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Bernie’s Transportation Communications Newsletter (TCN) – September 11, 2009

September 11, 2009 at 8:38 pm

Friday, September 11, 2009 – ISSN 1529-1057


AVIATION

1) FAA Chief Questions Professionalism in New York Crash

Link to AP article:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hw-2hzkelIPTV83q-bDZWseAJR9AD9AKN2502

2) ‘Global Safety Information Exchange’ Called for During FAA Aviation Safety Forum

Link to article in ATW Daily News:

http://atwonline.com/news/story.html?storyID=17830

CAMERAS

3) CCTV to be Used in Wellington, New Zealand to Prosecute Parking Offenses

Link to article from The Dominion Post:

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/2857157/CCTV-to-snare-Wellington-drivers

CARTOGRAPHY

4) In These Woods, They Don’t Speak GPS

DeLorme’s Maine Atlas & Gazetteer still prized for detail it provides.

Link to article in Computerworld:

http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9137889/In_these_woods_they_don_t_speak_GPS?taxonomyId

MARITIME

5) ‘Routine’ Coast Guard Exercise on Potomac River Exercise Sparks Alarm

Other agencies not informed of training event.

Link to article in Government Executive:

http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=43574

RAILROADS

6) Latest Edition of ERTMS’s Signal

Link to newsletter:

http://ec.europa.eu/transport/rail/interoperability/ertms/doc/014_signal_2009_09_en.pdf

ROADWAYS

7) Proposed National Signage Code: What It Would Look Like in a Real Community

Link to article on PhysOrg:

http://www.physorg.com/news171894885.html

SAFETY / SECURITY

8) Software Tools Give Public Safety Agencies a Common View During Emergencies

Link to article in Government Computer News:

http://gcn.com/articles/2009/09/14/emergency-comm-sidebar-common-view-tools.aspx

TRANSIT

9) Jerusalemites Launch Public Protest Against City’s Transportation System

Lack of information one of the complaints.

Link to article in Haaretz:

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1113824.html

10) iPhone Apps Let Boston T Commuters Find Stations, Check Arrival Times

Link to article in The Boston Globe:

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2009/09/11/iphone_apps_let_t_commuters_find_stations_check_arrival_times/

TRAVELER INFORMATION / TRANSPORTATION MANAGEMENT

11) New Traffic Management Center Moves Game Day Traffic at University of Florida

Link to article in The Gainesville Sun:

http://www.gainesville.com/article/20090911/ARTICLES/909119954/-1/NEWS1001?Title=New-center-moves-game-day-traffic-

12) Seattle Must Build a 21st Century Transportation Network

An intelligent transportation system would help ease congestion.

Link to commentary in The Seattle Times:

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2009849252_guest13dietzel.html

VEHICLES

13) Ford Shows Off Its High-Tech Gadgetry

Link to article in the San Jose Mercury News:

http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_13318591

News Releases

1) Information Tackles the Traffic Jam – Overview of Real-Time Traffic Information Service Market in China

2) International Sign Association and US Sign Council Tell US DOT to Put Brakes on Flawed Research

3) Real-Time Public Transit Information Coming to Wellington, New Zealand

Upcoming Events

Smart Ticketing & Transport 2009 – October 5-6 – Paris

http://www.groupeactis.com/spip.php?article534

Friday Bonus

Moving sidewalks instead of subways?

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20327200.200-how-the-moving-walkway-nearly-overtook-the-metro.html?full=true

Today in Transportation History

1609 **400th anniversary** – Henry Hudson’s ship the Half Moon makes the first recorded European visit to what will become New York City.

http://www.ny400.org

======================================================================

The Transportation Communications Newsletter is published electronically Monday through Friday.

To subscribe send an e-mail to: TCNL-subscribe@googlegroups.com

TCN archives: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/transport-communications

Questions, comments about the TCN? Please write the editor, Bernie Wagenblast at i95berniew@aol.com.

