Talking Transportation: Flattening the Commuting Curve

Jim Cameron

In the post-COVID-19 world (whenever that may be) commuters will be asking themselves one question:  Is this trip really necessary?

Sure, when the quarantining is lifted and the life-threatening virus seems to have passed (at least until it returns next fall), we may look forward to getting back on the train and on the crowded highways.

But the weeks of not commuting have changed our attitudes toward work and the necessity of travel.  Going forward, I think we will be making that daily trek a lot less often and that will have a profound effect on transportation.

Sure, plumbers can’t telecommute, but knowledge workers can.  And they make up a large portion of southern Connecticut’s population.  They’ve been working from home just fine in recent weeks.  So they’ll be asking themselves (and their employers) if a daily schlep into their New York City, New Haven or Hartford office is really necessary, or if they can continue to work from home two or three days a week.

Being self-employed, I have worked from my home office for over 35 years.  I sure don’t miss the daily grind, nor the office politics, and love my work so I end up doing it six or seven days a week: it’s not a job but a passion.

When I started my consultancy I didn’t have a computer or even a fax machine. Today, the average home has as much communications gear as at the office.  We don’t need a physical presence “at work” to be working.

We will all be wearing face masks for many months to come any time we leave our homes.  And work meetings won’t involve shaking hands or exchanging business cards.  Business travel?  Not anytime soon.

I have a neighbor who used to make almost weekly flights to London for a single meeting or business luncheon.  That was nuts before COVID-19 and is certainly unnecessary now.

So in an ironic way, this virus might actually be a blessing for commuters.

Our trains and highways used to be crowded because we all bought into an outdated social construct that “work” was something we did from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, at an office.  Rush hours were called “peak periods,” just like when the virus was at its worst.

Post-COVID-19, we can flatten that commuting curve on the roads and rails.

Ridership on Metro-North need not peak in rush hours if it can be spread out over the hours or days.  And I-95 need not be a parking lot if people are working from home or staggering their hours.

Parking won’t be as much of an issue if demand drops.  And we’ve already seen New Yorkers opting for walking or bicycling instead of taking the bus or subway.

Less traffic should mean faster delivery times for trucks and shorter commutes for those who must drive.  And we’ll all be burning less fuel, cleaning our air.

Fewer cars on the road should mean a reduction in traffic accidents.  Driving less, our car insurance premiums should go down.

If we’re not wasting time commuting, we’ll have more time for our families, for volunteer work and our personal interests (and health-giving sleep.)

As horrendous as this virus has been, it’s given us all a chance to rethink our priorities.  Life is too short to work at a job you don’t like or waste hours a day getting there.

Post-COVID-19 will be a new world for commuters.

Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media.

About the author: Jim Cameron is founder of The Commuter Action Group, and a member of the Darien RTM.  The opinions expressed in this column are only his own. You can reach him at CommuterActionGroup@gmail.com  For a full collection of  “Talking Transportation” columns, visit www.talkingtransportation.blogspot.com.

For Connecticut shoreline towns, figuring out a summertime beach policy during social distancing means plenty of hard decisions (from HartfordCourant.com)

In a video taken at Groton’s Eastern Point Beach last weekend, Mayor Keith Hedrick held up flexible PVC pipes fitted together as a jumbo hoop.

When he stepped inside, it gave him a 6-foot buffer on all sides: just what beachgoers this summer will need to maintain.

“That’s your distance — this is what 6-foot is,” Hedrick said on the video. “So imagine walking through the beach with towels everywhere and chairs and coolers and children and sunbathers and everything else, and …

Read the full article by Don Stacom and published on the Courant.com  May 10, 2020 at this link.

Another COVID-19 Casualty: Lyme’s 2020 Hamburg Fair Has Been Cancelled

LYME – (Press Release) Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Hamburg Fair Association (HFA) has cancelled this year’s Hamburg Fair. 

The annual fair would have been celebrating their 119th year the third weekend of August.  Hosted by The Lyme Grange, the fair, located at 1 Sterling City Road, Lyme, CT has in the past featured Milestone Midway Carnival rides, kids games, food concessions, oxen-pull, arts and crafts, and top local musicians. 

“The Hamburg Fair Association has been following guidance from public health officials and has determined that it is just not possible to host the fair this year.” says Skip Beebe, HFA President.  “The health and safety of our community, guests, staff and volunteers remains our top priority.  We look forward to welcoming guests to our annual fair tradition in 2021 and welcome new volunteers to help make it a banner year.”    

The 2021 Hamburg Fair will take place Aug. 20 – 22.

The Annual Hamburg Fair is hosted by Lyme Grange #147 and organized by many local volunteers to build community relationships and create lasting family memories.  Money raised from the event proceeds are used to fund the Grange Association, Lyme Fire Association and Lyme Ambulance Association.    

For more information, visit www.hamburgfair.org

Death of David “Dave” Lawrence Allyn of Old Lyme Announced

OLD LYME — David “Dave” Lawrence Allyn, 66, of Old Lyme, beloved husband of 40 years to Donna (Diangi) Allyn, passed away May 4, 2020 after a courageous nine-year battle with cancer. He was born May 3, 1954, in New London and was raised in Mystic, graduating from Stonington High School in 1972.

Dave had a love for music that began early on. He started playing accordion at the age of nine …

Read the full obituary at this link.

For This Mother’s Day, Letters (37 of them!) From My Mom

Photo by Alvaro Serrano on Unsplash.

Editor’s Note: We read this column by Geoff Calkins and thought it was such a wonderful article and obviously so appropriate for today, Mother’s Day, that we wanted to share it with our readers.

It was published May 8 on TheDailyMemphian.com and the reason we saw it is that Geoff is the brother of one of our readers, who lives in Old Lyme, Ellen Calkins.

Ellen had posted the link to Geoff’s column on her Facebook page and we asked if we could share it on LymeLine.com. We now have her, and through her, Geoff’s, permission to publish, so do take a minute to enjoy this remarkable article, which begins:

It’s just one line, in one of dozens of letters I’ve kept. The letter isn’t dated, but it’s from a long time ago.

“Why don’t you go to journalism school?”

I wound up leaving the law and going to journalism school.

So, thanks, Mom!

The nine Calkins kids will all join in on a Zoom call with Mom Saturday. It’s something we’ve done since the pandemic began. But before there was Zoom, there was another form of long-distance communication. The letter. My Mom is the best letter-writer I have ever known …

Read the full column at this link.