2019 MassDOT Transportation Innovation Conference
Date: 4/9/2019 7:30 AM - 4/10/2019 4:30 PM
Location: The DCU Center
50 Foster St
Worcester, Massachusetts
Capacity:
Overview
Online Registration Is Now Closed
Walk-Ins Welcomed
Check out the latest state of the art technology, interactive displays, and the chance to share ideas with peers in related fields.
The annual conference put on by MassDOT is the largest transportation innovation conference in Massachusetts. With over 60 sponsors and exhibitors, the conference will have countless opportunities to meet with experts, as well as interactive demonstrations and engaging displays of cutting edge technology.
The conference will once again include the addition of the Massachusetts Community Transportation Coordination Conference as part of the MassDOT Transportation Innovation Conference. The inspiration behind combining conferences is the increasing interest among stakeholders in collaborating to address transportation barriers for pedestrians, seniors, and people with disabilities.
This combined event will be an invaluable opportunity for state, MPO/local, transit agencies, researchers, human service agency staff, advocates, planners and private sector practitioners to share ideas, sponsor peer-to-peer learning, and collaborate on issues of mutual interest.
The 2-day conference will offer more than 40 breakout sessions! Come learn about innovations being made in the fields of Construction/Materials, Planning/Design, Operations/Maintenance, Safety/Mobility, Technology, and Policy.
The event is open to all transportation professionals including MassDOT, municipalities, consultants, contractors, vendors and manufacturers, MPO/local, transit agencies, researchers, human service agency staff, advocates, planners, and private sector practitioners.
Conference Fee Waiver Opportunity for Community Mobility Organizations and Advocates
MassDOT’s Transportation Innovation Conference features a Community Transportation and Mobility track, focusing on creative approaches to improving access, mobility, and transportation services for older adults, people with disabilities, and low-income commuters in Massachusetts. This track grew out of the Massachusetts Community Transportation Coordination Conference, formerly a stand-alone conference held annually in early May.
To facilitate the integration of the two conferences, MassDOT is offering a fee waiver opportunity for the conference. If you are interested in local and regional community transportation and transportation coordination but cannot pay the conference registration fee, you may be eligible for a fee waiver or scholarship:
MArtap Scholarship Program: Open to all organizations in rural and non-urbanized areas – including Councils on Aging and other transportation providers.
Instructions:
1. Register and pay for the Transportation Innovation Conference by clicking on the "Registration" tab at the top of this page.
2. Apply for the MArtap scholarship for reimbursement at www.mass.gov/forms/martap-scholarship-application.
Fee Waiver Application: Open to individuals with disabilities, seniors, and other self-advocates OR organizations that are current or recent recipients of grants through MassDOT’s Community Transit Grant Program.
Instructions:
Click on the link provided to apply for the Transportation Innovation Conference fee waiver: Fee Waiver Application Form. You do not need to register for the conference. If you receive the fee waiver, you will be automatically registered.
If you do not qualify under these criteria but need assistance paying the conference fee, please email Rachel Fichtenbaum at rachel.fichtenbaum@state.ma.us to be added to a waitlist should additional funds become available (not guaranteed).
Register Today! Click on the Registration tab above.
Become a Sponsor or Exhibitor Today!
Sponsor/Exhibitor Packet
This event is accessible to people with disabilities and individuals with limited English proficiency. If you need a reasonable accommodation (such as American Sign Language Interpreters, assistive listening devices, handouts in alternate formats, etc.) and/or language assistance (such as translated documents or an interpreter) to fully participate, please contact Brenda Codella at bcodella@umass.edu or 413-522-6434 at least 14 days prior to the event. Such services are provided free of charge.
Registration cancellations must be received within 7 days of the event or you will be invoiced for the registration fee.
Learn,
Network,
Discover!
Conference Speakers
Stephanie Pollack
Secretary and CEO, Massachusetts Department of TransportationCarlos Braceras, P.E.
Executive Director, Utah Department of Transportation
Jonathan Gulliver
Highway Administrator, Massachusetts Department of TransportationPatricia Leavenworth
Chief Engineer, Massachusetts Department of Transportation
The 3M Transportation Safety Division Roadshow is coming!
• Learn about 3M Connected Roads• Experience road safety through virtual reality
• Check out road safety innovations with hands-on experiences
• Visit the roadshow theater to see firsthand how 3M products make a difference
Sessions
Sessions | |
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Tuesday, April 9, 2019 | |
7:30 AM - 4:30 PM |
Special eventCredit |
8:30 AM - 9:00 AM |
Special eventOPENING PLENARYGrand Ballroom Jonathan Gulliver, Highway Administrator, MassDOT |
9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 1Session 1, Mobility Track, Room A: Walkability for People of All Ages and AbilitiesWalking is a component of most trips – and an important travel mode in and of itself. Join representatives of WalkBoston, the Massachusetts Commission for the Blind, and the Veterans’ Administration for a workshop on the elements of a walkable community. Walkable communities promote health, access, community engagement, independence, and quality-of-life for older adults and individuals with disabilities. And when communities meet the needs of seniors and people with disabilities, all residents benefit. Using examples from projects underway in communities around Massachusetts – including urban, suburban, and rural contexts – presenters will highlight ways to improve the built environment, as well as policy changes that can improve walking safety, access, and comfort for older adults and people with disabilities. |
9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 1Session 1, Room B: Techniques to Fingerprint Construction MaterialsNew technologies such as X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) and Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) offer a non-destructive analytical technique to determine and verify material composition, providing MassDOT with a level of confidence related to product quality and long-term performance in less time. Using these technologies on select construction materials, MassDOT will be able to compare the material in the field to what is on file from the initial approval process. The ability to quickly confirm that materials used on-site meet contract specifications minimizes the risk for noncompliance. This presentation will illustrate the various materials that are being tested in the lab using these innovative technologies and the processes that have been developed.
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9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 1Session 1, Room C: MassDOT Stream Crossing HandbookThe MassDOT Highway Division will introduce its newly updated Stream Crossing Handbook, which revises and improves the 2010 handbook, Design of Bridges and Culverts for Wildlife Passage at Freshwater Streams. The handbook updates information on current federal and state regulations and addresses evolving MassDOT practices for stream crossing design and installation. It also introduces new reference materials for stream crossing design to accommodate wildlife passage, to consider climate change, and provide guidance for municipal personnel on MassDOT standards and review process. New content has been developed to help municipalities develop designs for local projects, including a summary of the MassDOT review process under MGL Chapter 85-Section 35, with links to MassDOT’s current submittal requirements. In addition, the handbook now includes illustrative designs of selected prototypical culvert and small bridge structures, with links to CAD drawing files, to help in the selection and design of structures that meet MassDOT standards and regulatory requirements for wildlife passage. |
9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 1Session 1, Room D: New Shared Mobility: Electric Scooters, Electric Assist Bicycles, and What’s NextNearly ten years after the docked bike share revolution began in North America, dockless bike share launched in 2017 as a new innovative business model for funding and operations. Then, in 2018, dockless e-scooter share rolled out. These shared mobility systems are part of a larger shift toward expanding options for first and last mile access to transit and on-demand transportation, and fueling the need for more dedicated on-street facilities for bikes and scooters. The rate of adoption has been remarkable – in just one year Bird and Lime reported 36 million scooter and bicycle trips. Such unprecedented growth has presented cities and transit agencies with new work to address permitting, design, equity, curb management, and more. Learn more from a variety of perspectives: companies, planners, municipal, MassDOT and MBTA. |
9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 1Session 1, Room E: Connected Vehicle Technology and the Road to a Connected CorridorAccording to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, connected vehicle technology could reduce crashes by 80%. This session will explore the challenges that come with creating connected infrastructure and will provide information about what is currently being done in Massachusetts. This session will also provide an overview of the US Route 33 Smart Mobility Corridor project near Columbus, Ohio. This 35-mile corridor offers a unique opportunity to deploy and test smart vehicle technology in various settings, including urban, suburban, and rural; and roadway types, including local, arterial, and collector streets and multi-lane divided highway ramps. The project includes the installation of nearly 100 dedicated short-range communication (DSRC) devices, equipping between 600 and 1,200 vehicles with connected vehicle technology, developing V2I applications, and developing a smart network to manage the data flows and system.
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9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 1Session 1, Room Junior Ballroom: Kelley Square ReimaginedKelley Square is a complex intersection of heavily traveled streets in Worcester, which has been characterized by the public as "unique", "special" and "weird". Between 2013 and 2016, Kelley Square represented the single location with the highest number of crashes in Massachusetts, and there is currently little in the way of multimodal accommodations for users wishing to travel through the area. MassDOT is currently advancing a project to improve safety and operations at this location. This session will detail the robust/innovative public engagement and design development process that has led to identification of a first of its kind for Massachusetts – the Hybrid Roundabout (aka "peanut") Preferred Alternative. This alternative will provide clearer definition and delineation of traffic movements, calm vehicular traffic, enhance accommodation for non-vehicular users and enhance neighborhood connectivity and access/egress to surrounding commercial and business interests. The session will also highlight the innovative tools such as 3-D visualization and operational simulation modeling used by the design team to achieve consensus on the identification and selection of the Preferred Alternative.
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10:15 AM - 11:00 AM |
Special eventFirst Floor Exhibits and Refreshments |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 2Session 2, Mobility Track, Room A: Innovative Approaches to Mobility for Low-Income IndividualsLow-income individuals need transportation to access jobs and other community services. Hear from two efforts – a nonprofit in Worcester, and a transit authority in Southern Maine – that are using donations to purchase bus passes for people in need. We’ll also hear from a non-profit in Framingham that partners with its local transit authority to provide transportation – while helping clients prepare for careers in transportation.
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11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 2Session 2, Room B: Advancements in Cement Concrete Research and TestingMassDOT is moving to update its cement concrete specifications for highway construction from a prescriptive-based method to performance-based requirements. During this transition, there is a necessity to expand on – and add to – the methods and technologies used for the evaluation of quality characteristics and mix properties of the concrete. MassDOT’s Research and Materials Section has been evaluating and employing new methodologies and technologies to assess concrete performance. This presentation will illustrate MassDOT’s implementation of several advancements in concrete testing including the use of “Surface Resistivity Meter”, “Maturity Meter”, “Freeze-Thaw” and “Ring Shrinkage.” |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 2Session 2, Room C: Accelerated Bridge Construction TechniquesIncluding two project presentations, the first will highlight the design process used for the plan development of Bridge 2931 in Preston, Connecticut. This structure was one of the first installations in the state that was designed to rely on Ultra High Performance Concrete (UHPC) shear keys, instead of transverse post tensioning cables for its continuity between beam elements. The presentation will discuss the advantages of this system over conventional construction, and show what sorts of geometries lend themselves well to using UHPC shear keys instead of post-tensioning cables. The second presentation will feature the Darlington Upgrade project, a $620 million project to improve an important transit corridor in Adelaide, Australia. Jacobs was responsible for the analysis and design of a continuous, three-span, curved steel tub-girder bridge, carrying both a multi-use path and vehicular traffic over a major expressway. The project was innovative in its use of double composite concrete construction. To minimize expressway closures, the design-build team constructed the bridge at a nearby offsite location and moved it into place using self-propelled modular transporters (SPMTs). This presentation will focus on the considerable design effort, planning, and analysis for the SPMT move, as well as the lessons learned. |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 2Session 2, Room D: Flying Colors: How Teamwork & Technology Drove the Success of Hingham’s Route 3A Road Diet Pilot ProgramWhen engineers and planners proposed narrowing Route 3A east of the rotary in Hingham, many people were skeptical. How could fewer lanes help alleviate safety concerns while maintaining traffic capacity, especially during the peak summer days on the primary route to and from Nantasket Beach in Hull? To test the design, MassDOT and the Town of Hingham, working with engineers from Design Consultants, Inc. and other firms, implemented a pilot program that used delineators to emulate future conditions. The team then employed multiple traffic tracking technologies, including Bluetooth, video and radar, to successfully demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed road diet. In this session, representatives from MassDOT, the Town of Hingham, and Design Consultants, Inc., will detail the challenges they encountered and the path the team traveled to reach consensus on a workable, affordable and effective solution. |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 2Session 2, Room E: Share the Path – Working Together to Expand Our Network of Enjoyable, Useful, Safe, Secure, Comfortable and Inclusive TrailsShared use paths are intuitively attractive for transportation and recreation, and they support many environmental, transportation and public health goals of the Commonwealth, but recurring challenges face communities and proponents who want to build them. MassDOT, DCR and EEA are working together as MassTrails to help move projects from ideas to implementation. This session will explore the benefits of shared use paths and discuss the MassTrails Shared Use Path Planning and Design Guide under development; we will also delve into how the MassTrails team and MassTrails Grant Program are improving key partnerships between the state, municipalities, path proponents and consultants – and what this highly-productive model of interagency cooperation may offer to the Commonwealth. |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 2Session 2, Room Junior Ballroom: Drones Part 1 - UAS Systems and Use-Cases: A New Paradigm for Transportation and Incident ResponseThe first presentation highlights research by the Bridgewater State University GeoGraphics Laboratory to help improve the safety and security of small suburban and rural commuter rail parking lots through unmanned aircraft systems (UAS). The GeoGraphics Laboratory’s project, funded through the National Academies of Sciences, focused on developing and field testing an approach to address these issues using a combination of small UAS (sUAS) for remote sensing, aerial imagery analytics, and cloud-based data analytics, made possible through state-of-the-art communications infrastructure. The second presentation will discuss a UAS research initiative by MassDOT in collaboration with the UMass Transportation Center. The objectives of this research are two-fold: (1) Develop practical procedures and protocols for MassDOT to integrate UAS technology into bridge and rail inspections presently carried out by traditional means, and (2) Conduct a pilot test of the developed procedures and protocols at a bridge or rail inspection site. The third presentation will discuss recent MassDOT Aeronautics Drone Pilot Program shared services mission operations. Activities to be covered include an overview of the breadth of missions across internal and external state agencies. Additionally, a review of the State House Dome inspection mission will include platform selection, sensors, flight operations, team coordination, and analytical products. |
12:15 PM - 1:30 PM |
Special eventLUNCHEON/KEYNOTE SPEAKER/EXHIBITSGrand Ballroom Stephanie Pollack, Secretary of Transportation & Chief Executive Officer for MassDOT Carlos Braceras, Executive Director of the Utah Department of Transportation |
1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 3Session 3, Mobility Track, Room A: New England Community Transportation RoundtableNew Hampshire is amping up its mobility management and statewide coordination efforts. Rhode Island just hired a mobility manager, and the Greater Portland Council of Governments received two national grants this year in support of regional and statewide mobility management efforts they are undertaking. Let’s talk to our neighbors about their efforts to see what we can learn and where we might partner across state lines.
