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US DOT and State DOT Interaction on CICAS

US DOT and State DOT Interaction on CICAS. Gene McHale FHWA Office of Operations R&D. September 28, 2004 CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis. Outline. Role of state DOT’s in CICAS Options for involvement Discussion Preferred options, other options

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US DOT and State DOT Interaction on CICAS

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  1. US DOT and State DOT Interaction on CICAS Gene McHale FHWA Office of Operations R&D September 28, 2004 CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  2. Outline • Role of state DOT’s in CICAS • Options for involvement • Discussion • Preferred options, other options • Role of local agencies and options for their involvement CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  3. Role of State DOT’s in CICAS • Partners – representing infrastructure owners, operators, and maintainers • Engaged in all phases of program • Concept develop, system design, prototype develop & testing, field testing, deployment • Responsibilities related to: • Technical expertise • Deployment feasibility • Policy issues CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  4. Options for Involvement CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  5. Option 1 – No Formal Agreements • State DOT reps participate in meetings, technical reviews, etc. • Travel expenses covered by Feds • Examples: • VII Working Group • 511 Coalition • NGSIM Model Users Group CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  6. Option 1 – No Formal Agreements (continued) • Pros: • Little admin burden for all • Cons: • States have no financial stake • Feds fund 100% of work CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  7. Option 2 – Individual Cooperative Agreements • Feds send funds to states to conduct work • 80/20 match requirement for ITS funds • Examples: • Current cooperative agreement with VDOT for IC work CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  8. Option 2 – Individual Cooperative Agreements (continued) • Pros: • Good if state DOT is conducting or subcontracting work • Individual agreements eliminate any lead state admin burden • Cons: • Fed admin burden if many states • Can’t guarantee work for all states • 20% match requirement CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  9. Option 3 – Federally Led Pooled Fund Study • Interested states contribute funds • State Planning & Research (SP&R) “federal” funds can be contributed with matching requirement typically waived • States prioritize how funds are spent • FHWA handles contract administration CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  10. Option 3 – Federally Led Pooled Fund Study (continued) • Examples: • Traffic Management Center (TMC) PFS • Traffic Control Devices (TCD) PFS • Pros: • States have financial stake • States prioritize how funds are spent • Perception as a more formal group? CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  11. Option 3 – Federally Led Pooled Fund Study (continued) • Cons: • States need to contribute funds • May be difficult to reach consensus on how funds should be spent CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

  12. Discussion Topics • Preferred option(s)? • Other options? • Options may not be mutually exclusive (e.g., PFS for all states involved, with cooperative agreements to states conducting work) • Role and engagement options for local agencies? CICAS Meeting - Minneapolis

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