Company travel assistance in the London area.

Author(s)
Kompfner, P. Hudson, R.H.C. Shoarian-Sattari, K. & Todd, D.M.
Year
Abstract

This report describes a major study of company travel assistance to car and public transport users crossing a Central London cordon in 1989. Surveys were carried out at the roadside and on all public transport modes, as well as at businesses and workplaces. One half of all cars entering Central London during the survey period from 0700 to 1300 hours were company cars. Four out of five of all cars received some form of assistance. Over one half of commuters in both company and private cars had a parking space provided. Only two in five public transport passengers received any help with the costs of their journeys, and three quarters of those had a season ticket loan. Two thirds of passengers had a car, and one in five of those had a company car but chose to travel by public transport. A survey of parking spaces in Central London suggests that their number has been declining in recent years. Results from the roadside surveys indicated that the existing supply of spaces was fully used by drivers. Companies believed that the provision of company cars would continue to expand in the future. Changes in the taxation of company cars and other benefits were expected to have little effect on companies' policies and on how employees travelled to work. Both car and public transport users favoured the improvement of public transport over measures to improve the road system.

Publication

Library number
C 4394 [electronic version only] /72 / IRRD 842535
Source

Crowthorne, Berkshire, Transport and Road Research Laboratory TRRL TRL, 1991, 29 p., 13 ref.; Research Report ; RR 326 - ISSN 0266-5247

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.