Appendix A — Other Boston Region Transportation Planning Projects
Appendix B — Public Participation and Response to Public Comments
Appendix C — Federal Fiscal Year 2017 UPWP Universe of Proposed New Studies
Appendix D — Geographic Distribution of UPWP Funded Studies
Appendix E — MPO Glossary of Acronyms
This appendix consists of brief descriptions of planning studies that will be conducted in the Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) area by individual agencies (Massachusetts Department of Transportation [MassDOT], Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority [MBTA], etc.) and municipalities during federal fiscal year (FFY) 2017. MPO funding will not be used for these studies, although in certain instances an agency or one of its consultants may contract with MPO staff (Central Transportation Planning Staff [CTPS]) to provide support for the preparation of an environmental impact report or a large-scale study. CTPS support work is described in Chapters 5 through 8.
The projects in this appendix are not subject to the MPO’s public participation process. Rather, they follow their own public processes, some of which may be required by the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (MEPA). They are included here to provide a more complete picture of all of the surface-transportation planning projects occurring in the Boston region.
Allston I-90, Massachusetts Turnpike Interchange Improvement Project |
Agency: MassDOT |
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The proposed project consists of an interchange improvement project to address the structural and geometric deficiencies of the I-90 Allston Interchange between Cambridge Street and Commonwealth Avenue in the city of Boston. Context-sensitive design alternatives will be discussed and will then be developed for further evaluation in an environmental document that will ensure that the reconstructed interchange and ramp configurations will continue to support the vehicular loading conditions and provide safe and reliable transportation access. The existing viaduct has severely deteriorated, and alternatives under consideration for its replacement will provide MassDOT the opportunity to reconfigure the Allston Interchange, which dates from the 1965 extension of the Massachusetts Turnpike to Downtown Boston. This project includes the provision of improving the alignment of I-90 between Cambridge Street and Commonwealth Avenue when all electronic tolling (AET) is implemented. Provisions for improved access through the project area for alternative modes of transportation will also be considered.
Arsenal Street Corridor Transportation Study |
Agency: MassDOT |
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The Arsenal Street Corridor Transportation Study aims to evaluate existing and future multimodal transportation conditions along the Arsenal Street corridor in the town of Watertown and its surrounding communities in order to develop and analyze alternatives to improve transportation conditions. The study will have a primary focus on bus service along Arsenal Street and at locations where bus service ties into crossing bus routes, including but not limited to MBTA routes 57, 70/70A, 71, and 73. In addition, the study will examine and evaluate alternatives in the context of vehicular, bicycle, and pedestrian use; land use; economic development; community effects; health effects; and cost. The impact on existing users of the transportation network will also be examined. The study will produce a final report that will include analytical findings, a recommended plan of future scheduled transportation improvements (short-term, medium-term, and long-term), preliminary cost estimates for these improvements, and a comprehensive implementation plan for the recommended improvements.
Cape Cod Canal Transportation Study |
Agency: MassDOT |
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The purpose of the Cape Cod Canal Transportation Study is to identify improvements to the transportation system in the area surrounding the Cape Cod Canal in Bourne and Sandwich, Massachusetts, including the construction of new Cape Cod Canal crossings. This study will include the development and analysis of a full range of transportation alternatives to address the identified transportation needs. The alternatives considered will include new or replacement Cape Cod Canal crossings; highway, interchange, and non-highway improvements; and other options and design elements that improve access in all modes. The alternatives will be evaluated using criteria that relate to the study’s goals and objectives. The study will result in the production of a final report that includes analytical findings, a recommended plan of future scheduled transportation improvements (short-term, medium-term, and long-term), preliminary cost estimates for these improvements, and a comprehensive implementation plan for the recommended improvements.
Climate Change Adaptation Plan:Phase I, Transportation Asset Vulnerability Assessment |
Agency: MassDOT |
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MassDOT will be conducting a statewide transportation asset vulnerability assessment. The Office of Transportation Planning kicked off the first phase of the Climate Change Adaptation Plan: Transportation Asset Vulnerability Assessment in summer 2015. This will include developing future climate scenarios for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts as well as a detailed assessment of the risks posed to the full inventory of MassDOT assets from the climate and extreme weather predictions.
Everett Transit Study |
Agency: MassDOT |
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Everett, a small densely populated urban city located across the Mystic River from Boston, is currently in the process of revitalizing its neighborhoods by attracting new or expanding existing industrial and business users, remediating brownfields, enhancing residential quality of life, and improving waterfront access. Many substantial future development and redevelopment projects have been identified by the city of Everett and MassDOT.
The massive change associated with such development presents the challenge of creating a balanced and integrated multimodal transportation system capable of serving the city for its long-term success. MassDOT will form a project team to create a transit-focused transportation plan given the future forecasts of major development.
I-93/I-95 Interchange Improvements Project |
Agency: MassDOT |
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MassDOT intends to redesign and reconstruct the I-93/I-95 Interchange to improve traffic flow and safety. The I-93/I-95 Interchange lies at the center of a regional highway network serving Massachusetts and the rest of New England. It is also an important link for the local communities of Woburn, Reading, Stoneham, Wakefield, and other neighboring towns. This interchange experiences heavy traffic volumes during peak hours. Delays are common during peak commuting times, with traffic often dangerously backed up from the ramps onto the mainline highways.
An in-depth planning study of the I-93/I-95 Interchange, completed in 2007, analyzed and recommended several short-term and long-term improvement alternatives. As a part of the required National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (MEPA) processes, and to complete an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and Environmental Impact Report (EIR), MassDOT now desires to refine and develop variations of the alternative interchange configurations and to evaluate the potential for improvements that are expected to enhance mobility and safety for users.
Intelligent Transportation Systems: Development and Implementation |
Agency: MassDOT |
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MassDOT is engaged in planning, developing, and implementing intelligent transportation systems (ITS) to more effectively operate the transportation system in Massachusetts. MassDOT’s Office of Transportation Planning conducts ITS planning, as described in the State Planning and Research Program, Part I. Current planning activities include implementing a statewide ITS planning program, deploying a recently completed statewide ITS strategic plan, maintaining and updating the regional ITS architecture for metropolitan Boston and other regions within the state, increasing awareness of ITS within the transportation community and among related stakeholders, planning activities in support of the use of ITS as a tool for improving system performance and function, and providing assistance in planning for the use of ITS for all modes.
MassDOT’s Highway Division established the ITS Programs Unit within the Statewide Operations Division to design, develop, implement, and maintain ITS systems for the state highway system. The ITS Programs Unit works with consultants and contractors on these rapidly evolving technologies. Current activities in the Boston region include operation of the Statewide Traffic Operations Center in South Boston, operation of the high-occupancy-vehicle (HOV) lanes on I-93 into Boston from the north and south, expansion of the real time travel monitoring (RTTM) system deployment, operation of the Massachusetts Interagency Video Information System (MIVIS) and advanced traveler-information system, and development of an Advanced Transportation Management System.
Kendall Square Mobility Task Force |
Agency: MassDOT |
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MassDOT’s Kendall Square Mobility Task Force process will provide a holistic approach to mobility issues in the Kendall Square area of Cambridge. In recent years, the city of Cambridge, MassDOT, the MBTA, institutions, and private organizations have documented the need for improved mobility in Kendall Square through a series of studies and initiatives. The existing mobility issues and deficiencies identified through these processes, coupled with planned growth in Kendall Square and East Cambridge, has created a need to develop a transportation strategy to address local and regional mobility needs and to mitigate potential future impacts.
The Kendall Square Mobility Task Force will work to identify projects and policy initiatives in support of the continued success of the Kendall Square area. These projects and initiatives will be technically and financially achievable over the short-term, medium-term, and long-term horizons. The task force will consider the capacity of connections into and within the Kendall Square area.
CTPS will support the Kendall Square Mobility Task Force through the MassDOT Statewide Planning and Research Program Support work (see Chapter 7 for additional information).
MassDOT Greenhouse Gas Strategies Phase II—Energy and Emissions Reduction Policy Analysis Tool (EERPAT) Strategy Testing |
Agency: MassDOT |
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MassDOT is working with the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EOEEA) to adapt the Federal Highway Administration's (FHWA’s) Energy and Emissions Reduction Policy Analysis Tool (EERPAT), which will enable modeling of the effectiveness of various approaches to reducing transportation sector greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. EERPAT will help MassDOT model the GHG impacts associated with capital investments and examine system adjustments for both transit and roadway operations. This tool also may allow modeling of the impacts of GHG education and encouragement policies designed to encourage mode shift, carpooling, and eco-driving. The results of this modeling and other analyses will be used to refine the transportation sector strategies included in EEOEA’s Clean Energy and Climate Plan (CECP) for 2020.
MBTA Modal Plans |
Agency: MassDOT |
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MassDOT’s Office of Transportation Planning will be undertaking a series of mode-specific plans as part of the update of the Program for Mass Transportation. MassDOT will procure consultant support for the technical and civic engagement elements of the modal plans.
CTPS will support the development of MBTA Modal Plans through the MassDOT Statewide Planning and Research Program support work.
McCarthy Overpass on McGrath Highway (Route 28) |
Agency: MassDOT |
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In 2011, MassDOT launched a planning process, generally known as Grounding McGrath, to determine the future of this section of the Route 28 corridor and particularly the McCarthy Overpass, which was determined to be in poor structural condition and in need of substantial repairs to both its substructure and superstructure. To follow up on the study Grounding McGrath: Determining the Future of the Route 28 Corridor, MassDOT will develop state and federal environmental review documents as part of the project development process for the preferred alternative for this project.
