Title: Kansas City Cross Town Improvement Project CTIP Summary
1Kansas CityCross Town Improvement Project
(C-TIP) Summary
- A Public Private Partnership
- June 21, 2006
2Contents
- Background
- Problem Statement
- Community Business Impacts
- Solution
- Public Private Industry Benefits
- Key Issues
- Why Kansas City?
- Partner Review
- Next Steps
- Summary
3Background
- More than one ground mode is often involved in
the transportation of intermodal goods - Interchange of this traffic must occur, often in
metropolitan areas - Truck to rail (near ports)
- Rail to truck to rail (rail interchanges)
- Truck-borne rubber tire interchanges are used
- When moving freight into and out of ports (where
on-dock rail is not available) - When steel wheel rail-to-rail interchanges are
not possible - To save time (steel wheel rail-to-rail
interchanges often take 2-3 days) - When containers will have cargo added/removed
- When service criteria for cutoff connection not
met - When railroads have car shortages or dont want
to relinquish scarce assets - When trains are not block order loaded at the
origin terminal
4Background
- Railroads provide critical freight links
- Long haul railroads rely heavily upon
interchanges for cross-continent movements - Intermodal rail traffic converges on a handful of
Midwestern cities - Interchanges also occur in significant numbers in
and around sea ports
5Rail-to-Rail Interchanges
- There are five major East-West intermodal
exchange points - Chicago is the largest example
- Intermodal crossroads
- 6 Class I railroads interchange
- 20 major rail yards
- 20,000 daily intermodal truck moves (Source
CREATE) - Nearly 1/3 are cross-town
- At least 10 are Bobtails
- Other hub cities experiencing same situation on a
smaller scale - Kansas City
- Memphis
- St. Louis
- New Orleans
6Port-to-Rail Interchanges
- Problem applies to a number of cities with large
ports - Few ports have on-dock rail
- Reliance on rubber-tire interchanges with nearby
rail terminals
7Airport Interchanges
- Airport cargo contributes to cross-town moves
between airports and distribution centers
8Why Kansas City?
- Smaller hub cities are also affected by these
issues - Kansas City is the second largest rail hub in the
US - Significant risks associated with a pilot study
in Chicago - Too large a scope
- Significantly more expensive
- Very visible to the public
- While not as significant a problem, benefits will
be seen - Results will be directly transferable to other
cities
9Example
10Problem Statement
- The existence of cross-town rubber tire
interchanges creates conditions that adversely
impact the efficiency of the transportation
network, the safety of the motoring public, and
the security and quality of life of citizens in
the communities through which they take place.
- Interchange volume expected to increase
proportionally to overall freight volumes - Inefficiencies in cross-town interchanges lead to
added traffic congestion and diminished air
quality - Bobtail and empty moves do not create revenue
- Bobtail tractors are inherently unsafe
- Empty trucks are not subjected to comprehensive
security standards - Lack of integration and communication results in
fragmented operations
11Volume Increases
- Intermodal volume is increasing
- Port related traffic is increasing
- Number of truck miles is growing
- Distance between terminals is increasing
Source American Association of Port Authorities
Source FHWA, Highway Statistics, Table VM-1,
1980-2004
12Congestion Increases
- FHWA Freight Analysis Framework (FAF) predicts
significantly worsening congestion at interchange
locations - Congestion at key locations where cross-towns
occur - East coast (port-to-rail)
- West coast (port-to-rail)
- Along Mississippi (rail-to-rail)
Back to Problem Statement
13Air Quality Degradation
- Congestion leads to idling which emits more
pollutants - Low profitability of drayage providers
contributes to an aging fleet which is less
environmentally friendly
Back to Problem Statement
14Bobtail Efficiency
- Empty and bobtail moves create no revenue
- Costs associated with moving bobtails must be
absorbed by one or more carriers - Empty moves represent additional, potentially
unnecessary truck trips
Back to Problem Statement
15Lack of Integration
- Operations are not integrated across modes
- Modes operate independently
- Backhaul opportunities are lost
- Accurate visibility information is not fully
available, or shared - Separate, isolated databases
- Inconsistent data quality and quantity
- Communications between modes is sub-optimal
- Heavy reliance on phone, fax, e-mail
- High degree of human intervention
