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SERVICE PLANNING AND DESIGN

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Title: SERVICE PLANNING AND DESIGN


1
SERVICE PLANNING AND DESIGN BUDGET CUT
PREPARATION
  • Presented by Robbie L. Sarles
  • RLS Associates, Inc.
  • 3131 South Dixie Highway, Suite 545
  • Dayton, OH 45439
  • Ph (937)299-5007

2
The Challenge
  • Tough Times
  • Pressure on All Funding Sources
  • Less Available Local Match
  • Rising Costs
  • Greater Demand for Services
  • Higher Expectations
  • Increasing Benefits/Demands of Technology
  • Aging Work Force

3
A Perfect Storm?
  • For Some It May BeWe Have Already Begun to See
    the Impact

4
What Is Different?
  • Uncertainty is Part of a Transit Managers Life
  • There Never Has Been Enough Funding
  • Crisis Come and Go
  • Political Pendulum Is Always Swinging

5
What Is Different?
  • Downturn of Nations Economy
  • All Funding Sources are Impacted
  • Matching Sources Are Evaporating
  • Competition for Funding is Unparalleled
  • Infrastructure Deteriorating

6
What Is Different?
  • Stop Gap Measures Will Not Be Enough
  • Long-term Solutions Are Needed
  • We Cant Do More With Less

7
Our Response?
  • The Transit Industry Cant Be Part of the
    Solution If It Is Part of the Problem
  • Must Practice Sound Financial Management
  • Must Avoid Common Pitfalls
  • Must Be Proactive

8
Top Ten Truths of Transit Financial Management
  • Just Because You Have Checks In the Checkbook
    Doesnt Mean You Have Money
  • You Cant Spend Next Years Money on This Years
    Expenses
  • Dont Borrow Unless You Have A Way to Pay It Back

9
Top Ten TruthsContinued
  • Just Because They Need It, Doesnt Mean You Have
    To Provide It . . . Every Service Has A Cost
  • You Cant Use the Same Money to Match Multiple
    Grants
  • Dont Assume That There Is No Theft . . .
    Borrowing

10
Top Ten TruthsContinued
  • If There Is No Documentation, it Doesnt Exist
  • Strings Are Always Attached to Federal Dollars .
    . . It Is Not Yours to Do With As You PleaseEven
    if it is a Good Idea
  • Shell Games Will Catch Up With You

11
Top Ten TruthsContinued
  • Deferring Maintenance and Training will Prove to
    Be More Costly In the Long Run
  • Regulatory Compliance Is Not An Option

12
Be Proactive
  • Know Your Agencies Finances and Understand Its
    Short- and Long-term Financial Health
  • Solicit Support and Input
  • Board Members
  • Management Team
  • Employees
  • OthersState and Local Partners

13
Do More With Less
  • ?

14
Seek Out New Revenue Sources
  • ?

15
Service and Fares
  • Be Prepared to Make Tough Decisions

16
Tough Decisions
  • Realize You Cant Do Everything for
    EverybodyLearn How to Say No
  • Objectively Evaluate Service Design
  • Minimize Emotional Connection
  • Utilize Updated, Accurate Data As Basis For
    Decisions
  • Plan for FutureEven if Informal

17
Service Planning
  • Where Do You Start?

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19
Mission
  • What Are You Doing That is Consistent With Your
    Mission Statement?
  • What Are You Doing That IS NOT Consistent With
    Your Mission Statement?

20
MISSION STATEMENT
  • Who Are You?
  • What Do You Want to Do?

21
SAMPLE MISSION STATEMENTS
  • to provide customer-focused mobility solutions
    for our local communities through strategic
    partnerships, innovative planning, and
    implementation options.
  • to provide all citizens and visitors with safe,
    reliable, and efficient transportation, which
    continues to grow to meet their needs through the
    efforts of dedicated and well-trained employees.

22
GOALS AND OBJECTIVES
  • Reflect systems mission
  • Means to achieve broader community goals
  • Provides framework for designing and evaluating
    existing and proposed service

23
POTENTIAL GOAL AREAS
  • Service quality and quantity
  • Effectiveness and efficiency
  • Responsiveness
  • Financial
  • Community participation

24
? ? ?
  • Are Resources Being Used Most Efficiently to
    Deliver Service?
  • Are the Services Being Delivered in the Most
    Effective Manner?
  • Are the Resources Being Used Most Efficiently to
    Deliver the Most Effective Services?

