Estimating uncertainty and Misery (Index) of the paratransit experience

IF 3.9 Q2 TRANSPORTATION
Aditi Misra , Wesley Marshall , Lucy O’Sullivan , Molly Wagner , Manish Shirgaokar
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Transportation access significantly impacts inclusion, well-being, and health. However, people with disabilities often struggle to use fixed-route transit due to mobility challenges. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) mandates complementary paratransit services, but these services remain inefficient and unreliable.
This study analyzes 1.16 million paratransit trips in the Denver region, comparing travel time reliability with car travel times using FHWA’s reliability indices: the Planning Index, Buffer Index, and Misery Index. We normalized the data using the paratransit user trip rate (PUTR), a ratio of trip distance to trip time, and conducted user interviews to provide insights into lived experiences and perceptions of service quality.
The results suggest significantly lower travel efficiency compared to car travel, with paratransit users experiencing much longer and less predictable trips. More specifically, paratransit trip times are highly volatile, requiring riders to plan for worst-case scenarios to ensure on-time arrival 95% of the time. On average, paratransit users must allocate 3 hours for trips that would take 20–30 minutes by car. The unpredictability of travel forces riders to overbudget time, significantly impacting daily mobility and quality of life.
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来源期刊
Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives Engineering-Automotive Engineering
CiteScore
12.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
185
审稿时长
22 weeks
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