OAKLAND, Calif., May 14, 2008… Traffic
delays along several of the Bay Area’s most congested
freeway corridors declined last year, the Metropolitan Transportation
Commission (MTC) and Caltrans reported today, though regionwide
congestion — driven by several years of steady job
growth and measured with greater precision in 2007 thanks
to an expanded data-gathering effort — reached its
highest level since 2000. While this year’s congestion
numbers may drop under the weight of $4-a-gallon gasoline,
rising carpool and transit use, a weak real estate market
and other factors, the region experienced 161,700 vehicle
hours of delay during the morning and afternoon commute periods
on an average weekday during 2007 (see “Daily
Freeway Delay by Bay Area County…”).
This figure is second only to the 177,600 hours recorded
in 2000, at the height of the dot.com boom.
Click to play the above video of the May 14, 2008 press
conference. (28 minutes. Requires Flash.)
Scott Haggerty, MTC Vice Chair and Alameda County Supervisor
(left) and Bijan Sartipi, MTC Commissioner and Caltrans
District 4 Director (right).
KTVU's Tom Vacar interviewing Scott Haggerty
Photos: John Huseby, Caltrans
Most notable
among the list of congestion hot spots that experienced a reduction in delay
in 2007 was the morning commute on westbound Interstate 80 from Hercules to the
Bay Bridge. While this busy stretch once again topped the list of the region’s
most congested freeway locations (see “Bay
Area Freeway Locations with Most Delay…”),
delay along the corridor fell nine percent in 2007 to 11,100 daily vehicle hours
of delay from the 12,230 hours of delay recorded on an average day in 2006.
“The
drop indicates improvements like the new FasTrak® configuration at the Bay
Bridge toll plaza are having a beneficial impact on the notorious backups along
that corridor,” said Caltrans Director Will Kempton. Other factors, such
as rising FasTrak use, fuel prices that climbed from an average of $2.66 for
a gallon of regular in January 2007 to $3.39 by December, and a rising number
of workers commuting via transit and carpools during the year, also may have
played a role in the reduction of morning congestion on this key freeway segment.
Reductions
in delay also were recorded at several other gridlock-heavy Bay Area locations
in 2007:
The morning trip along westbound Interstate 580 across
the Altamont Pass from Interstate 205 to Hacienda Drive
fell one spot to number 4 on the Top 10 list for 2007,
as average vehicle hours of delay dropped 4 percent to
5,120 last year (from 5,320 hours in 2006).
The afternoon drive along northbound U.S. 101 and eastbound
Interstate 80 in San Francisco, from the 101/Alemany Boulevard
interchange to the Bay Bridge, retained its position as
number 5 on the Bay Area’s Top 10 list, but vehicle
hours of delay fell almost 3 percent to 4,760 from 4,880
in 2006. This was due in part to a traffic realignment
in March 2007 as part of the ongoing reconstruction of
the Bay Bridge West Approach.
The afternoon commute on eastbound Route 4 from Bailey
Road in Pittsburg to G Street in Antioch recorded a 17
percent decline in congestion in 2007 (3,140 vehicle hours
of delay, down from 3,800 hours in 2006), dropping this
segment to number 11 on the 2007 list from number 7 in
2006. A widening project that added an eastbound traffic
lane along a portion of this segment in late 2006 helped
to ease conditions in this corridor.
“The
worst of the Bay Area’s congestion tends to be concentrated
in a few familiar places,” observed MTC Vice Chair
and Alameda County Supervisor Scott Haggerty, noting that
eight of the top 10 regional hot spots were on the 2006 list
as well — including Interstate 580 through the Altamont
Pass and the Tri-Valley area. “But we’re starting
to see results from the new strategies being used to unclog
some of our most persistent bottlenecks. For example, afternoon
traffic flow on eastbound 580 between Pleasanton and
Livermore (number 2 on the Top 10 list for 2007) is already
much better since ramp-metering was expanded this past January. ”
The morning
commute on westbound Interstate 580 through the Tri-Valley is expected to improve
once metering lights are activated this fall — perhaps enabling a further
reduction of delay in 2008, to build on the modest reduction witnessed in 2007.
“I’m
one of thousands of drivers,” continued Haggerty, “who expect an
even bigger payoff from new carpool lanes that will be added to I-580 in the
Tri-Valley area in the next few years.” Construction on the eastbound
carpool lane, funded through the $19.9 billion Proposition 1B infrastructure
bond approved by voters in 2006, is scheduled to begin this summer.
