The Mercury News

SIGNALING FOR FIXES

Federal grants will help cities across the Bay Area modernize traffic lights to adjust their timing

- By Gary Richards grichards@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Traffic lights, damn ’em. Red way too long, don’t seem synchroniz­ed and too often lead to frustrated drivers jamming their way into an intersecti­on on red, blocking traffic across all lanes.

Relief is in the works. More than a dozen cities and agencies across the Bay Area have embarked on a potentiall­y far-reaching plan for smarter lights that has some traffic planners almost giddy over improving one of the top gripes drivers rail about.

The Innovative Deployment­s to Enhance Arterials (or IDEA), in which federal grants are distribute­d to public agencies through the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Commission, will collect data and monitor traffic signal status of each vehicle on its arrival. It will record the data and prepare them for analysis if the signal timing is in need of improvemen­ts.

The adaptive traffic signal operation would adjust the signal timing of red, yellow and green lights to accommodat­e changing road conditions and continuous­ly distribute

green light for optimum traffic signal options and improve travel time and reduce congestion.

“This is definitely a game changer,” said Matt Morley, the public works director in Los Gatos, which will get $700,000 in federal grants to modernize signals throughout town. “This will replace the guts of our control systems, which are antiquated, with modern control systems.”

Traffic lights are a major complaint of drivers, and not just during commute times but at all times.

The National Highway Institute has given a grade of Dplus or worse to reflect how poorly signals function in urban areas nationwide.

This is more than just adding extra green time. That’s so old school.

The new focus is to pinpoint problems almost immediatel­y with a sharp eye on the future when automated vehicles hit the road in great numbers.

“Instead of reacting to customers’ complaints, this will allow staff to proactivel­y identify signal inefficien­cies and take corrective actions,” John Ristow, San Jose’s acting director of transporta­tion, said of the nearly $1.9 million the city will get to upgrade 100 intersecti­ons on eight busy streets.

AC Transit will use $2.3 million for Dumbarton Express service improvemen­ts. Walnut Creek will install a next-generation transit signal priority system on five streets, and Hayward will use the new system at 34 intersecti­ons.

The Valley Transporta­tion Authority will get $830,000 for an accessible automated

vehicle test at the Palo Alto VA Medical Center.

Oakland, Emeryville, Pleasanton, Dublin, Union City, San Rafael, San Ramon and South San Francisco are all jumping on board.

The program set aside $13 million in September. Millions more will be needed, but early results show that more than 1,600 of the 110,000 signals around the Bay Area have been retimed in recent years — reducing travel times by 15 percent; saving more than 3.9 million hours in travel and 11 percent of fuel, or 11.5 million gallons; and reducing emissions by 422.4 tons.

The process now in most cities is to retime lights every three to five years.

About 15 percent of San Jose’s 951 signals have faulty detection on any given day.

“We have an aging and unreliable infrastruc­ture that causes travel delays,” Ristow said. “Most agencies don’t have resources to tackle these. We certainly don’t.”

The new system could detect which buses in Walnut Creek are packed with riders and give them a series of green lights.

Or it could detect pedestrian­s intruding onto Caltrain tracks, alerting drivers of a pedestrian at midblock, or

avoid puzzling intersecti­ons like the “eBay light” at Hamilton Avenue and Graylands Drive in San Jose.

“It is one of the most irritating of Santa Clara County’s traffic lights,” said Sean Everton, who daily sees a handful of shoppers who have discovered that it’s often quicker to exit the parking lot on Hamilton and make a Uturn at Graylands instead of waiting behind a red light to return to Hamilton.

But more needs to be done. Millions more in federal aid is needed to keep on top of advancing software.

“There is a lot of work to be done to consider this a success,” said Walnut Creek Assistant Public Works Director Steve Waymire. “The primary challenge is having technology developed by different companies talking to each other in an efficient and safe manner. As with all of the intelligen­t vehicle systems, security of the system from hackers is also a concern.

“But we are excited to advance this technology; and hopefully, it will be one of many technologi­es that will change the way we view our transporta­tion system.”

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Motorists make their way through a series of traffic signals along West Santa Clara Street in downtown San Jose on Wednesday.
NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Motorists make their way through a series of traffic signals along West Santa Clara Street in downtown San Jose on Wednesday.

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