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Developing ITS to Serve Diverse Populations. Advanced Transportation Technologies Seminar September 12, 2006. Presentation Overview. Background, definitions I-394 MnPASS Evaluation ATIS Advanced Transit Information Systems Carsharing Community Based Transit (CBT). History.
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Developing ITS to Serve Diverse Populations Advanced Transportation Technologies Seminar September 12, 2006
Presentation Overview • Background, definitions • I-394 MnPASS Evaluation • ATIS • Advanced Transit Information Systems • Carsharing • Community Based Transit (CBT)
History • Latest in several “Guidestar”-funded projects • Past projects have focused on analysis and evaluation of technology applications: • Telework and other tele-applications • Sustainable Transportation • Emergency Management Systems (EMS)
Meaning of “Diverse” • 3 perspectives • Diversity of trip type • Diversity of trip mode • Diversity of person • This project especially considers: Serving those that do not rely on a single occupant vehicle as their primary transport mode
I-394 MnPASS Attitudinal Evaluation • 3 wave panel survey • Coordinated with Value Pricing Outreach projects from MnDOT and FHWA • Conducted under subcontract with NuStats
I-394 MnPASS Attitudinal Evaluation • Primary objectives: • Attitudes and awareness • Overall • Equity • Technology • Changes in travel behavior
Attitudinal Panel Survey Design I-394 MnPASS Wave 1 Wave 2 Wave 3 Spring 2006 Fall 2004 Summer 2005 Fall 2005
Overall attitudes What do you think of allowing single drivers to use the carpool lanes by paying a toll?
Equity: MnPASS Acceptance “Good Idea” by Usual Mode Transit:49% SOV: 65% HOV: 60%
Technology:Satisfaction with Operational Elements- Spring 06
Travel Behavior:Usual Travel Mode Now consider all trips you made in both directions. On how many of those trips did you… I-394 Panelists I-35W Panelists
ATIS Evaluation Claremont Graduate School
ATIS School of Information Systems and Technology • Provides an assortment of traffic information services • Provide route-guidance and destination information • Provides information for transit planning (mta.net, metrotransit.org)
Research Questions School of Information Systems and Technology What are citizens’ assessment of government-led online transit planning (ATIS) services? • To what extent is this assessment comprised of satisfaction, frustration, confidence and pleasantness of the online experience? • To what extent does this assessment vary as a function of system’s perceived utility, reliability, efficiency, customization and flexibility? • How well does an evaluation-metric explain satisfaction with e-service?
School of Information Systems and Technology Survey and Focus Groups • Online transit planning websites • Los Angeles MTA (www.mta.net) • Minneapolis / St. Paul Metro Area (www.metrotransit.org) • Online survey • Overall response (n=401) • LA: n=155 • MN: n=246 • Focus groups • Discussions with MN and LA users (n=30) • LA: n=8 • MN: n=22
School of Information Systems and Technology Online Survey • Designed to collect reactions after respondents used the websites • Reactions were gathered based on scenarios that were presented to respondents • Extended trip duration, beginning at A, going to B, then going to C.