25
PERFORMANCE EVALUATON AS A TOOL
  • To Measure and Assess Performance
  • To Evaluate the Progress Towards Transportation
    Goals and Objectives
  • To Serve as a Basis for Decision-Making
  • Diagnostic Tool to Identify Performance Problems
  • To Assess Policy, Procedures, and Service
    Implications

26
TARGET AUDIENCE of PERFORMANCE MEASURES
  • System Management
  • Governing Boards
  • General Public
  • Passengers

27
TYPES OF PERFORMANCE MEASURES
  • Cost Efficiency
  • Service Effectiveness
  • Cost Effectiveness

28
COST EFFICIENCY
  • The Amount of Service Provided for the Amount of
    Money Spent

29
PRIMARY COST EFFICIENCY MEASURES
  • Total Operating Cost Per Vehicle Service Hours
  • Total Operating Cost Per Vehicle Service Miles

30
SECONDARY COST EFFICIENCY MEASURES
  • Examples Include
  • Driver Operating Cost Per Vehicle Service Hour
  • Vehicle Service Hours as a Percent of Driver Pay
    Hours
  • Maintenance Cost Per Vehicle Mile
  • Administrative Cost Per Vehicle Service Hour

31
SERVICE EFFECTIVENESS
  • The Consumption of Service in Relation to the
    Amount of Service Available

32
PRIMARY SERVICE EFFECTIVENESS MEASURES
  • Passengers Per Vehicle Service Hour
  • Passenger Revenue Per Vehicle Service Hour
  • Passengers Per Vehicle Service Mile
  • Passenger Revenue Per Vehicle Service Mile

33
COST EFFECTIVENESS
  • Consumption of Service in Relation to Resources
    Expended

Cost Effectiveness
34
PRIMARY COST EFFECTIVENESS MEASURES
  • Passenger Revenue Plus Local Contributions as a
    Percent of Total Operating Cost
  • Passenger Revenue as a Percent of Total Operating
    Cost
  • Total Operating Cost Per Passenger

35
Formulate Performance Measures
Service Outputs
Transit System
Public Consumptions
Inputs
Cost Efficiency
Service Effectiveness
Cost Effectiveness
36
SERVICE QUALITY
  • The Relationship of Service Delivery and Customer
    Expectations
  • ACCESSIBILITY - Ability to Accommodate the
    Disabled
  • Percent of Service Hours With Lift-Equipped
    Vehicles
  • AVAILABILITY - Span of Service, Frequency of
    Service and/or Percent of Population Within
    Walking Distance

37
SERVICE QUALITY (CONTD)
  • COMFORT - Seat Availability, Climate Control, and
    Smooth Ride Operations
  • RELIABILITY - On-Time Performance
  • SAFETY - Vehicle Miles Per Accident Passenger
    Injuries Per 100,000 Passenger Boardings

38
PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENTS
  • Controllable Factors
  • Decisions, Policies, and Actions of Governing
    Board, Managers and Employees
  • Non-Controllable Factors
  • Physical, Economic, and Social Factors not under
    the Control of the Transportation System

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SERVICE AREA CHARACTERISTICS
  • Service area size
  • Socioeconomic characteristics
  • Land use characteristics
  • Travel characteristics
  • Geographic and topographical characteristics

41
SERVICE AREA CHARACTERISTICS (CONTD)
  • Weather
  • Availability of other services - Public sector
    - Non-profit - Private sector
  • History

42
SOCIOECONOMIC CHARACTERISTICS
  • Auto availability
  • Income level
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Employment status
  • Minority
  • Education level
  • Disability mobility status
  • Expectations

43
TYPICAL TRANSIT USER
  • No car available
  • Lower income
  • Minority
  • Female
  • Work trip

44
LAND USE CHARACTERISTICS
  • Density of origins - Residential development -
    Elderly housing - Subsidized housing
  • Density of destinations - Employment sites -
    Job training sites - Day care facilities -
    Schools - Universities/colleges -
    Shopping/retail centers - Social service agencies

45
LAND USE CHARACTERISTICS (CONTD)
  • Service area size
  • Proximity to regional medical and retail centers

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TRAVEL CHARACTERISTICS
  • Peak periods AM, PM, midday - Varies by type
    of trip
  • Off-peak periods evening, weekends - Trip
    purpose - Work - School - Social service
    agencies - Shopping - Personal business -
    Medical - Recreational

