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Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization:
Performance-based Planning and Programming

September 2018

 

WHAT IS PERFORMANCE-BASED PLANNING AND PROGRAMMING?

Performance-based planning and programming (PBPP) applies data to inform decisions aimed at helping to achieve desired outcomes for the region’s multimodal transportation networks. The Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) articulated its desired outcomes for the Boston region’s transportation system in its current long-range transportation plan (LRTP), Charting Progress to 2040. The overall vision established in Charting Progress to 2040 is to create

 

a modern transportation system that is safe, uses new technologies, provides equitable access, excellent mobility, and varied transportation options—in support of a sustainable, healthy, livable, and economically vibrant region.

 

Charting Progress to 2040 alsocreated a framework to guide the MPO in making investments through its planning and programming processes, namely, the LRTP, an investment plan covering more than 20 years; the Transportation Improvement Program (TIP), a five-year plan for funding capital infrastructure projects; and the Unified Planning Work Program (UPWP), which is produced annually to support conceptual plans and research. The LRTP, TIP, and UPWP processes become PBPP processes when the MPO takes the following actions:

 

The MPO currently applies PBPP principles when making investment decisions as part of the LRTP, TIP, and UPWP development processes. For example, the MPO established criteria based on its goals and objectives to use when evaluating LRTP and TIP projects. MPO staff applies data gathered from project proponents to conduct those evaluations, which help the MPO make spending decisions. Staff also reports on expected performance outcomes from these projects in LRTP and TIP documents. In addition, the MPO has started responding to new federal PBPP requirements, such as setting targets for specific measures. Over the next few years, the MPO will need to continue to respond to federal PBPP requirements.

 

By implementing performance management practices in its planning and programming activities, the MPO can

 

This document describes 

 

A glossary of PBPP terms and a list of key transportation performance-management rules and requirements are included at the end of this document.

 

The diagram below illustrates the elements involved in PBPP, and how they relate to some of the MPO’s existing plans and activities. The PBPP process, which is cyclical, includes three phases:

 

The sections that follow explain how these PBPP concepts relate to federal requirements for the MPO planning process—including requirements to monitor and set targets for performance measures—and to ways that the MPO can use PBPP to help achieve its transportation goals.

 

 

Creating a Framework for the Boston Region MPO’s Performance-based Planning and Programming Process. The figure shows the three key phases in the MPO’s performance-based planning process: Plan, Program, and Monitor and Evaluate. The figure describes activities that will occur during each phase.

 

Central Vision Statement

The Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization envisions a modern transportation system that is safe, uses new technologies, provides equitable access, excellent mobility, and varied transportation options—in support of a sustainable, healthy, livable, and economically vibrant region.

GOALS OBJECTIVES
SAFETY
Transportation by all modes will be safe
• Reduce number and severity of crashes, all modes
• Reduce serious injuries and fatalities from transportation
• Protect transportation customers and employees from safety and security threats (Note: The MPO action will be to incorporate security investments into capital planning.)
SYSTEM PRESERVATION
Maintain the transportation system
• Improve condition of on- and off-system bridges 
• Improve pavement conditions on MassDOT-monitored roadway system 
• Maintain and modernize capital assets, including transit assets, throughout the system 
• Prioritize projects that support planned response capability to existing or future extreme conditions (sea level rise, flooding, and other natural and security- related man-made hazards) 
• Protect freight network elements, such as port facilities, that are vulnerable to climate-change impacts
CAPACITY MANAGEMENT/MOBILITY
Use existing facility capacity more efficiently and increase healthy transportation capacity
• Improve reliability of transit
• Implement roadway management and operations strategies, constructing improvements to the bicycle and pedestrian network, and supporting community-based transportation
• Create connected network of bicycle and accessible sidewalk facilities (at both regional and neighborhood scale) by expanding existing facilities and closing gaps
• Increase automobile and bicycle parking capacity and usage at transit stations
• Increase percentage of population and places of employment within one-quarter mile of transit stations and stops
• Increase percentage of population and places of employment with access to bicycle facilities
• Improve access to and accessibility of transit and active modes
• Support community-based and private-initiative services and programs to meet   last mile, reverse commute and other non-traditional transit/transportation needs, including those of the elderly and persons with disabilities
• Eliminate bottlenecks on the freight network
• Enhance intermodal connections
• Emphasize capacity management through low-cost investments; give priority to projects that focus on lower-cost O&M-type improvements such as intersection improvements and Complete Streets solutions
CLEAN AIR/CLEAN COMMUNITIES
Create an environmentally friendly transportation system
• Reduce greenhouse gases generated in the Boston region by all transportation modes as outlined in the Global Warming Solutions Act
• Reduce other transportation-related pollutants
• Minimize negative environmental impacts of the transportation system
• Support land use policies consistent with smart and healthy growth
TRANSPORTATION EQUITY
Provide comparable transportation access and service quality among communities, regardless of income level or minority population
• Target investments to areas that benefit a high percentage of low-income and minority populations
• Minimize any burdens associated with MPO-funded projects in low-income and minority areas
• Break down barriers to participation in MPO-decision making
ECONOMIC VITALITY
Ensure our transportation network provides a strong foundation for economic vitality
• Respond to the mobility needs of the 25–34-year-old workforce
• Minimize the burden of housing and transportation costs for residents in the region
• Prioritize transportation investments that serve targeted development sites
• Prioritize transportation investments consistent with the compact-growth strategies of MetroFuture

