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<br /> of various transportation problems. Table 5 presents the <br /> results. <br /> [See Table 5) <br /> Significant proportions of respondents view most of <br /> the listed transportation issùes as "severe" or "modest" <br /> problems, as shown in Table 5, but there are some important <br /> distinctions to be made. "Lack of railroad overpasses" <br /> easily is viewed as the most important transportation problem <br /> by the citizens of San Marcos. Over 48% of respondents rate <br /> this as a severe problem. Similarly, large proportions <br /> view "traffic congestion" (71.1%) and "dm'lntown parking" <br /> (64.3%) as severe or modest problems. Considerably smaller <br /> proportions view traffic signals, lack of public <br /> transportation, sidewalks, or lack of bicycle routes as <br /> severe transportation problem issues. <br /> Table 5a reexamines these results accounting for the <br /> various category of respondents. <br /> [See Table 5a] <br /> Some significant differences to these patters are <br /> evident as shown in Table 5a. Residents of Central San <br /> Marcos are much less critical of "traffic congestion," <br /> 23 <br />