# Promoting Resilient Operations for Transformative, Efficient, and Cost-Saving Transportation Discretionary Program Metrics
**AGENCY:**
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT).
**ACTION:**
Notice; request for comments.
**SUMMARY:**
The FHWA is establishing metrics for the purpose of evaluating the effectiveness and impacts of projects under the Promoting Resilient Operations for Transformative, Efficient, and Cost-Saving Transportation (PROTECT) Discretionary Grant Program. The FHWA will select a representative sample of projects to evaluate using these metrics. This notice fulfills FHWA's requirement to publish the proposed metrics in the *Federal Register* for public comment.
**DATES:**
Submit comments on the proposed metrics by May 20, 2024.
**ADDRESSES:**
To ensure that you do not duplicate your docket submissions, please submit comments by only one of the following means:
• *Federal eRulemaking Portal:* Go to *www.regulations.gov* and follow the online instructions for submitting comments.
• *Mail:* Docket Management Facility, U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, West Building Ground Floor, Room W12-140, Washington, DC 20590;
• *Hand Delivery:* West Building Ground Floor, Room W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590, between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. ET, Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays. The telephone number is (202) 366-9329;
• *Instructions:* You must include the Agency name and docket number for the notice at the beginning of your comments. All comments received will be posted without change to *www.regulations.gov,* including any personal information provided.
**FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:**
Rebecca Lupes, Office of Natural Environment; *[email protected],* 202-366-7808, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590, or Alla C. Shaw, Esq. HCC-30, *[email protected],* (202) 366-1042, Room E84-463, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590.
**SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:**
**I. Background**
On November 15, 2021, the President signed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) (Pub. L. 117-58, also known as the “Bipartisan Infrastructure Law” (BIL)) into law.
Section 11405 of the BIL established the PROTECT Formula and Discretionary Grant Programs, which are codified in section 176 of Title 23, United States Code (U.S.C). Although both the PROTECT Formula and Discretionary Grant Programs share common activities, this notice focuses only on the discretionary grants authorized under 23 U.S.C. 176(d). Under 23 U.S.C. 176(f), FHWA is directed to establish metrics for the purpose of evaluating the effectiveness and impacts of PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program-funded projects and procedures for monitoring and evaluating projects based on those metrics. The FHWA is also required to select a representative sample of projects to be evaluated based on these metrics and procedures. This notice provides an opportunity for public comment on the proposed metrics before they are adopted. (23 U.S.C. 176(f)(2)). The FHWA may adjust these metrics based on feedback from this notice and from grant recipients, as well as FHWA's assessment of analytical and data challenges and ongoing assessment of the utility of each measure.
The vision of the PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program is to fund projects that address the climate crisis by improving the resilience of the surface transportation system, including highways, public transportation, ports, and intercity passenger rail. Projects selected under this program should be grounded in the best available scientific understanding of climate change risks, impacts, and vulnerabilities. Projects should support the continued operation or rapid recovery of crucial local, regional, or national surface transportation facilities. Furthermore, selected projects should utilize innovative and collaborative approaches to risk reduction, including the use of natural infrastructure, which is explicitly eligible under the program. Natural infrastructure (also called nature-based solutions) strategies include conservation, restoration, or construction of riparian and streambed treatments, marshes, wetlands, native vegetation, stormwater bioswales, breakwaters, reefs, dunes, parks, urban forests, and shade trees. Nature-based solutions reduce flood risks, erosion, wave damage, and heat impacts while also creating habitat, filtering pollutants, and providing recreational benefits. Projects in the PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program have the potential to demonstrate innovation in the area of resiliency and best practices that State and local governments in other parts of the country can consider replicating.
By funding projects that improve resilience to natural hazards and climate change impacts, the PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program aims to reduce damage and disruption to the transportation system, improve the safety of the traveling public, and improve equity by addressing the needs of disadvantaged communities that are often the most vulnerable to hazards. The FHWA will seek to award projects to communities that demonstrate a strong need for the funding. The program also includes set asides for rural communities and Indian Tribes.
Under the PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program, similar to the PROTECT Formula Program, grant funds may only be used for activities that are primarily for the purpose of resilience or inherently resilience-related.
There are four categories of funding under the PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program. One category is for Planning Grants. The other three categories are for Resilience Improvement, Community Resilience and Evacuation Routes, and At-Risk Coastal Infrastructure projects, collectively referred to as Resilience Grants. The FHWA is seeking input on proposed performance metrics that will enable the Agency to measure the impact and effectiveness of a representative sample of grant projects funded under the PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program. Proposed metrics are located in Section II of this notice.
