on the whole, people like cars and governments like (gas) tax revenue.

      Public transit takes both of those things away. Electric cars help with the pollution, but costs government the gas tax revenues, hence the sometimes "innovative" proposals you are starting to hear about how to tax electric car owners for their utilization of road infrastructure.

      Still, in practically every city, outside of the places where there is simply no possible way to increase road capacity, people will prefer increased ro

      • Re:I hate cars (Score:4, Informative)

        by dasunt ( 249686 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @04:32PM (#57614222)

        governments like (gas) tax revenue.

        Gas tax comes nowhere near to paying for the cost of building and maintaining our streets and roads.

      • Re:I hate cars (Score:4, Insightful)

        by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot@worf.ERDOSnet minus math_god> on Thursday November 08, 2018 @04:53PM (#57614340)

        Why do we live like this?

        Because, on the whole, people like cars and governments like (gas) tax revenue.

        Public transit takes both of those things away. Electric cars help with the pollution, but costs government the gas tax revenues, hence the sometimes "innovative" proposals you are starting to hear about how to tax electric car owners for their utilization of road infrastructure.

        Still, in practically every city, outside of the places where there is simply no possible way to increase road capacity, people will prefer increased road capacity to any public transport solution.

        Actually, you can thank General Motors for the love of cars.

        Because back in the early 20th century, public transit in North America was actually.... extremely good. In any town or city, bit or small, you could get around using public transit. between horse drawn carriages to street cars it was a completely normal way to travel. Not just New York, or San Francisco, but any twon in any state.

        Of course, the Model T brought cars into the mix, but not by much - they were relatively finicky things and you still had to contend with a lot of pedestrian traffic everywhere.

        What replaced the street car was buses, which were considered high tech and advanced (since they didn't require rails). This did lead to the failure of many streetcar companies, since people flocked the novel bus that could go more places (and did) over the street car.

        General Motors came along and basically decided to buy out all the failing street car companies. They didn't replace them, just bought them up, shut them down and left it as things were. Advertised the heck out of cars giving freedom (we're still talking early 20th century here) and there you go. After the second world war, the car became the status symbol and everyone bought into it, the interstate system was developed and so on. Plus, cities spread out into suburbs designed for cars and you end up with what we have today.

        Hard to imagine, but at one time, the USA had a better public transportation system than Europe. Even today it still doesn't quite match what we had back then.

        American car culture was literally developed from advertising - just like how weddings were transformed by a few De Beers ads insisting you must have a diamond ring.

    • by King_TJ ( 85913 )

      I finally invested in a used Tesla, so I don't worry about buying gasoline anymore.

      There are actually a lot of electric car options out there now, even on the used market, so you can no longer really say they're "un-affordable". I mean, not unless your budget only includes beater cars under $2,000 or something.

      I regularly see electric Smart4Two cars for sale, going for as little as $6,000-ish each, often with low mileage. If you're single and just need a vehicle for a work commute, it'll get the job done,

    • "Why do we live like this?" Because it results in the objectively amazing, easy, and technologically advanced lives we now live. Though everyone likes to bitch and whine about how bad things are, that's just human's pessimistic brains, we were built through evolution to think in terms of worst case (for good reason). Objectively the average person now lives far better than a king of not even one hundred years ago, and it's steadily getting better too.

      I remember as a kid, only rich people went to Hawaii
  • I've lived close to and far from work over the years. Most recently I moved from a 15 minute in town commute to a 45 minute commute. I'm finding that the 45 minute commute is pretty productive. I think about work and home things, it lets me wind down and get ideas. I'll either make a spoken note or just remember what I want to do to make improvements to whatever I'm doing be it home or work related. I almost never have any music, pod cast, or books on tape going as a quiet commute is my desire. The short co

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • This is where autonomous cars will help. When you can get work done as part of your commute it becomes less of a hassle. This is why rich people have drivers, so they can be conducting business and the driver has no incentive to get worked up about traffic as it's their job and they get paid no matter what traffic is doing.

