Addressing the Transportation Industry's Human Infrastructure

You are here

MTI perspective explores the human infrastructure of our nation’s transportation safety systems
August 12, 2024
|
San José, CA

In the wake of the Francis Scott Key bridge collapse, the East Palestine train derailment, and numerous other incidents whose root causes may lie in failed human infrastructures, it has become increasingly apparent that along with the need to address physical transportation infrastructure, the industry needs to address the human infrastructure of the nation’s transportation safety systems. The latest Mineta Transportation Institute (MTI) perspective, Reinforcing the Human Infrastructure of our Nation’s Transportation System, explores this issue by synthesizing the results of a recent expert panel discussion that underscores the need for greater attention to mindfulness, psychological safety, and emotional well-being in industry workplaces. 

In 2022, the U.S. Surgeon General released a new framework for mental health and well-being in the workplace that shows 76% of U.S workers reported at least one symptom of a mental health condition and 84% of respondents said their workplace conditions had contributed to at least one mental health challenge. The perspective digs into the discussion from a panel of leading experts from Harvard and Yale, mindfulness practitioners, and transportation safety professionals convened at the 2023 American Psychological Association’s Work, Stress, and Health conference. the expert panel offers the following for consideration by policymakers and safety leaders:

  • Development of peer-to-peer influencing skills that improve social intelligence and conflict management.

  • Leadership emotional intelligence training that fosters psychologically safe work environments that ensure employees feel comfortable speaking up.  

  • Integration of mindfulness practices into day-to-day work practices that supports employee’s awareness, empathy, openness, humility, and resilience to stress.

  • Psychologically safe onboarding processes that welcome newcomers into an environment that supports speaking up and interpersonal risk-taking.

  • Team building that helps foster agile self-improvement-oriented teams for improved organizational functioning, especially in high-hazard environments.

  • Continuous learning and development that weaves psychological safety and emotional intelligence into the fabric of the organization across time.

 

“Even in the short term, toxic work environments and negative emotional contagion can be devastating to mental health, physical health, job performance, and safety. Over the long term, they can create a culture of such pervasive toxicity that it may affect public safety and the economic viability of our transportation systems,” reports Dr. Karen Philbrick, one of the experts on the panel, as she explained the role of toxic work environments in transportation catastrophes investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board.

The experts’ reflections on these topics make it clear: To attend to this human infrastructure is to attend to the health, well-being, and safety of the thousands of employees spread across our national transportation system and beyond that of the public at large. Neglect of this infrastructure can have a serious negative impact on our nation’s safety, security, and economic viability.

 

ABOUT THE MINETA TRANSPORTATION INSTITUTE

At the Mineta Transportation Institute (MTI) at San Jose State University (SJSU) our mission is to increase mobility for all by improving the safety, efficiency, accessibility, and convenience of our nations’ transportation system. Through research, education, workforce development and technology transfer, we help create a connected world. Founded in 1991, MTI is a university transportation center funded by the US Department of Transportation, the California Department of Transportation, and public and private grants, including those made available by the Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017 (SB1). MTI is affiliated with SJSU’s Lucas College and Graduate School of Business.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Michael Coplen, an MTI Research Associate, has conducted human factors research for more than 20 years at the U.S. Department of Transportation. He is founder and president of TrueSafety Evaluation, LLC, a company that helps transform organizational culture to improve employee safety, health, and well-being by infusing Key Impact SkillsSM and a Mindfulness-Based Risk Reduction® (MBRR®) approach into the structure of organizational systems.

 

Media Contact:

Dr. Hilary Nixon
Deputy Executive Director
O: 408-924-7564
CSUTC
MCEEST
MCTM
NTFC
NTSC

Contact Us

SJSU Research Foundation   210 N. 4th Street, 4th Floor, San Jose, CA 95112    Phone: 408-924-7560   Email: mineta-institute@sjsu.edu