Time to Stop Flying Blind: Build a Next-Generation Traffic-Modeling System

One of the most important laws to be enacted this year requires the Virginia Department of Transportation to review the traffic impact of rezoning cases in fast-growth counties. Officially, the law doesn’t go into effect until next year, but it’s already had a test case — in the fastest of fast-growth jurisdictions, Loudoun County.

As chronicled on this blog, VDOT studied the impact of proposed changes to the Loudoun County management plan that would increase the number of dwelling units from 5,000 in the South Dulles region to 28,000. The results, VDOT asserted, would lead to the lowest Levels of Service — gridlock, essentially — for hours a day and miles around. Greenvest, the lead developer, countered that VDOT neglected to include $700+ million in road improvements planned by the private sector and failed to consider that those extra 23,000 households would strain the local transportation system wherever they lived. The Piedmont Environmental Council contended that the study understated the magnitude of congestion by underestimating the length of likely commutes. (See the details in my most recent column, “Loudoun Lightning Rod.“)

This VDOT report won’t settle anything. That’s OK. It’s still early in the game. VDOT, we hope, will continue to refine its methodology. And local planning departments, which supply the underlying data, will continue to collect better information.

At the risk of putting readers to sleep, I will renew a recommendation that failed to elicit any comment whatsoever when I last mentioned it on this blog. To make rational land use and transportation decisions, Virginia needs the best traffic modeling system available. The one that VDOT uses now is state of the art — as in, no one’s got a better one — but it still falls short of what’s needed. Virginia is a national leader in the modeling & simulation of complex systems. We have the capability to build the world’s best traffic/land use model. Why not set the new global standard?

A next-generation traffic modeling system would allow us to delve into the complex interactions between transportation and land use, answering questions that leave Bacon’s Rebellion bloggers and readers chasing their tails in endless circles of argumentation for the lack of conclusive evidence. Thanks to the Division of Motor Vehicles, we know how many miles every car is driven each year, and the address of its owner. With a world-class modeling system, we could cross-tab that data with variables — development density and the presence of sidewalks, grid streets and mass transit, just to mention a few examples — that would yield definitive answers about which types of development are associated with the most driving, and by what margin.

Such a system might be expensive in the sense that it could cost tens/hundreds of millions of dollars to set up and maintain. But that would seem to be a relatively small price if the output would better inform decisions affecting tens/hundreds of billions of transportation improvements and real estate investments. That should be Virginia’s number one transportation priority before spending one more dollar on new roads and rail.


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6 responses to “Time to Stop Flying Blind: Build a Next-Generation Traffic-Modeling System”

  1. Ray Hyde Avatar
    Ray Hyde

    “Thanks to the Division of Motor Vehicles, we know how many miles every car is driven each year, and the address of its owner. With a world-class modeling system, we could cross-tab that data with variables — development density and the presence of sidewalks, grid streets and mass transit, just to mention a few examples — that would yield definitive answers about which types of development are associated with the most driving, and by what margin.”

    Now you are talking. This is an idea I can get behind.

    How does VDOT know how many miles I drive every year? Even I don’t know that. All I know is when the oil change light comes on. Wouldn’t they really have to know that, by vehicle?

    Could we just put GPS senders on a sample of vehicles and get most of the same answers?

    If we get those answers, I might have to eat my words, but I would look forward to it if the answers are real and not political.

  2. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    “Could we just put GPS senders on a sample of vehicles and get most of the same answers?”

    Great idea. A more advanced system could track things like fuel usage, time spent at traffic lights, etc.

    Sounds like a job for the Census Dept.

    Or, better yet,we could create a whole new Gov’t dept…The Traffic Census Bureau…yippee!

  3. Ray Hyde Avatar
    Ray Hyde

    Sure, and there would be privacy issues, etc.

    But maybe you could outsource it like the rest of government, and turn it over to someone like th people that do the TV ratings.

  4. Toomanytaxes Avatar
    Toomanytaxes

    The proposal to gather, analyze and use traffic data to make transportation decisions makes sense — but only if all three steps are used. It would clearly save taxpayers money over the current system that makes transportation decisions based on lobbying the CTB.

    Could anyone imagine AT&T or Verizon making investment decisions about their networks (where they invest billions each year) without first gathering, analyzing and then using network traffic data? Of course not; these companies make every best effort to make investment decisions based on engineering and economic data.

    But, for the taxpayers of Virginia and probably most other states, transportation decisions are too often made on a data-free basis. Even when the data exist, they are often ignored because of politics and lobbying. Witness the Commonwealth’s decision to spend $4 B on the Silver Line despite the fact that spending that much money (and probably much more because of cost overruns) despite its own evidence that no signficant improvement in traffic would occur. That is simply wrong. The expenditure of $4 B plus should result in substantial traffic improvement or it should not be spent and taken from taxpayers.

    I further suspect that there would be strong opposition to this reform from those who can successfully manipulate today’s system. And then, of course, the path of least resistance is to raise taxes and spend the money. If you keep on doing what you’ve been doing; you will keep on getting what you’ve been getting.

  5. Jim Wamsley Avatar
    Jim Wamsley

    Jim. You have experts behind you. This is what JLARC said in 2001

    The most recent needs assessment has numerous shortcomings, including use of outdated data and criteria for measuring need, decisions based on subjective judgments, and a questionable process for calculating the costs of deficiencies. In most cases, available and updated traffic data had not been added to the database since 1994. In addition, an initial examination of the database uncovered more than 2,300 instances in which congestion deficiencies were identified, but no solution was proposed to address the deficiency. Conversely, many improvements were added to the needs assessment that did not address deficiencies based on engineering standards, because staff knew that projects were planned or under consideration on a particular route. Adding further subjectivity to the process was the fact that these inclusions or exclusions were done by different people for different regions of the State; thus there was no consistency even within the use of subjective professional judgment.
    In order to fulfill the legislative intent of the needs assessment requirement, VDOT needs to develop an objective needs assessment that is based on objective criteria. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) has developed a model which is used to develop a national needs assessment that could also be used to develop a State needs assessment. This model, which is referred to as the Highway Economic Requirements System (HERS), has been developed and improved by FHWA over 20 years. The U.S. General Accounting Office, as well as a team of economists assembled by the FHWA, has concluded that it is an effective tool for measuring construction need, and two states are currently using the model to assess their state needs. and Transit Funding (December 2001)
    http://jlarc.state.va.us/Summary/Rpt272/Equity.HTM

  6. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    The analysis idea is great. When you want an incredible tool to visualize it all, I know one to sell – not kidding.

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