Showing posts with label Portalnd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portalnd. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Institute of Transportation Engineers - Oregon Section - Technical Workshop


Registration Online at www.oregonite.org
Leadership in the Profession
Oregon ITE Winter Workshop - Feb 1
Location: ODOT Region 1 – 123 NW Flanders, Portland, OR



8:00 - 8:30       Registration & Networking                                      (Refreshments)
8:30 - 8:45       Introduction
Bob Pappe, Oregon Department of Transportation State Traffic Engineer

8:45 - 9:00       Overview of the Day
Peter Koonce, Portland Bureau of Transportation & Oregon ITE President

9:00 - 10:00     Perspectives on Leadership from the Director or Transportation Level
                        Tom Miller, Portland Bureau of Transportation Director
                        Cam Gilmour, Clackamas County
                        Martha Bennett, Metro Chief Operating Officer

10:15 - 12:00   Highway Capacity Manual 2010 – An Introduction and its Application
Mark Vandehey, Kittelson & Associates, Inc. – Lead on HCM 2010
                        Luigi Casinelli, HDR – NYCDOT Case Study on HCM 2010 Application

12:15 - 1:30     The CEOs Perspective on Leadership                       (Lunch provided)

We are in a time of unprecedented economic challenge. What qualities are CEOs looking for in employees and how does that relate to ITE members and advancement of the profession?

Mark Vandehey, Kittelson & Associates, Inc.
                        Mia Birk, Alta Planning & Design
                        Randy McCourt, DKS Associates
                        Ralph Batenhorst, HDR

1:30 - 2:30       Applying Performance Measures – What’s the Future Hold?
            Moderator: Tom Armstrong – City of Portland Bureau of Planning
Lidwien Rahman, ODOT Region 1 – Alternative Performance Measures Study
                        Peter Koonce, PBOT – Measures that Move us Toward our Multimodal Future
Joe Marek - Clackamas County – Incorporating Safety into MOEs

3:00 - 4:00       Advances in Data Collection & Performance Measures of Tomorrow
                       Kelly Clifton, Portland State - New Techniques in Data Collection
                        Ted Trepanier, INRIX – New Sources of Data from the Private Sector
                        Steve Perone, PTV America  - Modeling and its Role on Performance

Friday, January 20, 2012

Bike Signals Presentation at 2012 #TRBAM

The CROW Manual is a great
resource for bicycle design.
Putting the finishing touches on the Bike Signals presentation and it is helpful to refocus some of the efforts for the coming months and years. Reflection on something as simple as a bike signal shows not only how far we have come, but also how much we have to do to make cycling safe in Portland.  Posted by Picasa
There are a wide variety of elements that we have used on the nine bicycle signals that we have built. The map that I have been using to inventory the system and planned indications is helpful to keep straight all of the work that is in the works.
View Portland's Bicycle Signals in a larger map

The NACTO Bike Guide presentations were very good overall. I learned quite a few things and did a bit of binge tweeting with nine tweets in about 4 hours.

Preparation for my presentation caused me to review the Guide in more depth and I found a few things that I disagree with in the signals portion, most notably the Clearance interval issue, which is something that's an ongoing debate at the Institute of Transportation Engineers and National Cooperative Highway Research Program efforts that have been worked on by VHB and Wayne State University. It's a project that originally proposed an arbitrary increase in yellow time for all cases where people on bicycles are present. All in the name of safety. I contend (consistent with the research) that the longer you make a clearance interval the more people will learn the constraints of the system and they will make decisions based on the known risk factors. The higher the clearance interval (yellow and all red) the higher likelihood for variable behavior. Higher speeds contribute to this issue and it falls back to the fundamental concept for how speeds are set in the U.S.