TO: CTPP-News
Last week the Census Bureau released a 13-page "Census Brief" on
"Journey to Work: 2000". The report, authored by Clara Reschovsky of the
Census Bureau, is #C2KBR-33, the 33rd in a series of short, general
interest census reports. It is available at:
http://www.census.gov/prod/2004pubs/c2kbr-33.pdf
or, for the site listing all of the census briefs and special reports:
http://www.census.gov/population/www/cen2000/briefs.html
There's an interesting table (Table 6) ranking the top 10 metro areas
by different means of transportation shares.
This is a good report to provide to your executive director and
management, to provide the "big picture" on commuting in America. Just
be sure to use a color printer due to the full-color U.S. maps included
in these briefs. Very helpful report.
Chuck Purvis, MTC
*************************************************************************************************************************************
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MONDAY, MARCH 15, 2004
Mike Bergman
CB04-42
Public Information Office
(301) 763-3030/457-3670 (fax)
(301) 457-1037 (TDD)
e-mail: <pio(a)census.gov>
More on 'The Daily Grind'
Commute to Work: It's Early, Lonely and Long,
Census Bureau Confirms
The typical U.S. commuter in 2000 left home between 6:30 a.m.
and
8:29 a.m. and drove alone for 26 minutes to get to work, the U.S.
Census
Bureau said today in a report based on Census 2000 results. Overall,
people
were leaving home earlier and spending more time in traffic in 2000
than in
previous censuses.
According to the report, Journey to Work: 2000, about 53 percent
of
all workers headed to their jobs between 6:30 a.m. and 8:29 a.m.
Another 20
percent of workers departed for work between midnight and 6:29 a.m, up
2
percentage points or 4.8 million workers from a decade earlier, the
largest
hike in any time period of the day.
The report is based on responses to questions asked on the
census
long form, which did not include the distance workers traveled in
their
journey to work. A sample of households, about 1-in-6 nationally,
received the long form. The data are subject to sampling and
nonsampling
error.
-X-
Editor's Note: The report can be accessed at
<http://www.census.gov/pop/www/cen2000/briefs.html>.