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How we measure traffic congestion matters

Dear Friend,

If someone walks to work or school, do they still count? We say yes, but the U.S. Department of Transportation seems to disagree.

Last week, USDOT issued a draft rule that will govern how states and metro areas will have to measure and address congestion, along with other metrics like freight movement and emissions. These new requirements are a welcome step toward measuring what our hard-earned transportation dollars actually buy us. 

However, the rule as it is currently written would measure success in outdated ways. Old measures leads to old “solutions,” like prioritizing fast driving speeds above all other modes of transportation and their associated benefits. 

Tell USDOT to take a wider view of success and change the proposed rule.

The rule as it is currently written fails to consider people taking transit, carpooling, walking, and biking. It would also penalize communities where people live close to work, or travel shorter distances at slower speeds. 

This rule makes driving fast the ultimate goal of our transportation system, regardless of what type of road you're on. Should driving fast be the highest priority on our main streets where people might be shopping or dining at an outdoor café? Should that be the priority in residential neighborhoods where children might be biking or walking.

Of course not. 

Success is about a lot more than moving cars fast. Tell USDOT to improve their proposed rule. Sign an individual letter that we will deliver on your behalf to USDOT.

This rule is particularly disappointing in light of Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx’s unprecedented effort to improve Americans' access to economic opportunity through better transportation options. Those are worthy goals, and passing the rule as currently written would be a missed opportunity to achieve them.

Deciding what projects we consider "successful" will influence which transportation projects are selected and built for years to come. Tell USDOT that #WeAllCount and that the new rule should reflect that. 

Sincerely,

Stephen Lee Davis 
Director of Communications
Transportation for America

P.S.—Want to know more about the new rule? If you read this before 1 p.m. EDT, join us for a free webinar today to learn all about it.

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