Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Gathering Neighbor Information for Public Relations Planning, a Case Study 2007 SME Annual Meeting and Exhibit, Denver Braden Lusk Presenting on 2/27/2007.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Gathering Neighbor Information for Public Relations Planning, a Case Study 2007 SME Annual Meeting and Exhibit, Denver Braden Lusk Presenting on 2/27/2007."— Presentation transcript:

1 Gathering Neighbor Information for Public Relations Planning, a Case Study 2007 SME Annual Meeting and Exhibit, Denver Braden Lusk Presenting on 2/27/2007

2 Public perception of blasting □Fear □Annoys/Anger Mine Operator or Blasting Professional Public □Necessary □Normal Business DISCONNECT/COMMUNICATION GAP

3 Public Regulators Mine Operators/Blasters Public Relations Lobby/Information Complaints Resolution ??? Confusion Inconsistent Regulations

4 What will be covered? □Introduction to Work □Survey Design □Survey Data Summary □Public Relations Tools □Recommendations for Industry and Regulators □Conclusions and Future Work

5 Expanding Urban Environments □Towns expand □Neighborhoods envelop aggregate operations □Complaints come from larger base and thus increase □More stringent local regulations □Operational costs increase to meet regulations □Potential for quarry closures

6 Reporting Units □Airblast □Decibel Scale □Vibration □Velocity (PPV) □Frequency Are these the best units from a public relations standpoint?

7 The Decibel Scale ARE DECIBELS THE CORRECT UNIT TO USE? A logarithmic, not regular scale SPL = 20 log (Pe/Po) dB (decibels) -Where Po is 2.9e-9 PSI □A doubling in pressure is a 6 dB rise □It is a logarithmic scale □The scale mimics how humans hear sound

8 Why are we using the decibel scale? □What do people usually associate with the decibel scale? □Answer: sound or things that produce noise. □Where is the majority of air blast energy? □Answer: Below the level humans can hear. □So why use this measurement scale if we can’t hear most of the air blast? E.g. like wind gusts

9 Why are we using the decibel scale? Frequency response characteristics in the American National Standard Specification for Sound Level Meters, ANSI-SI.4-1971 (Mining 402, 2005).

10 Damage threshold vs. limits □The damage threshold for poorly hung and large windows is 144 dB □Windows rarely break at this value □The current OSM limit for blasting is 133 dB □Typical blast might produce 120dB at nearest structure □The US OSHA noise limit for working is 115 dB for 2 hrs □The OSHA impulsive limit is 140 dB

11 Visual Representations Comparison of logarithmic decibel scale and normal PSI scale.

12 Which is best? □Decibel Scale is difficult to understand, and does not represent airblast well. □PSI appears to be a better choice. □Millibar is another option worth exploring.

13 Figure 2.1. Human response compared to structural damage criteria.

14 Changing Limits? □The research never had a goal of changing limits for airblast and ground vibration. □Most of these are scientifically based and are more than adequate for protecting structures.

15 Survey Pools □5 Survey Pools were Selected □Alpha – Public In Proximity to blasting operations □Beta – Public away from blasting □Gamma – Civil Engineers □Delta – Blasting Professionals □Epsilon – Local, County, and State Regulators □All Survey Groups were nonprobability selected. □Combination of Judgment and Convenience sampling.

16 Survey Pools □Three metropolitan areas were targeted for public surveys. □St. Louis, MO; Little Rock, AR; Springfield, MO. □Beta Neighborhoods were chosen to match corresponding Alpha Neighborhoods. □Gamma was selected through Civil Professors and contacts in industry □Delta consisted of a list from ISEE from surrounding states □Epsilon was gathered through local, county and state government websites. □Nearly 2,100 Surveys were distributed total. Nearly 300 were returned.

17 Survey Design □Several parties were consulted for survey design. □Surveys were returned by mail. □All groups were given essentially the same survey. □Alpha, Beta, and Gamma were nearly identical. □Delta and Epsilon had a few different questions but the extra data wasn’t used.

