Executive Summary
This document, Charting Progress to 2040, is the Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization’s (MPO) Long-Range Transportation Plan (LRTP) that will be used to move the region’s transportation network from its present state towards the MPO’s vision for the system’s future:
The Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization envisions a modern transportation system that is safe, uses new technologies, provides equitable access, excellent mobility, and varied transportation options—in support of a sustainable, healthy, livable, and economically vibrant region.
To help achieve the MPO’s vision, this LRTP identifies goals, evaluates needs, and sets priorities, which will be supported with federal funding that the MPO receives for planning and programming investments in capital projects. However, given the region’s aging transportation infrastructure and limited resources, the MPO addresses the following challenge through this LRTP:
How can we maintain the transportation network to meet existing needs, adapt and modernize it for future demand, and simultaneously work within the reality of constrained fiscal resources?
In answering this challenge, the MPO has re-evaluated its past practices and set a new course by moving away from programming expensive capital-expansion projects to ease congestion, and instead, setting aside more funding for small operations-and-management (O&M)-type projects that support bicycle, pedestrian, and transit, along with major roadway improvements.
The MPO developed Charting Progress to 2040 in compliance with current federal highway legislation,Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century (MAP-21), which governs MPO activities. In keeping with MAP-21, planning for this LRTP incorporated a number of new elements that brought more information to the decision-making process, for both the MPO and the public. One new element is an interactive web-based needs-assessment application that all interested parties may access. In addition, MPO staff enhanced its performance-based planning practice for this LRTP and expanded its use of contemporary planning tools, such as scenario planning, to inform policy and other types of decisions.
Public participation provided on-going critical input to the MPO's decision-making process. Throughout development of this LRTP, the MPO engaged in extensive outreach with an eye toward making public participation convenient, inviting, and engaging for everyone. In particular, the MPO sought to break down barriers to participation for people who traditionally have been only minimally involved in the continuous, comprehensive, cooperative (3C) planning process; for example, minority and low-income populations, and those with limited English proficiency or disabilities. These outreach efforts reflected the MPO's recently revitalized public participation program that includes using more electronic forms of communication and interactive engagement techniques.
Early in the process of developing Charting Progress to 2040, the MPO revised its vision statement to focus more sharply on the transportation issues of greatest concern to the MPO and the public for the envisioned future transportation system, including:
For each of these issues, the MPO identified problems and their associated requirements for the transportation network. This allowed the MPO to set goals that, if accomplished, would result in concrete solutions for the identified problems, and help the region achieve its vision by 2040. The MPO established objectives for each goal. (See Figure ES.1.)
FIGURE ES.1
MPO Vision, Goals, and Objectives
Central Vision Statement
The Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization envisions a modern transportation system that is safe, uses new technologies, provides equitable access, excellent mobility, and varied transportation options—in support of a sustainable, healthy, livable, and economically vibrant region.
Goals and Objectives
Safety - Transportation by all modes will be safe
System Preservation - Maintain the transportation system
Capacity Management/Mobility - Use existing facility capacity more efficiently and increase healthy transportation capacity
Clean Air Communities - Create an environmentally friendly transportation system
Transportation Equity - Provide comparable transportation access and service quality among communities, regardless of income level or minority population
Economic Vitality - Ensure our transportation network provides a strong foundation for economic vitality
Together, the vision, goals, and objectives lay the groundwork for the MPO’s performance-based planning practice, which in turn informs all of the work conducted by the MPO, including evaluating and selecting projects and programs for the LRTP, selecting projects for the Transportation Improvement Program (TIP), and selecting planning studies for the Unified Planning Work Program (UPWP).
The MPO assessed the region’s transportation needs to help decide which projects to fund in the LRTP. This Needs Assessment includes information about how the region’s surface transportation system is used, both now and in future projections; how it interacts with land-use conditions and the environment; and how well it serves low-income, minority, and other historically underserved populations. The Needs Assessment also establishes the baseline for charting progress through performance-based planning.
