For Immediate Release
June 12, 2003Governor,
Commissioner Launch TDOT SmartWay
Part of Broader Campaign to Make TDOT
more Efficient, Consumer Friendly
Nashville -- With the press
of a keyboard today, Governor Phil Bredesen launched the first phase
of TDOT SmartWay -- the state’s new intelligent transportation
system. The new system, controlled from the state-of-the-art
Transportation Management Center in Nashville, is expected to make
highway travel in the region safer, and more consumer friendly.
TDOT SmartWay uses advanced
technology (including 20 electronic message boards, 56 cameras and
speed congestion monitors) to spot traffic flow interruptions. This
information is, in turn, used to provide up-to-the-minute traffic
information to drivers so they can avoid congested areas. At the same
time, it gives TDOT the tools it needs to better monitor traffic
delays and more quickly respond to road problems.
“Widening highways in urban areas
cannot be the only option for improving congestion. Utilizing this
technology allows us to communicate directly with motorists so they
can make smarter choices on the highway as they go to work, school and
play,” Bredesen said. “It’s the first of what I hope will be several
changes aimed at making TDOT more consumer-friendly.”
“Tennesseans are tired of being
stuck in traffic because of incidents, road maintenance, and highway
construction. While we can’t get rid of the orange barrels, TDOT
SmartWay can help drivers avoid them. It can also help reduce the time
required to clear an accident. Never before have we had a system like
this in Tennessee that will aid in increasing traffic capacity without
widening the highway,” said Nicely.
The launch of TDOT SmartWay is one
of many changes underway at TDOT designed to make the department more
efficient and responsive to community concerns. Earlier this year, the
Bredesen administration reorganized the department to create a new
community relations division to improve the department’s interface
with the public. Other changes are underway to make TDOT projects more
environmentally friendly and community-oriented.
“This is just one of many changes
drivers across the state will start seeing,” Nicely said. “I’m
determined to make TDOT run more effectively -- with the consumer in
the driver’s seat.”
According to Nicely, TDOT SmartWay
has the potential to add 15% capacity to Tennessee’s interstate system
and to reduce incidence delay by as much as thirty minutes per
occurrence.
The sharing of TDOT SmartWay
intelligence is also a key to the system’s success. Starting today
local television stations will begin airing live feeds from the TDOT
SmartWay cameras to assist their viewers. The information will also
be fed directly to emergency response agencies. And, shortly,
information picked-up on the traffic cameras and congestion monitors
will be shared with highway users before they travel via TDOT’s
website,
www.tennessee.gov/tdot/tdotsmartway.
TDOT’s new SmartWay system will be
implemented first in the Nashville area with plans to expand it into
the three other major urban areas in phases over the next several
years. In Knoxville, construction will begin early this fall on a new
transportation management center there, with a projected completion
date of December 2004. System design will begin in Memphis this
summer and early implementation of a camera system will begin in
Chattanooga within the next 12 months.
A recorded statement from TDOT
Commissioner Gerald Nicely about TDOT SmartWay will be available this
evening on the TDOT radio actuality line at 615.741.2992 or
1.800.860.6808. |