Statewide Iowa –(RI) — Traffic and the sale of new cars are both picking back up as the state emerges from the shut down brought on by the coronavirus.
Iowa Department of Transportation director of planning, Stuart Anderson, told the Transportation Commission during a workshop Monday traffic numbers bottomed out the week of April 10th.
(as said) “All traffic was down 44 percent that week and the interstate traffic was down 47 percent for the same week in 2019.”
Anderson says traffic volume has increased every week since the low.
(as said)”We are still below the 2019 levels — but the week that ended last Thursday — total traffic was down 21 percent,” according to Anderson. So, we’ve cut in half the traffic impacts on the state.”
The fees paid when someone buys a new car also saw a drop.
(as said)”In March they were down a little over 50 percent from April of last year…..in May it’s down a third from what it was,” Anderson says.
The car fees and gas tax are used to fund road repairs. Anderson says they had projected a loss of 25 percent in road funding or about 35 million dollars. But those numbers are looking better.
(as said) “COVID-19 impact now for the June distribution is a drop of 25 million dollars — which is a 20 percent reduction compared to the previously predicted 25 percent.”
Anderson says there is a lot of variability and projections “are highly subject to change.”