Title: A Program Overview Status of Planning for Operations
1A Program Overview Status of Planning for
Operations the Urban Partnership Initiatives
- Virginia ITS Conference
- Virginia Beach, Virginia
- April 29, 2008
Emiliano Lopez P.E. FHWA Office of
Transportation Management Washington, DC
2Agenda
- What Is Planning for Operations?
- Where We are Headed.
- Advancing the Program.
- Urban Partnership Agreements Scope and Current
Status.
3What is Planning for Operations?
- Planning for Operations is
- Coordination between planning and operations
- Coordination between planners and managers for
day-to-day operations
4Planning for Operations Program Goals
- To enhance and strengthen both the planning and
the operations functions to support regional
operations in the 21st Century. - To enhance the regional decision-making process
so that operations investments are on par with
investments in construction and system
preservation.
5Motivation for the Program
- SAFETEA-LU Requirements
- CMP The transportation planning process shall
address congestion management through a process
that provides for effective management and
operation - Mgmt and Ops LRTPs shall contain Operational
and management strategies to improve the
performance of existing transportation
facilities - Secretarys Congestion Initiative
- Transportation is key to the productivity, and
therefore the success, of virtually every
business in America. Congestion and delay not
only waste our time as individuals, they also
burden our businesses and our entire economy with
inefficiency and higher costs. - - Secretary Norman Mineta, 2001
6Management and Operations (MO) Includes
- Work Zone Traffic Management
- Roadway Weather Information
- Electronic Payment (for transit, parking,
tolling) - Freight Management (ports and transfer areas)
- Coordination of highway, rail, transit, bicycle,
and pedestrian operations
- Traffic Incident Management
- Travel Information Services (for roadways and for
transit) - Freeway Management
- Automatic Vehicle Location for Transit
- Traffic Signal Coordination
Underpinned by regional operations collaboration
and coordination
7Related Strategic Program Areas
- Congestion Management Process (CMP)
- Emergency Response and Homeland Security
- Planning for Special Events
- Regional ITS Architecture
- Data Management
- Performance Measures
8Key Issues and Challenges to Better Planning for
Operations
- Culture of Operators Planners
- Short vs Long Term Perspectives
- Organizational and Institutional Settings
- Awareness and Understanding of Issues
- Different Analysis Methods and Tools
- Funding Resource Opportunities
9Who Is Involved
- Transportation community
- State DOT Local jurisdictions (PW)
- Transit agencies Port/toll authorities
- Public safety community
- Police Fire EMS
- Freight/Shippers
- MPOs
- Business community
- Tourism Chamber of Commerce
10Where Are We Headed?A Cultural Shift
Coordination Among Day-to-Day Operations Managers
Coordination Among Decisionmakers
Linkages
11Why Coordinate Planning and Operations?
- Motivation for integrating MO in the MTP
- Rapidly increasing congestion
- Constraints on transportation capacity expansion
- Growing connectivity, interdependency and
operational impacts across modes - Need to develop a mix of capital projects and
operational solutions in the plan to address
congestion and public safety - Address problems now make a difference in short
term - What gets measured gets managed
12How Do We Get There? New Thinking is Needed
- Objectives-driven, performance-based
- Linking planning and operations
- Incorporating operational strategies into plan
- Incorporation of CMP into planning process
- Deliberate and sustained Regional Transportation
Operations Collaboration and Coordination
13Framework for New Thinking
14Objectives to Actualize the Goals
- Objectives are specific, measurable statements
relating to attainment of goals - An objective should be SMART
- Specific Sufficient to guide formulation of
alternatives - Measurable Quantitative measures
- Agreed Consensus on common objective(s)
- Realistic Within limitations of resources
- Time-bound Identified timeframe
15Objectives - Examples
- By 2020, reduce the variability in travel time on
freeways and major arteries in the region such
that 95 of trips (19 out of 20) have travel
times no more than 1.5 times the average travel
time for a specific time of day. - By 2010, reduce the clearance time of traffic
incidents on freeways and major arteries in the
region from a current average of X minutes to an
average of Y minutes.