53
GEOGRAPHIC AND TOPOGRAPHIC FEATURES
  • Water bodies and bridge weight restrictions
  • Street widths and direction
  • Pavement quality
  • Parking
  • Grades/hills - topography
  • Railroad tracks and overpasses
  • Traffic restrictions and signals

54
GEOGRAPHIC AND TOPOGRAPHIC FEATURES
(CONTD)
  • Congestion roadway capacity, peak pattern
    changes
  • Community boundaries
  • Speed limits
  • Inhospitable walking environment
  • Greater building setbacks
  • Long distance between generators

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DATA COLLECTION PROCEDURES
  • Service area characteristics - U.S. Census -
    Chamber of Commerce - Department of Development
    - Metropolitan planning organizations - Local
    planning agencies - Department of Transportation

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58
EXISTING SERVICE CHARACTERISTICS SERVICE
TYPE
  • Demand response - Advanced reservations (1 48
    hours) - Door to door, curb to curb, or door
    through door - Pickup window (/- minutes
    from scheduled pickup time - Standing
    orders - Contract services - Paratransit
    vehicles - Area coverage - Productivity

59
EXISTING SERVICE CHARACTERISTICS SERVICE
TYPE (CONTD)
  • Demand response (Contd) - Eligibility
    requirements - Funding sources and levels
  • - Personal involvement - Technology
    applications
  • Fixed route, fixed schedule - Types of
    routes - Express - Local - Crosstown -
    Circulator - Radial, Grid, Hub

60
EXISTING SERVICE CHARACTERISTICS
SERVICE TYPE (CONTD)
  • Fixed route, fixed schedule (Contd) - Fixed
    guideway, rail, or surface - Complementary
    paratransit service (see demand response) -
    Headway average and maximum - Transfer rate
  • Directness of travel - Circuitousness -
    Interlining - Transfers - Through-routing -
    Shared ride

61
EXISTING SERVICE CHARACTERISTICS SERVICE
TYPE (CONTD)
  • Service availability area coverage -
    Percentage of population with access to
    service
  • Service level/volume - Vehicle revenue hours -
    Vehicle revenue miles
  • Policy headway fixed route
  • Pickup window demand response
  • Advanced reservation period demand response

62
EXISTING SERVICE CHARACTERISTICS
SERVICE TYPE (CONTD)
  • Span of service - Days of service - Hours of
    service
  • Usage patterns
  • Ridership

63
SERVICE QUALITY
  • Response time demand response - On-time
    performance - Pickup window - Advance
    reservation requirements - general public
  • Response time fixed route - On-time
    performance - Average headway - Maximum
    headway - of transfers - Service mix

64
SERVICE QUALITY (CONTD)
  • Service reliability
  • Loading standard
  • Safety
  • Infrastructure
  • Accessibility

65
EXISTING SERVICE POLICIES
  • Fleet accessibility
  • Group trip potential
  • Door-to-door vs. curb-to-curb
  • Labor contract
  • Personnel policies
  • Experience and competence of scheduling and
    dispatch staff
  • Experience and competence of vehicle operators
  • Vehicle condition and maintenance

66
EXISTING SERVICE POLICIES (CONTD)
  • Mobility training
  • History/community perception
  • Use of volunteers
  • Policy headway (fixed route)
  • Pickup window (demand response)
  • Advanced reservation period (demand response)
  • Bus stop spacing (fixed route)
  • Scheduling pickup increments (demand response)

67
DATA COLLECTION PROCEDURES FOR EXISTING
SERVICES - FIXED ROUTE SERVICES
  • Route maps and timetables
  • Point checks - Maximum load count - Arrival
    time
  • Ride checks - On/off counts by stop - Average
    trip length - Running speed - Load profile
    diagrams - Passenger miles
  • Boarding counts - Fare category by trip

68
DATA COLLECTION PROCEDURES FOR EXISTING
SERVICES - FIXED ROUTE SERVICES (CONTD)
  • Farebox readings - Total cask - Ridership -
    Average fare
  • Revenue counts
  • Transfer counts - Transfer activity - O/D Pairs
  • Passenger surveys - Passenger travel patterns,
    characteristics, and opinions

