Study of Adequacy of Commercial Truck Parking Facilities--Technical
Report (FHWA-RD-01-158):
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This report documents the findings of a study undertaken to investigate the
adequacy of commercial truck parking facilities serving the National Highway
System (NHS) in response to Section 4027 of the Transportation Equity Act for
the 21st Century (TEA-21). Section 4027 requires the following:
...a study to determine the location and quantity of parking facilities
at commercial truck stops and travel plazas and public rest areas that could
be used by motor carriers to comply with Federal hours of service rules. The
study shall include an inventory of current facilities serving the National
Highway System, analyze where shortages exist or are projected to exist, and
propose a plan to reduce the shortages. The study may be carried out in cooperation
with research entities representing motor carriers, the travel plaza industry,
and commercial motor vehicle drivers.
To assist in the preparation of this report, the Federal Highway Administration
(FHWA) encouraged the creation of partnerships of public- and private-sector
stakeholders at the State level and provided a technical guidance document for
their use in conducting an inventory of current facilities serving the NHS,
analyzing current and projected shortages, and developing plans for action at
the appropriate jurisdictional levels. FHWA provided technical assistance to
the partnerships to guide them in completing these activities. FHWA division
offices worked closely with the partners for approximately one year and provided
guidance and advice on forming and structuring partnership membership, conducting
partnership meetings to review inventory and analysis results, and preparing
partnership status reports that describe actions to mitigate any parking shortfalls
identified. This report summarizes the results of this effort.
This study of the NHS is a follow-up to a previous study of the Interstate
Highway System completed in 1996.(1) Subsequent
to this 1996 report, a number of States also conducted studies of truck rest
parking needs and availability within their jurisdictions.
FHWA solicited input on the truck rest parking issue through the Rest Area
Forum, which FHWA hosted in Atlanta, GA, on June 29–30, 1999. Forum participants
included more than 70 State Department of Transportation (DOT) and enforcement
officials, representatives of the motor carrier industry, commercial truck-stop
operators, commercial drivers, safety advocates, and other interested parties.(2)
In addition, on May 21, 1999, FHWA issued a Request for Information (RFI-ST-001)
to obtain feedback on how best to design, focus, and conduct the Section 4027
study. Five individuals or organizations responded. The results from the 1996
report and individual States’ subsequent studies, input from the Rest Area Forum
participants, and responses to the Request for Information can be summarized
as follows:
- Many Rest Area Forum participants and respondents to the Request for Information
voiced the sentiment that we now know the problem and, therefore, should focus
on solutions rather than on more studies. One significant exception is a response
to the Request for Information that recommends: “The TEA-21 study should count
all private- and public-sector spaces to accurately assess the truck parking
situation.”
- Parking shortages are concentrated and solutions thereto should be targeted
at a corridor or regional level; therefore, the analysis of shortages and
development of solutions should be performed at the corridor, State, or sub-State
rather than the national level.
- Satisfying drivers’ rest parking needs in corridors or regions with either
real or perceived shortages in parking supply is likely to require public,
private, and public-private solutions. Identifying consensus solutions among
parties with competing interests is likely to be easier and more successful
at the corridor, State, or sub-State level.
- A major unknown and point of contention is whether, or to what extent, public
rest area and commercial truck-stop parking are interchangeable. To supply
parking where drivers need it, a better understanding of their parking-related
needs and decision-making processes is required.
In consideration of this input, FHWA has undertaken a two-pronged approach
to the Section 4027 study. First, FHWA contracted for research to clarify drivers’
parking-related needs and decision-making processes. Second, FHWA encouraged
the creation of partnerships of public- and private-sector stakeholders in 49 States
(excluding Hawaii) and provided a guidance document for their use in inventorying
current facilities serving the NHS, analyzing current and projected shortages,
and developing plans for action at the appropriate jurisdictional levels. These
partnerships provided a forum for interested parties, including State and local
agencies as well as the private sector, to examine the problem and formulate
strategies to mitigate any problems identified.
This report, which summarizes the work completed by these partnerships, involved
the following process:
- Estimate parking demand using a modeling approach.
- Inventory public and commercial truck spaces.
- Identify deficiencies by comparing supply and demand.
- Develop recommendations for improvements to mitigate any existing or future
problems identified.
