Report Ranks Bay Area Roads Among Nation's Worst
The Road Information Project (TRIP)'s 2005 report, Rough
Ride Ahead, identifies five California metro areas — including
San Jose and San Francisco-Oakland — in its list of
the 10 major U.S. urban areas with the poorest pavement conditions
on major roads and highways and the highest additional vehicle
operating costs per driver due to poor pavement conditions.
San Jose ranks #2, with 67 percent of its major roads and
highways in poor condition, while San Francisco-Oakland ranks
#5, at 60 percent.
These rankings are the legacy of many years of underinvestment
in our transportation infrastructure. But the outlook finally
is improving for Bay Area streets and roads. The transportation
sales taxes approved in 2004 by voters in Contra Costa, Marin,
San Mateo and Sonoma counties all include significant investment
in local streets and roads. A higher-than-expected flow of
federal transportation dollars into the Bay Area allowed MTC
this spring to allocate an additional $22.5 million to help
reduce cities' and counties' road maintenance backlogs. And
Gov. Schwarzenegger's recent announcement that his proposed
budget for fiscal year 2005-06 will restore Proposition 42
funding for transportation is expected to deliver an additional
$51 million for streets and roads throughout the nine-county
region.
While the Bay Area's pavement repair and maintenance needs
continue to outpace the available revenues, the restoration
of Proposition 42, increased federal funding, and voter-approved
sales taxes are major steps in the right direction. MTC's newly
adopted Transportation
2030 Plan, which details
the Bay Area's transportation investment strategy for the next
25 years, identifies more steps that should be taken to restore
our streets and roads to like-new condition. Several bills
have been introduced in the California Legislature — AB
1623 (Klehs), AB 1208 (Yee) and SB 680 (Simitian) — that
would increase state funding for streets and roads in Bay Area
counties. The Commission supports these bills, as well
as efforts in Washington, D.C., to enact a new federal transportation
program to replace the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century, or TEA 21, which expired in September 2003.
For Bay Area information, see this MTC fact sheet:
For the TRIP study, click here:
http://www.tripnet.org
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