Title: Flagging rules
1A Brief History of Maine Roads
plus Federal and State Urban areas, state aid,
highway classifications/jurisdictions/responsibili
ties, URIP, route numbers
by Peter Coughlan, P.E. Director, Maine Local
Roads Center
2Tah
THEN
MUD
Macadam
State Aid
Snow Reimbursement
Town Road Improvement Program
Federal Aid
Dirt roads
3MPOs
TODAY
Sensible Transportation Policy Act
Urban compacts
State Aid roads
Anti-icing
URIP
Natl Highway System
Federal Urban boundaries
Federal Aid
4Topics
- History of Maine roads
- Where did state aid come from ?
- Inventory of all public road miles
- Fedl Functional Classification vs Jurisdiction
- Urban areas Federal vs state compacts
- Maintenance responsibilities
- Capital improvement responsibilities
- Roads that fall thru the cracks
- TRIP to LRAP to URIP funding
- Comparison to other NE states
5History
- 1901 -- Gov Hill declared a need for a system
- State began reimbursing towns for main roads
- 1907 State aid law passed where state funds
are sent to each town based on vals. - 1913 3 classes created State Highway, State
Aid, 3rd class - 1931 Highway Fund established
6History
- 1941 1101 miles of unimproved State Aid miles
out of 5,867 miles - 1945 Town Road Improvement Program started with
mud money - 1955 state aid fund started to provide aid to
towns in completing unimproved gaps - 1957 983 miles of unimproved State Aid miles
out of 7829 miles
7History
- 1970 each town gets TRIP to improve townways
- 1975 criteria for classification established
- 1981 noting excessive miles of State Aids, LRAP
created and thousands of miles reclassified - 1981 additional criteria for classification
- 1997 discussion started on State Aid/minor
collectors - 2000 LRAP transformed to URIP
8Public Miles
9Federal Functional Classification
- The process by which roads are grouped into
classes according to the character of service
they provide
10Federal Functional Classification
- it reflects a highways balance between providing
land access versus mobility
11Federal Functional Classification
- Arterials Interstate, principal, other
principal, minor - Collectors major (urban) and minor
- Locals
- See yellow page for details
12Maine Highway Jurisdictions
- State Highways maintained yearround by DOT
- State Aid highways DOT roads that are
plowed/sanded/salted by Maine towns and cities - Townways maintained yearround by towns/cities
- Except in urban compact areas
13Linking Federal FFC and State Jurisdictions
14Maines urban areas
- FEDERAL URBAN AREAS
- STATE URBAN AREAS aka urban compacts
- Some towns/cities are both, some are just one,
and others are just the other - Maine Service centers is yet another term used
by State Planning Office geared around market
areas
15Maines FEDERAL urban areas
- FEDERAL URBAN AREAS
- Determined by dicennial US Census
- Set by population density per census block
- Used for planning purposes or for ordinances
- Have no connection to who-maintains-what
- 46 Towns/cities are included
- 9 of them are NOT state urban
- Ellsworth was only Maine community to drop off
the list in 2000
16Maines state urban compact areas
- URBAN COMPACT AREAS
- Determined by state statute and DOT staff
- Must be either 1) 7500 pop., or 2) between 2500
7500 with w/r ratio of 1.0 and opts in - "Compact" or "Built-up sections" means a section
of the highway where structures are nearer than
200 feet apart for a distance of 1/4 of a mile,
unless otherwise defined - Used to define MAINTENANCE changes along with
authority over entrance permits, highway openings - 43 towns/cities are included
- 14 more towns are winter compacts only
- 20 of them are NOT Federal urban
- No changes happened after 2000 Census
- Some rural towns MAY become UC after 2010 Census
17CUL
18Do FEDERAL and STATE urban lines coincide?
