Authors: Annabelle Boyd, John P. Sullivan
Date of Publication: 1997
Sponsoring Agency: U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Transit Administration in cooperation with the Transit Development Corporation
Abstract:
A vast storehouse of information exists on many subjects of concern to the transit industry. This information has resulted from research and from the successful application of solutions to problems by individuals or organizations. There is a continuing need to provide a systematic means for compiling this information and making it available to the entire transit community in a usable format. The Transit Cooperative Research Program includes a synthesis series designed to search for and synthesize useful knowledge from all available sources and to prepare documented reports on current practices in subject areas of concern to the transit industry.
This synthesis series reports on various practices, making specific recommendations where appropriate but without the detailed directions usually found in handbooks or design manuals. Nonetheless, these documents can serve similar purposes, for each is a compendium of the best knowledge available on those measures found to be successful in resolving specific problems. The extent to which these reports are useful will be tempered by the user’s knowledge and experience in the particular problem area.
This synthesis will be of interest to transit agency general managers, transit police, security professionals, safety departments, and transit agency personnel in operations, maintenance, procurement, and administration, as well as to local, state, and federal law enforcement and emergency preparedness agencies such as the FBI and BATF. It provides a useful perspective on mass transit preparedness, offering information on the current practices of selected transit agencies to prevent and respond to terrorism and acts of extreme violence. This synthesis contrasts transit perspectives to those of general service police through a review of the relevant literature.
Administrators, practitioners, and researchers are continually faced with issues or problems on which there is much information, either in the form of reports or in terms of undocumented experience and practice. Unfortunately, this information often is scattered or not readily available in the literature, and, as a consequence, in seeking solutions, full information on what has been learned about an issue or problem is not assembled. Costly research findings may go unused, valuable experience may be overlooked, and full consideration may not be given to the available methods of solving or alleviating the issue or problem. In an effort to correct this situation, the Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Synthesis Project, carried out by the Transportation Research Board as the research agency, has the objective of reporting on common transit issues and problems and synthesizing available information. The synthesis reports from this endeavor constitute a TCRP publication series in which various forms of relevant information are assembled into single, concise documents pertaining to a specific problem or closely related issues.
This report of the Transportation Research Board reports the expressed concerns of surveyed transit agencies. A sizable majority of transit police and operations personnel regard terrorism as a serious threat and recent experience and training have encouraged transit personnel to assume more responsibility for activities to mitigate terrorism and improve related emergency response capabilities.
To develop this synthesis in a comprehensive manner and to ensure inclusion of significant knowledge, available information was assembled from numerous sources, including a number of public transportation agencies. A topic panel of experts in the subject area was established to guide the researchers in organizing and evaluating the collected data, and to review the final synthesis report.
This synthesis is an immediately useful document that records practices
that were acceptable within the limitations of the knowledge available
at the time of its preparation. As the processes of advancement continue,
new knowledge can be expected to be added to that now at hand.
No. of Pages: 80
To Order This Document: Request Document No. RA400017