David Crawford cherrypicks conference and award highlights  
     
Almost 30% of all US citizens live in rural areas or very small communities, and 34 of the 50 states exceed this level in their own populations, with the proportions rising as high as 85%. And although rural routes carry only 35% of all traffic, the accidents that occur on them account for some 54% of all US road traffic accident deaths. To address these facts the US has introduced a nationwide Towards Zero Deaths programme. 
     
Co-hosted by 
     
Its ‘Crosstalkless’ concept derives from the disruptive effect of unwanted signals in a communications channel caused by interference from another circuit. Springfield professional engineer – ITS, Roger Lile, told 
     
“Our concept addresses ways of acquiring traffic information from ITS devices, or visual or verbal sources, and then redistributing it in a timely manner. The result could be as simple as a signal timing adjustment resulting from a video observation.”
     
In rural parts of the US the local fire departments typically rely on volunteer support and the firefighters also act as search-and-rescue teams. To aid the volunteer firefighters’ efforts the University of Missouri has equipped to use GPS-enabled devices to locate often-scattered fire hydrants as well as tourists lost in the wilds of the Ozarks. 
     
In one town, boy scouts trained by the university, worked with regular firefighters to map some 300 hydrants, whose GPS coordinates are now available electronically for use on callouts. The resulting faster response times have brought lower Insurance Service Office ratings for local property owners.
 In Fredericktown, the fire  department is trying out a new GPS-enabled smartphone app that sends out  the location of the command area for the fire and gives responders the  one-touch capability to send theirs, with an estimated time of arrival.  Companion software maps the location of everyone involved. 
     
In  a major disaster, such as the 2011 Joplin tornado, in which 158 people  died, small communities’ emergency and search and rescue teams call on  help from neighbours. These incoming responders will be unfamiliar with  the locality – and in even greater difficulties if street signage and  points of interest have suffered from the impact. In such situations  reliable GPS data becomes critically important.
  
Collisions
 
 One  major rural safety issue is the risk of collisions at intersections  between major and minor routes - especially unsignalled ones. Factors  impelling ITS development include evidence that static intersection  signs are often ineffective and that sight restrictions caused by curves  and slopes on minor-road approaches increase crash risks. 
     
At  the same time only limited funds are available for physical  improvements such as realignments and grade smoothing; not least given  low traffic volumes. Nearly 70% of fatal vehicle collisions in Minnesota  happen on country roads. 
     
Rural  two-way, static stop sign-only equipped intersections accounted for 76%  of these crashes. The 
     
In  response, the 
     
The  system measures the time it takes for a vehicle on the major route to  travel between two sensors spaced some 6m (20ft) apart to determine  speed, and then calculates when that vehicle will arrive at the  intersection. It then alerts drivers on the minor route using a flashing  bright yellow sign to give them around seven seconds’ notice to avoid  entering the intersection. 
     
The  sensor loops are bored horizontally under the major route surface from  the roadside, avoiding closures for installation and reducing future  maintenance costs – a key issue for rural deployments. MnDOT brought in  the 
     
Results  showed an activation rate of 99.98%, exceeding MnDOT’s 99.95%  specification. It now plans to deploy RICWS at up to 50 rural crossings.
 
 In  a parallel project, the UoM has demonstrated an  LED-based advanced  low-cost, low-maintenance dynamic alert system for  rural intersections  that reacting to traffic presence. The system aims  to reduce vehicle  speeds on the major approach to the intersection and  warn those drivers  of a stopped vehicle on or entering the  intersection, and warn drivers  on the minor approach of an oncoming  vehicle on the major approach.  
     
The   design uses ‘off-the-shelf’ equipment that available technicians can   put together; wireless communications between components to avoid the   need for hardwire connections or ducts; and solar energy wherever   possible.
     
Results have   shown an average decrease in vehicle speeds on the main approach of   3.8mph (6.2km/h) which equates to almost one second of extra time. In a   survey of residents living within close range of a test, 92% agreed or   strongly agreed that the system improved safety. 
     
Challenges   indentified for future studies include drivers relying on blinking LED   warning signs in the same way as the would traffic lights and battery   charging at intersections that are not in sunny locations. 
     
For   signalised rural high-speed intersections Texas Transportation   Institute (TTI) has developed the Detection-Control System (D-CS) which   is described as dilemma-zone protection technology. Identifying vehicle   lengths and speeds at locations 265yd to 333yds (245m to 305m)  upstream  of an intersection, it monitors their approach lane-by-lane  and assigns  different weightings to trucks and cars based on lengths.  By processing  the resulting real time traffic data, D-CS predicts the  best time to end  the green phase on the major approach. 
 
