Timothy Compston finds out if exchanging traffic and road condition data with private app developers makes sense for both drivers and road authorities.    
     
Much has been said about the potential benefits for authorities in sharing data with traffic and navigation app developers, and receiving ‘crowdsourced’ information in return – so how is it working in practice?  
     
An app developer very much in the fast lane for two-way traffic-related data sharing is 
     
For the uninitiated, Waze is basically a ‘crowdsourced’ navigation app which collects and shares real-time information from users. So-called ‘Wazers’ enable Waze, when the app is on, to collect data on their vehicle’s location and speed. The app also encourages ‘Wazers’ to send in reports – which are rated by other users - on the events and conditions they encounter on the roadway. 
 
Connected data
According to Paige Fitzgerald who oversees the Connected Citizens Program at Waze, there are two main goals informing this information exchange process: “The first is to make the Waze map as good as it can be for our local users. Our government partners have really valuable data sets with the best advance notice of road closures.” Fitzgerald adds that a second ‘goal’ occurred more organically when it was realised that - going in the other direction - Waze’s data was very valuable to these same partners: “Most particularly the incident data.” 
 
Fitzgerald says Waze’s partnership efforts really kicked into gear in 2013 when it was approached by the authorities in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, prior to the Pope’s visit: “They [Rio] were worried about congestion preceding, and during, his visit, so they wanted to have the best data on where obstructions were occurring.”
On the question of privacy,  Fitzgerald is quick to reassure ‘Wazers’ that the user reported incident  information Waze’s partners ingest is already publically available: “We  [Waze] don’t share any personal user details like user names, comments,  or photos - just the reported incidents. Whether it is a five-car  pile-up or a pothole, all that information can then go to the government  body to address in real time.” 
     
As  well as immediate issues, Fitzgerald suggests Waze’s data is invaluable  for longer term planning, helping DOTs and municipalities identify  hotspots for every type of incident from vehicle collisions to cars  parked on the shoulder.
  
Storming ahead
In  May 2014 Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) gave the ‘green  light’ to a data sharing partnership with Waze – the first American DOT  to do so. Russell Allen, ITS program development engineer at FDOT,  believes that as a major tourist state, it is important to deliver the  best possible traveller information to motorists: “Having extra eyes on  Florida’s highways is helpful, especially on the highways that are not  instrumented with cameras and detectors. Anything that we can do to  utilise the data we have, and private sector data, to better prepare the  travelling public is worth looking into.” 
 
Speaking to ITS International as a storm system loomed, Allen said the Waze data could, potentially, come into its own when disruptive weather hits: “We experience things like debris in the roadway and flooding. Where there is any kind of incident or location-based threat for the motorist, then the crowdsourced people can lock that into Waze and we can relay that [information] to our system.”
As FDOT can filter the data that it takes from Waze, one capability Allen reckons could be geared up when the worst happens - which Florida’s current 511 traveller information system doesn’t do - is the ability to highlight gas stations that still hold fuel: “This could prove invaluable if an evacuation is required as a big problem, with all our highways heading north to get off the peninsula, is actually finding gas,” says Allen.
Allen  says the ‘partnership’ road  ran smoothly: “In order to collect the Waze  data we had to develop a  software interface and that was pretty  painless.” He adds that other  state DOTs have been in touch to learn  from Florida’s experience: “Each  conversation is different, but the  overall conclusion is that  crowdsourcing data from partners such as Waze  is a source of real-time  information that results in little or no cost  to the transport agency.”
  
Citizen reports
In   the Pacific Northwest, Oregon DOT recently signed up to a data  exchange  with Waze. Galen McGill, ITS manager at Oregon DOT, explains  the  rationale: “We have people scattered across the state but they are  not  everywhere all of the time.” He acknowledges that, unlike some  states,  Oregon didn’t necessarily have the resources to build up its  own network  of ‘citizen reporters’ and that it was probably a better  approach to  work with Waze.  
     
In   practice, McGill believes that Oregon may not utilise all of the Waze   data on offer: “It is a different type of data than we are used to,   obviously being user reported. There has had to be a little bit of   filtering. We have had to say ‘which of the data is important to share   [with drivers]?’ We are looking at the more major incident. Potholes may   be useful to know about internally but not something we feel the need   to report to folks. One thing that we won’t report by policy, is police   locations,” says McGill.
 
Mutual benefits
Iowa DOT (IDOT) is also starting a relationship with Waze. Sinclair Stolle, IDOT’s traveller information program manager, is enthusiastic about the potential: “We are always looking at ways to broaden the reach of our information, traffic information, closures and construction to the public and the media. Having the two-way data exchange between IDOT and Waze is a mutually beneficial arrangement.”
Stolle   says finalising the  contract took longer than putting the data on   Iowa’s website, which  was partly down to ensuring that as a public   agency it tied in with  any ‘open records’ legal requirements: “Once we   got that in place and  had access to the data feed it was about three   months to tweak it to  what we needed.” 
     
As with other DOTs, Stolle   confirms that Iowa is  filtering the data: “We want it to be the most   impactful for our  website and our traveller information system,” she   says.
     
Touching  on the   display of each other’s data, Stolle explains that anything  Waze takes   from IDOT’s data feed is displayed on the app as ‘the DOT  reported it’:   “On the other end, events on our website, mobile app and  511 phone   system say that it is a ‘citizen report’ reported by the  Waze app.” 
She   feels that it is important  that the icons on the  websites and mobile  app  are similar to those  for the DOT’s own events:  “They are just a  little  bit different so  you can still relate to them  and not have to  learn a  new set of  icons.”
   
Beta testing
In Brazil, Pedro Junqueira who is executive chief of the Rio Operations Centre (ROC), explains that the tie-up with Waze builds on Rio’s reputation as being ahead of the technology curve as a ‘beta-tester’ city: “The partnership was really an idea from the Mayor of Rio, Eduardo Paes. He challenged us to have Waze data as part of our tools in just a few weeks and we achieved this integration with the Operations Centre,” explains Junqueira.
“The    partnership with Waze means  that the ROC receives, in real time, the    app’s user information  throughout Rio,” says Junqueira. He adds that    reports of crashes,  traffic conditions and stalled vehicles reported by    the Waze  community also appear on a geo-referenced map in the  situation   room. 
     
For   Junqueira,  Waze  is one of ‘the greatest’ examples of a crowdsourced   app: “In  relation  to traffic control they are miles ahead of any  other  tool  we’ve heard  about.” Asked whether other cities or DOTs  should  follow  Rio’s example,  Junqueira’s reply is brief and to the  point: “Do  it!”
  
Research study
Across     in New Zealand, Sonia Pollard, the national programme development     manager for the Transport Operation Centres, is a strong advocate of an     ‘open approach’ to data. Although it is still early days, Collard     confirms that the New Zealand Transport Agency recently commissioned a     study to assess the potential for crowdsourced data: “This includes a     review of partnering with private agencies to review how we increase     data inputs and share our data to improve the information that we     provide to transport users.”
     
 
-  About the Author - Timothy Compston is a freelance journalist who specialises in traffic technology and security issues.        
 
    
        
        
        
        



