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BOX 2
Data
on Passenger-Miles of Travel
Total
passenger-miles of travel (pmt) excludes travel in
heavy trucks, by bicycle, by walking, and by boat (including recreational
boat). Pmt in heavy trucks is excluded because such travel is assumed to be
incidental to the hauling of freight, the main purpose of this travel. Bicycle,
pedestrian, and boat travel are excluded because national estimates are not
available on an annual basis. The Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS)
compiles pmt data primarily using mode-by-mode data derived in various ways by
BTS and others. For instance, pmt for large air carriers and intercity trains
are estimated from ticket sales and trip lengths; for transit, data are
reported by transit authorities. Each method used to estimate these data has
differing strengths and weaknesses.
BTS
has another set of national pmt, the National Household Travel Survey (NHTS),
last conducted jointly by BTS and the Federal Highway Administration in 2001
and 2002. As survey data, they are collected using a single methodology. This
provides a coherence and comparability not available with data compiled by
individual modes. However, the survey data are not collected annually, making
them unsuitable for year-to-year trend analyses. Another difference between
NHTS data and the data compiled by BTS is the extent of their coverage among
modes. It can be expected, then, that because of methodological and coverage
issues the two sources of pmt data will differ. In section 4, Variables
Influencing Traveling Behavior, the report uses data from the 2001 NHTS.
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