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Hybrids With Stickers Getting Kicked Out of HOV Lane

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by HOVer, Jun 20, 2007.

  1. Swanny1172

    Swanny1172 New Member

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    "About 22,000 of the 85,000 HOV stickers in the state have been snapped up by drivers in San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Alameda and Contra Costa counties."

    Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_6119873
     
  2. desertbriez

    desertbriez New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Swanny1172 @ Jun 21 2007, 05:58 AM) [snapback]465660[/snapback]</div>
    orange county has that already: fasttrack

    as far as HOV lanes.... when there's traffic bad enough... we never use them because the regular lanes go just as fast or faster (when you're already crawling)....

    we'll use the HOV's when traffic is moving... but it's moving in ALL lanes anyways!

    and yes... OC is HORRIBLE for traffic.... HOV or not! i will drive miles out of our way to avoid the 91!
     
  3. RobertG

    RobertG New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(MikeSF @ Jun 21 2007, 08:08 AM) [snapback]465728[/snapback]</div>
    Someone else posted a percentage of the stickers in California which went to drivers in SF Bay area counties. A recent study by Caltrans showed that in the Bay area only six percent of commuter lane occupants were single occupant hybrid vehicles. I posted that earlier with a link to the San Jose Mercury News article. Unfortunately, that newspaper's web site requires a subscription to view their articles. Don't know how I got there the first time.
     
  4. rfred

    rfred New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Alrobot @ Jun 21 2007, 08:48 AM) [snapback]465677[/snapback]</div>
    Wow! So let me see if I can follow your logic...

    Nope, couldn't find any.
     
  5. subarutoo

    subarutoo New Member

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    Funny...I thought HOV was "Hybrids Only Vehicles" lane.
     
  6. kdk84

    kdk84 New Member

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    I am also for not letting hybrids in the HOV lane. I live in an area where I don't use the HOV lane anyway but they are designed to promote carpooling which is a good thing. Although it can be annoying to get stuck in traffic at least your car (the prius) turns itself off and you aren't wasting gas like everyone else.
     
  7. onlynark

    onlynark Member

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    they should setup cameras along hov lanes to capture cheaters. then there will be no problem with hybrids in HOV lanes.
     
  8. donee

    donee New Member

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    Hi All,

    No HOV lanes here, and I get to pay $250/year for the privledge of a limited access highway drive to and from work.

    As another poster said, nobody anticipated a car that would consume 1/2 the gas, or even less polution.

    If they are going to change the access rules, they should do it by polution per commuter basis.

    Your typical Chevy Suburban with 3 pasengers is not even as good as a Prius with one person in toxic and greenhouse polutants. A Suburban will take up allot more following and restart room than a Prius as well, due to poorer brakes, and slower accelleration.

    Time to get those SUV's out of the HOV lanes, unless they have 4 people in em.

    Every car in the HOV lanes should be required to be stickered. And the HOV stickers should have a number in the middle, indicating how many passengers are required that year to meet the state set polution requirement.
     
  9. alexstarfire

    alexstarfire New Member

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    I think if they really wanted to get people to drive cars less that they should make the entire highway HOV (maybe 1-2 non HOV lanes), cept for rush hours of course. That would really make people think. They will respond to longer waits more than anything else.
     
  10. HOVer

    HOVer New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(rfred @ Jun 21 2007, 11:20 AM) [snapback]465870[/snapback]</div>
    The logic is this:
    In California, a lot of people bought the Prius/Civic hybrids just to get the HOV lane stickers and get into the carpool lane to knock some time off the commute. They didn't necessarily buy the Prius for the gas mileage.

    If the stickers are revoked before they expire, I might put my Prius up for sale too. Sure the gas mileage is great and I'm doing something good for the environment, but that new Porsche Carrera is looking mighty tempting... However, I am kinda used to the 52mpg I'm getting. Even my wife's non-hybrid Civic seems like a gas guzzler to me now!!

