Office of Freight Management and Operations (HOFM) - Status and Future Directions Tony Furst, Director.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Oregon Freight Plan July 28, Linking Freight Improvements to Economic Growth Travel Time Freight Transportation Improvements Productivity Competitiveness.
Advertisements

March 2012 Ports and Cities Conference Newcastle Dorte Ekelund, Executive Director Major Cities Unit Department of Infrastructure and Transport
Mid-Atlantic Rail Operations Study -- Benefit Assessment Presented by: Jack Lettiere, Commissioner New Jersey Department of Transportation Presented to:
Returning to Our National Waterways Dabney Hegg U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation.
I-95 Corridor Coalition December 14, 2001 I-95 Corridor Coalition Mid-Atlantic Rail Operations Study — An Integrated Strategy to Eliminate Choke Points.
Freight Transportation Economic Regulation Transportation Logistics Spring 2009.
© 2009 Rochester Institute of Technology Geospatial Intermodal Freight Transportation (GIFT)
URBAN FREIGHT Getting kicked to the curb?. How will we live?
Freight Data - A Transportation Perspective September 2010 Michael Sprung – FHWA, Office of Freight Management and Operations.
Freight and Transportation Planning Workshop- Executive Summary Presented by the Federal Highway Administration Date Location.
Logistics and Regions. Trends The regions are becoming integrated in large-scale network economies (new markets conditions, reliance on global supply.
The Freight Analysis Framework – Overview and Uses Bruce Lambert Office of Freight Management and Operations.
Engaging the Private Sector in Freight Planning An Executive Overview Presented by the Federal Highway Administration January 16, 2007 TX Border Partnership.
Weather and Winter Mobility Program Overview U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration Paul Pisano Weather & Winter Mobility Coordinator.
Freight Transportation System Performance and the Economy Identifying Economic Benefits Resulting from Freight Infrastructure Improvements FHWA Talking.
U.S. Railroad Industry Federal Railroad Administration U.S. Railroad Industry Federal Railroad Administration.
THE IMPACT OF GLOBAL LOGISTICS
Overview of the Freight Analysis Framework Rolf R. Schmitt January, 2008.
1 SAFETEA: Transportation System Management, Operations and ITS Jeffrey F. Paniati Associate Administrator, Office of Operations Federal Highway Administration.
Freight Performance Measures Crystal Jones FHWA Office of Freight Management and Operations.
Texas Freight Forecasting Rob Bostrom Monisha Khurana Liza Amar Planning Applications Conference 2015.
GeoResources Institute Spatial Technologies for Freight Transportation Efficiency, Planning, and Safety Chuck O’Hara, Ph.D. Associate.
Freight Analysis Framework version 3 (FAF3) __________ Talking Freight Webinar October 2010.
Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21 st Century Act of 2011 Potential Freight Implications FHWA Talking Freight December 2011 Tony Furst, Director FHWA.
Freight Bottleneck Study Update to the Intermodal, Freight, and Safety Subcommittee of the Regional Transportation Council September 12, 2002 North Central.
Transportation—Managing the Flow of the Supply Chain Lecture 8.
Freight Issues and Policy Options Memphis Freight Planning Conference October 2, 2001 Gary Maring, FHWA.
Craig O’Riley & Adam Shell Office of Systems Planning Wednesday, December 1,
Freight Productivity Impacts of Natural and Man-Made Disasters Paul Bingham Managing Director, Global Commerce and Transportation IHS Global Insight Talking.
Freight Issues in the Report of the National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission Transportation for Tomorrow.
A Case Study of Promoting Metropolitan Freight Collaboration: The Twin Cities Experience Performance Management Framework Minnesota Department of Transportation.
National Multimodal Freight Trends/Issues/Forecasts/ Policy Implications.
USDOT, RITA RITA: Oversight of USDOT’s R&D programs  University Transportation Centers $100M  UTC Consortia $80M  UTC Multimodal R&D $40M  Intelligent.
Talking Freight Promoting Economic Revitalization through Enhanced Freight Transportation Eric G. Madden Deputy Secretary for Aviation and Rail Freight.