16CMP and MO Interim Guidebooks
- Presents Best Practices for New Thinking in
Planning for Operations - Will Be Available Early May
- May Posted on Office of Operations Website
http//www.plan4operations.dot.gov/ - May to October Comment Period to Seek Input
Finalize Documents - Fall 2008 Guidebooks Will be Finalized
17Interim Guidebooks OutreachNext Steps Scheduled
- June Web Seminars to DOTs, MPOs and Transit
Operators - July August Six Informational Workshops
Across the US Explaining the Guidebooks Seeking
Input - Special Focus Technical Assistance to TMAs on
Improving Quality of Their CMPs
18Locations of the WorkshopsJuly to September 2008
- Greater Boston Area
- Philadelphia
- Atlanta
- Chicago
- Denver
- Seattle
19Update on the Urban Partnership Agreements
- The Current Status of Activities
20Urban Partners
Seattle
Minneapolis -St. Paul
New York City
San Francisco
Note NYC was unable to secure tolling
authority and is no longer an Urban Partner.
Miami
21Congestion Pricing - The Options
Convert Currently Free General Purpose Lanes/
Facilities to Variably or Dynamically Priced
Build New Lanes/ Facilities to be Variably or
Dynamically Priced
HOV to HOT Conversion (Use Excess Capacity)
Cordon or Area Pricing
Minneapolis St. Paul
Miami
22Minneapolis St. Paul Urban Partner
- Create 15 miles of continuously priced lanes on
I-35W between downtown Minneapolis and the
southern suburbs - Existing HOV lanes converted to
dynamically-priced HOT lanes - Existing HOT lanes extended
- Convert narrow bus-only shoulder lanes to wider
Priced Dynamic Shoulder Lanes
23Miami Urban Partner
- Create 21 miles of HOT lanes on I-95 from Fort
Lauderdale to downtown Miami - Raise HOV limit from HOV2 to HOV3
- Expand 10-lane highway to 12 lanes (by reducing
the width of the existing lanes from 12 to 11
feet and using a portion of the shoulder)
24Congestion Pricing - The Options
Convert Currently Free General Purpose Lanes/
Facilities to Variably or Dynamically Priced
Build New Lanes/ Facilities to be Variably or
Dynamically Priced
HOV to HOT Conversion (Use Excess Capacity)
Cordon or Area Pricing
Minneapolis St. Paul
Miami
Seattle
San Francisco
25Seattle Urban Partner
- Variable pricing on the State Route 520 floating
bridge. - King County crossing that currently carries about
160,000 people per day between Seattle and its
Eastside suburbs. - Tolls on the existing bridge are intended to help
pay for the new bridge.
26San Francisco Urban Partner
- Variable pricing on Doyle Drive, the 1.5 mile
elevated roadway leading to the Golden Gate
Bridge - Will charge an extra one-way-fee above the 5
toll on the Golden Gate Bridge - Revenues will help pay to
reconstruct the 70-year old
Doyle Drive
27Congestion Pricing - The Progress
Convert Currently Free General Purpose Lanes/
Facilities to Variably or Dynamically Priced
Build New Lanes/ Facilities to be Variably or
Dynamically Priced
HOV to HOT Conversion (Use Excess Capacity)
Cordon or Area Pricing
Minneapolis St. Paul
Seattle
Miami
San Francisco
New York City
28New York City Urban Partner
- Cordon/area pricing
- Will charge drivers 8 and trucks 21 a day to
enter or leave Manhattan below 86th Street on
weekdays during the workday - Those who drive only within the congestion zone
would pay 4 a day for cars, 5.50 for trucks
29New York City Proposal
- Status
- Commission Plan approved by City Council
- State Legislature did not have votes for passage
- Observations
- Started significant National dialogue
- USA not ready for aggressive congestion pricing
such as cordon pricing - Points to importance of HOT projects as a way of
increasing the publics comfort level - Funds will be re-allocated
30Congestion-Reduction Demonstration (CRD) Program
- Los Angeles (announced April 25th)
- 213.6 million
- HOV-to-HOT Conversion on I-10 I-210
- Chicago (anticipated to be announced April 29th)
- On-Street Parking Pricing using a Public-Private
Partnership - Off-Street Parking Pricing at Employer Sites
- Transit Improvements in the Downtown area
31For More Information onUPAs and CRDs
- Visit
- www.fightgridlocknow.gov
- www.fhwa.dot.gov/congestion/index.htm
- www.ops.fhwa.dot.gov/