69
SELECTION OF TECHNIQUES
  • Availability of technology
  • Availability of personnel
  • Union rules
  • Ridership levels
  • Number of vehicles
  • Route structure (degree of interlining)
  • Transfer tickets
  • Availability of smart fare cards

70
DATA COLLECTION PROCESS
  • Develop baseline - On/off counts - Farebox
    readings, average fare - Onboard survey
  • Monitor changes - Point checks - Arrival times
    - Total boardings or revenue

71
DEMAND RESPONSE SERVICES
  • Dispatch logs
  • Driver manifest analysis - O/D pairs - Travel
    time analysis - Trip denial logs
  • Vehicle utilization chart
  • Passenger surveys

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PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT NEEDS AND EXPECATIONS
  • Public meeting
  • Rider surveys
  • Stakeholder interviews
  • Household surveys
  • Employer survey
  • Elected official interviews
  • Focus groups
  • Driver input

85
STAKEHOLDERS
  • Human service agencies
  • Higher education institutions
  • Employers/business community
  • Retailers
  • Governmental entities
  • Seniors

86
STAKEHOLDERS
  • Medical community
  • Children of older adults
  • Youth
  • Developers
  • Minority populations
  • Non-English speaking populations
  • General public

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Excellent and Good Ratings
90
DEMAND ESTIMATION METHODOLOGIES
  • Survey response
  • Similar routes method
  • Elasticity models
  • Regression models transit propensity

91
SURVEY METHOD
  • Request travel itineraries
  • Assess perceptions and attitudes of new service
  • Identify sensitivities
  • Extrapolate the response to potential user group
  • Adjust patronage estimates for noncommittal bias
    x 20

92
SIMILAR ROUTES METHOD
  • Identify similar routes
  • Utilize same trip rates
  • Elasticity models - Wide variation by market
    segment, mode, time period, and trip purpose
  • Fare changes elastic
  • Services change inelastic

93
REGRESSION MODELS
  • Associates independent factors to ridership
  • Requires calibration to specific site
  • Based on socioeconomic variables, land use
    variables, or transit service variables

94
TRANSIT PROPENSITY
  • Model derived from 1986 study Financing and
    Sustaining Rural Mobility in Rural Areas A
    Manual by Theodore A. Wallin and Alice Kidder
  • Transit Propensity ((12 X) (19
    Y))/0.8where X population aged 65and Y
    Number of zero vehicle households

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REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS
  • Americans with Disabilities Act - Complementary
    paratransit service - Service area - Days
    and hours - Fare - Trip priorities -
    Response time - Advance reservation -
    Capacity constraint - Trip denial -
    Trip negotiated /- 1 hour - Excessively
    long wait time

99
REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS (CONTD)
  • Americans with Disabilities Act (contd) -
    Complementary paratransit service (contd) -
    Capacity constraint (contd) - Excessively
    long transit time - Equivalency of service

100
REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS (CONTD)
  • Charter Regulations (49 CFR Part 604) - Charter
    definition - Group of persons - Common
    purpose - Single contract (written or oral)
    - Fixed charge - Exclusive use of service
    or vehicle

101
CHARTER REGULATION EXEMPTIONS
  • FTA excludes from charter regulations coverage of
    recipients under the Section 5310, Section 5311,
  • Section 5316, and Section 5317 if the
    service to provided is for program
    purposes.
  • Transportation that serves the needs of either
    human service agencies or targeted
    populations(elderly, individuals with
    disabilities and/or low income individuals)

102
REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS (CONTD)
  • Charter Regulations (49 CFR Part 604) (contd) -
    Charter definition (contd) - Specialized
    itinerary - Uses FTA-funded vehicle - Must
    identify willing and able private charter
    operations - If exists, charter is prohibited
    unless exception applies - No
    willing and able operator - Service and
    accessibility requirements exceed
    private operators capacity - Special
    events or national significance

103
REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS (CONTD)
  • Charter Regulations (49 CFR Part 604) (contd) -
    Must identify willing and able private charter
    operations and publish annual notice (contd)
    - If exists, charter is prohibited unless
    exception applies (contd) -
    Social service agency transporting disabled
    individuals, federally funded, consistent
    with program purpose - Agreement with
    willing and able private operator
    - Undue hardship

