BOARD OF SUPERVISORS VOTES TO PUT MEASURE R EXTENSION ON THE BALLOT
In a drama-filled session of the LA County Board of Supervisors today, Chairman Zev Yaroslavsky voted with Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas and Supervisor Don Knabe to put the proposed extension of Measure R on the November ballot. Supervisor Michael Antonovich voted against the measure, arguing that the ballot language was misleading, and Supervisor Gloria Molina was not at the meeting.
The meeting provided high drama, with the conclusion uncertain until the board returned from a closed session and Yaroslavsky called for a vote but didn't get a second. Ridley-Thomas then asked for a roll call, Yaroslavsky pointed out his motion hadn't been seconded, and Ridley-Thomas agreed to second it.
By that point many people in attendance had assumed the vote was going the other way.
The meeting provided high drama, with the conclusion uncertain until the board returned from a closed session and Yaroslavsky called for a vote but didn't get a second. Ridley-Thomas then asked for a roll call, Yaroslavsky pointed out his motion hadn't been seconded, and Ridley-Thomas agreed to second it.
By that point many people in attendance had assumed the vote was going the other way.
SOCAL SUSTAINABILITY FORUM 8/15-8/16
Southern California communities are leaders in sustainability. And this is the premiere annual event for the local governments who are at the front lines. Hosted by the LARC, the Los Angeles Regional Collaborative for Climate Action and Sustainability, attendees will include government officials, academics and businesses to talk about how to build a more sustainable SoCal. Topics of discussion:
August 15 and 16 at the Renaissance Long Beach Hotel. More here.
- tools to fund sustainability such as using offsets to add to the bottom line, collaborative purchasing, tariffs and partnerships
- tools to strategize, including how governments can deal with CEQA and CARB, how climate planning can be integrated into water planning, and a look at the county's public health efforts
- tools to build, including how electric vehicle programs work together, implementing SCAG's RTP/SCS and Metro's sustainability planning policy, increasing energy efficiency via retrofit despite increasing demands for electricity, and a look at new clean energy technology.
August 15 and 16 at the Renaissance Long Beach Hotel. More here.
MEASURE R EXTENSION PASSES ANOTHER TEST; ON TO BOARD OF SUPERVISORS TUESDAY
The LA Metro Board today voted 10-1 to allow Measure R sales tax funds to be moved from highway projects to transit and vice versa if supported by a two-thirds vote of the board. Only Metro Board Chairman and LA County Supervisor Michael Antonovich voted against the measure, contending that the LA mayor, who appoints 4 board members, would have undue influence. The motion was key to earning the support of the San Gabriel Valley Council of Governments -- which wants to use some highway funding to extend the Foothill extension of the Gold Line to Claremont -- for an extension of Measure R.
Tomorrow (Tuesday) the LA County Board of Supervisors will vote on whether to put the Measure R extension on the November ballot. The extension of the sales tax, to 2069, would provide LA Metro with a longer revenue stream to bond against, making it easier for the agency to get money up front to build all Measure R funded projects now, when the economy could really use the boost.
The state legislature still has to approve AB 1446, which authorizes the collection of the tax if the voters approve it, and AB 1446 still has to be signed by Governor Jerry Brown.
Metro staff has said all material must be submitted to the County Registrar by August 10 if the measure is to get on the November ballot.
Tomorrow (Tuesday) the LA County Board of Supervisors will vote on whether to put the Measure R extension on the November ballot. The extension of the sales tax, to 2069, would provide LA Metro with a longer revenue stream to bond against, making it easier for the agency to get money up front to build all Measure R funded projects now, when the economy could really use the boost.
The state legislature still has to approve AB 1446, which authorizes the collection of the tax if the voters approve it, and AB 1446 still has to be signed by Governor Jerry Brown.
Metro staff has said all material must be submitted to the County Registrar by August 10 if the measure is to get on the November ballot.
LA MAKES TOP 6 BEST CITIES FOR YOUNG PROFESSIONALS
San Francisco, #2, trumped LA, #4, "which could cause quite a stir," according to the Urban Times blog. But the choice of Seattle as #1 was "the most shocking revelation." NYC is #3. Washington DC and Chicago are #5 and #6. The analysis, by timeRAZOR, looked at the number of restaurants, bars and clubs; museums, theaters, stadiums and arenas; galleries and concert venues; percentage of young people; percentage of college degrees; and median salary for college grads. Read it at theurbn.com.