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1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 3Session 3, Room B: From Ground to Cloud: The Future of LIMMSFor decades, MassDOT has relied on an antiquated system of hand-written test report forms, redundant data entry, and numerous decentralized databases to perform its daily functions related to material testing. This inefficient method results in enormous paper consumption, misfiling of documentation, delayed contract certification, sample misidentification, and lack of test data analytics. To resolve these inefficiencies, MassDOT is employing a Laboratory Information Materials Management System (LIMMS) to oversee, analyze and track materials electronically. This presentation will illustrate the implementation strategy for LIMMS including how materials testing equipment will be linked to the software for seamless data collection and the improvement of turnaround time related to material processing, testing, analysis and final acceptance. |
1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 3Session 3, Room C: Developing Strategies for Equity at MassDOTEquity is a key concern of this administration, and MassDOT is working to incorporate equity considerations into all of our policies, plans, services, and initiatives. We are examining the challenges to equity in access to services and destinations that are newly created or perpetuated by changes in the transportation marketplace, including technological innovations and land use development policies, as well as the impacts of transportation policies and infrastructure on transportation outcomes. This panel aims to raise the profile of some of these barriers and describe ways that MassDOT is being proactive about setting policy, developing tools and metrics, and delivering services that are not only mindful but responsive to issues of equity in transportation. |
1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 3Session 3, Room D: Utility Planning Eases Back Bay Bridge ProjectDuring one weekend in 2018, MassDOT replaced the bridge carrying Massachusetts Avenue over Commonwealth Avenue in Boston in just 73 hours, more than 30 hours ahead of schedule. Working with MassDOT, Stantec developed an innovative approach using early utility relocation and accelerated bridge construction techniques to replace the bridge quickly, while minimizing impacts to the traveling public and the local neighborhood. This session will present the innovations that were applied on this project, including use of a separate contract for utility relocations, specially designed precast concrete elements to facilitate rapid construction in the restricted urban environment, and avoiding impacts to surrounding park land through a design approach that established work zones in the existing right-of-way.
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1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 3Session 3, Room E: Testing Automated Driving Systems on Public WaysRepresentatives of the Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) and MassDOT will provide a brief overview of connected and automated vehicles, and discuss how automated driving systems (i.e. self-driving cars) are being tested and researched in the two states, in partnership with the system manufacturers, transit agencies, and municipalities. RIDOT will highlight the first initiative of its Transportation Innovation Partnership (TRIP), the Little Roady Autonomous Shuttle Pilot Project. Working with the startup May Mobility and local partners, the project is bringing electric autonomous shuttles to Providence. This is enabling RI to test and research a range of factors to better understand the potential of new technology to improve mobility options, and will help the State prepare for these changes. MassDOT will share information about the Commonwealth's application process for permitting testing of automated driving systems in well-defined environmental conditions, on approved municipal and state roads across the Commonwealth, and will outline opportunities for municipalities and road owners to participate and facilitate testing. Ryan Jacobs of nuTonomy, a developer of automated vehicles, and currently testing in the Boston area, will provide an overview of the company’s local and international activities. |
1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 3Session 3, Room Junior Ballroom: New Methodologies for Bicycle, Pedestrian and Access to Transit Project PrioritizationAs part of the recently released 2018 Pedestrian and Bicycle Transportation Plans, MassDOT is taking a data-driven approach to prioritize locations for new projects that address safety, equity, accessibility, access to transit, and critical gaps in connectivity. Learn about the new methodology and new public engagement strategies that informed the analysis, how the outcomes are being used to transition quickly from planning to implementation in 2019, and a new count pilot to help track progress. |
2:45 PM - 3:15 PM |
Special eventFirst Floor Exhibits and Refreshments |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 4Session 4, Mobility Track, Room A: Reducing Social Isolation through Age- and Dementia-Friendly TransportationAccess to appropriate transportation is a core component of what makes a community welcoming and livable for residents of all ages – including those with dementia. Communities and regions around the Commonwealth are working on age- and dementia-friendly initiatives, and last year, Massachusetts built on local progress and joined the network of AARP Age-Friendly States with a multi-year action plan. In this session, presenters will discuss local and statewide initiatives to promote age- and dementia-friendly transportation systems, as well as examples of how these efforts are promoting local mobility and reducing social isolation across the Commonwealth.
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3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 4Session 4, Room B: Concrete Pavement SolutionsThis session will include panel members from the concrete industry and MassDOT. Members of American Concrete Pavement Association (ACPA), Massachusetts Concrete & Aggregate Producers (MaCAPA), and National Ready-Mix Association will present on the benefits of concrete pavement as construction strategies. Presenter Bill Cuerdon, former Director of the NY chapter of the ACPA has 30 years of experience with the NY DOT, and a wealth of knowledge in many areas including the design and construction of concrete pavement. There will be an overview of different design, material, and construction specifications and techniques of full depth and overlay projects. Information on projects from New York and midwestern states will also be shared. MassDOT personnel Andrew Paul and Lyris Liautaud will discuss three projects (located in District 2, District 3 and District 4) that have been selected to use concrete pavement solutions. |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 4Session 4, Room C: Innovative Driven Pile Solution for the Rhode Island Route 6/10 Interchange ProjectThis presentation details the execution and results of a comprehensive pile load test program, offers guidance for the potential use of taper tube piles on projects across the New England region, and presents a unique case study where driven piles were value engineered to develop the optimal deep foundation solution. |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 4Session 4, Room D: Beyond the Public Meeting – #PublicInvolvementWe live online – it is where we get our news, where we work and socialize, and where we share our opinions. While public engagement is a critical facet of each of our projects, it is traditionally conducted in a way that is at odds with our evolving digital world. Smart and authentic public engagement can not only inform design, but also enhance our relationship with the communities we serve. Join this interactive session as presenters and participants dive into some of the challenges and opportunities of strategic communications and how a new approach can change the way today’s public is engaged. Learn how to use technology to give voice to underserved populations, get inside the world of virtual public involvement, and learn how to pair digital tools with traditional outreach to engage new audiences. |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 4Session 4, Room E: In the Zone - Work Zone SafetyThis session includes three presentations. The first will discuss MassDOT’s deployment of Portable Traffic Signals (PTS) to alleviate traffic congestion and assist with safety during a 2018 construction project on the Sagamore Bridge. This presentation will discuss the unique circumstances of the project, as well as take an in-depth look at PTS and associated technologies utilized on-site. The presentation will also discuss the use of PTS as an emergency-response tool for traffic management. The second presentation will focus on better hazard awareness for work zone safety, including a module on resources to prevent struck-by incidents with an emphasis on typical hazard scenarios, blind spots for major types of construction equipment, work zone safety construction equipment diagrams, swing radii, the penalty of unverified assumptions in work zone communications, and job hazard analysis. The final presentation will highlight the use of truck mounted attenuator (TMA) automation to improve work zone safety. Through a partnership with Kratos Unmanned Systems Division, Royal Truck & Equipment has developed the first autonomous TMA truck, known as the ATMA. This presentation will discuss the details of the ATMA and its safety benefits. |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 4Session 4, Room Junior Ballroom: Creating a Complete Street on a Gateway BridgeThe 120-year-old North Washington Street Bridge over the Boston Inner Harbor needed to be replaced. The challenge was to create a Complete Street on a Gateway Bridge. The 100’ wide x 1087’ long structure carries 42,000 vehicles per day, heavy pedestrian traffic and numerous utilities from Boston’s North End and West End areas to Charlestown. The existing bridge was eligible for National Register of Historic Places listing, and in conformance with the National Historic Preservation Act, a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) was signed by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), the State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO), MassDOT Highway Division and the City of Boston. The agreement stipulated that the proposed replacement structure be a Gateway bridge, with architectural design elements incorporating the new structure into its surroundings, distinguishing the crossing as a unique place in itself, and include architectural design of structures, lighting, overlooks, separated bicycle lanes and other elements, to encourage use by people of all ages and interests. The design team, included the Boston Public Works Department, MassDOT, Alfred Benesch & Company, and Rosales + Partners, who developed a highly collaborative process, soliciting stakeholder feedback, while working within MOA constraints. Presenters will discuss this process and project results. |
4:30 PM - 6:30 PM |
Special eventReception at Innovation |
Wednesday, April 10, 2019 | |
8:30 AM - 9:00 AM |
Special eventOPENING PLENARYGrand Ballroom Jonathan Gulliver, Highway Administrator, MassDOT |
9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 5Session 5, Mobility Track, Room A: Employment TransportationIn 2016, 85% of all U.S. workers drove to their workplace. In other words, 128 million people drove a car, a van or a truck – mostly alone – contributing to road congestion, pollution, and greenhouse gas emission. The Federal Highway Administration, through the Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program (CMAQ), has funded transportation demand management (TDM) activities nationwide since 1990. |
9:00 AM - 10:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 5Session 5, Room B: Implementing a GIS-based Safety SystemState DOTs are looking for data driven approaches to improve highway safety. Presenters will discuss the approach developed in Connecticut, which includes a custom Safety Management System based on Parts B and C of the Highway Safety Manual (HSM). Network Screening, Diagnosis and Countermeasure Selection Modules are currently in use by CTDOT. VHB presenters will also discuss the updated Crash Data Portal being developed for MA, which will enable users to access crash data in numerous ways. |
9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 5Session 5, Room C: Advancements in Curb Management and Bus Rapid Transit in MassachusettsThe compact downtowns of Massachusetts are attractive to infill development and walkable, transit-oriented lifestyles, but a lack of street parking has driven many communities to restrict new development through impractical parking requirements and the fear of burdensome traffic. Learn how this paradigm is being flipped on its head by treating curb spaces not as parking but as high-capacity terminals for accessing downtown, thanks to new mobility technologies. With smart curb management, development is increasing the person-carrying capacity of front-door parking over thirty times, by integrating ridesharing, micro-transit, e-scooters, shared bikes, and shared autonomous vehicles directly into their access profile. In addition to these new technologies, 2018 was a momentous year for bus riders in greater Boston, as municipalities around the region took bold steps to pilot elements of BRT (Bus Rapid Transit) in collaboration with the MBTA. Focusing on the Massachusetts Avenue pilot project in Arlington, this session will walk participants through the process of putting BRT elements along a critical and congested corridor, including development coordination with a multiagency working group, public outreach efforts, use of innovative BRT elements, design constraints, alternatives development, and selection of a preferred alternative.