Northern New England Intercity Rail Initiative |
Agency: MassDOT |
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The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, with the participation of the state of Vermont and the state of Connecticut, is conducting the Northern New England Intercity Rail Initiative (NNEIRI) Feasibility and Planning Studyto identify upgrades and improvements along two major rail corridors known as the Inland Route and the Boston-to-Montreal Route that make up part of the federally designated Northern New England High-Speed Rail Corridor. The Inland Route rail corridor connects the cities of Boston, MA and New Haven, CT via the cities of Worcester, MA and Springfield, MA. Improvements to the Inland Route may facilitate initiation of passenger train service along a second route between Boston and New York at speeds comparable to the existing Amtrak regional trains that travel along the Northeast Corridor. The Boston-to-Montreal rail corridor connects the cities of Boston, MA and Montreal, Quebec via Springfield, MA and White River Junction, VT. Both corridors share common track on the route between the cities of Boston and Springfield. This study will result in a draft Service Development Plan for each passenger rail corridor and a Tier 1 Draft Environmental Impact Study, the first document necessary to comply with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) for high-speed rail service along both the Inland Route and the Boston-to-Montreal rail corridor.
Route 107 Corridor Study |
Agency: MassDOT |
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The purpose of this study is to evaluate operational and potential geometric improvements that would address the existing issues and mitigate the potential future impacts of new retail development along Route 107 in the cities of Lynn and Salem. The project extends from Wilson Street in Salem to Maple Street in Lynn. A plan for future transportation improvements (short-term, medium-term, and long-term), based on an alternatives analysis, will be the end product of this project.
South Station Expansion Project |
Agency: MassDOT |
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The 13 tracks currently available at Boston’s South Station significantly constrain current and future rail mobility, not only within Massachusetts but throughout New England and Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor. South Station operates above its design capacity for efficient train operations and orderly passenger queuing, and lacks comfortable, modern facilities for passenger queuing, leaving riders standing in the elements as they wait to board their trains.
This project will complete all necessary analysis of alternatives, environmental review, and preliminary engineering (approximately the 30 percent design phase) required for the expansion of South Station and for the development of a new midday commuter rail layover facility. The project will include planning and designing an enhanced passenger environment at South Station through improved streetscape and pedestrian, bicycle, local transit, and vehicular facilities in and around South Station, including the reopening of Dorchester Avenue at the station for public use. The project will consider opportunities for joint public-private development above an expanded South Station, and will also include a plan for the relocation of the existing US Postal Service General Mail Facility, which must be moved to accommodate the station’s expansion.
Plan for Accessible Transportation Infrastructure (PATI) Prioritization Criteria |
Agency: MBTA |
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The MBTA will be cataloging access barriers at each subway station, commuter rail station, and bus stop. Stations and bus stops that are considered accessible today will be surveyed starting in spring 2016. Parallel to the survey effort, a working group comprised of MBTA officials and disability/accessibility stakeholders (PATI Engagement Committee) will develop a shared method for prioritizing the removal of the barriers in a manner that is sustainable and has the largest possible positive impact on access.
Downtown Beverly Parking Plan |
Agency: City of Beverly |
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The city of Beverly will procure consulting services to conduct a comprehensive parking analysis and plan for the two core commercial districts located in downtown Beverly along Cabot and Rantoul Streets. Project scope will include analysis of the existing conditions, development of policy and management recommendations to maximize utilization of existing parking spaces, and, where necessary, make recommendations for additional parking capacity. The parking strategy will provide policy recommendations that will support continued redevelopment and success for downtown businesses and institutions while continuing to serve current and future downtown residents.
Dudley Square Complete Streets Design Project |
Agency: City of Boston |
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The Dudley Square Complete Streets Design Project is a Boston Transportation Department (BTD)–led initiative and community-planning process that will develop roadway, intersection, and streetscape design plans for construction in Dudley Square. The initiative aims to modernize existing conditions and bolster the ongoing municipal and private investment projects in Dudley Square, including the Ferdinand Building and the former Area B-2 police station site. The project will consider a range of improvements for traffic, parking, buses, pedestrians, bicycles, accessibility, and the overall safety and aesthetics of the streets and sidewalks. Special emphasis will be given to developing plans that improve the multimodal environment of Dudley Square and build upon previous planning initiatives. The geographic limits of work are generally bounded by Dudley Street between Shawmut Avenue and Harrison Avenue, Washington Street between Shawmut Extension and Melnea Cass Boulevard, and Warren Street between Kearsarge Avenue and Washington Street.
Rutherford Avenue—Sullivan Square Design Project, Charlestown |
Agency: City of Boston |
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The city of Boston is proceeding with the redesign of the Rutherford Avenue corridor in Charlestown, which extends about 1.5 miles from the North Washington Street Bridge to Sullivan Square and provides a critical connection between Everett, Somerville, other suburbs north and east of Boston, and Boston’s downtown business area. The corridor’s highway-like design is inconsistent with present day circumstances, and the function and design of the Sullivan Square rotary is problematic. Pedestrian mobility is limited, and bicycle travel is not compatible with the high-speed road. The corridor is 8 to 10 lanes wide (120 to 140 feet), which has created a significant barrier to areas on either side of the roadway, including Bunker Hill Community College, Paul Revere Park, the Hood Business Park employment area, and MBTA rapid transit stations.
There are significant transit-oriented development (TOD) opportunities along the corridor, and public investment in new infrastructure will provide support for the development of commercial and residential uses that otherwise would be unlikely or unable to locate in the area. A number of major structural elements in the corridor were constructed more than 60 years ago; they are approaching the end of their life cycle and will need to be replaced. With the completion of the Central Artery/Tunnel (CA/T) project and more traffic on roadways such as I-93 and US Route 1, a dramatic reduction in traffic volumes along Rutherford Avenue presents a unique opportunity to transform the corridor’s character from a 1950s automobile-oriented facility to a 21st-century multimodal urban boulevard corridor that will attract private developments.
Grand Junction Greenway |
Agency: City of Cambridge |
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The vision of the Grand Junction corridor with a multi-use path alongside the existing tracks was first formally envisioned as a top priority by the 2000 Cambridge Green Ribbon Open Space Committee in its study of possible new parks and open space in the city. Since then, feasibility studies have been completed, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) provided $500,000 in funds to the Cambridge Redevelopment Authority for construction of a segment of the path between Broadway and Main Street, which was completed in spring 2016. In fiscal year 2016, the city undertook a physical survey of the northern portion of the corridor to be used as the basis for a more detailed design of the path. In addition, deed and plan research provided better understanding for the need and impact of a zoning overlay to protect land for the path. In fiscal year 2017, the city will continue to explore the development of a concept for a multi-use path that works with future transit options from Massachusetts Avenue north to the Somerville line. Design review will be coordinated with MassDOT and the MBTA, which own and operate trains in the right of way.
Envision Cambridge |
Agency: City of Cambridge |
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The city of Cambridge has embarked on Envision Cambridge, a comprehensive multi-year planning process, to create a shared vision for the community and to develop policy and design goals and actionable recommendations to guide future changes in the city. This work will integrate and build upon existing policies, programs, and initiatives through an inclusive, wide-reaching process that looks beyond traditional planning efforts to engage the public, analyze information, and craft solutions. Residents, business employers and employees, property owners and developers, institutions, nonprofit organizations, and many other stakeholders will be active participants in this process and a key component to ensuring that the citywide plan reflects the values of the entire community.
City staff are working with a community advisory committee and an interdisciplinary consultant team that will use a rigorous, data-driven process to complement and augment the capacity of the city staff. This process will result in a strategic framework that addresses a broad range of issues, including mobility, housing, land use, urban design, climate resiliency, social equity, economic development, and open space.
Newton in Motion |
Agency: City of Newton |
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The city of Newton has launched Newton in Motion, a year-long initiative to focus on a transportation strategy for the city. The Newton-in-Motion project will produce a comprehensive guide towards a more equitable and economically and environmentally sustainable multimodal transportation system. This plan will create a nuanced and up-to-date strategy that carries the Newton Comprehensive Plan forward while also complementing the missions of the Housing Strategy and Sustainability Plan. This plan will also be a strategy that is adaptable to changing travel patterns within the city and region as well as to the rapid growth of transportation options. Produced from extensive community engagement and data analysis, the strategy will address the needs of all members of the Newton community and will provide a variety of real options that support a balance among all modes of transportation.
The Newton-in-Motion project will collect public input through online methods as well as through three series of public workshops: one focused on transportation visions and goal setting; one focused on preliminary transportation concepts, including some pilot demonstrations of ideas; and one presenting and collecting input on a draft strategy. Each meeting will have an associated online activity. The project will have a number of benchmark deliverables, including:
Citywide Mobility Plan |
Agency: City of Somerville |
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In 2015, the city of Somerville will launch a 12–18 month citywide strategic planning process focusing on mobility. Extensive data collection and analysis will be conducted, and deliverables will include customized multimodal level-of-service criteria for Somerville. Street typologies and design standards will be established. Capital and operating budgets will be evaluated, and related policies, programs, and projects will be studied and prioritized for consistency with the adopted SomerVision Comprehensive Plan.
Union Square Neighborhood Plan (includes Streetscape and Utilities Design and Engineering) |
Agency: City of Somerville |
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In 2015, the city of Somerville will begin construction of the Union Square Early Action streetscape and utility improvements, which will return Prospect Street and Webster Avenue to their historic two-way configuration. Simultaneously, the Somerville by Design neighborhood plan for Union Square will be completed, which will include a longer-term streetscape improvement plan, as well as deep utility engineering, for the study area.
