A Region Deep in Crisis
The facts speak for themselves:
- Traffic congestion in the L.A.-Long Beach region costs businesses & residents more than $10.7 billion annually
- For every dollar of capital or operating investment in transportation projects, three dollars in increased retail sales are created along the corridor
- The average driver here wastes 72 hours per year stuck in traffic–three whole days!
- For a lawyer who bills even $300/hr, that time is valued at more than $21,000
- A staffer who makes $25/hr could value his time lost as almost of $2,000
- 10% of gasoline is wasted regionally due to traffic – equivalent to a $5-$10 tax on every fill up!
- Due to population growth, L.A. will add the equivalent of two cities of Chicago by the 2030’s
- Traffic is expected to slow to an average speed of 20 miles per hour in some areas
- SCAG says congestion will increase by up to 100% in some areas over the next 20-plus years
- L.A. has less road capacity per capita than all but 2 of the 65 largest U.S. regions
- As little as 6.6% of L.A. commuters take transit, in part due to a lack of a fully built out system
- Development projects that would be heralded in any other region, are blocked by homeowner whose top concerns are traffic, traffic, and traffic.
- L.A. has 88 days of unhealthy air pollution, the worst in
the nation; whereas air pollution concerns are used to block
development & industrial projects, in fact cars are the primary
source of air pollution; gridlock causes higher exhaust emissions than
free-flowing roadways
- Equally important, traffic congestion has an intangible
effect on society – consumers have less time for their family
& friends, for shopping, or for dining out. Dodger Stadium, the
Music Center, LACMA, and other civic landmarks become inaccessible on
weekday evenings.
Source: TX Transportation Inst, SCAG, FHA, U.S. Census Bureau, LACMTA, EPA, UCLA Institute on the Environment,
APTA, & Remarks by Mayor Villaraigosa