quote:
To counter 62's ball gargling of Denver:
A U.S. census report on commuting for 2013 estimated how residents in the Denver area (excluding Boulder) traveled to work and how long it took, on average:
By car: 75.4 percent (26 minutes).
By carpool: 8.9 percent (29 minutes).
By public transit: 4.4 percent (47 minutes). Surveys by the Downtown Denver Partnership, while not scientific, suggest that far more downtown workers roughly 40 percent in the 2015 survey commute most days using public transit.
Another way: 11.3 percent (no time given).
How much taxpayer money on glorious mass transit projects is justified to serve 4.4% percent of commuters to give them the pleasure of spending an extra 20 minutes on their commute?
Denver Commutes Getting Worse
Plenty of other articles out there about light rail not reducing commute times, not reducing the number of cars on the road and having no measurable affect on improving pollution.
Another good article that light rail may not be the answer
Mentions a lot of things from other posters above re: tele-commuting, Uber Lyft, density, centralized business districts etc
Well damn I just had my responses typed up, but accidentally hit esc which closed the window.
In a nutshell:
your quote says 40% of downtown workers.. that's exactly my point. Transit is for a specific set of people, not everybody. Would houston traffic improve if 40% of downtown workers were off the road? Enough said.
Flaw in the article; Denver light rails stop at DU, with 12k students, and auroria campus which houses 3 colleges and probably 30k+ students. That is a lot of people that ride that probably aren't counted in this article's definition of 'commuter'. My cousin goes to CU Denver and rides the rail. He's one of thousands. Those are cars off the road. You can't argue that.
Another slight flaw, in 2013, only 2 rails existed, both going south. By the end of this year, 4 more will have opened, adding service to the west side, nw side, se side, and in 2018, the ne side.
Denver commute times are getting worse no doubt, because everyone like myself is moving in droves here. Hopefully, an extensive rail system can help alleviate it and give people options in the far future. Denver also doesn't seem to just continually made freeways wider, opting to find other options I guess, so that adds to the worsening commute times when you couple it with high numbers of people moving here. I-70 is two lanes much of the way through denver, including right by downtown.
No one ever says rail is quicker than driving. That's not the point. You take cars off the road, and you remove the rider from stressful traffic to read, work, music, sleep, etc. And remove chance of a wreck. Also, I've had a 2 hour commute after getting stuck at work in a blizzard. a rail along 290 would no doubt be quicker than the 80 minutes it takes to get far out. So there are situations where rail would be quicker.
And 'not reducing cars on the road'.. This is very easy to explain; yes it is reducing cars on the road, but those cars are replaced by new additional cars of people moving here, so it appears as though the rail didn't reduce the number. Had the rail not been there, there would have been a large increase of cars of the road.
I'd love to telecommute everday. I did several days a week for several years here, but I've changed jobs and it's not my decision, nor is it most people's decision.
At the end of the day, you can sit there from 1000 miles away and have your opinions, but I see with my own eyes every day trains on the side of I25 with a whole lot of heads inside. Hands down, that means there are less cars on the road, making my commute quicker.