Fairmount Planning Initiatives |
Agency: Various |
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State transportation agencies are partnering with federal agencies, the city of Boston, and neighborhood-based organizations on a number of planning initiatives designed to improve access to transit and promote sustainable development in the Fairmount Corridor. These initiatives, which are underway as the MBTA completes major infrastructure improvements and three of the four planned new stations on the Fairmount Line, include:
Ferry Compact |
Agency: Various |
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The Ferry Compact’s principal mission is to identify an overall vision for the ferry system in Massachusetts that improves the transportation of people, goods, and vehicles by water. The Compact’s membership (including MassDOT, the MBTA, Massport, the Massachusetts General Court, the Steamship Authority, the Seaport Advisory Council, the Boston Harbor Association, and several Boston region municipalities) is a mix of state agencies, state and local elected officials, and other organizations that are dedicated to improving ferry transportation in the commonwealth. For more information, visit MassDOT’s Ferry Compact website (https://www.massdot.state.ma.us/planning/Main/StatewidePlans/FerryCompact.aspx).
Go Boston 2030 |
Agency: Various |
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The goal of this multiyear planning process is to envision the city of Boston’s long-term transportation future and recommend policies and projects that will support improved and equitable access to jobs, education, and health care. The focus of Go Boston 2030 will be to improve roadway safety, alleviate congestion, promote alternatives to cars, and build new transit connections. The plan will be linked to economic revitalization and ongoing climate change initiatives. The Boston Transportation Department will lead an interagency team for Go Boston 2030, which will be driven by a far-reaching public engagement process.
South Coast Rail Project |
Agency: Various |
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The South Coast Rail project will restore passenger rail transportation from South Station in Boston to the South Coast of Massachusetts, including the cities of Taunton, New Bedford, and Fall River. The Final Environmental Impact Statement/Report (FEIS/R) was issued in September 2013, and the state was authorized to advance permitting in November 2013. The project will include 10 new stations, modifications at Canton Junction and Stoughton, and two layover facilities at the end of both the Fall River Secondary leg at the Weaver’s Cove East site and the end of the New Bedford Mainline leg at the Wamsutta site.
Next steps for this project include advancing the preliminary engineering (including approximately the 15 percent design phase) and permitting processes, which will include a final Wetlands Mitigation Plan that must be approved by the US Army Corps of Engineers prior to issuing their Record of Decision (ROD). These activities will be led by the MBTA. In addition, the project team has been meeting with permitting agencies to develop a strategy and process for obtaining permits in the most expeditious and prudent manner possible. Preliminary engineering efforts were completed in the fall of 2015. As of the fall of 2015, the U.S. Army Corps permit was in process and the agency chose a preferred route. Additionally, the Section 106 historic resources permitting process was substantially completed.To further other permitting and environmental approval processes, the project team has coordinated with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, the Massachusetts Natural Heritage and Endangered Species Program, the Federal Highway Administration, the Federal Transit Administration, the Massachusetts Historic Commission, and the Massachusetts Division of Fish and Wildlife.
MassDOT and the MBTA also moved forward with several projects that have independent utility (separate, complete projects), including upgrading and/or replacing grade crossings and replacing several rail bridges (four bridges in Fall River and six bridges in New Bedford).
The Southeastern Regional Planning and Economic Development District (SRPEDD) directs the South Coast Rail Task Force, which is composed of appointed members from the 31 communities in the South Coast Rail Corridor, as well as regional transit authorities and environmental groups. Initially established as a result of the 2002 Secretary’s Certificate, the focus of the task force is now limited to land use planning rather than route determination and vetting. Visit the South Coast Rail website for more information on this project and updates to the environmental, engineering, and construction schedules (http://www.massdot.state.ma.us/southcoastrail/Home.aspx).
NEC FUTURE |
Agency: Federal Railroad Administration |
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NEC FUTURE is a comprehensive federal planning effort, launched by the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) in February 2012, to define, evaluate, and prioritize future investments in the Northeast Corridor (NEC) from Washington, D.C. to Boston. The FRA has initiated a comprehensive planning process for future investment in the corridor through 2040. Through the NEC FUTURE program, the FRA will determine a long-term vision and investment program for the NEC and will provide a Tier 1 Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and Service Development Plan (SDP) in 2016 in support of that vision. Technical work includes an analysis of market conditions in the corridor, the development of program alternatives, an evaluation of the environmental impacts of those alternatives, and a recommended approach that balances the needs of various users of the corridor (whether commuters, intercity passengers, or freight) in a manner that ensures safe, efficient travel throughout the Northeast. For more information, visit the NEC Future website (http://www.necfuture.com/).
New England University Transportation Center (Region One) |
Agency: Colleges and Universities |
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The New England University Transportation Center (Region One) is a research consortium that includes the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (lead university), Harvard University, and the state universities of Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Maine. It is funded by the United States Department of Transportation's University Transportation Centers (UTC) Program. The New England UTC conducts multiyear research programs that seek to assess and make improvements to transportation safety, as well as to develop a systems-level understanding of livable communities. For further information, visit the New England University Transportation Center’s website (http://utc.mit.edu/).
The staff of the Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) followed the procedures set forth in the MPO’s adopted Public Participation Plan for the Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization when developing the federal fiscal year (FFY) 2017 Unified Planning Work Program (UPWP). These procedures are designed to ensure early and continued public involvement in the transportation-planning process.
The FFY 2017 UPWP development process began in September 2015. Staff solicited topics for study through outreach at Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) subregional group meetings. Staff also sought suggestions at Regional Transportation Advisory Council meetings and through public outreach at two development sessions for the Transportation Improvement Program (TIP) and the UPWP. Staff considered these suggestions and public input, as well as comments received during the FFY 2016 public review period and inputs from recent planning documents in the FFY 2017 UPWP draft development process. This process, described in Chapter 1, culminated in the MPO UPWP Committee’s recommendation for the FFY 2017 UPWP budget. The committee also recommended a set of new studies for inclusion in the FFY 2017 UPWP draft for public review, which was subsequently approved by the MPO for public circulation on June 2, 2016. MPO staff also has presented information on the recommended new studies to the Regional Transportation Advisory Council.
Following the MPO’s approval for circulating the FFY 2017 UPWP draft for public review, staff posted the document on the MPO’s website (http://bosmpo.ctps.org/upwp). Staff also emailed the MPO’s contact list (MPOinfo) notifying recipients of the document’s availability and of the 30-day period for public review and comment. The email list includes chief elected officials and planning directors of the region’s 101 municipalities, the Regional Transportation Advisory Council, the MAPC subregional groups, participants in the MPO’s transportation equity work, state legislators, public libraries in the region, and many other interested parties. In addition to the MPO’s website, this information was also posted in the MPO’s newsletter (TRANSreport). Additionally, a press release was sent to local and regional media outlets.
During the review period, the MPO held two public workshops (called “office hours”) during which MPO staff made themselves available, either in person or over the phone, to stakeholders who wanted to discuss the FFY 2017 UPWP draft. These meetings were also used to gather input from the public about their planning priorities. All of these MPO meetings and public workshops, which were held to discuss the FFY 2017 UPWP draft, were accessible by transit service and to people with disabilities.
A summary of written comments on the FFY 2017 UPWP draft, as well as the MPO’s responses to those comments, can be found in Table B‑1.
Comment Number | Comment Origin | How was Comment Received? | Chapter | Page # in Public Review Draft | Section | Comment | MPO Response | Revision to UPWP Text |
1 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Overall | Overall | Overall | MassDOT submitted several comments addressing editorial revisions and clarifying questions on budget amounts and work descriptions. These are not included separately as they do not require substantive revisions to the document. | All revisions will be made in response to MassDOT's editorial and clarifying comments. | Yes |
2 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Overall | Overall | Overall | Provide a geographic distribution table of UPWP-funded studies by municipality, including the name of the beneficiary and the number of tasks per year, along with an accompanying narrative. | This is being developed and will be included with the final UPWP document. | Yes (The draft included a placeholder for this summary.) |
3 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 3/Regulatory Framework | 3-8 | 3.2 | Add discussion about how the UPWP ties into state guidance and transportation priorities. | Language will be added to the final UPWP to discuss how studies and ongoing work funded through the UPWP relate to state guidance and transportation priorities. Proposed addition under Section 3.2: As described in Chapters 6 through 8, much of the work funded through the UPWP focuses on encouraging mode shift and diminishing GHG emissions through improving transit service, enhancing bicycle and pedestrian networks, and studying emerging transportation technologies. All of this work helps the Boston region contribute to statewide progress towards the priorities discussed throughout this section. |
Yes |
4 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 4/Federal Fiscal Years 2014-2016 Completed UPWP Studies | 4-3 | Table 4-1 | These are only federal funds and do not include match? Or do they? Specify | All budget numbers throughout the UPWP include the federal and local match amounts. A note will be added to the table to clarify this. | Yes |
5 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 5/Certification Requirements | 5-3 | Table 5-1 | General comment on funding differences: If the activities are "generally the same," then why are we increasing/decreasing the costs (in some cases, significantly) on some of these tasks? Suggest providing a more detailed explanation in that regard. | Text will be added preceding the table to explain reasons that there are differences between FFY 2016 and FFY 2017 budgets for various tasks and work areas. Proposed addition: The tables show some differences in the budgets for CTPS and MAPC tasks between FFY 2016 and FFY 2017. There are several reasons for these differences. In some years, MPO staff may plan to undertake new or additional data collection and analysis under specific line items; there may be greater emphasis placed on a task in a given year (e.g., the final year in an LRTP development cycle); there may be a determination that the tasks undertaken as part of one line item may be combined with an ongoing activity; and there may be staff fluctuations from year to year. Where possible, explanations will be added for line items in which the budget has changed significantly. |