1 IntelliDrive SM Research, Development and Emerging Technologies National ITS Perspective Panel Joseph I. Peters, Ph.D. Federal Highway Administration.
Freight Council Webinar February 21, 2006 Anthony T. Furst Director, FHWA Office of Freight Management and Operations The Framework for National Freight.
Jennifer Murray Traffic Forecasting Section Chief, WisDOT Metropolitan Planning Organization Quarterly Meeting July 28 th, 2015.
Transportation leadership you can trust. presented to FHWA “Talking Freight” Seminar Series presented by Lance Neumann Cambridge Systematics, Inc. August.
MARYLAND FREIGHT SUMMIT Freight in the Mid-Atlantic Region Jeffrey F. Paniati Associate Administrator for Operations Federal Highway Administration September.
What are Intelligent Transportation Systems? Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) are existing and new technologies, including information processing,
Engaging State DOT’s Engaging State DOT’s 2008 ITS America State Chapters Council Annual Meeting and State Chapters Strengthening Workshop Bernie Arseneau,
Technology and the National Freight Action Agenda U.S. Department of Transportation Richard M. Biter Deputy Director US DOT, Office of Intermodalism November.
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style BUREAU OF TRANSPORT & REGIONAL ECONOMICS-TRANSPORT COLLOQUIUM 05 Future Opportunities.
SAFETEA-LU System Management and Operations Key Provisions Jeff Lindley Office of Operations Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation.
International Logistics Centres for Western NIS and the Caucasus Georgia: Areas in the vicinity of Tbilisi airport Ministry of Economy and Sustainable.
Context and Priorities April 9,  Why FHWA Focuses on Improving Operations  FHWA Operations Program Areas  Key Current Program Priorities.
AASHTO-FHWA Freight Partnership II Survey and Meeting: FHWA Perspective Tony Furst, FHWA-Office of Freight Management & Operations April 18, 2007.
Federal Highway Administration Office of Freight Management and Operations 1 FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR MULTI-STATE/JURISDICTIONAL DECISION MAKING Christine.
Nate Asplund Director – Public Private Partnerships September 20, 2009 SCORT 2009 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.
PROJECT OVERVIEW FHWA Talking Freight Seminar December 15, 2004 Dilara Rodriguez Project Manager, CALTRANS National I-10 Freight Corridor Study.
Abstract Background Methodology Methods While the project is in the data-collection and background research phase, there are several studies that utilize.
Bicycle Advisory Board September 2, 2015 Freight Master Plan.
National Modeling TRB Transportation Planning Applications Conference May 5, 2013.
SAFETEA-LU System Management and Operations Provisions Jeff Lindley Director of the Office of Transportation Management Office of Operations Federal Highway.
Company LOGO Georgia Truck Lane Needs Identification Study Talking Freight Seminar March 19, 2008 Matthew Fowler, P.T.P Assistant State Planning Administrator.
FHWA Operations Core Business Unit National Associations Working Group April 8, 1999 Christine Johnson Program Manager and Director, ITS Joint Program.
Freight Transportation Plan Savannah, GA AMPO Conference - October 23, 2014.
The Transportation Logistics Company Indiana Logistics Summit Infrastructure Needs and Opportunities September 26, 2007.
ADVANCED TRANSPORTATION AND CONGESTION MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGIES DEPLOYMENT (ATCMTD) PROGRAM 1 Bob Arnold, Director Office of Transportation Management,
Industry Briefing 25 May 2016.
COMPREHENSIVE PLAN UPDATE MEETING 2 – TRANSPORTATION ELEMENT 12/12/2013.
0 Freight Activities: Year in Review Dec. 12 th 2015.
Presented to Indiana Logistics Summit Indianapolis, Indiana presented by Keith Bucklew Director - Freight Mobility Indiana Department of Transportation.
Minnesota’s Freight Performance Measures Cecil Selness, Director Office of Freight and Commercial Vehicle Operations Minnesota Department of Transportation.
Rice University – Baker Institute
Freight Transportation Plan Savannah, GA
2017 SCORT Conference Washington, DC
“efficient movement of goods across the entire state of Oregon”
FUTURE CAPACITY BUILDING NEEDS dISCUSSION
Connected Places: Freight, Regions and Megaregions Catherine L
Presentation transcript:

