Title: Not Your Grandfather's DOT: The FDOT District 5 and PennDOT Experiences
Track: Connect
Format: 90 minute moderated discussion
Abstract: Today's economic realities require the rethinking of conventional transportation approaches. Learn about how Florida and Pennsylvania's Department of Transportation are using new tools, policies, and guides to proactively plan multi-modal transportation solutions.
Presenters:
Presenter: Jane Lim-Yap Kittelson & Associates, Inc.
Co-Presenter: Steven Deck Parsons Brinckerhoff
Co-Presenter: Brian Hare PennDOT Program Center
Co-Presenter: Mary Raulerson Kittelson & Associates, Inc.
Planning Tools for Linking Rural Development and TransportationRPO America
Ähnlich wie Not Your Grandfather's DOT: The FDOT District 5 and PennDOT Experiences--Bold New Initiative District 5 Multi-Modal Planning Guidebook (20)
Not Your Grandfather's DOT: The FDOT District 5 and PennDOT Experiences--Bold New Initiative District 5 Multi-Modal Planning Guidebook
1. A Bold New Initiative District 5 Multi-Modal Planning Guidebook
pro walk pro bike pro place | 9.9.2014
Presenting on Behalf of John P. Moore, FDOT District 5 Jane Lim-Yap, AICP Mary Raulerson
4. “We are pushing ahead with a great road program, a road program that will take this Nation out of its antiquated shackles of secondary roads… It will be a nation of great prosperity, but will be more than that: it will be a nation that is going ahead every day. With… our population increasing at five every minute, the expanding horizon is one that staggers the imagination.”
October 29, 1954
Interstate Highway System
7. Source: Congressional Budget Office and “Life in the Slow Lane”, The Economist, April l 28, 2011
0.00%
0.05%
0.10%
0.15%
0.20%
0.25%
0.30%
0.35%
0.40%
Highway Trust Fund Receipts (Percent of GDP)
Transit Account
Highway Account
Limited Revenues
$1 trillion
National transportation funding shortfall through 2015*
$200 billion
National revenue gap per year*
* Source: Transportation for Tomorrow Report, The National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission, December 2007.
8. $50 billion
FDOT estimated funding gap over next 20 years
Governor Scott’s Regulatory Reform Transition presentation, December, 2010.
Source: MPOAC Situational Analysis, December 2010
Funding Shortfall
Florida Metro Area Transportation Funding Shortfall Estimates
1997
2002
2008
9. 20% of household budget spent on transportation
Sources: U.S. Department of Energy; Bureau of Labor Statistics, TTI Mobility Report 2010, FHWA Livability Initiative.
increased costs of driving
Oil Prices ($ per barrel)
Crude
Diesel
Unleaded
4.8 billion hours time spent in traffic in 2009
10. Source: MPOAC Situational Analysis, December 2010 and State Smart Transportation Initiative (ww.ssti.org)
Personal Income
VMT
Population Growth
changing travel patterns
23% Drop in amount of driving by 16 to 34 year olds from 2001 to 2011 Source: Transportation and the New Generation: Why Young People Are Driving Less and What It Means for Transportation Policy
12. increased safety concerns
“Walking in Orlando is almost akin to being on a theme park ride, but without the
safety equipment or procedures…”
13. By 2025: 1 in 5 Americans will be over 65
focus on expanding mobility one third of all Americans don’t drive more than half of older Americans would rather drive less
Sources: Surface Transportation Policy Project. “Americans’ Attitudes Toward Walking and Creating Better Walking Communities.” 2003; APTA 2009 Public Transportation Fact Book; 2008 National Household Travel Survey; Steven Raphael and Alan Berube. “Socioeconomic Differences in Household Automobile Ownership Rates: Implications for Evacuation Policy,” paper prepared for the Berkeley Symposium March 2006, http://urbanpolicy.berkeley.edu/pdf/raphael.pdf.
