4.0 Article

Integrating COVID-19 health risks into crowding costs for transit schedule planning

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.trip.2021.100522

Keywords

COVID-19 and transit; Optimum headway; Pandemic health risks; Transit scheduling

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Funding

  1. Canada (NSERC)
  2. NSERC Alliance COVID-19 Grant

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This study explores the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on public transport and proposes a methodology for setting transit line frequencies. The developed mathematical models consider both passenger costs and health risks associated with the pandemic, providing guidance for transit planners and operators in adapting operations during and after the pandemic.
The public transport sector worldwide experienced the worst impact in recent history, in terms of ridership loss, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic negatively affected passengers' perceptions of public transport and is likely to make a lasting impact on ridership, trip patterns, and modal share. Without any supportive changes to transit operations, ridership is likely to decline. This study explores the setting of frequencies in transit lines and proposes a two-part methodology that addresses the changing perceptions of users, especially in a health-related context. The first part develops a mathematical model that expresses the pre-COVID-19 cost of passenger crowding as an integral part of user costs to determine the optimal headway that considers the tradeoffs between user and operator costs. A continuum approximation for the demand of the bus line has been used in the derivation. The second part extends the developed model to include both the costs of the health risks associated with the COVID-19 pandemic and crowding. The developed models will help transit planners and operators to plan and adapt operations to changing health risks during the pandemic and post-pandemic. Several numerical examples are provided to describe the uses and applications of the analytical models using information obtained from the literature.

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