Speeding the route to
vehicle safety
Every year, officers of the Government of British Columbia's Commercial Vehicle Safety
and Enforcement (CVSE) unit perform approximately 35,000 roadside inspections of commercial
vehicles. They're checking for safety violations and ensuring that all commercial vehicles
meet the standards set out in the Motor Vehicle Act Regulations. In other words, they're
making sure the province's roads are as safe as possible for everyone.
It's a vital task, but until recently, it was hampered by delays in getting inspection information
from the roadside into the CVSE database. Inspectors completed forms by hand and forwarded them
to the nearest regional office, which then sent them to the central office. This meant the same
data was entered three separate times, a process that was time-consuming, costly, labour-intensive
and could be prone to errors. Worst of all, accurate data about non-compliant vehicles was not
immediately available to enforcement officers, which meant that unsafe vehicles or drivers
could be posing continued dangers to other road users.
To solve the problem, CVSE began developing a business case for automating the process by creating
a complete mobile field inspection solution.
Commercial Vehicle Safety and Enforcement in British Columbia
Commercial Vehicle Safety and Enforcement falls under the B.C. Ministry of Public Safety and
Solicitor General. As a Government office, the unit is required to use a competitive selection
process when looking for new partners and providers, so a request for proposals was issued.
However, the unit's management team already knew that there wasn't a single existing solution
that met all their needs. One would have to be created specifically for them. "We had done a bit
of an environmental scan ourselves and were pretty sure which way we wanted to go," says Rob Kroeker,
B.C.'s Director of Commercial Vehicle Safety. "But what was avant garde about this was that we
were looking to have one service provider. We wanted a single source for the hardware, the wireless
communications structure, the software and the development."
As one of the providers bidding for the contract, TELUS coordinated a complete solution, calling
on the expertise of a number of different TELUS units and developing a preferred status
relationship with a Victoria-based developer of electronic forms solutions. "TELUS prevailed,
not just on price, but based on the quality of their solution and their expertise as well," says Kroeker.
A complete, single-source solution
For each inspection, a CVSE officer completes an eForm on a ruggedized Panasonic Toughbook
tablet PC. The information from the form is encrypted and compressed for security, then transmitted
via the private TELUS 1X wireless network to a highly secure TELUS Data Centre in Victoria. Finally,
a link to the B.C. Government's own data centre makes it available to any authorized CVSE or
enforcement officer who needs it. In this way, information that previously took 14 days or longer
to become available is now accessible in mere minutes, with a minimum of manual effort and a
significant improvement in the quality of data. Because data is only entered once, there are
far fewer opportunities for error, resulting in greatly increased accuracy.
To make everything work seamlessly for CVSE, TELUS provides a single-source, integrated solution
that includes procurement, implementation, deployment, hardware, network, hosting, application
integration, support and training.
Specifically, TELUS provides:
- The eForm and custom Java application, developed with PureEdge of Victoria and installed on tablet PCs
- TELUS Mobility cell phones, PC air cards and 1X wireless network, with TELUS Mobility partners subcontracted to provide and install vehicle mounts
- Design, configuration and deployment of the servers at the Victoria Data Centre
- Network connectivity between the Data Centre and the TELUS Mobility network
Currently, the solution is in its pilot stage, with full rollout expected shortly.
A very positive experience
"Our experience has been very positive," says Kroeker. "The solution not only delivers an automated
form, it has also allowed our patrol staff to deliver a number of other functions through wireless.
For example, they can now look up vehicle and driver data from their truck, which is something
they couldn't do before. There's been enormous uptake of this from our staff, a complete endorsement of it."
Another advantage for CVSE is that the solution is fully scalable. It can expand and incorporate
additional elements on an as-needed basis. It's also repeatable, which means that similar solutions
can be developed on an accelerated basis, leveraging the knowledge and expertise already gained. In
fact, TELUS has already bid for and won a follow-up project and is currently designing another
automated form to be used by garages that do government inspections of commercial vehicles.
Kroeker has been particularly pleased with the positive working relationship that has developed
between CVSE and TELUS. "TELUS has brought a customer service bent to the project and shown a
complete willingness to meet our needs."