1 / 23

Woodburn Interchange EA

Woodburn Interchange EA. Evaluation Framework Presentation SWG Meeting #2 April 10, 2003. Process Overview. Define the problem Establish the evaluation framework Identify new alternatives/options Apply threshold screening of alternatives/ options for fatal flaws

rumer
Download Presentation

Woodburn Interchange EA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Woodburn Interchange EA Evaluation Framework Presentation SWG Meeting #2 April 10, 2003

  2. Process Overview • Define the problem • Establish the evaluation framework • Identify new alternatives/options • Apply threshold screening of alternatives/ options for fatal flaws • Evaluate and rank alternatives • Select study alternatives/options

  3. Establish The Evaluation Framework • Evaluation framework includes two types of criteria: • Threshold screening of feasible from non-feasible alternatives • Alternative evaluation of feasible alternatives

  4. Identify Alternatives • Desired Outcome: • All ideas are developed into alternatives/options with the best chance • Check previously dismissed alternatives to validate cause for dismissal in light of changed conditions • Define alternatives/options in such a way they can be directly compared one to another

  5. Threshold Screening Process • Desired Outcome: • Eliminate infeasible, unreasonable alternatives/options • Spend resources evaluating alternatives/options that have realistic prospect of being implemented

  6. Threshold Screening Criteria Should Be: • Thresholds --- either a project meets the criteria or it does not • Easily measured --- no substantial data gathering necessary • Non-judgemental --- not used to prejudge on criteria that require more analysis

  7. Woodburn Threshold Criteria • Federal Policy • Satisfies 20-year design life • Meets interstate design and access policies • Consistent with local plans • Local system improvements support interchange investment

  8. Woodburn Threshold Criteria • State Policy • Supports safe movement of freight • Satisfies defense highway design criteria • Satisfies major investment policy hierarchy • Meets access policy or can reasonably justify a deviation

  9. Woodburn Threshold Criteria • Draft Local Project Criteria • Relatively similar impacts or distinct advantage over another alternative

  10. Threshold Screening Caution • In order to meet the schedule and budget commitments: • Anytime a fatal flaws is discovered for an alternative…it is eliminated from further consideration

  11. Alternative Evaluation Process • Desired Outcome: • Select alternatives/options for detailed evaluation in the environmental document

  12. Evaluation criteria should be: • Comprehensive -- reflect the full range of stakeholder values • Fundamental ---relate to topics that really matter • Relevant ---help distinguish among alternatives • Independent---don’t allow double-counting of outcomes • Measurable---allow for clear comparison of alternatives • Well-defined---mutual understanding of meaning

  13. Woodburn Draft Evaluation Categories • Transportation & Safety • Natural Resources • Developed Environment • Implementation and Costs

  14. Alternative evaluation process involves: • Developing criteria categories • Developing measurable criteria in each category • Rating alternatives • Weighting criteria • Calculating rankings

  15. Evaluation criteria may be either: • Natural scales - easily understood measures ($, acres, number of structures) • Constructed scales - developed scales for less quantifiable measures (safety, bike/pedestrian connectivity) • Note: Criteria must reflect data availability and data collection budget constraints

  16. Rating Alternatives • Based on data collected for each criteria • Developed by staff • Available for review and discussion by SWG

  17. Alternative Safety # residential displacements A -1 Poor 6 A-2 Exceptional 12 A-3 Above Average 9 Alternatives will be rated for their performance against the criteria:

  18. Evaluation Criteria will be weighted by the SWG to: • Represent the multiple values of stakeholders • Perform sensitivity analysis • Calculate and visually display the trade-offs

  19. Performance Value Criterion Measure Rate x Weight = Score A 3 20 60 B 4 70 280 C 1 10 10 D 2 25 50 Total Score 400 Evaluate Remaining Alternatives • Factual rating against performance measures • Value weighting to reflect trade-off in values • Single score for each competing alternative

  20. Project Alternatives Alternative Score Alternative 1 (II-1/B-2a/b) 86.6 Alternative 2 (II-1/B-2c/d) 76.9 Alternative 3 (II-1/A--1d) 65.4 Alternative 4 (II-1/A-1e) 64.3 Alternative 5 (II-4/B-2a/B) 63.4 Alternative 6 (II-3/B-2a/b) 60.7 Alternative 7 (II-4/B-2c/d) 52.5 Alternative 8 (II-3/B-2c/d) 52.0 Alternative 9 (II-4/A-1d) 42.6 Alternative 10 (II-4/A-1e) 40.6 Alternative 11 (II-3/A-1d) 40.1 Alternative 12 (II-3/A-1e) 39.5 Alternative 13 (III-2/B-2c/d) 37.3 Alternative 14 (III-2/B-2a/b) 36.8 Alternative 15 (III-2/B-3a) 35.1 Alternative 16 (III-1/B-2a/b) 31.8 Alternative 17 (III-2/B-3d) 28.6 Alternative 18 (III-1/B-3a) 28.5 Alternative 19 (III-1/B-2c/d) 27.3 Alternative 20 (III-1/B-3d) 23.2 Rank Alternative • Highest score represents highest value • Scores are not “the answer” but provide a basis for informed discussion and justification of choices • Allows “apples to apples” comparison

  21. Sensitivity analysis will indicate: • If a criterion has an influence on the results and how much • What change is required in the weight to produce a change in the results

  22. 0.89 0.71 0.64 0.62 0.58 0.44 0.36 0.33 0.32 0.32 Alternate 5 Alternate 1 Alternate 7 Alternate 6 Alternate 10 Alternate 2 Alternate 3 Alternate 9 Alternate 8 Alternate 4 Criteria Legend Right-of-Way Impacts Natural Environment Impacts Community Livability Impacts Transportation Performance Cost Sensitivity Analysis -- Contribution by Criteria

  23. Evaluation Framework Summary • Well defined and structured criteria will: • Provide a good basis for rating alternatives • Provide the basis for weighting criteria • Provide a focus for discussing community values rather than positions on particular alternatives • Provide the information for decision-making

More Related