104
REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS (CONTD)
  • General Public Service Guidelines - Open to
    public - Controlled by transit - Multiple
    stops - Advertised - Part of network - Part of
    plan - Stops on route area reasonable
    generators - Charges fare (comparable to similar
    service)

105
REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS (CONTD)
  • General Public Service Guidelines (contd) - In
    service hours - No drinking - Designed to
    benefit public at large
  • - Drivers have to let general public on board
    - Contributions to system - In service area

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  • Service Planning Determines the Operations,
    Maintenance, Administrative, and Capital
    Requirements of the Public Transportation System
    Based on Adopted Goals and Objectives

108
Service Planning
  • Service Modes

109
TRADITIONAL FIXED ROUTE, FIXED SCHEDULE
  • Corridor linehaul
  • Radial, grid, hub
  • Express, limited stop
  • Fixed route local
  • Local, limited stops
  • Fixed route commuter
  • Crosstowns
  • Connectors/Feeders
  • Fixed route, reverse commute
  • Fixed guideway service - Heavy rail - Light
    rail - Commuter rail

110
NON-TRADITIONAL SERVICE TYPES
  • Transit centers (multi-modal)
  • Hubs
  • Seamless regional mobility
  • Brokerage
  • Mobility managers
  • Shuttles

111
NON-TRADITIONAL SERVICE TYPES (CONTD)
  • Neighborhood circulators
  • Subscription bus
  • Vanpools/Ridesharing
  • Service routes
  • Special niche services
  • Revenue commuter

112
TRANSIT CENTER/TIMED TRANSFER
  • Connecting multiple suburban transit centers
  • Centers located at key activity centers and park
    and ride lots
  • Connects circulators with linehaul services
  • Transfers are timed to reduce wait times timing
    is critical as headways increase
  • Transfer location amenities and security
  • Drivers communicate to facilitate transfers

113
EXPRESS ROUTES
  • Long-distance commuter trips
  • Limited stops
  • High travel speeds arterial or highway
  • Comfort and reliability
  • Stress-free commute
  • Special equipment
  • Primary central business district bound/major
    suburban employment centers
  • Served by feeders and/or park and ride lots
  • Heavily traveled corridors limited stops
  • Guaranteed ride home and safety nets
  • Best if bus receives priority treatment
  • Peak and limited mid-day trips

114
EXPRESS ROUTE KEY FACTORS
  • Real employer support - Direct subsidy -
    Employee-subsidized passes - Guaranteed ride
    home - Flex-time
  • Participatory planning and local support
  • Congestion and parking fees that penalize
    automobiles
  • High-density destinations
  • Good residential marketshed
  • Bus priority treatments
  • Supportive regional planning
  • Transit dependent populations
  • Special equipment

115
LIMITED STOP ROUTES
  • Heavily traveled corridors
  • Supplement locals
  • Skip stops, closed door
  • Requires residential density, multiple activity
    centers, concentrated stop locations
  • Used to upgrade existing services

116
CIRCULATORS
  • Local travel internal trip-making
  • Connect to bus services

117
FIXED ROUTE CIRCULATOR
  • Neighborhood employment site, shopping center
    penetration
  • Local trip-making
  • Secondary roadways
  • Internal community general circulation and/or
    special purpose
  • Short, non-linear
  • Connect multiple origins and destinations

118
FIXED ROUTE CIRCULATOR (CONTD)
  • Potential to reduce congestion in high-density
    areas
  • Target markets shoppers, elderly
  • Smaller vehicles
  • Complement linehaul services feeder
  • Use in low density, difficult terrain, limiting
    roadway design

119
CIRCULATOR KEY FACTORS
  • Population and population density
  • Transit dependent population
  • Mixed use setting or special conditions
  • Appropriate headway and travel times
  • Low operating cost low productivity
  • Attractive pricing
  • Coordinated intermodal connections

120
SHUTTLE SERVICE
  • Tailored, high-quality connecting services
    between activity centers
  • Niche markets specific trip purposes - Station
    to employment center - Residence to linehaul
    service - Midday employment/shopping shuttles -
    Special event shuttles
  • Short, direct, quick (outside walking distance)
  • Public-private partnership opportunities

121
SHUTTLE SERVICE (CONTD)
  • Careful planning avoid charter
  • Open to public
  • Multiple stops
  • Advertised
  • Stops on route are reasonable generators
  • Charge fares
  • Drivers have to let others board
  • Contributors paid to support service, not
    specific route

