Virginia man commutes 220 miles a day

Lots of my neighbors have that kind of a commute every day. I certainly had longer commutes in miles at times when I was falling timber. I just didn't have to deal with city traffic which I hate.
 
My ex father in law commuted from south Los Angeles to far north Los Angeles. He was paid quite well, but 3 hrs a day on the 405 takes a toll. So nice to open the door and be at your job.
 
We commuted over that just for daughters diving practice. Did it 5 days a week after school for around 3 years. It was crazy...
 
Don't know where Richard Va. is but I am guessing it is Richmond and the distance is about right.....
he has plenty of company.....cost of living up there is so high that it is near unaffordable....many people commute more than 50 miles one way every day....Northern Va. (AKA the occupied territory) is populated with people who work in Washington and sleep in Northern Va and most of them are come here Yankees and other assorted carpet baggers.
 
pdfangus":3i6t8vwg said:
Don't know where Richard Va. is but I am guessing it is Richmond and the distance is about right.....
he has plenty of company.....cost of living up there is so high that it is near unaffordable....many people commute more than 50 miles one way every day....Northern Va. (AKA the occupied territory) is populated with people who work in Washington and sleep in Northern Va and most of them are come here Yankees and other assorted carpet baggers.

I drive 52miles one-way and have done it for 16years. 520miles a week Min @ 19gal a week @ AVG 2.28 $ PER GAL AVG =4375.00 X 16years =70,000.00

That's the only complaint I have.

My mileage actually is around 800 to 1000 miles a week but the extra it is expensed.
 
You people back east measure commutes by miles. In the west it is measured by time. The daughter in Montana has about an hour and a half commute to the grocery store. No traffic but if you are riding with her you might want to buckle up and hang on as she will do about 80 mph on the gravel roads.
 
A guy I work with commutes 80 miles each way to my work and has been doing it for 20 years. I only commute about 5 and don't ever plan to commute any further.

Kyle
 
I made a round trip of 90 miles for 35 years. If I had it to do over I would move as close to work as I could. Any way the work produced a pretty good pension and one of the highest SS checks in the area according to our accountant.
 
Dave":6tpbtc2p said:
You people back east measure commutes by miles. In the west it is measured by time. The daughter in Montana has about an hour and a half commute to the grocery store. No traffic but if you are riding with her you might want to buckle up and hang on as she will do about 80 mph on the gravel roads.

they obviously don't have a LEO enforcing the speed limit every half mile either....it is ridiculous how many speeding tickets are written every day....my buddy who just retired from one sheriff's office and has taken a job as a bailiff in another county comments on how many tickets he sees every day in his new commute.

around here normally the state police work the interstates and the local police work the others....but where he is now the pickings are so rich on the interstate that they all work the interstate and it is like a feeding frenzy...target rich environment.... we were just talking about it yesterday while he was driving to work....
 
pdfangus":20kaulze said:
around here normally the state police work the interstates and the local police work the others....but where he is now the pickings are so rich on the interstate that they all work the interstate and it is like a feeding frenzy..

Over near where we are, on 33, its common now to see both State Troopers and Sheriff Deputies in marked and unmarked cars on a 1o mile stretch at the same time.
 
pdfangus":2bpsx01l said:
Dave":2bpsx01l said:
You people back east measure commutes by miles. In the west it is measured by time. The daughter in Montana has about an hour and a half commute to the grocery store. No traffic but if you are riding with her you might want to buckle up and hang on as she will do about 80 mph on the gravel roads.

they obviously don't have a LEO enforcing the speed limit every half mile either....it is ridiculous how many speeding tickets are written every day....my buddy who just retired from one sheriff's office and has taken a job as a bailiff in another county comments on how many tickets he sees every day in his new commute.

around here normally the state police work the interstates and the local police work the others....but where he is now the pickings are so rich on the interstate that they all work the interstate and it is like a feeding frenzy...target rich environment.... we were just talking about it yesterday while he was driving to work....

I don't believe they write speeding tickets in Montana for anything under 100 mph. But that is a whole different story. Here is Washington they will write a ticket but there aren't that many cops out looking for speeders. I have a 22 mile each way commute. About half on county roads and half on the interstate. I will see a cop maybe once a month while commuting. And I am commuting into the city that is both the county seat and the state capital. If I were to go north of town toward Seattle/Tacoma I will see more cops.
 
Do any of yall remember this ?

http://fairfaxnews.com/2012/04/virginia ... last-year/

Virginia Raked In $101 Million in Speeding Tickets Last Year
April 3, 2012 8:42 pmBy: Fairfax News inShare.3Virginia has about 75,000 miles of roadway, 279 law enforcement agencies, and no speed cameras, by state law. Nevertheless, the Commonwealth collected more than $101 million in revenue from speeding infractions written by radar-gun-wielding police officers during 2010, according to an analysis by AAA Mid-Atlantic.

An 8/10 mile stretch of Interstate 295 near Hopewell, Virginia is dubbed the “Million Dollar Mile” because of the town’s penchant for issuing millions of dollars in speeding tickets a year, mostly to out-of- state motorists.

It’s garnered Hopewell its reputation as a “speed trap” in the eyes of many motorists, the auto club notes. The dispute over the city’s speed ticket revenue elicited an official ruling from the state’s Attorney General and triggered a court clash between the city prosecutor and the Commonwealth’s Attorney.

Other cities across the state are also cashing in on speeding and other traffic citations, notes the auto club. All told, Virginia raked in $238 million in traffic fines during the fiscal year ended June 30, 2010. Those citations were issued by both the Virginia State Police and local police departments.

