How To Improve Road Quality



Similar documents
Pavement Management Implementation: Success Stories for Maryland Counties

Road Asset Management

Alternatives to the Circ Project Prioritization Methodology Prepared for Circ Task Force July 28, 2011

Transportation Infrastructure Asset Management

Asset Management for MAP-21. Gary Lasham, P.E. Jonathan Pollack

Nevada DOT Cold In-Place Recycling Federal Highway Administration National Review Close out meeting, August 25, 2005

South Carolina Multimodal Transportation Plan Vision, Goals, Objectives, and Performance Measures

How To Manage Transportation Asset Management

Technical Memorandum PERFORMANCE MEASURES. Prepared by:

Presentation to NYSAMPO, June 2015 Steve Wilcox, P.E., Director, Maintenance Program Planning Bureau NYSDOT

Advancing Asset Management at DelDOT

CONNECTICUT S TOP TRANSPORTATION ISSUES:

Chapter 5 RISK MANAGEMENT ANALYSIS CHAPTER 5 RISK MANAGEMENT ANALYSIS PAGE 49

Presented via Video Recording at IHEEP Conference June 2014

Pavement Management Systems

CHAPTER 2 PAVEMENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM

Paving Capitalization Work Categories and Treatments

CHAPTER 4 SURFACE TRANSPORTATION PROGRAM (STP)

CHAPTER 4 EXISTING TRANSPORTATION MANAGEMENT

Marketing Bridge Preservation UTAH Perspective

Where Do We Want to Go? How Can We Get There?

Informational Workshop Public Meeting Kanawha Falls Bridge Project

HRTPO PROJECT PRIORITIZATION AND SELECTION PROCESS PROJECT CATEGORIES AND EVALUATION CRITERIA

PRIORITIZATION PROCESSES

Activity Management Plan Overview

CALIFORNIA TRANSPORTATION BY THE NUMBERS:

Keeping Our Bridges Safe 2014 Report. MaineDOT

Draft TMH 22 ROAD ASSET MANAGEMENT MANUAL

NORTH DAKOTA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development. Initial Transportation Asset Management Plan (Pilot Version February 2015)

Stephen Gaj. Martin Kidner State Planning Engineer Wyoming DOT

How To Manage The County Of Simcoe'S Infrastructure

Asset Management Plan Final Report

Township of Enniskillen. Asset Management Plan

Earth Retaining Structures

KENTUCKY TRANSPORTATION CABINET POLICY FOR FEDERALLY FUNDED PAVEMENT REHABILITATION AND PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE PROJECTS

Butch Wlaschin P.E. Director, Office of Asset Management, Pavements, and Construction FHWA

HERS_IN. HIGHWAY ECONOMIC REQUIREMENTS SYSTEM (for) INDIANA. AASHTO Transportation Estimator Association Conference October 16, 2001

Safe & Sound Bridge Terminology

Surface Transportation Program (STP) Projects

Colorado Off-System Bridge Program Description and Guidelines for Selecting Bridges for Rehabilitation or Replacement Funding

The City of Owen Sound Asset Management Plan

MAP 21 themes. Strengthens America s highway and public transportation systems. Supports the Department s aggressive safety agenda

COST EFFECTIVE ROAD MAINTENANCE MARCH 2015

Road Asset Management vs Pavement Management A new Paradigm. Arthur Taute Stewart Russell

Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Performance Report

Chapter VIII: Long-Term Outlook and the Financial Plan

final plan CDOT's Risk-Based Asset Management Plan Colorado Department of Transportation Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Larry Redd, P.E.

TRANSPORTATION ASSET MANAGEMENT The Strategic Direction of Georgia Department of Transportation

SECTION III-06 Surfacing Page 1 Revised 3/2/10. See the DESIGN GUIDELINES in Section I-06 for requirements for cross slope of the roadway.

