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ITS/CVISN Efforts in the Border Region. Border Partnership Working Group January 11, 2006 Al Kosik Traffic Operations Division TxDOT. Presentation Outline. Overview of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) in TxDOT Border Safety Inspection Facilities (BSIF)
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ITS/CVISN Efforts in the Border Region Border Partnership Working Group January 11, 2006 Al Kosik Traffic Operations Division TxDOT
Presentation Outline • Overview of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) in TxDOT • Border Safety Inspection Facilities (BSIF) • Commercial Vehicle Information Systems and Networks (CVISN)
Intelligent Transportation Systems • The application of advanced technologies (computers, communications, electronics) to transportation problems • Congestion, incidents, safety, weather • Multiple technologies • Field equipment in harsh environments
The Need for ITS • Traffic volumes continue to increase • New construction is not keeping up • Impossible to simply “build our way” out of congestion • Transportation Management Centers (TMCs) can help ease congestion on the existing highway system
Benefits ofEffective ITS • Reductions in: • Motorist delay and queue length • Direct and indirect economic losses • Air pollution • Incident response times • Secondary collisions • A more efficient transportation system
Transportation Management Centers (TMCs) • TxDOT has 9 TMCs in operation • Large centers: Houston TranStar, 200 mi. of freeways, multiple agencies, large building, large operations floor • Small centers: Wichita Falls, a few cameras and signs, weather data, 2 workstations, part-time operator • TMCs operating in Laredo and El Paso
TxDOT’s 9 TMCs • Amarillo (PEGASIS) • Austin (CTECC) • Dallas (DalTrans) • El Paso (TransVista) • Fort Worth (TransVISION) • Houston (TranStar) • Laredo (STRATIS) • San Antonio (TransGuide) • Wichita Falls
TMC Applications • Incident detection and management • Traveler information • Monitor system performance • Safety • Weather
ITS Field Equipment • Dynamic Message Signs (DMS) Closed Circuit Television Cameras (CCTV) Detection (multiple technologies) Lane Control Signals Environmental Sensors Highway Advisory Radio (HAR) • Fiber backbone in urban areas; large communications systems • Leased wireline (ISDN, T1); Wireless
TxDOT ITS Program • $40M to $50M ITS projects let per year • $10M to $15M per year on maintenance, upgrades, and rehabilitation • 700 miles of highways with freeway systems • 395 DMS • Over 800 closed circuit ITS cameras • 100 miles of HOV lane systems • Over 700 miles of fiber optic cable backbone
Traffic Websites • Allow motorists to get information from their computer • Websites can provide: • Interactive maps of current conditions • Camera snapshots • Incident locations • DMS display information • Travel times • Text messages
Rural ITS • Flood warning • Ice, winter weather • Fog • Traveler, tourist information • Alternate routes • Remote CCTV at strategic locations • Future: corridor information (I35, I40, I10)
Need for Rural ITS • Why? • 80 % of Nations roads are in rural & small urban areas (under 50,000 population) • Rural roads < 40% annual vehicle miles, but > 60% traffic fatalities • Work zone fatalities on non-Interstate roads 3 times higher • Average twice as long for crash notification and victim transfer
Statewide Development and Integration (SDI) Program • Standard statewide software modules (TMC) - realistically 80% • Write once, use many times • Reduce lifetime maintenance costs • Well documented, defined interfaces • System Engineering process • National standards • Software modules are in operation • BSIF software developed by SDI contractor • Southwest Research Institute (contractor)
Border Safety Inspection Facilities (BSIF) • 8 locations planned at border crossings • Standard design • 2 in El Paso under construction • Operated by DPS • Very automated process (eventually) • Standard software modules; write once, use many times
BSIF Equipment • DMS • Detection • Transponder readers • Cameras (surveillance and snapshot) • Oversize detection • Weigh-in-Motion • Static scales
Current development activities • Development underway for BOTA (El Paso) • Flow management, DMS, CCTV, RFID tags, presence detection, weigh-in-motion, scales, dimensional checks • Interface with DPS safety information • Reuse of software • Existing statewide ITS subsystems • BSIF modules to be developed and shared • Subsequent deployments under review: • Zaragoza (El Paso) • Eagle Pass (Laredo)
Commercial Vehicle Information Systems and Networks (CVISN) • Multiple agencies sharing data • TxDOT, DPS, Comptroller • Common CVISN data base • Single point of contact, electronic • Completed top level design and business plan • Working group and steering committee established
CVISN… • The collection of information systems and communications networks that support CVO. • Includes information systems owned and operated by governments, motor carriers, and other stakeholders. • Provides a framework for parties engaged in CVO safety assurance and regulation to exchange information and conduct business transactions electronically. • The goal is to improve the safety and efficiency of commercial vehicle operations. • Core Compliance includes: Safety Information Exchange, E-Credentialing, E-Screening.
CVISN Status • Summary • Participants (DPS, CPA, and TxDOT) will share safety and credentialing data via TexVIEW • Motor carriers will be able to apply for and renew credentials online • Working group meeting of participants to determine status is being planned. • TexVIEW and One-Stop need to be developed. • Once developed, existing systems will be modified to tie into these new systems • BSIF will utilize CVISN data for safety inspections
Questions or Comments? • Good judgment comes from bad experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment