A new method for public involvement in electric transmission line routing
Date
2010-04-19Author
Jewell, Ward T.
Grossardt, Ted
Bailey, Keiron
Gill, Raman
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Jewell, Ward; Grossardt, Ted; Bailey, Keiron; Gill, Raman; , "A new method for public involvement in electric transmission line routing," Transmission and Distribution Conference and Exposition, 2010 IEEE PES , vol., no., pp.1, 19-22 April 2010
doi: 10.11
Abstract
Public participation in and acceptance of routing decisions for electric transmission lines has delayed and prevented the construction of numerous lines in recent decades. A new method of public participation called Structured Public Involvement (SPI), developed previously by two of the authors for routing other public infrastructure, has been adapted to routing electric transmission lines. SPI elicits and quantifies community values then routes the line according to these values and best engineering design practices. The process is done before any potential routes are ever considered by the transmission company and routing professionals, effectively allowing the public, in collaboration with experts, to determine the line route. This reduces the chances of line routing failure by simplifying the project and greatly accelerating the complex problem of comparing alternate line routes, and it facilitates public acceptance of a final route.
Description
The full text of this article is not available on SOAR. WSU users can access the article via IEEE Xplore database licensed by University Libraries: http://libcat.wichita.edu/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=1045954