© 2009 Bernie Wagenblast


This is what happens to bicycle thieves…Bad ass gets his ass whipped badly

September 11, 2009 at 7:39 pm

Blessing in disguise! New chapter in transportation opens as global warming softens fabled & frozen Northeast passage! Alternative route to Suez Canal cuts 4500 miles for ships

September 11, 2009 at 7:19 pm

(Source: New York Times; Mail Online; Heavy Lift)

For hundreds of years, mariners have dreamed of an Arctic shortcut that would allow them to speed trade between Asia and the West. Two German ships are poised to complete that transit for the first time, aided by the retreat of Arctic ice that scientists have linked to global warming.

The ships started their voyage in South Korea in late July and will begin the last leg of the trip this week, leaving a Siberian port for Rotterdam in the Netherlands carrying 3,500 tons of construction materials.

Russian ships have long moved goods along the country’s sprawling Arctic coastline. And two tankers, one Finnish and the other Latvian, hauled fuel between Russian ports using the route, which is variously called the Northern Sea Route or the Northeast Passage.

But commercial ships have always been thwarted by the dangerous pack ice, as have those attempting the more famous Northwest Passage between the Atlantic and the Pacific over the top of Canada.   The Northeast Passage has been frozen solid for centuries, but as global warming pushed back the ice, Russia made repeated attempts to get ships through in the last 20 years.

The Bremen-based project and heavy lift shipping company, Beluga Shipping,succeeded in sending two merchant vessels – Beluga Fraternity and Beluga Foresight –  through the formerly impenetrable Northeast Passage from Asia to Europe.

Image Courtesy: New York Times via Mail Online - The fabled Northeast Passage

Both vessels had set sail in July from Ulsan in South Korea, to enter the Northern Sea Route via the inspection point at Vladivostok in order to deliver their project cargoes further into the region than any other merchant vessel had been able to do before. Now, 44 cargo modules with single weights of 200 tons or more have been discharged offshore onto barges using the ship’s onboard cranes for on-transport to Surgut.

The two ships will now head to Rotterdam via Murmansk to unload the remaining 3,500 freight tons of construction parts packed in wooden boxes.

During the passage through the East Siberian Sea, the Sannikov Strait and the Vilkizki Strait, the Beluga vessels followed in a little convoy behind Russian Atomflot-ice breakers 50 Let Pobedy and Rossia. Small icebergs, icefields and iceblocks were safely negotiated.

Lawson W. Brigham, a professor of geography at the University of Fairbanks who led the writing of an international report on Arctic commerce, the Arctic Marine Shipping Assessment, confirmed that the passage of the two German ships appeared to be the first true commercial transit of the entire Northeast Passage from Asia to the West.

He credited Beluga for taking on both the summertime Arctic waters, which still pose threats despite the recent sea-ice retreats, and Russian red tape, a maze of permits and regulations.  “This may be as much of a test run for the bureaucracy as for the ice,” said Dr. Brigham, an oceanographer who is a former Coast Guard icebreaker captain.

“Apart from the stress, it is an economically and ecologically beneficial shortcut between Europe and Asia,” Valery Durov, captain of the Beluga Foresight, wrote in response to e-mailed questions about the treacherous stretch. “In such voyages, the advantage of fewer miles can outweigh delays waiting for clear water.”A re-opened Northeast route means huge savings in fuel and time because it cuts 4,500 miles off the established merchant ship journey to Europe from Asia, which takes in the South China Sea, Indian Ocean, Suez Canal and the Mediterranean.

Though the window for sailing the route north of Russia is only a few weeks a year, it trims days to weeks off trips and saves fuel. For example, the voyage from Yokohama, Japan, to Rotterdam via the Northeast Passage is about 4,450 miles shorter than the currently preferred route through the Suez Canal, according to the Russian Ministry of Transport.

It was not until 1914 that a Russian admiral, Boris Vilkitsky, mapped the eponymous strait separating Asia from the Severnaya Zemlya archipelago at the northernmost point of the route, Russian maritime experts say.

The Northwest Passage, a meandering set of channels through Canada’s Arctic, has been increasingly tested as well, but has not so far become a reliable commercial route, with transit limited mainly to military or research craft.

The passage requires a permit because it crosses Russian territorial waters. Aleksandr N. Olshevsky, a retired captain of the Taimyr icebreaker and now director of the Federal Agency for Marine and River Transport, said he and others in the agency were in favor of lowering the fees as a means to increase traffic and generate revenue for maintaining the icebreakers, as well as buoys and other navigational aids.

