NMDOT Pavement Distress Data Quality Management Plan | Guide/Manual, Research Report
PavementThis document is a pavement distress data quality management plan produced by the New Mexico Department of Transportation (NMDOT). It details the department's quality management approach, protocols, quality control procedures, and independent verification methods.
Publisher: New Mexico Department of Transportation
Targeting The Crosshairs | Article, Research Report
SafetyCrashes at intersections are one of the leading causes of highway fatalities. In 2014, intersection crashes alone resulted in 8,664 fatalities out of the 32,675 total roadway deaths that year. As a means to address traffic-related fatalities and injuries on the Nation’s roadways, the Federal Highway Administration’s Office of Safety employs a focused approach to safety. This approach is built around three technical focus areas--roadway departures, intersections, and pedestrians/bicycles--and prioritizes resources and efforts to help States and local agencies address their road safety needs. More specifically, the Intersection Safety Program focuses on the many variables that influence safety at intersections, from behavioral factors and special users to intersection design and facility type.
One of the key tools that falls under this program is the Intersection Safety Implementation Plan (ISIP), which can be instrumental in helping transportation agencies reduce intersection-related traffic injuries and fatalities. States develop ISIPs as a way to include intersection safety in their Strategic Highway Safety Plan, either as a standalone emphasis area or integrated across various emphasis areas. Although a State’s Strategic Highway Safety Plan might identify some strategies for improving intersection safety, the ISIP establishes more detailed implementation activities, countermeasures, strategies, deployment levels, implementation steps, and required funding.
Developing TAMP Financial Plans: Final Guidance | Guide/Manual
Asset Management, Bridge, PavementThis document explains how State DOTs can develop financial planning processes to support development of their 10-year transportation asset management plans (TAMPs). The FHWA defines a TAMP financial plan as “a long- term plan spanning 10 years or longer, presenting a State DOT’s estimates of projected available financial resources and predicted expenditures in major asset categories that can be used to achieve State DOT targets for asset condition during the plan period, and highlighting how resources are expected to be allocated based on asset strategies, needs, shortfalls, and agency policies.”1 The TAMP financial plan describes the financial environment in which the agency expects to operate on an annual basis over the full time period covered by the TAMP.
Incorporating Risk Management into Transportation Asset Management Plans: FHWA Interim Guidance | Guide/Manual
Asset Management, Bridge, PavementThis document provides guidance on the risk element of a risk-based transportation asset management plan (TAMP), defines risk, and provides guidance on how the risk element can be applied to meet the requirements of a risk-based TAMP.
Using a Life Cycle Planning Process to Support Asset Management: Final Guidance | Guide/Manual
Asset Management, Bridge, PavementThis document provides guidance on developing an initial lifecycle planning (LCP) process that satisfies the requirements in the Asset Management Rule and leads to the identification of an effective investment strategy for managing transportation assets. As agencies mature in their use of an LCP process it is
anticipated that they will be able to employ more sophisticated analysis tools and techniques.
TranPlanMT | Plan
Montana's long range plan was first adopted in 1995, and most recently updated in 2017. It details the state's transportation policy direction a 20-year horizon and guides decision-making. The long range plan collects information about the transportation assets in addition to surveys and public comments to address the current and future transportation needs.
Guide for Optimal Replacement Cycles of Highway Operations Equipment (NCHRP 13-04) | Guide/Manual, Research Report
The objective of this research, NCHRP 13-04, was to develop a Guide for Optimal Replacement Cycles of Highway Operations Equipment. The guide included processes and tools for consideration in making decisions regarding the optimal replacement cycles of on- and off-road highway operations equipment used by state highway agencies.
The study’s report, Research Report 879: Optimal Replacement Cycles of Highway Operations Equipment, acts as a handbook on equipment replacement concepts and an instruction manual for making cost-effective replacement decisions. The research report presents a process for determining replacement needs for highway operations equipment, identifying candidate equipment units for replacement, and preparing an annual equipment replacement program. The products include a guidance document and an Excel-based replacement optimization tool to support the equipment replacement process and facilitate its implementation.
