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Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program. Energy Law, Fall 2010 Natashia Holmes natashiaholmes@sbcglobal.net. Presentation Outline. Brief review of 1990 Amendments to the Clean Air Act which impacted the development of federal transportation programs
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Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program Energy Law, Fall 2010 Natashia Holmes natashiaholmes@sbcglobal.net
Presentation Outline • Brief review of 1990 Amendments to the Clean Air Act which impacted the development of federal transportation programs • Overview of the Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ) Program • Case Study: Northeastern Illinois’ implementation of the CMAQ program • CMAQ policy considerations for the next federal transportation bill
Clean Air Act • Originally enacted in 1977 • Made significant improvements in U.S. air quality….but environmental and health issues due to urban air pollution persisted
Clean Air Act, 1990 amendments • Congress’ effort to strengthen efforts to meet National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) • Targeted reducing main culprits of urban air pollution: • Allowed EPA to designate boundaries of ‘nonattainment’ areas • Particulate Matter • Ozone (smog)
‘Nonattainment’ areas • Geographical area whose air quality does not meet federal air quality standards designed to protect public health Source: United States Environmental Protection Agency
Intermodal Surface Transportation and Efficiency Act (ISTEA) • Enacted in 1991, first multi-year federal transportation funding program • Focused on multi-modal, environmentally sensitive, transportation planning • Established the Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ) Program to implement ambient air quality standards
Following ISTEA… • CMAQ was reauthorized in the Transportation Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21, 1998), and • Safe Accountable Flexible Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU, 2005)* • Emphasis remains on intermodal connections, quality of life, clean air and economic competitiveness SAFETEA-LU expired Sept. 20, 2009, but has since been operating under continuing resolutions at original authorization levels.
Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality (CMAQ) Improvement Program • First federal transportation program explicitly targeting air quality improvement • Serves to implement the air quality standards set by the 1990 Clean Air Act • Provides funding to states to use in ‘nonattainment ‘ areas for projects that help address air quality concerns from transportation sources
CMAQ: Program Goals • Improving Air Quality • Relieving Congestion Natural Gas Filing station High-Occupancy Vehicle Lane (HOV)
CMAQ: Statutory Requirements • Conformity Analysis • Ensures that federal transportation funding goes only to transportation activities that are consistent with federal clean air goals • Emissions Analysis • Projects seeking funding must estimate the expected emissions, with particular attention to CO, VOCs, NOx, PM, for the purposes of project evaluation and selection
CMAQ: Program Administration • Funding is provided to either a State or Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) • MPOs are federally mandated for areas of a state with 50,000+ population, and as a condition for spending federal highway or transit funds in urbanized areas, have responsibility for planning, programming and coordination of federal highway and transit investments.
CMAQ: Projects Eligible for Funding • General Categories of Funding: • Traffic flow improvements • Shared ride programs • Travel Demand Management • Bicycle/ pedestrian facilities, programs • Transit improvements • Other projects…. • Traditional funding ratio is 80 percent (federal share)/20 (local share) • However, the Energy Independence and Security Actof 2007provided for up to a 100 percent Federal share for CMAQ projects in FY 2008 and 2009.
CMAQ: Project Prerequisite • Eligible projects must be included in the MPO’s/Statewide Transportation Improvement Program • Transportation Improvement Program is prioritized listing/program of transportation projects covering a period of four years that is developed by an MPO as part of the metropolitan transportation planning process, and required for projects to be eligible for federal funding
Case Study: Northeastern Illinois’ implementation of CMAQ • Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (CMAP) • Metropolitan Planning Organization for the northeastern Illinois region • Responsible for the development of a comprehensive regional for the northeastern Illinois region (GoTo2040) • Responsible for the development and maintenance of travel forecasting methods used in the air quality conformity analysis of transportation improvement programs and regional transportation plans • Administers and implements the CMAQ program for the northeastern Illinois metropolitan area
Northeastern Illinois at a glance... • Commonly referred to as ‘metropolitan Chicago’ • 9.5 million population • Encompasses seven counties • 3rd largest intermodal hub in the world • 3rd worst congested metropolitan area in the US
Transportation hub = air pollution • Northeastern Illinois does not meet national ambient air quality standards for ground-level ozone (smog) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5), such as soot
Northeastern Illinois = nonattainment • Moderate non-attainment area for the 8-hour ozone standard, and • Non-attainment area for the annual fine particulate matter (PM2.5) standard
CMAP Project Selection Process • CMAP issues ‘Call for projects’ • Applicants must submit a proposal for one of the eligible project funding categories • CMAP’s Project Selection Committee reviews the applications and ranks them according to the evaluation methodology • Projects selected for funding become a part of the TIP • Non-exempt projects are the only CMAQ projects ‘modeled’ for conformity before they are included in the TIP
CMAP Project Evaluation Methodology CMAQ Program VOC Emission Reduction s • Primary ranking: cost per kilogram of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) eliminated over the life of the project. • Additional ranking categories: • cost per kilogram of nitrogen oxides (NOx) eliminated; • cost per thousand vehicle-miles traveled (VMT) eliminated; • and cost per thousand trips eliminated.
2010-2011 Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning, CMAQ funding distribution
CMAQ Policy Considerations for the next federal transportation bill • Should the metropolitan planning process take in consideration the location of generators for the purpose of locating charging stations (electric cars)? • Should the MPO Policy Committee be expanded to include a representative from the ICC and the EPA? • Should project criteria be more strictly defined and used only for projects that directly eliminate one person auto-use? • Should the ability to ‘flex’ CMAQ funds be eliminated? • Should rail infrastructure improvements be allowed, if air quality benefits and congestion relief result from the project?
Sources • Federal Highway Administration, http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ • Federal Transit Administration, http://www.fta.dot.gov/ • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, http://www.epa.gov/ • Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning, http://www.cmap.illinois.gov/ • Metropolitan Planning Council, http://www.metroplanning.org/ • Illinois Department of Transportation, http://www.dot.il.gov/ • Texas Transportation Institute, 2009 Annual Urban Mobility Report, http://mobility.tamu.edu/ums/ • Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency Project, http://www.createprogram.org/