- Yes
- In some towns, they are indeed the same
- They even may be the same as the town line
- No
- More often than not, they are different
- Fedl line could be inside the CUL
- CUL could be inside the Fedl line
- In same town, it can go back and forth
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21 22Maintenance responsibilities
- RURAL AREAS
- Governed by jurisdiction title of State Highway,
State Aid, and townway - STATE URBAN COMPACT AREAS
- Governed by where the CUL is on the State Highway
and State Aid roads - WINTER COMPACTS
- Only applies to certain State Highway sections
23Maintenance responsibilities
- RURAL AREAS
- State Highway yearround by DOT
- State Aid yearround by DOT except that ALL
winter plowing/sanding/salting done by each
town/city - Townway -- yearround by each town/city
24Maintenance responsibilities
- WINTER COMPACT AREAS
- State Highways only yearround by DOT except
that ALL winter plowing/sanding/salting done by
each town/city - An old, leftover standard that needs to be
revisited as it breeds confusion - Usually NO CUL signs at all
- Applies to only 14 towns
25Capital Improvement responsibilities
- RURAL AREAS
- Governed by Federal Classifications of arterials,
major collectors, and minor collectors - FEDERAL URBAN AREAS
- Small urban areas, or
- 4 MPO Regions who prioritize their roadways
26Capital responsibilities
- RURAL AREAS
- arterials DOT and FHWA
- major collectors DOT and FHWA
- minor collectors only program is Rural Road
Initiative (RRI) where towns 1/3 matches DOTs
2/3 match----- zero Fedl
27Capital responsibilities
- URBAN AREAS
- arterials DOT and FHWA
- major collectors DOT and FHWA
- minor collectors NA
- If MPO area, then MPO handles all planning,
funding, etc.
28Roads that fall thru the cracks
- Misclassified roads
- State highway/minor collectors only 14 Miles
left - Severe problem 10 years ago but worked with 20
Towns with 80 miles to eliminate decades-old
mismatches - Roads caught between Fedl and state urban lines
- If minor collector is inside urban compact, its
not eligible for RRI
29Roadway Funding
- Town Road Improvement Program, Snow
Reimbursement, and State Aid Program replaced in
1981 by Local Road Assistance Program (LRAP) - LRAP replaced by Urban/Rural Initiative Program
(URIP) in 2000
30LRAP to URIP in 2000
- URIP annual funding floats with DOT Budget
rather than being static - Joint MMA/DOT effort to level the playing field
- RRI (1/3 2/3 matches) created under URIP to
finally provide a CIP funding mechanism for minor
collectors
31Urban/Rural Initiative Program
- Rates are per lane-mile
- Urban compact rates are much higher than rural
roads - Must be used for capital improvements to local
roads and/or state aid/minor collectors - Urban funds can be used for maintenance, if
desired - Some very rural towns have no townways
- Many towns are hold harmless meaning they are
receiving more than they mathematically should
32URIP Lane-mile Rates
33URIP Studies
- Legislatively-directed in 2005 delivered
January 2006 from MMA to Transp. Committee - Recommendations unanimous that
- URIP are being equitably distributed
- Limitations on use of are acceptable
- Program is appropriately funded
- OPEGA study in July 2007
- Program is well-managed
- Belief that majority of are being spent as
intended - Need to collect data on fund use
34Route Numbers
- Two types
- US Routes
- Governed by AASHTO
- Application process to make any changes
- Examples 1, 2, 201, 202, 302, I-95, etc
- Primarily on NHS and arterials
- State Routes
- Governed by MaineDOT
- Typically black-on-white rectangular
- Evolved over decades
- Examples 3, 4, 5, 100, 155, 222, up to 238
- MUCH overlap
- On all highways including 784 miles of minor
collectors
35Other nearby States
- All use Federal Classification system
- Most have other jurisdiction systems like State
roads and local roads and compact areas - Most do NOT have shared maintenance duties
similar to Maines state aid system of
DOT/summer and town/winter - Most state roads are responsibility of state
yearround - Most local roads are responsibility of towns
yearround