Category: News

  • NCHRP Synthesis 425: Waterproofing Membranes for Concrete Bridge Decks

    Cover imageTRB\’s National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Synthesis 425: Waterproofing Membranes for Concrete Bridge Decks documents information on materials, specification requirements, design details, application methods, system performance, and costs of waterproofing membranes used on new and existing bridge decks since 1995.

    The synthesis focuses on North American practices with some information provided about systems used in Europe and Asia.

    NCHRP Synthesis 425 is an update to NCHRP Synthesis 220: Waterproofing Membranes for Concrete Bridge Decks that was published in 1995.

  • TCRP Synthesis 98: Ridesharing as a Complement to Transit

    Cover imageTRB\’s Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Synthesis 98: Ridesharing as a Complement to Transit explores current practices in using ridesharing to complement public transit and highlights ways to potentially enhance ridesharing and public transit.

  • NCHRP Synthesis 432: Recent Roadway Geometric Design Research for Improved Safety and Operations

    Cover imageTRB\’s National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Synthesis 432: Recent Roadway Geometric Design Research for Improved Safety and Operations reviews and summarizes roadway geometric design literature completed and published from 2001 through early 2011, particularly research that identified impacts on safety and operations.

    The report is structured to correspond to chapters in the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials\’ A Policy on Geometric Design of Highways and Streets, more commonly referred to as the Green Book.

    NCHRP Synthesis 432 is an update of NCHRP Synthesis 299 on the same topic published in 2001.

  • TCRP Synthesis 95: Practices for Wayside Rail Transit Worker Protection

    Cover imageTRB\’s Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Synthesis 95: Practices for Wayside Rail Transit Worker Protection is designed to highlight knowledge, practice, lessons learned, and gaps in information related to wayside rail transit worker protection programs.

  • NCHRP Synthesis 428: Practices and Procedures for Site-Specific Evaluations of Earthquake Ground Motions

    Cover imageTRB\’s National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Synthesis 428: Practices and Procedures for Site-Specific Evaluations of Earthquake Ground Motions identifies and describes current practice and available methods for evaluating the influence of local ground conditions on earthquake design ground motions on a site-specific basis.

    The report focuses on evaluating the response of soil deposits to strong ground shaking.

  • TCRP Synthesis 99: Uses of Social Media in Public Transportation

    Cover imageTRB\’s Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Synthesis 99: Uses of Social Media in Public Transportation explores the use of social media among transit agencies and documents successful practices in the United States and Canada.

    For the purposes of the report, social media are defined as a group of web-based applications that encourage users to interact with one another, such as blogs, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, Foursquare, and MySpace.

  • NCHRP Synthesis 431: Practices to Manage Traffic Sign Retroreflectivity

    Cover imageTRB\’s National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Synthesis 431: Practices to Manage Traffic Sign Retroreflectivity includes examples of practices that illustrate how different types of transportation agencies might meet federal retroreflectivity requirements for traffic signs.

  • Conference Proceedings 48: Financing Surface Transportation in the United States: Forging a Sustainable Future—Now!

    Cover imageTRB\’s Conference Proceedings 48: Financing Surface Transportation in the United States: Forging a Sustainable Future—Now summarizes a May, 2010 conference that focused on developments in innovative funding techniques and options for securing continued revenue to support national infrastructure and mobility needs.

    Views presented in Conference Proceedings 48 reflect the opinions of the individual participants and are not necessarily the views of all conference participants, the planning committee, TRB, or the National Research Council.

  • NCHRP Report 716: Travel Demand Forecasting: Parameters and Techniques

    Cover imageTRB\’s National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Report 716: Travel Demand Forecasting: Parameters and Techniques provides guidelines on travel demand forecasting procedures and their application for helping to solve common transportation problems.

    The report presents a range of approaches that are designed to allow users to determine the level of detail and sophistication in selecting modeling and analysis techniques based on their situations. The report addresses techniques, optional use of default parameters, and includes references to other more sophisticated techniques.

    NCHRP Report 716 is an update to NCHRP Report 365: Travel Estimation Techniques for Urban Planning.

  • New From NAP 2012-11-21 16:03:56

    Final Book Now Available

    The aim of this report is to encourage enhanced richness and relevance of the undergraduate engineering education experience, and thus produce better-prepared and more globally competitive graduates, by providing practical guidance for incorporating real world experience in US engineering programs. The report, a collaborative effort of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD), builds on two NAE reports on The Engineer of 2020 that cited the importance of grounding engineering education in real world experience. This project also aligns with other NAE efforts in engineering education, such as the Grand Challenges of Engineering, Changing the Conversation, and Frontiers of Engineering Education.

