AMERICAN ROAD & TRANSPORTATION BUILDERS ASSOCIATION: Texas DOT Makes Major Commitment to Safety Embracing ARTBA Foundation’s ANSI-Endorsed Certification Program for Transportation Project Decisionmakers

American Road & Transportation Builders Association issued the following announcement on Oct. 25.

The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) has made a major commitment toward improving safety in and around the state’s roadway construction work zones. The agency has become the first in the nation to help hundreds of its employees earn the “Safety Certification for Transportation Project Professionals™” (SCTPP) credential endorsed by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI).

SCTPP Commission Co-chair David Walls, president & chief executive officer of Texas-based, diversified construction firm Austin Industries, announced the state agency has entered a partnering contract with the American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s Transportation Development Foundation (ARTBA-TDF) to enable 500 TxDOT employees to sit for the professional certification exam in their Fiscal Year 2019.

The SCTPP test was developed under strict ANSI guidelines by a consortium of safety experts from leading transportation construction firms, state transportation departments, federal agencies, trucking and insurance industry firms, and labor unions. They were brought together in 2015 under the umbrella of the American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA). The group was tasked with identifying core safety competencies that could serve as an international standard for the transportation infrastructure industry and then develop a rigorous exam to test knowledge and understanding of them.

The program, which earned in May ANSI accreditation under ISO/IEC 17024:2012 international standard, was launched in late 2016. The exam is administered nationwide at Pearson VUE Test Centers. The program is managed by the ARTBA-TDF.

The SCTPP is targeted at significantly elevating safety awareness among the thousands of non-safety professionals in the industry—planners, designers, field supervisors and inspectors—who are in decision-making roles from project conception through completion. The aim, Walls says, is to bring thousands of more “eyes” to the task of identifying and mitigating potential hazards for workers and motorists commonly found in transportation work zones—skills identified through the professional certification exam.

As part of the partnering contract, TxDOT employees will be given 24/7 access to online SCTPP prep courses available at www.puttingsafetyfirst.org/prep-courses/. The transportation project-specific courses have been pre-approved for Professional Development Hours (PDH) to meet licensing requirements for engineers in Florida, North Carolina and New York. The 38 states that follow the National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying (NCEES) Model Rules for continual professional competency accept the PDHs as well.

ARTBA Chairman Bob Alger, president and chief executive office of Connecticut-based The Lane Construction Corporation, commended TxDOT for its commitment to reducing the number of deaths and injuries that occur in the state’s road work zones each year. He predicted other state transportation departments would follow TxDOT’s leadership in engaging the safety certification program.

For further information on the certification program, visit www.puttingsafetyfirst.org.

Original source can be found here.

Source: American Road & Transportation Builders Association




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