Bad traffic in L.A.’s toll lanes? Blame the 25% of drivers who don’t pay to use them, officials say View Larger Image Los Angeles Times » On any given morning, more than a quarter of drivers in the toll lanes have evaded the single-driver toll, a problem that has become the top issue for Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s traffic officials. The high scofflaw rate has harmed the efficiency of the lanes, driving up prices and slowing down speeds for the customers who did pay to enter, they said. Michelle2017-10-17T15:02:58-08:00October 13th, 2017|California, Highways, Tolling| Share This Story, Choose Your Platform! FacebookTwitterEmail Related Posts ‘A fiasco from the beginning’ — Caltrans’ costs soar on $1.1 billion San Francisco tunnels April 10th, 2019 Getting There: Congestion pricing isn’t coming to Spokane, but these roads aren’t free and never were April 8th, 2019 The Boring Company: What 8 Cities Really Think of Elon Musk’s Tunnel Vision March 26th, 2019 Sea level rise could threaten California cities and ports by 2040 March 21st, 2019 Multi-billion, decade-long toll road plan gets green light, but bottlenecks loom March 12th, 2019 ‘Fix the Damn Roads’: States Step In After Trump’s Plans Stall March 11th, 2019 ARTBA analysis shows boost in state transportation funding legislation March 8th, 2019 Genoa Bridge Collapse Throws Harsh Light on Benettons’ Highway Billions March 5th, 2019 Can America Still Build Big? A California Rail Project Raises Doubts February 25th, 2019