Yes |
6 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-9 | Study of Promising Greenhouse Gas Reduction Strategies | Ensure this document and efforts therewith are not largely a rehashing of previous efforts. The approach appears to be focused on regional impacts, but care should be taken not to bog the study down with information staff has already researched and presented. | As described in the "Approach" section of this study, the objective of this work is to build off of the 2016 GHG Reduction Strategies Study. Specifically, this study funded in FFY 2017, would focus on a particular subset of the 14 strategies identified in the 2016 report to understand the potential for their implementation at a regional level. | No |
7 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-9 | Study of Promising Greenhouse Gas Reduction Strategies | Please coordinate with OTP's Sustainable Transportation Group on these efforts to avoid duplication with the Energy and Emissions Reduction Policy Analysis Tool (EERPAT) for evaluating transportation sector GHG reduction measures in Massachusetts, which was performed by Cambridge Systematics for MassDOT. | As the work scope for this study is developed, CTPS will coordinate with OTP's Sustainable Transportation Group. | No |
8 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-10 | Addressing Priority Corridors from the Long-Range Transportation Plan Needs Assessment | What necessarily is considered a "high level of congestion"? | Congestion is used as one of the selection criteria for potential study locations. Congested conditions are defined as a travel time index of at least 1.3 (this means that a trip takes 30 percent longer than it would under ideal conditions). The text will be clarified to explain this. | Yes |
9 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-14 | Low-Cost Improvements to Express-Highway Bottlenecks | Define what low-cost infrastructure solutions mean, and provide examples from previous efforts. | Low-cost infrastructure solutions can be defined as design or operational infrastructure solutions as opposed to major construction projects. Low-cost solutions stay within existing right-of-ways and often involve things like re-striping lanes or utilizing existing highway shoulder areas for an additional lane. Examples of recommendations from previous phases of this study include creating an auxiliary lane for merging and diverging traffic and lengthening the deceleration lane at an exit. Text will be added to the document to clarify this project description. | Yes |
10 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-16 | Planning for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles | Then what? We need to have a next step here. If the first step is research, we should have another step in mind. | Suggested addition: The next step would be to follow up on the recommendations. These could be related to model development, data resources, or planning studies. | Yes |
11 | MassDOT | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-18 | MPO Staff-Generated Research Topics | Provide examples from the last two years. I believe MPO members expressed interest in knowing more about this as well. | This program was funded for the first time in FFY 2016. The work being undertaken in FFY 2016 consists of investigating the possibility of using drivers-license acquisition rates obtained through RMV data as a possible measure of transit dependence. The thought is that current measures of transit dependence, such as vehicles per household, may not be an accurate measure given the availability of car-sharing services such as zipcar. Therefore, this research aims to develop a new measure of transit dependence that could be more accurate and meaningful. |
Yes |
12 | Joan Meschino, Candidate for State Representative, Third Plymouth District | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-14 | Low-Cost Improvements to Express-Highway Bottlenecks | The Braintree Split is a major interchange that is crippled daily by extreme congestion. Many South Shore residents are tied up daily at this bottleneck. They suffer extended travel times and unsafe roadway conditions. The Braintree Split is also one of the high-priority locations identified in the MPO's Long-Range Transportation Plan. I ask that the MPO fund this study and give attention to the Braintree Split. | The MPO completed a corridor study about the Braintree Split in 2006 (http://www.ctps.org/braintree_split). This corridor and the surrounding transportation network remains a high priority of the MPO, and the issues in this area will continue to be considered for cost-effective and multimodal solutions that can be implemented. |
No |
13 | Joan Meschino, Candidate for State Representative, Third Plymouth District | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | Overall | Overall | I write to support several planning studies and ongoing programs that would be particularly helpful for South Shore towns (Hingham, Hull, Cohasset, and Scituate), as they work to address local transportation problems. These towns have varied and important transportation needs. In addition, I am advocating for proposed work in greenhouse gas reduction. For the FFY 2018 UPWP, I suggest planning for more commuter-boat service and for intra-community shuttle buses, including shuttle buses to commuter boats and/or the commuter rail. |
The MPO appreciates Ms. Meschino's comments and will consider these points as work programmed in the FFY 2017 UPWP is planned in further detail and in the development of the FFY 2018 UPWP. | No |
14 | Joan Meschino, Candidate for State Representative, Third Plymouth District | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-12 | Addressing Safety, Mobility, and Access on Subregional Priority Roadways | Earlier versions of this study have focused on priority needs in MAPC's South Shore Coalition, and the Coalition and municipalities have greatly appreciated this work. These studies typically identify implementable, complete streets solutions that are well-received by municipalities. I support continuing this series of studies and hope that locations in the South Shore Coalition might be considered again as an area of focus. | The MPO appreciates Ms. Meschino's comments and will consider these points as work programmed in the FFY 2017 UPWP is planned in further detail and in the development of the FFY 2018 UPWP. | No |
15 | Joan Meschino, Candidate for State Representative, Third Plymouth District | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-10 | Addressing Priority Corridors from the Long-Range Transportation Plan Needs Assessment | This study could help address the serious traffic problems on the South Shore's heavily congested arterials: Route 3A, Route 228, Route 53, and Route 18. Please include it in the UPWP. |
The MPO appreciates Ms. Meschino's comments and will consider these points as work programmed in the FFY 2017 UPWP is planned in further detail and in the development of the FFY 2018 UPWP. | No |
16 | Joan Meschino, Candidate for State Representative, Third Plymouth District | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-9 | Study of Promising Greenhouse Gas Reduction Strategies | I heartily support the MPO's ongoing work to identify effective steps to reduce GHGs. The outcomes of this work are essential to having real impact in slowing the advance of climate change and related sea-level rise — a real threat to South Shore communities. This study can guide the MPO and the state to do our part to help minimize the devastating effects of inaction or ineffective action in reducing GHGs produced by transportation. | The MPO appreciates Ms. Meschino's comments and will consider these points as work programmed in the FFY 2017 UPWP is planned in further detail and in the development of the FFY 2018 UPWP. | No |
17 | Joan Meschino, Candidate for State Representative, Third Plymouth District | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-19 through 6-23 | Bicycle/Pedestrian Support Activities; Regional Transit Service Planning Technical Support; Community Transportation Technical Assistance Program | I ask that the MPO fund the ongoing technical analysis programs: Bicycle/Pedestrian Support Activities; Regional Transit Service Planning Technical Support; and the Community Transportation Technical Assistance Program. These programs provide essential guidance and input to local officials in support of their initiatives to improve mobility through better bicycle and pedestrian facilities and new, locally operated bus transit. These programs are an effective way of sharing the MPO's expertise with local officials who are aiming to make improvements. I support this ongoing work and, if they are funded, will work to raise awareness about them within the South Shore. | The MPO appreciates Ms. Meschino's comments and will consider these points as work programmed in the FFY 2017 UPWP is planned in further detail and in the development of the FFY 2018 UPWP. | No |
18 | Terry Forrest | Phone call during public comment period outreach | Overall | Overall | Overall | Overall, Mr. Forrest wishes there would be greater discussion of accessibility issues in the TIP and UPWP. Specifically, Mr. Forrest wanted to make sure that the MPO considers accessibility issues into corridor and bicycle/pedestrian studies that are completed for municipalities. | Accessibility is factored into the TIP project evaluation. In the UPWP, accessibility is addressed through the MPO's work with the Access Advisory Committee to the MBTA; our support of the MBTA's Plan for Accessible Transit Infrastructure; and other community technical assistance that focuses on improving pedestrian connections and safety. The MPO's work, specifically studies such as Safety Analysis at Selected Intersections; Addressing Safety, Mobility, and Access on Subregional Priority Roadways; and Addressing Priority Corridors from the LRTP Needs Assessment, considers accessibility requirements and improvements. |
No |
19 | Terry Forrest | Phone call during public comment period outreach | Overall | Overall | Overall | Mr. Forrest had the following additional comments: - Interest in an improved paratransit user registration system so that people registered and approved to use paratransit in one region were automatically approved to use it throughout the state. - Interest in a Google map type of system that shows paratransit or accessible routes and extends beyond the Boston region to show accessible directions to other regions in the state. - Interest in improved access and accommodations on Amtrak to secure wheelchairs into place. Sometimes, people in wheelchairs are forced to ride in the luggage areas of the trains. |
The MPO appreciates Mr. Forrest’s comments. MPO staff forwarded his questions and concerns to the appropriate parties at the MBTA and Amtrak. Additionally, the MPO will consider accessibility focused studies and analyses in the FFY 2018 UPWP. | No |
20 | Scott Zadakis, CrossTown Connection Transportation Management Association | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-7 | Safety Effectiveness of Safe Routes to School Programs | As an organization that promotes walking and biking, CrossTown Connect supports project #13280 to improve the Safe Routes to School program. We believe bike/pedestrian to be very important, and we additionally support all other technical and planning assistance you can offer to Massachusetts communities as well as studies you conduct to better understand how to create a better, safer, and more connected network of bike/pedestrian facilities. | The MPO appreciates the comments from CrossTown Connect TMA. | No |
21 | Scott Zadakis, CrossTown Connection Transportation Management Association | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-10 and 6-21 | Addressing Priority Corridors from the Long-Range Transportation Plan Needs Assessment Regional Transit Service Planning Technical Support |