Clic here to read the entire article.

Event Alert! Transit Oriented Development Panel Discussion – September 15, Washington, DC

September 11, 2009 at 6:11 pm

Transit Oriented Development Panel

Hosted by Womens Transportation Seminar (WTS), Washington DC Chpater

September 15, 2009

This panel will focus on recent and anticipated changes in national and state-level legislation and policies that facilitate stronger transportation-land use coordination in the planning process, with a focus on encouraging transit oriented development.

Featured Speakers:

Amy Inman,  Senior Planner, Department of Rail and Public Transportation

Christopher Patusky, Director, Office of Real Estate, Maryland Department of Transportation

Mariia Zimmerman, Vice President for Policy, Reconnecting America

Serving as Moderator for the Panel:

Susan Borinsky, FTA Associate Administrator for Planning and the Environment


WHEN:

Tuesday, September 15
12:00 Noon

WHERE:

District Chophouse
509 7th Street NW
Washington, DC 20001

METRO:

Gallery Place/Chinatown (Yellow/Red/Green)

PROGRAM FEES:

$30 WTS Members ; $60 Non-Members; $15 Students

RSVP:

Email RSVP@WTS-DC.com by Thursday, September 10, 2009.  Please indicate “TOD Panel” in the subject line.
Please include full name, company, phone, e-mail, and membership status and note any special needs or dietary restrictions on your RSVP; we will accommodate your request as well as possible.

We urge you to RSVP now and reserve your seat.* Seating is limited, and priority will be given to WTS members.


Please note, if you RSVP late or walk in the day of the program, you are not guaranteed a place and may be asked to wait for availability. Additionally, unless you cancel by the program’s RSVP date, or if you are a ‘no-show’ you will be obligated to pay.
Remit advanced payments payable to “WTS-DC” to: WTS-DC Treasurer, P.O. Box 34097, Washington, DC 20043. Please specify what program/event the payment is for. All RSVPs will receive an email about electronic payment through paypal prior to the event. If you choose not to pay electronically we will accept checks and cash at the door

Curb ’em British Cowboy Clampers! British media battles against outrageous parking enforcement practices

September 11, 2009 at 5:40 pm

(Source: Mail Online, UK)

Today the Daily Mail demands action against the menace of cowboy wheel clampers.

The industry rakes in almost £1billion a year from motorists parked on private land and has been described as ‘legalised mugging’.

Clampers routinely charge £500 penalties, tow away cars, prey on the vulnerable and are often paid on commission, encouraging them to immobilise as many vehicles as possible. But despite the extraordinary power they wield, those working on private land in England and Wales are completely unregulated and their victims have no right of independent appeal.

The Mail, supported by motoring groups and MPs, is calling for an end to this unfairness by bringing the law for parking on private land in line with that for public roads, including the introduction of a maximum limit for penalties.

Image Courtesy: Mail Online - Suggested legislative changes to curb the growing clamping problem

Experts say the major flaw in the current regime is that the company which issued the penalty in the first place is allowed to act as judge and jury in the case – unlike on public roads, where an appeal can be made to an independent tribunal.

The clampers can charge whatever they like and are even allowed to exploit the Government’s supposedly confidential DVLA database to find drivers’ names and addresses at £2.50 a time.

It has led to clamping becoming a boom industry. Between March 2008 and April 2009, the number of licensed clampers rocketed by a staggering 58 per cent – from 1,200 to 1,900.

Instead, when ministers publish their clamping Bill later this year, the Mail calls for the legislation to include:

• An independent tribunal to hear appeals by motorists who are clamped on private land.

• Maximum penalties for infringements on private land to be brought in line with those on private road.

• A ban on towing away a vehicle unless it is posing a danger, blocking access or has been abandoned.

• Prohibition of offering incentives to private clampers, based on how many motorists are issued with penalty charges.

Click here to read the entire article.

