NTL Record

Title Impact of exempt vehicles on managed lanes.
Record ID 51786
Personal Name
Creator
Turnbull, Katherine F.
Corporate Creator Texas A&M Transportation Institute; Battelle Memorial Institute
Corporate
Contributor
United States. Department of Transportation. Federal Highway Administration. Office of Operations
Publisher United States. Department of Transportation. Federal Highway Administration. Office of Operations
Publication Date 20140115
Language English
Abstract In order to better utilize available capacity in high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes, states are permitted to allow certain qualifying non-HOVs to use HOV lanes. In general, states may allow motorcycles, public transportation vehicles, high-occupancy toll (HOT) vehicles, and low-emission and energy-efficient vehicles to use HOV lanes. For any or all of these types of vehicles, the states must establish programs addressing candidacy, enrollment, and management of the lanes. In the case of tolled vehicles, dynamic pricing is the primary control that limits the potential to cause congestion in the lanes. In the case of the energy-efficient vehicles, the programs typically include decals, licenses, license plates, or stickers, that serve to identify and, in some cases, cap the number of allowed to use the lanes vehicles. Concerns may arise that the number of exempted vehicles may overburden the capacity of the HOV lanes to perform their primary function, which is to provide an incentive to form carpools (and thereby reduce the number of cars on the road) and to “reward” such an incentive by guaranteeing a mostly delay-free trip. Use by non-HOVs may overburden the HOV lanes, causing the integrity of the HOV lanes to suffer. The Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21) 2012 now mandates that any HOV facility that allows tolled vehicles or any class of qualifying energy-efficient vehicles must annually certify that the subject lanes are “not degraded.” By definition, this constitutes that for a 180-day continuous reporting period, the lane(s) operate at greater than 45 mph for 90% of the time. (See Section 166, Title 23 of United States Code for the full language.) This report examines programs in use by states allowing low-emission and energy efficient vehicles to use HOV, HOT, and managed lanes without meeting the vehicle-occupancy requirements. Information is presented on the enabling legislation, the program elements, use of the programs, and impacts of the HOV, HOT, and managed lanes in 13 states.
Rosap ID dot:27278
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/27278
TRT Terms Managed lanes; High occupancy vehicle lanes; High occupancy toll lanes; Traffic flow; Traffic congestion
General Subjects HOV, HOT lanes, Exempt vehicles, Congestion, Hybrids, Tolled vehicles, Lane degradation
Geographical
Coverage
United States
TRIS Online
Accession No
1525270
Contract Number DTFH61-13-P00183
Report Number FHWA-HOP-14-006
Resource type Tech Report
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/51000/51700/51786/fhwahop14006.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository