A traffic incident management project in Arizona has speeded up reopening closed lanes and saved an estimated $165m through reducing traffic delays.
     
The process for clearing roadway incidents on the Maricopa County freeways in Arizona has always reflected industry best practice with, for instance, a live feed of freeway cameras to the Arizona Department of Public Safety’s (DPS) dispatch centre and the City of Phoenix Fire dispatch centre. The region has nearly 480km (300 miles) of freeway connecting 27 cities and towns and three Native American Indian Communities. The moment a traffic incident is observed, operators at Arizona DOT’s traffic operations centre (TOC) alerts the Department of Public Safety’s (DPS) dispatch centre which sends troopers to the scene. Many incidents are also directly reported to DPS via 911 calls from passing motorists. 
     
The responding troopers take with them the equipment they believe necessary given the information available, and once on scene they work with the dispatch centre in coordinating the response. Coordination and communications to manage activities between Arizona DOT and DPS is via radio communications equipment and messages through the computer aided dispatch system.
     
In the first nine months of 2014 this system resulted in the average time to clear an incident (the time of arrival of response vehicles to the point all vehicles and debris are removed from the crash scene) of slightly longer than 106 minutes The roadway clearance time (the average time taken to clear travel lanes) was almost 90 minutes. 
     
Since the beginning of January 2015, one DPS trooper has been located alongside four ADOT staff within the TOC as part of a pilot project to streamline incident management and reduce clear-up times on the freeway. The pilot project is co-sponsored by the Arizona DOT and Maricopa Association of Governments (MAG), the regional planning agency. The trooper in-charge, DPS Sergeant John Paul Cartier, and the other members of his team at the TOC have secure access to the DPS’s computer aided dispatch system and radio frequencies to communicate with troopers in the field and can activate resources after camera verification. 
     
Furthermore, based on what the troopers can see on the CCTV camera   views, they pass along their assessment of the crash scene and can   activate fire, emergency medical services, towing and traffic control   resources as necessary.  The fire and emergency medical services are   provided by the local city responding to 911 calls or in response to a   request from the DPS dispatch centre.
     
By   September 2015, just nine months into the three-year pilot project,  the  benefits of this system have already become clear with the most   striking result being a 63% reduction in the time taken to clear the   roadway compared with a year earlier. That improvement comes in spite of   an increase of 23% in crashes (to 13,862) in the first nine months of   2015 which actually resulted in an increase in average response time –   up from 14.7 to 23.8 minutes. This increase in the crash rate is not   limited to Maricopa County as crashes have increased across Arizona and   the US by as much as 19%. 
 
However,  the input from Sergeant Cartier and his crew means that the  troopers  depart for the scene better prepared to deal with the  situation they  will encounter. In addition, the ongoing management of  the incident has  also improved and, for instance, other services may  already on their way  – alerted by the troopers in the TOC instead of  waiting to be summoned  once their colleagues arrive on the scene.
     
As  a result the average time to clear the roadway after non-injury crashes  (of which there were 10,061) was cut by 54 minutes to 29 minutes (a 63%  reduction). With the 3,767 crashes involving injuries, the time saving  was 51 minutes (90 minutes down to 39) and represents a 57% reduction.  In the case of the most protracted incidents, the 34 fatal crashes, the  average roadway clearance time has almost been halved to 172 minutes  from the pre-pilot figure of 329 minutes. 
     
In  evaluating the figures for all the freeways’ 13,800 crashes, even when  factoring in the longer response time (due to more crashes), the average  time from when a trooper is dispatched to a crash scene to clearing the  roadway has almost halved (100 minutes down to 55.5) 
     
MAG  has estimated that by reducing the time taken to clear the roadway,  around 8.4 million vehicle hours were saved both on the freeways and in  the surrounding roads, in the first nine months of the pilot scheme.  This was arrived at using productivity savings estimated using a  regional traffic simulation model that compared the total traffic delay  on the road network with the freeway crashes in 2014 and with those in  2015. Using the $16.79/hr figure for value of time calculated by the  Texas Transportation Institute for its 2011 Mobility Report, MAG puts  the savings in the first nine months of the pilot at $165million. This  analysis does not include any potential savings due to reductions in  secondary crashes.
     
Incident  clearance time (the time to remove vehicles from hard shoulders) has  also been reduced by 45% to almost 59 minutes. Incident duration (the  time the responding trooper was dispatched to the time when all vehicles  and debris are removed from view) showed a more modest reduction of 11%  to around 73 minutes.  
     
While  this appears a somewhat mixed picture, beyond the increase in response  time for the reasons mentioned earlier, all other operations have been  carried out quicker than before. This is because the presence of the DPS  troopers at the TOC has improved their ability to actively manage  traffic incidents through utilising the centre’s resources. Beyond the  traffic incidents, the troopers have the authority, training and  experience to also respond to law enforcement situations.  
     
The  pilot has also provided an added benefit in the synergy it has created  through the DPS team becoming better informed about traffic management  functions. In turn, the troopers have provided valuable input to traffic  management problem solving from an enforcement viewpoint. So although  the pilot still has more than two years left to run, both ADOT and MAG  believe it has already proved the tremendous value of co-locating  traffic control and enforcement staff in the larger US metropolitan  regions - and potentially in others too.
    
        
        
        



