Forget ‘Bridgegate.’ Here Are Six Innovators Trying to Fix the Daily Commute

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has found himself embroiled in scandal after texts and emails linked members of his administration to politically motivated lane closings. “Bridgegate,” or revenge by traffic jam, has topped headlines. But we here at NationSwell wondered: Aren’t there people in America trying to help drivers, not hinder them? In an effort to spotlight the problem-solvers, we rounded up some of the best innovators who are working to fix our traffic woes:

1) The startup that wants to make sitting at red lights more bearable

Matt Ginsberg, CEO of the Oregon startup Green Driver, has created an app that may alleviate the stress of being stuck at a red light. Called EnLighten, it uses real-time traffic data to count down when the light will change from red to green. A few seconds before the light changes, a chime goes off, allowing drivers to refocus attention on the road. Another benefit? If the technology is integrated with the car’s computer, a hybrid could more efficiently choose between gas and battery, meaning lots of savings for drivers. The free app is available in nine towns and cities, and Ginsberg plans to expand nationwide.
MORE: 9 Surprising Infrastructure Innovations Happening Right Here in America

2) The governor who’s trying to fix his state’s transportation infrastructure

New Jersey, take note: Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick and his administration have an ambitious plan that would substantially improve the state’s transportation system. Just last Friday, the governor unveiled a $12-billion, five-year transportation blueprint that called for an all-electronic tolling on the Massachusetts Turnpike, new buses and improved bus maintenance facilities, a seasonal train service between Boston and Cape Cod, and improvements to outdated bridges across the state.

3) The engineer who’s campaigning for more nighttime deliveries

Jose Holguin-Veras, a professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y., has been conducting research for a dozen years in the hopes that he can convince businesses in cities like New York to take overnight deliveries. One of his studies found that deliveries made between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. could cut costs by 30 percent and, with fewer trucks on the road, could alleviate traffic during the day. Holguin-Veras is leading a program in conjunction with the New York City Department of Transportation, called deliverEASE, which has already enlisted 150 restaurants, grocery stores and retailers — including Whole Foods, Just Salad and Sysco — to take overnight deliveries. A good start for a city that accepts more than 200,000 deliveries every day.
MORE: Can a Crime-Reduction Method Also Prevent Traffic Accidents?

4) The official who fought for public transit

Steve Meyer, chief capital development officer for the Utah Transit Authority, faced an uphill battle when convincing Utah residents to embrace a Salt Lake Valley light rail. But thanks to the UTA’s strategy to unite people and the cities up and down the Salt Lake Valley corridor, the TRAX system was completed in August 2013, two years ahead of schedule and $340 million under budget. The UTA estimates that TRAX ridership saves 29,000 trips per day — enough to free up two lanes on Interstate 15 every day.

5) The professor whose algorithm may prevent traffic waves

Berthold Horn, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has developed an algorithm that might prevent traffic by helping drivers maintain the optimal distance between cars both in front of and behind them. Using the same technology that powers adaptive cruise control — where cars gauge how fast nearby vehicles are going using radar sensors or digital cameras — Horn’s system would have cars maintaining a distance halfway between the car ahead and the car behind. Most drivers only think about the distance ahead, but by also considering the distance of the car behind, one car’s sudden braking is less likely to trigger a chain reaction that causes a jam.

6) The traffic-easing drones everyone is waiting for

Though it isn’t immediately clear when transportation authorities might use such technology, universities are examining the way that drones could make our roads more efficient. At the Michigan Tech Research Institute, part of the Michigan Technological University, researchers are constructing drones that might one day be used to monitor the condition of unpaved roads, understand traffic patterns and evaluate conditions inside culverts. Another project in Georgia recently received funding from the Federal Highway Administration to understand how drones could help workers maintain road safety.
MORE: Can a New Kind of Sidewalk Saves Lives?

An Innovative Idea to Help Veterans and the Environment at the Same Time

Here’s a sunny way to help veterans. SolarCure is a New Jersey-based public relations and marketing firm that runs an innovative program, Adopt A Solar Panel, encouraging donors to pay for solar panels on the roofs of non-profit organizations such as VFW halls and American Legion posts. The veterans’ organizations get the benefit of reduced energy rates and can even earn some money from the solar panels through Solar Renewable Energy Credits. SolarCure works with veteran-owned companies or companies that employ veterans to install the panels. SolarCure’s CEO, Mike Ferraro, served in the Air Force for 32 years. “When I came back from Vietnam we did not receive a very nice welcome,” Participant Frank Buono, president of Intelligent Business Concepts, said in a statement. “Due to that experience, I am always looking for ways to assist our new veterans. SolarCure is one of those ways.”
MORE: How Doing Something With Veterans Does Something for Them (And America)

Pediatric Cancer Research Was Falling Behind in One Crucial Area. Until Now.

So much of the hope and promise of cancer research comes from the incredible potential that personalized, targeted treatments can offer. Targeting the specific genetic mutations in an individual’s cancer leads to much more effective, manageable treatment. But most of the research and success stories have been (not surprisingly) for adult cancers. Pediatric cancer researchers, on the other hand, haven’t had the resources to share the same sense of victory. The Hugs for Brady Foundation committed itself to changing that trend, with a large research grant at Rutgers University. Some kids’ cancers are among the rarest types, which means they’re the toughest to study and cure, and the commitment from Hugs for Brady will allow for innovation in research to apply precision medicine’s best practices to these devastating forms of cancer.

This Hero Cop’s New Beat Is Diapers

Officer Tyrone Hodges spent his law enforcement career protecting the low-income people of Trenton, N.J. until a line-of-duty injury forced him to retire in 2004. He wanted to continue doing meaningful work, and he was completing his master’s degree in organizational leadership at Rider University, when he read that many families in the area can’t afford diapers for their babies. For his final school project, he personally collected a thousand diapers and gave them to the Millhill Child and Family Development Center, so many that the center told him they might not be able to store them all. Then Hodges shifted to collecting donations for the center, garnering enough to purchase 20,000 more diapers. That’s enough to keep the 2,500 low-income families the center supports well stocked for a good while. To top it off, Hodges wrote a 30-page paper about the project. Sounds like an A+.

How the Internet Can Make Food Drives Better

This winter, the food drive at the Bayonne Economic Opportunity Foundation in New Jersey is doing more than just collecting cans outside local grocery stores. Thanks to a new company, they’re reaching out online to get fresh fruits and vegetables and other healthy food before it spoils. YouGiveGoods is a for-profit company that enables churches, food pantries, and other charitable groups to request the items they really need, while making donating as easy as ordering from Amazon. The efficiency of online ordering makes a wide range of foods available to donate.

Beautiful Anti-Bullying Song, Written by a Student, Is Taking Over East Brunswick

Kathleen Lonski thought that her school’s anti-bullying campaign left out a big piece of the picture. Though the school was trying to stop bullying, she didn’t see any support for victims of bullying. Though she hadn’t directly experienced bullying herself, she saw a need for advice and empathy for her classmates. With her insightful look at the problem, her creative approach to a solution was fitting. She picked up her guitar, applied lessons from her after-school music composition club, and wrote a song. With “Don’t Let Them In,” she has rallied the school district and the whole community. Almost every school in her East Brunswick school district has played the song, and she performed the song at the East Brunswick Performing Arts Center to a standing ovation. Building on the success, she’s recording a demo album, hoping her message will continue to spread in support of victims of bullying.