CrossTown Connect supports project #13276 addressing multimodal mobility, and we would urge CTPS to identify our region as a priority corridor. The broader 495 corridor is experiencing high levels of growth and traffic is increasingly becoming a problem, yet our towns are caught between MART, LRTA, and the MBTA. Consequently, our transit options are limited to the Fitchburg Line on the Commuter Rail and the LRTA #15 bus that comes from Lowell through Westford as far as IBM, just over the Littleton line. With a much improved reverse commute schedule on the Fitchburg Line of the Commuter Rail (three outbound trains before 9:00 AM), it will be even more important to address multimodal access and mobility in our region. If we were to be identified as a priority region, we would be very interested in addressing first and last mile connections to the Fitchburg Line with various solutions, including fixed-route shuttles, vanpools, and even ride-hailing services. It is critical as this region continues to grow that we develop a multimodal transportation system that can support it. Similarly, we strongly support programs and studies related to regional transit service planning whether carried out locally or for large organizations such as MassDOT or RTAs. |
The MPO appreciates the comments from CrossTown Connect TMA. These comments will be considered as specific study locations are being chosen for FFY 2017 planning studies and technical assistance work. The study of priority corridors identified in the LRTP is geared towards corridors specifically identified throughout the region during the development of the LRTP. These expressway and arterial corridors were defined as congested locations based on speed index, travel time index, volume-to-capacity ratio, and crash history. For the list of these corridors, please see Chapter 4 of the Regionwide Needs Assessment (http://bosmpo.ctps.org/data/pdf/plans/LRTP/charting/Charting_Progress_2040_Chapter4_final.pdf). Interstate 495 was not specifically identified as a priority corridor; however, many intersection roadways were, including a portion of Route 2 in Acton and Concord. The TMA and other stakeholders will have the ability to weigh in on which locations are chosen for study in the fall and winter (October–January) as specific study locations are defined. First-mile-and-last-mile studies are being undertaken in FFY 2017 under the Regional Transit Service Planning Technical Assistance line item in the UPWP. The TMA and other stakeholders will have the ability to weigh in on which locations are chosen for study in the fall and winter (October - January), as specific study locations are defined. Please follow up with MPO staff in the fall and winter for more information. |
No |
22 | Scott Zadakis, CrossTown Connection Transportation Management Association | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-22 | Community Transportation Technical Assistance Program | As an organization that coordinates and provides community transportation, Crosstown Connect also supports CTPS’s efforts to provide Community Transportation Technical Assistance to localities in need of your expertise. In fact CrossTown Connect recently took advantage of a DLTA grant to study potential shuttle routes connecting the Littleton Commuter Rail Station to area businesses and other locations where demand exists. This study mapped out potential routes and estimated costs for operating them. We believe that Community Transportation Technical Assistance is a powerful tool to help communities address wide-ranging issues from sidewalk facilities to high crash-rate intersections. | The MPO appreciates the comments from CrossTown Connect TMA. | No |
23 | Scott Zadakis, CrossTown Connection Transportation Management Association | Written comment to MPO staff | Chapter 7/Agency and Other Client Transportation Planning Studies and Technical Analyses | 7-8 | North-South Rail Link | As mentioned earlier, we are very pleased with the schedule enhancements on the Fitchburg Line that went into effect this past May. In order to capitalize on these enhancements further in the future, we support the updating of the analysis of the North-South Rail Link. Connecting North and South stations would increase the capacity of the system and negate the inconvenient need to transfer via two different subway lines (or another means such as a cab) when traveling through Boston by rail. It would also negate much of the South Station Expansion project by creating thru-capacity. | The MPO appreciates the comments from CrossTown Connect TMA. Please refer to Chapter 7, page 7-8 (in the public review draft of the UPWP) for a description of the North-South Rail Link work that CTPS is conducting as part of its agency-funded work. | No |
24 | Louise Baxter, T Riders Union | In-person comment during public comment period outreach | Overall | Overall | Overall | Ms. Baxter was interested in commenting on the draft UPWP and interested in the TRU being more involved in next development cycle. | The MPO welcomes your comments on the UPWP and will consider them in the development of the FFY 2018 UPWP. In order for the TRU to become more involved in the upcoming UPWP and TIP development cycles, please follow-up with either Alexandra Kleyman, TIP and UPWP Manager at akleyman@ctps.org, or Jennifer Rowe, CTPS Public Participation Program Manager at jrowe@ctps.org. MPO staff would like to work with you and the rest of the TRU to help make sure you can be more involved in our transportation planning and programming processes. |
No |
25 | Karen Dumaine, Neponset Valley TMA and Alewife TMA | Phone call during public comment period outreach | Overall | Overall | Overall | Ms. Dumaine made the following comments: - Concern about traffic and safety at the rotary near Alewife, interest in technical assistance programs. - General interest in understanding what the MPO/CTPS does, how to be involved in the processes. - Interested in having MPO Staff come speak to TMAs |
The MPO has studied traffic issues in and around the Alewife area in previous years. Data and analysis completed in 2008 and 2009 can be found on the MPO's website at http://www.ctps.org/alewife_phase_ii. If you have specific questions about addressing the transportation issues in this area, please contact Alexandra Kleyman, TIP and UPWP Manager, at akleyman@ctps.org. Jennifer Rowe, CTPS Public Participation Program Manager, will follow-up with you about further outreach to the TMA as we begin out fall public outreach. Feel free to be in touch with her at jrowe@ctps.org. |
No |
26 | Lenard Diggins, MBTA Rider Oversight Committee | In-person comment during public comment period outreach | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-16 | Planning for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles | Mr. Diggins expressed interest in this study and is happy that the MPO is undertaking it. | The MPO appreciates your comments. | No |
27 | Lenard Diggins, MBTA Rider Oversight Committee | In-person comment during public comment period outreach | Overall | Overall | Overall | Mr. Diggins would like to understand the times during the MPO UPWP process that are most appropriate for public input. | Jennifer Rowe, CTPS Public Participation Program Manager, will follow-up with you about further outreach to the MBTA Rider Oversight Committee as we begin our fall public outreach. Feel free to be in touch with her at jrowe@ctps.org. |
No |
28 | Andrea Downs, Newton Transportation Advisory Group | In-person comment during public comment period outreach | Overall | Overall | Overall | Ms. Downs made the following comments: - She supports a UPWP study on developing a level of service measure beyond vehicles. - She is interested in better bicycle and pedestrian data and counts in the region. - Other projects she supports include right-sized parking, closing safety gaps for cyclists, and safe routes to school. - She expressed frustration about transportation projects that do not provide safe accommodations for cyclists and pedestrians despite prioritization in MPO/DOT planning documents. There seems to be a gap from plan to execution. |
The MPO appreciates Ms. Downs's comments and will consider these points as work programmed in the FFY 2017 UPWP is planned in further detail and in the development of the FFY 2018 UPWP. | No |
29 | James Jay, member of the public | Chapter 6/Boston Region MPO Planning Studies and Technical Analysis | 6-27 | Alternative-Mode Planning and Coordination | It's great to see funds allocated for further implementation of the Hubway bike share program. I hope to see this in all future UPWPs, along with language surrounding: - Hubway stations at all current T stations (where there is room) - All future T station redesigns should allocate space for Hubway stations - Encouraging Hubway as a last-mile option for T riders - Including Hubway stations on certain MBTA maps - The possibility of eventually linking Hubway passes with MBTA passes - Including the MBTA's bike policy on all spider maps (especially the time frame for which bikes are allowed) |
The MPO appreciates Mr. Jay's comments and will consider these points as work programmed in the FFY 2017 UPWP is planned in further detail and in the development of the FFY 2018 UPWP. | No | |
30 | Senator Joan B. Lovely, Second Essex District | Letter | Overall | Overall | Overall | Included in the UPWP are 2 projects in the 2nd Essex Senate District. I am pleased to see the Boston Region MPO has has prioritized these studies to help achieve its transportation goals as a region. Specifically, I am thankful that the planning study and technical analysis of the Salem Cycle Track Pilot Project and at Route 114/Andover Street at Esquire Drive and Violet Road in Peabody are moving forward. | The MPO appreciates Senator Lovely's comments. A Bicycle Circulation Master Planning Study was completed in January 2010 by Fay, Spofford & Thorndike and the Salem Bike Path Committee. It can be accessed online here: http://www.salem.com/sites/salemma/files/uploads/circulation.pdf. If you have specific questions or ideas about bicycle planning in the region, please contact Casey-Marie Claude, CTPS Bicycle and Pedestrian Coordinator, at cclaude@ctps.org. Under its study of priority corridors from the Long-Range Transportation Plan, the MPO completed a corridor analysis of Route 114 between Interstate 95 and the Peabody city line in Danvers. This study was completed in November of 2012 and can be accessed online here: http://www.ctps.org/data/html/studies/highway/priority_corridors/Route_114.html. If you have specific questions about the UPWP process or any of the work programmed in the FFY 2017 UPWP, please contact Ali Kleyman, CTPS UPWP Manager, at akleyman@ctps.org. |
No |
CTPS = Central Transportation Planning Staff. DLTA = District Local Technical Assistance Program. DOT = Department of Transportation. FFY = fedeeral fiscal year. GHG = greenhouse gas. LRTA = Lowell Regional Transit Authority. LRTP = Long- Range Transportation Plan. MAPC = Metropolitan Area Planning Council. MART = Montachusett Regional Transit Authority. MassDOT = Massachusetts Department of Transportation. MBTA = Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. MPO = Metropolitan Planning Organization. OTP = MassDOT’s Office of Transportation Planning. RMV = Registry of Motor Vehicles. RTA = Regional Transit Agency. TIP = Transportation Improvement Program. TMA = Transportation Management Association. TRU = MBTA Riders’ Union. UPWP = Unified Planning Work Program.
This appendix includes the Universe of Proposed New Projects, which documents the proposed new discrete studies that the Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) staff and the Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) staff collected or developed for the development of the federal fiscal year (FFY) 2017 Unified Planning Work Program (UPWP). Each entry includes a summary of the purpose of the proposed study and the anticipated outcomes.
Studies in the universe are organized into the following categories:
Within these categories, studies were considered based on origin:
Each proposed study in the universe is also evaluated based on the following evaluation areas:
Evaluating the studies in this way will allow MPO staff to analyze how federal planning funds are being spent in the region over time and to compare the amount of spending across the various evaluation areas. Furthermore, tracking spending by LRTP goal area, mode, study scale, etc., will allow MPO staff, in coordination with the MPO and the public, to set goals for how federal transportation planning funds are spent by the MPO for the benefit of the region.
In addition to evaluating the proposed new studies in the Universe, MPO staff defines general scopes and estimated costs for the proposed studies and considers potential feasibility issues. These various factors, along with the availability of funds for new studies, were considered as staff identified a recommended set of new proposed planning studies for review by the UPWP Committee. For more information on the process of developing and evaluating the Universe, please see Chapter 1.
