Bringing Transit Planning To The MPO Planning Table - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 35
About This Presentation
Title:

Bringing Transit Planning To The MPO Planning Table

Description:

Bringing Transit Planning to the MPO Planning Table ... In non-attainment areas transit agencies play a vital role in ensuring the plan ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:128
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: Dru94
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Bringing Transit Planning To The MPO Planning Table


1
Bringing Transit Planning To The MPO Planning
Table
  • Daniel Rudge Chief of Planning
  • Virginia Department of Rail and Public
    Transportation

2
What Will We Cover?
  • Constrained Long Range Plan (CLRP)
  • Transportation Improvement Program (TIP)
  • Congestion Management Process (CMP)
  • The unique Virginia structure
  • Important Virginia documents
  • DRPTs response

3
The Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan
  • Your MPOs Guidebook
  • CLRP

4
Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP)
  • Federal Requirements
  • Must be prepared and updated every four years if
    in non-attainment or maintenance area for air
    quality, otherwise every five years
  • Update process can begin as early as one month
    after CLRP is formally adopted and take the full
    four-five years to complete! (Most try to do it
    in two years or less)
  • Forecast period is 20 years (including
    transportation network projects, cost estimates
    and estimation of readily available funds)
  • Some FTA representatives want a continuous
    20-year plan horizon, others just a 20-year
    forecast period

5
Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP)
  • Federal Requirements (Continued)
  • Must consider all modes of transportation
  • Must follow 3C process (Continuing, Cooperating
    and Comprehensive)
  • Must address eight planning factors

6
Eight Planning Factors
  • Support economic vitality
  • Increase safety
  • Increase security
  • Increase accessibility for people and goods
  • Protect and enhance environment
  • Enhance connectivity across modes
  • Promote efficient operation of existing
    transportation network
  • Emphasize existing system preservation

7
Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP)
  • Federal Requirements (Continued)
  • Must consult with following agencies
  • State and local growth management
  • Economic Development
  • Natural resources
  • Air quality boards
  • Environmental protection
  • Conservation
  • Historic Preservation
  • All transportation mode providers

8
Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP)
  • Federal Requirements (Continued)
  • Must identify all transportation facilities
  • Major roadways
  • Transit
  • Intermodal
  • Multimodal
  • Alternative/CHOICE/SMART transportation
  • Emphasis on facilities that serve important
    national and regional transportation functions

9
Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP)
  • Federal Requirements (Continued)
  • A discussion of potential environmental
    mitigation activities and impacted areas and
    activities that can best restore and maintain
    these areas
  • A financial plan (Developed with State)
  • Demonstrates how adopted plan can be implemented
    (estimate readily available funds)
  • All public and private funding sources identified
  • Recommend additional funding strategies
  • May be required to fall into specific time bands

10
Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP)
  • Federal Requirements (Continued)
  • Operational and management strategies that
    improve the performance of existing facilities
    while relieving congestion and improving safety
    for people and freight
  • Capital investment strategies to
  • Preserve existing infrastructure
  • Provide for multimodal capacity increases based
    on regional priorities and needs
  • Transportation and transit enhancements

11
Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP)
  • Federal Requirements (Continued)
  • Comparison of transportation plan with State
    conservation plans/maps
  • Comparison of plans to inventories of natural and
    historic resources
  • In non-attainment areas, must coordinate with
    Clean Air Act agencies to develop transportation
    control measures for inclusion in the Statewide
    Improvement Program

12
Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP)
  • Key Things To Remember
  • All MPO plans, programs and activities must be
    consistent with the Long-Range Plan
  • Most MPOs have weak transit sections
  • DRPT is reviewing transit agency and MPO plan
    consistency
  • In non-attainment areas transit agencies play a
    vital role in ensuring the plan meets Clean Air
    Act requirements

13
The Transportation Improvement Program (TIP)
  • Where your tax dollars go to make transportation
    improvements

14
Transportation Improvement Program (TIP)
  • Programs federal, state and local dollars for
    specific transportation projects in region
  • Similar to City or County Capital Improvement
    Program
  • Broken down by mode
  • Airport
  • Highways
  • Transit
  • Freight
  • Enhancements