    This publication presents 29 programs that have successfully infused real world experiences into engineering or engineering technology undergraduate education. The Real World Engineering Education committee acknowledges the vision of AMD in supporting this project, which provides useful exemplars for institutions of higher education who seek model programs for infusing real world experiences in their programs. The NAE selection committee was impressed by the number of institutions committed to grounding their programs in real world experience and by the quality, creativity, and diversity of approaches reflected in the submissions. A call for nominations sent to engineering and engineering technology deans, chairs, and faculty yielded 95 high-quality submissions. Two conditions were required of the nominations: (1) an accredited 4-year undergraduate engineering or engineering technology program was the lead institutions, and (2) the nominated program started operation no later than the fall 2010 semester. Within these broad parameters, nominations ranged from those based on innovations within a single course to enhancements across an entire curriculum or institution.

    Infusing Real World Experiences into Engineering Education is intended to provide sufficient information to enable engineering and engineering technology faculty and administrators to assess and adapt effective, innovative models of programs to their own institution’s objectives. Recognizing that change is rarely trivial, the project included a brief survey of selected engineering deans concern in the adoption of such programs.

    [Read the full report]

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  • New From NAP 2012-11-21 00:00:00

    Final Book Now Available

    The number of new drug approvals has remained reasonably steady for the past 50 years at around 20 to 30 per year, while at the same time the total spending on health-related research and development has tripled since 1990. There are many suspected causes for this trend, including increases in regulatory barriers, the rising costs of scientific inquiry, a decrease in research and development efficiency, the downstream effects of patient expirations on investment, and the lack of production models that have successfully incorporated new technology. Regardless, this trajectory is not economically sustainable for the businesses involved, and, in response, many companies are turning toward collaborative models of drug development, whether with other industrial firms, academia, or government. Introducing greater efficiency and knowledge into these new models and aligning incentives among participants may help to reverse the trends highlighted above, while producing more effective drugs in the process.

    Genome-Based Therapeutics explains that new technologies have the potential to open up avenues of development and to identify new drug targets to pursue. Specifically, improved validation of gene-disease associations through genomics research has the potential to revolutionize drug production and lower development costs. Genetic information has helped developers by increasing their understanding of the mechanisms of disease as well as individual patients’ reactions to their medications. There is a need to identify the success factors for the various models that are being developed, whether they are industry-led, academia-led, or collaborations between the two.

    Genome-Based Therapeutics
    summarizes a workshop that was held on March 21, 2012, titled New Paradigms in Drug Discovery: How Genomic Data Are Being Used to Revolutionize the Drug Discovery and Development Process. At this workshop the goal was to examine the general approaches being used to apply successes achieved so far, and the challenges ahead.

    [Read the full report]

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  • New From NAP 2012-11-20 09:09:22

    Final Book Now Available

    In 1996, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) released its report Telemedicine: A Guide to Assessing Telecommunications for Health Care. In that report, the IOM Committee on Evaluating Clinical Applications of Telemedicine found telemedicine is similar in most respects to other technologies for which better evidence of effectiveness is also being demanded. Telemedicine, however, has some special characteristics-shared with information technologies generally-that warrant particular notice from evaluators and decision makers.

    Since that time, attention to telehealth has continued to grow in both the public and private sectors. Peer-reviewed journals and professional societies are devoted to telehealth, the federal government provides grant funding to promote the use of telehealth, and the private technology industry continues to develop new applications for telehealth. However, barriers remain to the use of telehealth modalities, including issues related to reimbursement, licensure, workforce, and costs. Also, some areas of telehealth have developed a stronger evidence base than others.

    The Health Resources and Service Administration (HRSA) sponsored the IOM in holding a workshop in Washington, DC, on August 8-9 2012, to examine how the use of telehealth technology can fit into the U.S. health care system. HRSA asked the IOM to focus on the potential for telehealth to serve geographically isolated individuals and extend the reach of scarce resources while also emphasizing the quality and value in the delivery of health care services. This workshop summary discusses the evolution of telehealth since 1996, including the increasing role of the private sector, policies that have promoted or delayed the use of telehealth, and consumer acceptance of telehealth. The Role of Telehealth in an Evolving Health Care Environment: Workshop Summary discusses the current evidence base for telehealth, including available data and gaps in data; discuss how technological developments, including mobile telehealth, electronic intensive care units, remote monitoring, social networking, and wearable devices, in conjunction with the push for electronic health records, is changing the delivery of health care in rural and urban environments. This report also summarizes actions that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) can undertake to further the use of telehealth to improve health care outcomes while controlling costs in the current health care environment.