It has emerged from two different needs: for a better system for managing high‐speed (over 72km/h) signalised intersections; and the ability to respond to mandatory speed reductions introduced in Houston (which has rural as well as urban areas). The problem with the conventional approach using fixed sensors, TTI research engineer Dr Danny Middleton told ITS International, is that these will be in the wrong place when speed limits change.
D-CS is designed to be speed independent, while   still  protecting the dilemma zone – typically at isolated intersections.   
     
The  FHWA has so far   deployed D-CS at eight sites in four US states,  Texas, Florida,   Louisiana and Illinois. Results have shown that  frequencies of red-light   violations and numbers of vehicles trapped in  dilemma zone have fallen   by 68% and 57% respectively. 
     
Based    on these results, the research team has concluded that wide-scale    deployment could improve safety at thousands of signalised intersections    and yield a high benefit-to-cost ratio. Ideas that proved  particularly   beneficial include having separate dilemma zones for cars  and trucks  and  enabling truck drivers to make decisions further away  from the   intersection. 
     
The    deployments have all run using controllers from 
   
Travel information
Eight north-western US states are active in the Operations and Travel Information Integration Sharing (OTIIS) project, which is working on the integration of multi-sourced data for travel information along the North/West Passage (NW/P) corridor. This follows interstate highways I-90 and I-94 from Washington to Wisconsin for nearly 2,000 miles (3,200km) - a major route for commercial and recreational travel.
Most of the states are heavily rural and three - Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota – currently lack appropriate traffic management centre operations (though they are now developing these). All experience extreme weather conditions.
The project is designing a wide-scale travel information website to help the planning of long-distance trips, and targetting of messages to modify driver behaviour. It will replace the multiple (DOT and non-DOT) sources that a long distance traveller on the N/WP currently has to consult.
Most of the state DOTs use XML (extensible markup language) or XML-based encoding for data feeds, although in varying formats and structures, and third-party sources can operate independently, making the available informational sources highly heterogeneous in nature.
The programme is therefore focussed on the need for efficient handling of this material, using a specially-developed data injector for posting the information on to the OTIIS website. It is also working on an application program interface for mobile app creation. Shown a mock-up app during a trial, one potential user said: “Finally, our DOT is caring about truck drivers.”
Currently under active consideration are plans for accident prediction and integration with freight scheduling; and intelligent rerouteing following incidents. One scheme would keep trucks on the highway, while diverting passenger traffic onto local roads.
Awards
The winner in the 2014 Best in Rural ITS Awards, run for the first time as part of ITSA’s overall scheme and announced at the 2014 ITS World Congress in Detroit, was theLaunched in November 2013, the scheme reflects the state’s characteristic terrain of high mountain passes and long rural routes that can make driving hazardous in severe winter. It supplements existing road and weather reports from UDOT’s snowplough crews and from the statewide network of traffic cameras and road weather information stations (RWIS).
The scheme organises and equips the volunteers, who can be UDOT employees, police patrols, truck drivers or other regular travellers, to give eye-witness reports on the route segments they are travelling. After completing around 30 minutes of training (online or in person), they receive a login and PIN to help them to make their submissions via a downloadable DOT Citizen Reporting app.
UDOT  meshes the resulting data to allow for variations in the quality  of  information submitted by professionals and non-professionals. By  August  2014, volunteers had submitted reports on 119 of the 145  identified road  segments, filling in information gaps in locations  where UDOT does not  have traffic cameras or RWIS units. During a heavy  winter storm in early  December 2013, they sent in over 130 individual  reports.
     
Among  shortlisted  entries was the 
     
In  September 2013  Condition Acquisition Reporting System (CARS), which  provides 511  technology in 10 US states, added an interactive CARS-Vox  component.  More recently, upgrades to more than 100 RWIS monitoring  highways  throughout the state have equipped these to generate real-time  roadway  and hazardous weather condition updates directly into ITD’s  511 system  every 15 minutes, 96 times per day, without human  intervention. 
     
In  April 2014,  the issue of a new ITD 511 smartphone app gave motorists  easier access  to travel information, with nearly 2,400 new users  downloading it in  the first week. ITD public information specialist Reed  Hollinshead told  ITS International: “This was one of our performance  highlights for the  last fiscal year”. 
     
In  the  Best New Innovative Practice - Research, Design and Innovation   category, the winner was the 
    
        
        
        
        