Europe’s love affair with hyrdogen technology continues; Germany Launches H2 Mobility Initiative to Expand Infrastructure for Refueling Hydrogen Vehicles

September 11, 2009 at 1:22 am

(Source: Green Car Congress)

Daimler AG and leading energy companies signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in Berlin, with the participation of the German Minister of Transport, Wolfgang Tiefensee, to evaluate and expand the setup of a hydrogen infrastructure in Germany to support the series production of fuel cell electric vehicles. In addition to Daimler, partners in the “H2 Mobility” initiative include EnBW, Linde, OMV, Shell, Total, Vattenfall and the NOW GmbH (National Organization Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology). The project is open for other interested partners.

The H2 Mobility launch comes one day after leading automakers signed a Letter of Understanding regarding the commercialization and series production of fuel cell electric vehicles from 2015 onward. Noting the importance of a hydrogen infrastructure with sufficient density, the automakers—Daimler, Ford, GM/Opel, Honda, Hyundai, Kia, Renault Nissan Alliance, and Toyota—in that LoU strongly supported building up a hydrogen infrastructure in Europe, with Germany as regional starting point, among other global starting points. (Earlier post.)

The H2 Mobility partners noted that significant progress has been made in Germany in recent years with the development of hydrogen based technologies in the mobility sector, marking the country as a potential start-market in the context of a broader European perspective.

The German government is also developing a plan to provide financial incentives starting in 2012 to support the production and sale of 100,000 electric cars annually. The plan envisages around one million electric cars on German roads by 2020. (Earlier post.)

Germany already has a leading position regarding the hydrogen infrastructure in Europe, with initial hydrogen centers having been established in urban agglomerations such as Berlin and Hamburg. Seven of the current thirty hydrogen fueling stations in Germany are integrated into public gas stations. Already five to ten hydrogen fuelling stations can secure a first supply in a major city. The partnership envisions connecting those urban agglomerations with supply corridors on main arteries to establish the essential prerequisites for nationwide development.

A fleet of 40 hydrogen vehicles is part of the Clean Energy Partnership (CEP) in Berlin and Hamburg. The CEP is aiming to demonstrate the suitability for daily use of hydrogen as an alternative fuel for vehicles and to test the infrastructure of hydrogen fuelling stations.

Since 1994, Daimler has invested more than €1 billion (US$1.5 billion) in the development of fuel cells. With more than 100 test vehicles and more than 4.5 million kilometers of test runs in total, Daimler has one of the largest fuel-cell vehicle fleets of passenger cars and buses worldwide.

Click here to read the entire article.

TransportGooru Musings: Germany is not the only European nation that has showed some love for hydrogen vehicles.   Norway is the other frontrunner in the hydrogen fuel economy and has made noteworthy investments (learn about Norway’s initiatives in building a hydrogen refueling infrastructure here).  As more nations are exploring the possibilities of hydrogen fuel vehicles in the future, the United States seem to think the other way.   The funding for hydrogen fuel vehicles has been cut down significantly in past years and that has put the program on life support.

If I wear my “forecaster” hat for a minute, I see in the near future a big jump in the number of electric hybrid vehicles flooding the market.   The long range perspective is a bit more of a mix – both hydrogen and electric vehicles equally mixed.  Now, this short term projection is causing a bit of a concern for some due to the fact that the current battery technology is not the best to sustain our energy needs for uninterrupted transportation. Some of them battery research is evolving  in directions that can eat up some of teh precious mineral reserves.  For example, the Lithium reserves in Bolivia (supposedly the largest in the world) would become the equivalent of today’s oil and the battery manufacturers might inadvertantly create a new monster in their quest for batteries that can hold charger for an extended period of time.  We do not want to create another OPEC that meddles with the price of our minerals market.   I read somewhere that China has already banned the export of some precious minerals which are used in battery reserach and has clearly shown its interest in siphoning off these resources for its domestic markets.  At some point in time we may need an alternative to our current Lithium ion battery tech and the only other tech that is promisingly clean and relatively cheaper is hydrogen.  That said, we can continue to argue about the economics and cost/benefits of H2 Vehicle vs Electric vehicle tech, but such arguments become pointless when we consider the cost of social problems (such as war/fight over natural resources, etc).   To avoid getting trapped into another mono-fuel model (i.e., electric or electric-hybrid, which anyway doesn’t fully fit into his mono-fuel model) like we are locked in now, the Government of United States should continue to invest in developing a viable hydrogen fuel technology that can equally compete with electric or electric-hybrid vehicles in terms of afforadability and efficiency.

