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UTA Civil Engineer Determines How to Keep Transportation Infrastructure Operating During COVID-19 Pandemic

Mohsen Shahandashti
Mohsen Shahandashti
ARLINGTON, TX — A Civil Engineer at The University of Texas at Arlington is determining how to keep transportation construction workers safe during the coronavirus pandemic while ensuring that critical infrastructure systems are properly inspected and maintained.

Mohsen Shahandashti, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, is using a National Science Foundation Rapid Response Research grant to identify challenges that impact workforce decision-making processes in the transportation construction industry during the pandemic. He is collaborating with Baabak Ashuri of Georgia Tech.

“States have bridges, highways, and construction projects, and they need to decide if they should continue to do maintenance and inspections,” Shahandashti said. “If the answer is yes, then they need people to make that happen. The tradeoff is that now they need to balance public health and worker safety. We’re hoping to identify factors that influence these decisions and to learn how and why managers make their decisions.”

COVID-19 has presented long-lasting challenges and impacted the entire country. By comparison, natural disasters such as hurricanes and tornadoes end relatively quickly and their impact is limited to a particular area, allowing help to come from unaffected regions.

For safety reasons, workers such as bridge inspectors pair up, making it nearly impossible for them to effectively distance from one another. Therefore, it is up to supervisors and managers to decide how much risk they are willing to accept.

Shahandashti hopes to collect information about those decisions and document the process as close to real time as possible, while memories are fresh. He plans to create an information repository that can serve as a playbook for future responses.

“Our hope is to learn from this for the future,” he said. “We might not experience something like this again for decades. But when we do, it’ll be worth the time we take now.”

Shahandashti is an expert in disaster engineering and has previously received grants to model the effects of earthquakes on water pipeline infrastructure. His knowledge is important in helping communities plan for natural disasters, said Ali Abolmaali, Chair of UTA’s Civil Engineering Department.
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