Emerging Technologies

This US city put an algorithm in charge of its school bus routes and saved $5 million

School buses sit idle at a bus yard after drivers walked off the job in the morning in Boston, Massachusetts October 8, 2013. Boston Mayor Thomas Menino vowed to punish school bus drivers who walked off the job on Tuesday in a labor action the city contended was illegal, and which even the drivers' union organization condemned. Some 33,000 public and private school students were left to find alternative routes to school on Tuesday after a union representing some 700 drivers and also represented by the United Steelworkers of America Local 8751 did not show up for work.  REUTERS/Brian Snyder    (UNITED STATES - Tags: BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT) - GM1E9A904F501

25 million US children travel on the iconic buses every day. Image: REUTERS/Brian Snyder

Sean Fleming
Senior Writer, Forum Agenda

Every day across the US, fleets of iconic yellow school buses carry more than 25 million children to and from school, covering around 6 billion kilometres a year. But these instantly recognizable vehicles - and the authorities that run them - are facing a number of challenges.

One major issue has been a shortage of drivers. From Hawaii to Nebraska, many school districts across the US have had to scale down or even suspend bus services. Even with signing-on bonuses and guaranteed minimum earnings, the town of Lincoln, Nebraska, couldn’t recruit enough drivers to fill all its vacancies.

A school bus used for transporting New York City public school students is seen driving down 135th avenue in the Queens borough of New York January 15, 2013. New York City school bus drivers will go on strike on Wednesday, an action that Mayor Michael Bloomberg said would complicate the commute of more than 152,000 students in the nation's largest public school system. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton (UNITED STATES - Tags: EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST) - GM1E91G07A901
US school buses cover a distance of around 6 billion km a year. Image: REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton (UNITED STATES - Tags: EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST) - GM1E91G07A901

The bus services are also expensive to run – fuel and maintenance costs are a major factor. Plus there is growing pressure to replace older, more polluting buses with newer models, which involves additional outlays.

A digital solution

But in Boston, automation may offer a route to solving some of these problems. Not in the form of self-driving vehicles, but in the use of machine-learning to improve school bus administration.

In 2017, Boston Public Schools announced a competition - the BPS Transportation Challenge - to find smart ways to improve school bus operations and bring down their $120 million annual cost.

The winner was the Quantum Team from the MIT Operations Research Center. The team developed an algorithm to identify the most efficient and cost-effective routes for BPS’s fleet of 650 buses. And last year, the algorithm got to work contending with multiple variables to reconfigure routes.

BPS gives parents a wide range of school choices, which means some schools have students from more than 20 different postal codes across Boston. Many schools in the district also operate different opening and closing hours, with start times varying between 07:15 and 09:30, forcing buses to make multiple trips with few students.

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Next stop, progress

But wasteful journeys like those are becoming a thing of the past in Boston.

The MIT algorithm takes data from Google Maps to analyze traffic patterns. It combines that with details on where students live and the schools they attend to calculate the best possible routes.

Annual costs have been cut by around $5 million, 50 underutilized routes have been scrapped, and the number of students per bus on the remaining services has increased.

Huge amounts of time have also been saved for teams of school bus planners, as it takes the algorithm just 30 minutes to do a job that used to take several weeks to complete manually.

Last year, BPS buses drove 1.6 million fewer kilometres, reducing daily CO2 emissions by 9,000 kilograms. It also plans to use the algorithm for an overhaul of school start and finish times, as part of the district's ongoing initiative to increase efficiency and effectiveness.

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