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Combining Pedestrian Plans and ADA Transition Plans

Combining Pedestrian Plans and ADA Transition Plans. Gail Payne Dowling Associates, Inc. September 2004. Presentation Overview. Current Approach Combined Approach Benefits Complaints Plan Components Community Outreach Inventories Codes/Standards/Guidelines Project Lists.

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Combining Pedestrian Plans and ADA Transition Plans

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  1. Combining Pedestrian Plans and ADA Transition Plans Gail Payne Dowling Associates, Inc. September 2004

  2. Presentation Overview • Current Approach • Combined Approach • Benefits • Complaints • Plan Components • Community Outreach • Inventories • Codes/Standards/Guidelines • Project Lists

  3. Current Approach • Separate efforts & requirements • Pedestrian Plans: local General Plans • ADA Transition Plans: 1973 Rehabilitation Act and 1990 ADA • Street Crossings • Sidewalks to/from public facilities (NEW!!!) • Costs more planning money • Separate prioritizations occur • Reduced synergy and coordination

  4. Current Approach (cont.) • Sacramento County Model

  5. Combined Approach • Pedestrian Master Plan • ADA Transition Plan: integrated, appendix

  6. Combined Approach – Benefits • Coordinated community outreach • Same facility inventory • Guidelines address • Disabled access requirements • Walkable community issues • Combined prioritization lists • Comprehensive grievance procedure • Share funding and staff = Streamlined/comprehensive approach

  7. Combined Approach – Complaints • ADA Transition Plan = legal document • Political structures may not allow it • Pedestrian Plans include additional issues • Education • Enforcement • More costly for combined plan

  8. Combined Approach - Mitigate • ADA Transition Plan Appendix • Project monitoring • Grievance procedure • ADA coordinator • ADA requirements/codes • Schedule / projects per year • Curb ramps • Crosswalks • Sidewalks at public facilities • Accessible pedestrian signals

  9. Plan Components • Community Outreach • Inventories • Codes/Standards/Guidelines • Project Lists

  10. Community Outreach • Increase influence at City Hall • Accessibility advocates • Vocal • Minority group • Pedestrian advocates • Few vocal members • Represent more constituents = synergy / strong advocacy base

  11. Inventories • Similar Needs • Sidewalk conditions (Barden v. City of Sacramento) • Curb ramps • Street crossings • Adjacent to key land uses • Pedestrian Plan Data (Sacramento County) • Speeds • Volumes • Sidewalk buffer

  12. Guidelines • ADA Codes/Standards • Path of travel • Street crossings • Pedestrian Guidelines • Exceed ADA requirements • Traffic calming • Pedestrian buffers • Retrofitting suburbia

  13. Project List Coordination • Accessible Pedestrian Signals & Countdown Signals • Sidewalks & Curb Ramps • Curb Ramps & Bulb Outs • Highest Priorities for both groups

  14. Conclusions • Pedestrian Plan with ADA Transition Plan • Coordinated community outreach • Similar facility inventory • Combined project lists • Guidelines address • Accessibility requirements • Walkable community issues • Shared funding and staff = Collaborative, streamlined approach

  15. Questions?

  16. Guidelines – ADA Walkways • Walkway Standards (Sacramento County) • Width • Passing space • Slopes (cross and running) • Meandering • Curbs • Changes in level and stairs • Gratings • Obstructions • Driveway and rail crossings • Temporary construction • Furnishings • Public transit stops

  17. Guidelines – Pedestrian Walkways • Exceed ADA Standards • Buffers • Landscape strips • On-street parking • Wide outside curb lane • Bike lanes • Traffic Calming • Speed humps • Chokers • Land Uses

  18. Guidelines – Pedestrian Walkways Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden

  19. Guidelines – ADA Crossings • Crossing Standards (Sacramento County) • Curb ramps • Slopes (running, cross and gutter) • Landing • Width • Detectable warnings/borders • Surfaces • Crosswalks • Width / color / size • Slopes • Signal timing • Medians / islands • Alignment • Accessible pedestrian signal standards

  20. Guidelines – Pedestrian Crossings • Exceed ADA Standards • Crossing Issues • Distances • Medians / islands • Crosswalk markings • Countdown signals • Traffic signals • Grade separations • Traffic Calming • Corner radii • Raised crosswalks / intersections • Curb bulb-outs • Roundabouts / traffic circles

  21. Guidelines – Pedestrian Crossings

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