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KFH Group Staff

Jill C. Stober

Transportation Planner
Bethesda Office

Jill Stober works on a wide range of projects as a Transportation Planner at KFH Group.  Her background includes needs assessments, transit service (rural, small urban, and intercity) planning, and transportation coordination.  She is also conducting work on the role of transit in climate change mitigation.

Ms. Stober was awarded a renewal scholarship from the American Public Transportation Foundation (APTF) at the 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Public Transportation Association (APTA). 

Selected Experience

Needs Assessments:  Ms. Stober has significant experience in analyzing transportation needs through demographic data, public outreach, and survey work. She utilizes Census data on potentially transit dependent populations to conduct a relative ranking of areas to determine those with the highest transportation needs within a jurisdiction, state, or region.  Ms. Stober is adept at using ArcView GIS to create maps that clearly portray demographic data, transit trip generators, gaps in transit service and opportunities for additional or new service.

Ms. Stober has also conducted needs analyses using data from travel demand models at the transportation analysis zone- and zip code-levels.  For a study of potential High Occupancy Toll lanes on Interstate 95 in northern Virginia, she created maps to portray projected home-based work trips in the study corridor.  Ms. Stober has also analyzed transit needs by zip code for the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) process at Fort Meade, Maryland.

Ms. Stober also has experience in conducting and analyzing on-board rider surveys, including recent projects in Lynchburg, Virginia and Annapolis, Maryland.

Service Planning:  Ms. Stober utilizes the needs assessments and input from stakeholders to develop service alternatives for various types of transit plans as described above.  In Bulloch County, she developed a small fixed-route system for the city and Georgia Southern University.  For Anne Arundel County’s transportation development plan, she helped create a countywide network that included local circulators, feeder routes to regional rail systems, and commuter bus routes.  Several of these alternatives were developed to accommodate the anticipated growth in the County due to BRAC at Fort Meade.  In Colorado, she helped develop alternatives for intercity and regional bus services to meet long-distance transportation needs, particularly for tourism and employment.  For Minnesota’s intercity bus study, Ms. Stober analyzed ridership data on existing routes to determine the utilization of existing stops and to plan service expansion and new services accordingly.

In addition to developing physical routes to meet transit needs, Ms. Stober has experience developing the implementation plan, outlining operational details such as service spans and headways, the required capital, the associated costs, and potential funding sources.  She has also worked on ridership and productivity estimates for proposed routes and analyzed the pros and cons of alternatives in recommending the implementation timeline or phasing.

Transportation Coordination:  Ms. Stober has also utilized needs assessments to develop coordinated public transit-human services transportation plans, according to SAFETEA-LU requirements, for Maryland, Arkansas, and Virginia.  At regional forums for Maryland’s plans, she helped lead breakout sessions with participants to determine the area’s local needs and identify potential solutions.  She then used this data to develop coordination strategies and work with stakeholder groups to prioritize and finesse strategies to best meet local and regional needs.  In Virginia, she developed GIS maps of the needs analysis for each Planning District Commission (PDC) and worked with stakeholders to identify additional needs, service gaps, and suitable strategies to ascertain funding and meet needs.

Other Experience:  As part of the service planning process, Ms. Stober has evaluated the operations and performance of existing services to determine areas for improvement and opportunities for increased efficiencies.  In Anne Arundel County, she identified existing routes from different providers that were not meeting the Maryland Transit Administration’s performance standards for fixed-route and demand-response service provided by Locally Operated Transit Systems.  Ms. Stober has also used GIS to conduct cost analyses, determining the cost allocation of inter-jurisdictional services based on route distance or time in each jurisdiction.  The results were used to evaluate the transit system’s existing financing mechanisms and to propose alternatives for funding route expansions or new services.

Ms. Stober has also worked on the transit component of implementing Maryland’s Climate Action Plan, the goal of which is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent from 2006 levels by 2020.  She worked with stakeholders to develop transit-related strategies and estimate the reductions in greenhouse gas emissions that could be achieved in implementing these strategies.

 

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Education

·        Master of Urban and Regional Planning, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

·        B.A. Environmental Science and Policy, Duke University

 

Previous Positions

·        Transportation Planning Apprentice – Planning and Operations Department, Potomac and Rappahannock Transportation Commission