122
SHUTTLE SERVICE (CONTD)
  • Incorporate into plan
  • Incorporate as part of network

123
SHUTTLE KEY FACTORS
  • Market profile
  • Service parameters
  • Income and density
  • Congestion and parking

124
SUBSCRIPTION
  • Service to a closed group of riders
  • Associated with sponsor
  • Fixed price regardless of ridership
  • Service tailored to subscriber needs
  • Guaranteed seats
  • Assurance of success

125
SUBSCRIPTION KEY FACTORS
  • Define demand with common origin/destinations and
    travel times
  • Comfort and convenience
  • Guaranteed ride home
  • Interest and sponsorship
  • Low operating cost

126
VANPOOL/RIDERSHARING
  • Commuters
  • Riders share cost/drivers ride free
  • Similar origins/destinations and travel times
  • Guaranteed ride home

127
DEMAND RESPONSE/ PARATRANSIT
  • Advanced reservations demand response
  • Realtime advanced response
  • Route deviation
  • Point deviation
  • Shared ride taxi
  • Exclusive use taxi
  • User-side subsidy
  • Limousine service

128
DEMAND RESPONSE/ PARATRANSIT (CONTD)
  • Zones
  • Transfers
  • Subscription
  • Social service agency coordination
  • Volunteers
  • Guaranteed ride home
  • Brokerage
  • Flex routes

129
ROUTE DEVIATION
  • Designated route and schedule with defined stops
    and time points
  • Buses deviate off route to pick up riders in
    designated areas then return to route
  • Point deviation returns to point of departure
  • Schedule must account for time to deviate
    deviations need to be monitored and accounted for
  • Door-to-door service
  • Small vehicles
  • Suitable when time sensitivity is low
  • Limited capacity

130
ROUTE DEVIATION ATTRIBUTES
  • Door-to-door convenience
  • Maintains fixed schedule framework
  • Attracts choice rider
  • Serves individuals with special needs reduces
    demand on specialized services
  • Increase area coverage
  • Increase utilization of small fleets

131
ROUTE DEVIATION KEY FACTORS
  • Moderate population density
  • Continuous roadway
  • Transit dependent profile (i.e., elderly)
  • Mixed-use settings
  • Connectivity balanced by reasonableness
  • Low operating cost
  • Coordinated intermodal connectivity
  • Local support and public participation
  • Marketing

132
FLEX ROUTES FIXED SCHEDULE
  • Stretches scarce resources
  • Specific corridors on scheduled days or times of
    day
  • Identify corridor of travel
  • Used to group longer-distance trips
  • Serves specific generators
  • Group trips/less per-trip cost
  • Door-to-door or curb-to-curb
  • Allows pre-planning, but not required

133
REAL-TIME ADVANCED RESERVATION
  • Similar to taxi
  • Group trips
  • Appropriate for small, well-defined service area
  • Increases ridership
  • No advanced planning
  • Door-to-door or curb-to-curb
  • Requires more complicated dispatch techniques
  • Area limited (no more than 4 square miles)

134
ADVANCE RESERVATION DEMAND RESPONSE SERVICE
  • Advanced reservations (1- 48 hours)
  • Door-to-door within designated service area
  • Standing orders accepted
  • Suitable for low to moderate densities
  • Provides greater area coverage
  • Small vehicle

135
ZONAL DEMAND RESPONSE
  • Service area divided into zones
  • Vehicles assigned/restricted to zones
  • Transfers at zone boundary

136
DEMAND RESPONSE KEY FACTORS
  • Appropriate setting
  • Focused, well-defined service area
  • Limited trips concentrating in zones
  • Internal opportunities
  • Transit dependent population
  • Applicability of new technologies for realtime
    scheduling
  • Reasonable operating cost
  • Modest expectations for mobility and
    cost-effectiveness

137
FAMILY OF SERVICES
138
SERVICE PLANNING
  • Service availability (amount, days, hours,
    geographic distribution)
  • organizational/institutional context
  • Service pricing
  • Labor requirements
  • Rolling stock
  • Other capital

139
SERVICE AVAILABILITY
  • Geographic coverage
  • Span of service
  • Frequency of service
  • Days and hours of service
  • Response time
  • Seat availability
  • On-time performance