Notes: (1) Green highlighted rows are new studies that were chosen for funding in FFY 2017. These studies are described in further detail in Chapter 6.
(2) Proposed studies F-1 and F-2 were not evaluated using the evaluation areas. F-1 dedicates an amount of funding for a yet-to-be-determined MPO staff research proposal, and F-2 is a data-collection research study with the potential to enhance staff's work; however, it does not directly relate to an LRTP goal area or the other evaluation areas.
AV/CV = autonomous vehicles/connected vehicles. CTPS = Central Transportation Planning Staff. FFY = federal fiscal year. FHWA = Federal Highway Administration. GHG = greenhouse gas. GTFS = general transit feed specification. LOS = level of service. LRTP = Long-Range Transportation Plan. MassDOT = Massachusetts Department of Transportation. MBTA = Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority. MPO = Metropolitan Planning Organization. P = primary. ROW = right-of-way. S = secondary. SIP = State Implementation Plan. SRTS = Safe Routes to School. UPWP = Unified Planning Work Program
This appendix summarizes the Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO)-funded work products produced by MPO staff and the staff of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) during federal fiscal years (FFY) 2010 through 2015, as well as those expected to be completed by the end of FFY 2016. The narrative below describes the methodology used to compile this information, as well as some of the additional factors that could be used to further analyze and use this data to inform and guide public involvement and regional equity purposes.
The purpose of this data collection and analysis is to better understand the geographic spread of Unified Planning Work Program (UPWP) work products (i.e., reports and technical memoranda) throughout the region. In other words, this exercise serves to illuminate which communities and areas of our metropolitan region have been the subject of transportation studies and analyses (or recipients of technical support) conducted by the MPO staff with 3C (continuing, comprehensive, and cooperative) planning funds. The data presented below covers UPWP tasks completed from FFY 2010 through FFY 2016 and includes work that resulted in benefits to specific municipalities as well as studies that had a regional focus.
This is the first FFY in which this data has been compiled, and MPO staff intends to continue to compile this information each FFY. Maintaining a database to track the geographic distribution of UPWP studies (those benefiting specific communities as well as those benefiting a wider portion of the region) can serve as one important input into the UPWP funding decisions made each FFY. When considered in combination with other data, such as the presence and size of a municipal planning department or the percentage of minority residents, this data on geographic distribution of MPO-funded UPWP studies can help guide the MPO’s public outreach to help ensure that, over time, we are meeting the needs of the region with the funds allocated through the UPWP.
As noted above, this analysis examined FFYs 2010 through 2016. In order to generate information on the number of UPWP studies produced during these FFYs that benefited specific cities and towns in the Boston region, MPO staff performed the following main steps:
Table D-1 shows the number of completed MPO-funded UPWP work products from FFY 2010 through FFY 2016 that are determined to provide benefits to specific municipalities. Studies and technical analyses are grouped by the year in which they were completed, rather than the year in which they were first programmed in the UPWP. Examples of the types of studies and work in the table include:
Community | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | Total | 2010 Population | 2010 Minority Population Count | 2010 Median Household Income | 2010 Roadway Miles | Subregion |
Boston | 3 | 4 | 5 | 2 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 25 | 617,594 | 327,282 | $50,684 | 778 | Inner Core |
Everett | 2 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 15 | 41,667 | 19,351 | $49,737 | 57 | Inner Core |
Waltham | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 15 | 60,632 | 18,954 | $66,346 | 115 | Inner Core |
Somerville | 4 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 14 | 75,754 | 23,395 | $61,731 | 88 | Inner Core |
Cambridge | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 13 | 105,162 | 39,903 | $64,865 | 120 | Inner Core |
Newton | 1 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | blank | 12 | 85,146 | 17,345 | $107,696 | 276 | Inner Core |
Quincy | 3 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 2 | blank | blank | 11 | 92,271 | 31,823 | $59,803 | 185 | Inner Core |
Chelsea | 4 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | blank | 10 | 35,177 | 26,295 | $40,487 | 44 | Inner Core |
Malden | 2 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | blank | 10 | 59,450 | 28,239 | $56,347 | 93 | Inner Core |
Lynn | 3 | blank | 1 | 3 | blank | blank | 1 | 8 | 90,329 | 47,360 | $43,200 | 153 | Inner Core |
Medford | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | blank | 1 | 7 | 56,173 | 13,384 | $70,102 | 92 | Inner Core |
Revere | 1 | blank | 2 | 2 | 2 | blank | blank | 7 | 51,755 | 19,456 | $49,759 | 85 | Inner Core |
Brookline | blank | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 6 | 58,732 | 15,692 | $95,448 | 92 | Inner Core |
Melrose | 1 | blank | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | blank | 6 | 26,983 | 2,822 | $82,482 | 71 | Inner Core |
Belmont | 1 | 1 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | 2 | 5 | 24,729 | 4,611 | $95,197 | 72 | Inner Core |
Arlington | 2 | 1 | blank | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 4 | 42,844 | 7,040 | $82,771 | 101 | Inner Core |
Saugus | 1 | blank | 1 | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 3 | 26,628 | 2,768 | $71,023 | 77 | Inner Core |
Winthrop | 1 | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 17,497 | 2,011 | $67,535 | 36 | Inner Core |
Watertown | 1 | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 31,915 | 5,850 | $74,081 | 72 | Inner Core |
Nahant | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 0 | 3,410 | 153 | $81,831 | 17 | Inner Core |
Inner Core Subtotals | 36 | 22 | 32 | 25 | 23 | 17 | 17 | 172 | 1,603,848 | 653,734 | blank | 2624 | blank |
Lexington | 2 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 2 | blank | 10 | 31,394 | 8,256 | $130,637 | 117 | MAGIC |
Lincoln | 1 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | blank | 9 | 6,362 | 1,096 | $121,104 | 51 | MAGIC |
Acton | blank | blank | 2 | blank | blank | 4 | 1 | 7 | 21,924 | 5,369 | $105,523 | 103 | MAGIC |
Bedford | 3 | blank | 1 | blank | 1 | 2 | blank | 7 | 13,320 | 2,136 | $107,639 | 70 | MAGIC |
Hudson | blank | 2 | 2 | 1 | blank | 2 | blank | 7 | 19,063 | 2,118 | $74,983 | 83 | MAGIC |
Maynard | blank | blank | 2 | 1 | blank | 4 | blank | 7 | 10,106 | 996 | $75,597 | 35 | MAGIC |
Sudbury | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | blank | 1 | blank | 7 | 17,659 | 1,880 | $153,295 | 138 | MAGIC |
Concord | blank | blank | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 7 | 17,668 | 2,266 | $119,858 | 104 | MAGIC |
Littleton | blank | blank | 2 | blank | blank | 3 | blank | 5 | 8,924 | 685 | $103,616 | 62 | MAGIC |
Bolton | 1 | 1 | 1 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | 4 | 4,897 | 320 | $125,741 | 60 | MAGIC |
Boxborough | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | 3 | blank | 4 | 4,996 | 1,056 | $102,222 | 33 | MAGIC |
Stow | blank | blank | 2 | 1 | blank | 1 | blank | 4 | 6,590 | 511 | $117,440 | 52 | MAGIC |
Carlisle | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | 2 | 4,852 | 595 | $155,000 | 55 | MAGIC |
MAGIC Subtotals | 9 | 7 | 22 | 8 | 4 | 28 | 1 | 79 | 167,755 | 27,284 | blank | 963 | blank |
Weston | 4 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 16 | 11,261 | 1,868 | $148,512 | 88 | MetroWest |
Framingham | 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 15 | 68,318 | 23,693 | $64,061 | 219 | MetroWest |
Wellesley | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 12 | 27,982 | 4,921 | $139,784 | 109 | MetroWest |
Natick | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | blank | blank | 1 | 10 | 33,006 | 4,817 | $87,568 | 123 | MetroWest |
Southborough | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | blank | 1 | blank | 8 | 9,767 | 1,362 | $140,184 | 69 | MetroWest |
Marlborough | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | blank | blank | 6 | 38,499 | 9,546 | $71,617 | 129 | MetroWest |
Holliston | 2 | blank | blank | 1 | 1 | blank | blank | 4 | 13,547 | 902 | $103,600 | 86 | MetroWest |
Ashland | 2 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 3 | 16,593 | 3,063 | $92,974 | 73 | MetroWest |
Wayland | 1 | 1 | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 3 | 12,994 | 1,912 | $129,805 | 87 | MetroWest |
MetroWest Subtotals | 21 | 12 | 12 | 14 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 77 | 231,967 | 52,084 | blank | 983 | blank |
Burlington | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 12 | 24,498 | 5,106 | $90,341 | 94 | NSPC |
Reading | 2 | blank | 1 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 11 | 24,747 | 1,870 | $99,130 | 89 | NSPC |