 

 

 

The MPO’s goals relate to transportation goals set at the federal level. The Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21) identifies seven national goals for the nation’s highway system, which have been continued under the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation Act (FAST Act), the current transportation funding law. The table below lists these goals and shows how they align with the MPO’s goal areas, as outlined in Charting Progress to 2040. The US Department of Transportation will be monitoring progress towards these transportation goals using performance measures discussed in the next section.

 

National and MPO Goals

National Goal

Boston Region MPO Goal Area

Safety—To achieve a significant reduction in traffic fatalities and serious injuries on all public roads

 

Safety

Infrastructure condition—To maintain the highway infrastructure asset system in a state of good repair

 

System Preservation

System reliability—To improve the efficiency of the surface transportation system

 

Capacity Management/Mobility

Congestion reduction—To achieve a significant reduction in congestion on the National Highway System

 

Capacity Management/Mobility

Freight movement and economic vitality—To improve the National Highway Freight Network, strengthen the ability of rural communities to access national and international trade markets, and support regional economic development

 

Capacity Management/Mobility and

Economic Vitality

Environmental sustainability—To enhance the performance of the transportation system while protecting and enhancing the natural environment

 

Clean Air/Clean Communities

Reduced project delivery delays

Not applicable

Not applicable

Transportation Equity

 

WHAT ARE FEDERAL REQUIREMENTS FOR PERFORMANCE-BASED PLANNING AND PROGRAMMING?

MAP-21 and the FAST Act direct MPOs to develop LRTPs and TIPs “through a performance-driven, outcome-based approach to planning.”1 States, MPOs, and operators of public transportation are required to establish targets for performance measures in key performance areas, and to coordinate with each other when setting these targets. Through the federal rulemaking process, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) have required states, MPOs, and transit operators to monitor the transportation system using specific performance measures.

 

Federally Required Highway Performance Measures

Highway Safety Performance Measures

 

 

Federally Required Performance Measures

Applicable Geographic Areas and Transportation Networks

Number of fatalities

All public roads in a state or MPO area

Fatality rate (per 100 million vehicle miles traveled)

Number of serious injuries

Serious injury rate (per 100 million vehicle miles traveled)

Number of nonmotorized fatalities and nonmotorized serious injuries

Sources: Highway Safety Improvement Program Rule (23 CFR 924), National Performance Management Measures Rule (23 CFR 490)

 

These highway safety performance measures relate to the national goal for safety. Values for these performance measures are expressed in five-year annual rolling averages. States and MPOs must set these highway safety targets annually, and they have a time horizon of one year. MPOs may establish targets by electing to support state targets or by setting separate targets for the MPO area. The Massachusetts Strategic Highway Safety Plan (SHSP) will inform the development of these targets and outline strategies to improve highway safety.

