Talking Vehicle Pilot Program Begins in 3 States

Commercial vehicles and private cars will soon be communicating with each other in New York, Florida and Wyoming as part of the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Connected Vehicle Pilot Program.

Image: U.S. DOT

According to the DOT, the program will serve as a mechanism to expedite the implementation of connected vehicle technology. A statement provided by the agency last year, indicated that “the pilots will be initial deployments of connected vehicle technology in real-world settings with the aim of delivering near-term safety, mobility, and environmental benefits to the public.”

In September 2016, the DOT awarded three cooperative agreements collectively worth more than $45 million to initiate the design/build/test phase of the program. The agency stated the 20 month pilot phase will consist of deployment of integrated wireless in-vehicle, mobile device and roadside technologies.

The intent of the program, according to the transportation agency, is to “encourage stakeholder partnerships between transit agencies, states, private firms and freight shippers to deploy applications using datacaptured from multiple sources (e.g., vehicles, mobile devices, and infrastructure) across all elements of the surface transportation system (i.e., transit, freeway, arterial, parking facilities, and tollways) to support improved system performance and enhanced performance-based management.”

The cities and state participating in the pilot program are New York, Tampa and Wyoming: