Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Early Daylight Savings and Traffic Signals...
Rick Zygowicz of the Wisconsin Section posted this timely warning (pun intended!) as part of ITE Wisconon News and Events:

The results of a brief survey have shown that only a small percentage of agencies that operate and maintain traffic signals have taken action to prepare traffic signals for the changes to Daylight Savings Time (DST) that take effect this year.

The 2005 Energy Policy Act has extended DST by one month. Previously DST took effect for most of the United States at 2 a.m. on the first Sunday of April and reverted to standard time at 2 a.m. on the last Sunday of October. Beginning this year DST begins for most of the United States at 2 a.m. on the second Sunday in March (March 11th) and reverts back to standard time at 2 a.m. on the First Sunday of November (November 4th).

If no action is taken traffic signal controllers may have incorrect time settings from March 11th - April 1st and October 28th - November 4th; resulting in Time of Day signal timing plans being offset by one hour on the dates indicated. Peak hour timing plans offset by one hour could potentially increase traffic delays at signalized intersections. It is recommended that this information be passed along to state and local agencies involved in the operation or maintenance of traffic signals to encourage appropriate action to be taken.

Agencies should be advised to check their system documentation to determine how these changes will effect the operation of their system(s). One or more of the following actions may be necessary:

> Controllers with programmable DST settings -- Update the settings to reflect the new implementation dates prior to March 11th. Verify that the changes take effect and monitor the operation of the system particularly on the dates of March 11, April 1, October 28 and November 4, 2007.

> Controllers without programmable DST settings connected to a central system or external time source -- Contact controller manufacturer for availability of firmware or software update; install update prior to March 11th. If firmware or software update is not available; disable DLS feature on controller and implement time update from central system or external time source. If DST feature cannot be disabled; implement time update from central on March 11th and verify time settings on April 1st, October 28th and November 4th.

> Controllers without programmable DST settings not connected to a central system or external time source -- Contact controller manufacturer for availability of firmware or software update; install update prior to March 11th. If firmware or software update is not available; disable DST feature on controller and implement time update manually on March 11th. If DLST feature cannot be disabled; implement time update manually on March 11th and again on April 1st, October 28th and November 4th.

For more information on this subject or this survey, please contact:
Eddie Curtis, P.E.
FHWA Resource Center
61 Forsyth St SW Suite 17T26
Atlanta, GA 30303
(404) 562-3920
http://ops.fhwa.dot.gov/arterial_mgmt/index.htm

Friday, February 23, 2007

An Open Letter to District and Section Leadership--

TO: Midwestern District Board, Illinois Section Board, MOVITE Section Board, NCITE Section Board, Wisconsin Section Board

FROM: Steve Manhart, P.E., PTOE, Midwestern District Director

RE: Transportation Certification Update

DATE: February 23, 2007

Just a few years ago, transportation professionals questioned the worth of any additional certification beyond the professional engineer license or AICP certification. Now, the Professional Traffic Operation Engineer (PTOE) certification has become an accepted and respected recognition of qualifications.

To date, total applications for the PTOE certification since the beginning of the program have surpassed 2,125 and there are more than 1,700 certified PTOEs worldwide. In the Midwestern District alone, we have 275 PTOEs.

Certification opportunities are on the rise. The PTOE, Traffic Operations Practitioner Specialist (TOPS) and Traffic Signal Operations Specialist (TSOS) certification exams are set to be offered on March 24, 2007. On that date, the Transportation Professional Certification Board (TPCB) will also be offering a new certification exam – the Professional Transportation Planner (PTP) certification exam.

Certification requirements, fees and exam schedule are posted on the updated TPCB website, http://www.tpcb.org/ . You will also find the listing of the seven March 24 exam locations, which includes one in the Midwestern District (Chicago), one close by (Dallas), and one at the ITE Technical Conference in San Diego. Please note that the application deadline has been extended to March 9, 2007, for these exams.

Preparation assistance for these exams is available on the TPCB website. There are online practice exams for all four certification programs and they are hosted on ITE’s learning.com website. The cost of the practice exams has been lowered to $10 per exam. Copies of the TSOS and TOPS Refresher course reference and the PowerPoint slide set with instructor notes are available for purchase. Soon, complete recordings of the PTOE/TOPS/TSOS web refresher courses and will be offered for self-study.

