• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

National Network for the Transportation Workforce

  • Home
  • About NNTW
    • About NNTW
    • Contact Us
  • 2025 Workforce Summit
    • Pre-Summit Webinars
  • News & Events
  • Mobility Matters
  • 2024 Tribal Summit
You are here: Home / Archives for Public interaction

Public interaction

Highway Engineer

The Roadway Design Engineer prepares plans and specifications for roadway construction and improvement projects. Before a road structure can be designed, the Engineer must determine the exact route the road will take, how many lanes are needed, how this road interfaces with other roads, and how the flow of traffic will be maintained. Design of the roadway system involves many considerations including safety, parking, traffic calming, pedestrian and bike paths, drainage, highway signs, road markings, signal systems, roadway lighting, impact attenuators, and guide rails. The Roadway Design Engineer conducts traffic studies, participates in public meetings, writes technical reports, and conducts construction analyses.

Other responsibilities typically include:

  • Performing roadway geometric design for horizontal and vertical alignment from preliminary to final design.
  • Preparing technical designs in accordance with design standards using roadway design software.
  • Preparing plan and specification documents including base sheet, details, quantities, special provisions, and estimates.
  • Coordinating with reviewers to ensure accuracy and quality of work.
  • Managing and maintaining project documentation.
  • Design systems or structures using sustainable materials, such as porous pavement or bioretention structures.
  • Preparing design for drainage and runoff.
  • Preparing designs that do not damage natural plant and wildlife environments.

Traffic Safety Planner

A Traffic Safety Planner is responsible for integrating safety into an agency’s planning documents and processes and for working collaboratively with stakeholders to implement safety plans. Must have knowledge of sources of safety data, systemic safety issues, contributing crash factors, and human behaviors associated with safety risk. They apply this knowledge to incorporate safety data and analysis into transportation decision-making processes to achieve safety improvement goals.

Other responsibilities typically include:

  • Represent traffic safety interests at a variety of cross-sector stakeholder meetings.
  • Analyze, synthesize, and present safety data to stakeholders and the public in visual or other formats that facilitate data-driven safety-related investments and decision-making.
  • Provide direction on the development and integration of safety goals and objectives into transportation planning processes; and implement a process for embedding safety performance measures into planning tools and investment decisions.
  • Promote effective public outreach, education and involvement to build support for safety priorities.
  • Participate in public meetings and conduct surveys to identify issues of public concern.
  • Implement monitoring and evaluation systems to ensure continuous improvement.

Download this page as a PDF.

Bridge Design Engineer

A Bridge Design Engineer conducts structural analysis to ensure the strength and safety of highway structures, prepares structural design and contract documents including drawings, specifications, and estimates, participates in preparing the project budget and schedule, participates in meetings with clients and project team members, and reviews the structural calculations and contract documents prepared by others. A Bridge Design Engineer may be the principal design engineer on a project or the assistant design engineer on large, complex projects. 

Other responsibilities typically include:

  • Develop designs for other highway structures such as sign bridges and lighting supports.
  • Analyze damaged bridges.
  • Assess structural adequacy of existing bridges to withstand stresses due to oversized or overweight truck stresses to prevent damage or a bridge collapse.
  • Prepare designs to upgrade an existing bridge by widening the deck, raising the deck, or strengthening the structure.
  • Assess design related construction problems and erection schemes.
  • Update bridge standards.
  • Carry out design investigations of cranes, hoists, and similar apparatus used on bridge and highway maintenance to ensure structural stability and safety of operators.

Download this page as a PDF

Copyright © 2025 National Network for the Transportation Workforce • Contact Us