    --------------------

    As far as the HOV lane goes, I can see a couple of sides of the argument:
    - On one hand, the government wants to open the HOV lanes up a little more so that it will give them fastlane for multiple-occupants. This will tempt people to look for carpoolers so as to get into the hov lane thereby getting more cars off the freeways.
    - On the other hand, most people in California (at least L.A.) don't want to carpool, much less take a ride on a bus or train. So California DOT said forget it, let's fill those empty spaces in the HOV lane with some cars that are in the regular lanes. What better car than a pollution-reducing, politically-left car like a hybrid! It might slow down the HOV lane, but it will alleviate some pressure in the regular lanes.
     
  11. Swanny1172

    Swanny1172 New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(HOVer @ Jun 21 2007, 08:15 PM) [snapback]466108[/snapback]</div>
    If you are considering buying a Porsche Carrera, then why are you worried about gas mileage? You obviously have money to burn...
     
  12. danatt

    danatt New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Swanny1172 @ Jun 21 2007, 07:58 AM) [snapback]465660[/snapback]</div>
    I recall hearing a piece on the radio a while back about a limited access highway lane system trial somewhere that had a fluctuating rate you would pay to use the lane. The rate would fluctuate in real time based on how congested it was. More congestion means it costs more to ride in the lane. Subscribers have a device in their car that lets them know the current rate. They can then decide if it's worth it to them to use the lane. In times of heavy congestion, the lanes would be occupied by only those willing to pay the higher rate. Supply & Demand, right? Time is Money, right? It sounded reasonable to me. But I don't remember where this was. Perhaps someone else has heard about this, and can fill us in.
     
  13. Inches

    Inches Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(subarutoo @ Jun 21 2007, 12:39 PM) [snapback]465946[/snapback]</div>
    Works for me...

    How about the CHP passing out tickets for violators?? I see a lot of those SUV things in the HOV lanes, solo.
     
  14. zenMachine

    zenMachine Just another Onionhead

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    I've uploaded to the File section an interesting study on the potential impact of exempt vehicles on HOV lanes. In case anyone's interested in some real life data.
     
  15. uclabruins

    uclabruins Member

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    LA Times wrote an article also:

    Caltrans seeks ways to unclog its overflowing carpool lanes
    Rush-hour speeds in some stretches are below 45 mph, prompting officials to consider barring lone motorists in hybrids.
    By Rong-Gong Lin II and Sharon Bernstein
    Times Staff Writers

    June 23, 2007

    California's growing network of carpool lanes is so congested that many of the lanes have fallen out of compliance with federal regulations, prompting officials Friday to begin considering radical measures to reduce congestion.

    A Caltrans study found that during the evening rush hour nearly one-third of carpool-lane miles do not meet federal minimum standards, which require that the lanes flow at speeds of 45 mph or faster at rush hour.

    The speeds are far lower on some major Southern California routes, including portions of the 405 Freeway from the South Bay through Orange County as well as the 5 and 210 freeways. Local officials say the 91 Freeway carpool lanes connecting Orange County and the Inland Empire can slow to 10 mph during rush hour, with portions of the 55 and 57 freeways doing even worse.

    The findings come amid a growing concern among transportation officials and motorists that the state's 1,350 miles of carpool lanes are losing their effectiveness as a tool to encourage ride-sharing.

    Over the last three decades, adding carpool lanes to ease congestion has been the dominant reason for widening freeways. Much of the $4.5 billion earmarked this year from a voter-approved state infrastructure bond measure will go to fund additional carpool lanes on freeways, including the 405, 57, 215 and 5. Ultimately, the state wants to build an additional 950 miles of carpool lanes.

    "The bottom line is that it's filling up everywhere," said Hasan Ikhrata, director of planning and policy at the Southern California Assn. of Governments. "They are becoming as congested as the other lanes."

    You don't have to tell that to commuters, who have been increasingly grumbling. Even bus operators have been fuming. Foothill Transit officials complained recently that a bus trip on the 10 Freeway carpool lanes between Montclair and downtown Los Angeles that took 94 minutes a decade ago now lasts two hours.

