Regional Transportation Advisory Council Meeting
February 11, 2015 Meeting
3:00
PM, State Transportation Building, Conference Room 4, 10 Park Plaza, Boston, MA
Mike Gowing, Chair (Acton) called the meeting to order at 3:00 PM. Members and guests attending the meeting introduced themselves. (For attendance list, see page 7)
M. Gowing stated that many meetings over the last several weeks have been cancelled due to the heavy snow storms this year. He recommended the Council address the chronic state of under-funding the MBTA transit system.
Approval of the minutes for the November 12, 2014 Advisory Council meeting was postponed to a future meeting.
C. Wang delivered a brief overview of this Boston Region MPO study which was funded as part of the MPO’s 2014 UPWP and is a continuing effort to address transportation needs in the MAPC subregions. The objectives of this study are to identify safety, mobility, access, and other transportation-related problems in the study corridor and to develop multimodal transportation solutions.
The study began in 2014 with the review of nearly 30 candidate corridors in the MPO region and the selection of Washington Street in Newton for the MPO’s approval. Once the City had completed a community meeting seeking inputs for the study, staff collected and analyzed data. Alternatives for improvement were developed and reviewed with Newton’s Transportation Team followed by the presentation of the draft project report to the City’s transportation committee; the study was subsequently approved by the MPO on January 22, 2015.
The study corridor covers nearly two miles of Washington
Street from Chestnut Street in West Newton to Church Street near Newton Corner.
This urban minor arterial roadway is under the City’s jurisdiction. The dense
roadway network serves regional traffic from adjacent communities containing major
roadways, bike routes, bus routes, and commuter rail service running parallel
to I-90 including two commuter rail stations.
C. Wang described the operational characteristics of the roadway indicating that sidewalks exist on both sides of the roadway, and that there are no dedicated bike lanes in the corridor.
The major issues raised at the community meeting concerned the high travel speeds and unsafe conditions for all users in the corridor, especially for pedestrians crossing four lanes of fast-moving traffic to reach their destinations.
Safety and operational analyses conducted to address the community concerns included the collections of traffic counts along the corridor. The traffic accident experience along the corridor was also reviewed, indicating that two intersections in the corridor experienced relatively high crash rates. Non-intersection roadway segments with commercial developments with generally higher crash rates were reviewed along with the pedestrian and bicycle crashes that occurred in the past 7years. A depiction of the accident analysis was presented.
At the Walnut Street Intersection, there were a high number of left-turn crashes. One reason for this is that the left turn traffic on Washington Street is forced to share its lane with through movements without protected signal phases. It was determined that crashes resulting from vehicles turning to or from adjacent developments and parking areas could be reduced by redesigning the road.
Traffic volumes of fewer than 20,000 vehicles per day in many segments of the project prompted the proposed “road diet” to reduce the number of travel lanes in order to achieve functional improvements. The study proposed a three-lane design that includes a median turning lane to improve turning movements.
Road segments that were not suitable for a “road diet” were designed with four narrower lanes allowing for the two bicycle lanes and a parking lane on one side to the roadway.
In evaluating the proposed roadway modifications under predicted future traffic conditions, two future-year traffic growth scenarios were studied. The moderate traffic growth scenario predicts about 3–5% growth and the significant traffic growth scenario predicts about 8–10% traffic growth in the next ten years. The study found that projected travel activity based on the significant growth scenario would still operate under acceptable levels of service.
Based on safety and operational analyses, a series of short- and long-term improvements were proposed. Short-term improvements are generally low-cost and could be implemented as soon as funding resources could be allocated.
The long-term improvement proposes redesign of the corridor which would see three components; the removal of one travel lane to create a center traffic median/turn lane; dedicated bike lanes; and some parking removal to allow for continuous bike lanes.
Several essential elements of the redesign include crosswalks, curb extensions, and widening sidewalks. With all these improvements, the roadway’s speed limits then can be adjusted from 35 to 30 MPH. The study finds a need to further review the parking conditions and access management and further examine lighting, landscape, and noise reduction strategies at the design stages.
C. Wang presented several slides of the locations and layouts of the proposed long-term improvements in a series of conceptual plans for the complete corridor. He concluded that the proposed long-term improvements have a number of benefits, including slowing down traffic, providing safe access to adjacent developments, accommodating bicycles and pedestrians, and improving safety, access and mobility for all users in the corridor.
The Newton Washington Street Study (PDF or HTML) with the
graphics of the corridor’s conceptual design can be downloaded from the MPO
website (click here).
