For Immediate Release
Contra Costa County's Chance to Comment on Proposed 25-Year Transportation Plan
CONTACT:
Ellen Griffin
510.817.5854
Doug Kimsey
510.817.5790
OAKLAND, Calif., Aug. 30, 2001...Contra Costa County residents can weigh in on
local and regional transportation issues at a workshop slated for Monday, Sept. 10, from 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. at the Richmond Kaiser Permanente Facility (Building A, Conference Rooms 1-3), 901 Nevin Avenue in
Richmond. The Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) is hosting the meeting to hear from the
public on a draft transportation plan to invest billions of dollars in anticipated federal, state and
local transportation funds over the next 25 years.
While focused on transportation, the draft plan also spotlights the nine-county Bay Area's projected
population and job growth, where people will live, the region's aging trend, and the impact of
commuters from outlying counties on Bay Area roads and transit.
According to MTC Chair and San Pablo City Councilmember Sharon Brown, "This edition of the Regional
Transportation Plan is MTC's most extensive effort ever to meet the increasing transportation needs of
our diverse, expanding population and to balance competing demands against limited financial
resources."
Of the total $82 billion that MTC anticipates will come to the Bay Area for transportation, 90 percent
($74 billion) is already committed to maintaining the existing transportation infrastructure or to new
or expansion projects approved by local voters. The $82 billion includes maintaining or rehabilitating
18,000 miles of local streets and roads and the cost of operating the region's public transit systems.
MTC proposes splitting the remaining $7.7 billion, with approximately half going to road and transit
projects recommended by county congestion management agencies and half reserved for regional programs
and services designed to benefit all Bay Area travelers, regardless of their home county.
Among the projects proposed for western Contra Costa County are: a Richmond Parkway Transit Center;
enhanced express bus service in the Interstate-80 corridor; AC Transit enhanced bus service in the San
Pablo Avenue corridor; and improvements to the Richmond Intermodal transfer station (BART to
Amtrak/Capitol Corridor). Other Contra Costa County projects include a fourth bore for the Caldecott
Tunnel; Route 4 improvements; Interstate 680/Route 4 Interchange improvements; East County commuter
rail and bus enhancements; and various bicycle and pedestrian projects.
MTC and local transportation agencies are still identifying other high-profile transit projects that
could be included in the plan, such as a BART-to-San Jose extension, a people-mover connection to the
Oakland International Airport, a light-rail connection to San Francisco's Chinatown, and various
express and urban rapid bus services.
Among the regional services MTC proposes for funding are: TransLink® , a transit-fare "smart card" for use on all
Bay Area transit systems; the Freeway Service Patrol that
assists motorists in distress on the region's freeways; rideshare programs that set up carpool/vanpool
ride matches; traveler information services, such as
the regionwide phone number (817-1717), that provide up-to-the-minute traffic information and connect
to transit agencies; and the Transportation for Livable
Communities program, which provides grants for small-scale transportation projects to enhance
community vitality.
The draft plan goes beyond the $82 billion of identified funding and envisions what could be
accomplished if more money becomes available. One potential new source of funding is a transportation
financing measure (ACA 4) approved by the California Legislature that may go on the statewide ballot
for voter approval in spring 2002.
MTC developed the draft transportation plan, in part, based on thousands of comments the agency
received from Bay Area residents during an extensive public outreach effort last spring. The Richmond
event is one of eight scheduled meetings throughout the Bay Area in September to obtain public comments
on the newly released Draft 2001
Regional Transportation Plan. In addition to attending and speaking at MTC meetings, the
public can comment on the plan by mail (MTC Public Information, 101 Eighth Street, Oakland, CA 94607),
by e-mail (info@mtc.ca.gov) or by fax (510.817.5848). An
interactive comment form is posted on the MTC Web site. Copies of the 182-page Draft 2001 Regional
Transportation Plan are available in public libraries and by mail upon request to the MTC/ABAG Library (call 510.817.5836). A 12-page overview of the plan
also is available from MTC. The plan also can be viewed and downloaded on the MTC Web site:
<www.mtc.ca.gov >.
MTC is the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area's transportation planning, coordinating and financing
agency.
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