摘要: |
Employee Trip Reduction (ETR) in Texas gained prominence between 1991 and 1992 as one method to
address air quality problems in major urban areas. ETR was a requirement in the federal Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1990 requiring pollution reduction plans in non-attainment areas. Houston, then and now,
registered the most severe air pollution in the state and was under mandatory trip reduction according to
guidelines administered by the Texas Natural Resources Conservation Commission (TNRCC), the agency
charged with air quality compliance in Texas. Although Dallas, Beaumont, and El Paso were also found to be
outside of compliance, the ratings for those cities were less severe and mandatory trip reduction was not
required. From the program ’ s onset, employers responded negatively to the requirements and began lobbying
elected officials and others to repeal the mandatory trip reduction program. The principal objections centered
on the cost of implementing the program, stringent record keeping requirements, and doubtful benefits. By
the mid-1990s, political support for the mandatory programs began to wane and elected officials rescinded the
mandatory program. TNRCC, then, structured a voluntary trip reduction program for the state. The purpose
of this work is to examine trip reduction in its voluntary form and assess its effectiveness. Specifically, this
study reviews the experience of companies that have voluntary trip reduction programs. It seeks to answer
the question of what conditions seem to attract the greatest participation.
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