Incorporating the Safe System Approach

 

Explore the New Technical Brief
April 21, 2022
Report Cover for ITE Technical Brief on Essential Components of Incorporating Safety in Transportation Impact Analysis

Incorporating the Safe System Approach

 

Explore the New Technical Brief
April 21, 2022

A commitment to Vision Zero requires institutionalizing a new way of thinking about safety, the Safe System approach, into everything we do. As transportation planners and engineers, one of our most frequent project types is a transportation impact assessment for new developments. How do we build land development projects that are not only accessible, but safely accessible, by every mode of transportation?

ITE’s new technical brief Essential Components of Incorporating Safety in Transportation Impact Analysis describes a comprehensive way for public agencies to incorporate the Safe System approach in project reviews. It can help transportation professionals to build proactive, multimodal safety considerations into transportation impact analysis reports. The brief describes eleven core elements with examples of impact methodology and a framework for selecting the methodology best suited for the jurisdiction and project. Mitigations and funding are also discussed, along with links to resources to further explore this topic.

Those who might be interested include:

• Agency practitioners and consultants seeking ways to institutionalize safety and fund safety enhancements, including those looking to implement existing safety plans
• Developers and consultants responding to development guidelines
• Professionals and students learning about impact analysis practices

We are proud to have served as the lead authors of this resource. Contact us to learn more about how Fehr & Peers can help your agency apply this guidance.

Interested in continuing the conversation about Safe System Approach and Traffic Impact Analysis?

share this article

Explore More

Safeguarding Safety for Road Users Now While Planning for an Automated Future

Safeguarding Safety for Road Users Now While Planning for an Automated Future

Although there is much uncertainty regarding how autonomous vehicles (AVs) might transform cities and influence roadway safety, our recent ITE Journal article “Safeguarding Safety for Road Users Now While Planning for an Automated Future” published alongside the Eno Center for Transportation explores different safety strategies that are important to consider both today and in an AV future.

SB743 and VMT FAQs

SB743 and VMT FAQs

A guide for agencies on implementing SB 743’s requirement to assess transportation impacts based on VMT instead of traffic delay, aligning with California’s environmental objectives.