A team of students from the 
     
In an impressive display of single-minded commitment, they delivered a well-executed ten-minute presentation they’d spent months perfecting. 
     
One of five groups invited to present at the 
     
While not as notorious as the 405 in Los Angeles or the Beltway around Washington, DC, anyone who has travelled I-75 or I-696 during the Motor City’s rush hour is likely familiar with their metropolitan Detroit counterpart. 
     
 
Complex concepts
     With strong ingenuity and communication, the Michigan team members discussed peak usage hours and how congestion could be reduced using ITS technologies combined with transportation systems management and operations (TSMO) strategies. 
     
Patrick Son, managing director of NOCoE, said the competition was designed to grow the students’ communication and presentation skills, but also to address workforce issues. “All of these students are the future of our industry,” he said. “Their engineering skills are already strong but for most, this was their first exposure to taking complex concepts and whittling them down to essential and compelling details, the kinds of skills that will be crucial when they present to industry leaders and agency decision-makers in their future.”
     
Other finalists at the event included teams from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, who proposed using data from the traffic conditions app, 
     
The University of Michigan’s winning team applied a ‘supply and demand’ approach to their solution. On the supply side, their proposal included managing the flow of vehicles through a combination of ITS and TSMO initiatives, particularly at the critical moment when vehicles merge into highway traffic. 
     
 
Car-pooling strategy
     On the demand side, they addressed the number of occupants in each vehicle, proposing a shuttle and car-pooling strategy in collaboration with General Motors and Chrysler, the I-75/I-696 area’s two largest employers. Team members Alex Sundt, Yan Zhao and Xiatong Sun who participated during the tournament, said they were confident but surprised by their win. “We are very excited,” said Sun. “We had the confidence after yesterday’s rehearsal but today we listened to others’ presentations, and we thought they were also very good.” 
 
     
Yan  Zhao concurred: “We are used to solving equations and we are used to  presenting in front of a lot of academic people but when we solve  real-life problems, we have to present our solutions to people who may  not be familiar with equations. We have to explain the details and our  reasoning behind it. That will be really helpful in my future.”
     
The  team received guidance from University of Michigan Civil and  Environmental Engineering Department assistant professor Dr. Neda  Masoud. Other team members participating in the project - but unable to  attend - included students Edmond Huang, Guoyang Qin and Amir  Tafreshian.
     
 
Necessary skills
     Patrick  Son says the contest was part of NOCoE’s commitment to ensure that the  future workforce has the skills necessary to address the needs of the  rapidly evolving transportation system. 
     
“Workforce  is one of the most important issues our industry is facing.  Transportation is changing almost daily and so are the skills necessary  to maintain a robust and appropriately trained workforce,” he said.  “Academic institutions are doing an outstanding job of preparing  engineers, planners and technologists, but we need to make sure the next  generation of transportation leaders also come equipped with crucial  communication and presentation skills.” 
     
NOCoE’s  workforce initiatives include: working with student ITE chapters to  develop ePortfolios, supporting the development of a comprehensive  guidebook to grow the TSMO workforce that contains position  descriptions, recruitment and retention techniques, and career  development strategies (available at www.transportationops.org),  providing a TSMO training database (also on the website), as well as  maintaining an ongoing partnership with US DoT’s Professional Capacity  Building programme (PCB) to identify and address the needs of academia  and employers.  
     
Earlier  this year, 
     
Those  initiatives are crucial for the road forward and they will require an  adaptive, nimble, and well-trained workforce. Workforce issues have  become a cornerstone issue at the American Association of State Highway  and Transportation Officials (AASHTO). 
     
 
Future optimism
     AASHTO  2018-2019 president and 
     
Back  in Austin, there was reason for optimism about the next generation of  transportation engineers. Each of the university teams impressed the  judges by developing solutions for the transportation challenges their  communities have been living with for generations. Each group displayed a  commitment to safety and sustainability, aligned perfectly with the  path laid out by the smartest minds in the transportation ecosystem.  Many of those smart minds were in the room as the students were  introduced to more than 500 transportation leaders during an ITE plenary  and awards session. But the awards and accolades are not the end of the  story. At least two of the finalists and potentially more, may soon see  their ideas become reality. The team from Florida International  University is already working with Tampa to implement their wrong-way  driving plan and a high level Tennessee DoT official confirmed he is  interested in funding a pilot on the University of Tennessee’s Waze  solution.
    



