Commuting Patterns, Brian McKenzie, U.S. Census Bureau
Friday, March 8, 2013 at 9:00 a.m. EDT
View the archived segment 
Biography: Brian McKenzie
PRESENTATION [PDF]
![]() Slide 1: A Look at Commuting Patterns in the United States from the American Community Survey [PDF] |
![]() Slide 2: Commuting Highlights [PDF] |
![]() Slide 3: Travel Time to Work (One Way) (1990 to 2011) [PDF] |
![]() Slide 4: Percent of Workers with One-Way Commutes of 60 and 90 Minutes or Longer [PDF] |
![]() Slide 5: U.S. Metropolitan Areas with the 10 Longest Average Commutes: 2011 [PDF] |
![]() Slide 6: How People Get to Work: 2011 [PDF] |
![]() Slide 7: Automobile Commuting: 1980 to 2011 [PDF] |
![]() Slide 8: Walking, Bicycle, and Transit: 1980 to 2011 [PDF] |
![]() Slide 9: Percentage of Workers who Commuted by Public Transportation for Metro Areas: 2011 [PDF] |
![]() Slide 10: Working from Home: 1990 to 2011 [PDF] |
![]() Slide 11: How People Get to Work - Comparing Cities: 2011 [PDF] |
![]() Slide 12: Percent of Workers in State who Live in a Different State: 2011 [PDF] |
![]() Slide 13: The three largest county-to-county home-to-work flows occured within counties in New York City [PDF] |
Sources of Information:
News Release: Megacommuters: 600,000 in U.S. Travel 90 Minutes and 50 Miles to Work, and 10.8 Million Travel an Hour Each Way, Census Bureau Reports
Press Kit: American Community Survey Commuting Products
Commuting Journey to Work)
ACS Home Page
Video: American Community Survey Transportation














Email Updates
Facebook
Twitter
Flickr
YouTube