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  • "Logistics and Supply Chain"
    The supply chain is the movement of raw materials and parts from the beginning of production through delivery to the consumer. Logistics is the aspect of supply chain management that plans, implements, and controls the efficient, effective forward and reverse flow and storage of goods, services, and related information between the point of origin and the point of consumption to meet customers' requirements.
Paper
Published: 2008
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Steve Globerman, Susan Albrecht
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Summary:
Variable service times at vehicle processing facilities (borders, weigh stations, landside marine port gates) cause transportation planning challenges for companies that regularly visit them. Companies must either build more time into their schedules than is necessary, and therefore underutilize their equipment, or risk missing delivery windows or exceeding hours of service regulations, actions that can result in fines, lost business opportunities, or other logistical costs.
Paper
Published: 2022
Authors: Haena KimDr. Anne Goodchild, Linda Boyle
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Summary:
While the number of deliveries has been increasing rapidly, infrastructure such as parking and building configurations has changed less quickly, given limited space and funds. This may lead to an imbalance between supply and demand, preventing the current resources from meeting the future needs of urban freight activities. This study aimed to discover the future delivery rates that would overflow the current delivery systems and find the optimal number of resources.
Paper
Published: 2009
Authors: Dr. Ed McCormack, Mark Jensen, Al Hovde
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Board 88th Annual Meeting
Summary:
A series of field operational tests completed by Washington State over a 10-year period has shown that electronic container door seals (E-seals) can increase the efficiency and improve the security of containerized cargo movement. Universal use of E-seals, along with the associated infrastructure, could provide notable improvements in security, container tracking, and transaction cost reductions.
Paper
Published: 2021
Journal/Book:  Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Summary:
As ecommerce and urban deliveries spike, cities grapple with managing urban freight more actively. To manage urban deliveries effectively, city planners and policy makers need to better understand driver behaviors and the challenges they experience in making deliveries. In this study, we collected data on commercial vehicle (CV) driver behaviors by performing ridealongs with various logistics carriers.
Paper
Published: 2010
Authors: Dr. Ed McCormack, Mark Jensen, Al Hovde
Journal/Book: International Journal of Applied Logistics
Summary:
Electronic door seals (E-seals) were tested on shipping containers that traveled through ports, over borders, and on roadways. The findings showed that using these RFID devices could increase supply chain efficiency and improve the security of containerized cargo movements, particularly when E-seals replace common mechanical seals. Before the benefits of E-seals can be realized, several barriers must be addressed.
Student Thesis and Dissertations
Published: 2021
Authors: Şeyma Güneş
Summary:
The demand for home deliveries has seen a drastic increase, especially in cities, putting urban freight systems under pressure. As more people move to urban areas and change consumer behaviors to shop online, busy delivery operations cause externalities such as congestion and air pollution. Micro-consolidation implementations and their possible pairing with soft transportation modes offer practical, economic, environmental, and cultural benefits.
Paper
Published: 2013
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Wenjuan Zhao
Journal/Book: Maritime Economics & Logistics
Summary:
This article considers the effectiveness of a truck appointment system in improving yard efficiency in a container terminal. This research uses the truck appointment information obtained from an appointment system to improve import container retrieval operation and reduce container rehandles by adopting an advanced container location assignment algorithm. By reducing container rehandles, the terminal could improve yard crane productivity and reduce truck transaction time.
Paper
Published: 2022
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review
Summary:
As awareness of the vulnerability of isolated regions to natural disasters grows, the demand for efficient evacuation plans is increasing. However, isolated areas, such as islands, often have characteristics that make conventional methods, such as evacuation by private vehicle, impractical to infeasible. Mathematical models are conventional tools for evacuation planning.
Keywords:
Evacuation
Technical Report
Published: 2009
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Derek Andrioli
Journal/Book: Transportation Northwest (TransNow)
Summary:
Establishment level employment data indicate that the warehousing industry has experienced rapid growth and restructuring since 1998. This restructuring has resulted in geographic shifts at the national, regional, and local scales. Uneven growth in warehousing establishments across the Pacific Northwest has likely exerted a significant impact on the regional transportation system, but the extent of these transportation impacts remains unknown.
Report
Published: 2022
Summary:
Just as there has been a push for more climate-friendly passenger travel in recent years, that same push is building for freight travel. At the same time ecommerce is booming and goods delivery in cities is rising, sustainability has become a policy focus for city governments and a corporate priority for companies. Why? Cities report being motivated to be responsive to residents, businesses, and the goals of elected leaders.
Technical Report
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Felipe Sandoval
Journal/Book: Oregon Department of Transportation, Research Section
Summary:
This research offers a novel formulation for including emissions into fleet assignment and vehicle routing and for the trade-offs faced by fleet operators between cost, emissions, and service quality. This approach enables evaluation of the impact of a variety of internal changes (e.g. time window schemes) and external policies (e.g. spatial restrictions), and enables comparisons of the relative impacts on fleet emissions.
Article
Published: 2021
Journal/Book: Coast Guard Journal of Safety & Security at Sea, Proceedings of the Marine Safety & Security Council
Summary:
Competition throughout the urban freight supply chain is steadily growing. Companies need to devise innovative methods for the transportation of goods from raw materials all the way to the final consumer. From concept to practice, it can be challenging to identify affordable solutions.
Technical Report
Published: 2012
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Andrea Gagliano, Maura Rowell
Journal/Book: Transportation Northwest Regional Center X (TransNow)
Summary:
The University of Washington (UW), Washington State University (WSU), and Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) recently developed a multi-modal statewide geographic information system (GIS) model that can help the state prioritize strategies that protect industries most vulnerable to disruptions, supporting economic activity in the state and increasing economic resilience.
Student Thesis and Dissertations
Published: 2021
Authors: Caleb Diehl
Summary:
In recent years, e-commerce has dramatically increased deliveries to residential areas. The rise in delivery vehicle activity creates externalities for the transportation system, including congestion, competition for parking space, and emissions. Common carrier lockers have emerged as a way to manage these effects by consolidating deliveries, but they remain largely untested in the United States.
Technical Report
Published: 2013
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Andrea Gagliano, Maura Rowell
Journal/Book: Oregon Dept. of Transportation, Research Section
Summary:
In many regions throughout the world, freight models are used to aid infrastructure investment and policy decisions. Since freight is such an integral part of efficient supply chains, more realistic transportation models can be of greater assistance. Transportation models in general have been moving away from the traditional four-step model into activity-based and supply chain-based models. Personal transportation models take into consideration household demographics and why families travel.