I encourage you to talk up these certification programs. Consider setting the example for your section. Encourage peers and subordinates to apply to take one or more of the exams. Remind everyone there is still time to sign up for the March 24 exams at any of the seven locations. The TPCB has pledged to expedite applications as they come in.

Together, we can post a record number of people sitting on one day taking the TPCB certification exams. Help us meet the goal to have more than 50 sit for the new Professional Transportation Planner exam.

Thanks!

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

TPCB News...
The Transportation Professional Certification Board Inc. (TPCB) announced that the first Professional Transportation Planner (PTP) examination will be held in six cities on March 24, 2007. Applications for the PTP certification exam on Saturday, March 24th must be received by Friday, March 9th. Additional information including an application, a detailed list of the subject domains and sub-domains, the number of questions on the test, a practice exam and future exam dates and locations is on the TPCB Web site at http://www.tpcb.org/.

Also, The TPCB is looking for participants in strategic planning for the proposed Transportation Safety certification. Are you interested, or do you know of someone you could recommend? It would require travel to Annapolis, MD. Please get back to me with any recommendations. I would request your response by March 1. I will then pass the names on to ITE HQ, and they will ultimately assign who will attend.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Plans to Improve Access to O'Hare...
Chicago is pushing a new plan aimed at improving roadway access to O'Hare International Airport, where driving to and from the terminals is like going through the world's busiest cul-de-sac.The ambitious initiative includes widening the main airport road, Interstate Highway 190, and building a new Mannheim Road over I-190, complete with a flyover ramp feeding traffic to the Tri-State Tollway (Interstate Highway 294).
In addition, the airport transit system, or People Mover trains, would be modernized. Twenty-four new People Mover cars would be added to the current 15-car fleet to meet future shuttle demand between the airline terminals and remote parking areas, city aviation officials said. Of the current 15 cars, 12 are in active use with three held in reserve.
Commuter Rail Gets Support from Outstate Minnesota Mayor...

Saint Cloud, MN, Mayor David Kleis and other supporters are lobbying for support from his city and other surrounding communities to be connected to the Northstar Commuter Rail Project. The Northstar Corridor from the St. Cloud area to downtown Minneapolis is one of the fastest growing transportation corridors in the state.

Commuters from the St. Cloud area who are traveling on either I-94, I-494 or Highway 10 to or from the Twin Cities can spend hours stuck in traffic during their rush hour commute.St. Cloud, with the support of legislation and the surrounding communities, could have an opportunity for its commuters to avoid the headache of rush hour traffic.

Friday, February 16, 2007

Saint Paul Looks for Light-Rail to Spur Development...
It's a seven-mile extreme makeover that many hope will spark a citywide renaissance.
After months of brainstorming, two task forces issued a block-by-block blueprint Thursday for development along a proposed $1 billion light-rail train line between St. Paul and Minneapolis. The master plan envisions a downtown high-rise transit hub, a Capitol-area "urban village" and more stores in the Midway.

US Transportation Secretary Visits Missouri...
Mary Peters, the U.S. Secretary of Transportation says the future of Missouri transportation is at the crux of the future of transportation nationwide. Peters also highlighted her plan to reduce congestion on the nation's busiest highways and interstates and included Missouri in her Corridors of the Future Program. She listed the I-70 corridor from Missouri to Ohio as one of the 14 stretches of highways and interstates her program will target.

In addition, Peters stressed the importance of finding a working solution to the controversy over the Mississippi River Bridge. She says the Missouri Transportation Department and the Illinois Transportation Department must work together because individual state revenues just won't cut it. Missouri has been pushing for a toll bride. Illinois has rejected that idea. But, Peters says a toll bridge is a viable solution.
Iowa Transporation Commission says Road Use Tax will fall short...
The Iowa Transportation Commission Tuesday endorsed the study that shows the road use tax fund will fall nearly 28 million dollars short in the next 20 years. The report has already gone to the legislature and Department of Transportation Director Nancy Richardson says this action helps in the argument for more road money.
St. Louis Salting, Signal, and Striping Questions...
A St. Louis Post-Dispatch traffic reporter answers readers' questions regarding ice control, flashing left-turn arrows, and double-white pavement markings... http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/columnists.nsf/alongfortheride/story/FA563AAEBFDB7A69862572800007706B?OpenDocument

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Candidates Announced for District Secretary/Treasurer...
At today's NCITE Section Meeting, President Marcus Culver announced that the nominees have been selected for this year's election for 2008 District Secretary/Treasurer position. John Crawford of URS Coporation and Mike Spack of TDI have been nominated for the District post. Elections will be held later this year. The successful candidate will serve a four-year progression through the District offices from Secretary/Treasurer, to Vice President, President and Past President. Good luck to each of the candidates!

