Road Running Technical Council
Who are the Members of RRTC?
You may view our officer list by clicking the
Committee
Make-up link on the left (officially, these are the only people that
USATF regards as "members" of RRTC). In practice, our most important
members, who do most of the Council's real work, are our Road Course
Certifiers:
View the list of
USATF/RRTC Course Certifiers
Recent News from RRTC
See Recent News from the USATF Road Running Technical Council.
What Does RRTC Do?
RRTC works to establish and maintain a credible technical basis for the sport
of road running. This work falls into eight categories:
- Course Certification: This is our principal point of contact with the road
running community. RRTC supervises the measurement and certification of all
road racing courses in the United States (There are also USATF-certified
courses in thirteen foreign countries). USATF certification is the runner's
assurance that the course was measured accurately by uniform standards.
Using our network of certifiers in every state, we certify about 100 new
courses every month.
- Course List Maintenance: RRTC maintains the list
of all USATF-certified courses (currently about 17,000 courses).
Updates are issued every two months and published in our newsletter
Measurement
News. Athletes often use this list when deciding where to
race. Anyone who asks may obtain up-to-date lists in either paper or
electronic form. Individual course certificates and maps are also
available by
sending $2.00 to the RRTC Course Registrar.
- Communications: This is accomplished largely through our bimonthly
newsletter Measurement
News which is typically 30-40 pages in length, containing
correspondence from runners, certifiers, USATF and foreign officials,
and others interested in course measurement. Input from readers helps
us assess how well our procedures and practices are working. We also
maintain frequent and constant communication with foreign measurers
and organizations. This has resulted in the adoption of RRTC's
measurement standards worldwide. And now that our
Measurement Procedures
manual is online, it is likely to further enhance road course
measurement standards around the world.
- Education and Technical Support: RRTC sends representatives to various
conferences and races, where we put on measurement seminars and educate
groups of people about course certification procedures. We also meet with
USATF, AIMS and
IAAF officials, and respond to the needs of the runners.
Recently, the RRTC Chairman traveled to Brazil and Japan, leading IAAF
measurement seminars with the local Federations in both of those countries.
- Validation Program: When an athlete sets a pending record in a road race,
we check the course and timing. This is overseen by RRTC's Validations
Chairman, who interfaces with the USATF Road Running Information Center and our
national network of measurers. When RRIC informs him of a potential record
performance, the RRTC Validations Chairman contacts an expert measurer and
the race director to arrange a validation. In addition to domestic
validations, RRTC has helped determine whether records set on foreign
courses were valid.
- Finish Lines: RRTC's book Road
Race and Finish Line Management has considerably improved the operation
of finish lines at road races. Currently, RRTC's Finish Line committee is
preparing a pamphlet of information that the organizers of every road race
that obtains a USATF Sanction need to know.
- Special Projects: RRTC has conducted many international seminars on course
measurement and race timing. In 1996, our big project was
measurement
of the Olympic Marathon and Race Walk courses in Atlanta. This was
a cooperative effort by 28 measurers from six countries. Another of our
projects was to put our
Measurement Procedures
manual online, which is likely to have a large impact on course
measurement.
- Miscellaneous Problem-Solving: We try to promote USATF/RRTC as a helping
hand to road runners. As a result, people come to us with questions about
USATF. We get these calls and letters all the time, and try to point people
in the proper direction.