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9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 5Session 5, Room D: 2-D Hydraulic Analysis of the Tower Road BridgeThe Tower Road Bridge, programmed for complete replacement by MassDOT in FY 2022, spans the Chickley River approximately 100’ upstream of the confluence of the Chickley and Deerfield Rivers in Charlemont, Massachusetts. This confluence, coupled with the presence of an existing 2-span railroad bridge just 50’ downstream of the Tower Road Bridge, creates a hydraulically-complex bridge replacement project well-suited to be one of MassDOT’s first applications of two-dimensional (2-D) hydraulic analysis. The presentation will provide an overview of the unique hydraulic features of this crossing, explain the advantages offered by the use of 2-D modeling on this project, discuss model development, summarize hydraulic and sediment transport/scour analysis results, and wrap-up with lessons learned. |
9:00 AM - 10:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 5Session 5, Room E: Construction Project Sequencing, the Customer Wins!The MassDOT Highway Division and the MBTA have been working to develop a more coordinated approach for the 2019 construction season and beyond. The goal is to have ongoing coordination efforts to maximize regional traffic mobility in the face of multiple highway, transit, municipal and private development projects that are reducing vehicular lane capacity and creating train and bus diversions. In 2019, a combined 125 projects will have impacts to the Greater Boston road and rail network. Working collaboratively, the MassDOT Highway Division and the MBTA will strategize future project sequencing to mitigate the overall impacts to the customer and ensure that construction activity on one road or transit facility will not place a severe burden on other roads and transit facilities. |
9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Concurrent Session 5Session 5, Room Junior Ballroom: Drones Part 2 - Developing & Deploying Advanced UAS Applications: The Case for Collaboration Among Government, Industry and AcademiaIn the first presentation, the MassDOT Aeronautics Division will discuss how the big data challenges are being addressed through an effort known as the Drone Data Analytics and Cybersecurity Program. The program includes managing the voluminous amount of collected data (predominantly imagery and video). The MassDOT Aeronautics Drone Program team recognizes the need for a solution to support, 1) the management of UAS operations, 2) secure storage and analysis of the UAS sensor data, and 3) the secure dissemination of end products to MassDOT users and decision makers. |
10:15 AM - 11:00 AM |
Special eventFirst Floor Exhibits and Refreshments |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 6Session 6, Mobility Track, Room A: Integrating Consumers into Community Transportation PlanningGroups in Springfield and Worcester each received national, competitive grants this year to include consumers in planning transportation services. Each initiative used different strategies to engage older adults, individuals with disabilities, and other groups that have traditionally been left out of transportation decision-making processes. Learn about each project, its outcomes, and lessons learned.
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11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 6Session 6, Room B: Use of Adaptive Traffic Control Signals in MassachusettsThree presentations will highlight the development, installation, and implementation of adaptive traffic signal systems to increase efficiency and improve the operation of existing roadways. The first presentation discusses a project that has installed an adaptive traffic signal system in Burlington, Massachusetts, at 27 signalized intersections along Burlington Mall Road, Cambridge Street, and the Middlesex Turnpike. The upgraded system provides enhanced capabilities to adapt to seasonal increases in traffic flow accessing the Burlington Mall, adjust timings to accommodate traffic volume surges due to events on I-95 nearby, and to minimize disruptions to normal signal operation resulting from emergency vehicle passage as they service Lahey Clinic and the two fire stations located within the project area. A live demonstration of the traffic management software will also be shown. The second presentation highlights an innovative public-private partnership between the City of Quincy and Ocean State Signal to bring the City’s traffic signal technology up to a modern standard and implement adaptive traffic signal system technology at more than 20 intersections along key corridors. The final presentation will focus on an innovative adaptive control method called Self-Organizing Traffic Signals. This method retains the essential features of fully actuated control, supplemented by new switching rules that organically lead to coordination and can reduce traffic delays and may offer significant decreases in delay for transit vehicles. |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 6Session 6, Room C: Strength Evaluation of Corroded Beam EndsThe state of Massachusetts maintained 482 structurally deficient bridges in 2017 (FHWA 2017). Corrosion of steel girder ends is a prevalent problem, due to chemical substances which are employed seasonally to winterize the road. These substances, due to leaking bridge joints, result in section loss at beam ends, significantly reducing the bearing capacity of the bridges. Extensive thickness reduction can potentially result in load posting recommendations. This study investigates the effect of beam end corrosion on the capacity of steel girder bridges, and aims to develop a new procedure to accurately evaluate their remaining strength. The first part of this research is initiated by collecting data from MassDOT inspection reports. The most common shapes and locations of corrosion topologies are identified and quantified, making use of inspection reports across the state of Massachusetts. Second, loading tests are performed on six full-scale beams with natural corrosion obtained from bridges undergoing deconstruction. The effects of initial deformation, web and flange holes are investigated. The ultimate strength and post buckling behavior of the system are presented. Numerical models are developed and calibrated using the experimental data. Finally, new procedures, which could be incorporated in the Massachusetts Bridge Manual, may also be useful for DOT engineers nationwide. |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 6Session 6, Room D: South Massachusetts Avenue Corridor Safety ImprovementsThe City of Cambridge undertook the South Massachusetts Avenue Corridor Safety Improvements project in 2017, with the goal of improving overall safety for users and supporting sustainable transportation through “quick-build” methods. The City and design team evaluated existing conditions and worked to develop low-cost and highly-effective design solutions to increase safety and support walking, bicycling, and transit along one of Cambridge’s busiest corridors. With input from the community and the stakeholders, the team created a low-cost design involving multiple quick-build design elements that offered flexible implementation as well as the possibility for future modifications. The design incorporated restriping pavement markings, signal re-phasing with protected/separate turning movements, additional signage, installation of flexible delineators, separated bicycle lanes, an additional crosswalk, accessible parking spaces and on-street parking, and the City’s second bus priority lane. Through these modifications, the City produced not only an affordable solution, but one that improves the safety and comfort of sustainable transportation. The project was implemented in late fall 2018. |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 6Session 6, Room E: Digitizing Municipal Transportation WorkflowsMassDOT GIS Services has released the Road Inventory Submission Application (RISA), a tool designed to replace existing methods of updating the Road Inventory File with a modern, web-based interface. RISA will allow local and regional governments to add roads and suggest changes directly to the MassDOT Road Inventory File, a GIS product used to assess municipal Chapter 90 disbursements. |
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM |
Concurrent Session 6Session 6, Room Junior Ballroom: Erosion and Sediment Control TrainingMassDOT, MassDEP, ACEC and CIM have partnered to provide statewide environmental training for consultants, contractors and public servants. The purpose of this training is to improve environmental stewardship on Highway Division projects through design, selection and implementation of stormwater Best Management Practices. The session will provide an overview of the material provided in the training, with focus on particular issues and challenges that have emerged during the development and implementation of this training. Panel members will share their unique perspective on these challenges and discuss opportunities to improve environmental compliance on construction projects statewide. |
12:15 PM - 1:30 PM |
Special eventLUNCHEON/KEYNOTE SPEAKER/EXHIBITSGrand Ballroom Patricia Leavenworth, Chief Engineer, MassDOT |
12:15 PM - 1:30 PM |
Special eventMobility Management Networking LunchShowcase corner, first floor. |
1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 7Session 7, Mobility Track, Room A: Transportation as a Social Determinant of HealthTransportation is one of the “social determinants of health:” the social, economic, and environmental factors that affect health. Learn about examples of partnerships between public health and transportation that are underway in Massachusetts to reduce barriers to healthcare. First, hear from two Community Health Network Area (CHNA) coalitions that have identified transportation as a priority. The CHNAs from the Blue Hills and North Central regions will each discuss why they see transportation as a health issue and how they are addressing it through multi-sector collaboration. Then, learn about an innovative effort from rural Central Mass to help physicians understand the role of transportation in healthcare – by incorporating transportation experiences into the medical school curriculum.
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1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 7Session 7, Room B: Using Sketch-Level Modeling Tools for Rail VisionBy the end of 2019, the MassDOT/MBTA Rail Vision will describe a commuter rail system that more effectively serves the future Boston Region. Planning for an uncertain future over a vast established network of commuter rail lines, spanning 388 route miles and almost 150 stations, requires creative thinking, regarding what kind of service is explored and how performance is measured. Rail Vision is conducting this analysis through two tiers– one using sketch tools and a second tier using traditional models (CTPS Travel Demand Model and Rail Traffic Controller). This presentation will focus on what has been learned from the first tier, where sketch-level modeling tools were applied to quickly and easily model performance of different service concepts, to understand how they affect key metrics, including ridership and operational feasibility, at a high-level. These tools – ATTUne for rail operations, the Regional Dynamic Model for ridership, and an Operating Costs model – informed decisions about which types of concepts work best for this region, helping narrow the options from over 65 service concepts to 7 alternatives in a short timeframe. |
1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 7Session 7, Room C: Redefining How We Think about Infrastructure: Improving Mobility and the Public RealmWhile roadway viaducts, bridges, and overpasses are commonly found in cities, at times even occupying large areas, the spaces below them often create undesirable public realm experience and impacts on pedestrian and bicycle networks. Some past attempts at creating public realm improvements under viaducts have suffered, due to a lack of design and planning integration with basic maintenance and repair requirements for the viaduct structure above. This presentation will focus on design innovations to the spaces under roadway viaducts developed through two projects, one that was recently completed, and another in the preliminary design phase: MassDOT's Underground at Ink Block, and the community-led concept design process for Charlesgate park under the Bowker Overpass, both in Boston. These projects show, that when included early in the integrative design process, these types of spaces can become mobility and public space assets, and potentially even facilitate maintenance and repair for the viaduct structures. Both projects also incorporate green storm water infrastructure where possible, improving water quality while also creating a more aesthetically pleasing environment. The presentation will outline observations and lessons learned, in terms of how the design team considered bridge maintenance and repair from the outset, green storm water management opportunities, and partnerships with local private actors and community groups to ensure viable and sustainable activation and maintenance of the under-viaduct spaces.
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1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 7Session 7, Room D: An Ongoing Study in Municipal Transportation Best PracticesEvery town in the Greater Boston Metro area struggles with traffic. Traffic congestion affects quality of life, has economic impacts in lost productivity, and contributes to climate change. On a local level, traffic congestion is often used as a basis for opposition to new development. A 2018 study by Einstein, Palmer, and Glick of Boston University, found that the most cited reason for opposition to new development is traffic. As much as the problem will show up as a municipal concern, most towns lack the means, expertise, and influence to deal with this regional scale problem, and the issue is often passed on as one to move up the chain (i.e. to the state or federal level). Despite the ostensible size mismatch there are significant opportunities for towns to help address both the local and regional problem. The Town of Weston has been collaborating with other towns, regional/state/federal agencies, and other transportation experts and providers on a practical set of solutions, and will share its initial findings on Transportation Best Practices where a municipality (Weston) can mitigate traffic issues and help improve transportation locally and regionally. |
1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 7Session 7, Room E: Accessibility Apps at the T: Removing Barriers through TechnologyThe panel will introduce three distinct existing and/or emerging applications designed, in whole or in part, to address accessibility barriers. Applications to be discussed include: the BlindWays App, which uses crowdsourcing to provide blind/low vision users with detailed directions to bus stops; the MBTA Trip Planner, in which the T and Google Maps partnered to provided heightened accessibility information about all MBTA stops; and AccessMBTA, which will be piloted this spring, and which uses Bluetooth beacon technology to convert text-based travel information on station advertising screens into audio. The session will also cover the importance of user testing in ensuring such emerging technologies are accessible to all. |
1:30 PM - 2:45 PM |
Concurrent Session 7Session 7, Room Junior Ballroom: State and Local Efforts Surrounding Climate Change ResiliencyThe panel for this session will describe the efforts behind creating the nation’s first, integrated State Hazard Mitigation Climate Adaptation Plan (SHMCAP) and the development of statewide climate change projections, including MassDOT’s/EOEEA’s efforts to standardize sea level rise and storm surge data along the Massachusetts coastline for use by state agencies, municipalities, and private stakeholders. An overview of MassDOT’s actions contained in the SHMCAP will be provided, including those that affect design standards and guidelines. This session will further present the City of Boston’s Climate Ready Boston initiative and the steps the City is taking towards implementation, including the Public Works Department’s recently released “Climate Resilient Design Standards & Guidelines for Protection of Public Rights-of-Way”. |
2:45 PM - 3:15 PM |
Special eventFirst Floor Exhibits and Refreshments |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 8Session 8, Mobility Track, Room A: Connecting Seniors to Ride-Hailing PlatformsOn-demand ride-hailing platforms like Uber and Lyft are helping to improve mobility, but can be challenging to use for those unfamiliar with or not in possession of the necessary smartphone technology. This session will feature a presentation from TRIPPS, a transportation resource for older adults based in Brookline, that developed a curriculum to teach seniors how to use Uber and Lyft. We'll hear from GoGoGrandparent, a company that requests and monitors transportation network company (TNC) rides for older adults who do not have access to a smart phone. And Lyft will demo their "concierge" product, a tool used by transit agencies and organizations to schedule and dispatch rides for consumers. General information about organizations partnering with TNCs to serve older adults, people with disabilities, and low-income individuals will also be included.
