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Congestion Management Process (CMP) Briefing to the Technical Committee May 2, 2012

Congestion Management Process (CMP)

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Congestion Management Process (CMP). Briefing to the Technical Committee May 2, 2012. What is a CMP?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Briefing to the Technical CommitteeMay 2, 2012

Page 2: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

What is a CMP?

“A congestion management process (CMP) is a systematic and regionally-accepted approach for managing congestion that provides accurate, up-to-date information on transportation system performance and assesses alternative strategies for congestion management that meet state and local needs.”

Source: Congestion Management Process: A Guidebook, USDOT, FHWA

Page 3: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

CMP & Transportation Management Areas (TMA)

• A CMP is required in metropolitan areas where the population exceeds 200,000

• Federal requirements also state that in all TMAs, the CMP shall be developed and implemented as an integrated part of the metropolitan transportation planning process.

Page 4: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

The process includes 6 steps:1. Development of congestion management

objectives;

2. Establishment of measures of multimodal transportation system performance;

3. Collection of data and system performance monitoring to define the extent and duration of congestion and determine the causes of congestion;

Page 5: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Steps:

4. Identification of congestion management strategies;

5. Implementation activities, including identification of an implementation schedule and possible funding sources for each strategy; and

6. Evaluation of the effectiveness of implemented strategies.

Page 6: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Approach

Although a CMP is required in every TMA, federal regulations are not prescriptive regarding the methods and approaches that must be used to implement a CMP. This flexibility has been provided in recognition that different metropolitan areas may face different conditions regarding traffic congestion and may have different visions of how to deal with congestion.

Page 7: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

State-of-the-Practice• Staff reviewed CMP’s of 10 similar sized MPOs

– SEMCOG, DRCOG, MTC, MAG, SCAG, SANDAG, etc.

• Shows a wide-range of plans / processes / performance metrics / update schedules

• In most cases, the CMP forms the basis for projects in the LRP

Page 8: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

An on-going process

• The CMP is an on-going process, continuously progressing and adjusting over time as goals and objectives change, new congestion issues arise, new information sources become available, and new strategies are identified and evaluated.

Page 9: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

The Baltimore Region’s CMP

– What are we measuring?– How are we measuring?– What do the numbers say?

– What can we learn from the numbers?– What are we doing about it?– Improving the process

Page 10: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

What are we measuring? • Roadway Measures

– Vehicle volumes (direction, time of day, peak hour, average daily traffic)– Volume/Capacity ratios by direction and time of day– Intersection Level of Service – average queue length, delay– Miles operating at Level of Service (LOS) E or F in peak period– Duration of congestion

• Transit Measures– Average speeds or travel time– Ratio of bus to auto speed (for bus systems)– Average peak period vehicle load factors (passengers per vehicle)

• Travel Time Measures– travel time – the amount of time needed to traverse a segment or corridor– travel speed – usually measured in one of two ways: (a) average travel speed: the

length of a segment divided by the travel time, or (b) spot speed: the speed of a vehicle or a sample of vehicles over a given time interval passing a point along a roadway

– delay – the difference between travel time and acceptable or free-flow travel time– travel time index – ratio of peak-period to non-peak-period travel time.

Page 11: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

How are we measuring?• Using GPS to Monitor Traffic

– Since 1998, BMC has used Global Positioning System units to collect travel time and travel speeds on 30 of the heaviest traveled roadways.

•  Aerial Surveys of Congestion – In the past, BMC staff has used extensive aerial surveys to monitor traffic

quality on the freeway system in the metro area.  • Traffic Counts

– Since 1990, BMC has collected and maintained traffic count data for area roadways from a number of sources, including SHA.

•  I-95 Corridor Coalition Vehicle Probe Project – This is a groundbreaking initiative providing comprehensive and

continuous travel time information on freeways and arterials using probe technology.

Page 12: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

What do the numbers say? Top 10 Bottlenecks

• Spring 2011

If the reported speed falls below 60% of the reference speed, the road segment is flagged as a potential bottleneck. If the reported speed stays below 60% for five minutes, the segment is confirmed as a bottleneck location.