    Caltrans is expected to develop a plan for the Federal Highway Administration in the next few weeks, and there is already much debate about what to do. If Caltrans can't improve carpool lane flow, it could risk losing federal funds.

    Among the ideas under consideration:

    • Limiting the state's program that allows lone motorists in gasoline-electric hybrid cars to use the carpool lanes.

    • Making it easier to enter and leave carpool lanes.

    • Increasing the minimum number of people for a carpool to three from two on some freeways.

    • Beefing up enforcement efforts against carpool lane cheating.

    Right now, motorists on most freeways are allowed to enter the carpool lanes only at certain stretches of the freeways. Most of the time, the lanes are separated from regular traffic by double yellow lines indicating that motorists may not cross at will.

    Through the years, Caltrans and other agencies have defended that system, saying it was intended to keep carpool lanes moving swiftly for long-distance motorists. Short-distance commuters would thus be discouraged, preventing them from merging into and out of the lanes and interrupting the flow of traffic.

    But some Caltrans officials are saying that as the system becomes more congested, the restricted merging points may actually cause bottlenecks, not prevent them.

    "People from mixed-flow lanes, when they come into the carpool lane, they come in at a slow speed. When they exit, they need to slow down to blend into mixed-flow traffic," said Syed Raza, who oversees traffic operations for Caltrans in Riverside and San Bernardino counties. "That ripple effect slows down everyone else in the carpool lane."

    Many Northern California carpool lanes already allow motorists to enter or exit at any time. According to the Caltrans study — which examined carpool lanes with computer sensors that monitor vehicle flow — some Northern California freeways are also out of compliance with federal regulations. Some of the worst congestion was found on the 101 Freeway in Santa Clara County as well as the 80 and 880 freeways in the east San Francisco Bay Area.

    The Orange County Transportation Authority is seeking to go to a similar enter-exit system on many of its carpool lanes and has already implemented it on new 22 Freeway carpool lanes.

    "There's nothing as frustrating as being stuck in traffic and having to wait" to get into carpool lanes, said Carolyn Cavecche, chairwoman of the transportation authority.

    Carpool lane user Elinor Hood, 67, of Ventura said the changes might improve traffic flow. But she also worries that they could increase accidents with more people weaving in and out — "especially when the carpool lane is moving fast and the people to the right aren't."

    Prohibiting hybrid drivers from using the most congested carpool lanes is also hotly debated.

    The state has issued 85,000 decals allowing lone motorists in hybrids to use the lanes, and there has been a clamor for officials to issue more as the fuel-efficient cars gain in popularity. Some carpoolers have complained that the addition of the hybrids has worsened traffic and slowed the carpool lanes. But a recent Caltrans study concluded that there was no clear indication that hybrids had significantly clogged the lanes.

    Some transportation agencies and experts have suggested increasing the minimum number of people allowed to use carpool lanes to three occupants from two. Three per car is already the minimum during peak hours on the El Monte Busway on the San Bernardino Freeway and on most roadways leading to the toll plazas on Bay Area bridges. Two per car is the standard in most other parts of the state.

    Raising the number would reduce carpool lane traffic — something Foothill Transit and other bus agencies like.

    But it would come at a price.

    "If they switched to three-plus, it would create 'empty lane syndrome' for a while," said Robert Copp, chief of the division of traffic operations for Caltrans in Sacramento.

    Carpool lanes would be emptier, not working at a great capacity, and some current users would be forced into regular lanes, worsening traffic there.

    But the idea also appeals to some traffic experts who have long sought ways to add toll lanes to Southern California freeways.

    Robert Poole of the Reason Public Policy Institute suggests that the extra capacity in the carpool lanes could be used by charging lone motorists a toll to use them. Revenue from these tolls could then be used to build freeways.

    Under the concept of "congestion pricing," the cost of the toll would rise in such a way as to keep the lanes free flowing.

