Glossary of Transportation Planning Acronyms and Terms
The transportation arena has a language all its own. Just as getting
from point ‘a’ to point ‘b’ in the San Francisco Bay Area is often
easier said than done, navigating your way through the complex web of
transportation terminology can likewise be a challenge. While MTC
strives to use plain language, acronyms and jargon invariably will
creep into many discussions about transportation. For this we apologize
and offer the following glossary of transportation planning acronyms
and terms.
AB 32
Assembly Bill 32
An act to add division 25.5 to the health and safety code, relating to global climate change.
ABAG
Association of Bay Area Governments
A voluntary association of counties and cities in the nine-county San
Francisco Bay Area. ABAG provides demographic, financial,
administrative, training and conference services to local governments
and businesses. A member sits on MTC.
ARTICLE XIX RESTRICTION
California Constitution
A provision in the California Constitution that limits the use of state
gasoline tax revenues to projects related to roadway (including bicycle
and pedestrian projects) or fixed guide way (rail or trolley coach)
improvements.
BAAQMD
Bay Area Air Quality Management District
(Also known as the Air District, since the acronym seems to take longer
to say than the full name.) Regulates industry and employers to keep
air pollution in check and sponsors programs to clean the air. In a
joint effort known as the Regional Agency Coordinating Committee
(RACC), the Air District works with MTC and the Association of Bay Area
Governments on issues that affect transportation, land use and air
quality.
BATA
Bay Area Toll Authority
BATA, acting as a separate legal entity of MTC, administers the base $1
toll from the Bay Area’s seven state-owned toll bridges (as opposed to
the second dollar, a surcharge to cover seismic retrofit costs, which
is administered by Caltrans). The state Legislature created BATA in
1998 to take over this responsibility from the California
Transportation Commission (CTC).
BAY AREA PARTNERSHIP
Often referred to simply as “The Partnership,” this is a confederation
of the top staff of various transportation agencies in the region,
including MTC, public transit operators, county congestion management
agencies (CMAs), city and county public works departments, ports,
Caltrans and the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) as well as
environmental protection agencies. The Partnership works by consensus
to improve the overall efficiency and operation of the Bay Area’s
transportation network, including developing strategies for financing
transportation improvements.
CALTRANS
California Department of Transportation
The state agency that maintains and operates California’s highway system.
CAPITAL FUNDS
Moneys to cover one-time costs for construction of new projects — such
as roads, bridges, bicycle/pedestrian paths, transit lines and transit
facilities — to expand the capacity of the transportation system, or to
cover the purchase of buses and rail cars.
CENSUS DATA
Information used by transportation planners to make projections about
future Bay Area travel patterns, housing needs and the like. Required
by the U.S. Constitution, the U.S. Census is a complete enumeration of
the population conducted every 10 years by the U.S. Census Bureau (the
last one was completed in 2000).
CMAs
Congestion Management Agencies
Countywide agencies responsible for preparing and implementing a
county’s Congestion Management Program. CMAs came into existence as a
result of state legislation and voter approval of Proposition 111 in
1990. Subsequent legislation made them optional. Most Bay Area counties
still have them. Many CMAs double as a county’s sales tax authority.
CMAQ
Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program
A federal source of funding for projects and activities that reduce
congestion and improve air quality, both in regions not yet attaining
federal air quality standards and those engaged in efforts to preserve
their attainment status.
COMMITED REVENUES
Revenues that are dedicated by law, ballot measure or prior MTC
programming actions to specific transportation investments. Committed
revenues comprise the vast majority of all funds identified in the
long-term regional transportation plan. (Also see “Uncommitted Revenues.”)
CONFORMITY
A process in which transportation plans and spending programs are
reviewed to ensure they are consistent with federal clean air
requirements; transportation projects collectively must not worsen air
quality.
CTC
California Transportation Commission
A state-level commission, consisting of nine members appointed by the
governor, which establishes priorities and allocates funds for highway,
passenger rail and transit investments throughout California. The CTC
adopts the State Transportation Improvement Program, or STIP, and
implements state transportation policy.
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
This term stems from a Presidential Executive Order to promote equity
for disadvantaged communities and promote the inclusion of racial and
ethnic populations and low-income communities in decision-making. Local
and regional transportation agencies must ensure that services and
benefits, as well as burdens, are fairly distributed to avoid
discrimination.