Very tempting
“It appears some communities are falling into the trap of using ‘traffic enforcement as a mechanism to raise revenue.’ It’s the very temptation that all law enforcement departments are warned to avoid,” said John B. Townsend II, AAA Mid-Atlantic’s Manager of Public and Government Affairs. “This enforcement for money, not for safety, undermines the credibility of law enforcement, infuriates motorists, and incenses politicians, and yes, even conscientious police officials. Was all of the ticketing done for safety purposes? Was the ticketing being done fairly across the entire driving population? News reports are shedding some doubt on the legitimacy of at least some of this effort.”

It’s ticket quotient. That’s the surprising finding in the Local Ordinances and Funding of Courts report. Prepared by the Virginia Auditor of Public Accounts, it provides a rare glimpse into the monies generated by traffic citations.

The lion’s share, or two-thirds, of speeding ticket revenue, tallying $64.8 million, was collected by 521 local governments – cities, county seats, counties, and incorporated towns – across the state during FY 2010, the report reveals. In contrast, one third of the infractions were written by Virginia State Troopers, with the Commonwealth netting $36.6 million from speeding ticket fines.

All-in-all, Virginia’s 500-plus localities and the Commonwealth reaped a windfall of $238, 314, 876 from traffic tickets of all sorts during FY 10, the breakdown of “‘Motor Vehicles’ infraction revenue shows. That’s the revenue from two million traffic tickets that year, editorialized The Washington Times.

Local police officers issued 60 percent of the moving violation tickets that year, carrying fines valued at $142, 712,713, District Court records shows. The offenses ranged from driving on a suspended license to failing to wear safety belts. During the same budgetary cycle, the Virginia State Police wrote 40 percent of the tickets, with the Commonwealth amassing $95,602,162 in traffic fines stemming from a veritable collectivity of traffic infractions, including child restraint violations, the AAA Mid-Atlantic analysis reveals.

Speeding tickets
Speeding tickets comprised 42.4 percent of all moving violations incurred on Virginia’s roads in FY10, the auto club observes. Reckless driving emerged as the second most common traffic offense that year. Virginia’s court system collected a total of $29,539,599 in fines stemming from reckless driving tickets, notes the auto club. That sum includes $18,437,544 collected from “Commonwealth Cases,” so-called, plus $11,102,055 in local cases, the Auditor’s report shows.

In Virginia, the District Court System handles the majority of “Motor Vehicles” infractions, explains Walter J. Kucharski, the Auditor of Public Accounts, who released his report September 28, 2011. Yet another report, this one from the Virginia State Police, shows State Troopers cited 197,616 motorists for speeding across the state in 2010. That’s in comparison to 72,532 drivers cited for reckless driving and 26,098 drivers nabbed for seat belt violations. State Troopers also apprehended 5,649 drunken drivers and stopped and ticketed 6,955 drivers for child restraint violations.

That same year, the Fairfax County Police Department issued more than 26,000 traffic tickets, and just across the Potomac River, the District of Columbia collected nearly two-fifths of Virginia’s statewide revenue total from speeding citations, which was $101,488,392. In contrast, the District netted $43.1 million in speed camera revenue resulting from 553, 753 speeding tickets.

Still, the ticket-writing finesse of Sheriff’s deputies in Hopewell, located 24 miles southeast of Richmond, and situated along a two-mile stretch of I-295, continues to raise eyebrows and concerns.

All told, 22,655 citizens live in the city of Hopewell, compared to the 1.1 million residents of Fairfax County, the U.S. Census Bureau confirms. Yet, Hopewell generated nearly half the traffic ticket count of the state’s most populous county. Outraged motorists are trending on an internet forum and buzzing about the city’s knack for issuing 1000 speeding tickets per month on average, netting over $150,000 per month for its depleted coffers.

Hopewell issued 10,122 traffic tickets in 2010, carrying $1.1 million in assessed fines, with 7,350 tickets (73.6 percent) going to out-of- state drivers. Deputies issued 14,778 traffic tickets in 2011, with 11,046 tickets (74.7 percent) going to residents of other states. The town netted $2,056,387 in fines, according to reports in the Richmond Times-Dispatch and the Progress-Index (Petersburg). Last Friday, a local judge upheld Hopewell’s controversial traffic ticketing system.

The controversy prompted Virginia State Senator John Watkins (R-Midlothian) to introduce legislation during the 2012 Virginia General Assembly Session to just to stop such practices along an interstate highway. Ultimately, that legislation (Senate Bill 500) died in committee.
 
and still if you set your cruise control 10 mph over the posted speed limit...you better be in the right lane or you will get run over....
so there is not shortage of potential victims for the speed traps.....
 
pdfangus":18vt4xd0 said:
Dave":18vt4xd0 said:
You people back east measure commutes by miles. In the west it is measured by time. The daughter in Montana has about an hour and a half commute to the grocery store. No traffic but if you are riding with her you might want to buckle up and hang on as she will do about 80 mph on the gravel roads.

they obviously don't have a LEO enforcing the speed limit every half mile either....it is ridiculous how many speeding tickets are written every day....my buddy who just retired from one sheriff's office and has taken a job as a bailiff in another county comments on how many tickets he sees every day in his new commute.

around here normally the state police work the interstates and the local police work the others....but where he is now the pickings are so rich on the interstate that they all work the interstate and it is like a feeding frenzy...target rich environment.... we were just talking about it yesterday while he was driving to work....

Amen to that. I have drove in all but ten states and I have never saw more troopers per mile than in VA. I drove to Withville a couple of weeks ago and I counted seven just from Marion to Withville on 81.
 

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