Integrating Economic Resilience in Performance-based Transportation Planning

  • Source: NADO
  • Date: 02/02/2018

Using information from dozens of regional planning and development organizations and their partners, the report suggests a framework for considering economic resilience and the input of economic development stakeholders throughout the planning process—from developing a vision, goals, and objectives through to selecting measures, prioritizing projects, and communicating performance information. Key takeaways include:

  • Take a systems perspective to understand economic resilience goals, regional prosperity, and transportation’s role. Multiple systems frameworks exist; the rural wealth creation framework is one focused on existing community assets.
  • Embed measurement into the regional planning process, rather than treating it as a standalone task.
  • Measure regional wellbeing across several emphasis areas, track it through plan updates, and use the measures in multiple planning efforts. Repurpose measures used by partners, such as state agencies, where appropriate.
  • Develop transportation project prioritization criteria that implement the vision, goals, objectives, and measures adopted through the planning process.
  • Communicate progress over time in order to make performance measurement a feedback loop that influences future planning and development decisions.
  • Intentionally include economic development stakeholders, including both private sector leaders and intended beneficiaries of development such as low-income residents, throughout the planning process.
Open Resource

Share:

We’d love to hear from you!

Have more mobility news that we should be reading and sharing? Let us know! Reach out to Sage Kashner (kashner@ctaa.org).

Skip to toolbar