EQUITY ANALYSIS
Consistent with federal requirements for environmental justice, MTC
conducts an equity analysis covering the 25-year regional
transportation plan to determine how the benefits and burdens of the
plan’s investment strategy affect minority and low-income communities.
FHTF
Federal Highway Trust Fund
The Highway Trust Fund (HTF) was founded by the 1956 Highway Revenue
Act. Prior to the HTF, funds were directed from the General Fund of the
U.S. Treasury. Originally, the fund was dedicated solely to highways.
Yet, the Highway Revenue Act of 1982 mandated a separate account to
support mass transit. Effective April 1, 1983, a Mass Transit Account
was created to receive a portion of the motor fuel taxes and receives
about 2.86 cents per gallon of gas.
FHWA
Federal Highway Administration
U.S. Department of Transportation agency responsible for administering
the federal highway aid program to individual states, and helping to
plan, develop and coordinate construction of federally funded highway
projects. FHWA also governs the safety of hazardous cargo on the
nation’s highways.
FINANCIAL CONSTRAINT
A federal requirement that long-range transportation plans include only
projects that have a reasonable expectation of being funded based upon
anticipated revenues. In other words, long-range transportation plans
cannot be pie-in-the-sky wish lists of projects. They must reflect
realistic assumptions about revenues that will likely be available
during the 25 years covered in the plan.
FLEXIBLE FUNDING
Unlike funding that flows only to highways or only to transit by a
rigid formula, this is money that can be invested in a range of
transportation projects. Examples of flexible funding categories
include the Surface Transportation Program (STP) and the Congestion
Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ) program.
FTA
Federal Transit Administration
U.S. Department of Transportation agency that provides financial and
planning assistance to help plan, build and operate rail, bus and
paratransit systems. The agency also assists in the development of
local and regional traffic reduction programs.
FE
Fund Estimate
The fund estimate serves to identify the amount of new funds available
for the programming of transportation projects. Once the fund estimate
is adopted, Caltrans and the regional planning agencies prepare
transportation improvement plans for submittal by December 15th (odd
years).
FY
Fiscal Year
Annual schedule for keeping financial records and for budgeting
transportation funds. California’s fiscal year runs from July 1 through
June 30, while the federal fiscal year runs from Oct. 1 through Sept.
30.
GARVEE
Grant Anticipation Revenue Vehicles Bond Program
Congress authorized states under the federal National Highway System
Designation Act of 1995 and the federal Transportation Equity Act for
the 21st Century to issue GAR
VEE bonds which are tax -exempt anticipation notes backed by annual
federal appropriations for federal aid transportation projects.
HIP
Housing Incentive Program
A program initiated by MTC to provide seed money to municipalities and
their development partners to encourage the development of compact
residential communities near public transit hubs.
HOV Lane
High-Occupancy-Vehicle Lane
The technical term for a carpool lane, commuter lane or diamond lane.
Intermodal
The term “mode” is used to refer to a means of transportation, such as
automobile, bus, train, ship, bicycle and walking. Intermodal refers
specifically to the connections between modes.
JARC
Job Access Reverse Commute
To improve access to transportation services to employment and
employment related activities for welfare recipients and eligible
low-income individuals and to transport residents of urbanized areas
and non-urbanized areas to suburban employment opportunities.
LIFELINE TRANSPORTATION NETWORK
An MTC initiative to enhance low-income residents’ access to key
destinations such as job centers, government buildings and medical
facilities during both peak commute periods and off-peak hours. While
most of the Lifeline network identified by MTC is already served by
existing transit routes, some low-income communities and/or
destinations are not served by transit or lack service at specific
times of day. MTC is working with transit operators and potential
funding partners to fill these gaps in the network.
LIFT
Low-Income Flexible Transportation
An MTC program that provides financial assistance for services to help
low-income residents get to and from work and other locations. Examples
of eligible LIFT projects include new and expanded public transit
services, transportation to child care centers, development of child
care facilities at transit hubs, rideshare activities and “guaranteed
ride home” programs.
MPO
Metropolitan Planning Organization
A federally required planning body responsible for the transportation
planning and project selection in its region; the governor designates
an MPO in every urbanized area with a population of over 50,000. MTC is
the Bay Area’s MPO.
MTC
Metropolitan Transportation Commission
The transportation planning, financing and coordinating agency for the nine counties of the San Francisco Bay Area.