 

Highway Infrastructure Condition Performance Measures

 

Federally Required Performance Measures

Applicable Geographic Areas and Transportation Networks

Percentage of pavements on the Interstate System in Good condition

Interstate roadways in a state or MPO area

Percentage of pavements on the Interstate System in Poor condition

Percentage of pavements on the non-Interstate NHS in Good condition

Non-Interstate NHS roadways in a state or MPO area

Percentage of pavements on the non-Interstate NHS in Poor condition

Percentage of NHS bridges by deck area classified as in Good condition

NHS bridges in a state or MPO area

Percentage of NHS bridges by deck area classified as in Poor condition

NHS = National Highway System
Source: National Performance Management Measures Rule (23 CFR 490)

 

These performance measures relate to the national goal for infrastructure condition. FHWA establishes thresholds for Good and Poor bridge and pavement condition. States are currently required to set four-year targets for Interstate pavement condition and to set two-year and four-year targets for non-Interstate NHS pavement condition and NHS bridge condition. MPOs are required to set four-year targets for each of these measures, and they may establish targets by electing to support state targets or by setting separate targets for the MPO area. State Transportation Asset Management Plans (TAMPs) for bridges and pavements inform these target-setting processes and identify strategies for managing and addressing the conditions of these facilities.

 

Highway System Reliability Performance Measures

 

Federally Required Performance Measures

Applicable Geographic Areas and Transportation Networks

Percent of person-miles traveled on the Interstate System that are reliable

Interstate roadways in a state or MPO area

Percent of person-miles traveled on the non-Interstate NHS that are reliable

Non-Interstate NHS roadways in a state or MPO area

Source: National Performance Management Measures Rule (23 CFR 490)

 

These measures relate to the national goal for system reliability. They describe travel time reliability by using a ratio to compare longer than usual (80th percentile) travel times to normal (50th percentile) travel times on NHS segments. FHWA sets a threshold ratio value to identify travel times on an NHS segment as reliable. These measures also consider travel volumes and vehicle occupancy for NHS segments to account for the impacts of travel time reliability on roadway users.

States are currently required to set two-year and four-year targets for the Interstate travel time reliability measure and four-year targets for the non-Interstate NHS travel time reliability measure. MPOs are required to set four-year targets for each of these measures, and they may establish targets by electing to support state targets or by setting separate targets for the MPO area.

 

Highway System Freight Reliability Performance Measures

Federally Required Performance Measures

Applicable Geographic Areas and Transportation Networks

Truck Travel Time Reliability Index

Interstate roadways in a state or MPO area

Source: National Performance Management Measures Rule (23 CFR 490)

This measure relates to national goals for system reliability and for freight movement and economic vitality. It describes truck travel time reliability on the Interstate by comparing long (95th percentile) truck travel times to normal (50th percentile) truck travel times. States are currently required to set two-year and four-year targets for this measure. MPOs are required to set a four-year target for this measure, and they may establish this target by electing to support the state four-year target or by setting a separate target for the MPO area.

 

Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ) Program Traffic Congestion Performance Measures  

Federally Required Performance Measures

Applicable Geographic Areas and Transportation Networks

Annual hours of peak-hour excessive delay per capita (for travel on NHS roadways)

NHS roadways in applicable urbanized areas

Percent of non-SOV travel

Applicable urbanized areas

NHS = National Highway System. SOV = single-occupancy vehicle.
Source: National Performance Management Measures Rule (23 CFR 490)

 

These CMAQ traffic congestion measures relate to the national goal for congestion reduction. Urbanized areas are defined by the US Census and represent the urban cores of metropolitan areas. These CMAQ traffic congestion measures apply to urbanized areas that contain geographic areas designated as not attaining Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standards for criteria air pollutants and precursors from mobile sources (also known as nonattainment areas), or geographic areas that have a history of being in nonattainment of these standards and need to maintain air quality monitoring and standard conformity processes (also known as maintenance areas).2

State DOTs and MPOs participate in processes to set targets for these measures to the extent that their state or region contains parts of the NHS network and overlaps  particular urbanized areas that contain non-attainment or maintenance areas. At this time, the Boston region includes an area (Waltham) designated as being in maintenance for carbon monoxide standards and also contains part of the NHS network in the Boston Urbanized Area, which includes portions of neighboring MPOs in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island.3 Because the Boston Region MPO meets these criteria, it is currently required to participate in a coordinated process to set a four-year target for the annual hours of peak hour excessive delay (PHED) per capita measure and two-year and four-year targets for the percent of non-single-occupancy-vehicle (SOV) travel measure. 

