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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, October 11, 2005

COMMENTARY
Time is money for Honolulu's commuters

By Cliff Slater

The primary objection to the option of HOT lanes, or high occupancy tollways, for Honolulu is the idea of people having to pay for highway use, which, in the minds of many, should be a free public utility.

An additional concern is that of equity; toll lane costs would fall more heavily on the less affluent.

So it should puzzle those who have these concerns to find that the HOT lanes in San Diego and Los Angeles are highly popular even with people who rarely use them.

Rather than commuters in the regular freeway's slower traffic resenting those whizzing by on the toll lanes, a federal government survey found that non-users overwhelmingly approve of HOT lanes.

The reason is that these motorists know that the HOT lanes provide a reliable way to be on time for crucial appointments when needed. They also realize that the addition of HOT lanes relieves traffic on the regular freeway.

A similar attitude prevails among our local residents who never use TheBus. Many of them will object to any suggestion of a cutback in bus service for the same reason. Their rationale is that they might need to use TheBus someday.

The issue in both cases is that we all value reliability in transportation. Precisely how much we value it is a new field now being studied by economists.

Another field that has been well-researched is the allied one of how much commuters value their time spent traveling. Economists do this by measuring how commuters choose between money-savings costs and how much additional time they are willing to take to save that money.

For example, they measure the additional time taken by motorists choosing a longer route on an untolled highway to avoid paying the toll on a bridge.

By knowing the motorists' earnings, the toll savings and the additional travel time, economists can calculate how much motorists value their time.

They can also gather data on those downtown Honolulu commuters who choose more distant, but less expensive, parking. These commuters save money on parking but spend a longer time walking to work.

Knowing these factors and commuters' earnings allows economists to calculate how commuters value their time.

We can also compare the time saved by those commuters who pay for higher-priced vanpools rather than the cheaper Express Buses and compare that to their earnings.

From the many studies on this subject, economists have determined that when we are walking or waiting during our commute, we value our time at about what we earn. When we are sitting comfortably in a bus, train or vehicle we value our time at half of what we earn.

Value of time is a significant determinant of how commuters choose between the various commuting methods open to them. It is the second-most important determinant next to commuters' out-of-pocket costs for parking.

However, neither value of reliability nor value of time have been included in past computer models attempting to correctly forecast transit ridership. It may be the reason that every Honolulu bus ridership forecast for the past 20 years has greatly overstated the actual ridership.

It will be interesting to see whether these values will be factored into the supposedly highly sophisticated computer model that will influence whether we get HOT lanes or rail transit.

Of course, were we to tie the pensions of elected officials to the accuracy of the upcoming transit projections, that would ensure that value of time and reliability was included and a lot more, including comparing the actual results of rail ridership in similar communities.

Cliff Slater is a regular columnist whose footnoted columns are at www.lava.net/cslater.