18 General Questions 1. Do you own or rent your residence? 2. What is your age? 3. What is your sex? 4. What shift do you work? 5. How long have you resided in your current residence? Technical Questions 6. How comfortable do you feel having a blasting operation within 1 mile of your home? GENERAL LIKERT 7. Based on good scientific research, the Federal Safety limit for air blast overpressure is 133 decibels. How comfortable are you with a blast producing 120 decibels of air blast overpressure? dB LIKERT 8. What do you associate with decibels. dB Association 9. The translated Federal Safety limit for air blast overpressure is 0.89 millibars. How comfortable are you with a blast producing 0.2 millibars of air blast overpressure? millibar LIKERT 10.What do you associate with millibars? millibar Association

19 11. The translated Federal Safety limit for air blast overpressure is 0.013 pounds per square inch (psi). How comfortable are you with a blast producing 0.0029 psi of air blast overpressure? PSI LIKERT 12. What do you associate with psi? PSI Association 13.Based on good scientific research, the Office of Surface Mining and Reclamation Enforcement also has a regulated safety limit for ground vibration of 1.8 inches/second at 35 Hz. How comfortable are you with ground vibrations at your home with velocity in the range of 0.5 inches/second at 35 Hz? VF LIKERT

20 14. Based on good scientific research, the Office of Surface Mining and Reclamation Enforcement has a translated regulated safety limit for ground vibration of 0.00818 inches. How comfortable are you with ground vibrations of 0.00227 inches at your home? inches LIKERT 15. Based on good scientific research, the Office of Surface Mining and Reclamation Enforcement has a translated regulated safety limit for ground vibration of 0.21 millimeters. How comfortable are you with ground vibrations of 0.06 millimeters at your home? mm LIKERT 16. Have you ever lodged a complaint against a blasting operation? COMPLAINT 17. Federal safety limits are reasonable for public safety. Federal LIKERT

21 Trends Look Good Figure 4.1. Bar graph of Likert comfort values for the Alpha Survey.

22 Figure 4.2. Distribution comparison for Alpha dB Likert, Alpha millibar Likert, and Alpha PSI Likert.

23 But Why? Table 4.3. Summary of responses for Alpha dB Association, Alpha millibar Association, and Alpha PSI Association questions. Alpha dB Association Responses Alpha millibar Association Responses Alpha PSI Association Responses 74.3% Sound2% Sound1.3% Sound 2% Pressure27% Pressure61.2% Pressure 19% No Answer or "Don't Know" 57.2% No Answer or "Don't Know" 28.3% No Answer or "Don't Know" 5.3% Weather13% Mentioned Tires 8.6% Other

24 Public Relations Tool □Vibration levels are already safe for structures □Public relations are necessary to reduce complaints □Check two very different quarry neighborhoods. □Check age factor

25 Ozark Quarry – Little Rock Quarries □Neighborhoods were visually different. □Ozark – High value homes, well kept. □Little Rock – Aged and deteriorated homes, not well kept. Table 6.1. Summary table for comparison of Ozark quarry and Arkansas quarries. Partitioned Location General LikertdB Likert millibar LikertPSI Likert Ozark2.00 2.442.50 Little Rock1.671.832.002.50 Partitioned LocationVF Likert inches Likertmm Likert Federal Likert Ozark2.242.342.282.90 Little Rock2.092.002.182.64

26 Closer Look □Was education an issue? Table 6.2. Summary table of association analysis of partitioned data for Ozark, Missouri quarry and Little Rock, Arkansas quarries. Partitioned LocationdB Association millibar AssociationPSI Association Ozark72% Sound32% Pressure69% Pressure 25% Don't Know or No Answer 44% Don't Know or No Answer 25% Don't Know or No Answer Little Rock83% Sound 83% No Answer or Don't Know 17% Don't Know or No Answer8% Pressure17% Pressure

27 Figure 6.1. Histogram showing average comfort levels from different age groups on Likert questions. Alpha Survey. Figure 6.2. Histogram showing average comfort levels from different age groups on Likert questions. Beta Survey.