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3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 8Session 8, Room B: |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 8Session 8, Room C: |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 8Session 8, Room D: |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 8Session 8, Room E: Applied Technology for the Inventory and Assessment of MassDOT and MBTA-owned Pedestrian InfrastructureThe first presentation will focus on the accessibility of the MBTA system and the MBTA’s Plan for Accessible Transportation Infrastructure (PATI), a part of its long-range strategy to achieve a fully accessible system. To support that goal, the MBTA collected accessibility data at 7,690 bus stops and 177 rail stations throughout its service area. The presentation will discuss the planning and design process that went into this substantial data collection undertaking, the data scoring, and the establishing of priorities for future improvements. The presenters will also share lessons learned about survey and scoring design, personnel selection and training, and quality control. The second presentation will highlight an ongoing MassDOT project examining the use of LiDAR as a tool to support efficient inventory updates and condition assessments of pedestrian infrastructure under MassDOT’s jurisdiction. Focusing on the State Route 9 corridor, the immediate scope of this study is to collect and process data with a mobile-LiDAR system, to verify and update the existing MassDOT’s sidewalk inventory data, and to incorporate physical condition information into the inventory geodatabase. It is anticipated that the outcome will provide MassDOT’s Highway Division with accurate information from which to prioritize sidewalk infrastructure maintenance and construction programs. |
3:15 PM - 4:30 PM |
Concurrent Session 8Session 8, Room Junior Ballroom: MassDOT's Project Delivery Process - Updates and ChangesThis session will focus on recent improvements to the MassDOT Highway Division’s project delivery process including: early project coordination and scoping, how they are leveraging technology and lessons learned from the use of MapIT and Bluebeam, how they are using metrics to drive performance, and tips for municipalities for managing STIP projects, and upcoming initiatives. |
Sponsors
Reach Your Target Market at the Largest Transportation Innovation Conference in Massachusetts!
After the success of last year’s Complete Street replica, this year’s conference will again have a Complete Street display featuring a Roundabout! The Complete Street Roundabout will include bicycle and traffic signals, crosswalks, protected bike lanes, dedicated bus lanes, electric scooters and bikes, drones and more!There will be live demonstrations throughout the day showcasing drones, electric chainsaws, ADA sidewalk inspection and construction, the MassTrails manual, just to name a few.
Come demonstrate your innovative equipment in our to-scale replica of a Roundabout! This unique opportunity will provide attendees and prospective customers alike to see your equipment in full operation. All Sponsors and Exhibitors will be located on the first floor along the street. Gold Sponsors have the chance to create and show off their company by creating their own parklet on the street! Show off your equipment to over 1000 professionals who attend the event.
RESERVE YOUR BOOTH TODAY!
The annual MassDOT Transportation Innovation Conference attracts transportation professionals from all over New England who are seeking the latest information on innovative technologies, designs and practices.
This combined event will be an invaluable opportunity for state, MPO/local, transit agencies, researchers, human service agency staff, advocates, planners, and private sector practitioners to share ideas, sponsor peer-to-peer learning, and collaborate on issues of mutual interest.
The conference runs from 7:30AM to 4:00PM on April 9 & 10, 2019.
SPECIAL SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES
GOLD LEVEL SPONSORSHIP
A GOLD Level Sponsor receives parklet space, skirted table and chair as well as the following:
• Two additional complimentary attendee registrations
Your logo will also be included on:
• Innovation Conference App, with company information, and link to sponsor’s website
• Event website (including link to sponsor’s website)
• Emails and direct mail marketing materials
• Event brochure that is distributed the morning of the event
• Shown during the conference slide show that is played throughout the event in the main ballroom
• Company banner displayed in main ballroom
• Session agenda signs outside each meeting room
SILVER LEVEL SPONSORSHIP
A SILVER Level Sponsor receives booth space, skirted table and chair as well as the following:
• One additional complimentary attendee registrations
Your logo will also be included on:
• Innovation Conference App, with company information, and link to sponsor’s website
• Event website (including link to sponsor’s website)
• Emails and direct mail marketing materials
• Event brochure that is distributed the morning of the event
• Shown during the conference slide show that is played throughout the event in the main ballroom
Cost: $1,500.00
BRONZE LEVEL SPONSORSHIP
A BRONZE Level Sponsor receives booth space, skirted table and chair as well as the following:
Your logo will also be included on:
• Innovation Conference App, with company information, and link to sponsor’s website
• Event website (including link to sponsor’s website)
• Event brochure that is distributed the morning of the event
• Shown during the conference slide show played throughout the event in the main ballroom
Cost: $750.00
EXHIBITOR BOOTH
Your Exhibitor Booth Includes:
• A 8-foot skirted table, one chair and one waste paper basket
• Additional chairs are available on request, depending on the number of attendees registered by your organization
• An electrical outlet
Cost: $500.00
FOR-PROFIT Fees include an exhibit booth and one complimentary conference registration, continental breakfast, lunch and breaks. Exhibitor assistants must pre-register online at $150.00 each.
NON PROFIT EXHIBITOR: $150.00
Includes an exhibit booth. Each agency attendee must pre-register online for the conference at $150.00 each. Non-Profit agencies interested in being a sponsor must pay regular sponsor fees.
GOVERNMENT AGENCIES: $150.00
Includes an exhibit booth. Each agency attendee must pre-register online for the conference at $75.00 each. Government agencies interested in being a sponsor must pay regular sponsor fees.
Online registration is now available. Click on the "Sponsor Fees" tab at the top of the page. Registration forms can also be emailed to donnelly@umass.edu.
SPONSOR/EXHIBITOR PACKET
Questions can be directed to Kathryn Donnelly at the UMass Transportation One Center - (413) 230-6791.
FIRST FLOOR EXHIBIT SPACE
Proposed first floor layout. More details coming soon!
Booth choice will be given to Gold Level Sponsors first, then Silver, then Bronze, then Exhibitors in order of paid registrations.
ALL SPONSOR/EXHIBITOR BOOTH INCLUDES:
• 8 foot skirted table, one chair and one waste paper basket
• Additional chairs are available on request, depending on the number of attendees that your organization registers.
• Indicate any special considerations and requests, including electrical outlets.
Exhibitors/Sponsors will be required to pay for any exhibit-specific audiovisual equipment, such as a table-top or free-standing TV-VCR. Please contact the UMTC at 413-545-2604, for specific equipment costs.
Exhibitors can SET UP on April 8 - 11:00am to 4:00pm and on April 9 between 6:00am and 7:30am. Exhibitors MUST enter through Door 4 on Major Taylor Blvd. prior to show hours.
Dismantling of exhibits may not occur prior to 4:30pm on April 10, 2019.
Arrangements may be made for shipment and storage of exhibitor displays to The DCU Center prior to the conference. There will be handling charges depending on the weight of the package(s). Should you need to ship items to The DCU Center for use during your event, please address the boxes as follows:
Guest Name (or the person who will be on site)
Your Company Name / MassDOT Transportation Innovation Conference, The DCU Center, 50 Foster St, Worcester, MA 01608
Venue
The DCU Center
The Convention Center has 100,310 square feet of exhibit space, 23,636 square feet in 11 meeting rooms, and a 12,144 square foot ballroom, (the largest in Central Massachusetts). The DCU Center is designed and sized specifically for the professional fulfillment, comfort and budget of small to large-sized conventions, meetings, social events and trade shows.
• 58,960 square feet of contiguous Exhibition Space
• 2 Ballrooms
• 11 Meeting Rooms (inclusive of Ballrooms)
• 2 Lounges
• Exquisite Pre-function Space
• Superb In-house Catering
• Separate Entrances for all Exhibit Halls
• Utility Floor Boxes located on 30-ft. centers
• Sophisticated Communication and Utility Services
• Electric: 120, 208 and 480 volt
• Water In and Out
• Compressed Air
• Voice, Video, CATV, Telephone and Data Communication
• Satellite Down-Link Capabilities
• Adjustable Lighting Levels
• 3 Access Doors that provide direct entry for large semis and other equipment onto Exhibit Hall floor
• Floor Load: Exhibition Hall - 350 pounds per square feet
Ballrooms & Meeting Rooms - 100 pounds per square feet
• Ceiling heights:
Exhibit Hall-30'
Ballroom-19'
Jr. Ballroom-14'8"
• Meeting Rooms-13'6", Showcase Corner-36'
• Dock Height: 4' with adjustable dock levelers
• Handicap Accessible
Area Hotels
Hilton Garden Inn
35 Major Taylor Blvd, Worcester, MA 01608
Phone: (508) 753-5700
Courtyard Worcester
72 Grove St, Worcester, MA 01605
Phone: (508) 363-0300
Holiday Inn Express
110 Summer St, Worcester, MA 01608
Phone: (508) 757-0400
AC Hotel by Marriott Worcester
125 Front St, Worcester, MA 01608
Phone: (774) 420-7555
Agenda
Tuesday, April 9, 2019
Registration/First Floor Exhibits: 7:30 AM – 8:30 AM
OPENING PLENARY: 8:30 AM – 9:00 AM
CONCURRENT SESSION #1: 9:00 AM – 10:15 AM
Break/First Floor Exhibits: 10:15 AM – 11:00 AM
CONCURRENT SESSION #2: 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM
LUNCHEON/KEYNOTE SPEAKER/EXHIBITS: 12:15 PM - 1:30 PM
CONCURRENT SESSION #3: 1:30 PM- 2:45 PM
Break/First Floor Exhibits: 2:45 PM - 3:15 PM
CONCURRENT SESSION #4: 3:15 PM- 4:30 PM
Reception: 4:30 PM - 6:30 PM
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Registration/First Floor Exhibits: 7:30 AM – 8:30 AM
OPENING PLENARY: 8:30 AM – 9:00 AM
CONCURRENT SESSION #5: 9:00 AM – 10:15 AM
Break/First Floor Exhibits: 10:15 AM – 11:00 AM
CONCURRENT SESSION #6: 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM
LUNCHEON/KEYNOTE SPEAKER/EXHIBITS: 12:15 PM - 1:30 PM
CONCURRENT SESSION #7: 1:30 PM- 2:45 PM
Break/First Floor Exhibits: 2:45 PM - 3:15 PM
CONCURRENT SESSION #8: 3:15 PM- 4:30 PM
Directions
Directions and Parking
The DCU Center's street address is 50 Foster Street, Worcester, MA 01608. Please see the below directions to help you find us from your location.
Get directions from the Public Transportation / North / Northeast / East / Southeast / South / Southwest / West / Northwest / Airports
From the North:
Sterling; Leominster; and Fitchburg: Take Rt. 12 S. to Rt. 190 S. to Rt. 290 W. Get off at Exit 18. Follow signs to the DCU Center.
Nashua, NH and Manchester, NH: Take Rt. 3 S. to Rt. 495 S. to Rt. 290 W. Get off at Exit 18. Follow signs to the DCU Center.
From the Northeast:
Marlborough; Lowell; Lawrence; Haverhill; and Portsmouth, NH: Take Rt. 495 S. Get off at Exit 25B. Take Rt. 290 W. Get off at Exit 18. Follow signs to the DCU Center. Lincoln; Salem; and Concord: Take Rt. 95 S (Rt. 128 S) to I- 90 W (the Mass Turnpike West) to Rt. 495 N. Get off at Exit 25B. Take Rt. 290 W. Get off at Exit 18. Follow signs to the DCU Center.
From the East:
Wellesley; Newton; Cambridge; and Boston: Take I-90W (Mass Turnpike West) to Rt. 495-N to Rt. 290-W. Get off at Exit 18. Follow signs to the DCU Center. Framingham; Natick; Westborough; and Shrewsbury: Take Rt. 9 W all the way into Worcester. When you get to the Worcester line, "White City Shopping Center" will be on the left. Stay on Rt. 9 and proceed to your 8th set of lights. Take a left onto Major Taylor Blvd. At the 4th set of lights, the DCU Center is on your right.
