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PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging.

PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

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Page 1: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration

Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging.

Page 2: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Source

Sterns, R., Antenucci, V., Nelson, C., & Glasgow, N. (2003). Public transportation: Options to maintain mobility for life. Generations, 27 (Summer), 14-19.

Page 3: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Introduction Social service agencies, transportation

service providers, and governmental entities are searching for ways to develop or improve transportation services to meet local travel needs of older people.

Services can be provided to: People of all ages; Age-segregated group; or Both older adults and people with disabilities.

Page 4: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Organization and Management

Transportation services may be organizaed within a single organizational entity acting alone or by two or more entities acting together through some informal or formalized arrangement.

Page 5: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Organization and Management

Organizational structures. Regional transportation authority (RTA).

The most familiar organizational model of public transportation services. Fixed route, fixed schedule, plus: Many new flexibilities.

A unit of local government. City, village, or county.

Page 6: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Organization and Management

Organizational structures (contd.). Social service agencies.

Transportation services to clients with agency-operated vans or buses.

Private enterprises. Tribal governments.

Page 7: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Organization and Management Coordination arrangements.

Brokerage. Identifying customer needs and matching them with available

transportation services. Coordination.

The process of coordination consists of combining arrangements and agreements among transportation providers to pool physical and financial resources, combine transportation capabilities, and improve the capacity of services to meet travel needs.

Three stages – cooperation, development of joint-use arrangements, and consolidation.

Mobility management. Serving customers as opposed to running a bus. Mobility manager carries out the coordination of transportation services. Brokering, facilitating, encouraging, coordinating, and managing both

traditional and non-traditional services to expand the array of transportation services to diverse consumer groups.

Page 8: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Framework for Service Delivery The delivery of transportation services

varies in flexibility, accommodation to people with different levels of functional capability, and cost, affecting how services are provided and how customers gain access to them.

The challenge is to determine the type and level of service that best meeting the needs of residents of the community and to develop appropriate services, given the resources available.

Page 9: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Framework for Service Delivery Framework for service delivery.

Fixed route, fixed schedule. Traditional mode. Dependable and reliable transportation for

functionally capable older adults with least assistance.

Fixed route, flexible schedule. Generally designed to accommodate an area

with recreational opportunities or points of interest along a fixed route.

Jitney, requires high level of functional capability.

Page 10: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Framework for Service Delivery Framework for service delivery.

Flexible route, fixed schedule. This type of service requires additional time

built into a fixed schedule to accommodate a stop that occurs off an established route.

Accommodates declining levels of functional capabilities.

Flexible route, flexible schedule. Demand-responsive or paratransit service. Costs more, suitable for low level of

functional capability.

Page 11: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Framework for Service Delivery

Framework for service delivery (contd.). No specific route or schedule.

Like a private taxi, virtually unlimited flexibility, especially when people are able to call and schedule rides for specific times.

Page 12: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Older Consumer Preferences for Transportation Services

Older adults choose specific forms of transportation for specific trips that meet their physical and emotional needs for specific situations.

Page 13: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Older Consumer Preferences for Transportation Services

Ideal services: Reliable. Provide travel door to door. Available within 30 minutes of a phone

call for service. Provide travel to more than one

destination during an outing. Allow flexibility in choosing destinations

and times. Provide comfortable waiting areas.

Page 14: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Older Consumer Preferences for Transportation Services

Ideal services (contd.). Provide easily accessible vehicles. Travel during evening hours and weekends. Provide friendly, courteous, helpful drivers and

information specialists. Provide easy-to-read and understandable

timetables, maps, and other travel information materials.

Provide training for travelers to help them use the services successfully.

Page 15: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Older Consumer Preferences for Transportation Services

Preferred service features offer the rider control, empowerment, and choice.

Page 16: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Bringing Improved Services to Your Community

Page 17: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Bringing Improved Services to Your Community

Page 18: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Bringing Improved Services to Your Community

Page 19: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Bringing Improved Services to Your Community

Page 20: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Summary Successful transportation service delivery

to older adults as well as others in the community requires the organization and management of a brokerage and coordination or mobility management.

Efficient and effective services are those that combine demand response, fixed and flexible routes, and fixed and flexible schedules.

Page 21: PPA 419 – Aging Services Administration Lecture 10c – Public Transportation and Aging

Summary

The challenge facing mobility managers and transportation planners is to find ways to deliver needed services efficiently in order to achieve the greatest public benefit for the public resources expended.