Office of Freight Management and Operations (HOFM) - Status and Future Directions Tony Furst, Director

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 2 Office of Operations Associate Administrator Office of Operations Director Office of Transportation Operations Director Office of Transportation Management Director Office of Freight Management & Operations

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 3 Office of Freight Management and Operations – The Context  25% of the U.S. GDP is related to trade and is predicted to grow to 35% in the next 20 years.  Freight volume moved by all modes of transportation is predicted to nearly double by  Many of our highways, railroads, and intermodal facilities are running out of capacity to accommodate anticipated volumes of freight.  Congestion impedes timely and reliable freight movements and threatens business productivity.  Freight movements cross state and metropolitan boundaries are served primarily by the private sector and are hard to accommodate by traditional public institutions.

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 4 A Matter of Perspective Public Sector (States, MPOs) PASSENGERS Private Sector (Shippers, Carriers) FREIGHT Global National Regional Local

Truck volumes on major highways –

Congested highways –

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 7 Office of Freight Management and Operations – The Context  Security, safety, environmental, and other concerns are competing with the need for efficient, reliable flows of freight.  Without improvements in technology, operations, infrastructure, and institutions the cost of goods will increase, global competitiveness will be reduced, jobs will be lost, and passenger travel by highway and rail will be in increasing conflict with freight movements.

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 8 Office of Freight Management and Operations – Objectives Support the productivity and economic benefits of freight transportation  Understand the magnitude and geography of freight moving on the nation’s transportation system  Develop strategies, analytical tools, institutional arrangements, and professional capacities for all levels of government to address freight movement  Enforce commercial vehicle size and weight requirements  Encourage innovative freight technology & operations

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 9 Office of Freight Management and Operations – Major Activities  Policy  Analysis  Freight Professional Development  Vehicle Size and Weight Enforcement  Freight Technology & Operations

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 10 Freight Policy

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 11 Freight Analysis Reduce congestion and improve mobility by providing analytic capability to transportation managers, planners and policy developers regarding freight transportation

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 12 Freight Analysis Framework (FAF)  Commodity flows by origin and destination for truck, rail, and water in 1998, 2010, 2020  Planned improvements: update base year to 2002 Economic Census, improve coverage, identify hazmat flows, time of day estimates, provisional estimates of current year freight activity, etc.  Applications: policy-sensitive mode split model, links to policy models, scenario forecasts  Assure continuation of data sources and explore new data sources 

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 13 Beyond FAF  Travel time in freight-significant corridors and border crossing delay  Drive coherent freight data to the people who make transportation investments  State freight profiles  The Freight Story. Intermodal Connectors, Condition and Performance Report, etc. 

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 14 Freight Model Improvement Program  Freight forecasts for facility planning, revenue forecasting, air quality concerns, etc.  Freight responds to different forces than passenger travel and needs different models  Improve existing tools and state of practice  Identify research needs and longer term model development 

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 15 Economics Understanding the Relationship between Transportation Infrastructure Investment and the Economy

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 16 The Issues  From 1980 to 2002, truck travel on US highways grew by 90% while lane-miles of public roads grew by only 5%.  U.S. rail traffic is at or near segment capacity in intermodal corridors and new tracks are not being laid down.  Short Sea Shipping lanes are not currently an intermodal routing option.  Between 1998 and 2020, US freight volume (all modes) is expected to increase from 15 billion to 25.5 billion tons (70%.)

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 17 The Issues  Between 1998 and 2020, the value of US freight (all modes) is expected to increase from $9 trillion to $30 trillion (233%.)  Between 1998 and 2020, the percentage of urban interstates carrying 10,000 or more trucks will increase from 27% to 69%.  Public and private investment is needed to accommodate increasing demand.  Potential investment in capacity expansion and operational improvement (including ITS applications) will have to compete with existing infrastructure maintenance and improvement.

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 18 The Big Picture  It is widely acknowledged that the health of the national economy is reliant on a functional transportation network.  However, there is no universally accepted means by which to calculate the economic benefits associated with transportation improvements.  FHWA seeks to create a series of models and methodologies that can be used by transportation planners to make a more complete evaluation of the relative economic value of alternative transportation system improvements, in order to better build the case that transportation improvements enabling improved freight flows lead to economic growth and development.

