WORK PROGRAM
freight planning support: federal fiscal year 2020
April 16, 2020
The Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) votes to approve this work program.
Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analyses
Boston Region MPO
Principal: Mark Abbott
Manager: Bill Kuttner
MPO 3C Planning and §5303 Contract #108217
Schedule and budget details are shown in Exhibits 1 and 2, respectively.
The Boston Region MPO elected to fund this study with its federally allocated metropolitan planning funds during federal fiscal year (FFY) 2020. The work completed through this study will address the following goal areas established in the MPO’s Long-Range Transportation Plan: safety, capacity management and mobility, and economic vitality.
The Boston Region MPO’s freight program began in FFY 2014 and has been funded annually on a regular basis since its inception. The broad outlines of the freight program were presented in the 2013 Freight Planning Action Plan.1 The Freight Planning Action Plan outlined several planning goals:
All the study topics identified in the initial action plan have been investigated to some extent, and in 2019 the action plan was updated.2 The update maintains focus on the planning goals listed above, reviews completed MPO-supported freight studies, and suggests topics for future study.
In 2017 the MPO was asked by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) to recommend sections of the region’s road network that would be designated by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) as Critical Urban Freight Corridors (CUFC). MPO staff had sufficient information about heavy vehicle travel patterns and industrial land uses to make recommendations that were accepted by MassDOT and the FHWA. As the designation process is complete, sections of the CUFC system are being studied in detail as part of the MPO’s annual freight program. The study proposed for FFY 2020 will focus on the connection of the South Boston Waterfront CUFC with the Southeast Expressway.
The principal objectives of this work program are as follows:
MPO staff will maintain an ongoing, collaborative relationship with freight stakeholders affected by freight movement in the Boston region including municipalities, shippers, carriers, and affected residents and businesses. Some of the activities will involve MPO staff attending and presenting at meetings and conferences, including some sponsored by the MPO. Recruiting and encouraging regional freight stakeholders to be involved in the MPO’s planning activities and its advisory committee, the Regional Transportation Advisory Council, will also be a valuable part of staff’s outreach.
Figure 1 shows the CUFC system connecting the South Boston Waterfront to Interstate 93, the Southeast Expressway. The Southeast Expressway is one of the most extensive and severe bottlenecks in the Boston region. Several conceptual plans and feasibility studies have explored ways of adding capacity in this corridor.3 Congestion in this corridor affects all traffic, but the effect on truck movement—specifically from the truck-dependent industries served through Interchange 18 in Newmarket Square, Widett Circle, and the South Boston Waterfront—have not been fully quantified.
Technical memorandum about truck flows in the study area
Freight data for use in model development efforts
Truck volume data collection for model estimation is ongoing. Some truck volumes have already been developed from Massachusetts toll reports. Vehicle counting equipment is installed at numerous non-tolled locations on the limited-access highway system, and some of these locations have been set up to classify vehicles by size according to the standard FHWA F-scheme. These data must be reviewed for reliability before being used for planning or truck model development.
Truck data appropriate for model development from sources and locations outside the Bypass Road-Southeast Expressway study area
Figure 1
South Boston Waterfront
Legend
Interstate highways, intermodal connectors, and associated connecting ramps
Roadways recommended for CUFC designation and associated interstate highway access ramps
Roadways with a functional class of collector or higher
Source: Central Transportation Planning Staff.
1 Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization (website), “Proposed Freight Planning Action Plan for the Boston Region MPO: Meeting the Goals and Addressing the Issues,” September 2013. https://www.bostonmpo.org/Drupal/freight_action.
2 Central Transportation Planning Staff, “Boston Region MPO Freight Planning Action Plan Update,” July 2019. https://www.bostonmpo.org/data/calendar/pdfs/2019/MPO_0718_Memo_Freight_Update.pdf.
3 Central Transportation Planning Staff, “Improving the Southeast Expressway: A Conceptual Plan,” February 2012. http://bostonmpo.org/Drupal/se_expr_concept.
Task |
Month | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | |
1.
Coordinate MPO Efforts with Freight Stakeholders |
From Month 1, Week 1 to Month 6, Week 4.
|
|||||
2.
Develop Bypass Road/I-93 Truck Travel Profile |
From Month 1, Week 1 to Month 6, Week 4.
Deliverable
A
Delivered by Month 6, Week 4.
|
|||||
3.
Develop Additional Freight Data Sources |
From Month 1, Week 1 to Month 6, Week 4.
|
Task |
Person-Weeks | Direct Salary |
Overhead (102.11%) |
Total Cost |
|||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
M-1 | P-5 | P-4 | Total | ||||
1.
Coordinate MPO Efforts with Freight Stakeholders
|
0.0 | 1.5 | 0.0 | 1.5 | $2,980 | $3,043 | $6,022 |
2.
Develop Bypass Road/I-93 Truck Travel Profile
|
1.5 | 7.8 | 2.0 | 11.3 | $21,116 | $21,562 | $42,678 |
3.
Develop Additional Freight Data Sources
|
0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 2.0 | $3,973 | $4,057 | $8,030 |
Total
|
1.5 | 11.3 | 2.0 | 14.8 | $28,069 | $28,661 | $56,730 |