BCBusiness

June 2016 The Commuting Issue

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/675852

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 68 of 95

CLAYTON CHMELIK AND HIS WIFE were poster children for the car-shunning millennial generation for most of their 20s. They lived in south Vancouver's Marpole neighbourhood and both took buses almost everywhere—•rst to university, then to their practi- cums and jobs. They didn't own a car and didn't feel deprived. Now 33, Chmelik, a health manager at a Richmond company, has two cars in his family. He commutes 40 minutes a day each way in his Mazda 3 from his townhouse in Surrey, while his wife has her own car, a Mazda 5, that she'll be using to commute to her counsel- ling job when her maternity leave for their second child ends later this year. He estimates it costs them at least $700 a month to run both vehicles, not counting the $10,000 apiece the cars cost to buy. He knows it's a lot. "If I had a choice, I wouldn't do it." JUNE 2013 BCBusiness 37 WHY THE CAR IS STILL KING T H E C O M M U T I N G I S S U E commuting is a fact of life for just about anybody who works for a living. it's also a key factor in the economic, environmental and emotional health of a community. we look at the true cost of commuting, how residents and businesses are reorienting themselves to face the new reality (including taking a rowboat to work!)—and what, if anything, transportation planners can do to get us out of our cars B Y F R A N C E S B U L A P H O T O G R A P H Y B Y P A U L J O S E P H

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of BCBusiness - June 2016 The Commuting Issue