Fourth Annual International Airport Geographic Information Systems Conference – October 6-8, 2009 @ Manchester, England

September 11, 2009 at 12:13 am

Fourth Annual International AAAE Airport Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Conference

General Information

The International Association of Airport Executives (IAAE), the American Association of Airport Executives (AAAE) and Manchester International Airport are pleased to present the Fourth Annual International Airport Geographic Information Systems Conference October 6-8, 2009 in Manchester, England. Following the first three successful conferences, which drew more than 175 attendees from 25 countries, the fourth conference promises to be an educational experience you will not want to miss!

By attending this conference, the only one in the world dedicated to airport GIS, you will learn from European, American, African and Asian airports how and why GIS is being used at large and small airports, as well as the ways in which GIS has made airports safer and more efficient. Airports from all corners of the world, new to GIS or experienced with GIS implementation, are welcome to participate, as well as anyone interested in GIS and aviation!

The conference includes:

  • GIS-related airport tour of Manchester International Airport
  • Diverse array of airport GIS-related presentations/demonstrations from airport GIS personnel, government officials, consultants and vendors
  • Exhibit opportunities
  • Sponsorship opportunities

All sessions, with the exception of the airport tour, will take place at the Renaissance Manchester Hotel. The conference will begin with registration and the welcome reception at 1830 on Tuesday, October 6. The general session will begin at 830 on Wednesday, October 7 and conclude at 1700 on Thursday, October 8. The registration fee includes all handout materials, the welcome reception, two luncheons and all coffee breaks. Dress is business attire. The Web site for the Renaissance Manchester Hotel is:www.renaissancemanchester.co.uk.

Click here for more details.

Bernie’s Transportation Communications Newsletter (TCN) – September 10, 2009

September 10, 2009 at 11:56 pm

Thursday, September 10, 2009 – ISSN 1529-1057


AVIATION

1) Pamela Anderson PETA Advert Too ‘Racy’ for US Airports

Link to AFP article:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hBYEK41Rw6WRM6UWcBq7Vb2uVciw

Link to further information and ad from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals:

http://www.peta.org/crueltydoesntfly/

BUSES

2) Greyhound to Offer Free Wi-Fi Services in UK

Link to article on cellular-news:

http://www.cellular-news.com/story/39505.php

CAMERAS

3) Gotcha! Maybe; Some New York Traffic Cameras Fake

Link to AP article:

http://www.newsday.com/news/new-york/gotcha-maybe-some-ny-traffic-cams-fake-1.1432378

GPS / NAVIGATION

4) War of Technologies in California Speeding Case

Parents of a teen driver use data from a GPS vehicular tracking device to fight a speeding charge based on radar guns.

Link to article in The Christian Science Monitor:

http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0911/p02s01-usgn.html

5) These Apps Help Users of iPhones Find Their Way

Link to column in The Wall Street Journal:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203440104574402571272018000.html

ROADWAYS

6) Traffic Noise Hurts

Link to article in the Los Angeles Times:

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/booster_shots/2009/09/hypertension-noise-traffic.html

Link to abstract in Environmental Health:

http://www.ehjournal.net/content/8/1/38/abstract

SAFETY / SECURITY

7) Program to Track Citizen US Border Crossings Exceeds Expectations

Link to story on Nextgov:

http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20090909_7105.php

8) Ford Backs Texting While Driving Bill

Link to AP article:

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Ford-backs-texting-while-apf-3700245611.html?x=0&.v=1

TELEMATICS

9) Gadgets in Race to Keep Drivers Safe, Multitasking

Link to column in The Detroit News:

http://www.detnews.com/article/20090910/OPINION03/909100337/1148/rss25

TRANSIT

10) Chicago Transit Authority Rail Stations to Get High-Resolution Digital Security Cameras

Agency will also make bus traffic data available to city to better track congestion.

