 
     David Crawford talks to Dennis Motiani about the role of the new National Operations Centre of Excellence.    
     
Consolidating the collective experience of the US transportation system’s management and operations (TSM&O) community, streamlining its information gathering, while cutting research times and costs are the key drivers behind the country’s new National Operations Centre of Excellence (NOCoE). Launched in January at the annual meeting of the 
     
The NOCoE is a partnership initiative bringing together three existing agencies, the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO), the Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) and ITS America, with governmental support from the US Department of Transportation’s Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). So, why the need for yet another body? 
     
Newly-appointed executive director, Dennis Motiani told ITS International: “These organisations all have huge remits that stretch across the whole of transportation. We are focusing specifically on the immediate practical needs of TSM&O engineers working on the ground for easy access to information to help them do their jobs better. 
     
“We also aim to make their efforts more productive by integrating the results into a constantly developing central knowledge base, so avoiding the risk of duplication, and pooling research activity – all with a single point of access.”  
     
NOCoE has two main activity streams. Its www.transportationops.org web portal represents the delivery of a specific product, the need for which had been identified in the reliability focus area of the TRB’s second Strategic Highway Research Program. 
 
Appointed for an initial one-year term, with prospects  of a two-year extension, Motiani wants to see the portal being  constantly referred to by state DOTs, metropolitan planning  organisations, local officials, consultants and academia to share their  achievements. Equally important, he wants it to capture worthwhile  information that could otherwise be lost. 
     
“Engineers  can develop a useful solution to a specific highway construction or  maintenance problem - sit on it and sleep on it, without sharing it for  others to benefit from – and then lose sight of it altogether when they  move onto their next project. We want to give them a convenient way of  ensuring that the information is available to the next DOT or  metropolitan planning organisations facing a similar issue. 
     
“Users  will also save time by making us a single entry point to lead them to  information that they need to find quickly, without having to track  their way through a whole list of individual websites. Saving 20 minutes  here, half an hour there – it all adds up when your time’s valuable.”
     
Among  discussion themes so far initiated on the website, one is on the future  of dynamic message signs. Another opens up the potential for sharing  experience with the Management & Operations Working Group set up in  2014 by the 14-member New York State Association of  metropolitan  planning organisations specifically to encourage state-wide  collaboration on TSM&O strategies and initiatives.
     
The  centre’s other main activity is its operations technical services  programme.  The first event, on 3 March, was a webinar introducing the  US National Performance Management Research Dataset, which the FHWA has  recently acquired from 
This resource  uses vehicle probe-derived data to  calculate average  travel times on the  US national highway system every  five minutes, and  generate reliability  indices. The FHWA is now making  it available to  state DOTs and  metropolitan planning organisations as a  tool for  performance  measurement. The webinar invited exchanges on how   participants are using  it. 
      
The highlight will be  an annual get-together  for TSM&O practitioners to discuss a major  topical issue – for  example, data management, strategic research  planning, or connected  vehicle impacts on the road infrastructure. 
     
Motiani   stresses that ITS will be a major focus area across the NOCoE’s   workplan, as “a key technological force in the ongoing transformation of   transport – how we drive cars in an era of automated and connected   vehicles; and what the roads of the future will look like. I can, for   example, foresee a time, within the next 20 years, when vehicles will   routinely be drawing power – possibly solar – from the roads that they   are travelling on, and we need to start looking ahead to that. 
     
“But   we’re not setting out to duplicate what 
     
   
Bowling along
As   an example of the kind of success story that the website aims to   disseminate, it cites the winter 2013/2014 hosting of Super Bowl XLVIII   at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. At that time Motiani was  assistant  commissioner in charge of the New Jersey DOT’s transportation  systems  management and while in post he received the request for  proposals for  his present role. 
Super Bowl Sunday is widely taken as an unofficial American national holiday. 
     
For   the first time, two US states - New Jersey and New York - co-hosted  the  game and its supporting programme, with New York supplying much of  the  hotel capacity needed.  “We worked together as equals”, said  Motiani.  The two states are already partners in the Port Authority of  New York  and New Jersey joint venture, which oversees much of the  regional  transportation infrastructure within a 3,900km² area, while  pre-game  events straddled the border.
Motiani   told ITS International: “NJDOT and its  partners routinely  plan and   staff transportation management for  scheduled special  events. Super Bowl   XLVIII was a special event of  exceptional size and  complexity, with a   full week of lead-up events  which posed  challenges to the whole   transportation infrastructure.”
      
Particular    issues included using an open-air stadium in a ‘cold-weather’  location  -  previous such events having been under cover. The choice  generated   considerable controversy over the threat of heavy snow,  which the game   itself just escaped, and the dislocation that this  would bring to the   network of bus services that carried spectators. 
     
In    addition, the road transportation network is intricate, with bridge   and  tunnel chokepoints. One of which is New Jersey’s Pulaski Skyway    bridge/causeway, which links up with the Holland Tunnel under the Hudson    River to connect the state with New York City. 
     
Long    seen as one of the most unreliable routes in the US, it closed  shortly   after the Super Bowl for deck reconstruction - one of  Motiani’s final   responsibilities before leaving NJDOT after 25 years.       
     
Not    least there was a strong policy emphasis on public transit, with  buses   carrying the most fans, followed by metro. There was no  pedestrian   access.  Did this work? “Yes, there was no traffic  congestion. One media   reporter drove from his Long Island home to the  stadium in 45 minutes –   a record.” 
     
Could  this   set a precedent for future largely transit-based sporting events  “Yes,   if they’re planned properly in advance.” Were there problems  this time?   “Yes, three times as many spectators as had been expected  came by rail,   and trains are a lot less flexible to manoeuvre for  upping service   levels than buses. So the possibility has to be built  into future   plans.” 
 
HRP 2        
         
Specially authorised by the US Congress, SHRP 2 
has focused on the country’s major highway transportation challenges: an ageing network; public demand for more efficient reconstruction; mounting levels and costs of congestion and pollution; and the threat to maintaining low road traffic accident levels from in-vehicle technologies competing for drivers’ attention.
         
Products developed to date, in addition to the NOCoE website, include:
         
•  A naturalistic driving study database based on data garnered from 5.4 million trips accounting for nearly 80 million km of driving, to supplement information from crashes, observations and surveys.
         
• Guidance on implementing strategies for increasing the reliability of travel time information, and incorporating the results into the TRB’s Highway Capacity Manual, a widely used road transportation reference documents in the US and around the world. Travel time accuracy is a major policy preoccupation for the TRB. 
         
• The SmartGAP free, open-source software tool for estimating the effects of smart growth strategies on regional peak-hour travel demand.    
 
 
     
         
         
         
        



