F Y 2014 - 2015 A n n u a l R e p o r t www.RTAmobility.com 1 E. Broadway Blvd., Suite 401, Tucson, AZ 85701 (520) 792-1093 [tel] (520) 620-6981 [fax] Roadway Valencia Rd. Safety Magee Rd. Environment Walking path along Sahuarita Rd. Transit Park and Ride at Broadway Blvd. and Houghton Rd. 2015 RTA Board RTA Chair Jonathan Rothschild City of Tucson Mayor RTA Vice Chair Ed Honea Town of Marana Mayor RTA Second Vice Chair Duane Blumberg Town of Sahuarita Mayor Ramón Valadez Pima County Board of Supervisors Catalina Alvarez Pascua Yaqui Tribe Vice Chairwoman Edward Manuel Tohono O’odham Nation Chairman Miguel Rojas City of South Tucson Mayor Satish Hiremath Town of Oro Valley Mayor Mike Hammond Arizona State Transportation Board Member Regional Transportation Authority of Pima County Pima County voters approved the 20-year, $2.1 billion Regional Transportation Authority plan in May 2006. The plan is funded by a half-cent excise tax. The RTA is the fiscal manager of the plan and member jurisdictions implement the bulk of the plan elements. Plan elements include roadway, safety, transit, and environmental and economic vitality projects and services. The RTA Board is comprised of chief elected officials, or their designees, of local, state and tribal governments. The RTA Board established a Citizens Accountability for Regional Transportation (CART) Committee to oversee plan implementation. The Technical Management Committee provides technical advice. The RTA is managed by Pima Association of Governments through a memorandum of understanding. More information is available at www.RTAmobility.com or www.PAGregion.com Farhad Moghimi, Executive Director Letter from the Chair The Regional Transportation Authority completed more than 700 multimodal projects through the end of the 2014-15 fiscal year, the ninth year of the RTA plan. One of these projects, the Sun Link streetcar, launched on July 25, 2014. In less than one year, the streetcar celebrated its 1 millionth passenger and now averages more than 4,000 passengers per day. Weekend and event ridership also has exceeded expectations, requiring additional service. Jonathan Rothschild This particular RTA project has helped transform downtown Tucson into a bustling urban core, spurring development along its 3.9-mile route. Other RTA projects also have led to economic development, such as the new Tucson Premium Outlets in Marana and the Houghton Town Center at the intersection of Houghton and Old Vail roads, where Walmart and a series of other retail outlets opened recently or are set to open in the coming year. Although development and jobs go along with transportation improvements, our economy has not yet recovered all that it lost during the recession. This means the RTA excise tax collections remain below projections. In light of the economic situation, the RTA continues to assess its financial outlook. The RTA Board has taken steps to supplement its revenues with other regional funds with the goal of delivering projects promised to voters in the 2006 ballot measure prior to the plan’s expiration in FY 2026. The RTA will mark the 10th anniversary of the Pima County voterapproved plan in May 2016. Soon, we will begin to explore reauthorization of the ½-cent excise tax. Nearly three years of planning and community discussion preceded voter approval of the current plan. Successful transportation projects require careful planning and considerable resources but they have the potential to yield great economic benefits – as the streetcar and other RTA projects have shown. The ½-cent excise tax has provided a much-needed boost to our transportation network and our economy. We need to renew this investment, with new focus on current needs and priorities, so we can continue to improve our region’s mobility, sustainability and livability. 2015 Citizens Accountability for Regional Transportation (CART) Committee Letter from CART Committee Chair In February 2015, the Regional Transportation Authority’s Citizens Accountability for Regional Transportation (CART) Committee voted in new officers. I have had the honor of serving as CART Chair in 2015, along with Vice Chair Steve Huffman and Secretary Doug Mance. I’d like to thank Kelly Maslyn, former CART Chair, and David Longoria, former CART Vice Chair and member, for their many years of service to the citizen’s committee since 2006. We also appreciate the years of service of the late Mr. Herb Trossman and Mr. John Sullivan, also former CART members. Bill Sheldon During the past fiscal year, the RTA continued to implement many projects as noted in this report. More are in the pipeline. Twenty-seven additional bus pullout projects, for example, were approved during the fiscal year. More than 108 bus pullouts, projects that were favored by the public as the RTA was developed, have been completed to date. In April, CART Committee members had the opportunity to tour projects completed or ongoing in the northwest section of the region. The transportation improvements in the northwest clearly have enhanced regional mobility and transformed the area into a vibrant community corridor for ongoing economic development. One of our region’s major roadway corridors received a green light from the Tucson City Council and RTA Board to move into the design phase. Broadway Boulevard, from Euclid Avenue to Country