    [Read the full report]

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  • New From NAP 2012-11-20 00:00:00

    Final Book Now Available

    The first two decades of the U.S. Geological Survey’s National Water Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program have provided a successful and useful assessment of U.S. water-quality conditions, how they have changed over time, and how natural features and human activities have affected those conditions. Now, planning is underway for the third decade (Cycle 3) of the Program outlined in the Science Plan, with challenges including ensuring that the NAWQA remain a national program in the face of declining resources, balancing new activities against long-term studies, and maintaining focus amidst numerous and competing stakeholder demands.

    The Science Plan for Cycle 3 articulates a forward-thinking vision for NAWQA science over the next decade, building on the previous cycles’ data, experience, and products. Preparing for the Third Decade (Cycle 3) of the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program explains the national needs outlined in the plan, NAWQA’s need to emphasize collaboration with other USGS and external programs, other federal agencies, state and local governments, and the private sector.

    [Read the full report]

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  • Thanskgiving for the ages: Unique heart valve procedure a holiday blessing for 94-year-old

    Vivian Valentine, a 94-year-old Santa Monica resident, has much to be thankful for this Thanksgiving. A new lifesaving heart-valve procedure, performed without traditional open heart surgery at UCLA, has given her a new lease on life.  
     
    Her holiday wish: to live to be 100 and to continue to sing in her church choir. Her doctors say she may just do that, given the success of the procedure, which is known as transcatheter aortic valve replacement, or TAVR.
     
    Like many older patients, Valentine was too frail to undergo conventional surgery to replace her main heart valve, which was so clogged with calcium deposits that it couldn’t open wide enough to adequately pump blood through her body. As a result of this condition, called aortic stenosis, she was chronically tired, couldn’t perform everyday tasks, suffered from heart palpitations and swelling in her legs, and was at a much higher risk of heart failure and death.
     
    Luckily, doctors at UCLA were able to help her using the new, minimally invasive TAVR procedure, which was approved last year by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Although other minimally invasive surgical procedures have been used on the aortic valve in the past, they relied on incisions in the chest wall and required cardiopulmonary bypass. 
     
    With the new procedure, far fewer surgical risks are involved. TAVR allows doctors for the first time to replace the aortic valve without a chest incision, and it only rarely utilizes a bypass machine, helping to prolong the lives of patients who aren’t candidates for traditional surgery. The new valve is deployed using a catheter — a long tube that travels through an artery in the groin up to the heart. Once in place, the valve is opened and starts working immediately.
     
    Procedures like TAVR offer new options for patients who are inoperable or excessively high-risk candidates for conventional open aortic-valve replacement surgery. Previously, these patients, who are often in their 80s and even 90s, had no choice but to accept a diminished quality of life or a shortened life.
     
    “This new procedure can give older patients a new lease on life and a chance to live better, longer,” said Dr. Jonathan Tobis, a clinical professor of cardiology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and director of interventional cardiology for the UCLA Health System. 
     
    Tobis noted that older patients with aortic stenosis who couldn’t undergo traditional heart surgery previously had only a 50 percent chance of living two years after their symptoms were diagnosed.
     
    Valentine is UCLA’s oldest TAVR patient to date.
     
    “These new, minimally invasive surgical techniques can really help extend and improve the quality of life for older patients who previously had few options,” said Dr. Richard J. Shemin, chief of cardiothoracic surgery for the Geffen School of Medicine and the UCLA Health System. “It is our goal to provide the best valve replacement device and the least invasive technology, which allows our patients to resume a more normal life.”
     
    As for Valentine, she left the hospital just three days after her Nov. 14 TAVR procedure at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. Her doctors say her prognosis is good and that she can soon resume her regular activities. 
     
    Her son, Lynn Lawrence, who owns a beauty salon in Altadena, was concerned at the prospect of his mother having a heart procedure at such an advanced age. “However,” he said, “I was just amazed at how well she’s doing — even the first day after the procedure.”
     
