MaaS is being operationalized through AIM grant funding awarded to MNDOT. The Minnesota Department of Transportation received funding for a regional platform to enable multi-modal trip planning and payment for residents in a 13-county area in southern Minnesota. The project integrates transportation services across rural, small urban and large urban communities and informs strategies for increasing transit ridership and improving service quality, especially in rural areas. MNDOT strongly emphasizes transit as the backbone of MaaS and all shared mobility and is leveraging AIM to integrate other services. This will allow for better planning to address community need and achieve MNDOT’s goal to facilitate all the mobility options in Southern Minnesota.
Transit agencies and service providers will have access to several data feeds in order to leverage for future mobility partnerships. MNDOT is focusing on two required data specifications: GTFS and GTFS-flex. This will be pursued through public data feeds for agencies to make available on their state platform as well as Google Maps, Apple Maps, Transit, among others.
MNDOT is also working closely with University of Minnesota to research how low-income riders benefit from MaaS, how this AIM grant and additional initiatives will help to reduce VMT, and more. MNDOT looks forward to building on their AIM grant progress with eventual statewide deployment, standardizing data and billing transactions and improving nonemergency medical transportation (NEMT), parking policy, curb management, distance – based fees, etc.
Discussion revolved around several key themes and challenges with innovation in the public sector. Many attendees suggested that agencies and other organizations should take a more modular approach and move towards hiring in-house technology professionals to steer the process for goal setting, requests for proposals, and more.
Attendees asked questions about how the COVID-19 Pandemic has disrupted the planning of this grant work. Additionally, how is COVID-19 pushing transit operations to evolve? How can these grants be leveraged further to address equity issues in transit services and drill down to focus on customer centric solutions for specific customers?
Leading for Change
Forums like this virtual peer exchange allow transit agencies and transit providers that are leading in AIM and mobility innovation to be featured, to connect with others, and to share their best practices. NCMM gives a unique opportunity for transit agencies and their partners to build on AIM and other mobility initiatives. When agencies hear of these innovations already happening, they can build on successes rather than starting from scratch. This allows transit agencies and providers to innovate quicker and to provide better and more cost-effective service to more transit riders.