Cutting red tape and pollution from unpaved roads by using a geographic information system.

Author(s)
Bloser, S.M. & Colbert, W.J.
Year
Abstract

A case study in the implementation and use of a customized geographic information system (GIS) as an administrative tool is described. A modified GIS is being used to provide full administrative support for a $4 million/year transportation grant program with a single part-time support staff person in the central office. Pennsylvania's Dirt and Gravel Road Pollution Prevention Program was enacted into law as Section 9106 of the State Vehicle Code in 1997 and is administered locally through county-based soil conservation districts. The program uses a simplified and customized GIS that enables personnel at 65 county conservation districts to use the system with minimal training. The customized GIS enabled a statewide assessment of more than 17,000 mi of unpaved roads to be conducted in 6 months. That assessment geographically identified and evaluated more than 11,000 pollution sites at which unpaved road runoff adversely affects stream quality. Pollution site assessments, recordkeeping, and reporting have been incorporated into the modified GIS to provide paperless, centralized reporting in keeping with the program's core values--streamlined administrative structure, emphasis on local control, and effective prevention of stream pollution from dust and sediment generated by unpaved roads. The value that a customized GIS can have for similar applications is illustrated by providing a walk-through of how the system works, why it has been accepted, and what it accomplishes for this innovative non-point-source pollution prevention effort. This paper is also available on CD-ROM (see C 30152 CD-ROM).

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Publication

Library number
C 30074 (In: C 30054 S [electronic version only]) /10 /15 / IRRD E824837
Source

In: Eight International Conference on Low-Volume Roads 2003 : papers presented at the Eight International Conference on Low-Volume Roads, Reno, Nevada, June 22-25, 2003, Volume 1, Transportation Research Record TRR 1819, p. 141-148, 3 ref.

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