Skip to main content

Q-Free and Raytheon bring MassDoT toll into focus 

Contract aimed at reducing need for manual review of images
By Adam Hill May 14, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Q-Free works with Raytheon in Massachusetts (© Ritu Jethani | Dreamstime.com)

Q-Free has combined with sensor specialist Raytheon Intelligence & Space to improve enforcement and tolling for Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDoT).

MassDoT's All Electronic Tolling System (AETS) has processed more than one billion camera image tolls since its inception, but must manually review many images because of unreadable or obscured plates.

However, the Covid-19 crisis is likely to accelerate the move to cashless tolling, making accurate readings vital.

Q-Free is installing its proprietary Intrada Insight automated licence plate reading system, which the company says will reduce the need for manual inspection: Bill Rapp, executive vice president of tolling solutions for Q-Free America, called it a "progressive agreement".

“As MassDOT’s tolling partner we are always looking for new technologies to improve the system and reduce operational costs," says Matt Gilligan, Raytheon vice president.

In a separate development, Q-Free has migrated its I-670 SmartLane congestion relief project in Columbus, Ohio to the cloud. Carried out with Amazon Web Services, the Ohio DoT project is one of the first of its kind to move to a cloud-hosted environment.

Q-Free says early data from the pilot scheme – which has hard shoulder running (HSR) at its heart - suggests that commute times from downtown Columbus to the east side have been halved.

The I-670 pilot uses Q-Free’s OpenTMS advanced traffic management system to provide operators with weather, speed, radar and camera data to help manage shoulder lanes and relieve congestion. 
 
“With our experience in Europe, we’ve seen how HSR can make a huge difference in relieving congestion and we brought that knowledge to this project,” said Tom Phillips, executive vice president of Q-Free’s Inter-Urban Division. “It’s a customised solution using several Q-Free OpenTMS modules to dial in the appropriate level of information at the right time.”
 

Related Content

  • Rajant sees good prospects for kinetic mesh system
    October 7, 2015
    US kinetic wireless mesh specialist Rajant’s first attendance at the ITS World Congress has opened its eyes to the business possibilities of the sector. “It’s very interesting,” said Graham Owen, Rajant’s sales director for the Middle East, Africa and Turkey. “We’ve been looking around and 80% of the people at this show have wireless infrastructure to deliver their applications. We see the transport market as a huge growth areas globally.”
  • 'Don't go from lockdown to gridlock', warns UITP
    July 29, 2020
    Coronavirus offers chance to rethink how we want to move about our cities, suggests report
  • German approval for Jenoptik TraffiStar
    November 8, 2013
    Germany’s Physical Technical Institute (PTB) has approved Jenoptik’s TraffiStar S350 laser scanner system for the German market. The approval enables the company’s Traffic Solutions division to provide police and local authorities in Germany with a fixed speed enforcement system that uses non-invasive sensors instead of in-road loops or piezos. The TraffiStar S350 is housed in the specially-designed TraffiTower, enabling the system to be used for a range of applications, including on road bends or obscur
  • What are AVs doing in rural Ohio?
    March 29, 2023
    Autonomous vehicle pilots so far have been typically sighted in urban areas. But researchers in rural regions of Ohio are now trying to find out exactly what benefits they could bring to the countryside