The MPO has made the Needs Assessment data available via the internet to help educate the public and make the planning process more transparent. A Needs Assessment document, also found on the MPO's website, summarizes these data and identifies the region’s most critical needs relative to each of the MPO's goals. The Needs Assessment makes clear that the region faces extensive maintenance and modernization needs, and must address safety and mobility for all modes.
Using the Needs Assessment, the MPO compiled a comprehensive universe of projects that could be programmed to solve the identified problems; the projects that became the recommended list selected for evaluation and inclusion in this LRTP, were taken directly from this universe.
During the 25 years of this plan, the Boston Region MPO has the discretion to program $2.85 billion in federal funds for highway transportation projects. This amount is significantly less than was available four years ago when the MPO programmed approximately $3.8 billion in its prior LRTP, Paths to a Sustainable Region.
Because, as of this writing, Congress had not yet passed new federal legislation that would solidify long-term revenue projections, the federal agencies advised the MPO to assume that revenues would increase by 1.5 percent each year for federal fiscal years (FFYs) 2021 through 2040. For the same period, the MPO was told to assume that project costs would inflate by 4 percent each year. If these assumptions hold true, project costs will outpace available revenues, resulting in diminished buying power in future years. A new authorization by Congress, following publication of this LRTP, could change the outlook for financing transportation projects in the Boston region.
TABLE ES.1
Comparison of Available Capital Highway Funds in Charting Progress to 2040 to the Previous LRTP, Paths to a Sustainable Region
FFYs 2015-13 |
FFYs 2016-20 |
FFYs 2021-25 |
FFYs 2026-30 |
FFYs 2031-35 |
FFYs 2036-40 |
Total |
|
Paths to a Sustainable |
$229.83 |
$557.47 |
$815.61 |
$1018.44 |
$1180.65 |
-- |
$3802.00 |
Charting Progress to 2040 |
-- |
441.65 |
464.87 |
580.90 |
657.78 |
$708.60 |
$2853.80 |
Difference |
|
($115.82) |
($350.74) |
($437.54) |
($522.87) |
|
($948.20) |
Percentage Change |
|
-21% |
-43% |
-43% |
-44% |
-- |
-25% |
FFYS = Federal fiscal years.
Note: Dollars in millions.
Paths to a Sustainable Region is a 23 year LRTP compared to Charting Progress to 2040 which is a 25 years.
Source: Central Transportation Planning Staff.
The financial plan for Charting Progress to 2040 reflects the way in which the MPO plans to balance the diversity of identified needs with the fiscal constraint of projected revenues. The financial plan includes estimated costs for the specific regionally significant transportation projects that the MPO will fund, as well as defined amounts of money set aside throughout the life of the plan for programs that will fund smaller projects. Because these smaller projects are not regionally significant, they are not accounted for individually in the LRTP, but will be selected through the TIP programming process.
In addition to reporting on the MPO's discretionary spending decisions, this financial plan also provides information on the nearly $6 billion that the state plans to spend on highway projects. It also will cite the $10.3 billion that the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) is expected to spend, and the capital resources available to the other two Regional Transit Authorities operating in the MPO region.
MPO staff used a variety of analytic methods, including a number of new and/or enhanced planning tools and techniques, to shed light on the potential outcomes of various investment strategies (and inform the MPO’s general discussions and decision making). Staff also increased its use of scenario planning to allow the MPO and other stakeholders to compare the relative effects of different possible transportation solutions.
Scenario planning helped illuminate the relative merits of two different approaches to one of the objectives related to the MPO's capacity management goal:
Should the MPO continue to use a congestion-reduction approach by investing in major arterials and express highways? Or, should the MPO adopt a capacity-management approach by investing in smaller-scale, but more diverse and geographically dispersed, O&M-typeprojects?
