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Alaska AK DOT/PF Overview 11/4/2016 Alaska DOT&PF 2 Alaska AKDOT/PF Overview Our mission is to "Keep Alaska Moving through service and infrastructure." 11/4/2016 Alaska DOT&PF 3 Organization REGIONAL STATISTICS


  1. Alaska AK DOT/PF Overview 11/4/2016 Alaska DOT&PF 2

  2. Alaska AKDOT/PF Overview Our mission is to "Keep Alaska Moving through service and infrastructure." 11/4/2016 Alaska DOT&PF 3

  3. Organization

  4. REGIONAL STATISTICS Central Northern South Coast Geographical Area 181,780 sq. mi. 416,000 sq. mi. 42,000 sq. mi. Public Facilities 235 Buildings 403 Buildings 15 Buildings Roads (centerline miles) 1,990 3,484 541 Bridges 264 378 126 Airports 110 106 45 Certified 11 7 5 Non-Certified 99 99 40 Harbors 6 1 44 Approximately 3,500 employees in 8 labor unions in 85 locations throughout the state.

  5. State of Alaska Facilities • 1,500 buildings • 10 million square feet of buildings • $2.4 billion in replacement value  DOA – office buildings, storage • 8 Public Building Fund buildings • 7 non-PBF buildings Health and Social Services – youth corrections, treatment and health centers,  Pioneers Homes, API  Corrections – correctional facilities DM&VA – armories, hangars   Fish & Game – bunkhouses, offices  DNR – cabins, recreational facilities, offices  Education – Mt. Edgecumbe  Labor - AVTEC  Courts – court and office buildings  Public Safety – crime labs, DPS facilities, CAP hangars

  6. DOT/ PF Facilities • 700 buildings  4 million sq. feet  $302 million original cost  $1 billion estimated replacement value • 150 buildings are over 60 years old (many built in the 1940’s and 1950’s)

  7. TYPES OF FACILITIES • Airport terminals • Ferry terminals • Office buildings • Maintenance shops • Equipment storage buildings • Weigh stations • Employee housing

  8. REGIONAL BOUNDRIES

  9. HIGHWAY DESIGNATIONS NHS / AHS National Highway System Alaska Highway System

  10. TED STEVENS ANCHORAGE INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT • #1 cargo airport in the US • Busiest floatplane base in the world • Nearly one in ten jobs in Anchorage • 9,119 airport jobs for $367 million payroll • 5,631 community jobs for $148 million payroll • Serves 5 million passengers per year • 58 airlines currently operating at airport

  11. FAIRBANKS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT #13 cargo airport in the US Large floatplane base – recently expanded Serves 800,000 passengers per year 15 airlines currently operating at airport FIA is the key passenger/cargo/mail hub for interior and northern Alaska serving 33 outlying communities.

  12. RURAL AIRPORTS • Largest airport operator in the U.S. DOT/PF operates 261 airports and seaplane bases statewide. 2 International – TSAIA and FIA. • 90% of Alaska landmass is not connected to the road system. • DOT/PF provides comprehensive services to support all airports in its system, including maintenance and operations, administrative, planning, airport security under TSA part 1542 and construction personnel.

  13. ALASKA AIRPORTS 261 State-owned Airports operated by DOT/ PF

  14. ALASKA DOT/PF HARBORS (51) State-owned Harbors (26) M & O Stations

  15. PORTS AND HARBORS Waterways provide the transportation corridors for the movement of more 95% of all cargoes delivered to Alaska and nearly 100% of all exports. DOT/PF owns 51 of the 76 public harbor facilities in Alaska. 25 are operated through agreements with local governments.

  16. Alaska Marine Highw ay System • The AMHS is designed to provide basic transportation services to the communities of southeast and southwest Alaska. • AMHS is an integral part of Alaska’s highway system, reaching many communities that would otherwise be effectively cut off from the rest of the state and nation.

  17. AMHS • 33 ports-of-call • 3,500 nautical miles of coastline served from Bellingham, Washington to Unalaska • Designated a National Scenic Byway in 2002 • A new fast vehicle ferry, Chenega, to serve Southeast and Prince William Sound, and travels at speeds up to 36 knots (41 miles/hr.)

  18. ALASKA MARINE VESSELS

  19. Measurement Standards / Commercial Vehicle Enforcement • Measurement Standards Division • Responsible for maintaining all Truck Scales and fuel pumps around the state.

  20. MS/CVE • Commercial Vehicle Enforcement • Responsible for enforcing all Federal Commercial Vehicle regulations.

  21. State Equipment Fleet • DOT/PF also supports, manages and maintains the states equipment fleet. • At present the fleet consists of over 4,500 vehicles and associated pieces of equipment

  22. TARGETS & DRILLS

  23. CRITICAL ELEMENTS • Bridges • Airports • Marine Ports • Individual Passenger Terminals • Key State Facilities • State Equipment Fleet

  24. INTER-DEPENDENCY Many bridges around the state will also support other critical infrastructure components i.e. Utilities and Communications lines.

  25. Infrastructure Protection • Alaska Partnership for Infrastructure Protection (APIP) • Federal Protective Security Advisor (RRAP) • Federal DOT Critical Nodes • TSA • FAA • USCG Vessels and Bridges

  26. DOT/PF RESPONSE

  27. STATE VULNERABLE TARGETS & DRILLS State of Alaska Law Enforcement Sensitive 1. Trans Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS) 2. North Pole Williams Express Refinery and Golden Valley Electric Association Power Plant 3. North Slope Oilfields 4. Anchorage Port Fuel Manifold System and Port of Anchorage 5. Cruise ships and Alaska State ferries 6. ACS, ALASCOM and GCI switch complexes (Anchorage and Juneau) 7. State telephone switches 8. Long haul fiber optic cables (Whittier, Valdez and Seward) 9. Tudor Road Tower (single point of failure for radio repeaters north of Anchorage) 10. Alaska National Guard Armory (Fort Richardson) 11. FAA Regional Flight Control 12. Beluga Power Plant and Undersea Cables 13. Four Dam Power Plant (Southeast Alaska) 14. Nikiski Refinery Complex 15. Alaska Railroad (to include the Hurricane Gulch Bridge)

  28. DOT/PF VULNERABLE TARGETS & DRILLS • NOTE: Alaska has a unique relationship with DOD as a result of a shared history. Much of the population is ex-military • There are two regularly scheduled and funded drill activities that rotate each few years in state. They are called Alaska Shield and Northern Edge. • The Alaska Shield exercises- State oversight / funded. • The Northern Edge- Federal oversight / funded. • 2016 Alaska Shield was held in April and was an Active Shooter drill that involved (8) communities across the state. Alaska DOT/PF participated in the exercise held at Anchorage Int. Airport. (Simulated Terrorist attack on an arriving overseas flight)

  29. DOT/PF VULNERABLE TARGETS & DRILLS • Vertical insertion Northern Edge.MPG

  30. DOT/PF VULNERABLE TARGETS & DRILLS QUESTIONS?

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