Incident Management (Traffic and Maintenance) for Western Florida Regional ITS Architecture - FDOT District 3 (Copy 1)
Service Packages
Stakeholders
- FDOT District 3
Roles and Responsibilities
- Coordinate incident response with the Florida Highway Patrol (FHP)
- Coordinate incident response with the FTE Operations Center at Turkey Lake.
- Coordinate maintenance resources for incident response with the FDOT District 3 construction and maintenance offices, and county and local maintenance and construction systems.
- Perform network surveillance for detection and verification of incidents on freeways, and send traffic/incident information and traffic images to county fire/EMS/sheriff, the FHP, the county EOC, and local fire/EMS/police agencies.
- Provide incident information to travelers using traffic information devices, such as dynamic message sign (DMS) devices and highway advisory radio (HAR) broadcasts, on freeways and through local information service providers (ISPs) and Web sites.
- Receive incident information, incident response status, and resource requests from the county EOC/warning points.
- Okaloosa County
Roles and Responsibilities
- Coordinate maintenance resources for incident response with county and city maintenance and construction systems.
- Perform network surveillance for detection and verification of incidents on county roads, and send traffic/incident information and traffic images to county fire/EMS/sheriff, the FHP, the county EOC, and local fire/EMS/police agencies.
- Provide incident information to travelers using traffic information devices on county roads, and through local ISPs, Web sites, and the local media.
- Receive incident information, incident response status, and resource requests from the county EOC/warning points.
- FDOT D3/Okaloosa County
Roles and Responsibilities
- Coordinate with other TMCs in FDOT District 3.
- Coordinate maintenance resources for incident response with county and city maintenance and construction systems.
- Provide incident information to travelers using traffic information devices on county roads, and through local ISPs, Web sites, and the local media.
Last Updated 4/29/2024