The results of this exercise led the MPO to adopt the O&M approach to programming in the LRTP, signaling a pivotal change in the MPO’s funding philosophy, and committing a significant portion of MPO funds to the following investment programs:
In addition to prioritizing the programs discussed above, the MPO also tried to honor its past policy and practice of maintaining its previous LRTP and TIP-programming commitments when selecting the recommended list of projects for inclusion in the plan. MPO staff used the recommended list to model two alternatives:
Ultimately, the MPO chose the O&M alternative for the final selection of projects and programs. The final selection was based on the informed judgment of the MPO and knowledge gained through the LRTP development process, including the needs assessment; scenario-planning; project information from feasibility studies, project-specific modeling work, and environmental impact reports; adherence to the MPO’s goals and objectives; and feedback from the general public and other interested parties.
Table ES.2, below, presents the MPO’s final list of the projects and programs included in Charting Progress to 2040’s 25-year horizon.
TABLE ES.2
Major Infrastructure Projects in the Recommended LRTP
Project Name |
Current Cost |
Middlesex Turnpike Improvements, From Crosby Drive North to Manning Road, Phase III (Bedford and Billerica) |
$26,935,000 |
Reconstruction of Rutherford Avenue, from City Square to Sullivan Square (Boston) |
$109,967,000 |
Intersection Improvements at Route 126 and Route 135/MBTA and CSX Railroad (Framingham) |
$115,000,000 |
Route 4/225 (Bedford Street) and Hartwell Avenue (Lexington) |
$23,221,000 |
Bridge Replacement, Route 27 (North Main St.) over Route 9 (Worcester St.) and Interchange Improvements (Natick) |
$25,793,000 |
Reconstruction of Highland Avenue, Needham Street and Charles River Bridge, from Webster Street to Route 9 (Newton and Needham) |
$14,298,000 |
McGrath Boulevard Project (Somerville) |
$56,600,000 |
Green Line Extension Project (Phase 2), College Avenue to Mystic Valley Parkway/Route 16 (Somerville and Medford) |
$190,000,000 |
Reconstruction and Widening on Route 18 (Main Street) From Highland Place to Route 139 (Weymouth and Abington) |
$58,822,000 |
Reconstruction of Montvale Avenue, from I-93 Interchange to Central Street (Woburn) |
$4,225,000 |
Bridge Replacement, New Boston Street over MBTA (Woburn) |
$9,707,000 |
Table ES.3, below, presents a list of the amount of funding dedicated to programs included in Charting Progress to 2040.
TABLE ES.3
Funding Dedicated to Programs in the Recommended LRTP
Program |
Dedicated Funding |
MPO Discretionary Capital Program: Major Infrastructure Projects |
$615,363,800 |
MPO Discretionary Capital Program: Highway Funds Flexed to Transit |
$190,000,000 |
MPO Discretionary Capital Program: Complete Street Program |
$936,262,700 |
MPO Discretionary Capital Program: Intersection Improvement Program |
$443,639,500 |
MPO Discretionary Capital Program: Bicycle/Pedestrian Program |
$158,442,700 |
MPO Discretionary Capital Program: Community Transportation/ Parking/Clean Air and Mobility Program |
$63,377,100 |
MPO Discretionary Capital Program: Unassigned Funds |
$446,707,600 |
Total Highway Funding |
$2,853,793,400 |
Transit Expansion Projects Funded in the Boston Region MPO by the Commonwealth |
$1,555,250,000 |
Transit Funding |
$1,555,250,000 |
Increasingly, over the past two decades, transportation agencies have been utilizing “performance management”—a strategic approach that uses performance data to guide decisions and track progress over time to help achieve desired outcomes. Another term for this strategy is performance-based planning and programming (PBPP). The goal of PBPP is to ensure that transportation investment decisions—both long-term planning and short-term programming—are based on their ability to meet established goals.