Woburn | 2 | blank | 1 | 3 | blank | 1 | 1 | 8 | 38,120 | 6,990 | $71,060 | 121 | NSPC |
Wilmington | 1 | blank | 1 | 3 | blank | blank | 1 | 6 | 22,325 | 1,725 | $94,900 | 95 | NSPC |
Winchester | 1 | blank | 1 | 2 | blank | blank | 2 | 6 | 21,374 | 3,065 | $121,572 | 73 | NSPC |
Lynnfield | 1 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | 2 | 1 | 5 | 11,596 | 758 | $87,590 | 66 | NSPC |
Stoneham | 1 | blank | blank | 2 | blank | 1 | 1 | 5 | 21,437 | 2,033 | $76,574 | 65 | NSPC |
Wakefield | 1 | blank | 1 | 1 | blank | blank | 1 | 4 | 24,932 | 1,751 | $89,246 | 85 | NSPC |
North Reading | blank | 1 | blank | 1 | 1 | 3 | 14,892 | 901 | $96,016 | 76 | NSPC | ||
NSPC Subtotals | 12 | 2 | 7 | 18 | 3 | 8 | 10 | 60 | 203,921 | 24,199 | blank | 764 | blank |
Salem | 2 | 3 | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 1 | 8 | 41,340 | 9,963 | $56,979 | 88 | NSTF |
Danvers | 1 | 2 | 2 | blank | 1 | blank | blank | 6 | 26,493 | 1,654 | $75,310 | 104 | NSTF |
Beverly | blank | 2 | blank | 1 | 1 | 1 | blank | 5 | 39,502 | 3,397 | $66,671 | 125 | NSTF |
Peabody | 2 | 2 | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 4 | 51,251 | 6,317 | $65,515 | 159 | NSTF |
Rockport | blank | 2 | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 3 | 6,952 | 286 | $70,625 | 33 | NSTF |
Swampscott | 1 | blank | 1 | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 3 | 13,787 | 963 | $90,763 | 43 | NSTF |
Gloucester | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 1 | blank | blank | 2 | 28,789 | 1,689 | $60,506 | 88 | NSTF |
Marblehead | 1 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 19,808 | 990 | $97,097 | 66 | NSTF |
Hamilton | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 7,764 | 676 | $99,732 | 45 | NSTF |
Ipswich | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 13,175 | 704 | $80,816 | 73 | NSTF |
Middleton | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 1 | 8,987 | 1,142 | $87,728 | 46 | NSTF |
Wenham | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 4,875 | 268 | $132,697 | 27 | NSTF |
Essex | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 0 | 3,504 | 135 | $76,989 | 24 | NSTF |
Manchester | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 0 | 5,136 | 184 | $105,000 | 24 | NSTF |
Topsfield | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 0 | 6,085 | 283 | $115,015 | 50 | NSTF |
NSTF Subtotals | 7 | 14 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 37 | 277,448 | 28,651 | blank | 995 | blank |
Braintree | 5 | blank | 1 | 2 | blank | 1 | 1 | 10 | 35,744 | 5,273 | $81,146 | 104 | SSC |
Weymouth | 3 | blank | blank | 1 | 1 | 1 | blank | 6 | 53,743 | 6,379 | $65,849 | 141 | SSC |
Cohasset | blank | blank | blank | 2 | blank | 1 | blank | 3 | 7,542 | 288 | $114,214 | 32 | SSC |
Holbrook | 1 | blank | blank | 2 | blank | blank | blank | 3 | 10,791 | 2,070 | $62,623 | 34 | SSC |
Scituate | blank | blank | blank | 2 | blank | 1 | blank | 3 | 18,133 | 856 | $86,723 | 101 | SSC |
Hingham | 1 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 22,157 | 1,022 | $98,890 | 110 | SSC |
Marshfield | blank | blank | 1 | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 25,132 | 1,005 | $86,486 | 131 | SSC |
Norwell | blank | blank | blank | 2 | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 10,506 | 495 | $108,944 | 69 | SSC |
Duxbury | blank | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 15,059 | 560 | $114,565 | 103 | SSC |
Hanover | blank | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 13,879 | 579 | $100,233 | 85 | SSC |
Hull | blank | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 10,293 | 591 | $72,166 | 50 | SSC |
Pembroke | blank | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 17,837 | 699 | $80,694 | 91 | SSC |
Rockland | 1 | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 1 | 17,489 | 1,610 | $64,512 | 48 | SSC |
SSC Subtotals | 11 | 0 | 2 | 17 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 36 | 258,305 | 21,427 | blank | 1099 | blank |
Milford | 1 | blank | blank | 3 | 3 | 1 | blank | 8 | 27,999 | 4,895 | $66,636 | 109 | SWAP |
Hopkinton | 2 | 1 | blank | 3 | blank | 1 | blank | 7 | 14,925 | 1,238 | $120,240 | 106 | SWAP |
Medway | 1 | blank | 1 | 2 | blank | blank | blank | 4 | 12,752 | 828 | $102,002 | 70 | SWAP |
Sherborn | 1 | blank | blank | 3 | blank | blank | blank | 4 | 4,119 | 274 | $145,250 | 56 | SWAP |
Bellingham | 1 | blank | blank | 2 | blank | blank | blank | 3 | 16,332 | 1,347 | $78,290 | 83 | SWAP |
Franklin | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 1 | blank | blank | 3 | 31,635 | 2,709 | $89,330 | 132 | SWAP |
Millis | 1 | blank | blank | 2 | blank | blank | blank | 3 | 7,891 | 576 | $85,472 | 52 | SWAP |
Wrentham | 1 | blank | blank | 2 | blank | blank | blank | 3 | 10,955 | 414 | $94,406 | 67 | SWAP |
Norfolk | blank | blank | blank | 2 | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 11,227 | 1,734 | $113,266 | 70 | SWAP |
SWAP Subtotals | 8 | 1 | 1 | 21 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 37 | 137,835 | 14,015 | blank | 745 | blank |
Needham | 2 | blank | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 8 | 28,886 | 3,156 | $114,365 | 119 | TRIC |
Dedham | 1 | blank | 1 | 2 | blank | 1 | 1 | 6 | 24,729 | 3,682 | $80,865 | 82 | TRIC |
Westwood | 1 | blank | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | blank | 6 | 14,618 | 1,237 | $114,250 | 80 | TRIC |
Foxborough | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 1 | 1 | blank | 4 | 16,865 | 1,400 | $93,397 | 82 | TRIC |
Randolph | 4 | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 4 | 32,112 | 19,559 | $64,607 | 93 | TRIC |
Walpole | 2 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | 1 | blank | 4 | 24,070 | 2,222 | $89,697 | 117 | TRIC |
Stoughton | 1 | 1 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | 3 | 26,962 | 5,822 | $67,175 | 108 | TRIC |
Canton | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | 2 | 21,561 | 3,610 | $89,705 | 92 | TRIC |
Norwood | 1 | blank | blank | 1 | blank | blank | blank | 2 | 28,602 | 4,960 | $72,472 | 93 | TRIC |
Medfield | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 1 | blank | 1 | 12,024 | 731 | $126,048 | 72 | TRIC |
Sharon | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 0 | 17,612 | 3,341 | $115,172 | 106 | TRIC |
Milton | 2 | 3 | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | 5 | 27,003 | 6,514 | $97,421 | 94 | TRIC/Inner Core |
Dover | 1 | blank | blank | 3 | blank | blank | blank | 4 | 5,589 | 490 | $164,583 | 59 | TRIC/SWAP |
TRIC Subtotals | 16 | 4 | 3 | 13 | 5 | 6 | 2 | 49 | 280,633 | 56,724 | blank | 1197 | blank |
Grand Total | 120 | 62 | 82 | 121 | 50 | 74 | 38 | 547 | 3,161,712 | 878,118 | blank | 9370 | blank |
MAGIC = Minuteman Advisory Group on Interlocal Coordination. NSPC = North Suburban Planning Council. NSTF = North Shore Task Force. SSC = South Shore Coalition. SWAP = SouthWest Advisory Planning Committee. TRIC = Three Rivers Interlocal Council.
In addition to work that benefits specific municipalities, many of the projects funded by the MPO through the UPWP have a regional focus. Table D-2 lists MPO-funded UPWP studies completed from 2010 through 2016 that were regional in focus.
More information on these studies and other work can be found on the MPO’s website (http://bosmpo.ctps.org/recent_studies) or by contacting Alexandra Kleyman, UPWP Manager, at akleyman@ctps.org.
FFY 2016 | |
Central Transportation Planning Staff | Metropolitan Area Planning Council |
|
|
FFY 2015 | |
Central Transportation Planning Staff | Metropolitan Area Planning Council |
|
|
FFY 2014 | |
Central Transportation Planning Staff | Metropolitan Area Planning Council |
|
|
FFY 2013 | |
Central Transportation Planning Staff | Metropolitan Area Planning Council |
|
|
FFY 2012 | |
Central Transportation Planning Staff | Metropolitan Area Planning Council |
|
|
FFY 2011 | |
Central Transportation Planning Staff | Metropolitan Area Planning Council |
|
|
FFY 2010 | |
Central Transportation Planning Staff | Metropolitan Area Planning Council |
|
|
EJ = environmental justice. FFY = federal fiscal year. GIS = geographic information systems. HOV = high-occupancy vehicle. JARC = job access reverse commute program. MAPC = Metropolitan Area Planning Council. MBTA = Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. MPO = Metropolitan Planning Organization. TIP = Transportation Improvement Program.
As mentioned previously, this is the first year that this type of data has been comprehensively compiled for the MPO staff’s work as programmed through the UPWP. Going forward, MPO staff intends to collect this data on an annual basis and to continue to use it as one input that can inform UPWP funding decisions. The data summarized in this appendix and future UPWP funding data that is added to it could be used in a number of different ways to help guide the spending decisions made in future UPWPs. Some analyses that the MPO could complete in the future include:
Making these comparisons with the data will provide the MPO with a clearer understanding of the impacts of the work that is programmed through the UPWP. Additionally, the MPO will be able to make more informed decisions about how we choose to distribute funding for transportation studies and technical analyses throughout the region.