14. •Doing More with Less
•Changing Travel Patterns
•Demand for More Travel Choices & Expanding Mobility
•Increased Safety Concerns
•Changing requests from our Communities
New challenges
15. Land Use
Travel
Road Capacity
Conventional Approach
GENERATES
DEMANDS
Anticipate
Forecast (Based on Speed)
Accommodate
16. Integrated Transportation & Land Use
Transportation Investments
Travel
Land Use
HELP MANAGE
INFLUENCES
Multi-Modal
Manage
Coordinate
18. Ingredients to Multi-modal obility
Place to comfortably and safely walk,
bicycle, take transit, or drive on
Places to conveniently walk to,
bicycle to, reach by transit, or drive to
19. •Doing More with Less
•Changing Travel Patterns
•Demand for More Travel Choices & Expanding Mobility
•Increased Safety Concerns
•Changing requests from our Communities
Tools to address new challenges
20. TRANSPORTATION DESIGN FOR LIVABLE COMMUNITIES “It is the policy of the Department to consider Transportation Design for Livable Communities features on the State Highway System …” Principles:
1.Safety of all modes
2.Balancing community values and mobility needs
3.Efficient use of energy resources
4.Protection of the environment
5.Coordinated land use and transportation planning
6.Local and state economic development goals
7.Complementing and enhancing existing Department standards and processes
Chapter 21 of Plans Preparation Manual: TDLC credit: Eric E Johnson / Flickr
21. Talking about Accommodating All Modes in Design is too Late
Planning
PD&E
Design
ROW
Impacts ($, Public Trust, Mitigation)
Construction
Built Project
•More Costly
•More Community Controversy
•More Mitigation Cost
•Least cost
•More opportunities to incorporate community goals
•Greater flexibility to evaluate a wide range of options
22. State
Directives
Regional
Planning
And
Priorities
(LRTPs)
Planning
Capital
Improvement
Programs
PD&E & Preliminary Engineering
Final Design
& Permitting
ROW & Utilities
Construction & Maintenance
When should we plan?
23. What projects do you want?
What problems do we have?
How can we leverage our investments to make us more sustainable and competitive?
Multi-Modal Planning
Stronger planning leads to better results
What opportunities do we have?
26. Land Use Strategies
•Land Use Policies/Regulations
•Detailed Land Use Plans
•Land Use Programs
•Other Land Use Strategies
Transportation Strategies (all modes)
•Capital Improvements
•Transportation Operations
•Maintenance Project
•More Detailed/Area-Specific Transportation Plans and Programs
•Other Transportation Strategies
Other Strategies
•Utility/Infrastructure Improvements
•Organizational Changes
•Do nothing (No-Build)
•Other Strategies
Planning within the project development process
Long Range Transportation Plans
FDOT Operations
Other Sources
Sources for Planning Studies
Multi-modal Corridor Planning
31. •4-lane major arterial, recently widened to 6 lanes
•Future travel demand far exceeds future capacity
•Limited alternative parallel network
•Roadway being used for BOTH local and regional trips
•Designated a multi-modal corridor in TRANSPORTATION 2035
•Multi-modal solutions viable only with land use strategies
Lake Apopka
Lake Minneola
Lake Minnehaha
Citrus Tower
Hancock
Avalon
Hartwood Marsh
Johns Lake
SR 50
the challenge
32. 1974
The Turnpike - now completed - provides a new and faster connection to N & S Florida
Small subdivisions become a more common as a development type
Commercial Development starts along SR 50 near US 27
Residential development continues S & E of downtown
33. 1999
Citrus Tower Blvd becomes a major connection to SR-50
Rapid residential development occurs
34. 2010
Few sections of local network added
Most of undeveloped land is located along the south side of SR 50 and East of US 27
Development of large commercial parcels becomes common
Some development on previously approved master planned communities continues
35. Weekday AM Peak East Bound Traffic
Weekday PM Peak West Bound Traffic
Corridor used for local traffic
36. Network does not support effective
multi-modal local traffic
Historic Clermont Street Network
Newer development East of Clermont
37. 1 Preserve & Celebrate Our Landscape
2 Preserve Historic Character & Sense of Place
3 More Play
4
Enhance Local Connectivity & Walkability
5 “Turn the Car Around”
community values & guiding principles
38. Scenario A Scenario B
Existing Roadway
Proposed Roadway
Existing Multi-use Trail
Proposed Multi-use Trail
Potential Bus Stop
45. credit: Pablo Abreu / Flickr
Evolving DOT Role
Reactive to Land Use Decisions
Proactive Partner
CSS &
Multi-Modal Mobility
Auto Through- put Economic Development & Other Community Goals