Inspection Data for Bridge Asset Management

National Bridge Inspection Standards (NBIS) Metrics

Asset Management Decision Support System Model. Technical Report. Submitted by. Cambridge Systematics, Inc. NJDOT Research Project Manager

INDOT Long Range Plan

Florida Transportation Commission: A Meeting of the Modes

Chapter 5 Financial Plan

Implementing a Strategic Highway Transportation Asset Management System at UDOT

Road Asset Management: Evolution and Trends

AGENCY OVERVIEW Date: 12/13/ UPPER GREAT PLAINS TRANS INST Time: 07:11:13. STATUTORY AUTHORITY North Dakota Century Code Chapter

MODULE 3. Upon completion of this module the participants will be able to:

Successful performance management serves as

REHABILITATION PACKAGE 1-a

H: Road Asset Management Plan February 2015

ASSET MANAGEMENT FOR KANSAS COUNTIES: THE STATE OF PRACTICE KEVIN D. FRIEDRICHS. B.S., Kansas State University, 2006 A THESIS

APPLICATION LAFAYETTE METROPOLITAN PLANNING ORGANIZATION (MPO) SURFACE TRANSPORTATION PROGRAM (STP) FUNDS TRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM (TIP)

Project Manager & Key Staff Standards for Technical Proposals Projects using Level A and/or Level B prequalification disciplines

Examples of Transportation Plan Goals, Objectives and Performance Measures

The Preservation of Local Truck Routes: A Primary Connection between Commerce and the Regional Freight Network

LIMITED SCOPE CONCEPT DEVELOPMENT REPORT

CITY COUNCIL AGENDA ITEM CITY OF SHORELINE, WASHINGTON

Integrated Asset Management Tool for Highway Infrastructure

Maintenance Management and Asset Management

Red Wing Bridge Project. PAC #5/TAC #8 Meeting July 18, 2013

Asset Management Guide for Local Agencies in Michigan

RANDOM/GRID BLOCK CRACKING EXTREME SEVERITY. Transverse Cracking- Extreme Severity. Alligator Cracking- High. Severity

Caltrans - Asset Management Implementation. March 2015

RTA ASSET MANAGEMENT PROGRAM

Managing the Risk of Aging Pavement Infrastructure in New Brunswick Through Innovative Decision Making

New Mexico DOT Transportation Asset Management Implementation Plan. final plan

American Public Works Association Asset Management Task Force, 1998

Transcription:

A Customer Service Level Approach for Maine DOT s Asset Management System Jeffrey L. Zavitski, B.A. Senior Implementation Specialist Deighton Associates Limited Chip Getchell, P.E. Director, Work Plan Division Maine Department of Transportation 2014 Transportation Asset Management Conference, Miami, Florida, April 28, 2014

Today s Presentation Acknowledgement of Co-Author Maine s Asset Management Vision Highway Corridor Priorities (HCPs) Customer Service Levels (CSLs) Asset Management System

Acknowledgement of Co-Author: Chip Getchell, P.E., Director, Work Plan Division, Maine DOT chip.getchell@maine.gov

Maine Capstone Performance Measures: 1) Customer Satisfaction 2) Safety 3) Customer Service Levels 4) Expenditures per lane-mile Compared to Other States 5) Work Delivered on Time 6) Work Delivered on Budget 7) Administration costs as a percent of Budget 8) Quality and Compliance 9) Performance Management and Employee Development

Maine Department of Transportation Facts: 8,818 miles of state maintained highways 2,734 bridges 36 Airports 500 miles of Rail 7 Ferries 450 buses

Current Challenges: Extensive system, sparse population (Rank 40 by Population Density), limited resources Declining Highway Trust fund revenues Funding Uncertainty at federal level Volatility of the construction price index Widening gap between available funding and needs Reconstructing all State roads to modern standards is unobtainable

Proposed Solution: Implement Transportation Asset Management Utilize Highway Corridor Priorities to prioritize the network Utilize Customer Service Levels to determine desired and acceptable levels of service for each priority. Implement an Asset Management System to examine alternative funding scenarios for multiple assets.

