Three months after roads emptied amid the coronavirus outbreak, U.S. traffic has rebounded to about 90 percent of pre-pandemic levels as states lift more restrictions, “quarantine fatigue” continues to take a toll and summer weather draws people out, according to travel analysts. In 22 states, people have begun to drive even more than they did in late February, before government stay-at-home orders began to take effect, according to INRIX, a traffic analytics firm based in Kirkland, Wash.

Those include states with recent increases in coronavirus infections, such as South Dakota at 121 percent of pre-pandemic travel levels, South Carolina at 108 percent, and Oklahoma at 105 percent, according to the INRIX data analyzed up to June 12. Bob Pishue, an INRIX transportation analyst, said the number of miles traveled by passenger vehicles nationwide during the week of June 6-12 averaged 93 percent of miles traveled during the last week of February. He said vehicle mileage has increased steadily since April 9, when average traffic nationwide bottomed out at 52 percent of normal.

Many major metropolitan areas also have seen less traffic growth, Pishue said, probably because many people still working from home are not commuting into downtowns and other job centers.
Posted in: USA