    The Bush administration has made congestion pricing a priority of its transportation policy, earmarking $130 million this year in grants to agencies working on toll road-type projects. Los Angeles County has no congestion pricing program in the works — and officials believe that's why the region was passed over for federal traffic grants this year.

    Toll lanes exist on freeways in Orange and San Diego counties, with the prices changing with the flow of traffic. Fees on the 91 Freeway's toll lanes, for example, approach $10 during rush hour.

    Toll lanes on freeways are usually built by private firms — and efforts to convert existing carpool lanes to allow for tolls would have to clear legal hurdles.

    But the carpool lanes have long been controversial. An attempt in the 1970s to convert an existing lane into a carpool lane on the Santa Monica Freeway prompted a revolt.

    In response, Caltrans decided it would add carpool lanes only when widening freeways so it would not take away regular lanes.

    Some officials do see some bright spots in the traffic woes.

    "The good news is that people are using carpool lanes," said Rose Melgoza, a spokeswoman for the Caltrans office in the Inland Empire.
     
  16. IsrAmeriPrius

    IsrAmeriPrius Progressive Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(uclabruins @ Jun 23 2007, 08:49 AM) [snapback]466850[/snapback]</div>
    Here are a couple of excerpts:

     
  17. dipper

    dipper Senior Member

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    :lol:

    True colors are flying.

    When can we have the HOV stickers removed? My 2005 Prius does not have it because I do not believe in giving a free ride by non-Environmental reason to get a Prius.

    And Prii are still selling without the HOV stickers, so it makes perfect sense to kill this program early.
     
  18. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    I have always said it made no sense at all to open HOV lanes to hybrids. First it was supposed to be an incentive to buy low-emissions cars. But the Prius was selling so fast in those days that it needed no incentive. You don't put incentives on a product so popular that stores (or in this case, dealers) cannot keep it in stock.

    Now we have people in this thread saying that since Prius pollutes less Prius drivers should be allowed in the HOV lane to reduce pollution. But this reasoning is flawed, because the Prius pollutes so little, and other cars pollute so much, that it's the big polluters that you want to get to their destination and off the road sooner.

    What they should really do is allow only fully-occupied vehicles in the HOV lane. Whatever is the maximum occupancy for the vehicle is the number of occupants that would qualify it for the HOV lane. (Though I think that anybody who would live in a place with so much traffic that it needs an HOV lane must have a screw loose.)
     
  19. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(RobertG @ Jun 21 2007, 10:42 AM) [snapback]465839[/snapback]</div>

    Ok, so someone posted earlier 22k out of 85k stickers go to the SF Bay area, roughly 25% of all the stickers.

    Yet single passenger hybrids only occupy 6% of all carpool vehicles, I think this is a clear cut case that hybrid drivers are not the cause of any HOV lane slowdowns, not to mention lots of East Bay lanes are 3 person = carpool so to have 6% of that really shows there ain't jack squat going on from hybrids.

    I'm curious if there's a similar percentage in Southern California
     
  20. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Swanny1172 @ Jun 20 2007, 04:00 PM) [snapback]465382[/snapback]</div>
    I have a buddy who works for FedEX. They hired him to ride in the passenger seat, from Fullerton to LAX, so the FedEx truck(s) get to the airport(s) faster. Think of all the FedEX trucks during rush hours. Plus DHL, UPS, etc. And think of all those international airports around the country where they do this. These trucks take up twice the space as a Prius, and THEY fall within your 'belief' ... namely TWO in the vehicle is the end all - beat all. I don't know ... I'd prefer to have the much shorter Prius with only one in the car, over all those Trucks that are "legal" under the "2 people in the vehicle" rule.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Swanny1172 @ Jun 21 2007, 09:58 PM) [snapback]466149[/snapback]</div>
    Just because (compared to many) one has $$$ to burn, doesn't mean they want the CO2 going into the air, or that they're into rushing Peak Oil along, or that they like to feel like they're funding al queda ... or ... get it? lots of other reasons.