MTS
Metropolitan Transportation System
A defined network of streets and roads, highways, mass transit routes,
bikeways, transfer points, airports and seaports considered essential
to regional mobility.
NCTPA
Napa County Transportation and Planning Agency
NVTA
Napa Valley Transportation Authority
OZONE ATTAINMENT STRATEGY
This plan details the strategy by which the Bay Area will comply with
federal ozone — or “smog” — standards. The Ozone Attainment Strategy is
prepared by the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, the
Association of Bay Area Governments and MTC, and then submitted for
review and approval by the California Air Resources Board and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency. The plan also provides a
transportation “emissions budget” that identifies allowable levels of
pollution from motor vehicles traveling in the Bay Area. (Also see “Conformity.”)
PARATRANSIT
Door-to-door bus, van and taxi services used to transport elderly and
disabled riders. Sometimes referred to as dial-a-ride service, since
trips are made according to demand instead of along a fixed route or
according to a fixed schedule.
PERFORMANCE MEASURES
Indicators of how well the transportation system or specific transportation projects will improve transportation conditions.
POTENTIAL NEW REVENUES
Funds that may be available for transportation investment in the future
if proposed new revenue sources are approved. Current legislative
proposals include a $1 increase in the base toll on state-owned bridges
and indexing the federal gasoline tax to inflation. These potential
revenues are not included in the financially constrained portion of the
long-term transportation plan.
PROGRAM
(1) Verb, to assign funds to a project that has been approved by MTC,
the state or another agency and (2) noun, a system of funding for
implementing transportation projects or policies, such as through the
State Transportation Improvement Program. (Also see “STIP.”)
PROPOSITION 42
A state constitutional amendment passed by California voters in March
2002 that permanently dedicates 100 percent of the state sales tax on
gasoline for transportation investments, although the Legislature is
able to suspend these provisions in times of fiscal crisis.
PUBLIC TRANSIT ACCOUNT
The Public Transit Account is established in the General Fund of the
State Treasury. Except as otherwise provided by law, all moneys
received by the Department of Transportation for public transit
purposes, from whatever source, shall be paid into the State Treasury
and credited to the account. All moneys in the account are appropriated
continuously to the department and shall be used for public transit
purposes authorized by law.
RACC
Regional Agency Coordinating Committee
A nine-member committee — composed of three representatives each from
MTC, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District and the Association
of Bay Area Governments — that coordinates activities of the three
agencies on issues that affect transportation, land use and air quality.
RSTP
Regional Surface Transportation Program
The Regional Surface Transportation Program (RSTP) was established by
California State Statute utilizing Surface Transportation Program Funds
that are identified in Section 133 of Title 23 of the United States
Code.
RTEP
Regional Transit Expansion Program
An identified list of high-priority rail and express/rapid bus
improvements to serve the Bay Area’s most congested corridors. The
program was adopted in December 2001 pursuant to MTC Resolution 3434 to
establish clear priorities for the investment of transit expansion
funds over the next decade.
RESOLUTION 3434
See Regional Transit Expansion Program.
RETURN TO SOURCE
A requirement with some funding programs (such as TDA) that the money
flow back to the county where it originated from tax revenues,
regardless of need.
RTIP
Regional Transportation Improvement Program
A listing of highway, local road, transit and bicycle projects that the
region hopes to fund; compiled by MTC every two years from priority
lists submitted by local jurisdictions. The California Transportation
Commission (CTC) must either approve or reject the RTIP in its
entirety. Once the CTC approves an RTIP, it is combined with those from
other regions to comprise 75 percent of the funds in the State
Transportation Improvement Program or STIP. (Also see “STIP.”)
RTP
Regional Transportation Plan
A master plan to guide the region’s transportation investments for a
25-year period. Updated every three years, it is based on projections
of growth in population and jobs and the ensuing travel demand.
Required by state and federal law, it includes programs to better
maintain, operate and expand transportation. The Bay Area’s 2005 update
of its long-range transportation plan, now under way, is known as
Transportation 2030.
SAFE
Service Authority for Freeways and Expressways
As the region’s SAFE, MTC, in partnership with the California Highway
Patrol and the California Department of Transportation, oversees the
installation and operation of call boxes along Bay Area freeways and
highways, and administers a roving tow truck service to quickly clear
incidents from the region’s most congested roadways. State legislation
in 1987 created the MTC SAFE, which is funded in part through a $1
surcharge on motor vehicle registrations.