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 19 Key Questions  What is the nature and magnitude of the relationship between transportation investments and the performance of the freight services sector, of other economic sectors (e.g. labor), and of the overall economy?  How robust are these relationships when the transportation infrastructure investments are made in different contexts (i.e. capacity expansion vs. operational enhancement)?  What role does transportation investment play in the reorganization of logistics processes (evolution of the supply chain)?

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 20 Key Questions  How do freight shippers and carriers weigh transportation improvements in the development of their business models?  As freight transportation cost and service improvements promote market expansion and integration, what interactive changes occur in labor, land and product markets within and between various economic sectors and regions?

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 21 State of the Practice (Macroeconomic)  Transportation Spending and GDP are positively correlated.  Research has shown that economic benefits associated with highway spending have decreased over time as there has been a shift from construction to operations and maintenance spending.  More and better roads reduce overall logistics costs (at a given output level) by making it faster and cheaper to move raw materials and finished products.  Lower costs are passed through to consumers, demand increases, output grows.

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 22 State of the Practice (Microeconomic)  Economic benefits from transportation system improvements are dependent on time-frame. o Short-run: Operating cost (rate) reduction, transit time savings (no change in operations) o Medium-run: Transportation replaces inventory, total logistics cost savings o Long-run: Supply-Chain modification, facility location and vehicle fleet changes

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 23 State of the Practice (General Equilibrium)  Benefits from transportation infrastructure improvements vary by region.  Improvements lead to redistribution of resources and regional specialization. 

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 24 Current Research  FHWA’s efforts to determine the magnitude of the long-run benefits associated with infrastructure improvements o Properly define the relationships that exist between the transportation network and the economy, by time-frame. (Completed, Phase I) o Estimate the long-run impact of transportation system changes on the economy using the best available metrics and data sources. (Completed, Phase II) Preliminary estimate is a15% mark-up over short and medium-run benefits captured under traditional BCA. o Pursue the development of models that can reliably determine the value of the benefits associated with transportation investment, on a national and regional level, using available data or identify needed data not currently available. (Underway) o Verify, validate, calibrate, refine and update models. (Future) o Deploy and implement models. (Future)

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 25 Freight Professional Development (FPD) Reduce congestion and improve mobility by providing training and analytic tools to transportation managers, planners and policy developers regarding freight transportation

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 26 Freight Professional Development  Listening sessions to identify current needs  NHI courses, workshops, and other traditional approaches to training and peer-to-peer exchange  New approaches such as the “Talking Freight” series  Resource Library  Long range strategies to develop the next generation of freight professionals  Virtual Freight Team / Freight Council 

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 27 Commercial Vehicle Size and Weight Improve the physical condition of the highway transportation system by effective application of size and weight standards and technologies

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 28 Commercial Vehicle Size and Weight  Facilitate & support effective State enforcement of Federal Size & Weight requirements thru training, policy interpretation, & technology advancement.  Support & assist the automated reporting of data on State activities.  Provide interactive, real-time website communication for stakeholders on emerging issues, legislation & research activities.

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 29 Commercial Vehicle Size and Weight  OS/OW study relative to infrastructure  Technology applications  VWS  Provide immediate customer service on inquiries & concerns associated with commercial vehicle size and weight matters. 

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 30 Freight Technology & Operations Improve freight efficiency and global connectivity by identifying and facilitating the deployment of technology and operations Receiver Motor/ Rail Carrier Port Carrier Shipper Motor/ Rail Port Carrier Ocean

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 31 Freight Technology & Operations  Tier I / Tier II (ITS / JPO)  Electronic Freight Manifest o Standards Development o Information Highway  Integrated Corridor Management System  Road Weather

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 32 Freight Technology & Operations  Tier II  Freight Process Mapping Enhancement  Border ITS integration  Project Selectivity Cost/Benefit  Border Wizard 

Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation 33 Office of Freight Management and Operations – Organization Tony Furst, Director Rose Skerkavich, Secretary Rolf Schmitt, Policy Team Bob Davis, Vehicle Size and Weight Team Mike Onder, Freight Technology & Ops Team

Further Information at: