Tuesday, October 10, 2006

mythbusters: more people ride than drive??

i'm not a typical Chicagoan at this very moment in time. ok, let me clarify. when i think of a real Chicagoan, i think of, say, my roomie. she gets up at the crack of dawn, stumbles bleary-eyed into the sunless morning and hikes 4 blocks to the el. she switches lines at the belmont stop, gets squished into the red line car with the 200 other early morning commuters, blesses her ipod and yawns toward the horizon. after fighting up the stairs and pulling her coat close against the wind, she arrives at work. 7:30am. come quittin' time, she does the same in reverse.

it is said that a typical chicagoan will bump elbows with humanity at least 500 times a day. after all, this is a city of 2.8 million.

i bump elbows with the girl from accounting while she gets off the elevator at the 3rd floor. that's about it. why? because i'm a reverse commuter. i get into my car and plunge into the arteries of the windy city, avoiding blockage where possible, hating my long commute into the demure southern suburbs. however, when i return home, and i hear about how smelly the el was from said roomie, i am grateful for my car.

i digress... more on the glory of car in another entry. my point is that the myth is: a good, typical chicagoan is my roomate. i am here to debunk that myth today. from observations made by yours truely.

1. on any given day, the travel time on the Kennedy, getting into Chicago is at least 45 minutes. This is a 16 mile stretch of FREEWAY that totes EXPRESS LANES.

2. at least 27 million daily trips happen in the greater chicagoland area. in my experience, at least 1 million people are moron drivers. then you have the 2 million grannies and little old men in hats driving huge sedans. then you have the 12 million other drivers (aka ME) just trying to arrive at a destination in one piece. in my best estimate, that leaves less than half of chicago commuters as public transportationists.

3. you always see construction on illinois highways. you rarely see construction on public transportation (only the brown line right now, and yes, albeit ishy, still gets people to work). i'm going to get flack for this observation. but seriously folks, look at how much highway construction there is, and for how long it lasts, and how much havok it reeks on drivers in illinois. why would we do this? so that we can fit more people on the roads.

based on these weak observations, many hours in the car spent fretting about lost time and many minutes spent on rare public transit trips, i believe that the majority of chicagoans drive to work. the myth will always be there, guys. but i am living proof that this myth is debunked.

why am i debunking this myth? because i need to live with myself every day. or perhaps the exhaust fumes finally got to me...

3 comments:

littlebmouse said...

Clearly someone has forgot that the El is not the only form of public transportation in the city to start with. There are these fun modes of transportation called buses, and there are also other trains that people use to go into and out of the suburbs.
That aside this article seems to forget that the 27million drivers are a few more than the 2.8 million people that live in the city.
I just think that you would have the reverse observations if you were taking the El everday instead of the car. There is contruction on the Red line also.
Sometimes the trains are also so full that you can't even get on them. That really sucks cause the following trains are not really that much better.
I know your trying to make yourself feel better but you get your not bumping into people time, I get to not have to pay insane amounts of money for gas. That and I learned that five min. can make a huge difference in how many people are actually on your train.

mule said...

I don't know if it will make either of you feel better but for the population that both of you are considering you should really think about it from the Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area which includes Chicago and her surrounding communities. By doing this the number of commuters you're competing against is roughly 9.16 million people.

dr gonzo said...

yes. i used the word "Chicagoland". in my head (and we all know i'm slightly demented), that means chicago and it's surrounding counties.

also, "public transportation": this encompasses all forms of transportation not via individual car: ie bus, bike, walk, carpool, AND el.