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Traffic Congestion: Potential Solutions

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... modes (e.g. telephone, electricity, and airlines) charge peak and off peak rates ... Congestion Pricing or 'Value Pricing': The Final Frontier ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Traffic Congestion: Potential Solutions


1
Traffic Congestion Potential Solutions
  • CRP 445/545
  • October 2007

2
Next Two Classes
  • Answers to traffic congestion
  • What are they and how well do they work?
  • Various issues related to transportation and
    quality of life
  • Sustainable communities (development that
    supports alternative modes of transportation),
    walkable communities, access management, traffic
    calming, context sensitive design, modern
    roundabouts, etc.

3
What Lies Ahead
  • Lectures
  • Two classes on Environmental Justice and Equity
  • Fairness issues in transportation
  • Impacts of the transportation system on people
    and communities
  • Services provided to different groups of people
  • One class on an issue of current concern
    Transportation Security
  • One class on freight transportation
  • (Guest lecture)
  • One class on future transportation trends and
    issues
  • (Guest lecture)

4
What Lies Ahead
  • Discussions and Short Papers
  • Student presentations on economic impact issues
  • Student presentations on QoL and EJ issues (if
    applicable)
  • Role play on environmental justice
  • Role play on security
  • Your project presentations
  • Final Exam

5
Todays Material
  • Various Solutions to Traffic Congestion
  • What are they?
  • Do they make sense if we think of traffic
    congestion as a market failure, a pricing problem
    or a negative externality?
  • Under what circumstances do they seem to be
    effective?
  • A shameless marketing discussion of the College
    of Design Rome Program for Summer 2008

6
What Is Congestion, Really?
  • A pricing problem--peaking demand
  • Highway capacity is a scarce resource under some
    conditions, yet we always charge the same price
    for it via user fees and taxes
  • Other utilities and transportation modes (e.g.
    telephone, electricity, and airlines) charge peak
    and off peak rates
  • An externality
  • As you enter a congested highway facility, you
    impose additional delays on all the other
    motorists
  • In other words, a form of market failure

7
Types of Congestion
  • Repetitive or chronic congestion
  • Occurs at the same places every day at about the
    same time (usually on weekdays)
  • Examples rush hour congestion on I-235 in Des
    Moines congestion at a major air hub on Friday
    afternoons
  • Tends to be an urban phenomenon and to be worse
    the larger urban areas get
  • Event-related congestion
  • Occurs due to an event, such as a crash, vehicle
    fire, weather, sporting event, construction zone,
    concert, etc.
  • Examples rubbernecking at a crash scene,
    aircraft delays at a hub due to thunderstorms
  • Can be urban or rural

8
Some Generic Approaches
  • Build more highway capacity
  • Build public transit capacity
  • Encourage higher rates of vehicle occupancy (more
    persons per vehicle, PPV) through means such as
    HOV lanes or formal ridesharing programs
  • Use ITS to provide better information to
    motorists and to improve operations
  • Pricing of the roadway and/or parking

9
The Market Failure Test
10
Adding More Highway Capacity
  • This is the traditional approach to traffic
    congestion
  • Adding roadway capacity will reduce congestion
    provided that an urban areas roadway program can
    keep pace with local travel demand growth
  • The problem is, most urban areas have already
    fallen behind so that new road growth now has to
    be faster than traffic growth
  • This is very difficult to accomplish
  • It is also very possible to overbuild capacity

11
Adding More Highway Capacity
  • If an urban area has fallen behind, any new road
    will almost magically induce new traffic to
    move from other roads and from off-peak to fill
    up the new capacity
  • Planner Anthony Downs observed this phenomenon
    decades ago
  • Urban areas, no matter what their size, are only
    adding on average 50 of the new lane-miles
    needed to keep up with traffic growth
  • Some new capacity will be needed and will be
    built, but this is very unlikely to be the only
    answer in most places
  • Wed have to more than double spending on new
    urban projects to catch up and then stay ahead
  • This approach will work best in smaller, slower
    growing metro areas

12
Adding Public Transit Capacity
  • The problem with adding public transit capacity
    is that it starts from very low base in most
    small and medium-sized urban areas
  • In smaller urban areas, public transit and
    ridesharing only capture 1 to 2 percent of the
    market for work trips
  • In order for this strategy to impact congestion
    in most urban areas, the occupants of at least 3
    or 4 out of every 100 vehicles need to switch to
    transit or become a carpool or vanpool this
    would be difficult to accomplish in most metro
    areas
  • This solution will work better in larger metro
    areas with well-established transit systems
  • This is probably a strategy that can only succeed
    when done in concert with others

13
Encourage Higher PPV
  • This strategy normally involves the use of
    strategies such as HOV lanes during rush hour
  • HOV lanes require that vehicles carry at least
    two occupants
  • Experience indicates that in most places, HOV
    lanes are a poor use of limited highway capacity
    they generally operate far below their useful
    capacity and dont appear to reduce overall
    demand much at all
  • Enforcement is a must with HOV lanes since if
    there is no enforcement, there will be poor
    compliance (SOVs will use the lanes)

