AASHTO CA02-4-2013 Brief 2 The Role of Commuting in Overall Travel.pdf
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1、Brief 2. The Role of Commuting in Overall Travel May 2013 Commuting in a merica 2013 The National Report on Commuting Patterns and TrendsAbout the AASHTO Census Transportation Planning Products Program Established by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) and
2、 the U.S. Department of Transportation (U.S.DOT), the AASHTO Census Transportation Planning Products Program (CTPP) compiles census data on demographic characteristics, home and work locations, and journey-to-work travel flows to assist with a variety of state, regional, and local transportation pol
3、icy and planning efforts. CTPP also supports corridor and project studies, environmental analyses, and emergency operations management. In 1990, 2000, and again in 2006, AASHTO partnered with all of the states on pooled fund projects to sup- port the development of special census products and data t
4、abulations for transportation. These census transpor- tation data packages have proved invaluable in understanding characteristics about where people live and work, their journey-to-work commuting patterns, and the modes they use for getting to work. In 2012, the CTPP was established as an ongoing t
5、echnical service program of AASHTO. CTPP provides a number of primary services: Special Data Tabulation from the U.S. Census BureauCTPP oversees the specification, purchase, and delivery of this special tabulation designed by and for transportation planners Outreach and TrainingThe CTPP team provide
6、s training on data and data issues in many formats, from live briefings and presentations to hands-on full day courses. The team has also created a number of electronic sources of training, from e-learning to recorded webinars to downloadable presentations. Technical SupportCTPP provides limited dir
7、ect technical support for solving data issues; the pro- gram also maintains a robust listserv where many issues are discussed, dissected, and resolved by the CTPP community ResearchCTPP staff and board members routinely generate problem statements to solicit research on data issues; additionally, CT
8、PP has funded its own research efforts. Total research generated or funded by the current CTPP since 2006 is in excess of $1 million. Staff Penelope Weinberger, CTPP Program Manager Matt Hardy, Program Director, Policy and Planning Janet Oakley, Director of Policy and Government Relations Project Te
9、am Steven E. Polzin, Co-author, Center for Urban Transportation Research, University of South Florida Alan E. Pisarski, Co-author, Consultant, Falls Church, Virginia Bruce Spear, Data Expert, Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Liang Long, Data Expert, Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Contact Penelope Weinberger
10、, e-mail: pweinbergeraashto.org, phone: 202-624-3556; or CTPPinfoaashto.org 2013 by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. All rights reserved. Duplication is a violation of applicable law. Pub Code: CA01-4 ISBN: 978-1-56051-562-3 2013 by the American Association of
11、State Highway and Transportation Officials. All rights reserved. Duplication is a violation of applicable law.Commuting in America 2013: The National Report on Commuting Patterns and Trends This brief is the second in a series of briefs that constitute a body of knowledge describing commuting in Ame
12、rica. This body of work, sponsored by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) and carried out in conjunction with a National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) project that provided sup- porting data, builds on three prior Commuting in America report
13、s that were issued over the past three decades. Unlike the prior reports that were single volumes, this effort consists of a series of briefs, each of which addresses a critical aspect of commuting in America. These briefs, taken together, comprise a comprehensive summary of American commuting. The
14、briefs are disseminated through the AASHTO website. Accompanying data tables and an executive summary complete the body of information known as Commuting in America 2013 (CIA 2013). This brief, The Role of Commuting in Overall Travel, sets work commuting in context with other aspects of travel, spec
15、ifically other purposes for travel. Americas transportation infrastructure and services address the needs of individuals for all their travel purposes and also serve the travel needs of commerce and government. Commuters vehicles share the roadways with vehicles carrying persons who are traveling fo
16、r school, shopping, personal business, social and recreational activities, and other purposes, and they also share the road with vehicles transporting freight and providing various services, from goods delivery to emergency response to service workers visiting customers. Visitors and tourists from o
17、ther communities and countries also share the transportation facilities. Similarly, transit services transport work commuters but also travelers pursuing other activities. Throughout history, as the human condition has evolved to include far greater specialization of labor com- pared to the days of
18、a more insular rural or agrarian society, commuting to work has become a principal motivation for travel. With the growth of manufacturing in the last century and in recent decades strong growth in service employment, persons increasingly travel from their home to a place of employment where these s
19、pecialized activities are carried out. The evolution of manufacturing, with its tremendous economies of scale, resulted in consolidation of employment sites and growing commuting. As urban- ization continued, residential neighborhoods developed in outlying areas; first driven by the desire to escape
20、 the pollution, land cost, and congestion of the urban center Brief 2. The Role of Commuting in Overall Travel Commuting to work constitutes approximately 16% of all person trips and 19% of all person miles of travel. For roadway travel, commuting constitutes 28% of household vehicle miles of travel
21、 and, for transit systems, 39% of all transit passenger miles of travel. 2013 by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. All rights reserved. Duplication is a violation of applicable law.4 Commuting in America 2013: The National Report on Commuting Patterns and Trends
22、 and later fueled by the American culture of seek- ing more space and larger homes. Similarly, agglom- eration economies fostered commuting to centralized office and service locations to efficiently conduct other business and commerce activities. In recent decades, more ubiquitous transpor- tation a
23、nd communication networks and changing economic conditions con- tributed to the dispersion of employment activities across broader urban and rural geographies. While work has remained a critical motivation for travel, over the past several decades the economic growth enabled by a productive working
24、population has contributed to rapid growth in travel for other purposes. Social activities, education, health care, shopping, personal business, vacation, and oth- er activities have been in- creasingly carried out away from home and require travel. Thus, both the share of travel for commuting and t
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