The
only newcomers to the annual Top 10 list are the southbound morning commute
along Interstate 880 from Marina Boulevard in San Leandro to the Route 92 interchange
in Hayward, which climbed all the way to number 8 on the list from number 26
last year; and the afternoon trip on southbound U.S. 101 from Great America
Parkway in Santa Clara to North 13th Street/Oakland Road in San Jose, which
rose to the number 10 position from number 14 in 2006.
Different Picture Regionwide
At the regional
level, the rise in reported commute-hour congestion for 2007
is due in large part to MTC and Caltrans mounting a more
robust data collection effort last year than in recent years. “We beefed up our congestion monitoring effort
to collect and analyze data from about 90 separate, typically less-congested
freeway segments that had not been monitored since 2003,” explained Caltrans
District 4 Director and MTC Commissioner Bijan Sartipi. “In so doing,
we recorded congestion in one year that likely had been building up over several
years.” The
likeliest explanation for the increase in congestion throughout the region
in recent years is the growth of the Bay Area economy. In 2007, some 53,000
jobs were added to payrolls in the nine-county region (source: California
Employment Development Department). This marked the
third consecutive year of regional employment growth, following
increases of about 61,000 jobs in 2006 and 26,000 jobs
in 2005. Congestion on Bay Area freeways has grown steadily
over this period, rising 33 percent since 2003, the last
year prior to 2007 when a complete survey (comprising some
160 freeway segments) of commute-hour traffic conditions
was taken.1 The close historical correlation between the
performance of the Bay Area’s economy (as represented by number
of jobs) and the amount of commute-hour congestion on the
region’s freeways is illustrated in the chart “Vehicle
Hours of Delay vs. Employment, San Francisco Bay Area,
1998-2007”.
Alameda County Suffers Biggest Share of Backups
At
the county level, Alameda County experienced the greatest
amount of freeway congestion (defined as average speeds below
35 miles per hour for 15 minutes or longer), with 63,900
daily vehicle hours of delay. Coming in a distant second,
with 28,300 daily vehicle hours of delay, is Santa Clara
County, and Contra Costa County a close third at 26,600 hours.
Marin County, San Francisco and San Mateo County are next
in line with, respectively, 11,200, 10,600 and 10,500 daily
vehicle hours of delay.
MTC is the
transportation planning, financing and coordinating agency for the nine-county
San Francisco Bay Area. Caltrans is responsible for the planning, design, construction,
maintenance and operation of the state highway system.
1 In previously released congestion tallies for the years
2004 through 2006, MTC and Caltrans carried forward the 2003
readings for approximately 90 less-congested freeway segments
that were monitored anew in 2007.
Bay Area Freeway Locations With Most Delay During Commute
Hours, 2007
2007 Rank
Location
2007 Daily (Weekday) Vehicle Hours of Delay
2006 Rank
2005 Rank
2004 Rank
2003 Rank
1
Interstate 80, westbound, a.m. Alameda/Contra
Costa County Route 4 to Bay Bridge metering lights
11,100
1
1
1
1
2
Interstate 580, eastbound, p.m.
Alameda County Interstate 680 to Greenville Road
7,410
2
2
3
3
3
U.S. 101, southbound, a.m.
Marin County Rowland Boulevard to Interstate 580
6,490
4
5
7
6
4
Interstate 580, westbound, a.m. Alameda County Interstate 205 to Hacienda Drive
5,120
3
3
2
3
5
U.S. 101, northbound and Interstate 80, eastbound,
p.m.
San Francisco U.S. 101: Alemany Boulevard to I-80; I-80: U.S. 101 to Sterling Street on-ramp
4,760
5
4
4
2
6
Route 4, westbound a.m.
Contra Costa County A Street/Lone Tree Way to Route 242
4,750
9
6
6
5
7
Route 92, eastbound, p.m.
Alameda County Industrial Boulevard to Interstate 880
3,930
6
7
5
15
8
Interstate 880, southbound, a.m.
Alameda
County Marina Boulevard to south of Industrial Parkway
3,790
26
23
25
47
9
Interstate 80, eastbound, p.m.
San Francisco
and Alameda counties Bryant Street/5th Street in San Francisco to east of Powell Street in Emeryville
3,530
8
10
10
18
10
U.S. 101, southbound, p.m.
Santa Clara County Great America Parkway to North 13th Street/Oakland Road
3,210
14
18
18
21
Sources: Metropolitan Transportation Commission, Caltrans
District 4
Rankings are for routes in which continuous stop-and-go conditions occur with
few, if any, breaks in the queue. Thus, corridors that have equally severe delays
but where congestion is broken into several segments may rank lower in this type
of congestion listing.