Estimate Parking Demand Using a Modeling Approach
A nationwide estimate of the peak-hour demand for commercial truck parking
facilities resulting from the need to comply with Federal hours-of-service (HOS)
rules was conducted. The approach relied on the development of an engineering
model to estimate the demand for commercial vehicle parking at public and commercial
facilities. The model predicts commercial truck parking demand for a highway
segment based on total truck-hours of travel and the time and duration of the
stops. The model considers the effect of Federal HOS regulations on parking
demand by using these regulations as part of the basis for estimating the average
number of hours spent parking per hour spent driving.
A national survey of truck drivers’ parking-related needs, preferences, and
decision-making processes was conducted as part of the modeling effort. Surveys
were distributed to a national sample of more than 2,000 truck drivers through
site visits and mailings to truck stops. Survey results of drivers’ preferences
were used to estimate the fraction of total parking demand for public and private
parking spaces.
Following are highlights from these efforts:
- There is currently an estimated peak hour demand for approximately 287,000
truck parking spaces at commercial truck stops and travel plazas and public
rest areas serving Interstate highways and other NHS routes carrying more
than 1,000 trucks per day.
- According to drivers’ preferences, the percentages of total demand for parking
at public rest areas and commercial truck stops are estimated as 23 and 77
percent, respectively.
- The 20-year forecast for the annual increase in parking demand is estimated
to be 2.7 percent.
- Drivers’ responses to the survey demonstrated definite preferences and priorities
when it came to choosing where they would park. For long-term rest (more than
2 hours), drivers overwhelmingly prefer commercial truck stops and travel
plazas to public rest areas (78 percent to 6 percent, respectively). For short-term
rest (less than 2 hours), drivers generally prefer public rest areas
to commercial truck stops and travel plazas (45 percent to 19 percent, respectively).
Short-haul driver preferences are the same as long-haul driver preferences,
although short-haul drivers value parking facility features differently than
long-haul drivers.
Additional details surrounding the national demand for commercial vehicle
parking and the national survey of driver needs and preferences can be found
in section 2.0 of this report.
Inventory Public and Commercial Truck Spaces
An inventory of the number of public rest areas and commercial truck stops
that could be used to comply with Federal HOS rules was conducted as part of
this study. The inventory included a survey of State DOTs to quantify the location
and number of public rest areas. A proprietary database developed by Interstate
America served as the primary basis for determining the number of spaces available
at commercial truck stops and travel plazas. The driver survey also addressed
features that truck drivers value at parking facilities. Highlights from the
commercial truck parking supply inventory and driver survey include the following:
- An estimated 315,850 parking spaces at public rest areas and commercial
truck stops and travel plazas serve Interstate highways and other NHS routes
carrying more than 1,000 trucks per day.
- Approximately 10 percent of truck parking spaces are in public rest areas
and 90 percent were in commercial truck stops and travel plazas.
- Expected growth of truck parking spaces at public rest areas is estimated
to be smaller (5.1 percent over the next 5 years) than growth in the
private sector (estimated at 6.5 percent annually).
- Truck drivers value public rest areas primarily for ease of access and convenience
and value commercial truck stops and travel plazas for their amenities.
- A significant percentage (21 percent) of the parking supply used by drivers
to comply with Federal HOS rules appears to occur at loading docks, company
terminals, or other facilities (e.g., fast food restaurants, shopping plazas,
and motels).
- Results from the driver survey and observational field studies suggest some,
but not complete, interchangeability between parking spaces at public rest
areas and commercial truck stops and travel plazas.
Refer to section 3.0 of this report for additional information pertaining
to the supply of commercial truck parking spaces, including drivers’ assessments
of parking facility quality and the interchangeability of public rest areas
and commercial truck stops and travel plazas.
Identify Deficiencies by Comparing Supply and Demand
A four-step process was used to determine where shortages in truck parking
exist or are expected to exist. First, estimates of parking demand over roadway
segments were developed using a modeling approach (section 2.0). Second, estimates
of parking supply were gathered for each segment using available data sources
(section 3.0). Third, a summary of the supply and demand for each roadway segment
was provided to partners for review, verification, and comment. In many cases,
subsequent analyses were conducted to account for the local knowledge of partners
to improve the estimates. Fourth, a final calibration of the model was completed,
and the calibrated model was used to evaluate shortages (section 4.0 ). Highlights
from these analyses follow.
