1 / 13

Transportation CIP Process

Transportation CIP Process. Update project costs and CIP request sheets. Nov.-Jan. – Update ongoing CIP project costs, including capital and maintenance projects Jan.-Feb. – Update prior year expenditures, current year budget. Transportation CIP Process. Prioritize improvements.

albina
Download Presentation

Transportation CIP 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. Transportation CIP Process

  2. Update project costs and CIP request sheets • Nov.-Jan. – Update ongoing CIP project costs, including capital and maintenance projects • Jan.-Feb. – Update prior year expenditures, current year budget

  3. Transportation CIP Process

  4. Prioritize improvements • Prioritization guided by Lee plan policies in Goals 36, 37, 38, 40, 41 (Transportation) and 95 (Capital Improvements). • Current process • Fund maintenance projects and debt service; then • Maintain project phases already in CIP; then • Add remaining phases of current; and then • Add new projects or project phases in later years.

  5. Transportation CIP Process

  6. Identify bike-ped priorities • Feb. – BPAC updates its priority list, consistent with Map 3D and comp plan policies, considering public requests and recommendations from other sources such as CSAC and MPO received throughout year. • Note: Palomino Lane bikes sharing roadway signs, Gladiolus Drive bike lanes and “sharrows” added in the current year.

  7. Palomino Lane before/after

  8. Transportation CIP Process

  9. Identify Candidate Projects to Add to CIP • Feb. – Identification of current and short-term future roadway level of service problems from most recent concurrency management report/calculations (requires revision to concurrency system) from newest traffic counts/short term modeling ; determination of candidate projects to add to CIP to address identified problems and consistent with long range plan; costing of candidate projects, all by DOT staff

  10. Transportation CIP Process

  11. Develop project-specific bike-ped spending plan • County previously set aside fixed amounts of impact fee (5%) and gas tax funding ($500,000) for retrofit program, but because of spending concerns shifted a couple of years ago to project-specific programming over the 5-year window • Now try to budget specific projects from BPAC’s priority list in amount roughly equivalent to old allocations • Also incorporate bike-ped improvements into larger CIP projects where feasible – mainly road widenings, sometimes resurfacing projects when separated out

  12. Develop project-specific bike-ped spending plan • Projects added to proposed CIP: • Complete streets review – Crest Ln, Gorham Ave (Villas) sidewalks, N Brentwood connection to Summerlin Rd multiuse path. • MPO plan - Recreational Loop (aka Tour de Park, improved Daniels Parkway multiuse path/ bike lanes), and University Loop Demonstration (Three Oaks Pkwy, Ben Hill Griffin Pkwy, Estero Pkwy bike lane) projects • BPAC - Fiddlesticks Blvd paved shoulders, Summerlin Rd bike lane improvements

  13. Transportation CIP Process

More Related