**Definitions**
• *Baseline* refers to the observed level of performance for a specified timeframe from which implementation begins, improvement is judged, or comparison is made. [^1]
[^1] For the purpose of this notice, FHWA is utilizing definitions for the performance management terms “baseline”, “goal”, “performance measure”, and “metric” from the FHWA *Transportation Performance Management (TPM) Guidebook* available at *https://www.tpmtools.org/guidebook/.*
• *Goal* is a broad statement of a desired end condition or outcome; a unique piece of the Agency's vision.
• *Performance Measures* are quantifiable and are based upon a defined metric used to track progress toward goals, objectives, and achievement of established targets. They should be manageable, sustainable, and based on collaboration with partners. Measures provide an effective basis for evaluating strategies for performance improvement.
• *Metric* is an indicator of performance or condition.
• *Effectiveness* refers to the extent to which a project is achieving one or more of the PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program objectives. [^2]
[^2] The FHWA is utilizing a variation of the U.S. Government Accountability Office's (GAO) definitions for the terms “effectiveness” and “impact.” *See GAO. Program Evaluation Key Terms and Concepts. GAO-21-404SP (2021),* available at *https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-21-404sp.pdf.*
• *Impact* refers to a valuation of a project's outcomes, including estimating what would have happened in the absence of the project.
• *Robustness* refers to the strength, or the ability of elements, systems, and other measures of analysis to withstand a given level of stress or demand without suffering degradation or loss of function. [^3]
[^3] The FHWA is utilizing Bruneau et.al.'s definitions for the terms “Robustness”, “Redundancy”, “Resourcefulness” and “Rapidity”. *See:* Bruneau, M., SE Chang, R.T. Eguchi, G.C. Lee, T.D. O'Rourke, A.M. Reinhorn, M. Shinozuka, K. Tierney, W.A. Wallace, and D.V. Winterfeldt. 2003. “A Framework to Quantitatively Assess and Enhance the Seismic Resilience of Communities.” Earthquake Spectra 19:733-752.
• *Redundancy* is the extent to which elements, systems, or other measures of analysis exist that are substitutable, *i.e.,* capable of satisfying functional requirements in the event of disruption, degradation, or loss of functionality.
• *Resourcefulness* refers to the capacity to identify problems, establish priorities, and mobilize resources when conditions exist that threatens to disrupt some element, system, or other measures of analysis.
• *Rapidity* is the capacity to meet priorities and achieve goals in a timely manner in order to contain losses, recover functionality and avoid future disruption.
**Areas Where FHWA Is Seeking Input**
• *Number and detail of proposed metrics.* The FHWA seeks comment on the number and level of detail of the proposed metrics.
• *Data availability.* The FHWA is seeking comment regarding the extent to which data resources are readily available to support the proposed metrics.
• *Decision support.* The FHWA intends for the proposed metrics to provide useful and timely data to inform transportation decision-making. The FHWA seeks comment on how data collected and published by the Agency may later be utilized by State departments of transportation, metropolitan planning organizations, cities, Tribes, and other stakeholders to deepen the understanding of resilience.
• *Reporting burden.* The FHWA seeks general comments on reporting burden associated with FHWA's collection of resilience metric data on the projects FHWA selects to monitor, especially PROTECT Discretionary Program Grant projects located in disadvantaged or environmental justice communities.
**II. Project Metrics**
**a. Planning Grants**
The purpose of PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program Planning Grants is to enable communities to assess vulnerabilities to current and future weather events and natural disasters and changing conditions, including sea level rise, and plan transportation improvements and emergency response strategies to address those vulnerabilities (23 U.S.C. 176(b)(2)(B)). To assess the effectiveness and impact of projects in fulfilling this purpose, FHWA established the program objectives and performance measures identified in Table 1. The FHWA will monitor progress made on each applicable performance measure using the associated metrics in Table 1.
