 
    Many authorities in the US and beyond have converted, or are converting, parts of the highway network into ‘Managed Lanes’ and charging motorists a fee to avoid the delays on the adjoining free use lanes. Some authorities have converted underused High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lanes into priced-managed high occupancy/toll lanes (HOT lanes) whereby the price charged can vary depending on a number of factors.
Some in the toll industry suggest that HOT or managed lanes are more a traffic control and metering methodology than a revenue generating mechanism. Keep in mind that in the US at least, most managed lane projects are operated by state DOTs, where success is often measured by improved traffic conditions within the corridor, instead of revenue generation. A project that loses money but improves traffic flow may be deemed a ‘failure’ in a traditional tolled project. But from a DOT perspective a relative small monetary loss which improves traffic flow is likely to be far less costly than reconstructing a road or providing alternatives such as rail transit.
As many managed lanes are conversions from high occupancy lanes, much of the infrastructure, both physical and electronic, is already in place and traffic flows along the corridor are well established. Even so the practical and financial success (or otherwise) appears to be variable at best and almost impossible to predict with any degree of confidence. In part this is due to the structure under which managed lanes operate which is often dictated by political rather than financial imperatives.
Consequently, this patchwork of political imperatives has led to a wide  variety of charging structures on managed lanes. Some schemes have a  fixed price and/or offer free passage to multiple occupancy and zero  emission vehicles and may only operate only in peak periods. In other  examples a fee may be a permanent factor but can be varied according to  current conditions or the time, day or journey length. In reality no two  projects are identical, making benchmarking and knowledge sharing  particularly difficult. 
 
Usually  the main aim in setting the toll rate is to maintain a target speed in  the managed lane but as drivers are able to choose whether to use the  free or managed lanes, this is a complicated calculation. With dynamic  pricing the toll is used to manage how many vehicles enter the managed  lanes so they don’t bog down to a standstill along with the non-toll  lanes. So although the toll rate may not be directly dictated by the  congestion in the non-toll lanes, it closely reflects that situation. 
 
Driver  behaviour is another variable. Studies have shown that drivers decide  whether or not to use the managed lanes depending on the perceived time  saving and the value they put on that saved time (ITS International  Jan/Feb 2014). The Miami Herald found that the higher the variable toll  was set on the I-95’s managed lanes, the more drivers were likely to be  lured away from the free lanes because they perceived there was a  greater time saving to be made. However, as more drivers opt to use the  managed lanes, the congestion on the free use lanes diminishes and with  it the potential time savings.
 
In  order to maintain traffic speed in the managed lane, the toll rate  becomes a balancing act of determining a price point at which driver A  will deem it too expensive to use in a specific window of time, while  driver B sees it as an acceptable cost to save time - for today at  least. The suggestion is that drivers choosing to pay the fee will be  those with non- repeating needs (hospital appointment, a flight to  catch…), rather than regular commuters. 
 
The  reality depicted in Michael Janson’s and David Levinson’s paper HOT  or  Not was rather different. Over a two-year period the duo found that   weekday time savings on the I-394 averaged 1.7 minutes in the mornings   and a little over 45 seconds in the afternoon while figures for the   westbound I-35 were just under three minutes in the morning and 1.2   minutes in the afternoon. As the toll prices averaged around $2.6, $1.4,   $2.9 and $2.5 respectively, this meant drivers were ‘buying’ time at   the rate of between $60 - $124 per hour - or roughly between $1 and $2   for every minute saved. 
 
While   reallocating an HOV lane as a HOT lane may fulfil some political   objective by reducing the congestion on the free use lanes, it leaves   authorities with a dilemma: should they post the journey time   information they have for both the managed and free use lanes? To do so   would correct drivers’ perceived time saving and dissuade some from   using the managed lanes until such time that congestion increased in the   free use lanes to a point where it equalled their preconceptions. 
 
Accessibility   also has to be taken into consideration from the political (but not   financial) angle as charging a high premium to use managed lanes could   exclude lower income drivers. Conversely, the Miami Herald’s findings   indicate a high fee could increase uptake and financial viability and   benefit low income drivers by reducing congestion on the free use lanes.   
 
What various research   appears to indicates is that the resulting situation can be   self-perpetuating and this goes some way to explaining the wide   variations in performance of superficially identical managed lanes   projects. This tendency to self-perpetuate provides another layer of   complexity and uncertainty when it comes to forecasting usage and   revenue for future projects.
 
While   public bodies may support a managed lane scheme that doesn’t cover its   running costs because of the wider benefits it provides, the   institutional investors that the US and other governments want to   finance the transport infrastructure will need to make a profit. This   brings centre stage traffic and revenue forecasting which has proved to   have a rather poor track record with managed lanes projects and will do   little to improve the confidence of private investors who need clarity   about both the political and financial objectives. 
 
 Foremost   among these concerns is the long term prospects for any  managed lane   project as there is long-standing public support for  maintaining and   ideally increasing the number and proportion of high  occupancy vehicles.   If that happens then it may be necessary to  increase tolls to dissuade  a  greater proportion of other drivers from  using the managed lanes to   maintain the target speed while  accommodating more non-tolled HOVs. In a   car-sharing future HOT lanes  may not offer significant time saving for   the general motorist and  therefore the HOT managed lane concept can  only  be seen as absorbing  current unused HOV capacity. All of which  adds to  the complexity of  making the managed lanes concept work in a  business  model to the  satisfaction of potential private-sector  investors.
 
The   flip side is  that where a managed lane project is underperforming   either politically  or financially, the authority (be that the public   body or private  investors) have at their disposal the ‘tools’ to  address  the situation.  The handful of private concessionaires  operating managed  lanes treat  the algorithms they use to balance  traffic speed against  the current  toll rate as a very serious trade  secret.
 
Changes   to existing  managed lane schemes raise the potential of losing public   support and  the prospect of meeting political resistance. So, for   instance,  discounting off-peak rates to encourage drivers to delay or   bring  forward their journeys may have a beneficial social effect but   could  be financially detrimental. Any subsequent reduction or removal of   the  off-peak discount may increase revenue but would almost certainly   be  universally unpopular with drivers – including those travelling at    peak periods who would be contemplating increased congestion on their    journeys. 
 
Industry sources    suggest the greatest selling point of HOT lanes is that you are making    use of lanes otherwise reserved for the often elusive HOV users.    Relocating some vehicles from the free use into managed lanes can    benefit both paying and non-paying driver, and if an authority can cover    its operating cost then everyone ‘wins’. 
 
The    reality remains difficult to determine because in state run projects    any ‘surplus’ generated would typically be devoted to transit services    in the same corridor meaning there was no year-end surplus to report  as   would happen with the private sector.
 
So    it seem likely authorities wanting to attract private investors for    managed and HOT lanes projects still face something of an uphill    challenge. 
 
     
         
         
         
        