SAFETEA-LU
Safe, Accountable, Flexible, and Efficient Transportation Equity Act - A Legacy for Users
Federal Legislation which provides $286.4 billion in guaranteed funding
for federal surface transportation programs over six years through FY
2009, including $52.6 billion for federal transit programs - a 46%
increase over transit funding guaranteed in TEA 21.
SALES TAX AUTHORITY
An agency that administers a voter-approved county transportation sales
tax program; in most Bay Area counties, the congestion management
agency (CMA) also serves as the sales tax authority.
SB 375
Senate Bill 375
Aims
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by providing financial and
environmental review incentives to reduce sprawl and promote
development patterns that give people transportation options so they
can drive less.
SELF-HELP COUNTIES
A term used to describe counties that have taken the initiative to
supplement available state and federal funds by enacting local
voter-approved funding mechanisms — such as half-cent sales taxes — to
pay for transportation improvements. In the Bay Area, five counties
have passed such measures: Alameda, Contra Costa, San Francisco, San
Mateo and Santa Clara.
SHA
State Highway Account
The State Highway Account is used for the deposit of all money from any
source for expenditure for highway purposes including major and minor
construction, maintenance, right-of-way acquisition, improvements and
equipment, services, investigations, surveys, experiments and reports.
SHA
State Highway Administration
Division of Traffic Operations - Road Information - California Highway Information
SHOPP
State Highway Operation and Protection Program
Purpose is to maintain and preserve the investment in California and its supporting infrastructure.
SRTP
Short Range Transit Plan
The Short Range Transit Plan (SRTP) is a federally mandated planning
document that describes the plans, programs and goals of the transit
operator.
SMART GROWTH
A set of policies and programs designed to protect, preserve and
economically stimulate established communities, while protecting
valuable natural and cultural resources and limiting sprawl.
SOV
Single-Occupant Vehicle
A vehicle with one occupant, the driver, who is sometimes referred to as a “drive alone.”
STA
State Transit Assistance
Provides funding for mass transit operations and capital projects.
STIP
State Transportation Improvement Program
What the California Transportation Commission (CTC) ends up with after
combining various RTIPs, as well as a list of specific projects
proposed by Caltrans. Covering a five-year span and updated every two
years, the STIP determines when and if transportation projects will be
funded by the state. Projects included in the STIP must be consistent
with the long-range transportation plan.
STP
Surface Transportation Program
One of the key funding programs in TEA 21. STP moneys are “flexible,”
meaning they can be spent on mass transit, pedestrian and bicycle
facilities, as well as on roads and highways.
SYSTEM MANAGEMENT
A coordinated series of programs involving MTC and partner agencies
such as the California Highway Patrol and Caltrans to make the region’s
existing transportation system work more efficiently. These efforts
include congestion relief initiatives such as the roving Freeway
Service Patrol tow trucks, and traveler information programs such as
the toll-free 511 phone service and the www.511.org Web page.
TIF
Transportation Investment Fund
The use of state gasoline sales tax revenues for transportation purposes.
TCM
Transportation Control Measure
A strategy to reduce driving or smooth traffic flows in order to cut
auto emissions and resulting air pollution. Required by the Clean Air
Act, TCMs for the Bay Area are developed by MTC. Examples of TCMs
include carpool lanes, roving tow truck patrols to clear stalls and
accidents from congested roadways, new or increased transit service,
and ridesharing services to get people into carpools and vanpools.
TCRP
Traffic Congestion Relief Program
A five-year state transportation investment plan passed by the
California Legislature and signed into law by Governor Gray Davis in
2000. The plan originally called for $6.8 billion of spending (with
$1.7 billion to the Bay Area) from fiscal 2000–01 to 2005–06, but
subsequent refinancing agreements postponed the funding until fiscal
2002–03 to 2007–08.
TDA
Transportation Development Act
State law enacted in 1971. TDA funds are generated from a tax of
one-quarter of one percent on all retail sales in each county; used for
transit, special transit for disabled persons, and bicycle and
pedestrian purposes. TDA moneys are collected by the state and
allocated in the Bay Area by MTC to fund transit operations and
programs. In non-urban areas, TDA funds may be used for streets and
roads under certain conditions.