From the Southeast:
Uxbridge; Woonsocket, RI; Pawtucket, RI; Providence, RI; and Warwick, RI: Take Rt. 146 N to Rt. 290 E. Get off at Exit 16. Take a left at the end of the ramp. At the 3rd set of lights (Major Taylor Blvd.), the DCU Center is on your left. Taunton; Attleboro; and Foxboro: Take Rt. 495-N to Rt. 290-W. Get off at Exit 18. Follow signs to the DCU Center. Falmouth, Hyannis, Provincetown: Take Rt. 6 W to Rt. 28 S towards Providence, merge onto Rt. 25 W and stay straight onto Rt. 495 N to Rt. 290-W. Get off at Exit 18. Follow signs to the DCU Center. Norwood, Brockton; and Quincy: Take Rt. 95 N (Rt. 128 N) to I-90 W (the Mass Turnpike West) to Rt. 495 N to Rt. 290-W. Get off at Exit 18. Follow signs to the DCU Center.
From the South:
Webster; Putman, CT; Plainfield, CT; Norwich, CT; and New London, CT: Take Rt. 395 N. to Rt. 290 E. Get off at Exit 16. Take a left at the end of the ramp. At the 3rd set of lights (Major Taylor Blvd.), the DCU Center is on your left.
From the Southwest:
Sturbridge; Southbridge; Harford, CT; and New York, NY: Take I-90 E. (the Mass Turnpike East) to Exit 10 (Auburn). After the tollbooth, bear left at the fork. Take Rt. 290 E. Get off at Exit 16. Take a left at the bottom of the ramp (there is a light). At the 3rd set of lights (Major Taylor Blvd.), the DCU Center is on your left.
From the West:
Sturbridge; Southbridge; Harford, CT; and New York, NY: Take I-90 E. (the Mass Turnpike East) to Exit 10 (Auburn). After the tollbooth, bear left at the fork. Take Rt. 290 E. Get off at Exit 16. Take a left at the bottom of the ramp (there is a light). At the 3rd set of lights (Major Taylor Blvd.), the DCU Center is on your left.
From the Northwest:
Barre; Athol; Orange; Greenfield; and Brattleboro, VT: Take Rt. 122 S., remaining on until you reach Worcester. Rt. 122 S becomes Pleasant Street. Stay straight Pleasant Street. Tun left onto Main Street. Turn right onto Foster Street. Follow Foster Street until you see the DCU Center on your left.
From Local Airports:
Worcester Regional Airport, Worcester, MA: Turn left onto Airport Dr. and follow Airport Dr. to the end, bearing right at the bottom of the hill. Take right onto Pleasant St. Follow Pleasant St. for about 3 miles until you come to a rotary. Take the 3rd exit off the rotary onto Highland St. Follow Highland St. for approximately 1.5 miles, turn right onto Major Taylor Blvd. Follow Major Taylor Blvd. for approximately 0.1 miles, and the DCU Center will be on your right. Logan Airport, Boston, MA: Take the Sumner Tunnel to Rt. 93 S, to I-90 W (the Mass Turnpike West). Get off at Exit 10 (Auburn). After the tollbooth, bear left at the fork. Take Rt. 290 E. Get off at Exit 16. Take a left at the bottom of the ramp (there is light). At the 3rd set of lights (Major Taylor Blvd.), the DCU Center is on your left. Bradley International Airport, Windsor Locks, CT: Take Rt. 91 N to I-90 E. (the Mass Turnpike East) to Exit 10 (Auburn). After the tollbooth, bear left at the fork. Take Rt. 290 E. Get off at Exit 16. Take a left at the bottom of the ramp (there is a light). At the 3rd set of lights (Major Taylor Blvd.), the DCU Center is on your left. Manchester Airport, Manchester, NH: Take Rt. 3 S. to Rt. 495 S. to Rt. 290 W. Get off at Exit 16. Take a right at the end of the ramp. At the 3rd set of lights (Major Taylor Blvd.), the DCU Center is on your left. TF Green Airport, Warwick, RI:
Take Rt. 95 N to Rt. 146 N to Rt. 290 E. Get off at Exit 16. Take a left at the end of the ramp. At the 3rd set of lights (Major Taylor Blvd.), the DCU Center is on your left.
Please Consider Using Public Transportation:
The MBTA commuter rail can be taken to Union Station, 34 Washington Square in Worcester. Union Station is located less than half a mile from the DCU enter. To walk from Union Station to the DCU Center, take a left upon exiting the station. Then, take a right onto Foster Street and follow Foster Street for about .2 miles. Once you've passed St. Vincent Hospital (on your right), cross the street to the DCU Center plaza. The Arena Box Office entrance will be directly in front of you. To enter the Convention Center, bear right down the plaza to Door #2, or Door #1 (revolving doors) on Major Taylor Blvd.For commuter rail fares and schedules to and from Worcester, please visit the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) at www.mbta.com or by calling 617-222-5000.
WRTA and WRTA ADA Paratransit
The Worcester Regional Transit Authority (WRTA) is a regional transit system that services the City of Worcester and the surrounding 36 communities in the Central Massachusetts area with a bus fleet that includes all-electric buses as well as many diesel-electric hybrid buses. www.therta.com
To schedule paratransit trips please call 508.791.WRTA option 3. Don't forget to schedule your return trip.
Parking at Union Station? The WRTA has several bus routes that will take you by the DCU Center. Routes 3, 23, 24, 26, 30 and 31. For more information visit the WRTA website.
Peter Pan
Peter Pan Bus Lines brings you to Union Station, 2 Washington Square, Worcester, MA 01604
Attendees
First Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Grace | LimeBike |
Chris | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Cesar | Sales Solutions, Inc. (GA) |
Michael | 3M (MN) |
Robert | HNTB Corporation |
Ryan | All States Materials Group |
Art | Indus Inc. |
Richard | Tighe & Bond (Woburn) |
Aaron | eNdoto Corp. (East Hartford CT) |
Todd | Bryant Associates, Inc. |
John | Fuss & O'Neill, Inc. (Manchester NH) |
Genevieve | Michael Baker International (CT) |
George | eNdoto Corp. (East Hartford CT) |
Dave | Highway Rehab Corporation (NY) |
Matt | Benesch (MA) |
Pompeo | Weston & Sampson |
Joe | Innovative Surface Solutions (NY) |
Andy | EMSEAL Joint Systems |
Sal | Precision Concrete Cutting (CT) |
Aaron | Advanced Drainage Systems, Inc. |
Michael | Sunbelt Rentals, Inc. (SC) |
Robert | GPI (MA) |
John | GPI (MA) |
James | AECOM |
John | Groundscapes Express |
Jeff | Dewberry |
John | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Raymond | AECOM |
Ray | Howard Stein Hudson (HSH) |
James | Felix A. Marino Co., Inc. |
John | Milone & MacBroom Inc (CT) |
Allison | Tetra Tech, Inc. |
Nicole | MobilityWorks (NH) |
Benny | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Mark | URETEK USA (NY) |
Fayssal | Husseini Design Group LLC |
Paul | OGI inc |
Heather | HDR |
Stanley | StreetScan Inc. |
Annie | Aquaphalt- Roadstone Productions (CA) |
Thomas | McFarland Johnson, Inc. (Concord NH) |
Christine | TEC, Inc. (Lawrence MA) |
Michael | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
David | Horizon Signal Technologies, Inc. (PA) |
Matt | HNTB Corporation |
Richard | WSP (MA) |
Bo | Migma Systems, Inc. |
Theresa | Aero Aggregates of North America (PA) |
Jim | Fifield Electric Bikes, Inc. |
Brian | KCI Technologies (FL) |
Frederick | Gregory Industries (NH) |
Dean | City of Leominster |
Robert | Econolite Control Products (MA) |
Ellen | CHA Consulting, Inc.(MA) |
Jay | City Point Partners, LLC |
Donald | |
Essek | VHB |
Corey | MA Executive Office of Elder Affairs (MA EOEA) |
Laureen | Brennan Consulting, Inc. |
Gene | AutomaTech, Inc. |
David | GPI (MA) |
Luciano | Jacobs |
Adam | Foursquare Integrated Transportation Planning |
Dennis | Stantec |
Glenn | Contech Engineered Solutions |
Gregory | VHB |
Jose | Grainger (CT) |
Teresa | TranSystems |
William | Kimley-Horn and Associates |
Benjamin | Altec Industries, Inc. (MA) |
Geoff | Verizon Smart Communities (NH) |
Thomas | Steere Engineering, Inc. (RI) |
Jasmine | Green International Affiliates |
Michael | CHA Consulting, Inc.(MA) |
Andrea | LandTech Consultants, Inc. |
J M | Ocean State Signal Co. (RI) |
Judy | Ideal Block |
Lenny | TranSystems |
Ellen | HNTB Corporation |
John | WSP (MA) |
Rebecca | Jacobs |
Taylor | Royal Truck & Equipment, Inc. (PA) |
Michael | BL Companies |
Jay | Lock & Load |
Adam | Dewberry |
Michael | City of Haverhill |
Jennifer | FHWA (MA) |
Kenneth | FHWA (MA) |
Jason | FHWA (MA) |
Tracy | FHWA, Safety R&D, Human Factors Team (VA) |
Joshua | FHWA (MA) |
Tomasz | FHWA (MA) |
Matt | FHWA, Safety R&D, Human Factors Team (VA) |
Jeff | FHWA (MA) |
Ken | FHWA (MA) |
Cassandra | FHWA (MA) |
Michael | FHWA (MA) |
Sandy | FHWA, Safety R&D, Human Factors Team (VA) |
Amy | FHWA (MA) |
Brandon | FHWA (MA) |
Gerardo | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Tom | Felix A. Marino Co., Inc. |
Emma | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Robert | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Courtney | BayPath Elder Services |
Jeff | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Michelle | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Brenda | MassDOT District 1 |
Victoria | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Maureen | BayPath Elder Services |
Kurt | MassDOT District 1 |
Kathryn | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Viviane | BayPath Elder Services |
Alexa | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Cole | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Erin | Private Citizen |
Kim | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Sam | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Jennifer | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Ayushi | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Kristy | Human Service Transportation |
Kassandra | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Grace | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Rebecca | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Tina | Human Service Transportation |
Waverly | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Matt | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Sandy | Human Service Transportation |
Cindy | Private Citizen |
Benjamin | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Cynthia | |
Jack | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Sharna | Human Service Transportation |
Michael | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Kris | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Ian | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Aldo | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Jeremiah | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Tracy | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Eleni | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Vera | Human Service Transportation |
William | Human Service Transportation |
Anthony | Human Service Transportation |
Youssef | MassDOT District 4 |
Joseph | MassDOT Right of Way Bureau |
Mariselly | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Melissa | MassDOT District 3 |
Daryl | MassDOT District 2 |
Alex | MassDOT District 6 |
Nick | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Marghrit | MassDOT District 3 |
Lokman | MassDOT District 4 |
Steve | MassDOT |
Bernard | MassDOT |
Michael | MassDOT |
Aidan | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Gary | MassDOT |
Corinna | MassDOT |
David | MassDOT Information Technology |
Sefira | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Stephen | MassDOT District 3 |
Jason | MassDOT District 3 |
Robbin | MassDOT |
Hema | MassDOT |
Kevin | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Lorraine | MassDOT Aeronautics Division |
Michael | MassDOT |
Matthew | MassDOT District 2 |
Stephanie | MassDOT |
Sarah | MassDOT District 3 |
Ethan | MassDOT |
Emily | MassDOT Safe Routes to School Program |
Thomas | MassDOT District 5 |
Christopher | MassDOT |
Michael | MassDOT District 4 |
Alolade | MassDOT District 3 |
Kelley | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Steven | MassDOT District 6 |
Dennis | MassDOT District 3 |
Daniel | MassDOT |
Joe | MassDOT District 3 |
Catherine | MassDOT |
