Incorporating Safety Into Transportation Planning and Decision-Making in Midsized Metropolitan Areas

Mid-sized metropolitan areas face very different challenges and transportation planning issues than those faced by larger metropolitan areas. This is especially true in the area of safety conscious planning (SCP). Conflicting organizational cultures and limited staff and technical tools are major...

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Main Author: Gaines, Danena Lewis
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/19702
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-197022013-01-07T20:23:44ZIncorporating Safety Into Transportation Planning and Decision-Making in Midsized Metropolitan AreasGaines, Danena LewisSafety planningSafety conscious planningTransportation planningTransportationTransportation engineeringTraffic safetyMid-sized metropolitan areas face very different challenges and transportation planning issues than those faced by larger metropolitan areas. This is especially true in the area of safety conscious planning (SCP). Conflicting organizational cultures and limited staff and technical tools are major challenges in SCP efforts for mid-sized metropolitan areas (200,000 to 600,000 population). This study surveyed mid-sized metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs) and conducted seven case studies of mid-sized metropolitan areas to better understand the challenges and opportunities facing SCP in such a context. The national survey and case studies focused on long range planning, data collection, human resources, technical analysis, and collaboration aspects of SCP as applied today. The results indicate that the majority of mid-sized MPOs have incorporated safety consideration into their long range transportation plans vision, goals and objectives, but some mid-sized MPOs are more proactive in the quantitative analysis of project safety outcomes than others. The dissertation recommends that the institutional and technical issues faced by mid-sized MPOs can be overcome by engaging all government levels of planning in SCP efforts that identify a safety champion in the management ranks, encourage state departments of transportation to provide mid-sized MPOs with more tools and training in SCP, promote a stronger relationship between the Governor s Safety Representative and the MPO, and create a more comprehensive forum for collaboration among safety professionals.Georgia Institute of Technology2008-02-07T18:11:25Z2008-02-07T18:11:25Z2007-11-09Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/19702
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Safety planning
Safety conscious planning
Transportation planning
Transportation
Transportation engineering
Traffic safety
spellingShingle Safety planning
Safety conscious planning
Transportation planning
Transportation
Transportation engineering
Traffic safety
Gaines, Danena Lewis
Incorporating Safety Into Transportation Planning and Decision-Making in Midsized Metropolitan Areas
description Mid-sized metropolitan areas face very different challenges and transportation planning issues than those faced by larger metropolitan areas. This is especially true in the area of safety conscious planning (SCP). Conflicting organizational cultures and limited staff and technical tools are major challenges in SCP efforts for mid-sized metropolitan areas (200,000 to 600,000 population). This study surveyed mid-sized metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs) and conducted seven case studies of mid-sized metropolitan areas to better understand the challenges and opportunities facing SCP in such a context. The national survey and case studies focused on long range planning, data collection, human resources, technical analysis, and collaboration aspects of SCP as applied today. The results indicate that the majority of mid-sized MPOs have incorporated safety consideration into their long range transportation plans vision, goals and objectives, but some mid-sized MPOs are more proactive in the quantitative analysis of project safety outcomes than others. The dissertation recommends that the institutional and technical issues faced by mid-sized MPOs can be overcome by engaging all government levels of planning in SCP efforts that identify a safety champion in the management ranks, encourage state departments of transportation to provide mid-sized MPOs with more tools and training in SCP, promote a stronger relationship between the Governor s Safety Representative and the MPO, and create a more comprehensive forum for collaboration among safety professionals.
author Gaines, Danena Lewis
author_facet Gaines, Danena Lewis
author_sort Gaines, Danena Lewis
title Incorporating Safety Into Transportation Planning and Decision-Making in Midsized Metropolitan Areas
title_short Incorporating Safety Into Transportation Planning and Decision-Making in Midsized Metropolitan Areas
title_full Incorporating Safety Into Transportation Planning and Decision-Making in Midsized Metropolitan Areas
title_fullStr Incorporating Safety Into Transportation Planning and Decision-Making in Midsized Metropolitan Areas
title_full_unstemmed Incorporating Safety Into Transportation Planning and Decision-Making in Midsized Metropolitan Areas
title_sort incorporating safety into transportation planning and decision-making in midsized metropolitan areas
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/19702
work_keys_str_mv AT gainesdanenalewis incorporatingsafetyintotransportationplanninganddecisionmakinginmidsizedmetropolitanareas
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