ITE would like to honor and recognize the latest donor to the Diversity Scholars Program, Gibson Transportation Consulting, Inc., in honor of its founder.
Patrick A. “Pat” Gibson, P.E., T.E., PTOE, an ITE Fellow and Life Member, has long been focused on the professional development of promising young engineers and planners, teaching at local colleges and universities, running company internship programs, and serving as the ITE Western District Student Endowment Fund Chair. During his time teaching at the University of California, Los Angeles, Pat was named Outstanding Transportation Educator by the ITE Western District and was twice named Civil and Environmental Engineering Department Lecturer of the Year (an award given by the students). This scholarship was created in honor of all Pat has done for students throughout the years.
The ITE Photo Exchange is an exclusive resource designed to foster collaboration and resource sharing among ITE members. This platform serves as a growing database where you can upload, share, and access a diverse range of categorized images, perfect for enhancing your projects and presentations. The Photo Exchange aims to streamline the discovery of relevant visuals while promoting the sharing of knowledge and experiences within our community.
Runnels are used in bike-friendly cities around the world and known by various names including bicycle stairway channels, wheel ramps, tracks, gutters, push ramps and/or access ramps. While bicyclists use of stairs is no replacement for ridable paths and routes, sometimes stairs provide a more direct route. While a fairly simple concept, bike runnels can be deceptively complex and require careful attention in design to address intended users. This requires specific efforts to minimize adverse impacts to people using the stairways. Stair use by those with mobility limitations, older persons, or young children who depend upon access to the handrails, requires the stairway tread to be free of any possible tripping hazard.
This document considers opportunities to evolve and align the LRSP process with a more robust and holistic safety framework, embracing national and international best practice—the Safe System approach—to address our road safety crisis in the United States. In 2021, an estimated 42,915 people died in collisions in the United States, a 10.5 percent increase over 2020 and the highest number since 2005. 2 The Safe System approach aims to eliminate fatal and serious injuries for all road users by accommodating human mistakes and keeping impacts on the human body at tolerable levels. Embedded in this approach is a Vision Zero goal, with the creation of a Safe System as the method to achieve that goal. Making a commitment to Zero Deaths and serious injuries means addressing crash risks through the five elements of the Safe System and promoting a holistic approach to safety across the entire roadway system through the six principles of the Safe System. As shown in Figure 1, the Safe System principles (outer ring) are the fundamental beliefs the approach is built on. The Safe System elements, shown in the middle ring, are the conduits through which the approach must be implemented.
The FCC has approved the "Joint Waiver" for C-V2X that was filed on behalf of 14 different public and private organizations.
This is an important first step as we attempt to regain momentum in the deployment of V2X technology, and will hopefully be the icebreaker in releasing approvals for the dozens of other C-V2X waiver requests submitted to the FCC over the past 12-18 months - and still not acted upon yet.
The waiver approval is subject to whatever changes might be implemented in a final rule on C-V2X technical parameters and licensing (via the 2nd Report & Order), which is likely not going to be released until much later this year - or most probably some time in 2024.
ITE's CAV Standing Committee will continue to monitor the evolution of C-V2X technology, licensing, and deployment - with several members participating in a USDOT V2X Workshop being held later this week in Dallas.