GPS DAILY TERRA DAILY SPACE DAILY SPACE WAR MARS DAILY SPACE TRAVEL ABC SOLAR ENERGY DAILY
  GPS News  
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  
Search All Our Sites at SpaceBank
New York School Districts Install GPS Tracking Systems in Buses

When the school buses leave the lot each day with AWARE, school officials are able to track their location. AWARE also monitors performance and diagnoses maintenance issues remotely. This helps deliver greater driver, passenger and bus safety.
by Staff Writers
Warrenville IL (SPX) Mar 23, 2006
Cutting-edge technology is making it easier for transportation directors to keep track of some school buses in New York. With the help of a global-positioning satellite (GPS) system installed in each of the school buses for a pilot testing program, school officials can locate exactly where their buses are at all times.

IC Corporation introduced the pilot program with 10 New York school districts to integrate a GPS - or telematics solution - into their buses. International Truck and Engine, IC Corporation's parent company, developed the telematics solution - known as AWARE Vehicle Intelligence - to help improve overall school transportation operations through better maintenance efficiencies and immediate knowledge of each vehicle's location.

The new system can keep track of the location of each school bus at all times and monitors the various systems on the bus, such as checking how often its flashing red stop lights are activated. This provides a real-time record of school bus stops, which is important to school officials when it comes to knowing the exact times when school buses are making stops. Access through a password-protected Web site gives school officials secure access of the location and performance of their school bus fleet.

In the New York pilot program, supervisors managing the district transportation operations are pleased with the new innovation and are discovering a number of potential uses and advantages for AWARE in school buses.

"Security is its greatest benefit," said Chuck Tanzer, fleet manager for the Saratoga Springs City School District. "By knowing where the bus is, if there is any kind of incident, I know where it is and can better determine how best to support the situation. You know immediately if there has been an accident or hijacking so that help can be dispatched that much quicker. That's even more important since 9/11."

In addition to tracking a bus's real-time location, AWARE also helps manage such operating costs as fuel costs. AWARE combines remote vehicle performance monitoring, diagnostics, service and vehicle positioning into a single Web-based tool, allowing school administrators access to the most updated information on their bus fleet. It provides maintenance professionals with an easier way to diagnose any issues with a bus, and it provides parents and school officials with peace-of-mind knowing that the buses are being monitored continually.

"Tracking fuel efficiency was accurate and easy, and today that is one of my biggest issues since my budget won't change because the prices do," said Robert Zeller, transportation supervisor at Warwick Valley Central School District.

One example from the pilot program provides a vivid illustration of how AWARE can make a difference. A New York school transportation director one day checked via computer on the location of one of his school buses outfitted with AWARE and discovered the bus was 45 miles away in a different city.

Unaware the bus had an assignment that day, he called the dispatcher who claimed the vehicle was in the bus parking lot. As it turns out, a substitute driver mistakenly had taken the wrong bus on a field trip and AWARE was able to pinpoint its exact location.

AWARE also features a "geofence" capability that allows school officials to designate a virtual boundary for school buses. If a bus leaves that boundary, an immediate alert can be sent to transportation officials via e-mail, cell phone text message or pager to let them know that a bus has left its operating area.

"School officials need to know where their school buses are at all times," said Dan Lindberg, vice president and general manager of AWARE Vehicle Intelligence at International. "When those school buses leave the lot each day with AWARE, school officials are able to track their location. AWARE also monitors performance and diagnoses maintenance issues remotely. This helps deliver greater driver, passenger and bus safety.

"School administrators also will detect an impact on the bottom line because the system helps reduce fuel and maintenance costs. Over the long run, AWARE can help pay for itself with the financial return on investment and overall peace-of-mind."

Related Links
IC Corporation

TomTom Unveils a Range of New and Updated Content And Services
Concord MA (SPX) Mar 21, 2006
TomTom unveils the full details of a new and updated collection of TomTom PLUS content and services. Building on TomTom's already rich PLUS portfolio, the new range of TomTom PLUS content and services gives customers the option to personalize their TomTom products, while improving and enhancing their navigation experience.






Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
  • Lockheed Martin Delivers F-22 Raptor To Second Operational Squadron
  • CAESAR Triumphs As New Gen Of Radar Takes Flight
  • Northrop Grumman to Provide F-16 Fleet To Greek Air Force
  • US Offers India Advanced Fighter Aircraft

  • Research On The Road To Intelligent Cars
  • Volvo Promises Hybrid Truck Engines Within Three Years
  • Carbon Fiber Cars Could Put US On Highway To Efficiency
  • Ventilated Auto Seats Improve Fuel Economy, Comfort

  • INX Introduces Emergency And Military Communications Solution
  • Responsive, Affordable Satellite Enhances Support To Warfighter
  • DRS Tech: Advanced Intelligence Equipment
  • Northrop Grumman And US Air Force To Examine Airborne Networking

  • Raytheon's Early Warning Radar Participates In Missile Defense Flight Test
  • New Poll Shows New Yorkers Support Missile Defense
  • BMD Watch: DOD's IG Fumes At MDA
  • BMD Focus: Quality Control Works

  • Scientists A Step Closer To Protecting World's Most Important Crop
  • Brazilian Farming Will Doom 40 Percent Of Amazon
  • New Sensor Will Help Guarantee Freshness
  • The Green Revolution Comes To Laos

  • Large Centrifuge Helps Researchers Mimic Effects Of Katrina On Levees
  • Louisiana Selects SGI For Storm Modeling And Visualization
  • Search For Katrina's Dead Stymied By Bureaucratic Wrangling
  • China Offers Bangladesh River Data For Flood Forecasts

  • Satellite Multicasting Improves Educational Information Delivery
  • Four More Glonass-M Satellites To Be Constructed In 2006
  • Radar Altimetry Shows Warming Affecting Polar Glaciers
  • Blue Sky's Iridium Sat System Supports Fossett's Latest Flight Attempt

  • Quickplacer, The Fastest Robot In The World
  • iRobot's PackBot On The Front Lines
  • Robots Used To Keep Children Safe In Japan
  • Biology Inspires Perceptive Machines

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement