Canvas Outage

Due to the Canvas outage, all Rutgers University–New Brunswick final exams scheduled for Friday, May 8, 2026, have been postponed. Bloustein School Internship poster sessions for today will be rescheduled. 

Adrian Ayala MCRP ’21 awarded top honors for TPD Student Paper Competition

March 9, 2021

Adrian Ayala, a second-year Master of City and Regional Planning student at the Bloustein School, was awarded first place for the 2021 Transportation Planning Division (TPD) Student Paper Competition, Exploring Alternatives to Police-Based Traffic Enforcement and Overcoming their Potential Barriers to Implementation.

The award will be presented virtually at the TPD Annual Business Meeting during the 2021 National Planning Conference.

The paper demonstrates the pressing need for alternative means of traffic enforcement and explores potential barriers those alternatives may face, along with possible solutions.

Traffic collisions are a serious threat on U.S. roadways, causing the death of over 35,000 Americans each year. Although there is a clear consensus that this public health crisis must be made a top priority throughout all levels of government, current traffic enforcement methods are not directly tied to increased traffic safety. Instead, traffic stops are often initiated by racial bias and devolve into the site of escalation, criminalization, and violence.

The use of police to initiate traffic stops fails on two fronts – the lack of a positive effect on safety as compared to alternative means of traffic enforcement, and the explicit and implicit racism that results in severe, harmful outcomes for Black people. Poor, Black communities disproportionately carry the burden of traffic-related injuries and fatalities due to being neglected in terms of transportation design and enforcement techniques that would lead to safer transportation networks and greater health outcomes. In addition to facing unsafe conditions across all modes, Black drivers are stopped much more frequently than white drivers. Thus, alternatives to police-based traffic enforcement could potentially serve to distribute traffic enforcement more fairly, while at the same time encouraging safer driving behavior and avoiding possible escalation and subsequent violence. Although alternatives to police-based traffic enforcement may serve to significantly reduce opportunities for racial bias in enforcement, the correct methods for implementation of these alternatives are heavily debated.

Adrian is concentrating on transportation planning and is currently working as a graduate research assistant for the Voorhees Transportation Center. He is also completing independent research projects with assistant professor Kelcie Ralph and VTC senior research specialist Charles Brown.

He currently works in the private sector as a transportation engineer for the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) on projects related to bus infrastructure improvements as well as design processes for improved pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure.

“Having been born and raised here in the greater Boston area, I have a unique connection to the metropolitan area and a passionate interest in developing more efficient and equitable multimodal networks to serve the diverse groups who rely on alternate modes of transportation. I hope to continue to serve my local community once I graduate,” said Adrian.

Previously, Adrian interned with the Bus Planning Department at the Washington Metro Area Transit Authority (WMATA), He completed an undergraduate degree in Civil Engineering with a concentration in transportation at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Recent Posts

NJ State Financial Aid Outcomes Dashboard Released

The New Jersey Statewide Data System (NJSDS) is pleased to present the first release of the New Jersey State Financial Aid Outcomes Dashboard. This dashboard shows outcomes calculated by linking longitudinal higher education data from the Office of the Secretary of...

Anita Franzione, 2026 Rose Teaching Excellence Award Recipient

The Bloustein School is pleased to announce that Anita Franzione, Full Professor of Teaching, is the 2026 recipient of the Jerome G. Rose Excellence in Teaching Award. The award is presented annually to a full-time faculty member committed to quality teaching,...

Emeritus Professor John Pucher: A Blueprint for Better Biking

"Cycling is healthy.” This simple mantra guides the lifestyle and academic work of East Coast Greenway Alliance Advisory Board member, professor and author John Pucher, who — at age 75 — is a regular rider of the East Coast Greenway in Raleigh, North Carolina. Pucher,...

NJSPL: Detecting Change in NJ Historical Water Bodies Using ArcGIS Pro

As we finish creating digital representations, or features, of historical water bodies for our project to create a dataset of historical water bodies in New Jersey, we begin exploring how these water bodies have changed over time. In GIS, the process of quantifying...