16Bobtail Moves
- Empty moves between terminals occur at a high
frequency - Bobtail moves are inherently unsafe
Source The Michigan Heavy Truck Study, Executive
Summary 1990
Source www.hankstruckpictures.com/joe_hyberg.htm
The bobtail configuration clearly has the most
serious problem safely negotiating the highway
system - The Michigan Heavy Truck Study,
Executive Summary, 1990
Back to Problem Statement
17Security
- Some units (often coming in on railcars) do not
have security bolts - During cross-town movements there is limited
ability to locate the truck - Limited security (fencing, locked gates) at
terminals that do not operate 24/7 - Bobtail moves often do not have to check in/out
at facilities - HazMat containers are mixed in with other
cross-town containers at many terminals
Back to Problem Statement
18Impact on Communities
- Congestion is worsening
- Service level degradation across all modes
- Deteriorating air quality
- Reduction in safety
- Bobtails inherently unsafe
- Large number of trucks on city streets
- Bobtail moves are eroding carrier profitability
- Owner-operator companies disappearing
- Public outcry against truck traffic
- Resistance to public acquisition of new
right-of-way
19Introduction to Solution
- In defining a technology-based solution, a number
issues had to be addressed, namely
- Intellectual Property who will own the
software, and will licensing (if any) fees be
guaranteed reasonable? - Business Model is there a money-making
opportunity here for industry? - Mode Expandability at how many other sites and
modes will the solution work with little or no
modification? - Operator who will operate the solution during
the pilot? After its adopted? - State Local Involvement What role will state
and local governments play? MPOs?
20Solution
Real-Time Traffic Monitoring
Wireless Drayage Updating
Chassis Utilization Tracking
Intermodal Move Exchange
21Solution
C-TIP is a four-part pilot demonstration that
seeks to provide a sustainable solution to
cross-town intermodal exchange problems. It will
be delivered through a public-private partnership
that includes the participation of city
governments, MPOs, State DOTs and the US DOT, in
addition to railroad and trucking companies,
steamship lines and 3rd party providers
- Major Components
- Intermodal Exchange (IMEX) open architecture
portal that allows for collaborative dispatch
management model among rail lines, truckers and
facility operators - Wireless Drayage Updating (WDU) open
architecture mechanism utilizing low cost
wireless technology as an interface between
drivers and dispatchers - Chassis Utilization Tracking (CUT) open
architecture portal that allows for commonly
managed chassis fleet and/or options for
collectively managing current assets - Real Time Traffic Monitoring (RTTM) real time
monitoring and distribution of route-specific and
location specific travel time and congestion
information
22Public Benefits
- Improved Efficiency
- Fewer overall moves leads to congestion
mitigation - Improved Safety
- Fewer overall moves leads to less accidents
- Reduction/elimination of unsafe bob-tail moves
- Reduction in negative Environmental factors
- Fewer overall moves leads to less pollution
- Improved air quality
23Private Industry Benefits
- Improved Efficiency
- Reduced costs and higher utilization rates for
drayage providers - Increased driver results and retention
- Increased reliability and availability of key
data - Reduced growth rate of capital investment in
assets and real estate - Higher rate of terminal capacity recovery
- Reduced dwell time of loads prior to departure
- Reduced chassis inventory and repositioning
24Key Issues
Issue ID is referenced in later slides
25Potential Partners
26Partner Priorities Objectives
Deploy technology to
State and Local Govt
Reduce Congestion and Improve Air quality
(KC Scout 1998 ITS Earmark)
DHS/TSA
Enhance Freight Security (672,998 approved
2005 Supporting C-TIP)
Carriers
Enhance Productivity (Contribution of Data and
Operation Processes)
US DOT
Enhance freight Efficiency and Safety (Request
ITS funding to address these issues)
3rd Parties
Address user needs Through Public/Private
Partnership
27Statements of Support
- State of Missouri
- KC SmartPort promotes inland port operations in
KC - KC Scout ITS traffic incident management
program - Railroad Companies
- Union Pacific Railroad (2 terminals in KC area)
- BNSF Railway (2 terminals in KC area)
- Kansas City Southern Railway (1 terminal in KC
area) - Norfolk Southern Combined Railroad (1 terminal in
KC area) - Trucking Companies
- In-Terminal Services
- Mid-Cities Motor Freight, Inc.
