USDOT Announces Appointments to the Transit Advisory Committee for Safety (TRACS) 

Pics 2023 02 07T105732.035

As part of the U.S. Department of Transportation’s (USDOT) focus on improving the safety of public transportation systems, U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg recently announced the appointment of 24 members to the Federal Transit Administration’s (FTA) Transit Advisory Committee for Safety (TRACS). 

“At the Department of Transportation, our top priority is ensuring the safety of every member of the traveling public, including the workforce,” said Secretary Buttigieg. “We look forward to working with the 24 members of TRACS – representing experts from large cities, small towns, academia, non-profits, organized labor, and more – to support the continued safety of public transit across America.”

TRACS’s membership reflects the geographic, size, and issue diversity across the transit industry and includes members from the large and small bus and rail operators, state safety oversight agencies, academia, non-profit organizations, and labor unions from rural communities to America’s most populous cities. 

TRACS provides information, advice, and recommendations on transit safety and other issues as determined by the Secretary of Transportation and the FTA Administrator. TRACS meets as a full committee at least once a year. Meetings are announced in the Federal Register and are open to the public. The first meeting will be held in early 2023. 

Since 2009, TRACS has provided FTA with valuable recommendations on critical issues, such as establishing a Fatigue Management Program for the Bus and Rail Transit Industry and researching transit worker accidents and fatalities to better protect them in railway corridors. The TRACS charter was renewed in February 2022.  

TRACS appointments are for two-year terms. New committee members include:

TRACS 2022-2024 Committee Members 

  • Edward Abel, Director of Operational Safety, Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority
  • Brian Alberts, Senior Director of Safety and Advisory Services, American Public Transportation Association
  • Johanna Cockburn, Director of Transportation, City of Greensboro, North Carolina 
  • Beverly Edwards, Chief Operating Officer, First Transit, Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Rebecca Frankhouser, Chief Safety Officer and Managing Director of Safety, Security, and Quality Assurance, King County Metro, Seattle, Washington
  • David Harris, Transit and Rail Division Director, New Mexico Department of Transportation 
  • Molly Hughes, Public Transportation Safety Administrator, Washington State Department of Transportation 
  • Donna Johnson, Vice President and Chief Safety Officer, Dallas Area Rapid Transit 
  • Laura Karr, Associate General Counsel, Amalgamated Transit Union
  • Jim Keane, General Manager of Operations Safety, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey 
  • Thomas Lamb, Chief of Innovation and Technology, Metropolitan Transportation Authority, New York City Transit
  • Brian Lapp, Senior Vice President and Chief Safety Officer, New Jersey Transit
  • Raymond Lopez, Deputy Executive Officer of Corporate Safety, Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority
  • Rachel Maleh, Executive Director, Operation Lifesaver, Inc.
  • Santiago Osorio, Chief Safety Officer, Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County, Houston, Texas
  • Karen Philbrick, Executive Director, San Jose State University, Mineta Transportation Institute
  • Ashley Porter, Transit Safety Programs Manager, Florida Department of Transportation 
  • Patrick Preusser, Director of Rapid Transit, City and County of Honolulu, Department of Transportation Services
  • Reggie Reese, Chief Safety Officer, Pierce Transit, Lakewood, Washington
  • Adam Sharkey, Deputy Director, River Cities Public Transit, Pierre, South Dakota
  • Justin Sobeck, State Safety Oversight Program Manager and Passenger Rail Safety Specialist, Missouri Department of Transportation 
  • Lisa Staes, Associate Director of Transit Safety and Workforce Development Program, University of South Florida, Center for Urban Transportation Research
  • Gardner Tabon, Executive Vice President of Systemwide Accessibility and Chief Safety Officer, Capital Metropolitan Transit Agency, Austin, Texas
  • Curtis Tate, International Administrative Vice President, Transport Workers Union

For more information, please visit transit.dot.gov.

Source: Federal Transit Administration

Similar Posts

  • Habitat Project Receives Texas APA Resilience Gold Award

    FacebookXRedditPinterestEmailLinkedInWhatsApp By Destiny Vaquera, Gerald D. Hines College of Architecture & Design Contributing Writer Gerald D. Hines College of Architecture and Design Professor Bruce Race’s habitat project, Robins Landing Town Center: Strategies and Guidance for Resilience, was recently awarded the Texas American Planning Association (APA) Resilience Gold Award. This award recognizes a strategy increasing the…

  • The Dallas Fort Worth Minority Supplier Development Council Building on a 50-Year Legacy of Resilience, Inclusion & Growth

    FacebookXRedditPinterestEmailLinkedInWhatsApp The Dallas Fort Worth Minority Supplier Development Council is dedicated to fostering business connections between our buying entity members, which include corporations and public-sector agencies, and certified minority-owned businesses. Our primary goal is to meet supply chain demands, contributing to the economic development of our communities through the utilization of certified MBEs. At DFW…

  • ​First Phase of new $6 Billion U.S. Gulf Coast Petrochemical Project

    FacebookXRedditPinterestEmailLinkedInWhatsApp Now Operational and Poised to Serve the Robust Global Demand for Advanced Polyethylene Resins Chevron Phillips Chemical Company LLC (Chevron Phillips Chemical) announced today it has successfully completed commissioning and begun start-up of its new polyethylene units at Old Ocean, Texas. Each unit will produce up to 500,000 metric tons annually to service the ever-increasing global…