Abstract

The request of equal accessibility must be respected to some extent when dealing with problems of designing or rebuilding of emergency service systems. Not only the disutility of the average user but also the disutility of the worst situated user must be taken into consideration. Respecting this principle is called fairness of system design. Unfairness can be mitigated to a certain extent by an appropriate fair allocation of additional facilities among the centres. In this article, two criteria of collective fairness are defined in the connection with the facility allocation problem. To solve the problems, we suggest a series of fast algorithms for solving of the allocation problem. This article extends the family of the original solving techniques based on branch-and-bound principle by newly suggested techniques, which exploit either dynamic programming principle or convexity and monotony of decreasing nonlinearities in objective functions. The resulting algorithms were tested and compared performing numerical experiments with real-sized problem instances. The new proposed algorithms outperform the original approach. The suggested methods are able to solve general min-sum and min-max problems, in which a limited number of facilities should be assigned to individual members from a finite set of providers.

Highlights

  • An important task of state administration and self-government is to ensure public safety and health

  • Let m denote the number of clusters and the associated service centers of a considered emergency service system and let p denote the number of additional facilities, which are to be deployed among the service centers

  • An approach based on convexity and monotony of decreasing nonlinearities in objective functions was presented

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Summary

Introduction

An important task of state administration and self-government is to ensure public safety and health. The three primary emergency services that can be summoned directly by the public are emergency medical services, fire- Journal of Business Economics and Management, 2020, 21(4): 1058–1071 fighters, and police These service systems are designed and operated to provide the population of a geographical region with the emergency service. A finite set of service centers located at nodes of the road network of the region represents a structure of the emergency system. A problem of fair allocation of additional facilities in the given set of emergency service centers is dealt.

Literature review
Models of collective fairness and linear integer programming approach
Dynamic programming approach to the fair facility deployment
Alternative polynomial approaches to the fair facility deployment
Numerical experiments
Conclusions
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