    Valentine, who said her damaged heart used to pound so loudly it sounded like Louis Armstrong playing trumpet in her chest, now says walking and breathing are much easier. And since the procedure, she noted, her heart is much quieter. Dr. Shemin said that is due to her heart murmur stabilizing with better blood flow through the valve.
     
    Valentine is eager to get back to singing soprano in both the Santa Monica Emeritus College Gospel Choir and the Redeemer Baptist Church choir. She’s been performing since 1957 and says it really keeps her going. She even sang a medley of her favorite songs — “Love Lifted Me,” “Amazing Grace” and “God Has Smiled on Me” — to her doctors from her hospital bed.
     
    A Santa Monica resident since 1944, the family matriarch is also looking forward to enjoying the upcoming holidays with her seven grandchildren, seven great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren.
     
    TAVR is the latest in a trend of major surgical procedures now being performed without invasive surgery at UCLA. With this unique technology, cardiologists and heart surgeons work closely together in performing the procedure. Valentine’s team included heart surgeons Dr. Shemin and Dr. Murray Kwon and cardiologists Dr. Tobis, Dr. William Suh and Dr. Gabe Vorobiof. Valentine’s longtime cardiologist is Dr. Lawrence Lazar.
     
    The cardiac team also relies on key anesthesiologists, nurses and technologists who help address the needs of each individual patient. 
     
    For more information about the TAVR procedure at UCLA, visit www.uclahealth.org/TAVR call 310-206-8232.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • New From NAP 2012-11-19 13:45:01

    Final Book Now Available

    The development of technologies to modify natural human physical and cognitive performance is one of increasing interest and concern, especially among military services that may be called on to defeat foreign powers with enhanced warfighter capabilities. Human performance modification (HPM) is a general term that can encompass actions ranging from the use of “natural” materials, such as caffeine or khat as a stimulant, to the application of nanotechnology as a drug delivery mechanism or in an invasive brain implant. Although the literature on HPM typically addresses methods that enhance performance, another possible focus is methods that degrade performance or negatively affect a military force’s ability to fight.

    Advances in medicine, biology, electronics, and computation have enabled an increasingly sophisticated ability to modify the human body, and such innovations will undoubtedly be adopted by military forces, with potential consequences for both sides of the battle lines. Although some innovations may be developed for purely military applications, they are increasingly unlikely to remain exclusively in that sphere because of the globalization and internationalization of the commercial research base.

    Based on its review of the literature, the presentations it received and on its own expertise, the Committee on Assessing Foreign Technology Development in Human Performance Modification chose to focus on three general areas of HPM: human cognitive modification as a computational problem, human performance modification as a biological problem, and human performance modification as a function of the brain-computer interface. Human Performance Modification: Review of Worldwide Research with a View to the Future summarizes these findings.

    [Read the full report]

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  • White-Nose Syndrome Bat Recovery May Present Challenges Similar to Those in Some Recovering AIDS Patients

    UPDATED 11/26/2012:  Phone number change for Judith Mandl, NIH

    Bats recovering from white-nose syndrome show evidence of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS), according to a hypothesis proposed by the U.S. Geological Survey and collaborators at National Institutes of Health. This condition was first described in HIV-AIDS patients and, if proven in bats surviving WNS, would be the first natural occurrence of IRIS ever observed.

    IRIS is a syndrome in which an organism’s immune system, having been suppressed for a time, reactivates and, perceiving a serious infection around it, goes into overdrive resulting in severe inflammation and tissue damage in infected areas.

    In both human patients with HIV-AIDS and bats with WNS, the functioning of the immune system is severely reduced. For humans, this occurs when the HIV virus attacks the patient’s white blood cells, and for bats, this occurs during normal hibernation. For both humans and bats, IRIS can be fatal.

    “The potential discovery of IRIS in bats infected with white-nose syndrome is incredibly significant in terms of understanding both the reasons for bat mortality and basic immune response,” said USGS Director Marcia McNutt. “This discovery could also prove significant for studies on treatment for AIDS.”

    IRIS was first described in humans with HIV-AIDS after patients with low counts of helper T lymphocytes, the type of white blood cells the HIV virus attacks, had increases in those cell numbers following treatment with antiretroviral therapy. In some patients, who had secondary bacterial or other opportunistic infections due to their suppressed immune system, their condition significantly worsened as the restoration in immune cell function resulted in an over-response to pre-existing infection and substantial damage to healthy tissue.

