Cedar Park - Leander Edition | October 2022

TRANSPORTATION UPDATES

Texas Transportation Commission adopts 10-year, $85B plan

Key projects outlined in the plan include $4.5 billion for the I-35 Capital Express Central project to expand the highway in Austin; numerous I-45 proj- ects in Houston, including at I-10 West for over $982 million; the I-35 Northeast Expansion in Comal and Guadalupe counties totaling over $421.5 million; and US 380 in Collin County near McKinney for $807.52 million. A full list of projects is available online. The UTP has 12 funding categories with each cate- gory addressing a speci c type of work, according to TxDOT. It authorizes the distribution of construction dollars to be available over the next 10 years. In addition to highway projects, the UTP outlines investments in public transportation, maritime, aviation, rail, and freight and international trade. In a press release, Abbott said the UTP will help with population and economic growth in Texas. “As more people move to Texas and businesses grow across the state, we are working together to make sure Texans’ transportation safety and mobility are secured and businesses can žourish for generations to come,” Abbott said. The projects in the plan will be funded through legislative and voter-approved initiatives that allocate portions of oil and gas taxes, sales taxes and other money to the state highway fund. The Texas Transportation Commission, the governing board for TxDOT, is required to approve a new 10-year plan each year. Texas Transportation Commission Chair J. Bruce

Capital Express Central project The Unied Transportation Program will direct $4.5 billion to the Capital Express Central project.

290

MOPAC

35

183 TOLL

BY CHRISTOPHER GREEN

On Aug. 30, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced the adoption of an $85 billion 10-year statewide road construction plan known as the Uni ed Transporta- tion Program. The UTP is the master document for the Texas Department of Transportation that connects the state’s plans—such as the Statewide Long-Range Transportation Plan, the Metropolitan Transporta- tion Plans and the Rural Transportation Plan—to the Statewide Transportation Improvement Program, which is the four-year construction plan. The UTP aims to address safety, congestion, rural activity and maintaining Texas roads. According to Abbott’s oŠce, the UTP funds will coincide with an additional $32 billion over 10 years for routine maintenance and project development—such as planning, professional engineering and right-of-way acquisition—for more than 7,000 transportation projects, amounting to a total investment of $117 billion statewide.

71 TOLL

N

Project details

SOURCE: TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION COMMUNITY IMPACT •removing the I-35 upper decks; •lowering the main lanes; and •adding two nontolled high-occupancy vehicle managed lanes in each direction.

Bugg Jr. said the UTP remains a top TxDOT priority. “The UTP režects a continued focus on improving transportation safety as the top priority, maintaining our current system, addressing traŠc congestion and improving statewide connectivity over the next decade,” Bugg said in the release.

10

COMMUNITY IMPACT • COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

Powered by