| ID# | Aligned DOT strategic goal | Program objective | Applicability | Performance measure | Performance metric | Data source |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| P1 | Climate & Sustainability | Integrate resilience in transportation planning and programming | Planning | Grant recipient
with long range transportation plans (State or metropolitan) | of
with long range transportation plans (State or metropolitan) | FHWA interviews the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
| P2 | Climate & Sustainability | Integrate resilience in transportation planning and programming | Planning | Grant recipient procured or utilized
for resilience related planning analysis to assess hazard severity, duration, and recovery of hazard events | of
procured or utilized for resilience related planning analysis to assess hazard severity, duration, and recovery of hazard events | FHWA interviews the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
| P3 | Climate & Sustainability | Integrate resilience in transportation planning and programming | Planning | (
events or documents) where resilience and resilience related topics are discussed | of
(
events or documents) where resilience and resilience related topics are discussed | FHWA interviews the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
| P4 | Climate & Sustainability | Integrate resilience in transportation planning and programming | Planning | Scenario Planning analyses that include | of how
has been incorporated into
and how results have been used | FHWA interviews the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
| P5 | Climate & Sustainability | Improve evacuation planning and emergency management preparations | Planning | Grant recipient and partner
incorporated into an agency's overall processes or policies | of
incorporated into Grant recipient's overall processes or policies | FHWA interviews the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
**b. Resilience Grants**
The metrics in Table 2 will apply to the three PROTECT Discretionary Program Resilience Grant categories that fund construction: Resilience Improvement Grants, Community Resilience & Evacuation Route Grants, and At-Risk Coastal Infrastructure Grants. The FHWA will use these metrics to assess the effectiveness and impact of projects in fulfilling the statutory purpose for these three grant types, which are described below.
**i. Resilience Improvement Grants**
An eligible entity may use a resilience improvement grant for one or more construction activities to improve the ability of an existing surface transportation asset to withstand one or more elements of a weather event or natural disaster, or to increase the resilience of surface transportation infrastructure from the impacts of changing conditions, such as sea level rise, flooding, wildfires, extreme weather events, and other natural disasters. (23 U.S.C. 176(d)(4)(A)(ii)(I)).
**ii. Community Resilience and Evacuation Route Grants**
An eligible entity may use a community resilience and evacuation route grant for one or more projects that strengthen and protect evacuation routes that are essential for providing and supporting evacuations caused by emergency events. (23 U.S.C. 176(d)(4)(B)(ii)(I-III)).
**iii. At-Risk Coastal Infrastructure Grants**
An eligible entity may use an at-risk coastal infrastructure grant for strengthening, stabilizing, hardening, elevating, relocating, or otherwise enhancing the resilience of highway and non-rail infrastructure, including bridges, roads, pedestrian walkways, and bicycle lanes, and associated infrastructure, such as culverts and tide gates to protect highways, that are subject to, or face increased long-term future risks of, a weather event, a natural disaster, or changing conditions, including coastal flooding, coastal erosion, wave action, storm surge, or sea level rise, in order to improve transportation and public safety and to reduce costs by avoiding larger future maintenance or rebuilding costs. (23 U.S.C. 176(d)(4)(C)(iii)).
**iv. Resilience Grant Performance Metrics**
Table 2 below lists proposed metrics that will be used on a subset of PROTECT Discretionary Grant Program Resilience Grant projects FHWA selects to monitor. For all selected projects, FHWA will assess vulnerability and whether the resilience improvement reduced exposure or sensitivity or increased adaptive capacity of the surface transportation asset. The FHWA will monitor progress made on each applicable program objective using the performance measures and metrics in Table 2. When collecting data on these projects, FHWA may consider how likely it is that specific hazards will occur (probability) as well as the consequences of an event occurring. Where possible, FHWA will request pre- and post- event data to help assess project effectiveness. For projects that require a baseline year measurement, FHWA will consult with the recipient to determine an appropriate baseline year to best measure effectiveness and impact.
**v. Four “R” Components of Resilience**
The FHWA proposes to evaluate the effectiveness of a representative sample of Resilience Grant projects against the “Four R” components of resilience: Robustness; Redundancy; Resourcefulness; and Rapidity. [^4]
[^4] Bruneau, M., SE Chang, R.T. Eguchi, G.C. Lee, T.D. O'Rourke, A.M. Reinhorn, M. Shinozuka, K. Tierney, W.A. Wallace, and D.V. Winterfeldt. 2003. “A Framework to Quantitatively Assess and Enhance the Seismic Resilience of Communities.” Earthquake Spectra 19:733-752.
**vi. Equity Metrics**
The FHWA will collect socioeconomic data from the representative sample of Resilience Grant projects to evaluate the effectiveness and impacts of those projects on underserved and disadvantaged communities. The FHWA will identify disadvantaged communities using the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool, available here: *https://screeningtool.geoplatform.gov/en/,* and DOT's transportation disadvantage tool, available here: *https://www.arcgis.com/apps/dashboards/d6f90dfcc8b44525b04c7ce748a3674a_* .
