us dot congestion initiative urban partnership agreements i-95 corridor coalition eps summit...

20
US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati Associate Administrator, Office of Operations Federal Highway Administration

Upload: pamela-wilkinson

Post on 05-Jan-2016

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements

I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit

September 19, 2007

Boston, Massachusetts

Jeffrey F. PaniatiAssociate Administrator, Office of Operations

Federal Highway Administration

Page 2: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Solving the Congestion Problem

Shape Demand Invest in New Capacity Operate System at Peak Performance Bring Supply and Demand into Alignment

-- Congestion Pricing

Page 3: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Congestion Pricing – Bringing Supply and Demand into Alignment Failure to properly price travel on highways is a

root cause of congestion. The price of highway travel (gas taxes, registration

fees, etc.) bears little or no relationship to the cost of congestion.

Unlike other public utilities, the public expectation is that the “service” is free or does not change with changes in demand.

Rationing transportation services via pricing is more efficient than rationing by delay.

Page 4: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Congestion Pricing - The Options

HOV to HOT Conversion (Use Excess

Capacity)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(New)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(Existing)

Cordon or

Area Pricing

Region - Wide

Charges

Page 5: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Congestion Pricing of Excess HOV Facility Capacity (HOT Lanes)

Fees for SOV use vary based on traffic levels - I-394 MnPass Express lanes in Minneapolis (dynamic pricing, real-time), I-15 FasTrak Lanes in San Diego (quasi-dynamic, every 6 minutes), and I-25 Express Lanes in Denver (variable pricing) all using electronic transponders.

QuickRide in Houston, TX, on the Katy Freeway - HOV-3 free; HOV-2 is $2 per trip using electronic transponder.

Page 6: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

HOV and HOT Lanes in the U.S.

Source: Texas Transportation Institute

Page 7: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Urban Partnership Agreements – Congestion Pricing Congestion Pricing is a key component of the USDOT

Congestion Initiative (Relieve Urban Congestion element) - Urban Partnerships.

Integrated “4T” Strategy . TOLLING (pricing) – Key Element

Direct user charge based on use of facility; varies based on level of congestion

Toll collection via electronic means (no booths) Transit Telecommuting/Travel Demand Management Technology

About $850 million in USDOT Discretionary Funds.

Page 8: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Urban Partners

Miami

Minneapolis -St. Paul

San Francisco

Seattle

NewYorkCity

Page 9: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Congestion Pricing - The Progress

HOV to HOT Conversion (Use Excess

Capacity)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(New)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(Existing)

Cordon or

Area Pricing

Region - Wide

Charges

Minneapolis – St. Paul

Miami

Page 10: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Minneapolis – St. Paul Urban Partner

I-35W between downtown Minneapolis and

the southern suburbs. Existing HOV lanes converted to

dynamically-priced HOT lanes (similar to existing MnPASS operation).

Existing HOT lanes extended. Shoulder lanes dynamically priced.

Page 11: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Miami Urban Partner

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).

Page 12: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Congestion Pricing - The Progress

HOV to HOT Conversion (Use Excess

Capacity)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(New)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(Existing)

Cordon or

Area Pricing

Region - Wide

Charges

San Francisco

Seattle

Minneapolis – St. Paul

Miami

Page 13: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Seattle 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.

Page 14: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

San Francisco Urban Partner

Variable pricing on Doyle Drive, the 1.5 mile elevated roadway leading to the Golden Gate Bridge.

Will charge an extra 1-way-fee above the $5 toll on the Golden Gate Bridge.

Revenues will help pay to reconstruct the 70-year old Doyle Drive.

Creation of Integrated Mobility Accounts. Variable pricing of on/off-street parking and city-

owned garage spaces in downtown San Francisco.

Page 15: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Congestion Pricing - The Progress

HOV to HOT Conversion (Use Excess

Capacity)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(New)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(Existing)

Cordon or

Area Pricing

Region - Wide

Charges

New York City

San Francisco

Seattle

Minneapolis – St. Paul

Miami

Page 16: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

New York City Urban Partner

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.

Page 17: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Congestion Pricing - The Progress

HOV to HOT Conversion (Use Excess

Capacity)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(New)

Variably or Dynamically Priced Lanes

(Existing)

Cordon or

Area Pricing

Region - Wide

Charges

New York City

San Francisco

Seattle

Minneapolis – St. Paul

Miami

Page 18: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

Congestion Pricing – Region Wide Charges

Current Examples Studies in Oregon and Seattle have tested

mileage-based fees and peak-period driving charges.

Nationwide Truck Pricing in Germany, Austria and Switzerland – Automated weight-distance truck tolls across their national highways (Note: Sets the stage for area-wide congestion pricing).

Page 19: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

USDOT/FHWA Next Steps

Promote HOV to HOT Conversions through Tailored Technical Assistance.

Urban Partners. Provide Direct Support to the Urban Partners. Harness and Share Experiences.

Provide General Resource Material - Tailored Workshops and Seminars; Reference Material. Value Pricing Pilot Program Lessons Learned. Model Pricing Legislation. “Making the Case” Outreach and Technical Support.

Page 20: US DOT Congestion Initiative Urban Partnership Agreements I-95 Corridor Coalition EPS Summit September 19, 2007 Boston, Massachusetts Jeffrey F. Paniati

Strategy to Reduce Congestion

For More Information

Visit www.fightgridlocknow.gov www.fhwa.dot.gov/congestion/index.htm