Thursday, December 8, 2011

A new way to procure

Photo credit: Chicago-L.org
The CTA's new 5000-series rail car costs $1.6 million dollars a pop—which means, when that 8-car train pulls into the station, you're staring at a cool $12,800,000.

Why so expensive? After all, you can buy a private jet for half the price. At that price, they should come with Italian hand-stitched leather seats instead of those plastic bucket seats... right?

There are a few contributors to the extreme price:

  • Non-standardization. Although most mass transit systems use the same gauge rail (ahem, BART), the platform heights, third rail type and voltage, platform lengths, clearance widths, signal system, and maximum curve radii are all vastly different. That means that every new order of trains essentially has to be entirely custom designed. 
  • No economy of scale. Once the trains are designed, the manufacturing process often has to be started from scratch. Besides specifying the process itself, this can even include procuring or building factories to satisfy Buy American laws—just for the life of the order. 
  • Few suppliers. In fact, there is only one American manufacturer of railcars left. Most equipment in the US is now designed by Bombardier (Canadian), Kawasaki (Japanese), or Alstom (French). So in the absence of a whole lot of competition, the bids are all high.  
It's not hard to imagine a new business model in this space, one that works more like the development and sales of automobiles or airplanes do.

Theoretically, a private supplier could standardize the basic technology and build platforms that can be adjusted to spec. Factory processes would have to be innovated, of course: for instance, adjusting the suspension for a different platform heights and using different transformers for different voltages. The truth is, the combination of factors is not infinite, and by standardizing as much as possible, better economies of scale could be established, engineering could be cut in the long-run, production could be more continuous, and industry innovations could be faster to disseminate. Plus, agencies could cut down on their costs of having to define in detail the specifications for new vehicles because the standardized units would already be compliant with ADA laws and have the latest technology offered as build-to-order options.

The biggest difficulty I can imagine is that the public procurement bidding process might not support this as it exists today. Because vehicles probably wouldn't be built exactly to RFP spec, public agencies would have to reconsider the way they perform large procurements.

But that's not such a bad thing, because the public procurement process is rife with waste. Imagine a change on a much larger scale: for example, a government agency in charge of establishing standards for all public services, thereby giving individual agencies must less work to do in the first place, saving money at the state and local level, and allowing private industry to simply build to those standards. The CTA wouldn't have to order a 5000-series car with every painstaking detail, they'd just order a 48' long, 9'4"-wide railcar with blue seats and top-loading 600V third rail shoes.

Most of the rest of the work would already be done.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

CTA asks citizens for budget ideas

Street as Theater
Among American transit operators, the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) has done a stellar job in recent years utilizing new technology. Of particular note is sharing its live bus and train tracking data to app developers through APIs, which has resulted in some pretty fantastic mobile apps. Over the past few months, CTA has finally made the leap into social media, opening official accounts on Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and Youtube.

Keeping a Web presence on the aforementioned social sites is standard fare these days (no pun intended), and CTA has been faithfully updating all of them with information about service updates and construction projects.

But what is much more interesting is they also opened an account on IdeaScale that solicits ideas from the community for their 2012 budget recommendations.

CTA's president Forrest Claypool has already made a number of recommendations in the preliminary budget, which includes departmental consolidation, an innovative approach to station renewal, and reduction of staffing to the lowest levels in the history of the agency. But major budget problems remain, and CTA will likely have to raise fares sharply and/or further cut service in the coming years.

I conducted a whole bunch of public meetings while I was at HSH, and, at least on the Eastern seaboard, they generally tend to be poorly attended, or be filled with people with agendas (or just complaints). Attracting bright minds and everyday people is not an easy task—after all, bright, everyday people have other things they need to attend to. Moving customer input to the Internet where it can be used at people's convenience is an obvious move, but it has to be done correctly.

IdeaScale is a pretty well-designed Web site. People suggest ideas, and then it is voted up or down and commented on by other users. But it will only work if people actually use it. CTA can do a few things to help:
  • Advertise it. They have free ad space in their stations, vehicles, and Web site. I've seen no evidence of this, yet. 
  • Reward people. Provide some sort of compensation (free Transit Cards?) for ideas that get incorporated into the budget plan. Or better yet, run contests in area business and design schools to find the most innovative solutions. 
  • Talk to people. CTA managers should respond to the ideas suggested to engage conversation. Many people think public agencies aren't really listening to them. They will only be convinced to help if they think their ideas matter.   
At the end of the day, there will be no panacea for CTA's budget problems. Major structural problems exist in CTA's funding model and labor relationships. As I've written here, they need to avoid the temptation to sell their long-term worth for short-term fixes. They also need to look both to the state and to their own business models to find new sources of revenue.

But recruiting bright and inquiring minds to invest their brainwaves in the problem is definitely a big step in the right direction.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Thoughts on Public Private Partnerships

Photo credit: The Guardian (UK)
In 2008, the London Underground absorbed the two Metronet infracos (private infrastructure companies) which had been responsible for running the sub-surface division of the metro system. In 2010, Mayor of London Boris Johnson condemned the Public Private Partnership contracts (PPPs) and subsequently, the government agency Transport for London (TfL) took control of Tube Lines, the infraco which is responsible for the Jubilee, Northern, and Piccadilly lines.

By all measures, the PPP scheme was a catastrophe for the already cash-strapped government, and an expensive one to boot. The private corporations which had taken ownership and responsibility for the operations and upgrade of existing Tube lines cost taxpayers more money, provided worsened service with more disruptions, had a record of safety incidents, and failed to meet project deadlines and requirements.

PPPs were promised to do the exact opposite things for London's network. What went wrong? Read on to find out.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

A business model for a profitable transit system



Mass transit systems are vital to a city and the overall health of the economy. After all, if the NYC Subway shut down, 5.1 million people every day would either not be able to get to work, would be delayed in far-worsened traffic, and/or would have to spend significantly more money on transportation. This would have obvious effects on private business.

Metro systems, with massive passenger throughputs, low friction steel-on-steel rails, and electric propulsion, are tremendously efficient and are by far the greenest way to move about an urban area. However, the cost of building and maintaining complicated infrastructure such as metros is tremendous.

Is the idea of a profitable metro system just a pipe dream? Read on to find out more.

Friday, September 23, 2011

Hello


This blog was created for MBA 517 - Strategic Competitiveness.

Outside of my life at the IIT Institute of Design and Stuart School of Business in Chicago, where I am a dual-degree Master of Design/MBA candidate (class of 2012), I am a hobbyist urban sustainability and transportation enthusiast and advocate. I have prior experience working in public involvement and transportation planning for an urban planning and engineering firm in New York City.

Thoughout the semester, I will follow and analyze innovative business models and ideas in transportation from around the world. Afterwards, who knows what can happen?

- Max