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Provision of research to develop a guide to help airport practitioners, of all sizes, effectively plan, manage relationships, and leverage opportunities with utility providers.
Starbridge can help you:
Pain points mentioned in board meetings and strategic plans
Instantly outline and draft all requirements
Bring in your USPs and exploit competitor gaps
Starbridge can help you:
Get ahead of RFPs — target accounts planning budget or ending contracts soon
Accounts with contract expirations, meetings mentioning your product, grants, budget changes and more
Starbridge.ai books 30 - 40% of leads into meetings
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Airports face different types of incidents and disasters, each with their own level of severity, which may result in major operational disruption, contributing to financial setbacks and emotional distress among airport employees, tenants, and passengers. Resources such as FAA AC 150-5200-31C, Airport Emergency Plan and the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s National Response Framework, Comprehensive Preparedness Guide 101, and the National Incident Management System provide foundational guidance to prepare U.S. airports to respond to all types of incidents and disasters. However, many airports do not have detailed recovery plans as they are difficult to develop and airport-specific guidance on incident and disaster recovery is limited. Research is needed to support airports in understanding the recovery process following all-hazard incidents and disasters, whether they are small incidents that cause minimal disruptions or major disasters that cause significant disruptions and require intervention from external stakeholders. The objective of this research is to develop a guide for airports to plan and execute a recovery from all-hazard incidents and disasters. The guide should be scalable to all types of airports and speak to airport emergency planners and executives. The guide must include an executive summary and a template for an airport recovery plan. The template should be inclusive of everything from initial recovery to back to normal operations and include checklists for short-, medium-, and long-term actions.
Posted Date
Dec 23, 2025
Due Date
Feb 10, 2026
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Release: Dec 23, 2025
Close: Feb 10, 2026
Airports face different types of incidents and disasters, each with their own level of severity, which may result in major operational disruption, contributing to financial setbacks and emotional distress among airport employees, tenants, and passengers. Resources such as FAA AC 150-5200-31C, Airport Emergency Plan and the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s National Response Framework, Comprehensive Preparedness Guide 101, and the National Incident Management System provide foundational guidance to prepare U.S. airports to respond to all types of incidents and disasters. However, many airports do not have detailed recovery plans as they are difficult to develop and airport-specific guidance on incident and disaster recovery is limited. Research is needed to support airports in understanding the recovery process following all-hazard incidents and disasters, whether they are small incidents that cause minimal disruptions or major disasters that cause significant disruptions and require intervention from external stakeholders. The objective of this research is to develop a guide for airports to plan and execute a recovery from all-hazard incidents and disasters. The guide should be scalable to all types of airports and speak to airport emergency planners and executives. The guide must include an executive summary and a template for an airport recovery plan. The template should be inclusive of everything from initial recovery to back to normal operations and include checklists for short-, medium-, and long-term actions.
AvailableTRB’s Airport Cooperative Research Program (ACRP) seeks a research team to develop a practical guide for airports to plan and execute recovery from all‑hazard incidents and disasters. The guide must be scalable to all airport types, aimed at emergency planners and executives, and include an executive summary plus a comprehensive recovery plan template with short‑, medium‑, and long‑term action checklists. This effort addresses the current gap in airport‑specific recovery planning guidance and supports industry resiliency.
Posted Date
-
Due Date
Feb 10, 2026
Close: Feb 10, 2026
TRB’s Airport Cooperative Research Program (ACRP) seeks a research team to develop a practical guide for airports to plan and execute recovery from all‑hazard incidents and disasters. The guide must be scalable to all airport types, aimed at emergency planners and executives, and include an executive summary plus a comprehensive recovery plan template with short‑, medium‑, and long‑term action checklists. This effort addresses the current gap in airport‑specific recovery planning guidance and supports industry resiliency.
AvailablePlan and conduct a needs assessment for Washington residents who have experienced hurt, harm or crime. The findings will guide future program funding and help evaluation program effectiveness. The consultant will collaborate with OCVA and partners to create and distribute a general survey, work with subcontractors from priority communities to design outreach and surveys that are culturally appropriate, and analyze data and provide to OCVA a final report, including summaries and recommendations.
Posted Date
Nov 21, 2025
Due Date
Jan 14, 2026
Release: Nov 21, 2025
Close: Jan 14, 2026
Plan and conduct a needs assessment for Washington residents who have experienced hurt, harm or crime. The findings will guide future program funding and help evaluation program effectiveness. The consultant will collaborate with OCVA and partners to create and distribute a general survey, work with subcontractors from priority communities to design outreach and surveys that are culturally appropriate, and analyze data and provide to OCVA a final report, including summaries and recommendations.
AvailableThe objective of this research is to develop a guide that helps airport practitioners justify and prioritize investments related to weather-resilient infrastructure. The guide will utilize existing tools, technologies, and methodologies to validate and convey the financial benefits of developing or updating airport facilities to enhance their resilience against weather events. The guide will be supported with a WebResource for developing a business case, with interactive modules and a logical workflow.
Posted Date
Dec 23, 2025
Due Date
Feb 2, 2026
Release: Dec 23, 2025
Close: Feb 2, 2026
The objective of this research is to develop a guide that helps airport practitioners justify and prioritize investments related to weather-resilient infrastructure. The guide will utilize existing tools, technologies, and methodologies to validate and convey the financial benefits of developing or updating airport facilities to enhance their resilience against weather events. The guide will be supported with a WebResource for developing a business case, with interactive modules and a logical workflow.
AvailableSurface intent from meeting minutes, budgets, and contract expirations. Influence RFP requirements before competitors ever see them.
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