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1
HOUSE RESOLUTION

 
2    WHEREAS, According to a 2014 study, five of the 20 most
3congested stretches of road in the United States are in the
4Chicago area; drivers in the northeastern Illinois-northwest
5Indiana region spent on average, 61 extra hours behind the
6wheel because of gridlock, construction zones, and collisions;
7that is the equivalent to a week and a half of work; the time
8wasted because traffic flow lagged well below speed limits
9during much of the day, was 6 hours more per driver;
10nationally, delays due to traffic congestion kept drivers and
11their passengers in cars for almost seven billion extra hours
12and more than three billion gallons of fuel were wasted; and
 
13    WHEREAS, Specific to the greater Chicago area, the study
14measured the total travel delay to 302.6 million hours
15affecting 3.4 million commuters in 2014; the cost of truck
16congestion, $1.5 billion in 2014, accounted for approximately
17five percent of the $28 billion nationally in the value of
18operating time and wasted fuel for commercial trucks stuck in
19traffic and adding to congestion; a driver in the Chicago
20region who needs to arrive on time at a destination 20 minutes
21away in light traffic, should instead budget a full hour during
22peak travel times; and
 
23    WHEREAS, Universities across the country are collaborating

 

 

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1with tech companies and state government entities to develop
2wireless technology to reduce traffic congestion; in South
3Carolina alone, Clemson University, Benedict College, The
4Citadel, South Carolina State University, and the University of
5South Carolina, are developing wireless technology for traffic
6signals in order to make it possible to eliminate car accidents
7and travel on busy roads without stopping for traffic lights by
8controlling traffic signals in real-time based on existing and
9predicted vehicular and pedestrian demand; researchers at MIT,
10using models developed in Singapore, were able to build
11simulations gauging driver locations with radio transmitters
12mounted on gantries scattered around a city, like the gantries
13used in many wireless toll systems, to route drivers around
14congested roadways by charging a toll for entering congested
15roadways, thereby providing an incentive to avoid it and choose
16and alternate route; therefore, be it
 
17    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE
18HUNDREDTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we
19urge Illinois colleges and universities, in cooperation with
20tech companies and government entities, to work together to
21develop wireless technology designed to work towards
22eliminating traffic congestion so that Illinois can be on the
23forefront in the elimination of traffic congestion and to make
24Illinois roads the safest in the nation, to reduce travel time,
25and to save money on wasted fuel.