- Greer Transportation
- Intermodal Association of North America (IANA)
- Provides coordinative, educational, and technical
support services to the intermodal freight
industry
28Next Steps
Next Steps
C-TIP Project Components
- C-TIP Pilot Operations
- Partner Evaluation
- Systems/Process Refinement
- Development of Value-Added Applications
- ITS Deployment Test
- User Needs Assessment
- IMEX, WDU, CUT, RTTM Development
- Technical/Operational Evaluation
- User Needs Assessment
- Teaming Agreements
- Detailed Project Planning
- Evaluation Planning
- Business Process Mapping
- Performance Measures
- User Driven Cost/Benefit Assessment
- Concept of Operations
- Policy/Funding Decisions
- Concept of Operations
- Funding Decisions
- Completion of Preliminary Analysis (CBM, Process
Modeling)
29Summary
- Cross-town interchanges occur frequently, and
are expected to grow in number - Interchanges are currently deficient
- Efficiency
- Safety/Security
- Environment
- Coordinated intermodal solution is required
- Need to leverage technology
- Multi-part deployment
- Public/private partnership
- Repeatable, expandable, scalable solution
- Next stepssecure funding and begin detailed
planning
30AppendixBusiness Case Details
31Business Case Overview
Issues
Back to Solution
32Business Case Overview
Issues
Back to Solution
33Business Case Overview
Issues
Back to Solution
34Business Case Overview
Issues
Back to Solution
35Potential Impacts
P-T Port Truck A-T Air
Truck R-T-R Rail-Truck-Rail
36Potential Impacts
P-T Port Truck A-T Air
Truck R-T-R Rail-Truck-Rail
37Potential Impacts
P-T Port Truck A-T Air
Truck R-T-R Rail-Truck-Rail
38Potential Impacts
P-T Port Truck A-T Air
Truck R-T-R Rail-Truck-Rail
1. Congestion Rankings taken from the 2005 Annual
Urban Mobility Study done by the Texas
Transportation Institute 2. Air Quality
statistics taken from the EPA Green Book 3.
Airport data reported as cargo tonnage moved 4.
Norfolk is not ranked, Virginia Beach (ranked 46)
and Richmond (ranked 57) are in the immediate area
39References
- Railroads
- Ben Shelton, Union Pacific
- Ocean Carriers/Ports
- Ed McQuillan, Hanjin Shipping
- South Carolina Port Authority
- Airports
- David Wirsing, Former President, Air Cargo
Association - Aircargoworld.com
- Research Bodies
- Eric Jessup, Washington State University
- The Michigan Heavy Truck Study, 1990
- Annual Urban Mobility Study, 2005, Texas
Transportation Institute - Green Book, US Environmental Protection Agency
- MPOs
- Gerald Rawlings, CATS
- Pete Beaulieu, Puget Sound Regional Council
- Southern California Council of Governments
- 3rd Parties
- Ted Prince, Optimization Alternatives, Inc.
- Tom Malloy, Intermodal Association of North
America - Walter Locke, Railinc
- Mike Winchester, OCEMA
- K. Mark Sommerhauser, Kansas City Scout
- Chris J.F. Gutierrez, Kansas City SmartPort
- CREATE
- Trucking Companies
- Phil Noury, Landstar