The D.C. Metro Is Still a Mess, But a 'Carpocalypse' Has Yet To Materialize
Why hasn't a collapse in rail transit service produced nightmarish levels of traffic congestion? Thank working from home and flexible work schedules.

One persistent fear over the last 18 months is that a post-pandemic reopening of offices paired with an unwillingness of office workers to return to taking transit would lead to a "traffic apocalypse" of clogged roads and nightmarish commute times.
Washington, D.C., is providing a case study in why these fears are overblown. Despite a near-total collapse in the area's Metro rail transit system, traffic volumes are actually below pre-pandemic congestion levels.
For the past month Metro has been running much-reduced service, with 20- to 24-minute gaps between the trains on most lines. That's because 60 percent of Metro's train cars are out of service. A problem with wheel assemblies on the 7000-series cars was causing a mounting number of derailments.
Hopes that this problem would be fixed relatively quickly were dashed today when the Washington Metropolitan Transportation Authority (WMATA), which operates Metro rail, announced that the elongated waits would continue until December 31.
WMATA has started a new, stepped-up inspection schedule that it hopes will soon let these trains safely carry passengers once again. But even if that proves successful, the process of taking the cars out of storage and making them ready for revenue service again will take time.
So WMATA still has no timetable for bringing back the 7000-series cars. The return of its 6000-series vehicles—which were yanked from service last year after several train decoupling incidents—will also be delayed, thanks to a shortage of available parts caused by global supply chain problems.
Average weekday boardings on Metro rail were north of 200,000 the week before the 7000-series cars were taken out of service. As of last week, that number had fallen to around 126,000—around 28 percent of 2019 November ridership levels. That's the lowest level of ridership since Metro rail service began in 1977.
The sudden reduction in rail service had initially sparked fears that as riders opted to drive to work instead, the result would be intolerable levels of traffic congestion. A number of solutions were floated to mitigate this seemingly inevitable "carpocalypse," from stepped-up bus service and emergency pop-up bus lanes to free bikeshare rides.
Some transportation researchers were musing that a carpocalypse could strike many American cities as we extricated ourselves from the pandemic. Between a collapse in transit ridership, rising auto sales, and the lingering health concerns people might have about riding on crowded buses and trains, they feared near-impassable freeways. A Vanderbilt University study predicted that San Francisco and New York would see commute times increase by 16 minutes and 11 minutes, respectively, if 25 percent of transit riders were to switch to single-occupancy vehicles.
The same study suggested that D.C. would see only about an additional minute of travel time if 25 percent of transit riders switched to driving alone. But even that appears to be an overestimate.
According to GPS manufacturer TomTom, traffic congestion in D.C. last week was about 7 percent below 2019 levels. That's up from the week prior to the Metro meltdown, when traffic congestion was at 19 percent of 2019 levels.
There are a couple of reasons why traffic volumes have remained below-average even with a barely functional Metro system, says Marc Scribner, a transportation policy analyst at the Reason Foundation (which publishes this website).
"We're able to absorb these kinds of transportation problems better than other places because we have a workforce that is more capable than other regions to engage in telework," Scribner tells Reason.
"The people that are coming back are still operating on flex schedules," he adds, meaning that fewer people are driving at peak hours, even if they are still commuting by car.
A Greater Washington Partnership report from February 2021 found that the D.C. region had the second most "remote-capable" workers in the country. Only San Francisco had more. The same report said that some 1 million workers—close to one-fifth of the area's workforce—could end up working off-site for a majority of the week after the pandemic.
Because about three-quarters of trips are non-commuting trips, the Greater Washington Partnership study didn't predict major changes to "high-level mobility patterns." Nevertheless, a switch from transit commuting to working from home would presumably dampen the rush-hour nightmares one might expect as people flee a barely functional Metro system.
This is cold comfort for Metro riders who actually depend on the system and find themselves having to wait longer for more crowded trains. It's also bad news for taxpayers.
The $1 trillion infrastructure bill passed by Congress included $550 billion in new spending, including $39 billion in new transit spending. If D.C. is any guide, that's a lot of money to spend on shoring up transit systems that seem less and less relevant to urban mobility.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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>>a carpocalypse could strike many American cities as we extricated ourselves from the pandemic.
is all the chicks and Oldies back out and in everyone's way.
495, capital beltway, was shutdown when some lady forgot how to merge and slammed into a box truck last week.
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Don't forget the old guy who misses his exit and locks up his brakes on the interstate.
that asshole was in front of me this morning.
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Did he have an 85 car motorcade?
Huge numbers of federal employees have switched to work from home. Some private as well. Doesn't this easily explain why Metro problems aren't leading to more traffic?
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We're able to absorb these kinds of transportation problems better than other places because we have a workforce that
is more capable than other regions to engage in teleworkdoesn't actually have to do any work while still getting paid not to do workFIFY.
There's a worse government run rail system than AMTRAK?
Just checking to see if carpocalypse had anything to do with the Alabama parade.
Wisconsin. But that's very close to Alabama.
Christian happuned to do a decent headline.
Who else remembers when the DC metro was the one thing the apparatchiki pointed to with pride, while Marion Barry was selling city contracts and sucking on his crack pipe?
-jcr
DC Metro extended the rail line form Tysons to Reston a few years ago, then continued to Dulles and beyond into Loudoun County. The line form Reston to Loudoun has never opened. It has failed tests for the structural integrity of the rails. Now has turned in to a huge pissing contest between VA, DC , MD and Metro.
The Silver Line has been unused for over three years. Brilliant.
There’s an explanation I consider likelier; the DC Metro was never much use for commuters in the first place. If you latched onto every single subsidy available to you, and we’re the sort of person who takes wear on your car into account when budgeting, a moth pass on the Metro was so-so sensible, if you lived far enough out. But only if you seldom had to move about IN DC for your job.
Congress’s Toy Train Set was handy for tourists, great for generating modernistic looking photo-ops, and largely a money pit. And that was when I lived in the area, before they added the silver line without beefing up the infrastructure (or without beefing it up nearly enough), and pretty much crashed the whole thing.
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