14
Better Use of Information/ITS
  • Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) play two
    roles in battling congestion
  • Improving our ability to efficiently operate
    transportation systems
  • Traffic signal interconnection and optimization
  • System performance monitoring via sensors and
    cameras
  • Incident detection, response and clearing
  • Ramp metering

15
Better Use of Information/ITS
  • Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) play two
    roles in battling congestion
  • Improving information to travelers, ideally in
    real time
  • Through variable message signs
  • Via Highway Advisory Radio (HAR)
  • Via Transportation Management and Information
    Centers and kiosks
  • Over the Internet
  • Via 511 telephone services
  • Over traditional media (radio, television, cable)

16
Effectiveness of ITS
  • ITS appears to be the best solution right now for
    dealing with event-related congestion
  • Weather problems
  • Traffic-crash related delays
  • Special events
  • Some ITS applications like ramp metering and
    traffic signal interconnection do positively
    impact chronic congestion
  • Twin Cities ramp metering experiment
  • In the longer term, smart highways and smarter
    cars may help us get more capacity from our
    highways

17
Congestion Pricing or Value Pricing The Final
Frontier
  • According to economic theory, congestion pricing
    should be the single most effective answer to
    congestion
  • Pricing of parking is a related policy lever
  • We know the concept works based on experience in
    other industries electricity, telephone,
    airlines, hotels
  • Unfortunately, its also the hardest concept to
    gain acceptance of
  • Hence, the recent attempt to come up a more
    positive spin (value pricing)
  • This is because variable pricing of highways
    requires a fundamental change in how we think
    about them

18
How Congestion Pricing Works
  • A variable price for using the road is charged
    based on the level of congestion (or time of day
    as a surrogate)
  • Ideally, automated collection technologies are
    used to avoid queuing at toll booths
  • People are thought to be willing to pay tolls of
    25 to 40 cents per vehicle mile to avoid
    congestion in major urban areas (this is the
    revenue maximizing toll)
  • Congestion is eliminated through route shifting,
    mode shifting, ride sharing, temporal shifting of
    trips, trip avoidance, etc.some motorists are
    tolled off
  • Revenues can be used to finance capacity or to
    make alternative transportation investments in
    the same corridor

19
An Operational Test
  • The first US test of congestion pricing was done
    in California by a private company operating a
    state highway
  • The California Private Transportation Company
    uses the toll revenues to finance extra roadway
    capacity
  • A 16 kilometer (9 mile) portion of Route 91 near
    Anaheim in Orange County
  • Variable tolls are charged on four express lanes
    (two in each direction) to keep speeds high and
    congestion low
  • SOV cars pay up to 2.50 during rush hour and as
    little as 25 cents off peak to use the express
    lanes
  • Carpools and vanpools with three or more
    occupants travel toll free anytime
  • All tolls are paid electronically using
    transponders in the vehicles

20
An Operational Test
  • So far, Route 91 is working well
  • Violators are automatically caught with cameras
    and are mailed fines of 100 to 300
  • The new express lanes drew so many commuters that
    congestion on the old parallel, free lanes
    declined to levels not seen in 15 years
  • Carpooling has increased dramatically in the
    corridor
  • Air pollution emissions are down in the corridor
    as a whole
  • The number of transponders in use is many months
    ahead of the projected level (the project is
    popular)
  • The state DOT made complementary investments in
    rail public transit in the same corridor this
    service is also well-used
  • The private company that owned it already sold it
    back to the public sector

21
Sticking Points
  • Getting the public to understand and warm up to
    the concept of congestion pricing--this is the
    purpose of demonstration projects such as Route
    91
  • The equity or fairness issue--what to do about
    people who cannot afford the congestion toll
  • The answer to this is in how the revenues from
    the congestion toll get spent, what level high
    occupancy tolls (HOT) are set, and what other
    investments are made (e.g. in public transit)

22
Conclusions Battling Congestion
  • Can we build our way out?
  • Only partially and only in some places.
  • Can we use public transit investments instead.
  • To a limited extent.
  • Are non-toll HOV lanes the answer?
  • Apparently not. They do not seem to work well.
  • Will better information and ITS work?
  • Very well for event-related congestion, but not
    as well for chronic congestion.
  • Is pricing the answer?
  • It looks promising but is hard to sell to the
    public and decision-makers. We need to try it
    more places.

23
Conclusions Battling Congestion
  • Congestion is an issue that is very likely to be
    with us for a long-time it will likely get worse
    before it gets better
  • We need to more carefully consider how we plan
    our cities in terms of development density and
    mixing land uses.
  • It may be that we could eliminate many auto trips
    in the long-run this way.

24
Next TimeOther topics related to quality of
life and transportation
  • Sustainable communities (development that
    supports alternative modes of transportation and
    that avoids urban sprawl)
  • Walkable communities
  • Access management
  • Traffic calming
  • Context sensitive design
  • Modern roundabouts
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