1 / 15

The Role of Metropolitan Planning Organizations in the TIP Process

The Role of Metropolitan Planning Organizations in the TIP Process Ted Leybold: Metro Program Manager. What is an MPO?. Established by federal legislation for urban areas > 50,000 population Governed by board of local officials

scott
Download Presentation

The Role of Metropolitan Planning Organizations in the TIP Process

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. The Role of Metropolitan Planning Organizations in the TIP Process Ted Leybold: Metro Program Manager

  2. What is an MPO? • Established by federal legislation for urban areas > 50,000 population • Governed by board of local officials • Maintain Long-Range Transportation Plan and Metropolitan Transportation Improvement Program • Conduct transportation emission analysis for air quality plans • If > 200,000 population, allocate federal STP funds

  3. MPO TIP Process • Allocate STP and CMAQ funds to local projects • Coordinate with ODOT and Transit providers on selection of highway and transit projects • Coordinate programming of projects by phase, year and fund type • Conduct air quality analysis • Submit for inclusion in STIP

  4. Allocation of Funds • Selects projects to receive federal STP and CMAQ funding • Establish policy objectives • Solicit project applications • Evaluate applications relative to policy objectives • Conduct public comment period • Administer selection of projects

  5. What is eligible? • Part of the Regional Transportation Plan • Meet federal program guidelines • Administered by public agencies capable of contracting with State DOT

  6. Program Objectives • Economic development in priority 2040 land use areas • Build a complete, multi-modal transportation system • Fund projects throughout the MPO region • Meet air-quality plan requirements

  7. Priority 2040 land uses

  8. Air quality objectives • Bicycle facilities: 5 miles each biennium • Pedestrian facilities: 1.5 miles each biennium • Diesel emission reduction

  9. Technical evaluation • Five evaluation categories • Quantitative score in four categories • Qualitative issues summary

  10. Pubic involvement • Reacting to evaluation of projects • Multiple means to comment • Listening Post format for testimony • Final comment after recommended list developed

  11. Project selection • Recommendation based on public comments, technical and policy evaluations • Decision made by MPO Board (JPACT) and Metro Council

  12. ODOT and Transit Projects • Coordinate selection of projects • Include in air quality analysis • Approve projects inclusion in TIP

  13. Programming of projects • Summarize project costs by phase • Local agency requested schedules • Balance costs and revenues by year and fund type • First and second year of TIP revenues must be available and committed to projects

  14. Air Quality analysis • Travel demand forecast • Land use • Population & employment forecast • Travel behavior survey • Transportation network • Transportation emissions forecast • Travel demand forecast • Vehicle fleet

  15. MTIP Approvals • Submit air quality analysis to FHWA/FTA for approval • Submit MTIP to Governor for approval • Submit approved MTIP for inclusion in STIP without change • STIP submitted for approval to FHWA/FTA for approval

More Related