The PHED per capita measure describes the amount of excessive delay that travelers experience from traveling on NHS roadways. FHWA defines thresholds for conditions during which roadway users are considered to be experiencing excessive delay. This excessive delay metric is then weighted by travel volumes and vehicle occupancy, and then divided by the urbanized area population to create a per-capita value. The percent of non-SOV travel measure describes the extent to which people are using alternatives to SOVs, which may help reduce congestion and air pollution from mobile sources.

 

Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ) Program Emissions Performance Measures

Federally Required Performance Measures

Applicable Geographic Areas and Transportation Networks

 Total emissions reduction for applicable pollutants and precursors for CMAQ-funded projects in designated nonattainment and maintenance areas

Nonattainment or maintenance areas within states or MPO areas

Source: National Performance Management Measures Rule (23 CFR 490)

This CMAQ performance measure relates to the national goal for environmental sustainability. As mentioned previously, the Boston region includes an area designated as being in maintenance for attaining EPA standards for carbon monoxide from mobile sources. As a result, the MPO must monitor and set targets for carbon monoxide emissions reductions from CMAQ-funded transportation improvement projects in that maintenance area (Waltham). The MPO must set two-year and four-year targets for this measure.4 States must set two-year and four-year targets for emissions reductions from CMAQ-funded projects in nonattainment and maintenance areas within state boundaries.

 

Federally Required Transit Performance Measures

Recipients of public transit funds, which can include states, local authorities, and public transportation operators, are required to establish performance targets for safety and state of good repair; to develop transit asset management (TAM) and transit safety plans; and to report on their progress toward achieving targets. Public transportation operators are directed to share information with MPOs and states so that all plans and performance reports are coordinated.

The sections below describe performance measures outlined in the National Public Transportation Safety Plan and in the final rule for TAM.

 

TAM Performance Measures

Transit Asset Category

Federally Required Performance Measures

Equipment

Percentage of vehicles that have met or exceeded their Useful Life Benchmark (ULB)

Rolling stock

Percentage of revenue vehicles within a particular asset class that have met or exceeded their ULB

Infrastructure

Percentage of track segments with performance restrictions

Facilities

Percentage of facilities within an asset class rated below condition 3.0 on the FTA Transit Economic Requirements Model scale

Source: Transit Asset Management Rule (49 CFR Part 625)

 

These transit asset performance measures reflect a subset of the various types of transit assets that support transit systems. Transit agencies—and states that sponsor groups of transportation agencies—are responsible for developing TAM plans that describe the inventory and condition of the agency’s transit assets and strategies for keeping those assets in a state of good repair. These TAM plans will inform transit agency TAM targets, which are one-year targets set annually. MPOs coordinate with transit agencies and state DOTs to set TAM targets for their regions. While MPOs are not required to adjust these targets annually, they must revisit these targets when updating their LRTPs or TIPs.  

 

Transit Safety Performance Measures

 

Transit Performance Area

Federally Required Performance Measures

Fatalities

Total number of reportable fatalities and rate per total vehicle revenue miles by mode

Injuries

Total number of reportable injuries and rate per total unlinked passenger trips by mode

Safety events

Total number of reportable events and rate per total vehicle revenue miles by mode

System reliability

Mean distance between major mechanical failures by mode

Sources: National Public Transportation Safety Plan (January 2017) and the Public Transportation Agency Safety Plan Rule (49 Code of Federal Regulations Part 673)

 

Transit agencies will be responsible for developing Public Transportation Agency Safety plans, in compliance with the Public Transportation Agency Safety Plan Rule. These agencies will be required to review and update these plans annually. These plans will include targets for the transit safety performance measures, which transit agencies may choose to amend when conducting annual reviews of their safety plans. Transit agencies must share these safety plans and targets with state DOTs and MPOs, which will set targets for their states and MPO regions.

 

Federal Requirements for PBPP Processes

The transportation legislation and federal rules that identify performance measures also describe how states and MPOs will need to incorporate these measures into their planning processes. States, MPOs, and public transportation operators continue to receive federal guidance on how to implement performance-based planning and programming.

