AASHTO CA01-4-2013 Brief 1 Overview.pdf
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1、Brief 1. Overview MAy 2013 Commuting in America 2013 The National Report on Commuting Patterns and TrendsAbout the AASHTO Census Transportation Planning Products Program Established by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) and the U.S. Department of Transpor
2、tation (U.S.DOT), the AASHTO Census Transportation Planning Products Program (CTPP) compiles census data on demographic characteristics, home and work locations, and journey-to-work travel flows to assist with a variety of state, regional, and local transportation policy and planning efforts. CTPP a
3、lso supports corridor and project studies, environmental analyses, and emergency operations management. In 1990, 2000, and again in 2006, AASHTO partnered with all of the states on pooled fund projects to sup- port the development of special census products and data tabulations for transportation. T
4、hese census transpor- tation data packages have proved invaluable in understanding characteristics about where people live and work, their journey-to-work commuting patterns, and the modes they use for getting to work. In 2012, the CTPP was established as an ongoing technical service program of AASH
5、TO. CTPP provides a number of primary services: Special Data Tabulation from the U.S. Census BureauCTPP oversees the specification, purchase, and delivery of this special tabulation designed by and for transportation planners Outreach and TrainingThe CTPP team provides training on data and data issu
6、es in many formats, from live briefings and presentations to hands-on full day courses. The team has also created a number of electronic sources of training, from e-learning to recorded webinars to downloadable presentations. Technical SupportCTPP provides limited direct technical support for solvin
7、g data issues; the pro- gram also maintains a robust listserv where many issues are discussed, dissected, and resolved by the CTPP community ResearchCTPP staff and board members routinely generate problem statements to solicit research on data issues; additionally, CTPP has funded its own research e
8、fforts. Total research generated or funded by the current CTPP since 2006 is in excess of $1 million. Staff Penelope Weinberger, CTPP Program Manager Matt Hardy, Program Director, Policy and Planning Janet Oakley, Director of Policy and Government Relations Project Team Steven E. Polzin, Co-author,
9、Center for Urban Transportation Research, University of South Florida Alan E. Pisarski, Co-author, Consultant, Falls Church, Virginia Bruce Spear, Data Expert, Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Liang Long, Data Expert, Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Contact Penelope Weinberger, e-mail: pweinbergeraashto.org,
10、 phone: 202-624-3556; or CTPPinfoaashto.org 2013 by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. All rights reserved. Duplication is a violation of applicable law. Pub Code: CA01-4 ISBN: 978-1-56051-562-3 2013 by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation
11、 Officials. All rights reserved. Duplication is a violation of applicable law.Commuting in America 2013: The National Report on Commuting Patterns and Trends The Commuting in America (CIA) series of reports describing travelers and their com- mutes to work began in April 1984, using census data to d
12、escribe the emerging patterns of commuting. The original intent of CIA was well stated by Frank Franois, former Execu- tive Director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO), and the first CIA Steering Committee Chair. As prefaced by Franois in the first rep
13、ort, the goal of the CIA is “to serve as a common resource of factual information upon which policy-makers can draw in shaping transportation development actions and policies over the coming years.It does not purport to reflect the policy positions of any of the sponsoring organizations and should n
14、ot be interpreted in this manner. ” This initiative, Commuting in America 2013 (CIA 2013), continues to adhere to this original intent and philosophy. This brief is the first in a series that constitutes a body of knowledge describing commuting in America. Sponsored by AASHTO and carried out in conj
15、unction with a National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) project that provided supporting data, this body of work builds on three prior documents covering this topic that were issued over the past three decades. Unlike the prior reports, which were single volumes, this effort consists of
16、 a series of briefs, each of which addresses a critical aspect of commuting in America. Taken together, they comprise a comprehensive summary of American commuting. The briefs are dissemi- nated through the AASHTO website. Accompanying data tables and an Executive Summary complete the body of inform
17、ation known as CIA 2013. Also different for CIA 2013 is the institutional structure through which this effort is supported. Prior reports were supported by the Transportation Research Board (TRB) and the Eno Foundation, whereas this report is supported as part of the AASHTO pooled-fund study which s
18、upports a broad array of initiatives associated with the Census Transportation Planning Products (CTPP). This multi-year initiative, of which CIA 2013 is part, is tar- geted to provide data and analysis on commuting to work to support the information needs of the state and metropolitan transportatio
19、n planning and policy community. Therefore, CIA 2013 has a different process for peer review, editing, and production of reports. The information products have Brief 1. Overview Commuting in America 2013 consists of a series of Briefs and an Executive Summary available through the AASHTO website whi
20、ch also contains additional source data and research documentation. Commuting in America 2013 is sponsored by AASHTO with support from NCHRP and the stakeholder community. 2013 by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. All rights reserved. Duplication is a violation
21、of applicable law.4 Commuting in America 2013: The National Report on Commuting Patterns and Trends changed and now include a set of written reports and the introduction of a web-based CIA 2013 portal for dissemination of written reports and supporting data. CIA 2013 includes several changes in the
22、data sources that support the technical analy- sis reported in Commuting in America products. Historically, the long-form survey, con- ducted as part of the decennial census, has been a primary data source to support much of the analysis presented in CIA products. However, the discontinuation of the
23、 long form after the 2000 Census and its replacement by the Bureau of the Census with the American Community Survey (ACS), which is conducted continuous- ly and reported annually, results in a significant difference in one of the major data sources available to support these documents. The ACS data,
24、 released annually in September of the year following its collection, significantly shortens the time lag between data collection and release compared to long-form census commuting data, and the continuous collection of ACS data enables more frequent updating. In addition to the development of CIA 2
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