Difference between revisions of "Portal:FTA Mobility on Demand Sandbox"
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
| colspan="2" style="vertical-align:top;" | {{About Transitwiki}} | | colspan="2" style="vertical-align:top;" | {{About Transitwiki}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | colspan="2" | '''Additional Reading''' | + | | colspan="2" | '''Additional Reading and Resources''' |
Mobility on demand is a new field, but researchers are beginning to study it. The following publications can help provide an introduction to what mobility on demand and how transit agencies should think about it. | Mobility on demand is a new field, but researchers are beginning to study it. The following publications can help provide an introduction to what mobility on demand and how transit agencies should think about it. | ||
Line 37: | Line 37: | ||
[http://sharedusemobilitycenter.org/sumc-research/ Shared Use Mobility Center Research] | [http://sharedusemobilitycenter.org/sumc-research/ Shared Use Mobility Center Research] | ||
: Includes updates on Shared Use Mobility Center projects currently underway. | : Includes updates on Shared Use Mobility Center projects currently underway. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [https://www.transit.dot.gov/research-innovation/mobility-demand-mod-sandbox-program.html FTA Mobility on Demand Sandbox Program] | ||
+ | : The [[Federal Transit Administration| Federal Transit Administration's]] page for this program. | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 19:27, 14 March 2017
FTA Mobility on Demand Sandbox Program Portal | |
---|---|
The Mobility on Demand (MOD) Sandbox Program is a Federal Transit Administration effort to support innovation among transit agencies and cities. Through the MOD Sandbox program, FTA provides organizations grants to conduct demonstration projects experimenting with unconventional operations. To be eligible, organizations must partner with at least one other organization (such as a private mobility provider or academic research institution). MOD Sandbox grants can cover up to 80% of the cost of a project; in 2016 (the program’s first year) it awarded nearly $8 million to 11 projects.
The ITS Joint Program Office (ITS JPO) and Federal Transit Administration (FTA) Office of Research started developing the MOD Program in 2015 to support applied research to better understand partnerships between emerging mobility providers and local transportation agencies, and to explore the federal role in supporting such partnerships. ITS JPO and FTA launched the $8 million MOD Sandbox grant program in May 2016, with eleven projects approved for funding in October of the same year. | |
Mobility on Demand articles on TransitWiki | MOD Grant Recipients |
|
|
About TransitWiki | |
Managing a transit agency is a complicated process with an overwhelming number of moving parts. Technology is constantly changing, which makes it even harder to keep everything running smoothly. Given the constraints of limited staff and budget, it can be difficult for an agency to keep up with best practices. That’s where TransitWiki comes in. The free and open knowledge-sharing platform is a one-stop shop for everything you need to stay on top of the ever-changing world of public transportation, from summaries of the latest research from APTA and TCRP to one-pagers on the latest FTA programs.
How TransitWiki Works While TransitWiki’s team of UCLA researchers can provide some of the information on the site, it’s professionals out in the field who really know what’s going on in the industry. Work that your agency does is likely relevant outside your area - a report assembled by the Chicago Transit Authority might contain information useful to LA Metro. Learning from peer agencies means wasting fewer resources on dead-end projects. How to Contribute TransitWiki is a public, user-editable website, allowing agencies to directly publish reports that they believe could be useful to others. This site is based on the MediaWiki software that powers Wikipedia and many other sites across the web. If you're familiar with how to navigate or edit Wikipedia, then TransitWiki.org should be straight forward. If not, see the MediaWiki FAQ. Once you make an account, our staff will confirm it and you can start adding articles using an intuitive web interface. You can post an entire report or pull out specific sections that you think are the most relevant to other agencies. Don’t have time to get the document formatted for the web? Send it to us and we’ll take care of the work. Potential contributors often wonder if the have the authority to share agency documents online. Transit agencies can be competitive, and in-house reports might feel like secrets that need to be guarded. But the kind of research relevant to TransitWiki is typically covered by open records laws and is already internet-accessible. By proactively sharing documents on TransitWiki, agencies can take control of the messaging and make sure they are presented properly | |
Additional Reading and Resources
Mobility on demand is a new field, but researchers are beginning to study it. The following publications can help provide an introduction to what mobility on demand and how transit agencies should think about it. Sheehan, R. (2015). “Mobility on Demand.” US Department of Transportation.
Federal Transit Administration. “Shared Mobility Frequently Asked Questions.”
TransitCenter. (2016). “Private Mobility, Public Interest."
TriMet. "MOD Sandbox Grant 2017 ‐ 2019."
Craig, T. "Flexible Trip Planner Update: Project Kick-Off!" Trillium Solutions, Inc.
Shared Use Mobility Center Research
FTA Mobility on Demand Sandbox Program
|