Asset Management Vision to Meet Challenges Why? In a word, Necessity! Compared to other states, Maine simply has a lot of miles of road and relatively few people spread out over a large area! Bruce A. Van Note, Deputy Commissioner

Prioritize the Network & Set Customer Service Levels

Setting the Highway Corridor Priorities Initial effort for 2008 2030 Long Range Transportation Plan Developed using several different planning groups and considered different networks and areas: Arterial Road Network Corridors of Regional Economic Significance for Transportation (CREST) Heavy Haul Truck Network (HHTN) Economic Development Districts (EDD) Labour Market Areas (LMA) Border crossings Service Centers Recreational Areas Coastal Peninsula Destinations

Customer Service Levels Customer Service Levels utilize customer focused engineering measures and are reported on a grading scale similar to school (A through F). Establish expected level of service for each asset and Highway Corridor Priority (HCP) based on three factors: Condition Safety Service

Calculating the Customer Service Levels: Condition Condition CSL based upon: Highways: Ride Quality (IRI) Pavement Condition (PCR) Roadway Strength (FWD) Bridges National Bridge Inventory (NBI) Ratings Other Assets Percent Useful Life or Remaining Service Life

Calculating Customer Service Levels: Safety Safety CSL Based Upon: Crash History Pavement Rutting Paved Roadway Width Bridge Reliability

Calculating Customer Service Levels: Service Service CSL Based Upon: Road Posting during Spring Thaw (results in a D) Bridge Posted (results in a D) Congestion

MaineDOT Asset Management System Asset Management Links Actions to Outcomes Asset Management Systems evaluate Outcomes for Actions

MaineDOT Asset Management System Includes strategic and tactical analyses of highway and bridge assets. Displays impacts of alternative budget scenarios on the each customer service level. Includes Slider Tools for asset allocation Includes true Cross Asset Analysis and Optimization functionality

Highway Management Analysis Includes typical performance measures used to trigger maintenance, preservation, rehabilitation and reconstruction treatments. Includes asset management performance measures for tracking impacts of the pavement program on the Customer Service Levels.

Asset Management for Highways Performance Measures calculated annually for each segment: Pavement Condition Rating (PCR) Roughness Index (IRI) Rutting Index (RUT) Remaining Service Life (RSL) Condition CSL, Safety CSL, Service CSL Grades A through F Summary measures calculated for alternative budget scenarios: Miles of Pavement with CSL Condition in A through F Miles of Pavement with CSL Safety in A through F Miles of Pavement with CSL Service in A through F

CSL Condition Targets for Highways CORRIDOR STRATEGIC TARGETS MINIMUM STRUCTURAL PRIORITY GOAL (average) TOLERABLE ADEQUACY 1 Maintain "Good Roads Cost Less" philosophy using PCR = 3.8 PCR < 3.0 Adequate complete mix of maintenance, preservation and IRI = 100"/mile IRI > 170"/mile Base rehabilitation treatments. RUT = 0.2" RUT > 0.5" Strength Address structural issues and geometric deficiencies (FWD and by 2022. History) 2 Maintain "Good Roads Cost Less" philosophy using PCR = 3.4 PCR < 2.6 Adequate complete mix of maintenance, preservation and IRI > 150"/mile IRI > 220"/mile Base rehabilitation treatments. RUT = 0.4" RUT > 0.75" Strength Address structural issues and geometric deficiencies (FWD and by 2027. History) 3 Keep pavements in serviceable condition and address PCR = 2.8 PCR < 2.0 Adequate isolated safety deficiencies. IRI = 200"/mile IRI > 300"/mile Base RUT = 0.6" RUT > 1.0" Strength (FWD and History) 4 and 5 Keep serviceable and spot safety deficiencies are to PCR N/A PCR N/A Strength be addressed by Maintenance and Operations IRI = 250"/mile IRI > 350"/mile not RUT = 1.0" RUT > 1.5" determined

Treatment Impacts How does each PMS treatment impact the customer service levels:

Typical PMS Strategy showing impacts to Condition CSL

Typical PMS Strategy showing impacts to Safety CSL

Analysis Results: Condition CSL

Maine DOT Budgeting and Optimization Flexible PMS Budgeting: Program Budgets: Dollar amounts supplied for maintenance, preservation and rehabilitation type treatments CSL Budgets: CSL Index budgets can be supplied in terms of miles exceeding all CLS levels, miles not exceeding CSL targets and miles not meeting minimum tolerable CSL targets Flexible PMS Optimization: Constrained program dollars, unconstrained CSL Indexes Unconstrained program dollars, constrained CSL Indexes Constrained program dollars, constrained CSL Indexes

