Urban Priority Pass: Fair Signalized Intersection Management Accounting For Passenger Needs Through Prioritization
Kevin Riehl, Anastasios Kouvelas, Michail Makridis

TL;DR
The paper introduces the Priority Pass, a reservation-based system that prioritizes individual drivers at signalized intersections to improve safety, social equity, and efficiency without causing unnecessary delays.
Contribution
It presents a novel economic controller enabling fair, targeted prioritization of drivers, addressing a gap in existing traffic management strategies.
Findings
Up to 40% delay reduction for prioritized vehicles in Manhattan case study.
Potential daily revenue of up to 1 million dollars from prioritization market.
Enhanced social welfare by equitable delay allocation to those in need.
Abstract
Over the past few decades, efforts of road traffic management and practice have predominantly focused on maximizing system efficiency and mitigating congestion from a system perspective. This efficiency-driven approach implies the equal treatment of all vehicles, which often overlooks individual user experiences, broader social impacts, and the fact that users are heterogeneous in their urgency and experience different costs when being delayed. Existing strategies to account for the differences in needs of users in traffic management cover dedicated transit lanes, prioritization of emergency vehicles, transit signal prioritization, and economic instruments. Even though they are the major bottleneck for traffic in cities, no dedicated instrument that enables prioritization of individual drivers at intersections. The Priority Pass is a reservation-based, economic controller that expedites…
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