Skip to main content

Ride sharing could ease US transport congestion

Increased ridesharing is seen by some in the US as the best opportunity to improve the country's transportation system. However this concept is missing from the Senate's MAP-21 bill for reauthorisation of the transport budget.
April 25, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Increased ridesharing is seen by some in the US as the best opportunity to improve the country’s transportation system. However this concept is missing from the Senate’s MAP-21 bill for reauthorisation of the transport budget.

In a post on the 5248 Eno Foundation’s Center for Transportation Policy Blog, Cindy Burbank, the vice chair of the recently formed Ridesharing Institute, applauds the overall direction of MAP-21. Burbank also discusses how much the MAP-21 legislation would do to support efforts to reduce traffic congestion by getting people to be passengers more often in carpools and vanpools. But her answer is, “…a missed opportunity.”

In a balanced and positive post Burbank, who is also a member of the Eno Board of Advisors, vice president and national planning and environment practice leader for 2693 Parsons Brinckerhoff, and formerly FHWA’s associate administrator for planning and environment, points out that the initiatives covered by MAP-21 will not be enough to head off growing congestion due to population growth. Combining carpooling and vanpooling into a single C/V mode, Burbank points out that it currently serves more work trips than transit, biking, and walking combined. And since trips to work are mostly at peak, it seems C/V is doing more to combat congestion than those higher profile and better funded alternatives.

And yet there is no single staffer at USDOT focused on the C/V mode. The post ends with five suggestions for changes to MAP-21 that would make a difference for the C/V mode:

    1) link increased C/V to the national interest;

    2) add C/V programs as an explicit eligible activity for the National Highway Program;

    3) specify person trips and passenger miles instead of vehicle throughput as performance measures;

    4) specify that a meaningful share of Federal transportation research dollars go to innovating C/V; and

    5) charge U.S. DOT with developing and implementing a strategic plan to double carpooling and vanpooling within 10 years.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Transport the key to economic growth
    July 12, 2012
    Delegates from around the world discussed the future of global transport at the 2009 International Transport Forum in Leipzig, Germany In the face of the global economic downturn, transport will play a key role in supporting economic growth and in the creation of new confidence in the world's economic future, the delegates of the 2009 International Transport Forum (ITF) agreed. As almost all global threats have strong, central links and impacts, the transport sector will remain at the forefront of most glob
  • Road tolling is vital for good roads
    January 2, 2024
    Upcoming transportation projects are outlined in planning documents throughout America by Mary Scott Nabers
  • New head for ARTBA’s Transport Development Foundation
    May 25, 2017
    A new head has been appointed for the American Road & Transportation Builders Association Transportation Development Foundation (ARTBA-TDF) Board of Trustees. The chairman of ARTBA-TDF will now be HNTB executive vice president Paul Yarossi. Yarossi has been a volunteer ARTBA leader for nearly two decades, serving as 2011 chairman and as ARTBA-TDF vice chair since June 2014. His other ARTBA posts have included: senior vice chairman, first vice chairman, vice-chairman-at-large, chairman of the Transportation
  • Helmet wearing a key priority in road safety
    February 27, 2012
    Politicians can be an easy target for criticism. Their job involves making decisions that affect the lives of others, whether popular or unpopular, which they believe are nevertheless for the common good. But every once in a while politicians; international, national or local, do something so unutterably stupid it defies explanation. And in the US state of Michigan, the Senate has done just that by approving the repeal of the motorcycle helmet law.