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Description / Abstract:
Executive Summary: Today's transportation agencies need to find
ways to improve service and demonstrate tangible results for their
customers—while operating under increasingly tight resource
constraints. Comparative performance measurement is a potentially
powerful technique for motivating and facilitating changes that
result in improved performance. It motivates organizations to
pursue improvements by showing them what their peers have been able
to achieve. It facilitates improvement by identifying specific best
practices that have led to good results. Establishing comparable
measures can take considerable effort, but pays off when
participating organizations learn from practices employed by their
peers to improve their own performance. Comparative performance
measurement efforts also have the important effect of shining a
spotlight on current approaches to show how data is tracked, how
performance is measured, and how results are used. Participating
agencies have an opportunity to examine the consistency and
accuracy of their measurement practices, learn about differences in
measurement across agencies, and work towards a greater degree of
commonality.
This report presents results of the third in a series of
comparative performance measurement efforts sponsored by the
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials
(AASHTO) Standing Committee on Quality (SCOQ), Performance
Measurement and Benchmarking Subcommittee. The purpose of these
efforts is to identify states that have achieved exemplary
performance, find out what practices have contributed to their
success, and document these practices for the benefit of other
states. This effort focuses on safety.