October/November 2007
In the News:
Bay Area Scores Urban Partnership Grant

U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary Peters announces the results of the Urban
Partnership grant competition. (Photo: J. Scott Applewhite, AP Images)

An expressway on stilts that is an extension of the Golden Gate Bridge,
Doyle Drive is in line for a makeover — and variable pricing. (Photo: Paul Chinn, San Francisco Chronicle)
The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) has designated
the San Francisco Bay Area as an Urban Partner, pledging $158.7
million in federal funds to implement and expand innovative
traffic-relief
programs in the region, the second most congested in the country.
Plans for spending the grant
money were highlighted in October when DOT Secretary Mary E.
Peters traveled to San Francisco for an inspection tour.
Peters was particularly impressed with San Francisco's
plans for a new parking system that will charge varying rates
according to the time of day and parking availability, and
that will allow drivers to scout out a free space from their
desktop or PDA before hitting the streets. “Frustration
ebbs and traffic flows when you implement this type of technology,” she
said.
Innovations in how drivers pay for parking also are in store. “No
quarters, no problem,” Peters said. “Drivers will
be able to pay with their credit and their debit cards or their
smart-trip cards [like the MTC-sponsored TransLink® card],
or even text in a payment with their cell phones.”
High-tech parking is just one piece of the “San Francisco
Bay Area Accelerate” proposal submitted by MTC and partner
agencies for the federal grant. Another key element is the
Doyle Drive Value Pricing Program, which calls for using variable
tolls to manage congestion on Doyle Drive, the elevated access
road connecting the Golden Gate Bridge to downtown San Francisco.
The grant funds and tolls also will help pay for the aging
facility's replacement with a modern, earthquake-safe
parkway. The fees would be collected electronically via FasTrak®,
using overhead sensors rather than a separate toll plaza.
Related “Accelerate” elements include expansion
of SFgo, the city's real-time traffic information and
management system to smooth traffic flows, provide transit
priority at signals and manage traffic incidents; and enhancements
to ferry service between Marin County and San Francisco. The
package also calls for expansion of MTC's 511 real-time
traveler information systems and development of an online,
multimodal trip planner.
The Bay Area grant is conditional upon securing authorization
from the California Legislature to implement a congestion toll
on Doyle Drive.
“This Urban Partnership award from U.S. DOT clearly
recognizes the Bay Area's national leadership in promoting
transit, technology and tolling,” said MTC Executive
Director Steve Heminger.
The Bay Area is one of five areas around the country to benefit
from the federal grants.
— Brenda Kahn
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