Link to article in the Chicago Tribune:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-cta-security-cameras_10sep10,0,5537591.story

11) CTA to Debut Developer Web Tools Page

Link to article in Metro Magazine:

http://www.metro-magazine.com/News/Story/2009/09/CTA-to-debut-developer-Web-tools-page.aspx

12) Federal Transit Administration: Social Networking in the Transportation Industry

Link to video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJuARta4Qrk

VEHICLES

13) New Technology Successful in Reducing Severity of Car Crashes

Link to ABC News story and video:

http://abcnews.go.com/Travel/technology-reduces-severity-car-crashes-fatalities-injuries/story?id=8523234

14) Madrid Reverses the Charges with Electric Car Plan

Test will convert phone booths to charging stations for vehicles.

Link to article in the Guardian:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/sep/08/electric-car-plan-spain

15) Your Reva Electric Car Running Low on Juice? Just Phone for More

Link to article in USA Today:

http://content.usatoday.com/communities/driveon/post/2009/09/68498492/1

News Releases

1) Premium Info for Car Drivers

Upcoming Events

International Airport Geographic Information Systems Conference – October 6-8 – Manchester, UK

http://events.aaae.org/sites/091102/

Today in Transportation History

1939 **70th anniversary** – The HMS Oxley was mistakenly sunk by the HMS Triton off the coast of Norway.  It was the first Allied submarine casualty of World War II.

http://uboat.net/allies/warships/ship/3393.html

======================================================================

The Transportation Communications Newsletter is published electronically Monday through Friday.

To subscribe send an e-mail to: TCNL-subscribe@googlegroups.com

TCN archives: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/transport-communications

Questions, comments about the TCN? Please write the editor, Bernie Wagenblast at i95berniew@aol.com.

© 2009 Bernie Wagenblast

Bernie’s Transportation Communications Newsletter (TCN) – September 9, 2009

September 9, 2009 at 5:52 pm

Wednesday, September 9, 2009 – ISSN 1529-1057


AVIATION

1) Aviation Weather: FAA and the National Weather Service are Considering Plans to Consolidate Weather Service Offices, but Face Significant Challenges

Link to US Government Accountability Office report:

http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d09761.pdf

BUSES

2) Federal Communications Commission Issues Report on Distributing Radio and TV Programming on School Buses

Link to FCC report:

http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-09-1999A1.pdf

CAMERAS

3) Mumbai Traffic Cops to Keep Tabs via CCTV

Link to article in The Times of India:

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/news/city/mumbai/Traffic-cops-to-keep-tabs-via-CCTV/articleshow/4988487.cms

CARTOGRAPHY

4) Map Still has a Place in this GPS World

Link to article in the Chicago Tribune:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/travel/chi-trav-gps-sep0609,0,2328206.story

ELECTRONIC TOLLING

5) New Pell Bridge Toll-Collection Technology Doesn’t Cut Crossing Cost

Link to article in The Providence Journal:

http://www.projo.com/business/content/Toll_Hike_09-09-09_7AFKC95_v9.38ae810.html

MARITIME

6) Buzzes Replace Tiring ‘Beep, Beep, Beeps’ at Port of Olympia

Sound of backing-up warning changed after complaints from neighbors.

Link to article in The Olympian:

http://www.theolympian.com/southsound/story/964497.html

OTHER

7) American Traffic Solutions Wins Bidding for Nestor Traffic-Enforcement Systems

Link to article in The Providence Journal:

http://www.projo.com/economy/NESTOR_BIDS_09-09-09_9RFLJA8_v7.37ce128.html

Link to news release from American Traffic Solutions, Inc.:

http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS224833+09-Sep-2009+BW20090909

8) September Issue of Florida DOT’s SunGuide Disseminator Online

Link to newsletter:

http://www.dot.state.fl.us/TrafficOperations/Newsletters/2009/2009-009-Sep.pdf

PUBLIC INFORMATION / EDUCATION

9) Caltrain, Facing Surge in Deaths, Aims to Educate Public on Dangers of Tracks

Link to Bay Area News Group article:

http://www.mercurynews.com/peninsula/ci_13296815

RAILROADS

10) Rail Implicated Falsely by Reporters’ Use of Active Voice

Link to blog on Greater Greater Washington:

http://greatergreaterwashington.org/post.cgi?id=3392

SAFETY / SECURITY

11) National Transportation Safety Board Tells Workers to Hang Up Cells

Link to article in USA Today:

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/wireless/2009-09-08-ntsb_N.htm