KAREN | MassDOT |
Kevin | MassDOT |
Luka | MassDOT |
Anthony | MassDOT |
Michael | MassDOT |
Andrea | MassDOT District 5 |
Peter | MassDOT District 4 |
Dennis | MassDOT District 3 |
David | MassDOT District 4 |
Matthew | MassDOT |
Alex | MassDOT |
Judy | Massachusetts Safe Routes to School Program |
Megan | MassDOT District 1 |
Liz | MassDOT Highway Division |
Nick | MassDOT District 3 |
John | MassDOT |
Alex | MassDOT |
Michelle | MassDOT |
Stephanie | MassDOT District 4 |
Rita | MassDOT Office of Diversity and Civil Rights |
Thomas | MassDOT |
Joe | MassDOT District 5 |
Susan | MassDOT |
Margo | MassDOT |
Christopher | MassDOT |
Elizabeth | MassDOT Highway Division |
Chunxia | MassDOT District 2 |
Michael | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Ana | MassDOT |
Robert | MassDOT District 5 |
Kevin | MassDOT |
Kevin | MassDOT |
Michael | MassDOT |
Joseph | MassDOT District 3 |
E Jenny | MassDOT Highway Division |
Joseph | MassDOT District 3 |
Michael | MassDOT |
Oona | MassDOT |
Jaime | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Rob | MassDOT |
Micah | MassDOT |
Jacquelyn | MassDOT |
David | MassDOT |
Jeffrey | MassDOT District 3 |
Ross | MassDOT District 3 |
Christian | MassDOT |
Jeffrey | MassDOT District 3 |
Shannon | MassDOT |
Francis | MassDOT District 5 |
Eileen | Fuss & O'Neill, Inc. (Quincy) |
Kimberly | MassDOT Right of Way Bureau |
Meghan | MassDOT Highway Division |
Patrick | MassDOT District 3 |
Diane | MassDOT Safe Routes to School Program |
Susan | MassDOT |
Francisca | MassDOT District 1 |
Patrick | MassDOT Safe Routes to School Program |
Michelle | MassDOT |
Matt | MassDOT |
Richard | MassDOT District 4 |
Carl | MassDOT |
Jennifer | MassDOT |
Andre | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Susan | MassDOT |
Kwabena | MassDOT District 3 |
Michael | MassDOT District 4 |
Connor | MassDOT |
Paul | MassDOT District 2 |
Catherine | MassDOT |
Eamon | MassDOT |
James | MassDOT |
Gregory | MassDOT |
Valerie | MassDOT |
Lily | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Mark | MassDOT District 4 |
Derek | MassDOT |
Prabhat | MassDOT |
Louis | MassDOT District 5 |
Emma | MassDOT |
Bao | MassDOT District 2 |
Patrick | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Derek | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Koby | MassDOT |
Jon | MassDOT District 2 |
Melissa | MassDOT |
Jessica | MassDOT |
Carmel | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Kevin | MassDOT |
Alexander | MassDOT District 2 |
John | Committee for Public Counsel Services |
Jean | MassDOT |
Walter | MassDOT Highway Division |
Alan | MassDOT Registry of Motor Vehicles (RMV) |
Philip | MassDOT |
Thomas | MassDOT Aeronautics Division |
Paul | MassDOT Highway Division |
Pamela | MassDOT District 3 |
Matt | MassDOT |
Patrick | MassDOT |
James | MassDOT District 3 |
Susan | Jacobs |
David | MassDOT District 5 |
John | MassDOT District 6 |
Terrence | MassDOT Aeronautics Division |
Ryan | MassDOT |
Jeremy | MassDOT |
Omar | MassDOT Safe Routes to School Program |
Tara | MassDOT |
Wilfred | MassDOT District 2 |
William | MassDOT District 3 |
Benjamin | MassDOT District 6 |
Adam | MassDOT District 3 |
Diane | MassDOT |
Jesse | MassDOT |
Greg | MassDOT District 5 |
Makaela | MassDOT |
Nexwan | Town of Concord |
Colin | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Patrick | MassDOT Registry of Motor Vehicles (RMV) |
Anne | MassDOT District 2 |
Ann | MassDOT |
Barbara | MassDOT |
Chester | MassDOT |
Tracy | MassDOT |
Jason | MassDOT |
Jeremiah | MassDOT District 3 |
James | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Alba | MassDOT |
Raymond | MassDOT District 2 |
Timothy | MassDOT District 4 |
Hasmukh | MassDOT |
Anthony | MassDOT District 3 |
Alba | MassDOT Highway Division |
Stephen | MassDOT |
Mary-Joe | MassDOT District 5 |
Irene | MassDOT |
Nathan | MassDOT |
Hung | MassDOT |
Lawrence | MassDOT District 5 |
Sandhya | MassDOT |
Bryan | McKinsey Boston |
Behnam | MassDOT |
Maria | MassDOT |
Craig | MassDOT District 5 |
Jennifer | MassDOT |
Steven | MassDOT Aeronautics Division |
Muazzez | MassDOT |
Jennifer | MassDOT District 2 |
Judith | MassDOT |
Jason | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Derrick | MassDOT |
Nick | MassDOT District 3 |
Emmanuel | MassDOT |
Michael | MassDOT District 3 |
Margarita | MassDOT District 4 |
Andrew | MassDOT Highway Division |
Timothy | MassDOT |
Shalini | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Lori | MassDOT District 3 |
David | MassDOT |
Linda | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Gabriel | MassDOT |
Derek | MassDOT |
Aaron | MassDOT District 5 |
Bryan | MassDOT |
James | MassDOT |
Claudia | MassDOT |
Stephanie | MassDOT |
Shane | MassDOT District 5 |
Elliot | MassDOT |
David | MassDOT |
Diana | MassDOT |
Kevin | MassDOT District 3 |
Paul | MassDOT |
Corrine | MassDOT |
Susan | MassDOT |
Misrak | MassDOT |
Joseph | MassDOT |
Frank | MassDOT District 4 |
Allison | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Eric | MassDOT |
Bindu | MassDOT |
Marilyn | MassDOT |
Paul | MassDOT |
Szczepan | MassDOT District 3 |
Elizabeth | MassDOT |
Caroline | MassDOT |
Zach | MassDOT |
John | MassDOT |
Daniel | MassDOT District 5 |
Robert | MassDOT District 5 |
David | MassDOT Highway Division |
Lee Ann | MassDOT |
Eric | MassDOT |
Courtney | MassDOT Highway Design |
Yichao | MassDOT District 2 |
Sheila | MassDOT |
Akosua | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Joseph | MassDOT |
Anthony | MassDOT |
Marianti | MassDOT |
Nicholas | MassDOT |
Samantha | Viability, Inc. |
Nicholas | ACCEPT Education Collaborative |
Matt | FriendshipWorks |
Patrick | work inc |
Raylen | Transportation for Massachusetts (T4MA) |
Michael | Habilitation Assistance Corporation |
Neejaa | |
Maria | TRIPPS Massachusetts |
Catherine | Easterseals, Inc. (MA) |
Louisa | LivableStreets Alliance |
Sophia | Watertown Transportation Management Association |
April | LogistiCare Solutions LLC |
Ranisha | Working Cities Pittsfield |
Bryan | Berkshire Community Action Council (BCAC) |
Angela | Transportation for Massachusetts (T4MA) |
Jarred | TransitMatters |
Deborah | Berkshire Community Action Council (BCAC) |
Kelsey | Emerson Hospital |
Aleta | Berkshire Community Action Council (BCAC) |
Joshua | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Carmen | Arc of Greater Plymouth |
Donna | Massachusetts Association of Councils on Aging |
Staci | Conservation Law Foundation |
Marlene | North Central Regional Mental Health Board (CT) |
Rita | Precast Prestressed Concrete Institute Northeast |
Mary | Barr Foundation |
Ashley | Blue Hills Community Health Alliance |
Patrick | Seaport TMA |
Leonidas | Easterseals, Inc. (MA) |
Kate | 2Life Communities |
Zachary | Rhode Island Public Transit Authority |
Rana | Pioneer Valley Planning Commission (PVPC) |
Sheri | Montachusett Regional Planning Commission (MRPC) |
Charles | New Hampshire Department of Transportation Systems Management Operations (TSMO) |
Gene | Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission (Boston) |
Tanya | Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission (Boston) |
Kobena | Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission (Boston) |
Harry | Shuttlebus-Zoom (ME) |
Louise | Department of Mental Health (North Grafton) |
Steve | MassCor Industries |
Cynthia | MA Commission for the Blind (MCB) |
Brian | Montachusett Regional Planning Commission (MRPC) |
Todd | Central Mass Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC) |
Karen | MA House of Representatives |
Cris | Norfolk County RSVP |
Yahaira | Central Mass Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC) |
Betsy | Boston Region MPO |
Carolyn | MA Commission for the Blind (MCB) |
Sarah | Rhode Island Public Transit Authority |
Brian | Division of Ecological Restoration |
Teri | Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission (Boston) |
Peter | Pioneer Valley Planning Commission (PVPC) |
Marc | Massachusetts Maritime Academy |
David | Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) |
Cara | National Rural Transit Assistance Program |
Constance | Central Mass Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC) |
Deirdre | New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDOT) |
Steven | MassCor Industries |
Robert | Norfolk County RSVP |
Monique | University of Massachusetts Medical School |
Connor | Central Mass Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC) |
Robert | Central Mass Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC) |
Megan | Franklin Regional Council of Governments (FRCOG) |
Lucas | New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDOT) |
Brenda | MassCor Industries |
James | Merrimack Valley Planning Commission (MVPC) |
Hoamy | Central Mass Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC) |
Steven | Cape Cod Commission (CCC) |
Chris | Transportation for Massachusetts (T4MA) |
Dale | VHB |
Daniel | Landing Studio |
Olu | FHWA (MA) |
Ravi | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Luiza | Perkins School for the Blind |
Dave | 3M (MN) |
Chengbo | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Imaikalani | Town of Weston |
Taher | Bridgewater State University |
Ali | MassDOT |
Farrukh | NED University of Engineering & Technology (Pakistan) |
E. Price | Pioneer Valley Transit Authority (PVTA) |
Christopher | Kleinfelder, Inc. |
Alexander | MassDOT |
George | MassDOT |
Lyris | MassDOT |
Edward | Benesch (MA) |
John | MassDOT Highway Division |
Jonah | MA Senate |
Joe | Easterseals, Inc. (MA) |
Michael | Tremont Strategies |
Amanda | MA Executive Office of Elder Affairs (MA EOEA) |
Sayeeda | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Erica | HNTB Corporation |
Justin | GoGo Technologies, Inc. (CA) |
Neil | MassDOT |
Carlos | Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) |
Laura | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Mark | FHWA (RI) |
Nick | FHI Studio (CT) |
Perian | Shuttlebus-Zoom (ME) |
William | New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDOT) |
Christopher | City of Quincy |
Danjue | North Carolina State University (NC State) |
Pete | MassDOT |
Angie | SRPEDD |
Don | VHB |
Stephanie | Middlesex 3 Coalition |
Bill | American Concrete Pavement Association of NY (NY) |
Andrea | MassDOT |
James | MassDOT |
Michelle | MassDOT |
Camilla | Kittelson & Associates, Inc. |
Moumita | Smith College |
Craig | Massachusetts Concrete & Aggregate Producers Association-MaCAPA |
Jeffrey | Hoyle, Tanner & Associates, Inc. (NH) |
Aikaterini | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Angela | VHB |
Ralph | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Jacqueline | MassDOT |
Tim | MassDOT |
Craig | TRC Companies |
Beth | University of Massachusetts Boston (UMass) |
Lori | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Julie | Weston & Sampson (Reading) |
Steve | 3M (MN) |
Wesley | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Thomas | MassDOT District 3 |
Rana | TEC, Inc. (Lawrence MA) |
Joshua | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Gail | Quaboag Valley Community Development Corp |
Rachel | MassDOT |
Kate | MassDOT |
Anthony | Town of Weston |
Hanan | MassDOT |
James | Massachusetts Healthy Aging Collaborative |
Peter | Northeastern University |
Ramya | Bridgewater State University |
Travis | 3M (MN) |
Simos | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Amy | MassDOT |
Michael | AI Engineers, Inc. (CT) |
David | Design Consultants, Inc. (Somerville) |
Astrid | MassDOT |
Phil | Alta Planning + Design |
Michael | VHB |
Jane | TRIPPS Massachusetts |
Dave | VHB |
John | STV Group |
Jonathan | MassDOT |
Grant | 3M (MN) |
Sally | New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDOT) |
Seth | Geosciences Testing and Research (GTR) |