    While is may be practical for some people to pick up a cheap rental near work to live and work in during the week, it's not a practical solution for people who have families. And it req

  • on their hands? I mean, worst case their kids are grown up and the work. A lot are just plain retired. Of course they don't mind spending time in a car the way a Millennial working two jobs and taking care of the kids does.
  • The problem is city design as well as the concept of a work day is 9 to 5.

    We cluster so much similar types of work in a concentrated location and dictate that it all starts and ends at the same hour.

    Convince your employer to start an hour later or earlier and you will see a major difference.

    • Convince your employer to start an hour later or earlier and you will see a major difference.

      I took your idea and wanted to improve upon it. However, my boss was not amused when I asked that we change our work hours from 08:00-to-17:00 to 21:00-to-06:00.

  • by Uncle_Meataxe ( 702474 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:27PM (#57613508)

    ... because I'm not. I've been commuting by bicycle for the last 20 years. It's like being on vacation while getting to work -- the best part of my day! It's a bit over 20 miles (33 km) each way so I'm on the bike for about two hours/day. What's great is that I get two hours of workout in per day for essentially one hour of time (it takes 30 minutes to drive each way). The thing most motorist don't understand is riding a bike is often faster than driving. On surface streets, it's almost always faster to ride a bike during commute hours. On average, cars go about 13 mph (21 kph) in cities, which is a very easy speed to ride a bike. Yeah, I live in California, but I've commuted year 'round in Michigan too, so there...

    • That's exactly what I do too. After switching to commuting by bike (8 miles each way), I can never go back to driving to work. If the weather is especially nasty, I'll take public transportation or telework.

      Plus sides include getting my exercise in for the day on my way to/from work, I'm super relaxed and more productive at work, I'm not putting miles on my car...

      I suppose I'm lucky to live in the reasonably dense mid-Atlantic with plenty of biking lanes and paths. I grew up in Indianapolis and cou
  • by TigerPlish ( 174064 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:30PM (#57613528)

    It was 1.5 hours from my house to the shop in Calle Ocho. Through the worst of miami. 2nd gear crawling most of the time.

    Then I got a better job, closer to home. I actually get to enjoy my car now. I floor the first 3 gears then lazy-shift up the last 3. Nice, flowing traffic -- fast, mind you, but easy.

    There's those who love to drive, and those who hate driving and hate cars. Guess who there's more of. Yeah. This is why cars are maybe 5% of the cars out there, and the rest are lumbering land-cows called "SUVs" and "Crossovers."

    And of those 5%, maybe 1% of those are sports car. What the hell happened? What's with all the land cows?

    Leave the driving to those who love cars. The rest of you, for all that is holy, get your self-driving podmobiles already!

    • The "land cows" have always been there. Before SUVs and crossovers, Americans bought Oldsmobile station wagons with fake wood siding and land barges like the Ford LTD. And then mooooomyvans like the Dodge Caravan...

    • by dj245 ( 732906 )

      There's those who love to drive, and those who hate driving and hate cars. Guess who there's more of. Yeah. This is why cars are maybe 5% of the cars out there, and the rest are lumbering land-cows called "SUVs" and "Crossovers."

      And of those 5%, maybe 1% of those are sports car. What the hell happened? What's with all the land cows?

      I've owned small cars, sport sedans, motorcycles, and hatchbacks all my life. I looked down upon large vehicles as unnecessary. Until last month when I started a concrete business and had to trade up for a truck. While I love the cornering of a small car and shuffling through the gears of a manual transmission, it just doesn't make sense in some places. My knee was in constant pain when I had a manual transmission Miata in Houston. If I had gotten into any accident in my CRX I would have probably been

  • by BrendaEM ( 871664 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:35PM (#57613562) Homepage
    America has written it's laws like everyone is born with a SUV strapped to their ass.
    If you make our transportation systems safer for pedestrians, bicyclists, motorcyclists, and scooterists, it will cut down traffic, and reduce our dependence on oil.

    Scooters, motorcycles, and mopeds help reduce traffic in other countries.