- A shortage of parking at public rest areas may exist in up to 35 States,
and a shortage of total parking may exist in up to 12 States.
- Shortages of parking at commercial truck stops and travel plazas are less
common and, to the extent that these spaces are interchangeable, may offset
shortages in parking at public rest areas.
- Although the driver survey indicates that 23 percent of the demand for truck
parking spaces is at public rest areas, only 10 percent of the supply is at
that type of facility.
- This imbalance in parking availability is underscored by the results of
the driver survey in which 50 percent of the respondents indicated that
parking is rarely or almost never available at public rest areas. Approximately
15 percent reported parking is rarely or almost never available at truck stops
and travel plazas.
- The estimated growth rate of parking spaces at commercial truck stops and
travel plazas (6.5 percent) will accommodate the expected growth in demand
for these spaces (2.7 percent).
- The estimated growth rate of truck parking spaces at public rest areas (5.1
percent over the next five years or 1.0 percent annually) is below the estimated
growth in demand for these spaces (2.7 percent annually). The increased demand
for public parking will exacerbate the supply shortages already apparent for
public parking unless either additional public spaces are made available or
steps are taken to encourage drivers to better utilize the existing supply
of private spaces.
Additional findings stemming from the analysis of commercial truck parking
supply and demand, including a national summary and a State-by-State analysis
of parking shortages, can be found in section 4.0 of this report.
Develop Recommendations for Improvements to Mitigate Any Existing or Future
Problems Identified
The State partnerships provided a set of recommended actions to solve any parking
shortages that have been identified either through this study or as a result
of other similar studies conducted in recent years for their States. These actions
fall into six broad categories, as listed below.
- Expand or improve public rest areas.
- A total of 15 States have firm plans to provide additional parking spaces.
- Eleven of these States provided a specific number of spaces for a total
increase in spaces of approximately 1,600 over the next five years.
- Improve geometric design of public rest areas to increase convenience
for drivers using these facilities.
- Expand or improve commercial truck stops and travel plazas.
- Increase yearly truck registration fees with the stipulation that these
special funds can be used only by States on initiatives to address the
truck parking issue.
- Implement a program that allows States to close rest areas in locations
that are well served by private-sector business and shift funds to areas
where additional development is desirable.
- Remove cost-prohibitive road improvement requirements imposed by State
DOTs upon developers attempting to open new facilities.
- Encourage the formation of public-private partnerships.
- Provide low-interest loans or grants to commercial truck stops to increase
capacity.
- Construct State-owned lots adjacent to commercial truck stops and travel
plazas and enter into agreements with these owners to lease or maintain
the lots.
- Work with owners of commercial truck stops to help them promote the
availability of parking in large lots close to the Interstate highway
(e.g., provide signage on the highway).
- Educate or inform drivers about available spaces.
- Develop Intelligent Transportation System deployments that provide drivers
with real-time information on the location and availability of parking
spaces. For example, investigate using cellular phones and radio frequencies
to broadcast parking locations and availability to drivers.
- Investigate using mailings related to credentials administration for
the International Registration Plan and the International Fuel Tax Agreement
as a means of distributing information on the location and type of parking
spaces within the base State to participating motor carriers.
- Publish and distribute a “trucker’s map,” in both paper and electronic
format, that pinpoints parking facilities for drivers (both public and
commercial), including lot capacity and space availability.
- Change parking enforcement rules.
- Implement more stringent enforcement of parking rules to remove vehicles
from locations such as interchange ramps.
- Change parking limits to permit trucks more time to park at public
rest areas.
- Encourage local government and business support for constructing and
operating commercial truck stop and travel plaza facilities in or near
their community industrial and business parks (i.e., zoning).
- Conduct additional studies.
- Refine the results from the present study and develop more detailed
assessment strategies at specific highway locations (e.g., target heavily
traveled truck corridors).
- Establish a multi-State committee to evaluate alternatives and recommend
solutions that would address the “staging” of trucks at certain locations
in response to “just-in-time” delivery.
- Conduct additional research to further refine the demand model (e.g.,
to accommodate local factors that can influence demand, such as a higher
rate of parking near major distribution centers).
More detail on these and other suggested recommendations from the State partnerships
for reducing truck parking shortages, including recommendations from the 1999
Rest Area Forum and from government and motor carrier industry stakeholders
surveyed as part of this study, can be found in section of this report.
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