1 / 20

Mn/DOT Economic Recovery Program Update

Mn/DOT Economic Recovery Program Update. Feb. 19, 2009. Enacted Bill & Modal Program Overview Tim Henkel, Mn/DOT. Enacted Economic Stimulus Bill. Final version (enacted Feb. 17, 2009) $48.12 billion for transportation Highways and bridges: $27.5 billion

kevina
Download Presentation

Mn/DOT Economic Recovery Program Update

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. Mn/DOT Economic Recovery Program Update Feb. 19, 2009

  2. Enacted Bill & Modal Program Overview Tim Henkel, Mn/DOT

  3. Enacted Economic Stimulus Bill • Final version (enacted Feb. 17, 2009) • $48.12 billion for transportation • Highways and bridges: $27.5 billion • Minnesota’s share approximately $502 million • Mn/DOT/local split- $345 Mn/DOT; $155 local • High-speed and Intercity Passenger Rail: $8 billion • Amtrak $1.3 billion • Transit formula: $6.9 billion • Minnesota’s share approximately $92 million • Transit fixed-guideway: $750 million • Transit new starts: $750 million • Competitive Surface Transportation Grants: $1.5 billion • Airports: $1.1 billion

  4. Supplemental Discretionary Grants for a National Surface Transportation System • $1.5 Billion • $20 million minimum (may be waived) • $300 million maximum per state/project • Criteria - Project of national, metropolitan or regional significant impact • Up to 100% federal funding • Grant criteria from US DOT in 180 days

  5. Supplemental Discretionary Grants for a National Surface Transportation System • Potentially eligible projects • Highways and bridges • Passenger rail - Capacity improvement project • Freight rail - Rail line rehabilitation - Intermodal yard • Port infrastructure - Intermodal terminal - Dock wall • Transit - Bus facilities - Fleet replacement • Up to 100% federal share

  6. Transit Capital Assistance: $6.9 B • Urbanized Area Formula Grants (5307) $5.5 B • Minnesota allocation $73 M – to Duluth, St. Cloud, Rochester, Moorhead, La Crescent, Met Council • Other than Urbanized Formula Grants (5311) $.69 B • Minnesota allocation $19 M • Project selection criteria • In 10-year capital plans • Meet vehicles requirements: Mileage, age, useful life • Meet facilities requirements: NEPA, property, permits • Illustrative projects • Vehicles: Buses and vans • Facilities: Bus garages, transfer stations, shelters, fare boxes, park and rides, ITS equipment • Up to 100% federal share, • Obligate 50% within 180 days, 50% within 1 year

  7. High-speed Rail and Intercity Passenger Rail: $8B • Competitive grants to states for: • High speed rail corridors • Intercity rail passenger service • Congestion mitigation projects • Criteria • US DOT issue grant requirements and procedures in 120 days (Mid June, 2009) • Use by 2012 • Up to 100% federal funding

  8. Airport Improvement Grants $1.1 B • Airports municipally owned • Priorities developed locally, prioritized statewide by FAA with input from Mn/DOT • 96 of 136 airports statewide federal-aid eligible and able to receive stimulus funding • Possible project selection criteria: project deliverability, improves safety or security, preserves infrastructure and enhances capacity

  9. Airport Improvement Grants: $1.1 B • Illustrative projects • Pavements: Runways, taxiways, aprons (aircraft parking) • Expansions: Lengthen runways and taxiways • Buildings: Hangars, terminals, snow removal Equipment buildings • 100% Federal share • 50% Awarded to grantees within 120 days, 50% within 1 year • Use by 2010

  10. Mn/DOT Programs and Candidate Needs • Highway infrastructure $519 million • Freight infrastructure (eligible for highway funding in Senate version) • Highway/rail grade crossing safety $ 34 million • Rail infrastructure improvements $ 20 million • Port infrastructure improvements $ 10 million • Truck enforcement and safety inspection $2.5 million ** Candidate project lists can be found at: www.mndot.gov

  11. Mn/DOT Programs and Candidate Needs • Transit capital • Intercity passenger rail $160 million • Bicycles and pedestrians $ 48 million • Greater Minnesota transit $ 60 million • Airport infrastructure $122 million • Pavements: e.g. runways, taxiways, aprons (aircraft parking) • Expansions: e.g. lengthen runways and taxiways • Buildings: e.g. hangars, terminals, snow removal equipment buildings ** Candidate project lists can be found at: www.mndot.gov

  12. Highway Program Overview Jon Chiglo, Mn/DOT

  13. Program Goals • Minnesota program • Even distribution of project work type across letting schedule • Work type diversity • Take advantage of entire industry capacity to deliver program • Transparency • Communication • Program development • Administration • Reporting program/project progress

  14. Program Development Principles • Project readiness • Environmental status, R/W availability, etc. • Consistency with performance based plans/needs • Commitment to make a lasting transportation need • Statewide coverage • Create jobs statewide • Balanced program • Use full capacity of construction industry

  15. Program Delivery • Project development • Lessons learned from past projects • This is not “business as usual” • Expedited delivery processes • Letting schedule • Spaced every 14 days starting March 13 • Driven by delivery time lines in Economic Recovery Act • Projects distributed throughout letting schedule • Give as many possibilities to bid contracts as possible • Will be monitoring inflation closely

  16. Program Delivery • Contract administration • Contracting methods • Design bid build, design build best value, design build low bid • Package projects • Max price contracts • Disadvantaged Business Enterprises • Goals will be established for each project • Industry interaction • Build off success from 35W project

  17. Program Delivery • Economic recovery timelines • State timelines • 50% of funds require authorization in 120 days • Unauthorized funds up to 50% go to DC for redistribution • Remainder of all funds require authorization by Feb. 17, 2010 • Reporting requirements: • 90 days, 180 days, 1 year, 2 years, 3 years • Projects (awarded, started, completed) • Jobs (created or sustained) • Funds (appropriate, allocated, authorized)

  18. Program Delivery • What does authorization mean? • The time plans are advertised • The time Request for Proposals (RFP’s) are issued • What does “shovel ready” mean? • Important dates to remember • Feb. 17 - Date of enactment • June 12 - 120 day deadline

  19. Program Delivery • Project development • Mn/DOT and consultant resources • Coordinating closely with FHWA • Authorization of projects • Risk management • Who can manage the risk most effectively • Coordination with Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPO) • Amendment of State Transportation Improvement Plan (STIP)

  20. Next Steps • Finalize program based on funding constraints • Continue developing projects • MPO Approvals • Authorization of projects • FHWA • First letting on March 13 • Approx. $46.5 million • Anticipated start of construction: Early May • Reporting and tracking progress • Communication

More Related