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Connection Protection: An Evaluation. ITS America Annual Conference Session 44 Presented by Jeff Jenq, Ph.D. Senior Research Scientist Battelle 10:00-12:00, Wednesday, April 28, 2004 San Antonio, TX. Acknowledgement. Joe Peters, JPO, Manager, ITS Program Assessment Yehuda Gross, JPO
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Connection Protection: An Evaluation ITS America Annual Conference Session 44 Presented by Jeff Jenq, Ph.D. Senior Research Scientist Battelle 10:00-12:00, Wednesday, April 28, 2004 San Antonio, TX
Acknowledgement • Joe Peters, JPO, Manager, ITS Program Assessment • Yehuda Gross, JPO • Terrell Williams, FTA • Steve Mortensen, Mitretek • Richard Hodges, UTA ITS Project Manager • Chris Cluett, Battelle • Ben Pierce, Battelle • Alan Pate, Battelle • Mitsuru Saito, BYU • Salt Lake County Aging Services
Background of UTA CP Evaluation • CP protects rail-to-bus transfers by sending a text message to a bus to hold for the late train • System completed in Jan. 02 • Successfully operated during the Winter Olympics • Identified by FHWA ITS Joint Program Office and FTA for Evaluation • Evaluation period: Dec. 02 ~ Apr. 04 • Final evaluation report to be published in May 04 available on FHWA EDL
Objectives of CP System • Protect transfers from higher frequency light rail (TRAX) to lower frequency bus services • CP system examines the status of TRAX trains and issues a “Hold at {Station} Until {Time}” message to buses waiting at next 3 rail stations via Mobile Data Terminal, if lateness of train is within a pre-determined threshold (e.g., 3 minutes) • Only protect the selected transfers where • Bus departure meets train arrival • Penalty of missing a bus is high • Last service • High ridership bus routes
Train Location By GPS 800 Mhz Radio Train Location ETA Estimation By Geo Focus ETA Electronic Sign at Train Station ETA CP Server By TransCore • CP Assignment • Bus Schedule • Train Schedule Mobile Data Terminal Status Of Radio CP Message 450 Mhz Radio Voice & Data Radio Server CP Message Hold at {Station Name} Until {Time} Bus Radio Control Coordinator Components of CP System
Hold at {Station Name} Until {Time} CP in Actions
Evaluation Approach • Quantitative study (analysis of system data) • Train arrival time • Bus departure time • CP messages • Qualitative study (user perceptions) • Bus operators (survey, interview) • Radio control coordinators, supervisors, managers (interview) • Bus riders (onboard survey)
CP Operational Characteristics • CP is triggered by late trains • One late train event could produce multiple CP messages (i.e., CP system compares ETA for next three stations and each station may have multiple protected transfers) • Small percentage (2%) of late train events were recorded • About 17 CP messages per day • Not all transfers are protected by CP
Two definitions of successful connection: When the bus departed more than (1) 120 (2) 180 seconds after the train arrived Quantitative Study Findings • CP significantly increased the percentage of successful rail-to-bus connections • 3.1~3.9 times more likely to have a successful connection at CP protected routes (120 sec. and 180 sec. definitions) • 2~3 times more likely to have successful connections when CP messages were issued (120 sec. and 180 sec. definitions)
Quantitative Study Findings (continued) • Most bus operators departed after the scheduled departure time; Bus operators tended to hold the bus longer past scheduled departure time when CP “hold until” message was issued • 51% of bus operators who received CP messages departed after the recommended time – suggesting the need to improve level of compliance • Mechanism for determining when to send a CP message was not associated with actual lateness of the train at TRAX station – suggesting the need to improve ETA estimation
Qualitative Study Findings • Bus operators reported a high number (2/3) of unnecessary CP messages received • 49% of operators indicated arriving late at TRAX station • Train was not late • Most bus operators will wait most of the time to pick up train passengers regardless of CP messages (customer orientation) • Tight scheduling reduced bus operators’ compliance to CP messages • Lack of slack time in schedule at TRAX stations • Unfamiliar with service route (especially for the extra board operators)
Qualitative Study Finings (continued) • 50% of operators agreed CP should be used on more routes; <20% disagreed • Most bus riders are not aware of CP program as CP was not advertised • Small but positive effects measured by rider reports of trip satisfaction and connection success for those who ride on CP protected routes • Many experienced transfer riders have learned to take an earlier train to avoid missing connection
Conclusions • CP is a low cost insurance to help increase connection success • CP utilizes existing ITS infrastructures and is highly flexible in terms of which transfer to protect and adjustment of decision parameters to hold a bus • Rooms for improvement • Operators’ compliance (more reasonable schedule, training and education) • Accuracy in issuance of CP messages • Improve current ETA estimates • Include bus status information when AVL is deployed • Better alignment of bus and train schedules improves rail-to-bus connections
For More Information:Jeff Jenq, BattelleJENQJ@BATTELLE.ORG(480) 655-8931Evaluation Report Will Be Available on FHWA EDL Web Site By End of May 2004