The Reporter (Vacaville)

Travel: Passenger vehicle travel rebounding to pre-pandemic levels

- By David A. Lieb

Americans may be rounding a corner — literally — in their response to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The number of daily passenger vehicle trips has hit a major milestone, reaching pre-pandemic levels for the first time in a year, according to data provided to The Associated Press by the transporta­tion analytics firm Inrix, with Americans driving more often and farther than at any time since pandemic lockdowns were invoked.

The rise in vehicle travel comes amid other encouragin­g health and economic indicators. Consumer spending and manufactur­ing have been picking up. Employers have been adding workers. Governors have been easing restrictio­ns on indoor dining and social gatherings. More auto fuel is being purchased. The winter peak in COVID-19 cases has receded. And more than one-fourth of Americans have received at least one dose of a vaccine.

Some of the largest travel increases have occurred in rural, suburban and smaller metropolit­an areas, Inrix transporta­tion analyst Bob Pishue said.

In Pensacola, Florida, passenger vehicle miles traveled last April dipped to around 50% of the average levels of January and February 2020, before pandemic restrictio­ns were imposed. The situation is significan­tly different this spring. On the weekend of March 20-21, passenger vehicle miles topped 150% of the pre-pandemic level, according to Inrix data.

“If you drove through

downtown Pensacola a year ago, it was a ghost town — everything was closed,” said Kaycee Lagarde, the city’s public informatio­n officer. “Now if you go downtown, it basically looks normal as far as the number of people being out.”

Lagarde said the traffic surge appears to have been aided by tourists, who have returned to beaches that were temporaril­y closed last year.

In general, “higher travel is reflective of a good economy,” said Tim Lomax, a research fellow at the Texas A&M Transporta­tion Institute. “They are traveling for a purpose, whether that’s a job, retail or school.”

Last spring, many vehicles got parked for an extended stay as governors and mayors issued stay-at-home orders, schools went virtual and work sites shifted from offices to homes as a precaution intended to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s. Passenger vehicle miles

traveled plunged to almost half their pre-pandemic levels nationally, and declined even more in some of the largest cities with the greatest restrictio­ns.

Less driving meant less money for state transporta­tion department­s, which rely heavily on motor fuel taxes. The American Associatio­n of State Highway and Transporta­tion Officials had estimated agencies could face a $28 billion revenue loss over a five-year period.

But “we’re starting to see a rebound here from a travel standpoint, and that’s been very helpful,” said associatio­n executive director Jim Tymon.

Passenger vehicle miles traveled have been climbing upward this month, reaching 112% of their prepandemi­c levels during the week ending March 19, according to Inrix, which compiles passenger vehicle traffic data from anonymous GPS signals, such as from cellphone apps.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Traffic makes its way along the 110 freeway on Sunday in Los Angeles. U.S. drivers recently reached a major milestone when the number of daily passenger vehicle trips reached pre-pandemic levels for the first time in a year, according to data provided to The Associated Press by the transporta­tion analytics firm Inrix. It’s a potential indicator that the pandemic’s strain on society may be easing.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Traffic makes its way along the 110 freeway on Sunday in Los Angeles. U.S. drivers recently reached a major milestone when the number of daily passenger vehicle trips reached pre-pandemic levels for the first time in a year, according to data provided to The Associated Press by the transporta­tion analytics firm Inrix. It’s a potential indicator that the pandemic’s strain on society may be easing.

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