School of Information Systems and Technology LA Responses Los Angeles (n = 155) • Profile • Age group of 18-44 years (57.4%) • With a Bachelors degree (70%) • Employed (FT or PT, 69%) • White / Caucasian (72.3%) • Male or Female (55% to 45%) • Household income < 75000 • Has access to vehicle (71%) • Matured user of computers (6-15 years – 57.5%) • Matured user of the Internet (6-10 years – 57%) • Uses public transportation “Less than once a month” • Uses public transportation for • Recreation or Work (36%) • Eventuality – “Car needs repair or is in shop” (27%)
School of Information Systems and Technology MN Responses Minneapolis Responses (n = 246) • Profile • Age group of 18-44 years (70%) • With a Bachelors degree (71.1%) • Employed (FT or PT, 64%) • White / Caucasian (85%) • Female (58% to 38%) • Household income < 75000 (70%) • Has access to vehicle (42.7%) • Matured user of computers (6-15 years – 78%) • Matured user of the Internet (6-10 years – 60%) • 48% use public transportation “5 or more times a week” • 44% planned their trip “At least Once a Week” • Uses public transportation for • Work or school (64%)
School of Information Systems and Technology Focus Group Findings • General Usability • Good way to plan trips • LA users thought that the MTA website is unable to plan complex trips • MN users commented on the inability to plan suburban trips
School of Information Systems and Technology Focus Group Findings • Emotional Dimensions • MN users were extremely satisfied on “impromptu” usage of the website • MN users felt an immediate sense of confidence in using the website • LA users noted the lack of integrated information services in case of multi-modal trips • In both cases, “matured” users felt that specific bus stops, which they knew, did not exist on the website
School of Information Systems and Technology Focus Group Findings • Suggested Improvements • Need for providing dynamic information • Based on real-time changes in stops or other facilities such as shelters • LA users felt that more visual information needs to be provided • MN users felt there is a need for better geographical information • They currently use other options such as Yahoo! Maps, Mapquest or Google Earth
School of Information Systems and Technology Focus Group Findings • Likely Use of e-Services • E-Gov ATIS service options were considered better than other services such as public libraries • Customization in terms of storing trips for future planning of the trips
School of Information Systems and Technology Directions and Implications • Considering Transit Planning as E-Gov • Focus on end-to-end service, especially by regular users • Understand and attend to frustration elements • Think about Mapquest (and Expedia) as setting the standard for online trip planning • Consider broader away of search/response options, across modes.
Carsharing James Andrew
Carsharing Fits Research Interest • Application of technology • Creates opportunity to bring transportation benefits to “non-traditional” populations • New innovation that raises as many policy questions as technological questions
What Carsharing Is NOT • Car Pooling • Ridesharing • Slugging • Informal • Communism
What Carsharing IS • One membership organization • Several paying members • One or more cars located in a convenient location • Members pay per use of car
Carsharing • Research in conjunction with hOurCar • Carsharing in other locations • Market for car sharing in TCMA • Develop a model that extends carsharing to “transportation disadvantaged” • “time-banking” • JARC
Carsharing Time-banking model • Car sharing currently appeals to middle income • As car sharing shifts private auto costs from fixed to variable, it presents a lower cost opportunity for private auto use • Fixed costs of carsharing still higher than transit, walking or bicycling • CSO’s cannot afford to unilaterally drop these
Carsharing • Time Banking model addresses the issue by creating opportunities for partnerships, cross-subsidies and limiting subsidized use • Partner • Transit agency, which increases / preserves ridership • 8 – 10 transit rides = one hour carsharing use
Carsharing • Cross-subsidization • Location in mixed income neighborhoods • Increased CS visibility • Link with transit creates additional incentive for higher income residents to join
Carsharing • Application of Time-banking to Twin Cities Neighborhoods • Analyzed: • Population • Poverty rate (proxy for mixed income) • Work location (proxy for transit potential) • Current transit share in mode split
Task 2: Carsharing • Application of Time-banking to Twin Cities Neighborhoods • Most likely areas: • Uptown • Marcy-Holmes • Loring Park • University of Minnesota
Task 2: Carsharing • Additional work needed: • Financial questions: • How much subsidy per user required? • How much subsidy covered by transit agency? • How much subsidy covered by cross-subsidy? • What is optimal mix of regular and low-income users? Of regular and subsidized uses? • How to market? • Develop on-the-ground demonstration
Community-Based Transit Gary Barnes, Heather Dolphin
Survey background • Earlier research identified two beliefs that were widely held but not formally documented as far as we could tell • Large numbers of privately held vehicles • Many vehicles used very little • The notion that the system is inefficient or needs to be better “coordinated” relies to some extent on these two beliefs • ITS: could technology help coordination?
Survey objectives • Measure of how widespread specialized transportation is and who is involved • Better understanding of two key questions • Vehicle inventory • Vehicle usage (or lack thereof) • Organizational models for specialized transportation provision
Methodology summary • Identify all organizations that might have an interest in transportation • Screened with large mailing of short pre-survey, then full survey to some pre-survey respondents • Divided respondents into providers, arrangers, those that do both, and those that are not involved