12) Driver Texting Now an Issue in Backseat

Link to article in The New York Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/09/technology/09distracted.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&pagewanted=all

13) US and Mexico to Create Cross Border Public Security Communications Network

Link to article in Government Security News:

http://www.gsnmagazine.com/cms/features/news-analysis/2623.html

14) National Transportation Safety Board Workers Barred from Using Wireless Devices While Driving on Duty

Link to AP video report:

http://www.metro-magazine.com/MetroTV/?id=37EEA620-64FC-47BF-98C2-FA4FC660DEED&CategoryID=1017

TELEMATICS

15) Mobile Carriers Sign Up to EU In-Car Accident Alert System

Link to article in PC World:

http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/171680/mobile_carriers_sign_up_to_eu_incar_accident_alert_system.html

16) OnStar is Not for Sale, New Features are Being Explored, Executive Says

Link to article in AutoWeek:

http://www.autoweek.com/article/20090908/CARNEWS/909089991

TRANSIT

17) Likely New York MTA Chief Looks to Bring British Innovation to NYC Transit

Plans include contactless fare cards and digital signs with next train arrival times.

Link to article in amNew York

http://www.amny.com/urbanite-1.812039/likely-mta-chief-looks-to-bring-british-innovation-to-nyc-transit-1.1431202

TRAVELER INFORMATION / TRANSPORTATION MANAGEMENT

18) RACC Automobile Club Launches a New Live Traffic Information Web Site in September

Link to article from ERTICO:

http://www.ertico.com/en/news/ertico_newsroom/partner_news_racc.htm

19) iheartradio 2.2 Adds Features, Including Traffic Reports on Demand, to Popular iPhone App

Link to article in Radio Online:

http://news.radio-online.com/cgi-bin/rol.exe/headline_id=n19705

VEHICLES

20) Blind Fears Over ‘Silent’ Hybrids

Link to PA article:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5gVHxFa51Gc7QFp-OqwikBVvu03Fw

WEATHER

21) NOAA Supercomputers to Forecast Better Weather?

Link to CNET News article:

http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10347566-2.html?tag=newsEditorsPicksArea.0

News Releases

1) Transportation Secretary LaHood to Keynote September 24 New York Metropolitan Transportation Council Meeting

2) DMG Unveils US$10 Million Digital Media Innovation in Beijing Metro

Upcoming Events

Webinar: Best Practices for Developing an Integrated and Effective Road Weather Information System (RWIS): Developing an RWIS Concept of Operations – October 13

http://www.pcb.its.dot.gov/t3/s091013_rwis.asp

Today in Transportation History

1909 **100th anniversary** – E.H. Harriman, a railroad executive who controlled the Union Pacific, Southern Pacific, Illinois Central and Central of Georgia, died.

http://www.pbs.org/harriman/1899/1899_part/participantharriman.html

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© 2009 Bernie Wagenblast

Getting Wiser & Greener! Oil rich Saudi Arabia takes a deep interest in rail projects; Makes strategic investments in rail transit and HSR projects

September 9, 2009 at 5:22 pm
(Source: Wired; Arab News; Straits Times)

The Saudi government is building a $1.8 billion monorail to ferry pilgrims among the holy sites of Mecca, Mina, Arafat and Muzdalifah. Once complete, the Saudis estimate 53,000 buses will disappear from the city’s crowded roads, promising a safer, more comfortable pilgrimage. (FYI – For those not in the know, Monorail is a single rail serving as the track for a wheeled or (magnetically) levitating vehicle, has been rapidly paving its way as a modern urban transit system, providing the most-sought-after transportation solutions for a built-up congested city.)

The monorail will be built over the next four years, with the first segment — roughly 35 percent of the project, by one estimate — opening in time for this year’s Hajj between November 25 and 29. Hajj, the annual pilgrimage to Mecca that all Muslims must complete if they have the means and ability to do so, is the fifth Pillar of Islam and as such attracts a staggering number of pilgrims.

