1 Introduction
1.1 Background
This report presents the results of a case study evaluation of a Maintenance Decision Support System (MDSS) project under a program funded by the U.S. Department of Transportation’s (USDOT) Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Joint Program Office. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) Road Weather Management Program (RWMP) has sponsored development of a prototype Maintenance Decision Support System (MDSS). The federal MDSS prototype software modules are available to private vendors who have utilized them to develop decision support applications tailored to the needs of state Departments of Transportation (DOTs). An MDSS was offered to the Scarborough crew of the Maine Department of Transportation (MaineDOT) by Meteorlogix/DTN. The DTN system, known as WeatherSentry, includes MDSS capabilities. Experience to date suggests that significant benefits are possible from the use of an MDSS, including improved productivity (e.g., reduced material costs, more efficient use of labor), enhanced mobility, and increased safety.
The MDSS offers guidance for maintenance managers and engineers that provide a forecasts of weather and pavement conditions and recommendations on efficient maintenance treatment strategies. This research is being conducted to understand the role, benefits, and potential cost savings associated with the use of an MDSS by MaineDOT on a segment of interstate in the vicinity of Portland, ME, based upon a comparison of historical winter maintenance practices and those practices facilitated through the use of the MDSS tools.
State DOT operations and maintenance personnel have many different tools available to help them maintain the safety and performance of their transportation systems. Among the several tools available in support of winter maintenance, an MDSS offers unique capabilities in support of operational decision making, pavement treatment, and resource deployment. These capabilities include enhanced corridor-specific weather and pavement condition forecasts, tailored road treatment guidelines, a GIS-based platform that integrates key elements previously addressed separately, and an educational value that encourages new and more effective ways to assess and respond to the effects of weather on the transportation infrastructure.
An MDSS offers a variety of benefits discussed in this report that include, for example, the potential to fine tune the timing of key decisions, such as when to mobilize, when to pre-treat, how much anti-icing chemicals to use, and where to assign and apply the various resources available to the DOT (labor, materials and equipment). The actual benefits experienced by a user of an MDSS will depend on many factors that must be considered in managing a storm event, and these factors are explored in this assessment of MaineDOT’s initial MDSS deployment.
The evaluation team, under a contract with the USDOT, worked with MaineDOT to identify and characterize the benefits and lessons learned from deploying an MDSS in support of winter maintenance operations during the winter of 2006-2007. This assessment examined the institutional challenges faced by MaineDOT’s Scarborough crew and the strategies they employed as they used a variety of tools, including the MDSS, to fight each of the winter storm events they faced. The assessment also described the resources and costs incurred by this crew in terms of labor, equipment, and materials across each of these events.
The evaluation sought to understand how the MaineDOT Scarborough crew traditionally handled these events and the role that the MDSS played in supplementing or changing their traditional approach to decision making and operational activities. Using a detailed event reconstruction approach, data were collected for a dozen winter storm events that required a maintenance response, in order to characterize the uses of the MDSS as a maintenance tool, versus not using an MDSS (i.e., how maintenance operations would have been conducted prior to having access to an MDSS). Lessons learned were derived from the reconstruction of these storm events that may be of use to other state DOTs considering implementing an MDSS technology.
1.2 Pathways to Benefits
There are many possible ways, or pathways, by which an MDSS could potentially offer benefits to a DOT winter maintenance operation. Some may be achieved more quickly or more easily, and some may be obvious and some may be less so. In order to facilitate the identification of benefits and lessons learned in this assessment, as well as to offer practical suggestions regarding how MaineDOT might consider using the MDSS to their benefit, a set of possible pathways was developed as shown in Table 1.
Table 1 illustrates pathways that link the kinds of information provided by an MDSS, both before and during a storm event, with the potential for benefit outcomes that could be experienced by any DOT winter maintenance division. As illustrated in the table, an MDSS can offer benefits by affecting the nature, timing, or effect of many of the key decisions that the maintenance operators, supervisors and crew must make in the course of fighting a winter storm. The pathways to the achievement of benefits are not always clear; a particular forecast from an MDSS may be considered in conjunction with several other pieces of information from an MDSS or other sources as well, and only taken together will they inform the best decision by DOT personnel. It will not always be possible to uniquely associate a particular benefit with an MDSS because the decision processes may be very complex and hard to disentangle. However, an MDSS is structured to integrate many of the informational elements shown in Table 1 in a way that enhances the efficiency and quality of decision making. While many of the elements in Table 1 may be separately available from a variety of service providers, the MDSS offers a significant improvement by linking key elements together through an accessible user interface.
One of the main ways that DOTs have used MDSS forecasts is for the timing of the start of precipitation, usually snow, to determine the optimum time for calling in their crews and when to initiate pre-treatment of the roads. Concurrently, the forecast of precipitation type, coupled with other factors such as forecasts of wind speed and pavement temperature trends, allow the DOT to decide what types of materials and how much of those materials to apply to the road surface.
Many state winter road maintenance operations have not had the benefit of precise forecasts of many key decision parameters in the past, such as air temperatures, pavement temperatures, bridge temperatures, bridge frost, dew point, and wind speed hours in advance. While MaineDOT has had access to weather services and a contract meteorologist to provide forecasts of many different weather parameters, they have lacked many of the MDSS capabilities and a common integrated platform for viewing and managing the information. MaineDOT also has lacked a system that could consolidate these weather parameters into treatment recommendations that are specifically targeted to defined geographic points within their maintenance region. In the past, operators have had a variety of state and local general weather forecasts of uncertain accuracy. They, like others in MaineDOT, have relied on Road Weather Information Systems/ Environmental Sensor Stations (RWIS/ESS), Automated Surface Observing Systems (ASOS), neighboring states and crews on the road throughout the state, plus the experience of their own crews, to provide current condition information as input to decisions. Now MDSS systems are offering more sophisticated forecasts that have the potential to change how maintenance decisions are made. The results of those decisions are expected to include more efficient deployment of staff, application of materials, and use of equipment with benefits measured in terms of road safety, mobility and operational efficiency better than was possible before. While this assessment recognizes there is likely to be a learning curve associated with the adoption and use of an MDSS in Maine, it sought to identify these kinds of benefits through an examination of how the Scarborough crew made use of the MDSS in dealing with each winter storm event.