Evulation
Evulation
U.S.Department
Highway safety
of Tronsportat)on
Federal Ht9hwaY
Administration Evaluation
November 1981 Procedural Guide
Program
Evaluation
+ HIGHWAY
o Non-Accident-
Based Project
Evaluation
SAFETY EVALUATION +
Accident-Based
Project
Evaluation
+
o o
Administrative
Evaluation
o
FOREMORD
The Guide was prepared by Goodell-Grivas, Inc. Mr. David Perkins was the
Principal Investigator. !~r. Rudolph Umbs is the Implementation Manager.
Rqw
b Directo , Office of Devel opwnt
Federal Highway Administrate on
NOTICE
The contents of this report reflect the views of the Office of Development
of the Federal Highway Administration, which is responsible for the facts
and the accuracy of the data presented herein. The contents do not
necessarily reflect the official pol icy of the Department of Transportation.
Description Page
Introducti on .........................................................1
What is Evaluation?...................................................5
Management Issues
....................................................7
i
TABLE OF CONTENTS (CONTINUED)
Description ~
References .....................................................346
Appendix .......................................................351
ii
LIST OF FIGURES
m ~
1. Highway Safety Improvement Program at the Process Level. .........3
9. Before and After Study With Control Sites (Trend Analysis). .....34
14. Assumed Change In MOE’s Before and After Project Implementation .42
.
111
m Page
iv
m &
66. WE Comparison Worksheet Modified For 8efore and After Plan. ...203
v
69. Evaluation Study Materials Check list ...........................24l
71. Assumed Change in MOE Before and After Project Implementation. .262
74. Objective and MOE Listing Form For Horizontal Alignments. ......275
75. Objective and MOE Listing Form For Vertical Alignments. ........276
76. Objective and MOE Listing Form For Combined Alignments. ........277
vi
LIST OF TABLES
Table Page
vii
INTRODUCTION
The Guide contains procedures and guidelines for performing the eval-
uation processes and subprocesses within the Highway Safety Improvement
Program described in the Federal-Aid Highway Program Manual (FHPM) 8-2-3.
Highway safety professionals have long recognized the nee& for an or-
ganized approach to the correct ion of highway safety problems. In the
1ate 1960’s and early 1970’s the importance of a highway safety program
was emphasized through legislation and research. More recently, the pri-
vate sector has expressed a desire for a systematic approach to improving
highway safety, and simi 1ar concerns have been expressed by State and
local highway agencies.
The recent emphasis on highway safety has led to the avai labi 1ity of
additional funding for the application of new procedures to enhance high-
way safety efforts at the State and local levels. ~ng the objectives of
these procedures were the efficient use and allocation of available re-
sources and the improvement of techniques for data CO1 lection, analysis
and evaluation.
3
tion subprocess.
2
——————-
, P~NN[NG COMPONENT
COLLECT AND
i MAINTAIN DATA
1
! i
i
PROCESS 2
lDENTIFY HAZARDOUS
I LOCATIONS
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b t
! PROCESS 3
— CONDUCT ENGINEERING
i STUDIES
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t
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PROCESS 4
- ESTABLISH PRIORITIES
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~-------------------------- ---------~-i
-------------------------- . ------------
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PROCESS 1 B
~ IMPLEMENTATION
SCHEDULE AND IMPLEMENT 1
~COMPONENT
SAFETY IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS
B
----------------- ---------- ---------- - !
P ---------------- ---------- ---------- -y
B I
PROCESS 1
~ EVALUATION i
DETERMINE THE EFFECT OF
1 COMPONENT HIGHWAY SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS :
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------------------------ --- ----------- ~
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,----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ___
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PROCESS 1. CMLECT ~ Ml WAI N OATA
pLdNMNG
COMPONENT
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PROCESS4. EST~LIW PROJE~ PRIORITIES
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‘ROCESS1. DETERMI,ETHE EFFECTOF HIGHWAYSAFETYIMPROVEME~
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Countermeasure
Project
Program
WHAT IS EVALUATION?