Heather | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Lawrence | Bridgewater State University |
Niki | VHB |
Christine | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Pamela | MassDOT District 5 |
Jennifer | MassMobility |
Joseph | VHB |
Scott | Horizon Signal Technologies, Inc. (PA) |
David | University of Massachusetts Boston (UMass) |
Qing | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Doug | MA Senate |
Wes | MassDOT District 3 |
Mathew | Jacobs |
Evan | 3M (MN) |
Nicholas | Toole Design Group |
Ryan | nuTonomy |
Joelle | Rhode Island Public Transit Authority |
Jessica | MassDOT |
Rob | MassDOT Aeronautics Division |
Aaron | Hoyle, Tanner & Associates, Inc. (NH) |
Aniko | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Marie | Landing Studio |
Patricia | MassDOT |
Steven | New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDOT) |
Tracie | MassDOT Highway Division |
Barry | MassDOT District 3 |
Alexandra | MassDOT |
Julie | South Middlesex Opportunity Council (SMOC) |
Gabriela | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Paul | MassDOT District 4 |
Steve | Tasks for Transit |
Theresa | HDR |
Maggie | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Terrance | MassDOT Aeronautics Division |
Drew | MassDOT Aeronautics Division |
Steven | MassDOT |
Zoe | Greater Portland Council of Governments (ME) |
Quinn | MassDOT |
Eric | VHB |
Jack | MassDOT District 4 |
Geoffrey | VHB |
Richard | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Scott | A Better City (ABC) |
Albert | VHB |
Adi | |
David | Comprehensive Environmental, Inc. (NH) |
Corey | MassDOT |
Michael | MassDOT |
Lily | MassDOT |
Holly | Less Road Traveled (CT) |
Chelsey | Community Health Network for North Central Mass |
Andrew | MassDOT |
Alicia | City of Boston |
Marco | MassDOT |
Sarah | University of Massachusetts Medical School |
Eric | 33 Smart Mobility Corridor (OH) |
Bonnie | MassDOT |
Stephanie | MassDOT |
Reed | Boston Cybernetics Institute |
Thomas | Royal Truck & Equipment, Inc. (PA) |
Kathryn | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Brittany | South Middlesex Opportunity Council (SMOC) |
Georgie | New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDOT) |
Stefan | Steer (CA) |
Guy | MassDOT |
Fred | Easterseals, Inc. (NH) |
Meg | AER Environmental Access Committee |
Peter | Toole Design Group |
Samantha | VHB |
Alyssa | University of Arizona |
Jason | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Bill | Nelson\Nygaard |
Bob | WGBH Radio |
Cara | City of Cambridge Traffic |
Uma | Bridgewater State University |
Judy | Easterseals, Inc. (IL) |
Jose | MassDOT |
Navjot | McKinsey Boston |
Charalampos | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Ben | Lyft (CA) |
Hannah | Bird |
Peter | New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDOT) |
Gary | VHB |
Patricia | Massachusetts Association of Councils on Aging |
Daniel | MassDOT |
Anoopa | Institute for Human Centered Design (IHC) |
Pete | MassDOT |
Francis | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Joseph | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
William | MassDOT District 5 |
Christine | VHB |
Michael | MassDOT |
George | UMass Transportation Center (UMTC) |
Scott | MassDOT Aeronautics Division |
Amber | Department of Veterans Affairs |
Matt | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Scott | 3M (MN) |
Julia | Institute for Transportation & Development Policy (ITDP) Boston |
Yuhao | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Mike | Ocean State Signal Co. (RI) |
Sarah | MA Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) |
Dan | Fuss & O'Neill Inc. (Springfield) |
Violet | MassDOT |
Kym | Blue Hills Community Health Alliance |
Liz | MassDOT |
Timothy | MassDOT Research and Materials |
Elizabeth | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Christos | Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) |
Scott | Town of Acton |
Shanshan | CT Transportation Safety Research Center (CTSRC) (CT) |
Rachel | Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC) |
Kate | Kleinfelder, Inc. |
Douglas | |
Kwame | WSP (MA) |
Amanda | VHB |
Matthew | CDR Maguire (MA) |
Dave | HNTB Corporation |
Christina | eNdoto Corp. (East Hartford CT) |
Erik | Green International Affiliates |
Christopher | Unistress Corporation |
Jacob | Liberty Mutual Insurance |
Pamela | Innovative Surface Solutions (NY) |
Dennis | WSP (MA) |
Dave | Precision Concrete Cutting (CT) |
Mike | HNTB Corporation |
Patrick | Benchmark Strategies |
Andy | WSP (MA) |
Jeff | 128 Business Council |
Mark | IPS Group (CA) |
Paul | HNTB Corporation |
John | SADA Systems (CA) |
Luke | VHB |
Benjamin | BETA Group, Inc. (MA) |
Michele | TransAction Associates |
Karen | Keville Enterprises |
Norman | Fuss & O'Neill, Inc. (Manchester CT) |
Steven | Gannett Fleming (Dedham) |
Scott | Weston & Sampson |
Richard | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Gary | HNTB Corporation |
Kathy | Jacobs |
Jill | AECOM |
Christopher | Tetra Tech, Inc. |
Richard | Weston & Sampson |
Kathleen | CDW Consultants |
Julia | AECOM |
Chris | Precision Polymer Casting (OH) |
Kate | Precision Polymer Casting (OH) |
Scott | Gill Engineering |
Nady | Keville Enterprises |
Karen | FedEx (MA) |
Christine | VHB |
Elsa | VHB |
Joe | A. R. Belli, Inc. |
Lori | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Jonathan | MassDOT |
Todd | Hoyle, Tanner & Associates, Inc. (NH) |
Jessica | Milone & MacBroom Inc (CT) |
Andrew | WSP (MA) |
Connor | Vortex Companies (CT) |
Thomas | Collins Engineers, Inc. |
Sean | SAS Institute Inc. |
Fran | Indus Inc. |
Joe | Smart Transportation Systems |
Ryan | CHA Consulting, Inc.(MA) |
Cody | Routematch (NC) |
Christopher | Jacobs |
Joshua | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Pam | StreetLight Data (RI) |
Ryan | HDR |
Chuck | Kiessling Transit, Inc. |
Matthew | HNTB Corporation |
Thomas | Gannett Fleming (Dedham) |
Kevin | TEC, Inc. (Lawrence MA) |
Anthony | Collins Engineers, Inc. |
Scott | TranSystems |
Nichole | Hoyle, Tanner & Associates, Inc. (NH) |
Jane | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Gisel | HNTB Corporation |
Jason | Toole Design Group |
Jeffrey | AECOM |
Scott | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Sandra | A. R. Belli, Inc. |
Sharon | Grainger (CT) |
Ted | Fuss & O'Neill Inc. (Springfield) |
Robert | Felix A. Marino Co., Inc. |
Sean | Esri (MA) |
Tom | VHB |
Joe | Massachusetts Organization of State Engineers and Scientists |
Jared | Jacobs |
Robert | Vortex Roundabouts |
Jack | Filtrexx Northeast Systems (NH) |
Nicole | VHB |
Emad | Nitsch Engineering |
Leah | HNTB Corporation |
Jose | Verizon Smart Communities (NH) |
Mike | E.J. Prescott, Inc. (ME) |
Sean | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Bonnie | GPI (MA) |
Mark | Econolite (IL) |
Jason | Gill Engineering |
Jamilee | Patrick Engineering, Inc. |
James | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Brian | Charles River Analytics |
Eric | XL Hybrids |
Jaime | Fuss & O'Neill, Inc. (Manchester NH) |
Philip | WSP (MA) |
Michael | Milone & MacBroom Inc (CT) |
Kenneth | Atlas Drilling |
Peter | Dewberry |
Jayson | Jacobs |
Susan | Dewberry |
Mark | BETA Group, Inc. (MA) |
Joseph | Gill Engineering |
Peter | Gill Engineering |
Jason | Lock & Load |
Abbie | American Council of Engineering Companies (MA) |
Butch | Groundscapes Express |
Kristine | Jacobs |
Mark | Howard Stein Hudson (HSH) |
Linda | Fuss & O'Neill Inc. (Springfield) |
Jerome | Design Consultants, Inc. (Somerville) |
Birendra | Nitsch Engineering |
Kala | AECOM |
Damian | OUTFRONT Media (NY) |
Robert | H&H |
Douglas | GPI (MA) |
Dave | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Patrick | TEC, Inc. (Lawrence MA) |
Rebecca | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Ingeborg | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Walter | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Michael | CONSOR Engineers, LLC |
Robert | TranSystems |
Nathan | Slalom |
Kien | BETA Group, Inc. (MA) |
Steve | McFarland Johnson, Inc. (Concord NH) |
Adam | HNTB Corporation (MO) |
Mike | Epsilon Associates |
Amy | Town of Brookline |
Ko | Green International Affiliates |
Alyssa | Epsilon Associates |
Rosie | Toole Design Group |
Darshan | BETA Group, Inc. (MA) |
Daniel | Dewberry |
Kelley | Building Relationships as a Foundation for Growth |
Craig | Dewberry |
Ravi | WSP (MA) |
Vinod | Tighe & Bond (Westfield) |
Jonathan | HNTB Corporation |
Vahid | WSP (MA) |
Bill | A. R. Belli, Inc. |
Jason | A. R. Belli, Inc. |
Wayne | Design Consultants, Inc. (Somerville) |
John | Ways2Go Travel Training |
Christopher | Toole Design Group |
Shanta | VHB |
Jim | Tetra Tech, Inc. |
Thomas | McFarland Johnson, Inc. (Concord NH) |
Margaret | Kittelson & Associates, Inc. |
Betsy | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Bob | Milone & MacBroom Inc (CT) |
Greta | Verizon Smart Communities (NH) |
Mark | HNTB Corporation |
Christine | HNTB Corporation |
David | Hoyle, Tanner & Associates, Inc. (NH) |
Stephen | Terracon Consultants, Inc. (NH) |
Nick | Fuss & O'Neill Inc. (Springfield) |
Kinton | eNdoto Corp. (East Hartford CT) |
Kinton | AIMS International (TX) |
Connor | Advanced Drainage Systems, Inc. |
Brian | Travelers Marketing |
Andrew | Gill Engineering |
Conrad | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Kellan | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Jeff | Garofalo & Associates (RI) |
Nick | John Turner Consulting, Inc. (MA) |
Jessica | Howard Stein Hudson (HSH) |
Jeffrey | Mott MacDonald |
Matthew | Hoyle, Tanner & Associates, Inc. (NH) |
Evan | TranSystems |
Robert | McFarland Johnson, Inc. (Concord NH) |
Josh | McFarland Johnson, Inc. (Concord NH) |
Matthew | Atlas Drilling |
William | Fort Hill Companies LLC |
Keith | Pare Corporation (RI) |
S | Bowman |
Joseph | WSP (MA) |
Mary | AAA Northeast (Southern New England) (RI) |
John | OUTFRONT Media (NY) |
Katharine | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Joseph | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Ed | H&H |
Katie | VHB |
Karin | S & R Corporation |
Stephen | Altec Industries, Inc. (MA) |
Doug | E.J. Prescott, Inc. (NY) |
Daniel | BETA Group, Inc. (MA) |
Christopher | TRC Companies, Inc. |
Darren | McClain & Co., Inc. (VA) |
Dana | Fifield Electric Bikes, Inc. |
James | Town of Dedham |
Timothy | smartmicro (FL) |
Luke | National Ready Mixed Concrete Association (PA) |
Ian | Howard Stein Hudson (HSH) |
Tim | SPS New England, Inc. |
Bill | Tighe & Bond (Westfield) |
Jay | CONSOR Engineers, LLC |
Avery | WSP (MA) |
Rocco | E.J. Prescott, Inc. (ME) |
John | Nitsch Engineering |
Robert | MDM Transportation Consultants |
Chris | Oracle |
Hugh | HNTB Corporation |
Dan | MDM Transportation Consultants |
Heather | Milone & MacBroom Inc (CT) |
Christine | AI Engineers, Inc. (MA) |
Samuel | TRC Companies |
Jon | MassDOT District 3 |
Colleen | HDR |
Micah | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Fred | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Darren | OGI inc |
Matthew | Tetra Tech, Inc. |
Paul | Gill Engineering |
Matthew | AECOM |
Alexander | HNTB Corporation |
Brian | Dewberry |
Bridget | Howard Stein Hudson (HSH) |
Christopher | HNTB Corporation |
Randles | Acrow Corporation (NJ) |
Steven | TranSystems |
Josh | CHA Consulting, Inc. (IN) |
Brian | Gannett Fleming, Inc. (PA) |
Qiwei | Lehigh Hanson (PA) |
Sean | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Daniel | Collins Engineers, Inc. |
Sam | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Michael | Benesch (MA) |
Luke | Gannett Fleming (Dedham) |
Krystal | AECOM |
John | HNTB Corporation |
Charles | BL Companies |
Daniel | HNTB Corporation |
Tess | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Anant | Terracon Consultants, Inc. (NH) |