Page 13: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Top 5 Congested Corridors

Corridors are composed of multiple contiguous bottlenecks totaling at least 3 miles in length

Page 14: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Rank #1 Congested Corridor

Page 15: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Congestion on SB - 4/9-13 Morning Peak

Mon Tue Wed Thurs Fri

Page 16: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Congestion on SB - 4/16-20 Morning Peak

Mon Tue Wed Thurs Fri

Page 17: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

What can we learn from the numbers?

• Identify congested locations and corridors• Understand recurring and non-recurring

congestion patterns• Evaluate and rank projects in the long-range

plan• Calibrate the travel demand model• Develop operational improvements/strategies

Page 18: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

What are we doing about it? – CMP Strategies

• CMP Strategies– Improving Roadway Operations

Adaptive Signal Control (e.g. Riva Road) Regional Traffic Incident Management (TIMBR) Real-time traveler information (511)

– Improve multi-modal Options Transit Bicycle & Pedestrian

• CMP Outcomes– Improve Air Quality – Improve Economy

Freight Mobility

– Improve Safety Strategic Highway Safety Plan (SHSP) Education (e.g. Street Smart)

Page 19: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Project Name

Project Limits

Improvement Likely Congestion Management Strategies*

Anne Arundel County

MD 175 MD 170 to Howard County line

From AA County line to MD 295 - 2 to 3 lanes. From MD 295 to MD 170 - 4 to 6 lanes

Intersection improvements were studied for the corridor.The County is pursuing additional transit service in the area.BWI Business Partnership is pursuing funding for additional ridesharing in the area.

I-97 MD 32 to US50/301

New roadway in median to accommodate barrier separated managed lanes

Channelized or grade-separated intersections or roundaboutsInterconnected/coordinated traffic signal system 

MD 100 AA-Howard County Line to I-97

Inside base widening to add 1-lane per direction

Considering Light Rail to run in median for a portion of the route.Real-time surveillance (CHART) and freeway service patrol for incident managementPark-and-ride lot within a 1-mile radius of project locationChannelized or grade-separated intersections

MD 198 MD 295 to MD 32

Widen MD 198 to provide easier access to Ft. Meade and Odenton Town Center

Reversible, turning, acceleration/deceleration, or bypass lanesHigh-occupancy vehicle facilities or systemsReal-time surveillance/traffic device controlled by a traffic operations centerInterconnected/coordinated traffic signal systemReal-time traveler information (CHART/511)BWI Business Partnership is looking to increase ridesharing in area through a grant. The County is looking to increase transit service in the area.

MD 3 AA-PG County line to MD 32

Improve safety and capacity on MD 3

Channelized or grade-separated intersections or roundaboutsTransit stop within a ½ mile radius of project locationPark-and-ride lot within a 1-mile radius of project locationTraffic operational improvements were considered. This project will incorporate a Michigan U (new type of signal control)

* congestion management strategies listed in this table are based on information provided by local jurisdictions and staff knowledge of existing operational characteristics along these project corridors.

Page 20: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Improving the process• Adopt Travel Time Reliability Performance

Measures to capture non-recurring congestion patterns (Travel Time Index, Planning Time Index, etc.)

• Form CMP Advisory Group (operations focused)• Link to safety, freight, ITS Architecture and

Management & Operations (M&O)• Coordinate with SHA & Jurisdictions• Continue role in the Interagency Review Process

– link NEPA & Planning

Page 21: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Next Steps

• Web updates - ongoing• CMP report – end of FY 2012• FY 2013 CMP

– Performance Measurement– Corridor Analysis– Coordinate with mid-Atlantic MPO’s on

reliability measures

Page 22: Congestion Management Process (CMP)

Questions / Comments / Suggestions

• BMC CMP Team Members:Bala Akundi, Bill LeonardBrian Ryder, Ed StylcEileen Singleton, Jason BiernatMonica Haines Benkhedda, Regina ArisTerry Freeland, Victor Henry