5
Two types of evaluation are addressed in this Procedural Guide:
Effectiveness Evaluation, and Administrative Evaluation. Effectiveness
Evaluation is the statistical and economic assessment of the extent to
Which a project or program achieves its ultimate safety ~al ‘of reducing
the number and severity of accidents. This type of evaluation is referred
to as Accident-Based Evaluation. This definition of Effectiveness Evalua-
tion has been expanded in the Procedural Guide to include a determination
of the intermediate effect of a highway safety project based on changes in
non-accident safety measures. This type of evaluation is referred to as
Non-Accident-Based Evaluation. This evaluation provides an indication of
project effectiveness based on observed changes in traffic operations and
driver behavior resulting from the project. Non-Accident-Based Evaluation
is an intermediate evaluation procedure which may be conducted prior to
Accident-Based Evaluation. when conditions permit, Accident-Based Evalu-
ation should follow Non-Accident-Based Evaluation.
WHY EVALUATE?
6
proven track record of effectiveness under similar conditions. The Plan-
ning Component also involves decisions relating to establishing project
and program priorities. The decisions are generally based on the results
of economic procedures which compares estimated benefits to estimated
costs for competing projects or programs+ Administrative Evaluation pro-
vides informat ion on implementation cost, manpower, and materi al expendi -
tures. Effectiveness Evaluation quantifies change in accident number,
rate and severity. Together, these evaluation outputs can be used as in-
puts to priority techniques, such as the benefit-cost and cost-effective-
ness. The use of evaluation results reduces subjective engineering in the
planning decisions.
Evaluation benefits also extend beyond the limits of the HSIP and
impact other highway-related activities within the agency. Highway de-
sign, operation and maintenance policy-makers can emphasize procedures and
techniques which have been shown through evaluation to maximize safety.
In this sense, other highway-related areas can enhance highway safety.
MANAGEMENT ISSUES
7
The agency should be aware of the fol lowing basic issues when esta-
blishing their safety evaluation policies:
The first and, possibly, the mst important step toward increas-
ing evaluation is to ensure that the benefits of evaluation are un-
derstood at al 1 agency levels (administrative, management, and tech-
nical levels). It is important to recognize that evaluation allows
the agency to improve its own abi1ity to make future safety-related
decisions. It should also be recognized that the cost to the agency
for not evaluating may be greater than the cost of conducting a
formal evaluation. Decisions involving selection and implementation
of corrective measures is a continuing chal lenge to the highway
safety engineer in addition to decisions regarding the continuation,
addition or deletion of ongoing highway safety improvements. The
approp~iateness of these decisions has a direct effect on the cost-
effect lveness of the highway safety program. Wel l-designed evalua-
tions provide necessary input to the selection of future improvements
by providing quantitative answers as to whether the intended purposes
of past improvements were accomplished, how efficiently the purposes
were accomplished, and whether unexpected or contrary results were
produced. Without formal evaluation, the answers to these questions
may not be known and thus limited safety funds may not be allocated
to projects and programs which are most effective in saving lives and
reducing injuries and property damage.
8
Accident Data Reliability
Program Evaluation
Administrative Evaluation
9
measures of project effectiveness are observed changes in the number,
rate, and severity of traffic acc~dents resulting from the implemen-
tation of project countermeasures. Proj@ct effectiveness is also ex-
amined with respect to the relationships between the costs and bene-
fits of the project.
Program Evaluation
Administrative Evaluation
11
PLANNING
*
COMPONENT
IMPLEMENTATION
4
COMPONENT
[
IVALUATION +
:OMPONENT IS EFFECTIVENESS
4 N“ EVALUATION
WARRANTED?
Y,,
ARE
+ N“ DATA AND RESOURCES
AVAILABLE?
PERFORM N-A-B
T\ B
PROJECT EVALUATION
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PERFORM A-B
* f\ B
PROJECT EVALUATION
v Y
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1S ADMINISTRATIVE
5
EVALUATION WMRANTED “0
PERFORM
ADMINISTRATIVE @
EVALUATION
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1. Effectiveness Evaluation is
warranted a a @
7. Pre-tiplmentation planning
is employed * e a
8. Post-implementation planninq
is wployed @ @
13
ACCIDENT-BASED PROJECT EVALUATION
15