Attracting, Retaining, and Developing the Transportation Workforce: Transportation Planners
NCHRP Report 798: The Role of Planning in a 21st Century State Department of Transportation—Supporting Strategic Decisionmaking (available at http://www.trb.org/Publications/Blurbs/172210.aspx) defined planning as the “factual, analytical, and collaborative basis for reaching decisions to improve multimodal transportation system performance. Effective planning results in cost-effective, cooperative, and responsive transportation solutions that achieve desired societal outcomes by balancing costs and benefits to communities, the economy, and the environment.” Producing sound transportation plans, e.g. long-range transportation plans and corridor plans, is a core activity of state departments of transportation (DOTs) and other transportation agencies. Therefore transportation agencies have long staffed their planning programs with professional planners with the knowledge, skills, abilities, education, and experience (KSAEEs) required for plan making. Beyond these traditional planning activities, the KSAEEs of planners can be valuable for strategic decisionmaking in other functional areas of an agency. Although traditional planning competencies are well matched for many functions within a transportation agency, emerging forces are reshaping the transportation planning and decisionmaking landscape. These include: (1) Rapidly changing transportation technologies and services, e.g., connected and automated vehicles, Mobility as a Service, shared mobility; (2) Demographic trends that affect travel behavior and how agencies communicate with their customers and stakeholders; (3) Trends in the nature of data and data-driven decisionmaking, e.g., big data, data visualization, analytics, data governance; (4) New approaches to transportation plan making, e.g., performance-based planning and programming, scenario planning, multi-modal planning, coordination across required transportation plans; (5) Calls for greater precision in projecting the returns on transportation investments; and (6) An increasingly dynamic funding, regulatory, and political environment. To effectively respond to this evolving landscape, a transportation agency needs access to an array of professionals with different talent profiles. The objectives of this research were to (1) identify KSAEEs and talent profiles for state, regional, and local transportation planners that are aligned with existing and emerging agency needs; and (2) provide guidance on how agencies can attract, develop, manage, and retain planning talent.
Language
- English
Project
- Status: Completed
- Funding: $300000.00
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Contract Numbers:
Project 08-125
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Sponsor Organizations:
National Cooperative Highway Research Program
Transportation Research Board
500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC United States 20001American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO)
444 North Capitol Street, NW
Washington, DC United States 20001Federal Highway Administration
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC United States 20590 -
Performing Organizations:
WSP USA Inc.
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Principal Investigators:
Meyer, Michael
- Start Date: 20190605
- Expected Completion Date: 20210304
- Actual Completion Date: 20210304
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Personnel management; Transportation planning
- Subject Areas: Administration and Management; Planning and Forecasting; Transportation (General);
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01790530
- Record Type: Research project
- Source Agency: Transportation Research Board
- Contract Numbers: Project 08-125
- Files: TRB, RIP
- Created Date: Dec 6 2021 3:21PM