Acronym |
Definition |
---|---|
§5303 |
metropolitan planning funds [FTA] |
3C |
continuous, comprehensive, cooperative [planning process] |
A&F |
administration and finance |
AACT |
Access Advisory Committee to the MBTA |
ABP |
Accelerated Bridge Program |
ADA |
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 |
ADT |
average daily traffic |
AFC |
automated fare collection |
AMPO |
Association of Metropolitan Planning Organizations |
APC |
automatic passenger counter |
APTA |
American Public Transportation Association |
ARAN |
automatic road analyzer |
ARRA |
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 |
ASL |
American sign language |
ATR |
automatic traffic recorder |
AVL |
automatic vehicle location |
AWDT |
average weekday daily traffic |
BCIL |
Boston Center for Independent Living |
BRA |
Boston Redevelopment Authority |
BRT |
bus rapid transit |
BTD |
Boston Transportation Department |
CA/T |
Central Artery/Tunnel [project] |
CAA |
Clean Air Act of 1970 |
CAAA |
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 |
CATA |
Cape Ann Transportation Authority |
CBD |
central business district |
CECP |
Clean Energy and Climate Plan for 2020 [MA] |
CFR |
Code of Federal Regulation |
CIC |
Community Innovation Challenge |
CIP |
Capital Investment Program |
CMAQ |
Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality |
CMP |
Congestion Management Process |
CNG |
compressed natural gas |
CO |
carbon monoxide |
CO2 |
carbon dioxide |
CPTHST |
Coordinated Public Transit-Human Services Transportation Plan |
CTPS |
Central Transportation Planning Staff [to the Boston Region MPO] |
CTTAP |
Community Transportation Technical Assistance Program |
DBMS |
database management system |
DCAMM |
Division of Capital Asset Management and Maintenance |
DCR |
Department of Conservation and Recreation |
DEIR |
draft environmental impact report [MA] |
DEIS |
draft environmental impact statement [federal] |
DEP |
Department of Environmental Protection [MA] |
DMU |
diesel multiple unit |
DTA |
dynamic traffic assignment |
EERPAT |
Energy and Emissions Reduction Policy Analysis Tool |
EIR |
environmental impact report [MA] |
EIS |
environmental impact statement [federal] |
EJ |
environmental justice |
ENF |
environmental notification form [MA] |
EOEEA |
Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs [MA] |
EOHED |
Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development [MA] |
EOHHS |
Executive Office of Health and Human Services [MA] |
EPA |
Environmental Protection Agency [federal] |
EPDO |
equivalent property damage only [index] |
ETC |
electronic toll collection |
FDR |
functional design report |
FEIR |
final environmental impact report [MA] |
FEIS |
final environmental impact statement [federal] |
FFGA |
full funding grant agreement |
FFY, FFYs |
federal fiscal year, federal fiscal years |
FHEA |
Fair Housing Equity Assessment |
FHWA |
Federal Highway Administration |
FONSI |
finding of no significant impact |
FRA |
Federal Railroad Administration |
FTA |
Federal Transit Administration |
GANS |
grant anticipation notes [municipal bond financing] |
GHG |
greenhouse gas [as in greenhouse gas emissions] |
GIS |
geographic information system |
GLX |
Green Line Extension [Green Line Extension project] |
GPS |
global positioning system |
GWI |
global warming index |
GWSA |
Global Warming Solutions Act of 2008 [MA] |
HOV |
high-occupancy vehicle |
HPP |
high-priority projects |
HSIP |
Highway Safety Improvement Program |
HTC |
Healthy Transportation Compact |
ICC |
Inner Core Committee [MAPC subregion] |
IMS |
intermodal management system |
INVEST |
Infrastructure Voluntary Evaluation Sustainability Tool [FHWA] |
IPCC |
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change |
ISTEA |
Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act [federal] |
IT&S |
Information Technology and Systems [CTPS group] |
ITDP |
Institute for Transportation and Development Policy |
ITE |
Institute of Transportation Engineers |
ITS |
intelligent transportation systems |
JARC |
Job Access and Reverse Commute [program] |
LAP |
language access plan |
LCW |
Livable Community Workshop |
LEP |
limited English proficiency |
LNG |
liquefied natural gas |
LOS |
level of service |
LRTA |
Lowell Regional Transit Authority |
LRTP |
Long-Range Transportation Plan |
MAGIC |
Minuteman Advisory Group on Interlocal Coordination [MAPC subregion] |
MAP-21 |
Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act [federal] |
MAPC |
Metropolitan Area Planning Council |
MARPA |
Massachusetts Association of Regional Planning Agencies |
MassDOT |
Massachusetts Department of Transportation |
MassGIS |
Massachusetts Office of Geographic Information |
Massport |
Massachusetts Port Authority |
MassRIDES |
MassDOT’s statewide travel options program |
MBCR |
Massachusetts Bay Commuter Railroad |
MBTA |
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority |
MCAD |
Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination |
MEMA |
Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency |
MEPA |
Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act |
MGL |
Massachusetts general laws |
MHS |
metropolitan highway system |
MIVIS |
Massachusetts Interagency Video Information System |
MOU |
memorandum of understanding |
MOVES |
Motor Vehicle Emissions Simulator [EPA] |
MPO |
metropolitan planning organization [Boston Region MPO] |
MPOinfo |
Boston Region MPO’s email contact list |
MWGMC |
MetroWest Growth Management Committee |
MWRC |
MetroWest Regional Collaborative [MAPC subregion] |
MWRTA |
MetroWest Regional Transit Authority |
NAAQS |
National Ambient Air Quality Standards |
NBPD |
National Bicycle and Pedestrian Documentation Project |
NEC |
Northeast Corridor [FRA] |
NEPA |
National Environmental Policy Act |
NHPP |
National Highway Performance Program |
NMHC |
non-methane hydrocarbons |
NOx |
nitrogen oxides |
NSPC |
North Suburban Planning Council [MAPC subregion] |
NSTF |
North Shore Task Force [MAPC subregion] |
NTD |
National Transit Database |
NTP |
notice to proceed |
O&M |
operations and management |
OCPC |
Old Colony Planning Council |
ODCR |
Office of Diversity and Civil Rights [MassDOT] |
OE |
operating expenses |
OTA |
Office for Transportation Access [MBTA] |
OTP |
Office of Transportation Planning [MassDOT] |
P3 [1] |
Public Participation Plan |
P3 [2] |
public private partnership |
PBPP |
performance-based planning and programming |
PDM |
Pre-Disaster Mitigation Program [federal] |
PEV |
pedestrian environmental variable |
PL [Funds] |
FHWA metropolitan planning funds; also known as Public Law funds |
PM10 |
particulate matter up to 10 micrometers in size |
PM2.5 |
particulate matter smaller than 2.5 micrometers in size |
PMT |
Program for Mass Transportation [MBTA] |
ppm |
parts per million |
PSA |
Project Selection Advisory Council |
RCCs |
regional coordinating councils |
RIF |
roadway inventory file |
RMV |
Registry of Motor Vehicles |
ROC |
Rider Oversight Committee [MBTA] |
ROW |
right-of-way |
RPA |
regional planning agency |
RSA |
Roadway Safety Audit [FHWA] |
RSS |
rich site summary [Web feed] |
RTA |
regional transit authority |
RTAC |
Regional Transportation Advisory Council [Advisory Council] |
RTC |
regional transportation center |
RTTM |
real time travel monitoring |
SAFE |
service and fare equity [analysis] |
SAFETEA-LU |
Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act−A Legacy for Users |
SCCCT |
Statewide Coordinating Council on Community Transportation |
SCI |
sustainable communities initiative |
SDO |
supplier diversity office |
SDP |
Service Development Plan [FRA] |
SFY |
state fiscal year |
SGR |
state-of-good repair |
SHRP |
Strategic Highway Research Program |
SHSP |
Strategic Highway Safety Plan |
SIP |
State Implementation Plan |
SNAC |
special needs advisory committee |
SNLA |
Small Necessities Leave Act |
SORE |
statement of revenue and expenses |
SOV |
single-occupancy vehicle |
SPR |
Statewide Planning and Research |
SRPEDD |
Southeastern Regional Planning and Economic Development District |
SRTS |
Safe Routes to School |
STB |
State Transportation Building [Boston] |
STIP |
State Transportation Improvement Program |
STP |
Surface Transportation Program |
SWAP |
South West Advisory Committee [MAPC subregion] |
TAM |
transit asset management |
TAP |
Transportation Alternatives Program |
TAZ |
transportation analysis zone |
TCMs |
transportation control measures |
TCRP |
Transit Cooperative Research Program |
TDM |
travel-demand management, or transportation-demand management |
TE |
transportation equity |
TEA-21 |
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century [federal] |
TEAMS |
Travel Efficiency Assessment Method |
TIGER |
Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery [TIGER Discretionary Grant program, federal] |
TIGGER |
Transit Investments for Greenhouse Gas and Energy Reduction [FTA grant program] |
TIP |
Transportation Improvement Program [MPO] |
Title VI |
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 |
TMA [1] |
transportation management area [FTA, FHWA] |
TMA [2] |
Transportation Management Association |
TMC |
turning movement counts |
TOD |
transit-oriented development |
TRB |
Transportation Research Board |
TREDIS |
Transportation Economic Development Impact System [software] |
TRIC |
Three Rivers Interlocal Council [MAPC subregion] |
TSIMS |
Transportation Safety Information Management System |
TSM |
transportation systems management [FHWA] |
UFP |
ultrafine particles |
UPWP |
Unified Planning Work Program |
US |
The United States of America |
USDOT |
United States Department of Transportation |
USGS |
US Geological Survey |
UTC |
University Transportation Center |
UZA |
urbanized area |
V/C |
volume-to-capacity ratio |
VHT |
vehicle-hours traveled |
VMS |
variable message signs |
VMT |
vehicle-miles traveled |
VOCs |
volatile organic compounds [pollutants] |
VRH |
vehicle revenue-hours |
VRM |
vehicle revenue-miles |
WalkBoston |
pedestrian advocacy group [Boston area] |
WAT |
walk-access transit |
WMM |
weMove Massachusetts [MassDOT long-range transportation plan] |
WTS |
Women in Transportation Seminar |
YMM |
youMove Massachusetts [MassDOT planning initiative] |