    In bats, IRIS might be a result of changes in immune system function during hibernation. During hibernation, all internal systems for the bats enter a reduced state, including the immune system, so as to conserve resources. This reduced immunity allows Geomyces destructans, the fungus that causes white-nose syndrome, to spread unchecked over the wings, muzzle, and ears of bats eroding through skin.

    If they survive the fungal infection through winter, when the bats emerge in the spring, they face a new challenge—intense inflammation at sites of infection with G. destructans. This inflammation in the wings can be so severe that it contributes to death.

    Scientists from the USGS National Wildlife Health Center and National Institutes of Health propose this sudden reversal of immune suppression in bats with WNS, accompanied by intense inflammation is a form of IRIS.

    Although never before observed outside a clinical setting, there is strong evidence that the inflammation observed in bats with WNS is IRIS.

    “We see strong similarities between human IRIS and the pathology associated with WNS , with potentially fatal outcome in bats,” said USGS lead researcher Carol Meteyer. “We hope that these findings will stimulate more experimental studies that yield insight into the role of the immune response during IRIS in humans as well as hibernating bats.”

    Even as the G. destructans fungus spreads throughout the bat’s body, there is no obvious inflammation in response to this hibernation-dependent fungal skin infection. This lack of inflammatory cell response is consistent with hibernation-induced inhibition of immune cell activity as the body temperature of hibernating bats drops to ambient temperatures 35-50 degrees Fahrenheit (2-10 degrees Centigrade).

    In addition, inflammation is not seen until the bat”s body temperatures reach their active levels of 93-102 degrees Fahrenheit (34-39 degrees Centigrade). These temperature levels indicate that the bat’s internal systems have come back online, including the immune system. Only then is the inflammation observed, and only in areas where the G. destructans fungus has taken hold. This behavior is consistent with IRIS observed in human HIV-AIDS patients.

    The report, entitled “Pathology in euthermic bats with white nose syndrome suggests a natural manifestation of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome,” is published in the November issue of the journal Virulence.

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  • New From NAP 2012-11-19 10:45:01

    Final Book Now Available

    The growth of electronic publishing of literature has created new challenges, such as the need for mechanisms for citing online references in ways that can assure discoverability and retrieval for many years into the future. The growth in online datasets presents related, yet more complex challenges. It depends upon the ability to reliably identify, locate, access, interpret, and verify the version, integrity, and provenance of digital datasets. Data citation standards and good practices can form the basis for increased incentives, recognition, and rewards for scientific data activities that in many cases are currently lacking in many fields of research. The rapidly-expanding universe of online digital data holds the promise of allowing peer-examination and review of conclusions or analysis based on experimental or observational data, the integration of data into new forms of scholarly publishing, and the ability for subsequent users to make new and unforeseen uses and analyses of the same data-either in isolation, or in combination with, other datasets.

    The problem of citing online data is complicated by the lack of established practices for referring to portions or subsets of data. There are a number of initiatives in different organizations, countries, and disciplines already underway. An important set of technical and policy approaches have already been launched by the U.S. National Information Standards Organization (NISO) and other standards bodies regarding persistent identifiers and online linking.

    The workshop summarized in For Attribution — Developing Data Attribution and Citation Practices and Standards: Summary of an International Workshop was organized by a steering committee under the National Research Council’s (NRC’s) Board on Research Data and Information, in collaboration with an international CODATA-ICSTI Task Group on Data Citation Standards and Practices. The purpose of the symposium was to examine a number of key issues related to data identification, attribution, citation, and linking to help coordinate activities in this area internationally, and to promote common practices and standards in the scientific community.

    [Read the full report]

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  • Renewable Energy Law News – Week of November 12

    Fate of wind energy production tax credit in hands of Obama, House GOP, officals say

    The fate of a tax credit that advocates say is needed to maintain tens of thousands of wind energy jobs will be decided during high-stakes, last-minute negotiations between President Obama and House Republicans over fiscal issues, officials said Tuesday.

    The wind energy production tax credit is due to expire at the end of the year. Its extension stalled in Congress this summer amid fierce opposition from some conservative House Republicans. The last chance to extend the measure is in the budget deal that will be cut between Obama and Republicans in the lame duck session of Congress.

    Backers of the credit tried to ramp up pressure to extend the $12 billion break Tuesday with a teleconference featuring several governors, who noted that uncertainty over its fate has led to thousands of job losses across the country. A study by a wind energy group found that 37,000 jobs would be lost if the credit expires.

