S. 3028 / Amend the Higher Education Act of 1965

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Emerging Transportation Technology

January 7, 2020
mike@standardsmichigan.com
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“Little Children on a Bicycle” mural on Armenian Street, George Town, Penang by Lithuanian artist Ernest Zacharevic as part of the George Town Festival 2012

 

The school bus system is the largest mass transportation system in the United States*

and has eluded the “gales of creative destruction”**  found in other industries.

 

In April the US Department of Transportation (DOT) created the Non-Traditional and Emerging Transportation Technology (NETT) Council to identify and resolve jurisdictional and regulatory gaps associated with non-traditional and emerging transportation projects pending before DOT, including with respect to safety oversight, environmental review, and funding issues. The Office of the Secretary of Transportation invites comments on projects, issues, or topics that DOT should consider through the NETT Council, including regulatory models and other alternative approaches for non-traditional and emerging transportation technologies.

The Federal Register Notice is linked below:

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION / Office of the Secretary / Docket No. DOT–OST–2019–0165

Comments directly to the DOT are due January 10, 2020.

Apart from inter- and intra- campus travel issues, there are three reasons for Standards Michigan interest in the DOT inquiry:

  • According to DOT statistics the American school bus system is the largest public transportation operation in the United States; with nearly 500,000 vehicles moving 26 million children to school every day.
  • A great deal of federal funding is allocated to transportation research.
  • Academic programs in engineering and urban planning must include an understanding of public and private transportation issues.   

For the education facility industry, Standards Michigan prefers privately developed consensus products; preferably by accredited or open-source standard developers with robust outreach toward the user-interest.   The American National Standards Institute — the not-for-profit organization that supports the voluntary standards and conformity assessment system — is planning to develop a response to the Request for Information, and strongly encourages its members and constituents to either respond directly to the RFI or to contribute to the ANSI’s response.

Contributions to ANSI’s response are due December 20th.

We place this commenting opportunity on the agenda of our monthly Transportation & Parking teleconference.  See our CALENDAR for the next online meeting; open to everyone.

Campuses are “cities-within-cities” and perfect study units for cities of the future

Issue: [19-152]

Category: Transportation & Parking

Colleagues: Mike Anthony, Paul Green. Richard Robben

* America’s Largest Transit System

** Joseph Schumpeter: Schöpferische Zerstörung


LEARN MORE:

Bureau of Transportation Statistics

The Yellow School Bus Industry

ANSI Announcement / November 27, 2019

H.R. 5247 / Stop Unfair Bid Shopping Act of 2019

January 6, 2020
mike@standardsmichigan.com
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Photo by Architect of the Capitol | Left: The teacher and children in a “little red schoolhouse” represent an important part of American education in the 1800s.
Right: Students attend a land grant college, symbolic of the national commitment to higher learning.

H.R.5247 – Stop Unfair Bid Shopping Act of 2019

To require prime contractors under Federal construction contracts to notify the Government of changes in certain subcontractors performing work under the contract.

Sequences of Operation for HVAC Systems

January 6, 2020
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Standards Michigan

January 5, 2020
mike@standardsmichigan.com
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University of Michigan 1855

We have spent the better part of 2019 setting up the 50-state framework and the algorithms for identifying commenting opportunities on consensus products that set the standard of care for safety and sustainability of the $300 billion education facility industry.   A spend rate of this size compares with the annual gross domestic product of entire nations such as Denmark and Chile.

Starting January 1, 2020 you will begin to notice more specifics about how each state finances, builds and operates the real assets that are the crucible for business and culture.  Hewing to our core mission we will focus on identifying and strengthening the voice of the user-interest.  (See our ABOUT)

StandardsMichigan.COM will remain the home site where most of the content is free.   All other states will have a dedicated web site — identifiable by the URL: www.standardsstate.com — which will roll out through 2020.  For example:

www.StandardsAlabama.com

www.StandardsMichigan.com

www.StandardsTexas.com (This is our mock-up site at the moment)

www.StandardsWyoming.com

It is unlikely that the web sites of all 50-states will have the same look and feel; owing to each state’s unique business and cultural profile; each state will have a different look-and-feel because every state’s business culture is different.   The content will be rich and fast-moving but we will be experimenting with different content management systems as 2020 proceeds.


Electronic Municipal Market Access / Michigan

Michigan Department of Licensing & Regulatory Affairs

List of colleges and universities in Michigan

List of school districts in Michigan

Michigan State University 2019-2020 Budgets

Emergency Services Communications

January 2, 2020
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Usage of Teledentistry / PINS

January 2, 2020
mike@standardsmichigan.com

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Interconnection of information technology equipment

January 1, 2020
mike@standardsmichigan.com
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ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 25 Interconnection of information technology equipment

Standardization of microprocessor systems; and of interfaces, protocols, architectures and associated interconnecting media for information technology equipment and networks, generally for commercial and residential environments, to support embedded and distributed computing environments, storage systems, other input/output components, home and building electronic systems including customer premises smart grid applications for electricity, gas, water and heat.

NOTE: This scope includes requirements for components, assemblies and subsystems. However, standardization of cables, waveguides and connectors remains within the relevant product technical committees and subcommittees of IEC. The scope includes the development of network interfaces, in liaison with committees for external utility networks, to support smart grid applications at the customer premises.

Strategic Business Plan

JTC1-SC25/2928/CDVISO/IEC 11801-3/AMD1 ED1: Amendment 1 – Information technology – Generic cabling for customer premises – Part 3: Industrial premises

Comments due 2020-02-28

Referred to the IEEE Education & Healthcare Facilities Committee.   See CALENDAR for the next online meeting.

H.R. 4997 / ARTS Act

January 1, 2020
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115th Congress. Photo Credit: Pew Research Center

To amend section 708 of title 17, United States Code, to permit the Register of Copyrights to waive fees for filing an application for registration of a copyright claim in certain circumstances, and for other purposes.

 

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