Skip to main content

Cubic pushes greater role of public transit authorities in driving MaaS

Public transit agencies must start playing a central role in shaping the direction of Mobility as a Service (MaaS) solutions, driving the implementation effort and acting as coordinators of future endeavours, according to Cubic Transportation Systems' (CTS’) report presented in Washington DC. The document, authored by the company's president Matt Cole, aims to help clients, partners and the transit industry revisit their assumptions about MaaS and encourage an open discussion about public transit as the bac
March 26, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Public transit agencies must start playing a central role in shaping the direction of Mobility as a Service (8356 MaaS) solutions, driving the implementation effort and acting as coordinators of future endeavours, according to 378 Cubic Transportation Systems' (CTS’) report presented in Washington DC. The document, authored by the company's president Matt Cole, aims to help clients, partners and the transit industry revisit their assumptions about MaaS and encourage an open discussion about public transit as the backbone of the concept.


Called MaaS: Putting Transit Front and Center of the Conversation, the white paper was launched at the American Public Transportation Association Legislative Conference and was delivered to the MobilityManagement Committee.

Additionally, the inquiry discusses trends taking place on the urban, technological and social layers that make Maas applicable to the current transportation landscape and drive the discussion about the need for MaaS solutions forward. The report goes on to define ten objectives for a responsible, people-centred and socially inclusive MaaS that points to a crucial role that public transit agencies must play. CTS' paper also explores challenges that MaaS players need to overcome such as improving integration, encouraging responsible, secure data sharing, solving issues related to ownership of the customer and finding a common language of agreeing on the right economic and pricing model. It also covers the role that local authorities and governments should play in the overall MaaS picture and what responsibilities should remain in the hands of local authorities and what should be outsourced to third parties.

Cole, said: “Today, the definition of MaaS remains ambiguous. The early adopters of MaaS were almost exclusively private mobility providers and so the industry has come to consider MaaS a private sector initiative. With public transit at its heart, MaaS can bring many benefits to cities, communities and transit agencies.”

A full copy of the report is available %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external here false https://www.cubic.com/sites/default/files/Maas_Final_Whitepaper.pdf false false%>.

Related Content

  • August 26, 2014
    Cubic ITMS and Urban Insights
    Cubic, whose transportation solutions power some of the major urban centres across the world, including London, San Francisco, Chicago, Vancouver, New York, Los Angeles, San Diego; Sydney; and Brisbane, will be showcasing two vital new services for the US market at the ITS World Congress Detroit. The first is its Intelligent Transport Management Solutions (ITMS) which has already powered the transport and infrastructure projects for the Sydney and London Olympic Games. The company says that, with an unriva
  • February 28, 2014
    Compass4D workshop
    The next Compass4D combined workshop and showcase event on the real deployment of ITS takes place at the Automotive Campus in Helmond in the Netherlands on 4 April. The workshop will discuss the actions needed to deploy ITS: What cities should do and what they expect from the industry; The role of European, national and local authorities; and the appropriate business models to guarantee a successful C-ITS deployment. The workshop will also show some of the ITS services for safer and cleaner transport in
  • April 23, 2018
    Need for co-operation highlighted at MaaS Market Atlanta conference
    City authorities worldwide need to work more closely together to shape the future of on-demand transportation services. Such co-operation could help reduce congestion and pollution, and improve the lives of citizens - that is the view of leading international experts who will be addressing MaaS Market – Concept to Delivery – the third Mobility as a Service (MaaS) conference to be run by ITS International.
  • March 19, 2018
    Insights into Mobility as a Service
    Mobility as a Service (MaaS) is one of, if not the, biggest changes in the transport sector for many decades and ITS International’s stand is the place find out everything there is to know about MaaS - from concept to delivery. Having already run two successful MaaS Market conferences in London, the company is at Intertraffic highlighting its first US conference which is being run with the support of City of Atlanta and Georgia’s State Road & Tollway Authority. The US conference will take place in Atlanta