NZ Transport Agency Risk Management Framework 2010-2013 | Research Report
This report aims to analyze and evaluate the New Zealand Transport Agency’s enterprise risk management system and explain how the system works to achieve the agency’s objectives. It outlines their risk management system including the features, foundations, and implementation. It also informs NZTA employees of what is expected at all levels with regard to risk management.
Connecting Maine: Planning Our Transportation Future | Plan
SafetyThis plan seeks to meet the needs of Maine's multimodal transportation system over a twenty-year period. It highlights five strategic goals: safety, sustainability, economic vitality, quality of life, and public awareness and participation. It is a resource designed to aid organizations and communities in planning for the transportation system into the future, especially when facing funding shortages.
In 2018, Maine DOT began to visualize the next iteration of their long range plan. While the final version of the new plan was anticipated by the end of 2019, it is still undergoing revision. To check on the state of the new plan go to this link.
NH Long Range Transportation Plan 2010-2030 | Plan
This plan directs New Hampshire towards its future vision for transportation. It focuses around four strategic outcomes: unify transportation planning and investment with broader state goals and actions; integrate planning and investment decision-making across all transportation modes, facilities, and services; increase investment in the areas of transportation infrastructure preservation and maintenance, travel demand management, and travel choices; and establish new, more effective collaborative partnerships to better leverage resources and to achieve long term goals.
West Virginia Multi-Modal Statewide Transportation Plan | Plan
The West Virginia long range plan develops a framework for prioritizing transportation investment across the state for a twenty-year horizon. It plots a direction for the state's transportation system, and it guides the state as it faces challenges related to finances, environmental sustainability, land use, and social equity.
Guidebook on Risk Analysis Tools and Management Practices to Control Transportation Project Costs | Research Report
This guidebook contains specific and practical to implement guidance for state DOTs on how to best manage the costs of transportation projects. Controlling costs is essential for any agency and this guidebook contains a toolbox of strategies for agencies to use. The tools include strategies and methods to meet cost-estimations. This guide is of obvious use to anyone who is responsible for managing costs or expenses at any transit agency during the planning, preconstruction, or execution of transit projects.
State DOT CEO Leadership Forum- Spring/Summer 2009 Pilot Study of State Driven Performance Based Management Reporting | Research Report
In June 2000, TRB sponsored a workshop for state DOT CEOs to provide a forum for peer-to-peer discussion of experience in managing internal and external change. Transportation Research Circular 501, Strategic Management Research Needs for State Departments of Transportation (December 2000), documented the activity. Many CEOs who attended the workshop subsequently commented on the positive experience they had, being able to learn about national trends and exchange ideas with their peers on changes affecting and being initiated in their organizations. Consequently, other NCHRP projects have enabled similar exchanges in more recent years: a second workshop in May, 2003 (NCHRP Project 20-24(29)), a research riew on CEO Engagement Options initiated in 2004, and the State DOT Leadership Forum—2006 (NCHRP Project 20-24(51)).
The 2009 forum built on several recent NCHRP projects in the 20-24 series that have developed guiding principles for establishing comparative performance measures and case-study examples of willing DOTs working together to establish such measures in key strategic management areas relevant to many DOTs. These measures are used for identifying best management practices and lessons learned that may then be shared among all agencies. In 2007, AASHTO’s Performance Based Highway Program Task Force presented to the Congressionally-mandated National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission examples of performance management to indicate how state DOTs can refine current performance-based management approaches to support an effective nationwide program in preparation for the next transportation funding reauthorization. Performance-based program management was the topic focus of the 2009 DOT CEO Management Forum.
The objective of this research project was to plan, organize, and hold a DOT CEO Management Forum in 2009. The forum followed the model represented by earlier forums, entailing an initial review of literature, current research, and recent state DOT experience on performance-based program management and a survey DOT CEO’s on the major issues and concerns surrounding this topic and its relationship to legislative program and policy development and management, particularly as applicable to federal-aid programs. A white paper was prepared to inform and stimulate discussion among forum participants, focused particularly on practical experience with performance-based program management and issues agencies face in adopting this approach. The forum was held at the University of Minnesota in Spring 2009.
Wyoming Connects: The Long Range Transportation Plan | Plan
Wyoming's long range plan is part of the planning process called Wyoming Connects. The long range plan highlights sixteen multimodal State Significant Corridors crucial to Wyoming's transportation system, and it methodologically analyzes future needs and revenue to provide a framework for maintaining the transportation network.
Toward Developing Performance Based Federal-Aid Programs | Research Report
Bridge, Pavement, SafetyThis project initially entailed a review of current literature on federal agency, DOT, and other transportation agency practices in performance-based budgeting, planning, and management of highway transportation programs, particularly with regard to lessons for highway-program budgeting, planning, and management. The research team worked with AASHTO leadership to develop and refine descriptions of the current state of practice in performance-based budgeting, planning, and management of highway transportation programs and to assess the impact of alternate federal-aid program mixes and apportionment formulas on transportation agencies’ ability to achieve specific performance goals. Working with AASHTO leadership, the research team undertook to develop alternatives for federal-aid program management to improve agencies’ ability to achieve specific performance goals
Integrating Individual Transportation System-Level Performance Programs to Determine Network Performance | Research Report
Environment, Safety, System PerformanceObjective: To develop a handbook that can be used as a reference by transportation agencies when implementing network performance measures across modes or jurisdictions, including methods for integrating performance measures from individual modes and jurisdictions and developing new measures, if needed, for transportation network performance.
Transportation Performance Management: Insight from Practitioners | Research Report
Bridge, PavementThe objective of this research is to develop a guidebook that reflects current practice in designing, implementing, and sustaining transportation performance management programs in state DOTs. The guidebook will include effective performance management frameworks and related tools and will particularly focus on how performance management programs are being integrated into decision making.
Supplement to the AASHTO Transportation Asset Management Guide: Volume 2 – A Focus on Implementation | Guide/Manual, Research Report
Bridge, PavementDevelopment of an implementation guide for asset management including processes and tools that can be used to implement TAM, strategies for enhancing communication about TAM and ways ERP systems can effectively support TAM.
Developing a GPS-Based Truck Freight Performance Measure Platform | Research Report
Freight"The Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT), Transportation Northwest (TransNow) at the University of Washington, and the Washington Trucking Associations have partnered on a research effort to collect and analyze global positioning system (GPS) truck data from commercial, in-vehicle, truck fleet management systems used in the central Puget Sound region. The research project is collecting commercially available GPS data and evaluating their feasibility to support a state truck freight network performance monitoring program. WSDOT is interested in using this program to monitor truck travel times and system reliability, and to guide freight investment decisions.
The researchers reviewed truck freight performance measures that could be extracted from the data and that focused on travel times and speeds, which, analyzed over time, determine a roadway system's reliability. The utility of spot speeds and the GPS data in general was evaluated in a case study of a three-week construction project on the Interstate-90 bridge. The researchers also explored methods for capturing regional truck travel performance."