OTREC research looks into bus safety performance monitoring and analysis

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A TriMet bus pulls up to a stop in downtown Portland, Oregon
Generally, public transit is safer than other personal travel modes. However, not all transit modes are created equal: compared with other forms of transit, buses have a higher safety incident rate.
 
For example, while buses in fixed route service accounted for 39% of the transit industry’s passenger miles in 2009, their associated casualty and liability costs accounted for 51% of the industry total. In 2010 TriMet, the Portland, Oregon region’s transit provider, formed a safety task force to review its bus operations.
The task force recommended that TriMet develop a comprehensive performance monitoring program to better integrate safety in its planning practices. Like other urban transit providers, TriMet was already sending safety performance information to the Federal Transit Administration’s National Transit Database. The task force recommended seeking a deeper understanding of the types of incidents that are occurring, and of when, where, and why they occur. The task force also recommended that operators complete a recertification program annually to ensure that safe driving practices remain fresh. 
In addition to keeping operators current on their safety training, the annual recertification program presented researchers with a unique opportunity to gain a firsthand perspective of the safety risks that bus operators encounter on a daily basis. Thus a survey of operator perceptions of safety risks was added to the training exercise. Investigators James G. Strathman and Sung-Moon Kwon, of Portland State University, explored those survey results.
 
For the purposes of the operator survey, the sources of safety risk in bus operations were organized into five general categories: 1) vehicle design and maintenance; 2) route design and location/design of stops; 3) operating conditions; 4) operator fatigue; and 5) operator stress. The survey was designed to address all five of these categories. Risk factors were identified in each of the five categories, and operators were asked to rank the factors in order of importance. After ranking specific safety risk factors in each of the five categories, they were asked to rank order the categories themselves on the basis of perceived safety risk.
Beyond this, the survey also collected operators’ views on safety enforcement activity. The drivers taking the survey were asked to rank the importance of four different types of roadway user negligence: distracted motorists, distracted cyclists and pedestrians, drug/alcohol impaired road users, and road users ignoring the “yield to bus” signs on the back of the bus.
The survey also sought information about the frequency and nature of “close 
calls” involving the bus or its passengers, and asked operators for suggestions to improve safety in TriMet’s established standard operating procedures. The final part of the survey collected information on whether the operators were full-time or part-time, as well as how long they had worked at TriMet. These differences in employment status were important, as they can affect operators’ work assignments. For example, part-time operators are much more likely to draw split-shift assignments, and their shifts are more likely to fall during peak travel times. Consequently, part-time and junior operators generally face greater safety risk exposure related to traffic conditions, schedule maintenance pressures, and driver fatigue.
Researchers drew some significant conclusions from the survey. They found that fatigue and stress are important sources of the safety risks that operators perceive in their work environment. The pressure of maintaining a schedule was the most important stress-related concern of part-time operators, whose work is concentrated in congested peak periods, and was the second greatest concern among full-time operators. Schedules were also the focus of the most frequently recommended change in standard operating procedures, as shown in the pie chart to the right.
For selected safety risk factors there were significant differences in perceived risk between part time and full time, and between less experienced and more experienced operators.  For example, full time operators perceived fatigue to be the greatest safety risk, while part time operators perceived stress to be the greatest safety risk.
 
For more information, click here to visit the project page or download the final report.

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