15
Transportation Improvement Program (TIP)
  • Federal Requirements
  • Develop the project list in cooperation with
    VDRPT, VDOT and affected transit operators
  • Develop funding estimates in consultation with
    VDRPT, VDOT and transit agencies
  • Funding estimates must be based on reasonably
    expected funds (usually historic availability of
    such funds must be documented)
  • Must be updated every four years

16
Transportation Improvement Program (TIP)
  • Federal Requirements (Continued)
  • The TIP will include
  • A priority list of proposed federally supported
    projects/programs and strategies to be carried
    out within each four year period
  • A financial plan that demonstrates
    implementation, funding resources to support
    projects and innovative financing techniques
  • Descriptions to identify projects and phases
  • Regionally significant projects identified
    individually
  • Other projects may be grouped and shown as one
    line item

17
Transportation Improvement Program (TIP)
  • Federal Requirements (Continued)
  • The TIP
  • Must be consistent with the Constrained
    Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP)
  • Some TIP projects/programs are not on a
    constrained project list contained in the CLRP,
    but may just be included by reference in a
    long-range plan.
  • May contain an illustrative list of additional
    projects that could be implemented if additional
    funds become available
  • Must follow same public involvement process as
    the CLRP

18
Transportation Improvement Program (TIP)
  • Federal Requirements (Continued)
  • The TIP
  • Must be consistent with Six-Year Improvement
    Program if state funds are being used
  • Is submitted to State and FHWA and FTA for
    approval
  • FHWA and FTA ensure that all projects and
    programs included in the TIP are consistent with
    the Statewide Transportation Improvement Program
    (STIP)

19
Transportation Improvement Program (TIP)
  • Key Things To Remember
  • The TIP is done every four years, so if you want
    a project funded by an MPO you must have it ready
    up to four years in advance!
  • Several MPOs update TIPs annually
  • TIP cycle usually begins in April and TIP is
    approved in August
  • It takes effect October 1 of each calendar year
  • How to coordinate state fiscal year operating
    July 1?
  • Typically, CMAQ and enhancement projects are
    selected every year or every other year
  • For MPOs under 200,000 population, project
    selection is done by State not MPO (except in
    Virginia where MPOs over 200,000 are treated like
    small MPOs in other states)

20
Distinguishing Between Large and Small MPOs
21
Two Kinds of MPOs
  • Those that serve areas with a population between
    50,000 and 199,999
  • Those serving populations 200,000 or greater are
    referred to as Transportation Management Areas or
    TMAs

22
Additional Requirements for TMAs
  • Must prepare a Congestion Management Process
    (CMP) document
  • Provides framework for effective management and
    operation of the transportation network by
    addressing specific recurring and non-recurring
    (accidents and special events) congestion
  • Transit and TDM strategies are typically part of
    a CMP process, but because there are few transit
    advocates at the table, the selected strategies
    focus on things like HOV/HOT lanes or road
    construction operational improvements (left turn
    lanes, signal timing improvements, etc.)

23
Congestion Management Process (CMP)
  • Be very careful because the Federal definition of
    a CMP is what we have just discussed
  • In Northern Virginia, a CMP is a locally
    developed plan to address traffic congestion as
    part of a major construction/reconstruction
    project
  • Because of the confusion, Virginia now calls them
    Transportation Management Plans
  • Because traffic models have difficulties
    predicting transit behavior, you need to work
    with your MPO to update your models

24
Congestion Management Process (CMP)
  • Projects identified in the CMP must then be
    placed in the TIP
  • Data analysis and monitoring activities may
    require that the long-range plan be modified
  • In non-attainment areas, federal funds may not be
    used for highway projects that will result in an
    increase of carrying capacity for the single
    occupant vehicle unless the project is addressed
    in the CMP process!!!

25
The State v. MPO Power Struggle
  • Many States did not quickly conform to the
    original ISTEA
  • Early 90s many Highway Departments became
    Transportation Departments
  • The focus of the new Transportation Department
    still was on highways
  • Transit and TDM were seen as projects that could
    take money away from road construction

26
The State v. MPO Power Struggle
  • With passage of TEA-21, Congress began to shift
    much of DOT power to large MPOs but did not
    provide much relief for small MPOs
  • SAFETEA-LU maintains this dichotomy as the state
    selects all projects for inclusion in the TIP in
    consultation with small MPOs
  • SAFETEA-LU allows large MPOs to select projects
    for inclusion in the TIP (except Interstate and
    NHS) after consulting with State (does not
    include Virginia!)