    The credit’s supporters say the government has subsidized fossil fuels like oil for more than a century. Opponents argue it distorts the energy marketplace and leads to higher prices.

    Governors Urge Congress to Renew Wind Energy Production Tax Credit

    Salt Lake City, UT — With the expiration of the wind energy Production Tax Credit looming and the clock ticking rapidly away to the end of 2012, a bipartisan group of U.S. governors is urging Congress to act now to save jobs. In a joint press conference held today, Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) stressed that uncertainty over the extension of the wind energy Production Tax Credit (PTC) is already beginning to have an impact on renewable energy jobs.

    “The uncertainty about the future of this tax incentive,” Grassley said, “hurts the economic good that these policies do.” Grassley, who authored the original wind energy PTC in 1992 and has also sponsored Senate bill (S. 3521), which aims to extend the tax credit for at least another year, pointed to the expiration of the biodiesel tax credit in 2010 as an example that he says resulted in 23,000 jobs being “put on hold.” This is a situation that all involved are keen to prevent from happening to wind energy in their states.

    Governor Terry Branstad (R-IA) also cited uncertainty about the wind energy PTC’s fate as a major playing factor in the decision of some companies to have already begun eliminating jobs. “Due to the uncertainty,” Branstad said, “we’ve begun to see a negative economic impact and loss of jobs in our states. In Iowa, Siemens recently announced the layoff of 400 employees at their plant in Fort Madison, and Clipper Windpower laid off 100 workers at their plant in Cedar Rapids. We have literally thousands of wind energy related jobs in our state. These are high tech, high paying jobs.” Branstad says he remains hopeful that Congress will act quickly to extend the PTC.

    Branstad is the chair of the Governors’ Wind Energy Coalition, which is a group comprised of 28 state governors who all share the goal of leveraging wind energy resources as a way to pursue the long-held goal of lasting energy independence.

    “Nationally, wind energy drives about $10 to $20 billion a year in private sector capital investment and employs almost 75,000 Americans,” said John Kitzhaber (D-OR), Governor of Oregon and vice chair of the Governors’ Wind Energy Coalition. Kitzhaber used Oregon’s own Sherman County as an example of how rural communities can utilize wind energy production to drive revenue. “The county now receives $33 million per year in revenue from wind farms,” Kitzhaber said. “That’s revenue that has proved essential to sustain schools, fire departments and road maintenance.”

    Hawaii issues new rules for renewable energy tax credit

    HONOLULU – The state Department of Taxation on Friday issued new rules for the renewable energy tax credits that have spurred more residents to install solar panels.

    The department said it is doing so to provide clarity to taxpayers, but environmentalists and renewable energy advocates said the new rules jeopardize the state’s progress in moving away from imported fossil fuels.

    The rules, which will take effect on Jan. 1, require renewable energy systems to meet set output capacity requirements. The Sierra Club and Earthjustice said the change would limit the solar tax credit for the average residential solar power system to $5,000. This would effectively cut the tax credit in half and put solar power out of the reach of many families, they said.

    The department explained its decision by saying the previous rules, issued in 2010, created uncertainty and an unlevel playing field. The department has been receiving complaints about the rules for more than a year, it said.

    The law grants residents and businesses a tax credit for installing a renewable energy system. Some people, however, have been advised by the companies putting in their solar panels to say their installation consists of multiple systems and then claimed the credit multiple times. This has made solar panels more affordable and encouraged many more people to buy them but it’s also depleted tax revenues and made it harder for the state to balance its budget.

    “After listening to taxpayers concerns, the department is issuing these new temporary rules in order to provide consistent, uniform and fair application of the tax credit law, while still supporting the State’s public policy goal of reducing our reliance on fossil fuel,” the department said in a statement.

    Photo via Flickr

  • New From NAP 2012-11-15 13:45:01

    Prepublication Now Available

    Following a 2011 report by the National Research Council (NRC) on successful K-12 education in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), Congress asked the National Science Foundation to identify methods for tracking progress toward the report’s recommendations. In response, the NRC convened the Committee on an Evaluation Framework for Successful K-12 STEM Education to take on this assignment. The committee developed 14 indicators linked to the 2011 report’s recommendations. By providing a focused set of key indicators related to students’ access to quality learning, educator’s capacity, and policy and funding initiatives in STEM, the committee addresses the need for research and data that can be used to monitor progress in K-12 STEM education and make informed decisions about improving it.

