National Academies Press: OpenBook

A Concept for a National Freight Data Program: Special Report 276 (2003)

Chapter: C Committee Meetings and Other Activities

« Previous: B Review of Freight Survey Collection Techniques
Page 97
Suggested Citation:"C Committee Meetings and Other Activities." Transportation Research Board. 2003. A Concept for a National Freight Data Program: Special Report 276. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10793.
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Appendix C
Committee Meetings and Other Activities

FIRST COMMITTEE MEETING, JUNE 4–5, 2002, WASHINGTON, D.C.

The following presentations were made to the committee by invited speakers:


Sponsor Expectations for the Study

Ashish Sen, Bureau of Transportation Statistics


Overview of Freight Transportation Data Sources

Lance Grenzeback, Cambridge Systematics, Inc., and Harry Cohen, Consultant, Ellicott City, Maryland


The Commodity Flow Survey

Michael Cohen, Bureau of Transportation Statistics

Page 98
Suggested Citation:"C Committee Meetings and Other Activities." Transportation Research Board. 2003. A Concept for a National Freight Data Program: Special Report 276. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10793.
×

The Freight Analysis Framework

Gary Maring and Bruce Lambert, Federal Highway Administration

SECOND COMMITTEE MEETING, SEPTEMBER 19–20, 2002, WASHINGTON, D.C.

The following presentations were made to the committee by invited speakers:


Freight Data Business Plan—Draft Version

Rick Donnelly, PBConsult, Inc. (committee consultant)


Air Cargo Data—Needs and Uses

Mort Plumb, Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport, Alaska


Transportation of Hazardous Materials

Kevin Coburn, Research and Special Programs Administration


Hazardous Materials Transportation—Security-Related Activities Since 9/11

Tom Sherman, Office of the Secretary of Transportation, U.S. Department of Transportation


Use of Technology to Collect Truck Data

Jeff Patten, Federal Highway Administration


The International Trade Data System

Craig Fundling, eCP


MPO Freight Data Requirements

Gerald Rawling, Chicago Area Transportation Study

Dennis Hooker, Metroplan Orlando, Florida


The committee also received a written submission on MPO Freight Data Requirements from Chuck Purvis of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, Oakland, California.

Page 99
Suggested Citation:"C Committee Meetings and Other Activities." Transportation Research Board. 2003. A Concept for a National Freight Data Program: Special Report 276. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10793.
×

A Shipping Industry Perspective on Freight Data Needs and Uses

Bill Ralph, Port Import Export Reporting Service


In addition, the committee discussed security data currently gathered by the Federal Aviation Administration and the Transportation Security Administration with Admiral Paul Busick of Battelle.

THIRD COMMITTEE MEETING, NOVEMBER 21–22, 2002, WASHINGTON, D.C.

PRESENTATION OF FREIGHT DATA BUSINESS PLAN

A draft of the freight data business plan (Appendix A) prepared by the committee’s consultant, Rick Donnelly, was presented at the 82nd TRB Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, January 15, 2003. The details of the session are as follows.


Session 713: National Freight Transportation Data Program Development

Arnim Hans Meyburg, Cornell University, presiding

Sponsored by Committee on Freight Transportation Data


Importance of Freight for Transportation

Emil Frankel, U.S. Department of Transportation


National Freight Data Business Plan

Rick Donnelly, PBConsult, Inc.


Trucking Industry Perspective

Bob Costello, American Trucking Associations, Inc.


Railroad Industry Perspective

Robert E. Martínez, Norfolk Southern Corporation


Forecaster’s Perspective

Paul Bingham, Global Insight, Inc.

Page 97
Suggested Citation:"C Committee Meetings and Other Activities." Transportation Research Board. 2003. A Concept for a National Freight Data Program: Special Report 276. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10793.
×
Page 97
Page 98
Suggested Citation:"C Committee Meetings and Other Activities." Transportation Research Board. 2003. A Concept for a National Freight Data Program: Special Report 276. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10793.
×
Page 98
Page 99
Suggested Citation:"C Committee Meetings and Other Activities." Transportation Research Board. 2003. A Concept for a National Freight Data Program: Special Report 276. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10793.
×
Page 99
Next: D A Framework for the Development of National Freight Data: Dissenting Statement of Kenneth D. Boyer »
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TRB Special Report 276 - A Concept for a National Freight Data Program calls upon the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) and its Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) to take the lead in coordinating freight data collection in the United States. Citing the need for accurate goods movement data in order to make informed decisions related to congestion, economic competitiveness, safety and security, and the environment, the TRB report recommends the development of a national freight data framework.

The report's conceptual framework focuses on increasing the linkages between different sources of data and filling data gaps to develop a comprehensive source of timely and reliable data on freight flows. The national freight database aims to fulfill the major needs of a wide variety of users by capturing the important characteristics of freight movements--namely, shipment origin and destination; commodity characteristics, weight, and value; modes of shipment; routing and time of day; and vehicle or vessel type and configuration. The database also forms a foundation on which users can build their own more specialized data sets.

In its eight recommendations, the report's study committee offers the U.S. DOT and the BTS specific guidance on developing a multiyear program to implement the framework concept. In particular, the committee strongly recommends that a freight data advisory committee composed of stakeholders and experts drawn from both the public and the private sectors play a key role in guiding program development and implementation. The proposed initiative will require a sustained effort over many years and involve many technical and organizational challenges. The amount of data required is large, and some of the information needed by decision makers has not previously been collected in the United States. The report highlights the development of innovative, low-cost methods for data collection and of procedures to protect the confidentiality of data providers as critical to a successful final outcome.

Demands on the U.S. transportation system continue to evolve in response to changing patterns of goods movement and passenger travel and heightened concerns about transportation security. In the case of freight, the growth of international trade, the shift from a manufacturing to a service economy, deregulation, and the advent of freight logistics have all resulted in changes in the nature and volumes of goods shipped and the origins and destinations of shipments. At the same time, growing congestion on the nation's roads and at transportation hubs, such as ports and airports, not only inconveniences travelers but also threatens to undermine the reliable and timely movement of goods so critical to the national economy and quality of life.

The effectiveness and efficiency of the freight transportation system are heavily dependent on reliable data to inform a range of decisions at all levels of government and in the private sector about economic and infrastructure investments and policy issues. Data on goods movements are needed to identify and evaluate options for mitigating congestion, improve regional and global economic competitiveness, enable effective land use planning, inform investment and policy decisions about modal optimization, enhance transportation safety and security, identify transportation marketing opportunities, and reduce fuel consumption and improve air quality. While data alone cannot guarantee good decisions, informed choices are not possible without good data.

Data on goods movements are collected by federal agencies and other public- and private-sector entities that monitor or analyze transportation and trade activities on a regional, state, national, or international level. Because these data collection efforts are not coordinated, the resulting data sets are of varying quality and reliability and provide an incomplete picture of the universe of freight movements. Furthermore, difficulties in combining data from the diverse sources limit the usefulness of current data sets for the purposes of freight transportation analyses. To remedy these deficiencies, a national freight data framework is needed.

A four page summary of the report was published in the July-August 2004 issue of the TR News.

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