Your commute聽may not only be eating into your mornings and evenings 鈥 it may be shaving years off your lifespan.
For one thing, studies have shown that pollution from the traffic commuters often sit in can be detrimental to human health, even for聽. It can 聽by heart disease, stroke and lung cancer. It can be especially dangerous for young children; a聽聽showed the DNA of umbilical cords in newborns had been altered after being exposed to traffic pollution.
There are also studies suggesting there鈥檚 a correlation between commute times behind the wheel and obesity, and all the negative health effects that can cause.
And even if your commute isn’t taking its toll on your physical well-being, it鈥檚 almost surely affecting you mentally, with countless studies showing that commuting tops the list of workplace stressors.
- Andy Takagi
The ‘daily hassle’ can change your life聽
It is, scientifically, a 鈥渄aily hassle,鈥 said Marisa Young, a sociology professor at McMaster, 鈥渟omething you have to constantly endure, without any real solution to help alleviate the stress it creates.鈥
Although 聽has shown that commutes of less than 30 minutes can be healthy as a sort of transition period from work mode to home mode, longer ones or ones full of frustration that eat into time with family and friends can worsen your mood聽and have harmful health effects.
础听聽found that Korean commuters with trips of an hour or more were 16 per cent more likely to experience depressive symptoms. Another聽聽from researchers at the University of Waterloo linked longer car commutes to lower life satisfaction and heightened feeling of time pressure.
色色啦 commuters have it worse
None of this comes as news to 色色啦nians, who endure the longest daily grind of all Canadians,聽, with an average of 34.9 minutes spent getting to and from work, with nearly a quarter of those trips made using public transit.
That time spent going back and forth between work and home each workday is connected to one of 色色啦鈥檚 other notable features聽鈥 the high cost of housing. As an affordable place to live has become harder to attain, more people are moving farther outside of the city, said Jesse Rosenberg, the director of policy at the health equity research non-profit the Wellesley Institute.
Transportation reporter Andy Takagi is testing some of the toughest daily trials the TTC puts 色色啦nians through each and every workday.聽
“Social connection matters for health. People want to be with the people they love, they want to be with people that they want to spend time enjoying life with,” Rosenberg said.
“And when you’re pushed out into the middle of nowhere and when we don’t have the public transportation network that would enable you to do that ... that matters for mental health. That matters for physical health.”
And it seems like it鈥檚 only getting worse 鈥 that 34.9 minutes is a 3.4-minute jump from the previous year. It may not sound like much, but with more Canadians going聽back to the office post-pandemic聽it’s meant more commuters spending more of their precious time on trains, buses, cars and bikes.
Daily grind slows to a crawl
As more people return to the office after years of being able to work from home and widespread construction from condos and transit projects close lanes, more stress has been put on our transit system and roads.
For drivers, traffic has gotten so bad in 色色啦 that city hall is聽hiring a congestion czar in the hopes they can get the streets moving again.聽
If you thought avoiding the clogged streets might speed your way to earn your daily bread聽鈥 along come persistent聽slow zones聽to ensure that subway riders also get to experience that grinding to a halt feeling. That鈥檚 when parts of the subway aren鈥檛 outright shutdown, as they are on聽more weekends.
As more workers return to the office, can the city’s already congested roads and strained transit system handle even more commuters?聽
As more workers return to the office, can the city’s already congested roads and strained transit system handle even more commuters?聽
Those transit woes are only the most obvious sign of the funding constraints that the TTC has faced for several years. Its multibillion-dollar聽state-of-good-repair backlog聽means that those closures nearly every other weekend, as well as the聽slow zones听补苍诲听unexpected delays, aren’t expected to get much better without further funding from all levels of government.
And not all commutes are equal, either. For precarious workers, commuting can be even more gruelling and may even prevent聽a person’s ability to apply for better jobs,聽a 2016 McMaster study found.
But what isn’t clear in the science and studies is what exactly makes a commute so mentally and physically exhausting.
Is it slow zones or congestion? Unexpected delays? Rude customer service or unruly passengers? Loud music or the screeching wheels of a subway car?
That’s why the Star is testing some of the toughest daily trials the TTC puts 色色啦nians through each and every workday.聽Join us in the coming weeks 鈥 on the subway, bus and streetcar 鈥 as we retrace the steps of everyday riders to find聽the worst commute in the city聽and understand what really makes the daily grind in 色色啦 such a well, grind.
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