    (Some scooters get 92MPG, many motorcycles get 64MPG.)
    • Some scooters get 92MPG

      That'd be pretty mediocre! My 125cc Honda gets >120 MPG. It won't cut it for freeway driving, but it'll get up to 45-50mph without too much struggling.

  • The average American drives 13,476 miles each year [carinsurance.com]. If they're spending 321 hours in their car each year, that works out to an average speed of 42 MPH. That's hardly bogged down by traffic, especially if you factor in time spent on local streets. I average about 20-25 MPH on local roads (after accounting for red lights). So if you figure half my commute time is on local streets, half on the highway, then I'm averaging 61.5 MPH on the highway.

    The "problem" isn't traffic. It's suburbanization and high
  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:46PM (#57613644)
    Driving is the means, not the end. The love affair was not with the automobile, but with getting out and exploring new places.
    • by geek ( 5680 )

      Spoken like someone thats never driven a corvette. Floor one of those fuckers down the freeway some day and then tell me its about the destination because when I'm behind the wheel of one of those SOB's I really dont give to shits where I am going.

  • by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:52PM (#57613692)

    Her research showed a notable difference between millennials and baby boomers.

    You do know there's a whole generation in between Boomers and Millennials right? A lot of Boomers are retired now, so if this research is being done on commuters, the people you are calling "Baby Boomers" are probably Generation X.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Her research showed a notable difference between millennials and baby boomers.

      You do know there's a whole generation in between Boomers and Millennials right? A lot of Boomers are retired now, so if this research is being done on commuters, the people you are calling "Baby Boomers" are probably Generation X.

      These studies always forget that we exist, only Boomers and Millennials matter to them. We're the ones always going "well nobody asked me" whenever we see these studies and poll results.

    • In all "serious" studies, it's Millenials VS !Millenials

  • by magzteel ( 5013587 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @02:53PM (#57613704)

    "Our study shows average_vacation_time average_commute_time".

    How is this significant? Does anyone commuting think like this? I just view commuting as part of a typical work day.

    It should come to no ones surprise that my vacation_days my_work_days.

    • ugh, Why does a LESS_THAN symbol disappear?

      "Our study shows average_vacation_time IS_LESS_THAN average_commute_time".

      How is this significant? Does anyone commuting think like this? I just view commuting as part of a typical work day.

      It should come to no ones surprise that my vacation_days IS_LESS_THAN my_work_days.

  • 120 hours of PTO (can't really call it vacation, since what used to be 5 sick/personal days are now lumped into it, so really about 80 hours of vacation). Plus 80 holidays.

    Yes, my life sucks....

  • Okay, yeah, we're in cars. You know what we're also doing? Getting utility out of those cars by being able to live further away from dense cities while commuting into them for our high-paying jobs.

    People wouldn't sit in traffic unless they had to? No shit. People also tend to work in sweatshops because they're _better paying than every other job_ in their town.

    I agree that it's a good amount of perspective that we get less vacation than we drive to work in terms of hours to convoy how long we really spend g

  • I've always loved a good cross-country drive, and I still do. But to drive to work every day? No thanks. I get to work from home, so I don't have to deal with rush-hour local traffic (Redmond/Seattle) thank $DEITY - If I had to commute to the office every day, I'd have to kill somebody.
  • I love driving, and I consider it a hobby as well as essential transportation. I grew up in a big city but I no longer live in one, so there are no traffic jams here, ever. the system functions as intended and driving is a pleasure. I have a car, a truck and a travel trailer. I use the car when I'm not hauling things - 34 MPG and fast. The diesel truck gets used when hauling or towing.

    There is a rather large disconnect between the city experience and the country experience. Here it's a central part

  • I know that the prevailing sentiment here is traffic, commuting, and why you need to commute and how bad it all is. I commuted at least 25 miles one way my entire working life, and I enjoyed it. Being in my car, alone, driving, was the most pleasant and least stressful part of the day. I could listen to the radio--if I wanted to--or I could keep it off. There was no one else making extra noise, no constant pestering for attention, no distractions except other traffic, which was more or less an auto-pilot ki

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