28 Final PR Example □St Louis quarry has experienced complaint issues. □Education levels were not an obvious problem. □Average age = 50 with 63% between 45 and 62. Table 6.3. Average comfort levels on Likert questions for Fred Weber South Quarry and overall Alpha Group. Partitioned Location General Likert Decibel Likert millibar LikertPSI Likert St. Louis Quarry2.022.052.372.29 Alpha Averages2.392.362.582.65 Partitioned LocationVF Likert inches Likertmm Likert Federal Likert St. Louis Quarry1.982.002.122.91 Alpha Averages2.372.412.503.06

29 Industry Recommendations □Embrace the idea of reporting ground vibration and airblast data in the most easily understandable format. PSI is a better unit than dB for airblast reporting. □Start asking why when residents are unhappy with blasting at the quarry. The Pilot Survey began showing trends that explained why respondents were uncomfortable with blasting. Further data from the additional survey groups (Alpha through Epsilon) supports the concept of starting by asking why residents are unhappy and complain. □Implement a proactive public-relations program which includes surveying adjacent neighborhoods to determine comfort values and “hang-ups” with the quarry operation. I’ve discussed how information from surveys could be used as a tool for directing public-relations efforts. □Follow public-relations efforts with education of neighbors in areas where a survey shows a need. □INDUSTRY MUST START THE PROCESS!!! PULL OUR HEADS OUT OF THE SAND.

30 Recommendations to Regulators □Scrutinize newly proposed blasting regulations. □Strive for uniform regulations backed by sound scientific research □Utilize simple, easy-to-understand units for regulations, similar to indicators from Warneke.

31 Conclusions □OVERALL PEOPLE ARE NOT COMFORTABLE WITH BLASTING NEAR THEIR HOMES. □THE USE OF THE DECIBEL SCALE IS MISLEADING TO THE PUBLIC AND CREATES GREATER DISCOMFORT WITH THE BLASTING THAT PRODUCES THE AIRBLAST. □PSI WOULD BE A BETTER CHOICE OF UNIT FOR REPORTING AIRBLAST MEASUREMENTS THE AGGREGATE INCREASE IN COMFORT LEVEL WAS OVER 10% IN NEARLY ALL CASES. □INDIVIDUALS WITH TECHNICAL BACKGROUNDS OR BLASTING EXPERIENCE WERE MUCH MORE COMFORTABLE THAN THE “GENERAL PUBLIC” ACROSS THE BOARD. THIS SHOWS THAT A LEVEL OF EDUCATION COULD MAKE QUARRY NEIGHBORS MORE COMFORTABLE WITH THE VIBRATION INFORMATION REPORTED TO THEM. SIMPLER UNITS COULD ONLY MAKE THIS AN EASIER TASK.

32 Future Research □Proposals to OSM for research with Surface Coal Mines. □Future Surveys could add to a database for creating more complete PR “Guides”. □Explore Percentage Units in airblast and ground vibration. □Target age differences with different survey items. □Utilize survey groups away from operations to measure more precisely the effects of education. “Calibrate” educational and PR tools. □Continue analysis of data gathered with cooperation from surface operations.

33 Final Note □There was discussion about potential advantages for neighbors to complain enough to force quarries to move. □Property Value Increase without industrial neighbor. □Construction cost increase making homes in neighborhood worth more. □There is no better reason to implement simpler units than to combat this occurrence. □Regulators must be armed with answers for constituents. This is not possible if they don’t understand the units.

34 Questions ?


Download ppt "Gathering Neighbor Information for Public Relations Planning, a Case Study 2007 SME Annual Meeting and Exhibit, Denver Braden Lusk Presenting on 2/27/2007."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google