U.S. roads less traveled in March

Published: May 27, 2008 at 12:26 PM
CHICAGO IS SELECTED AS U.S. CANDIDATE TO HOST THE 2016 SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

WASHINGTON, May 27 (UPI) -- U.S. drivers logged 11 billion fewer miles on the road in March compared with a year ago, the Department of Transportation said.

The decline continues a downward trend that began in November, a department report issued by the Federal Highway Administration said.

It is the first time miles driven on public roads declined in March since 1979.

It follows a "modest 1 billion mile" increase in the national odometer reading in February 2008 compared with February 2007.

The estimate comes from data collected at 4,000 automatic traffic recorders and includes an estimated reduction of 9 million tons of greenhouse emissions produced in the United States for the first quarter of 2008.

The decline also "underscores the challenges facing the Highway Trust Fund and its reliance on the federal gasoline excise tax," Acting Federal Highway Administrator Jim Ray said.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints




Additional News Stories
Retailers: As snow falls, so do sales
NBA: Washington 118, Golden State 109
NHL: Vancouver 3, Washington 2
Woman allegedly stole case of Scotch
NBA: Houston 116, Dallas 108 (OT)
NHL: Chicago 5, Boston 4 (SO)
COL FB: Villanova 23, Montana 21
fark
If you're traveling through Denver International Airport and find $170,000 laying around, can you...
Cows have taken over Clark County
Shortage of ugly sweaters threatens to ruin ironic hipster parties
Yeah, you probably have mad cow disease
U.S. to Capture Cow Farts to Save the Planet. This should complete the Cow trifecta
Austin man reports cow as missing