In response to a question from a member, C. Wang explained that
he attempted to add a cycle track to the conceptual layout but there were
right-of-way constraints. (C. Porter)
Asked if he considered designing bike tracks between the parking and the
roadway lane and lowering the design speed to 25 mph. C. Wang reiterated that
the right-of-way constraints precluded that possibility. He stated that on minor
urban arterial streets, speeds of 25 mph are hard to enforce. (J. Read)
Regarding roadway ownership, C. Wang pointed out that the corridor is a
City of Newton roadway, but MassDOT District Six was consulted in the roadway
study. (S. Larrabee)
C. Wang stated that the cost of the corridor improvements were estimated
to be between 12-15 $M. Due to the cost, the project was divided into three
phases. (J. Read)
Future traffic growth resulting from the proposed design measures was modeled
using traffic data and future year projections analysis. Level of service
analysis suggests that some of the intersections will still have diminished
level of service even with the enhanced turning movements as some of the
roadway sections are heavily travelled. (M. Gowing, J. Read, D. Montgomery)
In response to a question, C. Wang stated that peak hour counts per lane
are addressed in studying the impacts of the proposed design. (J. Read)
M. Gowing explained that this presentation is being presented as part of
a UPWP study that brings information to the Advisory Council so that better
informed consultation can be made to the MPO. (J. Read)
In response to a question, C. Wang stated that MassDOT Engineering
Directive for Complete Streets would likely allow for the proposed lane widths
for this corridor. At the design stage, the City should consult with MassDOT
early. (T. Kadzis)
The Long-Range Transportation Plan (LRTP) Committee met before the full Advisory Council meeting on February 11, 2015. The purpose of the meeting was to be updated on the progress of the LRTP. The time frame of the LRTP, which is updated every four years, spans the 2015 – 2040 planning years this cycle. A major plan element is showing how the expected discretionary funds of the MPO will be spent within that time frame. The MPO funds are not part of the State’s capital program. The LRTP estimates discretionary funds of about $2B to be available over the 25 year period of the plan, or about $75M per year.
The MPO staff has completed various sections of a foundational document for the LRTP. It is the Needs Assessment for the LRTP and includes the existing conditions report; a chapter on transportation and land use; a chapter on recommended needs which lists projects and programs identified as needed in all the modes. The next step in LRTP development is the work on scenario planning. Currently, there are three scenarios being reviewed for presentation to the MPO and the Base Case Scenario. The 2040 No-Build Scenario (Base Case) considers a plan that has no improvements to the existing transportation network other than those that are currently under construction, advertised for construction, or included in the first year of the 2015–18 Transportation Improvement Program (TIP); The Current-LRTP Scenario reflects the MPO’s current spending patterns; The Operations and Management (O&M) Scenario focuses on lower-cost O&M improvements such as intersection improvements and Complete Streets solutions; and a High-Capital Investment (High-Cap) Congestion Management Scenario includes a large percentage of high-cost capital infrastructure improvements, such as interchange upgrades and major bottleneck reconstructions.
The O&M Scenario would shift about 4/5th of the funds into smaller projects while the High Capital Scenario would move about 4/5th into larger projects. Currently, the two scenarios are being modeled. The results will be presented at the March 19 MPO meeting.
Several issues being considered by the MPO include:
C. Porter described the funding differences between the projects in the
O&M and the High Cap scenarios being tested.
D. Montgomery stated that an added benefit of programming for smaller
projects is that more local buy-in will occur making the O&M scenario an
attractive option.
C. Porter stated that the MPO is spending much of its funding on only a
few projects in the TIP which absorb most of the available funds. M. Gowing added that these are good but very
expensive projects, and in a limited funding environment, $75M does not go very
far.
C. Porter suggested program spending be considered for the O&M
projects as it makes more sense to have one budget available for intersection
improvements rather than include individual intersection improvements over a 25
year period. So if a project is under $20M and does not add capacity to the
system, it can be put on the TIP and in the program approach to funding, the
project would be in one of the program categories in the LRTP. S. Ringler
stated that the general program spending approach gives more flexibility to
funding.
T. Kadzis felt that current practice already allows for flexibility in
the LRTP and stated that anything over 5 years out in the LRTP is
semi-meaningless in the long-range plan.
Now, project development process is 7 years, up to 10 years to bid. Many
things on the TIP have been on the LRTP for a long time. When they have finally
gotten programmed–and sometimes they need to be
reprogrammed in another year–this affects the programming of
other projects. The idea of a “bucket” program approach merely reflects the
current reality. T. Kadzis added that the costs of transportation projects are
difficult to ascertain. The impact of the cost changes can have a significant
impact on the plan as a whole.
C. Porter suggested proposing a look at a scenario with more funding. He
recommended researching different funding commitments in order to determine the
impact of more funding. This could be done after the current LRTP is completed.
D. Montgomery stated that the MPO uses the LRTP as a backdrop to the
annual development of the TIP and that the Advisory Council needs to understand
the relationship between the LRTP and the TIP.
M. Sanborn suggested that flexing highway funding to transit and selecting
the O&M Scenario were the preferences of the LRTP Committee today. C.
Porter added that MPO does not have a large amount of funding for large cap
projects.
M. Gowing was concerned about the commitment of a funding source for
transportation infrastructure. T. Kadzis emphasized that political pressure
does play an important role in the funding of transportation.
Committee members discussed means of advocating for increased funding for
transportation projects while maintaining the primary mission; providing advice
to the MPO.
The meeting was adjourned at 4:30 PM.
Agencies (Voting) |
Attendees |
MassRides |
Catherine Paquette |
|
|
Municipalities (Voting) |
|
Acton |
Mike Gowing |
Cambridge |
Cleo Stoughton |
Needham |
David Montgomery |
|
|
Citizen Groups (Voting) |
|
APA - Massachusetts Chapter |
John (Tad) Read |
Boston Society of Architects |
Schuyler Larrabee |
Massachusetts Bus Association |
Mark Sanborn |
MassBike |
Chris Porter |
MoveMassachusetts |
Jon Seward |
|
|
Other (Non-Voting) |
|
Boston |
Tom Kadzis |
|
|
Guests
John McDougall |
350MA |
Susan Ringler |
350MA |
Scott Zadakis |
CrossTown Connect |
Staff
David
Fargen
Matt
Archer
Chen–Yuan
Wang