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Developed from a summary prepared for the New York State Association of MPOs 1.

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Presentation on theme: "Developed from a summary prepared for the New York State Association of MPOs 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Developed from a summary prepared for the New York State Association of MPOs 1

2  Congress passes multi-year authorizations for the programs of the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and Federal Transit Administration (FTA)  ISTEA (1991)  TEA-21 (1998)  SAFETEA-LU (2005)  MAP-21 (2012)  FAST Act (2015)  Authorization establishes policy and sets maximum spending levels for each program 2

3  Passed on December 4, 2015  Five year authorization extends through Federal fiscal year 2020 (Sept 30, 2020)  Total authorized spending $304.7 billion  Modest increases in most programs  Uses various funding mechanisms to avoid dealing directly with the annual shortfall in the Highway Trust Fund 3

4  Funding may not exceed authorized levels, but may be less  Limits may also be established on how much of the funding may be obligated  Congress may pass a rescission after the fact, and take some of the appropriated funding back 4

5  MPO designation unchanged: base population 50,000; TMA designation 200,000  ISTEA began the policy of enumerating factors to be considered in the long range transportation plan; there have been small changes with each authorization.  FAST adds two new planning factors:  Improve the resiliency and reliability of the transportation system and reduce or mitigate stormwater impacts of surface transportation  Enhance travel and tourism 5

6  MAP-21, passed in 2012, made a number of policy changes and program consolidations  Rules of MAP-21 that guide program delivery are still in effect under FAST Act, but many have not yet been finalized  Capital investments under the plan should include strategies to reduce vulnerability due to natural disasters 6

7  Focus on freight and its support of the national economy  National Multimodal Freight Policy/ National Multimodal Freight Network  Includes National Freight Network (highways); Class 1 railroads; major seaports; major air cargo hubs; inland waterways including St. Lawrence Seaway, Great Lakes  Critical Urban Freight Corridors: in metro areas >500,000 population, MPO designates; in remaining metro areas, state designates in consultation with the MPO 7

8  Reinstates the competitive bus and bus facilities grant program at USDOT - $268M in 2016 growing to $344M in 2020  These remain in place under FAST  Performance based planning and programming  FTA programs consolidated  Surface Transportation Block Grant Program: renames STP, but with no eligibility changes  Transportation Alternatives Program (TAP) is no longer a named program; eligible purposes remain under a funding set-aside from STBGP 8

9 FHWA Total $226.3 BAnnual Average (millions) % change from 2015 National Highway Performance Program$23,280+6.3 Surface Transportation Block Grant11,654+15.6 Transportation Alternatives Set-aside760+3.3 CMAQ2,405+6.1 HSIP2,317+5.7 Metropolitan Planning – PL343+9.5 National Highway Freight Program (?)1,249(new) Nationally Significant Freight & Highway Program (?)900(new) 9

10 FTA Total $61.1 billion ProgramFY 2016 funding (millions)Notes 5307 (Urban formula)$4,530 100 bus rule modified to include non-ADA paratransit 5339 (Bus & Bus Facilities)428 (formula) 268 (discretionary) Cost Effective Capital Investment Pilot Program 5303 (Metropolitan Planning) 131 Continues joint planning language with FHWA 5309 (Fixed Guideway)2,300 New Starts max 60% FTA $; Small Starts threshold $300M 5310 (Enhanced Mobility for Seniors & Disabled) 263 5311 (Rural formula)620 10


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