Emergency Transportation Operations

Federal Highway Administration Focus States Initiative: Traffic Incident Management Performance Measures Final Report

Focus States Initiative - Lessons Learned

Institutional Issues and Challenges

The participating States identified the most common institutional issue as gaining acceptance to measure performance from both executive decision makers and other agencies involved with TIM responsibilities. The following identify reasons for the difficulty in obtaining executive acceptance:

  • The development of an integrated TIM program and program-level TIM PM often requires "thinking outside of the box":
    • Agencies have specific charges and responsibilities and may not view the collection of data needed for TIM PM as a priority when responding to an incident.
    • Agencies view TIM PM as being the responsibility of another agency. One State cited an example where emergency responders indicated that collecting data and measuring performance was the responsibility of the State's DOT.
  • Decision makers may have limited resources available for program activities and need to be convinced that investing resources in TIM PM is worthwhile.

The participating States also identified other significant issues involved obtaining executive acceptance for data exchange:

  • Exchanging data with other agencies may be a new practice for an agency and managers need to be convinced that this is beneficial to their agency.
  • What data is exchanged, who has access to the data, and how the data is used also may be of concern. This is particularly true with respect to data that may be needed for criminal investigations that arise from an incident.
  • Data exchange often involves legacy system modifications. Again, the key issue is convincing managers to invest resources.

Fortunately, the participants identified a number of strategies that they have used in their own States to address the above-cited issues. Successful strategies, all of which emphasize developing cooperative relationships with other agencies, include the following:

  • Establishing working relationships with all agencies involved. Several States have established working groups that meet on a regular basis to discuss TIM operations and policies as a means to identify areas for improvement and exchange information and lessons learned.
  • Developing a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between agencies that defines roles, responsibilities, and establishes a defined working relationship. An MOU can be an effective tool for addressing data exchange issues by stating what data will be exchanged and how the data will be used.
  • Developing outreach materials that document the benefits of TIM PM. These can incorporate results from other States or within the State, but the key is to show how performance measurement can be a benefit, i.e., improving response operations and responder safety, obtaining additional budget funds, and so forth.
  • Establishing a cost-sharing agreement was identified by several States as critical to success. Placing responsibility on a single agency to obtain the funding needed for legacy system modifications was identified as problematic, whereas cost-sharing served the benefit of reducing a particular agency's resource requirements. States indicated that leveraging other funding sources and resources also was a critical success factor, such as demonstrating how a particular legacy system modification needed to support TIM PM also would support other program activities helped obtain acceptance and support from management.

Technical Integration and Data Exchange

  • Establish agreements between law enforcement and DOTs to preclude compromising sensitive data. Ensuring that law enforcement data provided to DOTs did not include any sensitive data that if made public would compromise a criminal investigation. A number of States indicated that to address this issue they had established agreements to specifically define data elements to be provided. These States also had established system filters that allowed the exchange of these agreed to data elements.
  • Establish technical committees to develop common data dictionaries. Many agencies within a State do not have compatible data dictionaries and collect the same information in different formats. States indicated that to address this issue, States would establish technical committees to help develop common data dictionaries or translators that would enable different systems to identify and match information.
  • Establish a common time stamp and common geographic coordinates necessary for data exchange and reporting functions. A common time stamp and common geographic coordinates necessary to identify an incident's location also were identified as key issues for data exchange. For example, an enforcement agency may time stamp the closing of an incident as when the last enforcement vehicle departs the scene, while DOT or other responders may still be onsite. States indicated that establishing a common time stamp that establishes common incident start and close time stamps and the sharing of this information between agencies as critical to properly measuring incident duration. The same issue was identified with the use of geographic coordinates: if agencies use different geographic coordinates to identify an incident location, some type of system modification that translates these into a common set of coordinates is needed to enable agencies to properly identify the location of the same incident.
  • Identify and agree to a defined standard or group of standards for data exchange. The States cited that identifying and agreeing to a particular standard or group of standards was identified as critical for ensuring interoperability. States indicated that multiple systems using multiple standards (IEEE 1512, APCO 36, NLETS, and so forth) created problems in enabling the exchange of data between systems. As part of this discussion, participants stated that developing a common ITS architecture was very helpful in identifying standards to be used by different agencies.
  • Identify and agree upon method of integrating text, video, and audio formats for data exchange. Integrating multiple types of data exchange via text, video, audio also was identified as important. This helps with identifying the appropriate response strategy; providing information on 511 or Web-based traveler information systems; notifying the media; and improving overall incident management in addition to enabling TIM PM. States indicated that this also helped convince managers to support the allocation of funds and resources needed for legacy system modifications.
  • Identify and agree upon consistent data collection practices within and between agencies. A significant issue facing States is that of inconsistent data collection practices both within and between agencies. Solutions identified included:
    • Minimizing human interface through use of automated data entry where possible, i.e., Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) systems, time-stamped data entry, and so forth.
    • Single-point data entry that is based on a user-friendly interface (for example, pull-down menus, single sheet, and so forth).
    • Pushing crash data from law enforcement to DOT and identify an agency (for example, DOT) responsible for time-stamping closure of incident.
    • Prioritizing the need for a "lane-clear" time stamp among law enforcement responders.
    • Training at all levels (practitioner, mid-level and executive) and among all partners organizations (DOT, law enforcement, etc.) on data-collection techniques to ensure common practices.
    • Identification and standardization by each State on which organization collects time-stamp data.

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