Jack Opiola talks to some 
     
Cities will accommodate almost 60% of the world’s population by 2025 and technology is outpacing transportation plans and planners - putting extreme pressures upon planners and transportation systems alike. Big data, digital payments, ubiquitous communications, smartphone applications, on-demand travel and autonomous vehicles are all shredding existing transport plans. Never before has the pace of population growth and the tools to address this problem been so out of alignment.  
     
Some European cities served by ‘hub and spoke’ transport networks are introducing innovative and ambitious, Mobility as a Service (MaaS) style, transportation schemes which combine available technology, collaborative public-private enterprises, open-data sharing and personalised transport services. Helsinki appears to be the thought leader and 
     
MaaS aims to remove the ‘hassle and pain’ from planning and ticketing trips and facilitate the use of public transport. For instance, Whim combines public transport with a variety of options from participating private firms and can plan, ticket and pay for public transport services (bus, tram, train, metro…), car services (taxi, car-share, car hire...) and bike share services to get individuals to their destination. The account-based service will display the cost for each option (highlighting the trade-offs between speed, comfort and price), remember an individual’s preferences and help optimise trips. Users can find all the travel options in one place and buy one-off journeys or a mobile phone style ‘bundle’ of monthly travel. By encouraging the efficient use of public transport over private cars, MaaS is intended to free up road space, prevent gridlock, and remove the pain points from multi-modal journeys.
     
MaaS is a concept not lost in the United States where west coast San Francisco and Atlanta to the east are considering MaaS opportunities. However, Tilly Chang of the San Francisco County Transportation Agency and Chris Tomlinson of Georgia’s 
     
Chang embraces the MaaS concept and cites Treasure Island, an island in San Francisco Bay serviced by the Bay Bridge, which is a focus of integrated transport with mobility options including bus, water taxi, cycling and private car. 
     
With the city’s transportation infrastructure in maintenance/renewal mode, Chang believes a MaaS-based mobility management approach could unlock greater system performance with benefits for all. For the traveller, MaaS can help plan, book and pay for their trip, while information and analytics can provide multiple aspects of their trip (price, cost, reliability, calories burned, emissions footprint…). For the city, a publicly managed MaaS platform can inform a more efficient deployment of resources and enforce/uphold city standards while serving as a platform for marketing sustainable transportation options and facilitating demand management through pricing and rewards. And, for the service provider, the MaaS platform is a major channel to distribute their product/service, widening and targeting their reach. 
 
    
Chang believes public sector-led initiatives are  essential to catalyse early stage trials and learning and could be done  by a city or regional government - or a private developer. In her view, a  joint public/private trial would be preferable, as will happen on  Treasure Island. In the early stages, research and development are key  to learning and gaining public trust/acceptance, and that requires a  joint venture between public and private players.
     
One  issue she raises is that the blending of public and private efforts in  the US is pale in comparison to the more centrally controlled public  transport initiatives in Finland (and across Europe). Her department is  working on a policy framework for local decision-makers regarding the  evaluation of emerging mobility services and technologies and creating  suitable criteria to measure performance and outcomes. 
     
She  believes the governance of MaaS, along with meeting equity,  accessibility, congestion, pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions, are  all important aspects of a trial. With input from industry and community  stakeholders, the intent is to define the city’s expectations and  create certainty for market entrants. However, she says many of the  regulatory roles are held by the state and are permissive of great  levels of innovation and experimentation by the private sector, without  corresponding requirements for data and transparency. 
     
This  situation is mirrored at the federal level so the governance of MaaS  and meeting congestion reduction and environmental policy objectives may  be more difficult in the USA than in European countries. 
     
Chang  is also keen on the state’s recently completed Road Charging Pilot  Program as it involves a key element applicable to MaaS - the  establishing of personal transportation accounts responsible for  planning, ticketing, payments and accountability. Currently, San  Francisco is planning to explore the possibilities of implementing MaaS  services with a host of partners and this will also include evaluating  the strength of support for the concept in other Californian cities and  the state’s central government. 
     
There  remains uncertainty about whether a distributed and independent set of  public and private operators could provide a system-wide, account-based,  collaborative program to manage demand on, for instance, Treasure  Island. 
     
While currently  difficult in San Francisco’s decentralised transportation system, if  California adopts road charging then the private account managers could  also handle additional value-added services including public transport,  parking, tolling and bike share through a single account. As with  utility companies, account managers could be managed through a set of  publicly administered incentives and overarching policy objectives. 
     
Atlanta–based  Tomlinson is also a proponent of the MaaS concept but due to the  current reliance on the car, he believes the biggest obstacle to wider  public acceptance is the ‘first mile’ of travel that can start from  anywhere in the suburbs. 
     
Once  a person is comfortably seated in a car, connections to public  transport become less attractive so he questions how public transport  can adequately and cost-effectively service these suburban  neighbourhoods to provide that first mile system. While dynamic ride  sharing or carpooling can address multiple start points and provide  connectivity to other public transport services, Tomlinson points out  that this works better with trips to the urban centre. Journeys to  dispersed destinations surrounding Atlanta, pose service difficulties to  which the car may remain the best solution. 
     
Tomlinson  also highlights commuters’ time sensitivity as demonstrated by  Georgia’s large and interconnected high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lane  network on which drivers voluntarily pay a toll to benefit from the  reliability and time savings offered by these additional lanes. In  contrast, public transport and multi-modal journeys suffer from  interchange delays but do offer the possibility of reducing congestion. 
     
His  view is that people will choose time-savings. So, while HOV lanes may  sway the decision to a car trip, a major highway crash could quickly  change which mode(s) offer the shortest journey time. As such, MaaS  applications could be the key to providing commuters with near real-time  data so they can make informed decisions. Providing the ability to pay  for the chosen mode(s), sweetens the pot further.  
     
He  points to the University of Georgia where students pay a fixed fee per  semester for unlimited service to or from the Athens, Georgia campus -  that approach has done much to reduce private car usage and provide  adequate transport services for the students. 
     
Tomlinson  has concerns about government’s ability to manage account-based systems  following his authority’s development of a smartphone app for tolling.  The continual release of new smartphones and the ongoing software  upgrades changed the authority’s thinking. “It was just not  cost-effective for us to undertake this with our internal resources,” he  admits. “We have now outsourced it to a company in the smartphone  application business and it is in their benefit to keep the app and  smartphone service up-to-date.”  
     
While  urban sprawl favours the private car, Tomlinson considers Atlanta’s  projected growth and increasing congestion when he predicts that the  travelling public will demand better integrated transport services,  including tolling and other car related services such as ride sharing. 
     
Despite  their reservations, both Chang and Tomlinson see MaaS as a natural  extension of integrated transport, smart cities, and other  transportation initiatives. Both believe mobility services will be  launched in America, albeit more car-centric hybrids of those deployed  in Europe.
    
        
        
        
        