Although the Boston Region MPO has been developing a PBPP practice for several years, it stepped up its efforts for this LRTP—both to improve the process and to meet MAP-21 requirements—through the following actions:
The MPO used PBPP to evaluate the degree to which proposed investments—both major infrastructure projects and O&M-type investment programs—advance each of the MPOs goals over the life of the LRTP. For the regionally significant projects and those that will be funded through O&M-type programs, MPO staff conducted project-level assessments using sketch-planning and travel-demand modeling techniques.
Performance-based planning is an ongoing process and will evolve as the MPO monitors and evaluates its progress using performance measures. The MPO will continue to use PBPP to monitor system-level trends annually and will propose performance targets for each performance measure. By continuously monitoring and evaluating its progress, the MPO will be able to weigh the trade-offs among competing goals and objectives in a more informed manner.
The MPO supports a transportation equity (TE) program to ensure that populations protected under various federal and state civil rights statutes, executive orders, and regulations (TE populations) are provided equal opportunity to participate fully in the MPO’s transportation-planning and decision-making process. Federal regulations require that TE populations share equitably in the benefits and burdens of past, present, and future transportation projects, programs, and service. The MPO’s TE program comprises various activities, including a public-participation program designed specifically to communicate with low-income and minority residents, the elderly, persons with disabilities, and persons with limited English proficiency (LEP).
For this LRTP, MPO staff used the travel-demand model set to perform two types of equity analyses:
For the first part of each type of analysis which looked at the change between the 2040 No-Build and Build alternatives for low-income, non-low-income, minority, and nonminority TAZs, respectively, all projected changes were within the margin of error of the model. The second part of the analysis which measured the ratio of the change from the 2040 No-Build to the Build alternative for low-income versus non-low-income TAZs and minority versus nonminority TAZs, showed no disproportionate burdens or disparate impacts for all six of the accessibility factors and most of the seven mobility, congestion, and air-quality factors analyzed. However, for one mobility and congestion measure, both a disproportionate burden and disparate impact was found; and for another, only a disparate impact was found. Because the underlying data for this analysis were within the model’s margin of error, these findings likely would not be meaningful; however, the MPO will track them via future TIP equity evaluations to ensure that they are addressed.
The MPO completed two types of air-quality analyses for Charting Progress to 2040. The first is the air-quality conformity determination for projects in the LRTP, as required by federal and state regulations, which specifically addresses carbon monoxide (CO). The requirement to perform a conformity determination ensures that federal approval and funding go to transportation activities that are consistent with air-quality goals. The air-quality conformity analysis shows that CO emissions from projects in Charting Progress to 2040 are consistent with the emissions budget set forth in the State Implementation Plan.
The second air-quality analysis looked at greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions for projects in the LRTP and TIP as mandated by state legislation, which requires that GHG emissions be reduced below 1990 levels by 25 percent by 2020, and 80 percent by 2050. To do so, state policies require the transportation sector to promote healthy transportation modes and support smart growth development.
The Massachusetts Department of Transportation, using MPO and statewide travel-demand models, will provide the MPO with statewide estimates of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions (the most prominent GHG). These estimates will be based on the collective list of recommended projects in all the Massachusetts LRTPs combined (and supplemented by CO2 emission-reduction results for smaller, “off-model” projects supplied by the MPO). MPO staff will present the results of this modeling to the MPO prior to its endorsement of this LRTP. The results of the GHG modeling will be available in a separate statewide air quality report at the end of August 2015. Although not federally required, an emissions analysis for ozone precursors will also be included in this separate air quality report for informational purposes only, based on comments received during the public comment period for the Draft LRTP.
Charting Progress to 2040 represents a turning point in the philosophy and practice of the MPO. The Boston region has long embraced transit and supported non-motorized modes of transportation. However, this is the MPO's first LRTP that does not prioritize the funding of regionally significant roadway projects over other types of investments. The MPO hopes that charting this new course will achieve its transportation vision for the future, to improve the quality of life of its residents and enhance the environment in the whole region.