November/December 2002
Internet Watch
by Keri Funderburg
New CD-ROM Takes the Bite Out Of Bad Weather
Temperatures are dropping and winter is fast approaching. For most
people, this simply means making sure last year's coat still fits
and finding matching gloves. But for transportation professionals,
colder weather means it's time to start preparing for the harsh driving
and road conditions that will grip much of the Nation for the next
several months. Ensuring that Americans can move smoothly and safely
to their destinations in winter is not easy, given that wet and slushy
highway conditions can lead to 25 percent speed reductions and an
18 percent reduction in capacity. Nor is it inexpensive. Each year,
State and local agencies spend more than $2 billion on controlling
snow and ice on roads and an additional $5 billion for infrastructure
repair due to snow and ice damage.
To improve management of roads for extreme weather conditions and
use transportation funds more efficiently, the Federal Highway Administration
(FHWA) developed a CD-ROM, Best Practices for Road Weather Management.
Released in August 2002, the CD-ROM provides traffic, emergency, and
maintenance managers with new and innovative solutions to various
weather threats, including fog, high winds, rain, snow, ice, flooding,
tornadoes, hurricanes, and avalanches.
A Wealth of Information
To compile the CD-ROM, FHWA staff scoured trade journals, attended
conferences, and talked with transportation professionals across the
country to garner best practices in managing roadways for weather
conditions. One section of the CD-ROM consists of a series of case
studies highlighting innovative approaches. The case studies describe
the technologies, results, and contact information for each project.
Users can search through the case studies by title, category, or keyword.
Examples of best practices include:
- An anti-icing and deicing system on Minnesota's Interstate 35
that monitors environmental conditions, activates flashing beacons
to alert drivers to icy conditions, and sprays liquid potassium
acetate on a bridge deck to prevent surface moisture from freezing
- A low-visibility warning system in Tennessee that monitors environmental
and traffic conditions in a fog-prone area, alerts drivers to hazardous
conditions, manages speed limits, and restricts freeway access
- A flood warning system in Dallas, TX, that monitors water levels
at streams located near roads to advise motorists of adverse conditions
until barricades can be erected
The CD-ROM includes a listing of more than 100 road-weather publications,
along with article abstracts and source information, which also may
be searched by title or keyword. Examples of publications listed on
the CD-ROM include: "Application of ITS for Winter Maintenance," "Current
Practices in Transportation Management during Inclement Weather,"
and "Friction as a Tool for Winter Maintenance."
A final component of the CD-ROM lists Web sites related to managing
roadways for weather conditions, such as the Snow and Ice Cooperative
Program (www.sicop.net),
the National Weather Service (www.nws.noaa.gov),
and the Standing International Road Weather Commission (www.bham.ac.uk/geography/met/sirwec/intro.htm).
Other Management Practices
In addition to FHWA, a number of other transportation agencies have
developed computer programs or Web sites devoted to this kind of road
management:
- The Washington State Department of Transportation's traffic and
weather Web site provides users with real-time road and weather
conditions. An interactive State map enables users to access current
statewide weather conditions, road temperatures, and mountain pass
driving conditions. Users also can view radar and satellite pictures
of the State. (www.wsdot.wa.gov/rweather)
- The Nevada Department of Transportation (NDOT) operates an information
system on a section of highway between Reno and Carson City. The
system collects current weather data, alerts traffic managers to
poor conditions, activates an alarm and variable message system
during high winds, and transmits weather data to NDOT's Web site.
NDOT's weather surveillance system enabled the agency to reduce
the number of maintenance vehicle passes required to treat that
particular stretch of roadway and reduced anti-icing chemical application
by 74 percent. (http://www.nevadadot.com/traveler/rwis/dist2/
)
- Several State departments of transportation are participating
in FORETELL, an initiative (funded partially by FHWA) that collects,
forecasts, and distributes highly specific information on road and
weather conditions pertinent to highway and trucking professionals,
transit operators, commuters, long-distance travelers, and other
road users. (http://www.foretell.com/help/Foretell/about.htm)
Transportation professionals may be unable to control the weather,
but this CD-ROM should help road managers make more informed decisions
once bad weather strikes. Better decisions will lead to better driving
conditions and fewer accidents. In the future, FHWA plans to post
information from the CD-ROM online.
For more information about the Best Practices for Road Weather
Management CD-ROM, contact Paul Pisano at 202-366-1301.