March/April 2004
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4600 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 800
Arlington, VA 22203
Tel. (703) 235-0500;
Fax (703) 235-0593
Home Page: www.nhi.fhwa.dot.gov |
New Course Provides Instruction on Managing Assets
Today's transportation environment is characterized by high user
demand, stretched budgets, declining staff resources, and a system that shows the
signs of age. The public has made significant investments in constructing,
maintaining, and operating the Nation's highways,
and taxpayers expect Federal, State, and local agencies to be responsible stewards
of those investments. Decisions about whether to repave a highway or build
a new bridge involve a complex web of considerations, including the time
horizon, economic and engineering factors, and the existing range of assets. Using
increasingly powerful computer systems, agency personnel now can assess the
tradeoffs among alternative investment options by performing sophisticated analyses of
their assets. By evaluating how they manage their infrastructure, transportation
officials can make more informed decisions about future investments.
In 1999, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) established the Office
of Asset Management, affirming its commitment to helping the Nation's transportation
agencies manage their assets more effectively. To fulfill
this commitment, FHWA's National Highway Institute
is offering a new course, Transportation Asset
Management (#131106). The 1-day course targets senior-level
executives and managers from different functional lines
and units, such as planning, engineering, capital
programming, financial management, maintenance and
operations, traffic and safety, system operation and
management, and information technology. Instructors
will introduce attendees to the concepts and principles
of asset management through examples of techniques currently used in transportation agencies.
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Instructors used this diagram during the course to reinforce the idea that transporation personnel manage assets to obtain policy goals directives throughout the planning, program delivery, and monitoring processes. |
"Asset management enables transportation agencies
to fulfill their stewardship role by ensuring a good
return on every tax dollar invested in the transportation
system by their customers," FHWA Administrator Mary E.
Peters noted in her remarks at the pilot offering of the
course. "The asset management training course will
provide agencies with many useful tools and techniques as
they move toward this new way of doing business."
During the course, participants apply lessons from
the Transportation Asset Management Guide
(NCHRP Project 20-24(11)), recently published by the
National Cooperative Highway Research Program. The
guide defines asset management, describes
state-of-the-art practices, and provides examples of effective practices
in four functional areas: policy development; planning
and programming; program delivery; and
information, analysis, and performance monitoring. A
noteworthy feature is the guide's self-assessment tool, which
agencies can use to characterize their existing practices
and identify specific opportunities for improvement.
The interactive course combines presentations
with class discussions and exercises, including a
session devoted specifically to completing and interpreting
the results of the self assessment. Participants also take
part in an exercise that involves helping a hypothetical
State transportation agency allocate resources and manage
its assets under budget constraints.
Using the self-assessment tool, exercises, and
real-world examples, participants learn how to organize
their thoughts on managing assets, structure an agenda
for detailed planning, and develop consensus among
top-level managers on the strengths of the agency and
areas that require improvement.
For further information on the course, visit NHI's
Web site at www.nhi.fhwa.dot.gov/training/train.aspx or contact John Taylor at 703–235–0524 or john.taylor@fhwa.dot.gov. To learn more about
transportation-related training courses available from NHI,
consult the course catalog at www.nhi.fhwa.dot.gov or
contact NHI at 4600 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 800, Arlington,
VA 22203; 703–235–0500 (phone); or 703–235–0593
(fax). For scheduling, contact Danielle Mathis-Lee at
703–235–0528 or danielle.mathis-lee@fhwa.dot.gov.
Other Articles in this issue:
Hyperfix 65/70
Coordinating Incident Response
Erosion Control with Recycled Materials
Glenwood Canyon 12 Years Later
A Tale of Two Canyons
Spotlight on the South
The AIRS Approach to Analyzing Intersection Crashes
Resource Center Goes National