Typical Analysis Results PMS analysis shows miles of each Highway Corridor Priority with at least one CSL grade or D or F for each alternative budget scenario: $100 Million Scenario Results Expenditures Miles of Road with at least 1 D or F Year PavementPreservation Backlog Maintenance HCP 1 HCP 2 HCP 3 HCP 4 HCP 5 $2,012.00 $174,993,008.00 $159,329,225.00 $70,774,524.00 280.02 158.95 481.57 347.30 428.26 $2,013.00 $56,296,614.00 $30,776,215.00 $0.00 303.68 196.14 590.22 457.41 654.45 $2,014.00 $49,998,580.34 $66,330,140.00 $26,999,905.00 318.10 179.17 509.20 484.27 545.60 $2,015.00 $51,486,039.78 $32,022,417.49 $27,809,355.79 303.03 163.04 523.28 476.53 538.55 $2,016.00 $53,041,186.04 $20,836,544.60 $28,643,636.46 305.87 180.31 468.29 418.55 554.43 $2,017.00 $54,617,223.72 $21,639,009.87 $29,461,211.69 331.72 175.35 409.71 358.67 490.42 $2,018.00 $56,272,171.57 $22,161,610.62 $14,791,919.85 408.39 176.76 461.17 372.16 490.55 $2,019.00 $57,949,346.04 $22,654,276.60 $12,689,223.61 430.58 208.44 452.42 357.20 493.61 $2,020.00 $59,700,002.41 $22,682,785.08 $11,394,596.88 421.48 197.36 472.28 364.02 495.31 $2,021.00 $61,490,851.28 $23,444,164.57 $33,199,301.28 333.71 237.06 488.71 606.92 900.04 $2,022.00 $63,338,345.35 $19,558,015.07 $34,197,968.15 371.50 262.71 441.17 795.11 1,165.64 $2,023.00 $65,237,951.23 $0.00 $35,227,367.78 367.01 246.84 516.43 801.42 1,151.69

Bridge Management Analysis Includes typical bridge NBI and element level performance measures used to trigger maintenance, preservation, rehabilitation and replacement treatments. Includes asset management performance measures for tracking impacts of the pavement program on the Customer Service Levels.

Bridge Management Performance Measures BMS analysis utilizes National Bridge Inventory inspection data and ratings: Culvert Rating Deck Rating Superstructure Rating Substructure Rating Structural Condition Also considers three elements using element level inspection data: Joints Paint System Wearing Surface Includes Customer Service Levels (CSLs) for Condition Safety Service

Bridge Management CSLs Condition CSL is entirely based upon Structural Condition Rating Safety CSL is based upon Superstructure condition Substructure condition Scour Criticality Service CSL is based upon Posting Status Posting Limits and Posted Truck Spacing

Bridge Management Treatments Treatments are as follows: Culvert Rehab Culvert Replace Bridge Rehab Bridge Replace Deck Rehab Deck Replace Joint Replace Paint Replace Scour Major Scour Ancillary Substructure Rehab Superstructure Replace Wearing Surface Repair Wearing Surface Replace

Bridge Management CSL Results

Comparing Highways and Bridges

Current Asset Management System Status: Highway analysis incorporates HCP and CSL methodology. Bridge analysis incorporates HCP and CSL methodology. Strategic Analysis Module (SAM) slider tools implemented to illustrate the impacts of increasing or decreasing funding to pavement or bridge assets. Management Dashboard implemented for asset management team for viewing analysis results, mapping data and using the SAM tools in an on-line environment.

Future Developments Refine Customer Service Levels for remaining assets with inventory systems. Implement Inventory, Analysis and Customer Service Levels for remaining assets (ferries, rail lines, buses, etc.) Implement True Cross Asset Analysis and Optimization functionality available in dtims where individual projects will compete for the same funding based upon benefits, costs and the impacts of the highway or bridge project on the overall Customer Service Level delivery.

Thank you!