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 High Point Transit System

Clean Air


Tomorrow, leave home without it. Just once or even twice a week, leave your car parked and get around another way. Try car pooling, taking mass transit, biking, or walking-and save a lot of money and aggravation.

 

You may already be following this advice-millions of Americans do every day-but you might not realize that when you do, you're doing something that reduces traffic congestion and adds up to cleaner air! In fact, every time you share a ride, you're helping to reduce emissions by almost half. Taking mass transit can do just as much. And, of course, walking, biking, and in-line skating are the healthiest ways to travel-for you and the environment. But be safe.

 

Two interactive CDs are available that will take you through bicycle and pedestrian safety situations encountered every day across America. Both CDs (in English and Spanish) can be ordered for free at http://safety.fhwa.dot.gov/ped_bike/ped_bike_order.cfm. The Bicycle Safety Education Resource Center Web site, http://safety.fhwa.dot.gov/ped_bike/, provides links to information about bicycle-safety education materials and guidance for educators.

 

There's a nationwide initiative to encourage employers to offer their employees a broad range of commuting options. It's called Best Workplaces for Commuters (BWC). In addition to saving time and money, BWC employers and employees report high rates of productivity, strong morale, and less stress trying to juggle family and work commitments. So, ask about it at work! (Visit www.bestworkplaces.org/ for more information.)

 

Here are some commuting, carpooling, bicycling, and walking facts to consider:

  • Carpooling, using transit, walking, or bicycling-just one day a week for a year-can save the typical commuter about 1,200 miles on their vehicle and about $455 in total driving costs .
  • Between 1980 and 2001, the U.S. population grew by 26%; however, the number of miles people drove increased by 82%.
  • 91% of Americans commute to work using personal vehicles; only 5% regularly use transit.
  • Because commuting has declined as a share of all vehicle trips-from nearly 33% in 1969 to less than 15 % in 2001-it is important to look beyond just your commuting trips.
  • You can reduce more air pollution if you walk or bicycle for short trips, compared to a long commute, because emissions are highest when a vehicle is started "cold." For instance, eliminating 5 separate one-mile vehicle trips reduces about the same amount of ozone-related pollution as eliminating one 15-mile trip.
  • 87% of daily trips occur in personal vehicles (of those about 38% are with a driver only and 49% are with more than one occupant). Almost 9% of trips are walk trips, about 2% are by transit, and almost 2% are by school bus.
  • The average American household uses almost 3 gallons of motor fuel per day-enough to fill 21 standard bathtubs a year.
  • In communities that use a combination of traffic congestion remedies-public transportation, bus and carpool lanes, traffic signal coordination, clearing crashes and disabled vehicles, and using signals that regulate traffic flow onto their freeways-annual congestion delay is reduced from 53 to 46 hours per person traveling in peak periods. That's like getting almost one whole work day to do something fun, instead of sitting in traffic!

 

For more information, please visit the It All Adds Up Web at http://www.italladdsup.gov

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