TE
Transportation Enhancements
Projects that include providing bicycle and pedestrian facilities;
converting abandoned railroad rights-of-way into trails; preserving
historic transportation sites; acquiring scenic easements; mitigating
the negative impacts of a project on a community by providing
additional benefits; and other projects.
TEA
Transportation Enhancement Activities
A TEA 21 funding category. Ten percent of STP moneys must be set aside
for projects that enhance the compatibility of transportation
facilities with their surroundings. Examples of TEA projects include
bicycle and pedestrian paths, restoration of rail depots or other
historic transportation facilities, acquisition of scenic or open space
lands next to travel corridors, and murals or other public art projects.
TEA 21
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century
Passed by Congress in May 1998, this federal transportation legislation
retains and expands many of the programs created in 1991 under the
Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA). Reauthorizes
federal surface transportation programs for six years (1998–2003) and
significantly increases overall funding for transportation.
TFA
Transportation Facilities Account
TFCA
Transportation Fund for Clean Air
The Transportation Fund for Clean Air (TFCA) is a grant program funded
by a $4 surcharge on motor vehicles registered in the Bay Area. This
generates approximately $22 million per year in revenues.
TITLE VI
Title 6
Refers to Title VI of the Federal Civil Rights Act of 1964, and
requires that transportation planning and programming be
nondiscriminatory on the basis of race, color and national origin.
Integral to Title VI is the concept of environmental justice. (Also see
“Environmental Justice.”
TIF
Transportation Investment Fund
The use of state gasoline sales tax revenues for transportation purposes.
TIP
Transportation Improvement Program
A short-term (covering three years) program of transportation projects
that will be funded with all federal funds expected to flow to the
region; the projects contained in the TIP are drawn from, and
consistent with, the long-range transportation plan.
TLC
Transportation for Livable Communities
Program created by MTC in 1998 to fund small-scale, community- and
transit-oriented projects that improve neighborhood vitality.
TOD
Transit-Oriented Development
A type of development that links land use and transit facilities to
support the transit system and help reduce sprawl, traffic congestion
and air pollution. It includes housing, along with complementary public
uses (jobs, retail and services), located at a strategic point along a
regional transit system, such as a rail hub.
TRANSPORTATION 2030 PLAN
The long-range transportation planning effort now under way in the
nine-county Bay Area to guide transportation policy and investment
decisions through the year 2030.
TDM
Transportation Demand Management
The application of strategies and policies to reduce automobile travel
demand, or to redistribute this demand in space or in time.
TRAVEL DEMAND MODEL
Used by transportation planners for simulating current travel
conditions and for forecasting future travel patterns and conditions.
Models help planners and policy-makers analyze the effectiveness and
efficiency of alternative transportation investments in terms of
mobility, accessibility, and environmental and equity impacts.
TRIBAL GOVERNMENT CONSULTATION
A formal process between MPOs and federally recognized Indian tribes,
which are recognized as sovereign nations, which calls for
government-to-government consultation regarding transportation planning
and programming efforts.
UNCOMMITTED REVENUES
Anticipated transportation revenues available for new investments after
accounting for revenue committed by law, ballot measure or MTC
programming actions. These revenues account for about 10 percent of all
revenues forecasted to be available over the 25-year period of the
regional transportation plan, and are the major focus of the update
process. (Also see “Committed Revenues.”)
U.S. DOT
United States Departmentof Transportation
The federal cabinet-level agency with responsibility for highways, mass
transit, aviation and ports; it is headed by the Secretary of
Transportation. The DOT includes the Federal Highway Administration and
the Federal Transit Administration, among others. There is also state
DOTs (known in California as Caltrans).
VALUE PRICING
The concept of assessing higher prices for using certain transportation
facilities during the most congested times of the day, in the same way
that airlines offer off-peak discounts and hotel rooms cost more during
prime tourist seasons. Also known as congestion pricing and peak-period
pricing, examples of this concept include higher bridge tolls during
peak periods or charging single-occupant vehicles that want to use
carpool lanes.
VMT
Vehicle Miles Traveled
One vehicle (whether a car carrying one passenger or a bus carrying 30
people) traveling one mile constitutes a vehicle mile. VMT is one
measure of the use of Bay Area freeways and roads.
Page last modified 02/04/2011 at 4:24 pm.
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