140
ORGANIZATIONAL/INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT
  • Local government
  • Non-profit
  • Human service agency
  • Private for-profit

141
SERVICE PRICING
  • Ridership levels
  • Fare equity
  • Ability to pay
  • Cost of service

142
LABOR REQUIREMENTS
  • Operation
  • Administration
  • Maintenance
  • Contract Services

143
ROLLING STOCK
  • Vehicles
  • Radios
  • Fareboxes
  • Lifts
  • Other Special Equipment

144
OTHER CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS
  • Garages
  • Offices
  • Shelters
  • Benches and stop signs

145
ITERATIVE REVIEWS
  • Iterative Planning Process

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THE ITERATIVE PLANNING PROCESS
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HOW CAN WE USE COST ALLOCATION MODELS?
  • Cost Evaluation and Billing (How Much Does It
    Cost to Operate an Existing Service?)
  • Cost Estimation and Budgeting (How Much Will It
    Cost to Change Service?)

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FIXED AND VARIABLE COST
  • Fixed Costs Do Not Vary with the Amount of
    Service Provided (e.g., Administrative Salaries)
  • Variable Costs Change Relative to the Amount of
    Service Provided (e.g., Drivers Wages)

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KEY ASSUMPTIONS FULLY-ALLOCATED COSTING
  • Total System Cost is Allocated to Services Based
    on Amount of Service Provided (e.g., Service A
    Operates 1,000 Service Hours)
  • System Average Unit Costs are Used to Estimate
    Service-level Cost (e.g., System Average Unit
    Cost 30/Service Hour Service A Cost 1,000
    30 30,000)

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WHY CANT WE USE A SIMPLE MODEL?
  • Sample System Statistics
  • Total Operating Cost 612,827
  • Total Hours
    28,811
  • Total Miles
    473,512
  • Average Unit Cost/Hour 21.27
  • Average Unit Cost/Mile 1.29

  • Speed
  • Service Hours Miles (MPH)
  • A 3,000 27,000
    9
  • B 3,000 48,000 16

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COST OF SERVICES USING AN HOUR-BASED MODEL
  • Cost Hours 21.27/Hour
  • Cost of Service A 3,000 21.27
  • 63,810
  • Cost of Service B 3,000 21.27
  • 63,810
  • Does This Make Sense?

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COST OF SERVICES USING A MILE-BASED MODEL
  • Cost Miles 1.29/Mile
  • Cost of Service A 27,000 1.29
  • 34,830
  • Cost of Service B 48,000 1.29
  • 61,920
  • Does This Make Sense?

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BASIC STEPS FOR DEVELOPING FULLY ALLOCATED
COST MODEL
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STEP 1 ASSEMBLE DATA
  • Compile Expense Data (Costs)
  • Compile Service Data (Hours, Miles)

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STEP 2 ASSIGN EXPENSE LINE ITEMS
  • All Costs Are Assumed to be Either Variable or
    Fixed
  • Expense Line Items Are Assigned to Variable
    (Hours or Miles) or Fixed Categories
  • Knowledge is Required of How/Why Expense Items
    Vary
  • Some DOT Cost Allocation Spreadsheets Use This
    Approach

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ALLOCATION TIPS
  • Be Logical in Your Reasoning for Assignment
  • Make Decisions That Are Defensible
  • BE CONSISTENT

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EXAMPLE OF EXPENSE ASSIGNMENT
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STEP 3 CALCULATE AVERAGE UNIT COST
  • Determine Each Variables Value (e.g., Number of
    Hours)
  • Divide the Cost by the Value to Obtain Average
    Unit Cost

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EXAMPLE OF UNIT COST ALLOCATION
  • Total Total
  • Basic of Expenses Operating Unit
  • Assignment Assigned Statistics Cost
  • Hours 277,037 28,811 9.62/Hour
  • Miles 188,812
    473,512 0.40/Mile
  • Subtotal (HM) 465,849
  • Fixed Cost 146,978 465,849 32
  • Annual Cost 1.32 (9.62 Hours) (0.40
    Miles)

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EXAMPLE OF APPLYING COST MODEL
  • Speed
  • Service Hours Miles (MPH)
  • A 3,000 27,000 9
  • B 3,000 48,000 16