 

Target Setting

 

 

Reporting

 

 

Federal Assessments

HOW CAN THE MPO BUILD A UNIQUE PERFORMANCE-BASED PLANNING AND PROGRAMMING PROCESS?

The MPO is already engaging in activities that support PBPP. The table below lists the steps of the MPO’s proposed PBPP process and indicates whether the LRTP and TIP processes are relevant to each step. For each area, the table notes whether the MPO has yet to begin an activity (symbolized by an open circle), is making progress on an activity (half-filled circle), or has completed an activity or established a process for completing that activity on an ongoing basis (filled circle). Where applicable, the table notes other MPO activities that may support each step.

 

Steps in the Boston Region MPO’s PBPP Process

 

 

 

Phase

 

 

Activity

Progress Made through LRTP and/or TIP

 

Supporting or Related MPO Activities

Plan

Follow a collaborative process to set goals and objectives, which align with national goals

l

 n/a

Integrate goals and objectives into planning and programming activities

l

UPWP development
and studies; CMP development

Use performance measures  for planning and analysis

l

UPWP development and studies; CMP development

Select standard performance measures for monitoring outputs and outcomes of MPO processes

º

UPWP and CMP development

Display baseline information through LRTP Needs Assessment, CMP Roadway Performance Dashboards, and related applications

º

CMP monitoring; MPO data collection and management

Collaborate with other stakeholders (for example, MassDOT and other MPOs) on setting targets and other PBPP topics

º

CMP development and monitoring; UPWP studies; MPO data collection and management

Track trends for performance measures

º

CMP monitoring

Set targets for a designated set of performance measures

º

 n/a

Collect, organize, and analyze data to support performance monitoring

º

UPWP metropolitan planning funding allocation; MPO data collection and management

Invest

Create and analyze scenarios to explore potential performance measure outputs and outcomes

º

n/a

Identify strategies and policies for allocating funding to address goals and objectives

º

UPWP development and studies

Use a performance- and criteria-driven process to support the MPO in selecting transportation projects or study locations for funding

º

UPWP studies

Monitor and Evaluate

Report baseline data, trends, and MPO performance outputs and outcomes

º

CMP monitoring;
MPO data collection and management; travel demand modeling

Determine the effectiveness of MPO strategies and policies on performance outcomes

¡

 

UPWP studies

Identify transportation needs and issue areas for further study

¡

 

UPWP studies

Review and adjust the MPO’s PBPP framework as needed

¡

 

UPWP and CMP development

CMP = Congestion Management Process. MPO = Metropolitan Planning Organization. PBPP = Performance-based Planning and Programming. UPWP = Unified Planning Work Program.

¡= Work on PBPP activity has yet to begin 

º = Work on PBPP activity is underway

l= Work on PBPP activity is complete or a process has been established


 

GOING BEYOND FEDERAL REQUIREMENTS

The requirements in MAP-21 and the FAST Act establish the backbone of the MPO’s PBPP process. In response to the existing federal mandate, over the next several years, the MPO will continue to set targets for specific federally required performance measures and coordinate on PBPP activities with the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT), the MBTA, other MPOs, and other stakeholders. However, the MPO can exceed these requirements to create a PBPP process that meets the MPO’s specific needs and interests. The following options are available:

 

 

Over the coming months, MPO staff will collect information for use in performance measurement, monitor updates in federal and state PBPP processes, explore tools and data, and recommend methods, performance measures, and performance targets to the MPO board. This work is designed to help the MPO make key decisions that will create an effective, integrated, and informative PBPP process for the Boston Region MPO.

 

Examples of Potential Performance Measures for the Boston Region MPO

 

Boston Region MPO Goal Area

Selected Federally Required Performance Measure

Example MPO Performance Measure

Safety

Number of fatalities

Number of HSIP-eligible, high-crash cluster locations improved through programmed projects7

 

System Preservation

Percentage of NHS bridges classified as in good condition

 

Number of sidewalk miles improved through programmed projects

 

Capacity Management/Mobility

Annual hours of peak-hour excessive delay per capita

 

Percentage of population within a quarter mile of a transit stop or station

 

Clean Air/Clean Communities

Total emissions reduction

 

Percentage of population with access to bicycle facilities

Transportation Equity

Not applicable (no federally required measure)

Percentage of equity populations within ¼ mile of transit service 

 

Economic Vitality

Percent of the Interstate System mileage providing for reliable truck travel times

 

Number of projects that provide access to targeted development areas

 

HSIP = Highway Safety Improvement Program. MPO = Metropolitan Planning Organization. NHS = National Highway System.