Elizabeth | Tetra Tech, Inc. |
Alkesh | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Roger | Roger Parsons |
Dan | Better Roads Consulting, LLC (FL) |
Peter | VHB |
Thomas | BL Companies |
Jonathan | All States Materials Group |
Chad | |
Franck | Soft dB |
Doug | Michael Baker International (CT) |
James | E.J. Prescott, Inc. (ME) |
Cheryl | TransAction Associates |
Matt | VHB |
Toni Marie | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Gabrielle | HNTB Corporation |
Mike | Patrick Engineering, Inc. |
Tom | FPNA |
Peter | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Shannon | Construction Industries of Massachusetts |
Allene | TranSystems |
Eric | McClure |
Ed | Milone & MacBroom Inc (CT) |
Thomas | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Peter | All States Materials Group |
Amanda | WSP (MA) |
Paul | Esri (MA) |
Kelly | Dewberry |
Jamie | McFarland Johnson, Inc. (Concord NH) |
Paul | StreetLight Data (RI) |
Mario | MobilityWorks (NH) |
Carolyn | WSP (MA) |
Jeff | Weston & Sampson |
Antonio | WSP (MA) |
Michael | BSC Group, Inc. (Main Office) |
Steve | Fuss & O'Neill Inc. (Springfield) |
Mark | AAA Northeast (Southern New England) (RI) |
Roy | SLR Consulting (CT) |
Randy | KCI Technologies (FL) |
Taskin | HNTB Corporation |
James | FedEx (TN) |
Conor | Kittelson & Associates, Inc. |
Jillian | Hoyle, Tanner & Associates, Inc. (NH) |
Peter | ACO, Inc. (OH) |
Matt | BETA Group, Inc. (MA) |
Alexandra | HNTB Corporation |
Matthew | Fuss & O'Neill, Inc. (Quincy) |
Jefferson | Benchmark Strategies |
Matthew | Nitsch Engineering |
John | Verizon Wireless (Westborough) |
Shaun | HNTB Corporation |
Mike | Transit X |
Bob | Howard Stein Hudson (HSH) |
Patricia | Steere Engineering, Inc. (RI) |
John | Advanced Drainage Systems, Inc. |
Glenn | Gannett Fleming (Dedham) |
Jennifer | Grainger (CT) |
Benjamin | MassDOT District 3 |
Tom | Howard Stein Hudson (HSH) |
Matthew | Nitsch Engineering |
David | TRC Companies |
Paul | Golder |
Ali | TranSystems |
Kyle | VHB |
Alexander | Collins Engineers, Inc. |
David | United Concrete Products, Inc. (CT) |
Linde | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. |
Cassandra | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Tony | Benesch (MA) |
Tom | Howard Stein Hudson (HSH) |
Richard | GEI Consultants (ME) |
Garrison | Boston Concrete Corporation |
Nicholas | Patrick Engineering, Inc. |
Mack | AI Engineers, Inc. (MA) |
Laura | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Frank | Green International Affiliates |
Kevin | Sunbelt Rentals, Inc. (SC) |
Michelle | Boston Univeristy Medical Campus - TranSComm |
Dilshod | LLC TML LOGISTICS (Uzbekistan) |
James | Gill Engineering |
John | John Turner Consulting, Inc. (MA) |
Steven | Howard Stein Hudson (HSH) |
Heather | XL Hybrids |
Andrew | TranSystems |
Alan | Indus Inc. |
Jeffrey | Northeast Traffic Technologies, LLC. |
Shahvir | AI Engineers, Inc. (MA) |
Laura | Steer Group (MA) |
Kevin | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Matthew | LandTech Consultants, Inc. |
Julia | Steer (CA) |
Andrew | Durisol USA (Canada) |
Darin | HNTB Corporation (MO) |
Johnathan | Kleinfelder, Inc. |
Catharine | Private Citizen |
Colin | HNTB Corporation |
Paul | Dewberry |
Andrew | Jacobs |
Beth | The Kraft Group |
Wing | McFarland Johnson |
Peter | HDR |
Michael | AECOM |
Said | HDR |
Joseph | Cambridge Systematics, Inc. |
Michael | McFarland Johnson, Inc. (Concord NH) |
Amy | Pare Corporation (RI) |
Kimberly | GPI (MA) |
Vanessa | Jacobs |
Arthur | HDR |
Kelly | VHB |
Dan | VHB |
Matthew | VHB |
Darren | Jacobs |
Kathryn | HDR |
Matt | Tetra Tech, Inc. |
Caroline | VHB |
Michael | BL Companies |
Adriaunna | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. (Woburn) |
Steve | BL Companies |
Darryl | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Haider | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Ron | VHB |
Sandy | Volpe National Transportation Systems Center |
Geoffrey | GPI (MA) |
Ramandeep | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Van | VHB |
Matthew | GPI (MA) |
Suzanne | BL Companies |
Susan | VHB |
Jonathan | VHB |
Tim | GPI (MA) |
Jessica | Milone & MacBroom Inc (CT) |
Cheryl | VHB |
Steve | Jacobs |
Michael | Stantec (Boston MA) |
Soni | Tetra Tech, Inc. |
Martin | Steere Engineering, Inc. (RI) |
Nicole | GPI (MA) |
William | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
David | Lock & Load |
Luke | TranSystems |
Mike | GPI (MA) |
Noah | Milone & MacBroom Inc (CT) |
Corinne | Green International Affiliates |
William | Bowman |
Peter | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Jaime | WSP (MA) |
John | GPI (MA) |
Keith | VHB |
James | Michael Baker International (CT) |
Kristine | VHB |
Watson | Stantec (Burlington MA) |
Paul | TranSystems |
Brian | Town of Natick |
Jeffrey | City of Boston |
Daniel | |
Robert | City of Boston |
Sue | |
Jacinda | Town of Bedford |
Susan | Town of Lexington |
Richard | |
Phillip | Town of Winchester Council on Aging |
Travis | Town of Hubbardston |
Catherine | City of Waltham |
Paul | CHESS Engineering |
Nicole | City of Boston Elderly Commission |
Sue | Town of Winchester Council on Aging |
Jim | City of Pittsfield Council on Aging |
Dawn | City of Worcester |
Eileen | Town of Barre Council on Aging |
Jeffrey | Town of Yarmouth |
Kevin | Town of Westminster |
Michael | City of Beverly |
Lisa | City of Amesbury |
Kristin | Town of Bedford DPW |
Kevin | Town of Oxford |
Stephanie | City of Boston DPW |
Joseph | City of Boston |
Edson | Town of Brookline |
Christopher | City of Worcester |
Elizabeth | Town of Wellesley |
Karin Valentine | University of Massachusetts Medical School |
Jeff | Town of Natick |
Matthew | Town of Tyngsborough |
Dave | Town of Wellesley DPW |
David | Town of Dartmouth |
Elizabeth | Town of Concord |
Adam | MassDOT |
Todd | City of Worcester |
Paul | Town of New Marlborough |
Eric | City of Westfield |
John | Town of Lexington DPW |
Emilio | City of Worcester |
Charles | Town of New Marlborough |
Jamie | Town of Northbridge |
Owen | City of Weymouth |
Tricia | Town of Lexington |
Steve | Town of Exeter (RI) |
Wayne | Town of Lexington DPW |
Faye | City of Newton |
Ross | Town of Lexington DPW |
Michael | City of Worcester |
Mignonne | Town of Weston Council on Aging |
Judith | Town of Millbury |
Glen | Town of Andover Police Department |
QinRui | Town of Acton |
Nicholas | Town of Concord |
Audrey | Town of Weston Council on Aging |
Brian | City of Worcester |
Isaac | City of Newton |
Marcia | Town of Concord |
Allison | City of Quincy - Traffic, Parking, Alarm & Lighting (TPAL) |
James | City of Westfield |
George | Town of Wellesley |
Matt | Town of Winchester |
James | Town of Northbridge |
Debra | Town of Chelmsford Council on Aging |
Kenneth | Auburn Water District |
Matthew | Town of Chesterfield Highway Department |
David | Town of Braintree |
Jason | City of Newton |
Matthew | City of Springfield DPW |
William | Town of Wilbraham |
Michael | City of Haverhill |
Beth | Devens Enterprise Commission |
Michael | Town of Sturbridge |
John | Town of Milton |
Christopher | MassDOT District 5 |
Brienne | Town of Rowley Council on Aging |
Matt | Town of Lexington DPW |
Nicholas | City of Worcester DPW & Parks |
Roger | Town of Winchester |
Theresa | Town of West Newbury Council on Aging |
Corey | Town of Acton |
Brian | City of Haverhill |
J. Michael | City of Waltham |
Lynn | Cape Cod Regional Transit Authority (CCRTA) |
Glenn | Pioneer Valley Transit Authority (PVTA) |
Mary | Greater Attleboro Taunton Regional Transit Authority (GATRA) |
Ed | MetroWest Regional Transit Authority (MWRTA) |
Suzanne | Vineyard Transit Authority |
Claude | Pioneer Valley Transit Authority (PVTA) |
Julie | Berkshire Regional Transit Authority (BRTA) |
Karen | Neponset Valley TMA |
Glenn | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) |
Joy | MetroWest Regional Transit Authority (MWRTA) |
Jenna | Franklin Regional Transit Authority (FRTA) |
Michael | Pioneer Valley Transit Authority (PVTA) |
Anna | Worcester Regional Transit Authority (WRTA) |
Michael | Brockton Area Transit Authority (BAT) |
Dennis | Worcester Regional Transit Authority (WRTA) |
Meaghan | Worcester Regional Transit Authority (WRTA) |
Bonnie | Montachusett Regional Transit Authority |
Robert | Berkshire Regional Transit Authority (BRTA) |
Andrea | MetroWest Regional Transit Authority (MWRTA) |
Pam | Pioneer Valley Transit Authority (PVTA) |
Sara | MetroWest Regional Transit Authority (MWRTA) |
Tess | Worcester Regional Transit Authority (WRTA) |
Diane | Worcester Regional Transit Authority (WRTA) |
Adam | Pioneer Valley Transit Authority (PVTA) |
Jeff | Private Citizen |
John | Pioneer Valley Transit Authority (PVTA) |
Sarah | Berkshire Regional Transit Authority (BRTA) |
Emily | MetroWest Regional Transit Authority (MWRTA) |
Thomas | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Patricia | Greater Attleboro Taunton Regional Transit Authority (GATRA) |
Eva | MetroWest Regional Transit Authority (MWRTA) |
Sarah | Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission (Boston) |
Noelle | Center for Living & Working, Inc. |
Cathy | Watertown for All Ages |
John | Town of Chelmsford Council on Aging |
Jennifer | Shore Educational Collaborative |
Vinod | Private Citizen |
Reggie | Massachusetts Advocates Standing Strong (MASS) |
Sheila | Quaboag Valley Community Development Corp |
Marie | Massachusetts Advocates Standing Strong (MASS) |
Gail | Massachusetts Advocates Standing Strong (MASS) |
Lisa | Town of Acton Commission on Disabilities |
Brian | Minute Man Arc |
Mary Ellen | Epilepsy Foundation New England |
Nancy | Transportation Advocacy Coalition |
Rhoda | MassADAPT |
Kevin | Private Citizen |
Latoya | Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe |
Linnea | SeniorCare Inc. |
Kimberly | Minute Man Arc |
Ben | Minute Man Arc |
Mike | Center for Living & Working, Inc. |
Richard | Montachusett Regional Trails Coalition |
David | Town of Carlisle Council on Aging |
Stephen | Minute Man Arc |
Marilyn | US DOT Leadership Team (MA) |
Christine | Watertown for All Ages |
Susan | Massachusetts Advocates Standing Strong (MASS) |
Elizabeth | City of Worcester Commission on Disabilities |
Lynn | Worcester Community Connections Coalition |
Irene | Town of North Andover |
Franny | Town of Acton |
Sassy | MAB Community Services |
Jack | VISIONS Consulting L3C |
Debbie | Private Citizen |
Kim | Massachusetts Advocates Standing Strong (MASS) |
Rupali | The Central Mass Employment Collaborative |
Scott | Stone Soup |
Nicky | South Middlesex Opportunity Council (SMOC) |
Emmett | MA Executive Office of Elder Affairs (MA EOEA) |
Stephen | Center for Living & Working, Inc. |
Sharon | MA Commission for the Blind (MCB) |
Adam | Riders Action Council |
Paula | Town of Acton Transportation Advisory Committee |
James | Private Citizen |
Matthew | Massachusetts Advocates Standing Strong (MASS) |
Anne | Parent Professional Advocacy League |
Raquel | City of Worcester Div of Youth Opportunities |
Valerie | Minute Man Arc |
Nora | Minute Man Arc |
Janice | Minute Man Arc |
Richard | Town of Barre Council on Aging |
Meaghan | Massachusetts Clubhouse Coalition |
Kim | Milone & MacBroom Inc (CT) |
Meghan | FriendshipWorks |
Tienam | University of Massachusetts Lowell (UMass) |
Jason | Environmental Partners Group, Inc. |
Liam | 495 MetroWest Corridor Partnership |
Drew | Bridgewater State University |
David | Private Citizen |
Amani | Blue Hills Community Health Alliance |
Eric | University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) |
Brian | RND Consultants, inc |
Paul | RND Consultants, inc |
Matthew | Comprehensive Environmental, Inc. (NH) |
Boris | Foursquare Integrated Transportation Planning |
Josh | Foursquare Integrated Transportation Planning |