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Suggested Citation:"Bibliography." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2017. Guidebook for Developing Ramp Control Facilities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/24668.
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Page 30

Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

30 Bibliography Doble, Nathan A., John Timmerman, Ted Carniol, and Mark Klopfenstein, Metron Aviation and Midori Tanino and Ved Sud, Federal Aviation Administration. 2009. “Linking Traffic Management to the Airport Surface— Departure Flow Management and Beyond.” Howell, Dan, and Ritchey, Steve. 2005. “Airline Operational Benefits of Surface Surveillance.” Goñi Modrego, Eduardo; Mihai-George Iagaru, Marc Dalichampt, and Roger Lane, Eurocontrol Experimental Center. 2009. “Airport CDM Network Impact Assessment.” Johnson, Bart. 2014. USA Today “Congested Airport Ramps Risky Before and After Flights.” Landry, Joanne, and Ingolia, Shane. 2011. ACRP Synthesis 29: Ramp Safety Practices. Transportation Research Board of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, Washington, D.C. Ricondo & Associates, Inc.; Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc.; Airport Development Group, Inc.; Aviation Safety and Security Education Training, LLC; and Two Hundred, Inc. 2013. ACRP Report 96: Apron Planning and Design Guidebook. Transportation Research Board of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, Washington, D.C. Ricondo & Associates, Inc., Planport GmbH, Two Hundred, Inc., and Unique (Zurich Airport, Ltd.). 2012. ACRP Report 62: Airport Apron Management and Control Programs. Transportation Research Board of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, Washington, D.C. Sandberg, Melanie, and Tom G. Reynolds, Weather Sensing Group MIT Lincoln Laboratory and Khadilkar, Harshad and Hamsa Balakrishnan, Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 2013. “Airport Characterization for the Adaptation of Surface Congestion Management Approaches.” United States Government Federal Aviation Administration Order 7110.65—Air Traffic Control. November 2015. United States Government Federal Aviation Administration Order 7210.3—Facility Operation and Administration, November 2015. United States Government Accountability Office—Report to Congressional Requesters. 2007. “Aviation Runway and Ramp Safety—Sustained Efforts to Address Leadership, Technology, and Other Challenges Needed to Reduce Accidents and Incidents.” Vail, Steve, Churchill, Andrew, Karlsson, Joakim, Domitrovich, Jessica, and Phillips, Tim. 2015. ACRP Report 137: Guidebook for Advancing Collaborative Decision Making (CDM) at Airports. Transportation Research Board of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, Washington, D.C.

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TRB's Airport Cooperative Research Program (ACRP) Research Report 167: Guidebook for Developing Ramp Control Facilities provides guidance to airport operators considering providing ramp control services. An accompanying Ramp Control Decision Support Tool assists users through most considerations before providing ramp control services, including facility requirements, staffing, training, and technology and other factors, allowing the user to determine the best way to move forward.

The Ramp Control Decision Support Tool is implemented in a sequence of HTML files and Javascript libraries that can be navigated using a web browser. The current version of the tool supports Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox browsers.

In order to use the install and start the tool please use the following steps:

1. Copy the provided zip file with the tool to a local directory.

2. Unzip the contents of the zip file to this directory.

3. Open index.html file using either Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.

4. The welcome page provides a general overview of the tool.

5. Click on the Get Started button to start uisng the tool. This will lead to Step 1 questions.

6. Provide responses to questions included in Step 1 and when done click on the Next button.

7. Repeat for Steps 2 and 3.

8. When done answering the questions for all three steps click on Report to automatically generate a report with all provided answers.

9. The report can be printed by clicking on Print button.

Disclaimer: This software is offered as is, without warranty or promise of support of any kind either expressed or implied. Under no circumstance will the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine or the Transportation Research Board (collectively "TRB") be liable for any loss or damage caused by the installation or operation of this product. TRB makes no representation or warranty of any kind, expressed or implied, in fact or in law, including without limitation, the warranty of merchantability or the warranty of fitness for a particular purpose, and shall not in any case be liable for any consequential or special damages.

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