Using products of the Strategic Highway Research Program to build better, safer roads March 1999 |
Transportation Research and Technology: Partnerships for the Next Century
Compared with previous legislation, the available funds for education,
training, deployment, and research and development have been cut in half
under TEA-21. These cutbacks, said FHWA Executive Director Tony Kane, have
"forced us to think about the leveraging and partnerships that we should
have always been thinking about. Now we
Partnerships will be crucial to the DOTs new Technology Deployment Initiatives and Partnerships (TDIP) program (see January 1999 Focus). The programs five primary goals are:
On a related theme, Gary Hoffman of the Pennsylvania DOT spoke of the need to improve pavement technology, thus minimizing the traffic disruptions caused by maintenance and rehabilitation projects. "One of the ways we can meet public expectation for road quality is through technology implementation," he said. Accomplishing this means using the best materials available and promoting preservation techniques in order to ensure a longer pavement life. Pennsylvania DOT is already working with numerous partners to achieve this goal, including the Mid-Atlantic University Transportation Center, the American Concrete Paving Association, and the Pennsylvania Transportation Institutes Northeast Center for Pavement Technology. Hoffman believes that FHWA must continue its involvement as well, despite the funding cutbacks. "FHWA needs to continue to play a strong role in coordinating the national focus," says Hoffman. "There is a danger that we will all go our separate ways and not get to the top of the ladder if we dont have the focus." Basav Sen of the U.S. DOTs Volpe Center spoke of the similar need to maintain a national focus on weather research. One way this is being done is through the new National Science and Technology Councils Enhanced Transportation Weather Services (ETWS) Initiative. This partnership between government agencies, professional and trade associations, the private sector, and academia was formed to increase the use of weather information in enhancing transportation safety and efficiency. ETWS hopes to extend its scope to provide weather information not only to its partners, but also to the everyday driver. Fenton Carey, Associate Administrator for Research, Technology, and Analysis in U.S. DOTs Research and Special Programs Administration, closed the session by asking the transportation community to examine the way it does business. According to Carey, technologies exist today that could dramatically improve transportation safety and mobility while improving the environment and U.S. economic competitiveness at the same time. Within 10 years, for example, these technologies could reduce the highway-related fatality rate by 75 percent; reduce the time and cost required to maintain the Nations highway infrastructure by 50 percent; and reduce intermodal freight travel time and handling costs by at least 50 percent. To achieve these objectives, however, will require strategically planned technology transfer efforts and partnerships that extend beyond State, Federal, and local transportation agencies to academia, industry, the environmental community, and the traveling public. "The challenge," said Carey, "is to see how the public sector can benefit from private sector innovation. A new role for the Federal government is emerging, and it is one that makes better use of resources and more use of partnerships." For more information on the TDIP program goals and opportunities for
partnership, contact Bob Kelly at FHWA, 202-366-1565 (fax: 202-366-7909;
email: robert.kelly@fhwa.dot.gov).
|
Back to table of contents |