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Coordinating public transport with land use and road infrastructure. Investigating mechanisms involved in two Scandinavian urban projects Research Director Frode Longva Institute of transport Economics flo@toi.no. The objective. Background
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Coordinatingpublic transport with land use and roadinfrastructure Investigatingmechanismsinvolved in two Scandinavian urban projects Research Director Frode Longva Instituteof transport Economics flo@toi.no
The objective Background • The transportation sector is a major contributor to climate change • Current measures are not sufficient to stop the negative effects The challenge: • Need to transcend PT policies into a wider sustainable agenda • Combing PT policies with issues of land use and road infrastructure • Ultimately increases the complexity involved in policy making and coordination This paper: • Examines the way PT measures are considered and implemented together with land use and road infrastructure policies • In two Scandinavian urban areas: Trondheim and Helsingborg
The cases Trondheim: • PT initiatives in the context of a policy package: The Environmental Transport package • The municipality, the region/PTA and the Road administration Helsingborg: • PT initiatives in the context of a partnership agreement: The Busvision • The municipality, the region/PTA, the operator Similarities • Seen as “upfront” in their PT solutions due to high actions taken towards reducing congestion and carbon dioxides • Combines PT measures with infrastructure and/or land use measures to achieve them
What is policy coordination? • Pressman&Wildavsky (1984): No suggestion for reform is more common than ”what we need is more coordination” • No generally agreed-upon definition of coordination exists • As a starting point: • “instruments and mechanisms that aim to enhance the voluntary or forced alignment of tasks and efforts of organizations within the public sector” (Bouckaert et al 2010:16) • The literature further separates between: • Horizontal and vertical coordination • Policy formulation and policy implementation
Organisationalcoordination • Completecontracting • Incompletecontracting • Discursivecoordination Coordinatingmechanisms– movingbeyondthe formal instruments Authority - control - sanctions - incentives - trust - consensus Deployment; how?Actors; who?Strength; what?
Organisational coordination • Same, same: Both cases combine • Working groups, administrative and political steering committees • All parties involved • But different: The organisations serve different purposes • Trondheim: the committees have hierarchically superior positions • Helsingborg: no pre-defined superior positions • The strain of coordination is put on • the consensus/equality based working groups in Helsingborg • the authority based steering committee in Trondheim • And same again: • Land use included in policy formulation, excluded from organizational instruments in both cases
Complete contracting • Authority mechanisms are replaced by control, sanctions and procedures of non-compliance • Two cases: • The service contract from PTA to operator in Trondheim • The service contract from PTA to operator in Helsingborg • Equal contractual arrangements despite functioning in different organizational surroundings • Both are highly detailed, incentivized, one-sided contracts • In line with aim of no operator involvement in Trondheim • At stake with aims of mutual partnership in Helsingborg • Complete contracting is less flexible and harder to adjust during the lifetime of the contract
Incomplete contracting • Control/sanctions are replaced by negotiation and trust • Two cases: • The Norwegian reward fund • The agreement between Helsingborg and the PTA • The Norwegian reward fund from state to the region/municipality • Specifies goals, financial obligations, monitoring forms etc • However, the evaluation form is open for interpretations • A vertical instrument spurring horizontal policy coordination • The agreements in Helsingborg are more vague • Evaluation through ongoing consultations and no sanctions • Control through the ongoing cooperation in the working groups • Contrast to the contractual clauses between the PTA and the operator
Discursivecoordination • Coordination through consensus building • For the PT planner, coordination leads to a variety of new partners • A variety of competencies and meeting of different knowledge claims. • In Helsingborg, the inclusion of the operator revealed knowledge and power struggles with those of the PTA • Initially, all involved parties were conceived equal • The operator was not allowed to lead any working groups + unlevelled resources • In Trondheim, the inclusion of the Road Administration revealed different cultures from those of the city planners and PTA • Planning of road investments without sufficient PT improvements
Conclusion • The findings calls for a system wide perspective: One mechanism may counteract another • The chosen coordinating instruments may be at stake with policy formulation • Land use was excluded in both cases • Complete contracting hardly consistent with mutual partnerships • Power structures may undermine policy coordination • Unlevelled amount of resources and competencies • Clashes of knowledge • Hierarchical and network mechanisms may be mutually reinforcing • Cooperation in working groups may require at strong authority based mechanism. • A vertical mechanism may spur horizontal coordination, eg. Reward fund • The findings stresses the importance of trust and cultural factors when designing the coordination process
So what? • Goal achievement in both cases • Sharp increase in PT patronage • Do we need all these coordinating efforts? • However: • In both cases: Thanks to isolated PT measures • In both cases: Infrastructure + land use endangers goal achievement • What happens in the long run? • More research is needed: • On the effects and limits of coordination • On the coordination problems and tensions which can exist between representatives of different planning sectors