Lum wrote:
The problem is that businesses tend to congregate into certain areas (Bath in the case of my GF) and then insist that all employees arrive at 9AM. 9AM is the goal, but the start time is flexible, so traffic levels will rise sharply until 9, then drop suddenly. If you allow flexitime, you'll still have the same number of cars going to work but they will be spread across a greater period of time and thus not getting in each others way so much, therefore everyone can go at a more efficient speed and get to work quicker, which is better for both the environment and for the mental health of the nation. Plus I imagine people spend more money (good for the economy) when they aren't getting home completely exhausted and going straight to bed.
Yeah but what I'm getting as it's not getting rid of any traffic, it's just spreading it out, and
possibly increasing it because there is even less scope for car sharing. Although it will reduce the journey times for those who are on the road around 8-8.30am, it will increase it for those around 9am-10.30am, when many light delivery drivers etc are going to be starting their rounds, and when people who don't work a traditional 9-5 venture out.
Flexitime will not solve congestion, it will just shift it around a bit, benefitting a few people but disrupting a few more. Homeworking is obviously much better, but I take the point that it's not always popular with employers and not always suitable.