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Title:

NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION SAFETY APPURTENANCE PROGRAM: ALTERNATIVE APPLICATION OF ROAD SAFETY AUDITS

Accession Number:

00810818

Record Type:

Component

Availability:

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Order URL: http://worldcat.org/isbn/0309067472

Abstract:

The state of New York owns and maintains an enormous inventory of roadside appurtenances, including guide rail, signs, delineators, and drainage structures. Those roadside features exist for the convenience and safety of the motoring public. Historically, maintenance of roadside appurtenances has depended to a large degree on inclusion in the department's pavement resurfacing programs, particularly the previous resurfacing and preservation and ongoing resurfacing, restoration, and rehabilitation programs. Those resurfacing programs have been largely supplanted by the department's highly successful preventive maintenance paving (PMP) program. In fact, the share of miles of pavement being resurfaced each year under the PMP program has been increasing steadily since 1990 (from 44 to 72% of total miles resurfaced). Since the goal of the PMP program is limited largely to maintaining pavements, roadside appurtenances were not receiving the attention they required. The New York State Department of Transportation safety appurtenance program (an FHWA road safety audit pilot program) ensures that roadside appurtenances receive the attention they need under the PMP program in order to protect a sizable roadside investment and to ensure the safety of road users. The Offices of Engineering and Operations jointly proposed the plan that would involve maintaining existing safety features and adding appropriate, easily implementable, and low-cost safety treatments at PMP project locations either during construction or, more likely, after construction as part of a distinct but "linked" effort. Work not included in the PMP project could be undertaken by maintenance forces or under requirements type contracts (separate signing or guide rail contracts). The guiding principles behind the plan are that it not interfere with accomplishment of the primary goal of the PMP resurfacing program (pavement maintenance), that it not result in a reduction in the number of lane miles treated with PMP resurfacing, and that it not significantly delay or otherwise complicate the processing of PMP resurfacing projects. A regional road safety audit team (composed of staff from design, traffic, and maintenance areas) now reviews proposed PMP project locations for existing accident problems, based on an identified accident history or potential accident problems such as obvious, hazardous roadway features that can be readily identified during a field review, and recommends cost-effective improvements to address existing and potential accident problems. The design of the program, how it gained executive management approval, and some early program accomplishments are discussed. The initiative has proven successful not only because of its clearly defined benefits for two agency goals (highway maintenance and safety) but also because of the systematic process by which it was introduced to agency managers with sometimes conflicting needs and agendas.

Supplemental Notes:

Distribution, posting, or copying of this PDF is strictly prohibited without written permission of the Transportation Research Board of the National Academy of Sciences. Unless otherwise indicated, all materials in this PDF are copyrighted by the National Academy of Sciences. Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.

Monograph Accession #:

00810814

Language:

English

Corporate Authors:

Transportation Research Board

500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001 United States

Authors:

Bray, J S

Pagination:

p. 31-42

Publication Date:

2001

Serial:

Transportation Research Board Conference Proceedings

Issue Number: 23
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
ISSN: 1073-1652

Conference:

Ninth Maintenance Management Conference

Location: Juneau, Alaska
Date: 2000-7-16 to 2000-7-20
Sponsors: Transportation Research Board; American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials; Federal Highway Administration; Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities; and Iowa Department of Transportation.

ISBN:

0309067472

Media Type:

Digital/other

Features:

Appendices (1) ; Figures (4) ; References (2) ; Tables (1)

Geographic Terms:

Subject Areas:

Highways; Maintenance and Preservation; Safety and Human Factors; I61: Equipment and Maintenance Methods; I85: Safety Devices used in Transport Infrastructure

Files:

TRIS, TRB, ATRI

Created Date:

Apr 27 2001 12:00AM

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