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EXAMPLE OF APPLYING COST MODEL CONTD
  • Annual Cost 1.32 (9.62 Hours) (0.40
    Miles)
  • Cost Service A 1.32 (9.62 3,000)
    (0.40 27,000)
  • 1.32 (28,860 10,800)
  • 52,351
  • Cost Service B 1.32 (9.62 3,000)
    (0.40 48,000)
  • 1.32 (28,860 19,200)
  • 63,439

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COMPARISON OF COSTING APPROACHES
  • Costing Approach Service A Service B
  • One Variable Hours 68,810 63,810
  • One Variable Miles 34,830 61,920
  • Two Variables/Overhead
    52,351 63,439

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EXAMPLE OF FULLY ALLOCATED COSTING
  • Problem We want to know the operating cost of
    Service A that we provide under contract to a
    social service agency. What should we charge the
    social service agency for Service A if we are
    using a contract rate based on miles (/mile)?

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EXAMPLE OF FULLY ALLOCATED COSTING (CONTD)
  • Solution
  • 1. Collect Annual Operating Data for Service A
  • Hours 7,543 Miles 80,042
  • 2. Develop Full Cost Allocation Model
  • Cost 1.32 (9.62 Hours) (0.40
    Miles)
  • 3. Determine the Annual Cost of Service A
  • Unit Operating Total
  • Cost Statistics Cost
  • Hours 9.62 7,543 72,564
  • Miles 0.40 80,042 32,017
  • Overhead 32 104,581 33,466
  • TOTAL 138,047

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EXAMPLE OF FULLY ALLOCATED COSTING (CONTD)
  • 4. Convert Annual Cost to a Mileage Rate
  • Mileage Rate Operating Cost/Annual Miles
  • 138,047/ 80,042 Miles
  • 1.73/Mile

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SPECIAL SERVICE NEEDS
  • Some services require special treatment (i.e.,
    added costs to the agency) such as - More
    operator assistance - More detailed reporting
  • These situations require special analysis.
    However - Added operator costs can be covered
    by hours - Special vehicles may require
    different mile costs - More detailed reporting
    may add a new overhead
  • factor.

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INCREMENTAL COSTING
  • Principal Use is to Estimate the Costs of Service
    Changes
  • Costs of Service Changes are Estimated by
    Omitting the Fixed Cost Factor From the Cost
    Allocation Equation
  • Example
  • Total Cost 1.32 (9.62 Hours) (0.40
    Miles)
  • Cost Change (9.62 Hours) (0.40 Miles)

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EXAMPLE OF INCREMENTAL COSTING AND FORECASTING
A SMALL-SCALE SERVICE CHANGE
  • Problem The transit system wishes to institute
  • a new service between a small town
  • and the county government center.
  • 1) What will be the added operating cost to
    operate this new service?
  • 2) What should be charged for this service?
  • Solution
  • 1. Estimate Annual Operating Data for the New
    Service.
  • Hours 1,530 Miles 38,250

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EXAMPLE OF INCREMENTAL COSTING AND FORECASTING
A SMALL-SCALE SERVICE CHANGE (CONTD)
  • 2. Develop Incremental Cost Allocation Model
  • Cost Change (9.62 Hours) (0.40 Miles)
  • 3. Estimate the Annual Incremental Cost of the
    New Service
  • Unit Operating Total
  • Cost Statistics Cost
  • Hours 9.62 1,530 14,719
  • Miles 0.40 38,250 15,300
  • TOTAL 30,019

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EXAMPLE OF INCREMENTAL COSTING AND
FORECASTING A SMALL-SCALE SERVICE CHANGE (CONTD)
  • 4. Revise (Recalibrate) Fixed Cost Factor in
    Cost Allocation Model
  • Subtotal (HM) 465,849 Existing services
  • New (HM) 30,019 New Service
  • Revised Sub (HM) 495,868
  • Fixed Costs 146,978 No Change
  • Fixed Cost 30 146,868/495,868
  • New Annual Cost 1.30 (9.62 Hours)
    (0.40 Miles)

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EXAMPLE OF INCREMENTAL COSTING AND
FORCASTING A SMALL- SCALE SERVICE CHANGE(CONTD)
  • 5. Determine the Fully Allocated Cost of
    New Service
  • Unit Operating Total
  • Cost Statistics Cost
  • Hours 9.62 1,530 14,719
  • Miles 0.40 38,250 15,300
  • Overhead 30 30,019 9,005
  • TOTAL 39,024

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