1 / 38

Transportation Enhancements: California’s Past, Present, & Future

Transportation Enhancements: California’s Past, Present, & Future. Stephanie M. Stoermer FHWA California Division. Historically speaking…. “California” has always been a favored destination...and there are so many “Californias” to chose from….

Télécharger la présentation

Transportation Enhancements: California’s Past, Present, & Future

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Transportation Enhancements:California’s Past, Present, & Future Stephanie M. Stoermer FHWA California Division

  2. Historically speaking… “California” has always been a favored destination...and there are so many “Californias” to chose from…

  3. Although California has been intermodal from early on…

  4. We are more noted for being the birthplace of the “Car Culture”…

  5. Good Roads Movement On July 16, 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal Aid Road Act of 1916, initiating the federal-aid highway program and providing additional impetus for the development of state highways. "The bill is as big as the great country it represents and as broad as the humanity it would serve." -- Southern Good Roads magazine

  6. The Price of Progress

  7. WHO UPSET ROGER RABBIT ? In “Who Framed Roger Rabbit ?”--set in 1947--Evil Judge Doom has a plan to take out Toon Town in order to acquire the land, which is in the path of a planned freeway to Pasadena. However, by 1947 there was already a freeway to Pasadena !

  8. SUPERHIGHWAY-SUPERHOAX (1970) “We must stop listening to engineers and highway planners, men who explain the effects of displacing people and services in very vague terms. Even more vague, in the mind of the highway planner, at least, is the direct social or economic effect of taking a park or wildlife refuge for highway use.” -Helen Leavitt, Superhighway-Superhoax

  9. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) provides expertise, resources, and information to improve the nation's highway system and its intermodal connections. The Federal-Aid Highway Program provides financial assistance to the States to construct and improve the National Highway System, other roads, and bridges. The Federal Lands Highway Program provides access to and within national forests and parks, Indian reservations, and other public lands by preparing plans, letting contracts, supervising construction, and inspecting bridges. FHWA conducts and manages a comprehensive research, development, and technology program. FHWA Today

  10. Transportation Enhancements:Background • TE activities have been eligible for funding under the Surface Transportation Program (STP) since the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA). • The dedication of a portion of federal-aid highway funds specifically for TE demonstrated a significant shift in national transportation policy. • Prior to ISTEA, only a few of these activities had been eligible for federal-aid highway funding,and they were often not included in the normal routine of planning and building highways.

  11. Transportation Enhancements:Background • Congress and various interests expressed concerns that Federal-aid highway funds were being used for activities not serving a transportation purpose. • In 1995,FHWA issued guidance stating specifically that TE activities "must have a direct relationship to the intermodal transportation system." • Some viewed this link as too tight or narrow. • In 1998, Congress amended the definition of TE activities by inserting the phrase "relates to surface transportation" as part of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century(TEA-21)

  12. Transportation Enhancements:Background • FHWA views this phrase as a more flexible standard than the "direct relationship" standard. • Congress also added two eligible categories (safety and educational activities for pedestrians and bicyclists, and transportation museums), and modified others (scenic or historic highway programs, tourist and welcome centers, and reducing wildlife mortality).

  13. Pedestrian and bicycle facilities Pedestrian and bicycle safety and education Scenic or historic easements and sites Scenic or historic highway programs Landscaping and scenic beautification Historic preservation Historic transportation buildings, structures, or facilities Rail to trail conversions Control and removal of outdoor advertising Archaeological planning and research Mitigate highway water pollution and wildlife mortality Transportation museums Transportation Enhancements:12 Eligible Categories

  14. What is “Surface Transportation” ? • All elements of the intermodal transportation system, exclusive of aviation. • For the purposes of TE eligibility, surface transportation includes water as surface transportation and includes as eligible activities related features such as canals, lighthouses, and docks or piers connecting to ferry operations, as long as the proposed enhancement otherwise meets the basic eligibility criteria.

  15. Transportation Enhancements • The majority of projects that use TE funds are small-scale projects with an average federal share of $339,000. • They are initiated at the local level by city or county governments or community-based organizations, referred to as sponsors. • Projects funded with TE dollars can also be initiated by state DOTs,other state agencies,federally-recognized tribal governments,or federal agencies.

  16. Transportation Enhancements • Like other components of the Federal-aid Highway Program, TE activities are federally funded and state administered. • The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) division offices located in each state, Puerto Rico, and Washington, D.C. provide guidance, stewardship, and oversight for the use of TE funds. • TE Program is not a grant program. The federal-aid program operates on a reimbursement basis as work progresses. Prior to construction the project must be approved by Caltrans and FHWA.

  17. TE Projects must relate to surface transportation: Some factors that can help establish this relationship: • Proximity to a highway or a non-motorized transportation corridor, • Enhances the aesthetic, cultural, or historic aspects of the travel experience, and • Serves a current or past transportation purpose.

  18. TE Projects must relate to surface transportation: Some factors that are notgood enough: • Near the road. • Can see it from the road. • People walk or travel there. • People used to go there before the highway was built.

  19. Projects eligible for TE funding must meet Federal environmental, project administration, and right-of-way requirements.

  20. Now comes the really exciting part…

  21. Federal Aid Financial Terminology Apportionments are the funds distributed among the states as prescribed by statutory formula. • Programmed funds have been approved at the state level by the appropriate jurisdiction, ruling body, or official. (Step 1 in spending process) • Obligation is the formal commitment of a specified amount of funding for a particular project. (Step 2 in spending process) • Reimbursements are the amount of funds FHWA has reimbursed to the state for completed work on TE projects, regardless of whether the project is only partially or fully complete. (Step 3 in spending process)

  22. $6,141,372,604 Total (Programmed Funds) 18,127 TE Projects FY 1992 to FY 2004

  23. Programmed Projects by TE ActivitiesFY 2004 and Beyond(Nationwide)

  24. TE in CaliforniaFY1992 – FY2003 • Apportioned: $564,898,923 • Programmed: $698,773,789 • Obligated: $422,981,582 • Reimbursed: $295,578,170 • Average Fed Award: $648,213

  25. Chicano Park Mural Restoration • San Diego, CA • TE Category 5 • TE award: $1,428,000 • Other: $185,000 • Total $1,613,000

  26. Ferry Building Restoration • San Francisco, CA • Primary TE Activity: 7 • Secondary TE Activity: 1,3,4,5 • TE award: $2,000,000 • Other funds: $61,000,000 • Total cost: $63,000,000

  27. Santa Monica Urban Runoff Recycling Facility (SMURRF) • Santa Monica, CA • Primary TE Activity: 11 • TE award: $1,158,000 • Other funds: $342,000 • Total cost: $1,500,000

  28. Sundial Bridge • Redding, CA • Primary TE Activity:1 • TE award: $1,400,000 • Other funds: $22,100,000 • Total cost: $23,500,000

  29. Santa Fe Depot Restoration • San Bernardino, CA • Primary TE Activity: 7 • TE award: $8,100,000 • Other funds: $7,100,000 • Total cost: $15,200,000

  30. Oaklawn Bridge & Wait Station South Pasadena, CA

  31. Tower Bridge Bike/Pedestrian Improvements Sacramento, CA

  32. Great Stone Church Mission San Juan Capistrano San Juan Capistrano, CA

  33. TE Resources FHWA Enhancements website:fhwa.dot.gov/environmental/te/index

  34. TE Resources National Transportation Clearinghouse Enhancements (NTEC) website: www.enhancements,org

  35. Questions ???

More Related