EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR STEVE HEMINGER’S REPORT TO
THE
COMMISSION MEETING
OF APRIL 25, 2012
SUMMARY OF EVENTS:
CTC Reception
Berkeley, March 28
I joined several MTC commissioners and staff at a reception
for the members of the California Transportation Commission
(CTC) who were in town for their monthly meeting. Commissioners
Green and Rein Worth made welcoming remarks at the event.
Federal Recertification Complete
Sacramento, March
29
The Federal Highway
and Transit Administrations have certified that MTC’s
planning process complies with all applicable federal laws.
Thus, we have their seal of approval for another four years
of planning the transportation future for the San Francisco
Bay Area.
AMPO Board Meeting
Washington, April 3
I presided over a regular meeting of the board of directors
of the Association of Metropolitan Planning Organizations
(AMPO) in the nation’s capital. As part of our
meeting, we heard presentations from various professional
staff members on Capitol Hill about the prospects for enactment
of a reauthorization bill this year.
AC Transit Fuel Cell Dedication
Emeryville, April
10
I joined a number of other local officials and dignitaries
at a dedication ceremony for AC Transit’s fuel cell facility
in Emeryville, which will be used both by AC Transit buses
and members of the general public with fuel cell private vehicles.
[More info]
High Speed Rail MOU Approved
San Francisco, April
12
Chair Tissier and I attended a major milestone meeting for
the California High Speed Rail Authority where the board approved
its revised business plan for constructing the initial stages
of the railroad as well as two memoranda of understanding (MOU)
with the Bay Area and Los Angeles regions for parallel investment
in the “bookends” that will complement the large
initial investment in the Central Valley. [More info]
BART Silicon Valley Groundbreaking
San Jose, April
12
I joined a cast of hundreds at a luncheon and groundbreaking
ceremony to mark the commencement of construction for the first
phase of the BART extension that will ultimately connect the
new Warm Springs station in Alameda County (also under construction)
to downtown San Jose and a final station stop in the City of
Santa Clara near San Jose International Airport. The
full 16-mile Silicon Valley extension is estimated to cost
$6.3 billion – about the same price as the new east span
of the Bay Bridge. Commissioner Haggerty spoke at the
groundbreaking ceremony, as did two former MTC commissioners:
Assemblyman Jim Beall and Santa Clara County Supervisor Ken
Yeager. [More info]
Title VI Compliance Review
Washington, April 12
We have received the results of the Title VI Compliance Review
conducted by the Federal Transit Administration. The
final report finds that MTC’s planning process and
programs comply with Title VI in most respects, but it also
identified deficiencies in two areas: (1) language access
for persons with limited English proficiency, and (2) the
fare change analyses we conducted in implementing the Clipper
smart card program. We will be working on a plan to
correct these deficiencies over the next several weeks.
Antioch Bridge Reaches Seismic Safety
Antioch,
April 17
Vice Chair Rein Worth was on hand at a press event to mark
the completion of earthquake retrofit work on the Antioch Bridge.
The work was completed $15 million below budget and a few
months early, a welcome change from other bridges in the
Toll Bridge Seismic Retrofit Program. [More info]
SAFETEA Reauthorization Lurches Forward
Washington,
April 18
Only a few weeks after passing a bill extending the SAFETEA
law until June 30th, the House of Representatives last week
passed a 10th extension of current law until the end of the
federal fiscal year on September 30, 2012. It is expected
that Senate leaders may act to designate this latest extension
bill (HR 4348) as the companion to the two-year reauthorization
legislation that the Senate passed in March (S 1813). If
they do so, that would lead to a joint House-Senate conference
committee being convened that could produce a final bill to
reauthorize SAFETEA after three years of false starts.
However, there are still several flies in the ointment. First,
the House bill is really just a “shell” of an authorizing
bill. It only contains substantive provisions in the
area of environmental streamlining. All other issues
such as program categories, state distribution formulas, and
how to pay for the highway and transit programs are missing
from the House bill because these matters couldn’t be
resolved within the House Republican caucus. Thus, the
Senate negotiators will be bringing a complete bill to the
conference table; the House conferees will have a pretty blank
piece of paper.
Second, the House bill also includes an extraneous provision
that would approve the controversial Keystone oil pipeline,
which has drawn a veto threat from the Obama Administration. Finally,
by the time it passed last month, S 1813 was not a full two-year
bill but only an 18-month authorization. Even if the
House-Senate negotiators produce a conference report and it
is enacted into law by September 30th, it would only buy us
a year’s worth of time before
the new authorization would expire and we would have to start
the process all over again. This long-running reauthorization
saga reminds me of what they say about the weather in Scotland:
if you don’t like it now, just wait a wee while, and
it will change again.
ABAG General Assembly
Oakland, April 19
Several MTC commissioners and ABAG board members, as well as
ABAG Planning Director Ken Kirkey and me, made presentations
about Plan Bay Area at the Spring General Assembly.
MTC 2011 Annual Report
At your places you will find a copy of MTC’s 2011 annual
report entitled “On the Job”. The report
is a salute to Bay Area transportation workers, featuring photographic
portraits of the men and women who are working hard to provide
today’s transportation services and build tomorrow’s
improvements.
Map of the Month
The map depicts the top five most densely
populated urban areas in the United States as tabulated in
the 2010 Census, and it contains two findings that contradict
conventional wisdom. First, despite California’s
reputation as the home of car culture and urban sprawl, the
four densest urban areas in the nation are located in the Golden
State – with the New York metro region rounding out the
top five. Second – and somewhat sadly – the
reason sleepy Delano, California makes the top five is that
this small land area contains two large California State Prisons
housing 10,000 inmates.
MTC Operational Statistics
The monthly report on the performance of MTC’s operating
programs:
Upcoming Events
May 11 — Special
JPC Meeting, Oakland
Executive Director's Previous Reports