Consequences of Delayed Maintenance of Highway Assets (NCHRP 14-20A) | Research Report
Asset Management, Bridge, PavementThe objective of this research, NCHRP Project 14-20A Consequences of Delayed Maintenance of Highway Assets, was to develop processes for quantifying the consequences of the delayed application of maintenance treatments on highway pavements, bridges, and other physical assets. The research expressed consequences in terms of performance indicators (e.g., distress and level of service), costs to owners and road users, and other relevant factors and defined delayed maintenance applications by (1) the inability to meet the agency-defined application schedule or (2) the available budget relative to an unconstrained budget (i.e., availability of the funds required to perform all needed maintenance).
Equipment for Improving Pavement Crack Cleaning Operations | Research Report
PavementThe Caltrans Division of Maintenance continually seeks improved methods and equipment to increase efficiency and worker safety, which in turn supports Caltrans’ mission and goals. The sealing of highway pavement cracks and longitudinal joints has been identified as an area possibly in need of enhancement. Unsealed pavement cracks, either in the form of random stress failure cracking or linear joints, accelerate highway pavement deterioration due to water and debris penetrating the structural section, thereby undermining pavement integrity. According to Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) study results, a properly installed, heated application of rubberized asphalt joint seal should remain effective an average of five years. All the major sealant manufacturers recommend the crack or joint be dry and free of all dirt, dust, debris, and vegetation prior to applying their rubberized asphalt sealants for optimum performance. Failure to properly clean a pavement crack or joint may result in the seal failing as soon as one thermal cycle, i.e. in less than one year. Unfortunately, conventional highway pavement crack cleaning techniques are innately labor-intensive and require workers to be on foot and exposed to traffic for prolonged periods of time, which often downgrades crack preparation tasks to low priority in a sealing operation. Caltrans Maintenance is interested in a broad look at equipment used by other state transportation agencies, as well as any recent innovations in crack cleaning technologies that may be utilized by Caltrans Maintenance to enhance highway sealing operations and thereby improve pavement maintainability statewide.
Publisher: Caltrans Division of Research, Innovation and System Information (DRISI)
NJTPA Summary of National Performance Management Requirements | Marketing/Communications, Research Report
Bridge, Environment, Freight, Pavement, Safety, System PerformanceThis summary and timeline, developed by North Jersey Transportation Planning Authority (NJTPA), presents information on the implementation of MAP-21/FAST Act performance measures and performance-based planning. Page 1 summarizes key reporting requirements by performance area. Page 2 includes a detailed reporting timeline. The summary is in draft form and was prepared by NJTPA staff to highlight reporting requirements of NJTPA its partner agencies.
Guide for Identifying, Classifying, Evaluating, and Mitigating Truck Freight Bottlenecks | Guide/Manual, Research Report
Freight, System PerformanceTRB's National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Research Report 854: Guide for Identifying, Classifying, Evaluating, and Mitigating Truck Freight Bottlenecks provides transportation agencies state-of-the-practice information on truck freight bottlenecks using truck probe data rather than traditional travel demand models. The report embraces a broad definition of truck freight bottlenecks as any condition that acts as an impediment to efficient truck travel, whether the bottleneck is caused by infrastructure shortcomings, regulations, weather, or special events. The comprehensive classification of truck freight bottleneck types described in this report provides a standard approach for state departments of transportation, metropolitan planning organizations, and other practitioners to define truck freight bottlenecks and quantify their impacts.
FTA Outreach Materials: Asset Inventory Webinar and Final TAM Performance Measure Guidebooks Webinar | Website
Asset ManagementThese outreach materials, published by the FTA on August 25, 2017, include information associated with the TAM rule, such as:
- Fact Sheets
- TAMNews, including upcoming initiatives and webinars
- Training, including information from the TSI, NTI, and NHI
- Presentations, recorded materials, and transcripts