27
Virginias Structure
  • Federal legislation creates six major highway
    funding categories (Interstate, NHS, Surface
    Transportation Program (STP), CMAQ, Safety,
    Highway Bridge and Rehabilitation Program)
  • Virginia DOT co-mingles all of those funds, adds
    state funds and creates Interstate, Primary,
    Secondary, Urban, Regional Surface Transportation
    Program (RSTP) and CMAQ categories
  • Transit funds stay the same as FTA categories
    (all the 53XX categories)

28
Virginias Structure
  • NHS and STP funds can be used for a wide variety
    of transportation projects, including transit and
    TDM
  • Transit programs and activities can use primary,
    secondary, and urban funds, in addition to RSTP
    and CMAQ
  • While RSTP funds remain a good option in theory,
    many MPOs are using all of their RSTP funds to
    cover cost overruns in road projects or are using
    them to address declining revenue

29
Virginias Structure
  • In general, CMAQ and RSTP funds are allocated by
    the MPOs and approved by the CTB
  • All others category allocations are determined by
    Commonwealth Transportation Board (CTB) in the
    SYIP
  • Some projects approved by CTB and included in the
    SYIP initially are not in the local TIP or the
    CLRP or the STIP

30
Virginia Planning Documents
  • We have three similar documents
  • Statewide Transportation Improvement Program
    (STIP)
  • Six-Year Improvement Plan (SYIP)
  • State Implementation Plan (SIP)
  • STIP and SIP are subject to FHWA, FTA and EPA
    approval

31
SYIP
  • Six-Year Improvement Plan (SYIP)
  • The SYIP is an allocation-based document
  • It specifies which projects the CTB would intends
    to fund over the next six years with federal and
    state funds
  • The SYIP is a state requirement and the official
    allocation document for the Commonwealth of
    Virginia
  • The CTB holds public hearings in the fall and
    spring to get input from citizens, local elected
    officials and MPOs on what projects they would
    like to see added to the SYIP
  • Adopted in June to coincide with state fiscal
    year

32
STIP
  • Statewide Transportation Improvement Program
    (STIP)
  • Documents how Virginia will obligate its share of
    federal funds
  • The STIP is comprised of all the MPO TIPs as well
    as projects with federal funds for the rest of
    the state
  • The STIP covers four years
  • The STIP must conform to the SIP by demonstrating
    that all nonattainment and maintenance area TIPs
    conform
  • MPO TIP amendments must be reflected in the STIP
    and STIP amendments must be reflected in MPO TIPs
    the two must match  
  • All federal funds are shown in the STIP 
  • Regionally significant projects (for air quality
    purposes) must be included in TIPs in
    nonattainment and maintenance areas and the STIP
  • The STIP follows the federal fiscal year (October
    1) because it is a federal funding document

33
SIP
  • State Improvement Plan (SIP)
  • The SIP is an air quality document 
  • Includes an emissions budget for various
    pollutants and sources, including mobile sources,
    point sources, etc.
  • Nonattainment and maintenance area emissions
    budgets are part of the SIP and conformity must
    be demonstrated to these budgets for CLRPs and
    TIPs 
  • MPOs demonstrate conformity of their CLRPs and
    TIPs (with assistance from VDOT and VDEQ)
  • Conforming TIPs are included in the STIP so that
    a conforming STIP can be submitted to FHWA  
  • FHWA cannot approve a STIP that includes a
    non-conforming TIP 
  • The SIP does not include transportation funding
    or projects 
  • Updated when new standards are imposed by EPA

34
DRPT Response
  • DRPT staff attendance at all MPO TAC meetings
  • MPO and Transit Plan Consistency Task Order
  • Grantee Handbook
  • Service Design Guidelines
  • Asset Management System
  • Performance Review Program
  • Better Technical Assistance and ADVOCACY

35
Are There Any Questions?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com