 

PBPP RESOURCES

MPO Performance-based Planning and Programming webpage: This webpage (bostonmpo.org/performance) describes the MPO’s recent PBPP activities, such as setting targets for specific performance measures. It provides information on federally required performance measures, related processes, and MPO targets, and it also hosts a link to the MPO’s Performance Dashboard.

MPO Performance Dashboard—Transportation in the Boston Region: This interactive dashboard presents data on crashes, bridge and pavement condition, bicycle and pedestrian facilities, and traffic congestion, as well as on the characteristics of the people who use the system. The dashboard can be reached via the MPO’s Performance-based Planning and Programming webpage (bostonmpo.org/performance).

Performance Reporting: The MPO’s Federal Fiscal Years (FFY) 2019–23 TIP includes a performance report (Chapter 4: TIP Performance Monitoring). This report discusses the MPO’s safety and TAM performance targets, as well as performance measures related to the MPOs FFYs 2019–23 Regional Target-funded projects. The FFYs 2019–23 TIP is available on the MPO’s TIP webpage (bostonmpo.org/tip).  

MPO Staff Contact: If you have questions about the MPO’s PBPP process, please contact Michelle Scott at 857.702.3692 or at mscott@ctps.org.


GLOSSARY

The definitions below are adapted from FHWA’s glossary, Transportation Performance Management Terms.

Goal: A broad statement of a desired end condition or outcome (e.g. “transportation by all modes will be safe”).

Metric: An indicator of performance or condition (e.g. number of fatalities during a particular year).

Objective: A specific, measurable statement that supports achievement of a goal (e.g. increase the percentage of the Boston region’s population and places of employment with access to bicycle facilities, which enhances capacity management and mobility).

Outcome: Intended results or consequences of carrying out a particular program or activity, which are often of most interest to system users (e.g. number of serious injuries reduced).

Output: Goods, services, or activities produced by a program or project that are delivered to the public (e.g. miles of pavement improved).  Outputs can be process oriented, and they help agencies track a program’s progress toward reaching desired outcomes.

Performance Measure: A metric used to monitor and report on a [transportation] characteristic. These measures are used on an ongoing basis to track progress toward goals, objectives, and achievement of targets (e.g. number of fatalities, tracked over time to assess progress in improving transportation safety).

Performance-based Planning and Programming: A strategic process, or series of processes, that apply data to inform decisions aimed at helping to achieve desired outcomes for the region’s multimodal transportation systems.

Strategy: A plan of action for achieving a target, goal, or objective (e.g. programming more Complete Streets projects to support more nonmotorized travel).

Target: A level of performance that an entity seeks to achieve within a specific time frame (e.g. a five percent reduction within two years of crashes that result in serious injuries to bicyclists and pedestrians).

 

KEY RULES AND REQUIREMENTS (as of September 4, 2018)

 

1 See 23 USC §134(c)(1) and 49 US.C. §5303(c)(1).

2 A precursor is a chemical compound that reacts with other chemical compounds in the presence of solar radiation to form pollutants.

3 This Boston region’s status with respect to EPA air quality standards is as of October 1, 2017.

4 MPOs without nonattainment or maintenance areas only need to set four-year targets.

5 Specific deadlines for when states and/or public transportation operators need to define their targets vary by measure.

6 See FHWA, Metropolitan Planning Organization Safety Performance Measures Fact Sheet, http://safety.fhwa.dot.gov/hsip/spm/docs/mpo_factsheet.pdf, p. 1.

7 MassDOT uses Equivalent Property Damage Only (EPDO) scoring to rank crash cluster locations in each regional planning area (RPA) in Massachusetts. EPDO scoring is a method for assessing the frequency and severity of crashes at a given location over a period of time. The method involves applying weighting factors to indicate the severity of a crash. Projects that address crash cluster locations ranked in the top 5 percent by EPDO value in a particular RPA are eligible for federal Highway Safety Improvement Program (HSIP) funds.