DOT tests idea: buses to ride I-40 shoulder
(News and Observer – January 25, 2012)
If you're stuck in I-40 traffic some time in the next few months and you spot a bus rolling along the shoulder, it's probably not in trouble.
It's in an experiment.
The state Department of Transportation, Triangle Transit and several other members of an "I-40 Partnership" are going to try a "bus on shoulder system" on a section of Interstate 40 in southern Durham
County. The I-40 Partnership is coordinated by the Regional Transportation Alliance, an association of Triangle chambers of commerce.
The system allows public-transit buses to use the shoulder as a regular lane of travel. The experiment will test whether the system can help alleviate I-40 congestion.
"It's the most heavily traveled and congested highway in the region," said city Transportation Director Mark Ahrendsen. "Over 140,000 cars a day in the Research Triangle Park and growing. It basically serves as the Triangle's Main Street."
Under the bus-on-shoulder system ("BOSS"), Triangle Transit buses may use the shoulder when traffic in the highway's regular lanes is moving at less than 35 miles per hour, said Meredith McDiarmid, DOT's corridor executive for Interstate 40 in the Triangle.
Buses do have to give way to vehicles stopped on the shoulder and emergency vehicles, she said.
"The first time I saw this I thought this was the craziest thing I ever heard," said City Councilman Mike Woodard. "But as I've been learning more about it ... I'm glad Durham's on the leading edge of good transit."
McDiarmid said the idea originated in Minnesota in the early 1990s. Eleven other states have since adopted it.
Triangle transportation planners and law-enforcement officers visited Minnesota to see the system in operation, she said; and, to try it out locally, rode a bus along an I-40 shoulder last week (with Highway Patrol escort).
"It was not a conscious choice just to be in Durham County," McDiarmid said. The Transportation Alliance wanted a test segment without many obstructions, such as bridges, that would force buses back into regular travel lanes. The chosen section has wide shoulders all the way and no "pinch points," she said.
If the pilot program works out and nothing happens to make officials "uncomfortable," it will remain in effect permanently and be extended to other roads in the Triangle and other parts of the state.