Arab News quotes Dr. Habeeb Zain Al-Abidine, the Deputy Minister of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Secretary-General of the Commission for Development of Makkah, Madinah and the Holy Sites , saying that a feasibility study conducted by an international company had proposed five monorails linking the holy sites.  The project is expected to facilitate the transportation of more than three million pilgrims between the holy sites.  “The feasibility study suggested the second monorail be built two to three years after the construction of the first one,” he said, adding that a single monorail would cost SR4 billion. The first monorail beginning from Mina will transport nearly one million pilgrims including 360,000 Arab pilgrims. The Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority (SAGIA), the Ministry of Transport and the Higher Commission for the Development of Makkah and Madinah have all reviewed a study of the project and welcome it. The study was prepared by the International Transport Projects Company, which is now contacting Saudi authorities to obtain the appropriate license to implement the project.

The monorail project, which is being implemented by a consortia of companies led by China Railway Company, will be operational with its full capacity during the Haj season of 2011, said the committee, which is chaired by Second Deputy Premier and Minister of Interior Prince Naif.   This is one of two rail projects the Chinese are building in Saudi Arabia (See below for details on the 2nd project).

The Arab News also says that Makkah monorails will be 8 to 10 meters above the ground to ensure smooth flow of pedestrians and vehicles.  “The monorail project will help withdraw about 53,000 buses and other vehicles being used by pilgrims coming by land from within the Kingdom and neighboring GCC countries,” the report said.

The committee said the monorail would pass by three stations in Arafat, Muzdalifah and Mina. The last station in Mina will be on the fourth flour of the Jamarat Bridge.   Controlled access to the monorail is intended to avoid accidents such as the tragedy at Mina in 2006, when more than 350 people died in a stampede after two busloads of pilgrims disembarked at the entrance to the Jamarat Bridge holy site. Trains on four elevated tracks will carry as many as 20,000 pilgrims an hour in an orderly fashion.   The project also includes parking facilities so that pilgrims can park their cars at the entrance of Makkah and then board the monorail.

Wait!  This is not the only rail activity happening in Saudi Arabia.  It is interesting to note how the Saudi Government is making strategic investments in rail projects arond the country.  Back in April, Arab News published an article about the Saudi Government’s plan for expanding the railway network across the country and beyond.  The Kingdom’s railway expansion envisages 3,900 km of new track. In addition to the Landbridge Project linking the Kingdom’s east with its west, two other major new rail projects are moving closer. These include a 450-km high-speed Haramain railway to link Jeddah with Makkah and Madinah.  

Finance Minister Ibrahim Al-Assaf announced plans to establish a new railway system linking the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman and the United Arab Emriates.   “GCC leaders have given preliminary approval for the project. The final decision will depend on its feasibility,” Al-Assaf said.

Talking about Chinese role in building railway infrastructure in Saudi Arabia, the other rail project is 275-mile high-speed rail system linking Mecca and Medina through Jeddah to be built by China Railway Engineering.  China’s involvement in both projects  (HSR and Monrail) reportedly was clinched during Chinese Prime Minister Hu Jintao’s visit to Saudi Arabia in February, during which representatives of Chinese Railway Corp. met with Saudi Prince Miteb bin Abdulaziz, chairman of the commission for developing the holy cities of Mecca and Medina.  (FYI – The Mecca deal highlighted the growing role of China in Saudi Arabia’s plan to commit 450 billion riyals (S$180 billion) to major infrastructure, education and new cities projects over the next five years.  China is already one of the top buyers of oil from Saudi Arabia, importing 36 million tonnes of Saudi crude last year, according to Chinese figures.)

Mansour Al-Maiman, secretary-general of PIF and chairman of Saudi Railway Company, said the North-South Railway would be ready next year for the transportation of minerals. He said the passenger railway linking Riyadh, Sudair, Qassim and Hail would be floated for tenders within a few days, adding that the work on the project would be completed by 2012.  Once complete, the North-South rail link woulc connect mineral-rich Jalamid belt with smelters in Ras Al-Zour near the eastern industrial city of Jubail.

The North-South Railway is given priority due to its importance to industrial development. It is integral to planned phosphate and bauxite mining projects in the north of the country that will link up with processing and smelters on the Gulf coast.  French defense group Thales and construction giant Saudi Binladin Group were awarded an SR1.7 billion ($453 million) contract to build signaling, ticketing, communications and security systems for the 2,400-km long North-South Railway.