**vii. Metrics Specific to Certain Hazard and/or Project Types**
The column titled “applicability” in Table 2 indicates whether a metric applies only to a specific hazard or project type. The FHWA will apply each metric on projects selected for monitoring based on project scope, applicable activities, etc. Because of the specific focus on nature-based solutions (NBS) in the PROTECT Discretionary Program, for example, some metrics are designed to only apply to projects installing NBS.
| ID# | Aligned DOT | Program objective | Applicability | Performance measure | Performance metric | Data source |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| | | | | | | |
| R1 | Equity | Increase transportation system
for all users | All selected projects | | Number of people from | FHWA may use the
. In addition, FHWA may interview the Grant recipient to obtain data. |
| R2 | Equity | Increase transportation system
for all users | All selected projects | transportation infrastructure | Reduction in number of people from
in the project area
transportation infrastructure | FHWA may use the
. In addition, FHWA may interview the Grant recipient to obtain data. |
| | | | | | | |
| R3 | Climate and Sustainability | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | All selected projects | Improved performance and ability of
to withstand | Change in Life Cycle Cost (per facility) or (per mile) for pavement system in the project area | FHWA conducts Life Cycle Cost Assessment (LCCA) comparison of replacement in kind vs. adaptive (resilient) design. |
| R4 | Climate and Sustainability | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | All selected projects | Decrease in Annual Maintenance Costs | Change in Projected or Actual Annual Maintenance/Repair Costs | FHWA coordinates with the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
| R5 | | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | Flooding/Scour | Reduction in roadway, bridge, and culvert vulnerability to floods | Number of
or
installed or enhanced in the project area | FHWA reviews project design documentation submitted by the Grant recipient. Suggested references: FHWA Hydraulic Engineering Circular 22 and Hydraulic Engineering Circular 23 (Vols 1 & 2). |
| R6 | | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | Flooding/Scour | or overtopping | Percent change in number of coastal and other low-lying roadway
(due to sea level rise, tides, and other factors) | FHWA interviews the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
| R7 | | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | Flooding/Scour | to future projected conditions | Number of constructed
or projected changes in land use/land cover | FHWA reviews project design documentation submitted by the Grant recipient. |
| R8 | | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | Flooding/Scour | to future projected conditions | Number of | FHWA reviews project design documentation submitted by the Grant recipient. |
| R9 | | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | Geohazards | Frequency of | Annual percent reduction in
in project area | FHWA coordinates with the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. FHWA or FHWA contractor determines pre/post-project slope stability rating using relevant project plans and surveys. |
| R10 | | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | Geohazards | to roads and highways | Annual percent reduction in
to roads and highways in project area | FHWA coordinates with the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
| R11 | | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | Seismic Vulnerability | Seismic vulnerability rating | Change in | FHWA completes seismic vulnerability rating analysis. |
| R12 | | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | Projects incorporating Nature Based Solutions (Coastal) | and | Annual percent change in the
in the project area | FHWA interviews the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. Possible field work required. |
| R13 | | Improve transportation infrastructure strength and | Projects incorporating Nature Based Solutions | | Annual percent change in the
in the project area | FHWA interviews the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. Possible field work required. |
| | | | | | | |
| R14 | | Improve transportation system | All selected projects | (miles) | Reduction in
(miles) because of the project | FHWA reviews project design documentation submitted by the Grant recipient. |
| | | | | | | |
| R15 | | Improve transportation system
and responsiveness | All selected projects | in project area | Annual percent change in
in project area | FHWA interviews the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
| R16 | | Improve transportation system
and responsiveness | Evacuation Routes | before, during and after evacuation event | Percent change
before, during and after evacuation event | FHWA will use National Performance Management Research Data Set (NPMRDS) data or equivalent. |
| | | | | | | |
| R17 | | Improve transportation system | All selected projects | that support | Number of warning systems or sensors that were used to improve transportation system performance | FHWA or FHWA contractor coordinates with the Grant recipient to obtain this local/self-reported data. |
The FHWA will utilize comments received on these draft metrics to develop final metrics that will be used to evaluate a representative sample of PROTECT Discretionary Grant projects. Final metrics will be posted on the FHWA PROTECT website *https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/environment/protect/discretionary/.*
*Authority:* 23 U.S.C. 176(f).
Shailen P. Bhatt,
Administrator, Federal Highway Administration.