| March/April 1998 Vol 61, No.4 U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration |
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| Public Roads: 80 Years Old, But the Best is Yet to Come Celebrate International Highway Transportation Safety Week 1998 Wealth of Information Presented at Superpave Conference AASHTO's SiteManager Tames Contract Documentation Intermodal ConnectorL NHS Catches up to the 1990's The ITS Joint Project Office: Structuring the Future ISTEA's Tribal Technical Assistance Program Legacy Pride and Partnership: Completing the Interstate H-3 HIPERPAV: A User-Friendly Tool to Help Us "Build It Right" Departments Editor's Notes Conferences/Special Events Calendar Public Roads (ISSN 0033-3735; USPS 516-690) is published bi-monthly by the Office of Research and Development, Federal Highway Administration(FHWA), 400 Seventh Street SW, Washington, DC 20590. Contact Editor Assistant Editor Kandace Studzinski Distribution Manager Judy Dakin All articles are advisory or informational and should not be construed as having regulatory effect. Contents of this publication may be copied provided credit is given to Public Roads and the authors. |
ALONG THE ROAD
“Along the Road” is the place to look for information about current and upcoming activities, developments, trends, and items of general interest to the highway community. This information comes from Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) sources unless otherwise indicated. Your suggestions and input are welcome. Let’s meet along the road.
Policy and Legislation
DOT and EPA Launch Transportation and Air Quality Pilot Program
Officials with EPA’s Office of Mobile Sources, FHWA, and the Federal Transit Administration will work with state and local organizations in Dover, Del.; Milwaukee; and San Francisco to support efforts to meet congestion and air quality goals under the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act and the Clean Air Act. The goal of the project is to build national and local coalitions of public and private organizations that will promote environment-friendly attitudes regarding transportation and air quality.
Customized packets of information are being distributed to each of the cities in the pilot study that address that city’s different needs. Results of the three pilot studies will be evaluated this fall.
Management and Administration
Highway Construction Costs Are Up
Increases in the unit prices for reinforcing steel, portland cement concrete, bituminous concrete, structural steel, and structural concrete raised this index in the fourth quarter. There was a decrease in the unit price for common excavation.
Trends in highway construction costs are measured by an index of average contract prices compiled from reports of state highway contract awards for federal-aid contracts greater than $500,000. Since the enactment of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991, the index reflects federal-aid contracts on the national highway system.
ITS-IDEA Program Encourages ITS Development
The next submission date for proposals is Sept. 30. Proposals are regularly submitted on either March 31 or Sept. 30. Experts in differing technical areas review and evaluate about 850 ITS proposals. The ITS-IDEA advisory committee then considers the submitted concepts. Technical News
NAPA and FHWA Release Superpave Construction Guidelines
FHWA Funds War Against Graffiti HITEC, with the assistance of the American Public Works Association and the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, is assembling an expert panel and a collection of candidates who are successfully applying graffiti-removal techniques and protection technologies so that HITEC can perform a group evaluation. Following the evaluation, the panel plans to develop and publish HITEC reports to document the performance of the technologies participating in the program. The panel meeting is scheduled for early summer 1998, but no date has been set yet.
Initiative Helps to Save Lives in Crashes
Beginning this fall, for a six-month period, 120 vehicles in southern Minnesota will be equipped with crash sensors, cellular phones, and global positioning systems. Together, these devices will provide 911 dispatchers and emergency response officials with a direct communications link to the vehicle. Emergency response officials will be able to receive detailed crash data such as the direction of impact, the severity of the crash, and the final resting position of the vehicle. This information will prevent typical problems that emergency response teams encounter, such as delayed notification and unreliable eyewitness accounts of the crash, which delay emergency responses and endanger crash victims. Public Information and Information Exchange
FHWA Announces Status of Eisenhower System of Interstate and Defense Highways
National Transportation Week Begins in May
FHWA Project Honored for Excellence in Erosion Control The project is located in the Idaho Panhandle National Forest and involved straightening and widening a 16-km section of Forest Highway 9 in the scenic mountains between Enaville, Idaho, and Thompson Pass on the Idaho-Montana border. This project aimed to control erosion on high, steep slopes through mountainous terrain; to protect the spawning grounds of native cutthroat trout from sediment; to reclaim 60.7 hectares of dredge mining tailings; to recontour the abandoned roadway, and to construct wetlands as part of a material source development and reclamation plan.
FHWA Requests Comments on Revised MUTCD The National Committee on Uniform Traffic Control Devices has been in charge of rewriting and reformatting the new MUTCD and has begun submitting recommendations to FHWA for review. FHWA is inviting comments on the proposed changes. The reviews and subsequent changes to MUTCD will occur in stages. The proposed text for Parts 1 (General Provisions) and 7 (Traffic Control for School Areas) were published in volume 62 of the Federal Register, page 64324, on Dec. 5, 1997. The closing date for comments is Sept. 8. To obtain a copy of Parts 1 and 7, contact Linda Brown at linda.l.brown@fhwa.dot.gov.
NAPA Announces Asphalt Competition Award Winner
Virginia Tech and VDOT Chosen for Grant on Night Driving Visibility
Virginia Tech and VDOT’s Research Council will provide in-kind services. Ford Motor Co. will provide the prototype headlights, and 3M Company, Day-Glo Color Corporation, and Carsonite International will provide the pavement markings, signs, and lane delineators. The value of all products and services will amount to more than $800,000.
FHWA Sponsors First International Transportation Essay Contest Essays must be submitted by Oct. 31, 1998, and should consist of an innovative, balanced, practical, applicable, and multidisciplinary approach to solving a real transportation problem facing a country or region. The essay is not to exceed 8,000 words or 25 pages, including diagrams, charts, photographs, and illustrations. Each submission must also include a two-page summary. Young professionals, graduate students, and post-graduate academics (with 10 years or less experience) in the transportation field are eligible to participate. Employees of the U.S. DOT are not eligible. The author of the winning essay from the United States will be awarded an expenses-paid trip to attend the 21st World Roads Congress in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in October 1999 and will be published in a future edition of FHWA’s bimonthly magazine Public Roads. If the winning U.S. essay is selected by the World Road Association as one of the top four essays from around the world, the primary author or team representative will present the paper on a panel at the World Roads Congress. For complete details on the essay competition, please visit www.international.fhwa.dot.gov, or contact the Office of International Programs by telephone (202) 366-2155 or e-mail at international@fhwa.dot.gov. Personnel
Masuda Selected as Division Administrator Masuda currently serves as the assistant division administrator in Richmond, Va. Previously, he was a district engineer in both Richmond, Va., and West Trenton, N.J. He holds a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering.
Deputy Administrator Has Two New Special Assistants Hardiman-Tobin has been with FHWA for five years and served as an attorney with the Office of Chief Counsel, Program Legal Services, General Law Branch. She holds a master’s degree in transportation planning and a juris doctorate in law. Micozzi has been with DOT for five years, three of which have been with FHWA. She served as a member of the Congestion Pricing Pilot Program Team and as technical assistant to the Associate Administrator for Policy. She earned a master’s degree in urban planning and is professionally certified in transportation demand management.
ACI Announces Personnel Changes Leyh had held his position at ACI for more than 22 years and plans to retire this July. He also served as president of ACI International’s research and education foundation, ConREF, as well as president of ACI’s for-profit subsidiary, Associated Concrete Ltd.
Falconer, formerly a vice president with VSL Corporation in Pennsylvania, will take on the challenges of organizing and developing new technical efforts, representing ACI’s interests both nationally and internationally. He holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in civil engineering. Conferences
U.S. ITS Joint Program Office Offers Courses
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