1 / 22

Oregon Public Transportation Plan Draft Plan Outreach COACT May 10, 2018

kasi
Download Presentation

Oregon Public Transportation Plan Draft Plan Outreach COACT May 10, 2018

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. In 2045, public transportation is an integral, interconnected component of Oregon’s transportation system that makes Oregon’s diverse cities, towns, and communities work. Because public transportation is convenient, affordable, and efficient, it helps further the state’s quality of life and economic vitality and contributes to the health and safety of all residents, while reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Oregon Public Transportation Plan Draft Plan OutreachCOACT May 10, 2018

  2. What is the Oregon Public Transportation Plan? • OPTP is a statewide mode plan that applies Oregon Transportation Plan policy to public transportation. • Supports and assists decisions • Does not identify specific investments

  3. Why this plan? • Public transportation is an important part of the whole transportation system • Benefits communities, residents, and visitors • Respond to change • Prepare agencies to capitalize on new opportunities • Support partnerships and creative solutions

  4. OPTP Objectives • Provide shared vision and policy framework • Describe public transportation’s role and contributions • Encourage and improve connections between modes, systems, public and private providers • Provide foundation for investment decisions • Describe roles in implementing the plan

  5. What is new in this OPTP? • Focus is statewide • Urban • Rural • Multimodal • Recognizes diversity of providers, communities, and needs • Works with recent mode plans • Bicycle and Pedestrian • Transportation Options • Rail Plan

  6. How does the OPTP relate to HB2017 and STIF? • Works with HB 2017 and STIF • (statewide transportation improvement fund) • Reflects and builds on HB 2017 inputs and priorities • Provides long-term policy foundation and guidance for investment decisions • Draft STIF rules reflect OPTP too • STIF plans must show projects from a local plan • And identify how project is consistent with OPTP • Local plans must be coordinated with neighbors • OPTP supports planning for public transportation, coordination, and partnerships

  7. Who’s been involved? • Diverse committees • PAC, TAC, ODOT staff • Stakeholders and the public • Early stakeholder interviews • 2015, 2017 Public Transit Conference workshops • 3 Focus Groups with riders and equity groups • 2016, 2017, 2018 public meetings and online open houses

  8. What we’ve heard so far, how OPTP addresses • Need for improved agency collaboration • Goals, policies, strategies, key initiative • Need for better connections between systems, regions, urban and rural • Goals, policies, and strategies, emphasizing connections and coordination • Need for reliable service • Goals and policies promoting service consistency, coordination with road authorities, identifying priority corridors via plans

  9. What we’ve heard so far, how OPTP addresses • Need for TO and mobility management strategies • Policies, strategies, acknowledgement of roles • Need for safe access to transit, mode connections • Policies and strategies for multimodal connections, hubs, safe facilities • Perceptions of safety on public transportation • Goal, policies, and strategies promoting safety, security, welcoming environment • Need to build a “culture of transit” • Emphasis throughout on making transit an easy, viable option for many trips

  10. OPTP Goals Mobility: Public Transportation User Experience Safety & Security Environmental Sustainability Accessibility & Connectivity: Getting from Here to There Community Livability & Economic Vitality Land Use Strategic Investment Equity Communication, Collaboration, & Coordination Health

  11. OPTP Chapters • Chapter 1: A New Oregon Vision for Public Transportation • Provides an introduction to the OPTP • Describes the business of the plan and context • Chapter 2: Setting the Stage • Plan foundations: current conditions, benefits, challenges and opportunities

  12. OPTP Chapters • Chapter 3: Goal, Policies, and Strategies • Organized by 10 OPTP goals • Introductions highlight broad ideas • Chapter 4: Investment Considerations • Describes investment scenarios • Chapter 5: Moving Forward • Describes roles, key initiatives, and performance measures

  13. Roles and Responsibilities State: Develop policy and rules, manage and distribute funding, convene and coordinate Public Transportation Providers: plan for and provide most service, coordinate and collaborate Transportation Options Providers: Connect riders to other services, enable system efficiencies Cities, Counties, MPOs, and Tribes: Plan for local transportation and land use, coordinate and collaborate, develop funding

  14. Key Initiatives • Public Transportation Plan Integration • Promote and encourage plan integration for successful transit and meeting transportation and other goals • Regional and Intercity Service • Improve and coordinate regional and intercity services • Public Transportation Technology • Anticipate, test, and implement technologies to improve services, coordination, and communication

  15. Plan Integration

  16. Questions and Discussion Do you have questions for ODOT? Questions for you: • What elements of the OPTP are most important to you or your agency/community? • How do you think you might use or be impacted by the plan? • What do you believe are important next steps to implement the plan?

  17. How to get involved • Actions you can take: • Review the draft OPTP • Send your comments through the online open house • Share the link with others Online Open House Link: http://optpfeedback.org/ (open late May – late July) Project Website: http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/Planning/Pages/OPTP.aspx

  18. Thank you!

  19. Next steps and schedule

  20. How to contact us Project Staff Lucia Ramirez, ODOT Planning lucia.l.ramirez@odot.state.or.us 503-986-4168 Jean Palmateer, Rail and Public Transit Division jean.m.palmateer@odot.state.or.us 503-986-3472 Michael Rock, ODOT Planning Unit Manager michael.d.rock@odot.state.or.us 503-986-3179

  21. OPTP PAC Members • David Lohman, OTC • Craig Campbell, AAA • Steve Dickey, Salem-Keizer Transit • Ben Duncan, Multnomah County • Karen Girard, Oregon Health Authority • Amanda Hoey, Mid-Columbia Economic Development District • Sharon Konopa, City of Albany • Robin McArthur, LCDC • Neil McFarlane, TriMet • Jeff Monson, Commute Options • Susan Morgan, AOC • Tonia Moro, RVTD & RVMPO Boards • Cosette Rees, Lane Transit District • Bob Russell, Oregon Trucking Association • Lisa Scherf, City of Corvallis • John David Tovey, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation • Elaine Wells, Ride Connection

  22. TAC Members • David Arnold, Association of Oregon Rail and Transit Advocates • Tyler Deke, Bend MPO • Lee Girard, Multnomah County • Chris Hagerbaumer, Oregon Environmental Council • Julie Jacobs, Oregon Department of Human Services • Sasha Luftig, Lane Transit District • John Mikulich, MTE Western • Doug Pilant, Tillamook County Transit • Dennis Pinheiro, Douglas County • Jamie Snook, Metro • Ian Stude, Portland State University • Paige Townsend, Rogue Valley Transit District

More Related