METRO BOARD MEETS TO VOTE ON MEASURE R TRANSIT/HIGHWAY SWAPS
The Metro board is meeting today to debate the motion put forward by Board Member and Duarte City Councilman John Fasana allowing funds to be moved from highway projects to transit and vice versa within the subregion where the project is funded. Fasana's amendment is widely expected to pass and was key to earning the endorsement of the San Gabriel Valley Council of Governments for a proposed extension of Measure R that could appear on the November ballot. Damien Newton had it all on Streetsblog on Friday.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT MOVING TOWARD LOANING NOT GRANTING?
The newly capitalized TIFIA loan program in the MAP-21 federal transportation bill is being called the “largest transportation infrastructure financing fund” in USDOT history. But on a Transportation for America call about MAP-21 today former USDOT Undersecretary of Policy Roy Kienitz wondered whether federal transportation loans instead of grants aren’t the way of the future, given declining federal gas tax revenues. That could work well for LA, because Measure R has provides us with a revenue stream that can be used to secure TIFIA loans. There are regions that aren’t so lucky. Consider the failure of a sales tax measure in the Atlanta region last Tuesday, which went down in defeat due to what one commentator calls “the three-cornered politics” of transportation today: the road lobby, the environmental/transit coalition, and anti-tax and anti-spending conservatives. Read more.
LA METRO -- AND EVERYONE -- IS TALKING ABOUT MAP-21
LA Metro is offering to tell you "everything you want to know about the new federal surface transportation bill but were afraid to ask." This session, in Metro's board room, follows on the heels of similar sessions by Transportation for America and over-subscribed sessions on the TIFIA loan program -- which USDOT calls the largest transportation infrastructure financing fund in its history -- by the National Highway Institute.
In the board room at LA Metro on Wednesday, August 15, 9:30 a.m. to noon. RSVP by August 10 to [email protected]. Here's the flier.
In the board room at LA Metro on Wednesday, August 15, 9:30 a.m. to noon. RSVP by August 10 to [email protected]. Here's the flier.
SECOND TIFIA WEBINAR WITH ASSISTANT SECRETARY CHRIS BERTRAM ADDED FRIDAY, AUGUST 3
Due to the overwhelming response for the National Highway Institute's MAP-21 TIFIA webinar with Assistant Secretary Chris Bertram, a second session has been added on Friday, August 3, from 10-11 a.m. PDT. Due to limited space you are asked to share locations to the extent possible. Click on the link below to register.
Register here.
Register here.
TRANSPORTATION FOR AMERICA INVITES YOU TO A CALL ABOUT THE NEW FEDERAL TRANSPORTATION BILL
In this conference call, Transportation for America will offer an in-depth look at the policies in the new transportation law, MAP-21. Former USDOT Undersecretary of Policy Roy Kienitz will moderate a panel of experts who will share insights about the specific policies contained in MAP-21.
What: MAP-21 Policy Discussion
When: Thursday, August 2, 11 a.m. PDT
Call: 866-740-1260 Passcode is 3355141
Here is a chart you can download comparing current law under SAFETEA-LU, the original House proposal H.R.7, and the new law under MAP-21.
Transportation for America is a broad national coalition focused on creating a national transportation program that will take America into the 21st century by modernizing our infrastructure and building healthy communities where all people can live, work and play.
What: MAP-21 Policy Discussion
When: Thursday, August 2, 11 a.m. PDT
Call: 866-740-1260 Passcode is 3355141
Here is a chart you can download comparing current law under SAFETEA-LU, the original House proposal H.R.7, and the new law under MAP-21.
Transportation for America is a broad national coalition focused on creating a national transportation program that will take America into the 21st century by modernizing our infrastructure and building healthy communities where all people can live, work and play.
METRO ATLANTA TRANSPORTATION SALES TAX REJECTED BY VOTERS
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that voters rejected a $7.2 billion transportation plan yesterday that business leaders called an essential bulwark against regional decline. The defeat of the 10-year, 1 percent sales tax leaves the Atlanta region's traffic congestion problem with no visible remedy. The vote was no surprise to independent pollsters who in recent weeks predicted an overwhelming loss, fueled by citizens' distrust of government and the metro area's splintered transportation desires. The metro Atlanta tax would have built a $6.14 billion list of 157 regional projects — relieving congestion at key Interstate highway chokepoints and opening 29 miles of new rail track to passengers, among others — as well as $1 billion worth of smaller local projects. The list was negotiated by 21 mayors and county commissioners from all 10 counties, and it contained about half transit and half roads. Re-playing 40 years of Atlanta history, controversy built instantly around the proposed expansion of mass transit. Some loved it, some hated it.
Read it in the Atlanta Journal Constitution
Read it in the Atlanta Journal Constitution