    The recommended indicators provide a framework for Congress and relevant deferral agencies to create and implement a national-level monitoring and reporting system that: assesses progress toward key improvements recommended by a previous National Research Council (2011) committee; measures student knowledge, interest, and participation in the STEM disciplines and STEM-related activities; tracks financial, human capital, and material investments in K-12 STEM education at the federal, state, and local levels; provides information about the capabilities of the STEM education workforce, including teachers and principals; and facilitates strategic planning for federal investments in STEM education and workforce development when used with labor force projections. All 14 indicators explained in this report are intended to form the core of this system. Monitoring Progress Toward Successful K-12 STEM Education: A Nation Advancing? summarizes the 14 indicators and tracks progress towards the initial report’s recommendations.

    [Read the full report]

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  • North Carolina, Delmarva Coastlines Changed by Hurricane Sandy

    USGS releases new before-and-after photos

    Updated

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – The USGS has released a series of aerial photographs showing before-and-after images of Hurricane Sandy’s impacts on the Atlantic Coast. Among the latest photo pairs to be published are images showing the extent of coastal change in North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware.

    The photos, part of a USGS assessment of coastal change from as far south as the Outer Banks of North Carolina to as far north as Massachusetts, show that the storm caused dramatic changes to portions of shoreline extending hundreds of miles. Pre- and post-storm images of the New Jersey and New York shoreline in particular tell a story of a coastal landscape that was considerably altered by the historic storm. Meanwhile, images from hundreds of miles south of the storm’s landfall demonstrate that the storm’s breadth caused significant coastal change as far south as the Carolinas.

    “Sandy taught us yet again that not all Cat-1 hurricanes are created equal: the superstorm’s enormous fetch over the Atlantic produced storm surge and wave erosion of historic proportions,” said USGS Director Marcia McNutt. “We have seized this opportunity to gather unique data on a major coastline-altering event.”

    As major storms approach, the USGS conducts pre-storm and post-storm flights to gather aerial images along the length of the coastline expected to experience impacts from the storm’s landfall. Identifying sites of such impacts helps scientists understand which areas are likely to undergo the most severe impacts from future storms, and improves future coastal impact forecasting. 

    Photo pairs from North Carolina to Massachusetts are now available online.

    “This storm’s impact on sandy beaches included disruption of infrastructure in the south, such as overwash of roads near Pea Island, Buxton, and Rodanthe in N.C., and some dune erosion near Duck, N.C.,” said St. Petersburg-based USGS oceanographer Nathaniel Plant. Such storm-induced changes to the coastal profile can jeopardize the resilience of impacted coastal communities in the path of subsequent storms.

    “Houses and infrastructure may be more vulnerable to future storms because beaches are narrower and dunes are lower,” Plant said.

    Overwash occurs when storm surge and waves exceed the elevation of protective sand dunes, thereby transporting sand inland. In addition to threatening infrastructure like roadways, it can bury portions of buildings and cause extensive property damage.

    The configuration of a coastline’s physical features determine how it will respond to storm forces, and whether it will experience erosion, overwash, or inundation.

    In South Bethany, Delaware, the storm appears to have eroded a low dune that had stood between the Atlantic and a row of beachfront homes. Like overwash, beach and dune erosion can compromise a coastline’s natural defenses against future storms.

    The Hurricanes and Extreme Storms team aims to quantify the degree to which such these defenses have weakened in all areas Hurricane Sandy impacted.

    Data collected from these surveys are also used to improve predictive models of potential impacts from future severe storms. Before a storm makes landfall, USGS makes these predictions to help coastal communities identify areas particularly vulnerable to severe coastal change, such as beach and dune erosion, overwash, and inundation.

    For instance, in the days before Sandy approached the eastern seaboard, the USGS ran models forecasting that 91 percent of the Delmarva coastline would experience beach and dune erosion, while 98 percent and 93 percent of beaches and dunes in New Jersey and New York, respectively, were likely to erode. Preliminary analysis suggests that Hurricane Sandy rapidly displaced massive quantities of sand in a capacity that visibly changed the landscape. 

    The USGS assessment also includes pre- and post-landfall airborne lidar data, which offers a more quantitative look at the extent of coastal change caused by Sandy. Lidar, or light detection and ranging, is an aircraft-based remote sensing method that uses laser pulses to collect highly detailed ground elevation data.