Monday, February 12, 2007

Tax Questions...
Marcus Culver, NCITE President, had questions regarding tax implications for his section. According to the "ITE Elected Leadership Manual", the section should probably be filing a return since their annual receipts are over $25,000.

However, in a phone call to Peter Frentz at ITE HQ, it was learned that as long as the section's revenue stays below $50,000, the section does NOT need to file taxes. Once the section gets over that $50K threshold, they need to go through a fairly lengthy process to establish tax exempt status (which ITE’s lawyers help with), and then they will have to file from that point forward. For more information, please contact Peter Frentz at ITE Headquarters.
PhotoCop, the Sequel...
This week, the City of Minnepaolis will be asking the Minnesota State Legislature to reconsider a state law to allow it to resume PhotoCop, which trained cameras on 12 intersections to catch drivers running red lights. We'll be following the developments of this debate.

Friday, February 09, 2007

McTrans HCS Survey...
McTrans is asking users of simulation models to participate in an online survey... "Recognizing that traffic analysts often use simulation and other models in conjunction with, or instead of, the HCM procedures, the National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) has initiated a project to enhance the guidance in Part V of the HCM for selection and use of alternative traffic analysis tools. This project is being carried out by the University of Florida and T-Concepts Corp.

"One of the key tasks involves a survey of current practice. We invite all users of traffic analysis tools to participate in this survey. Your response will help to guide the research team in the development of guidelines that will be useful to you as a transportation professional.

"The survey document is posted at http://trc.ce.ufl.edu/research/nchrp385/survey.htm. The survey is brief and can be completed in about ten minutes. If you agree that better guidance is needed on the use of alternative tools for traffic analysis, we hope you will take advantage of this opportunity to give the project team your thoughts."

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

ITE District 1 Considering Name Change...
Much like our Midwestern District in the last couple of years, ITE District 1 is considering a name change. District Director Kim Hazarvartian says the District Executive Board is talking about changing its name from District 1 to Northeastern District. The District incorporates the New York Upstate Section, The Meotrpolitan Section of New York and New Jersey, and the New England Section. Their executive board questioned whether they needed to have a vote of their membership to approve the name change.


This is the latest in the trend of districts rebranding themselves by their geographic area. One look at the ITE website under "ITE Chapters" shows a map that identifies each of the 10 districts by their new geographic monikers. Check it out at http://www.ite.org/emodules/scriptcontent/chapterdirectory/main.cfm

Monday, February 05, 2007

NCITE Section Meeting Announced...

Please join NCITE for breakfast on Tuesday, February 13th and learn more about the status of several of our high priority transit corridors. A panel of four speakers – Rich Rovang, Metropolitan Council (Central Corridor), Katie Walker, Hennepin County (Southwest Corridor), Mike Schadauer, Mn/DOT (Northstar Corridor) and Dan Krom, Dakota County (Cedar Avenue) – will each be giving a presentation on their respective corridors.
Follow the attached link for information on the February NCITE Section Meeting.
Please RSVP (email preferred) by noon Thursday, February 8.
Illinois Considering Roundabouts...

Roundabouts Debated for Kane County (IL) Traffic Safety... http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/beaconnews/news/241369,2_1_AU03_ROUNDABOUT_S1.article

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Newsletters...
Here are the section newsletters from Wisconsin and North Central Sections, as well as the ITE E-Newsletter...
Contact Wisconsin Section Newsletter editor Rick Zygowicz at rick.zygowicz@transcore.com

http://www.nc-ite.org/newsletters/Winter2007inciter.pdf
http://app.bronto.com/public/?q=message_preview&fn=Key&type=tracking&id=buixsjafhoirvbvdijyvilbhoxxibkn&link=aheomhyslexohcfnacnmbfpipqunbpm