Club Road, will be widened to six lanes with bus pullouts. This project, once completed, will be a renewed gateway to downtown Tucson, along with the final phase of Downtown Links as it connects to Barraza-Aviation Parkway. We continued to receive project updates and a positive outlook on the projects benefitting from the $150 million in RTA bonds issued in June 2014. While we recognize that RTA revenues continue to lag, the RTA has developed solutions to deliver projects in the 20-year plan. The RTA continues to provide outstanding results to the benefit of our regional economy and mobility. Albert Pesqueira Allen Cook Amber Smith Armando Rios Jr. Charlene Robinson Chris Albright David Heineking Douglas Mance James Barber Joseph Oliva III Kennton Grant M. Joe Yee Pamela Traficanti Richard Roberts Robert Cook Roger Cracraft Sami Hamed Steve Huffman William Sheldon Jurisdiction Representatives: Kendell Elmer Pima County Alena Fast City of Tucson Herman Lopez City of South Tucson Kelle Masyln Town of Marana Tom Bush Town of Oro Valley The late John Sullivan Town of Sahuarita Charles Mendonca Pascua Yaqui Tribe Gerald Fayuant Tohono O’odham Nation 2015 Technical Management Committee Jurisdiction representatives: Chuck Huckelberry John Bernal Pima County Martha Durkin Daryl Cole City of Tucson Joel Gastelum City of South Tucson Kelly Udall Town of Sahuarita Keith Brann Town of Marana Marcelino Flores Pascua Yaqui Tribe Jose Rodriguez Town of Oro Valley Steve Tipton Tohono O’odham Nation Private Sector Representatives: Bob Iannarino Chet Davis Frank Thomson Jim Schoen Paul Cella Roger Caldwell Steve Shepherd William Carroll Projects Completed in FY 2014-15 ROADWAY IMPROVEMENTS La Cañada Drive, River Road to Ina Road Houghton Road, Broadway Blvd. intersection (Vicksburg St. to Foxmoor Drive) La Cholla Blvd., Magee Road to Overton Road Wildlife crossing at Twin Peaks Rd. SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS Speedway Blvd./6th Ave. intersection Orange Grove Road/Mona Lisa Drive intersection Rancho Sahuarita Road/La Villita Drive intersection La Paloma Academy at Golf Links Road pedestrian crossing La Cholla Blvd. at Merlin St. pedestrian crossing Park Ave. at 33rd St. pedestrian crossing Stone Ave. at King St. pedestrian crossing Magee Rd. Homer Davis Safe Routes to School project Centennial Elementary and Flowing Wells Jr. High - Safe Routes to School project Bus Pullouts Package No. 4 City of Tucson ADA Bus Stop accessibility improvements ENVIRONMENTAL AND ECONOMIC VITALITY IMPROVEMENTS Orange Grove Road bike lanes Bus pullout on Valencia Rd. Pantano Riverpark, Broadway Blvd. to Kenyon Drive Cañada del Oro shared-use path State Route 86 (Ajo Highway)/Santa Rosa wildlife underpass State Route 86 (Ajo Highway)/Kitt Peak wildlife underpass TRANSIT IMPROVEMENTS Modern Streetcar (Sun Link) St. Mary’s intersection Broadway Blvd./Houghton Road park-and-ride and transit center Major Projects under Construction in FY 2014-15 ROADWAY IMPROVEMENTS Magee Road, La Cañada Drive to Oracle Road (completed Oct. 2015) Sahuarita Road, La Villita Drive to Country Club Road (completed Sept. 2015) 22nd St./Kino Parkway intersection (completed Oct. 2015) Rita Road Valencia Road, Alvernon Way to Wilmot Road (completed Dec. 2015) Valencia Road, Wade Road to Mark Road Silverbell Road, Grant Road to Goret Road Houghton Road, Broadway Blvd. to 22nd St. SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS Nogales Hwy./Old Nogales Hwy. intersection (completed Dec. 2015) Construction on Valencia Rd. Rancho Vistoso Blvd./Vistoso Highlands intersection (completed July 2015) Pedestrian signal at Treat Ave./Broadway Blvd. (completed Nov. 2015) Pedestrian signal at Euclid Ave. and 5th St. (completed Sept. 2015) Pedestrian signal at 22nd St. and Avenida Serio (completed Nov. 2015) ENVIRONMENTAL AND ECONOMIC VITALITY IMPROVEMENTS 22nd St. and Kino Parkway Intersection Campbell Ave. transportation enhancements Rancho Vistoso sidewalk (completed July 2015) State Route 86 (Ajo Highway) wildlife fencing (completed Oct. 2015) State Route 77 (Oracle Road) wildlife crossings Broadway and Houghton Intersection Kolb Road Connection Projects going to Construction during Calendar Year 2016 State Route 77 (Oracle Road) at Los Lomitas pedestrian crossing ROADWAY IMPROVEMENTS Palo Verde pedestrian crossings (Milton Road and Alvord Road) Kolb Road Connection (Sabino Canyon Road extension) Phase 2 Old Vail Safe Routes to School project Grant Road Phase 2, Stone Ave. to Park Ave. Elephant Head Road bridge reconstruction Sunset Road, Silverbell Road to Interstate 10 Golf Links Road bicycle bridge deck replacement Ina Road/I-10 interchange and railroad grade separation Pima Farms Road bridge replacement Tangerine Road, La Cañada Drive to Dove Mountain Blvd. Wilmot Road, end of pavement to Sahuarita Road Downtown Links, Phases 3 & 4 ENVIRONMENTAL AND ECONOMIC VITALITY IMPROVEMENTS Summit View walking path Ina Road sidewalk, Thornydale Road to Meredith Blvd. Houghton Road, Union Pacific Railroad bridge replacement El Rio Park to Avra Valley Road shared-use path Valencia Road, Wilmot Road to Kolb Road Hughes Access Road/Alvernon Way bicycle lanes SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS Arroyo Chico Greenway, Country Club Road to Treat Ave. Stone Ave. and Drachman St. intersection Ina Road at Thornydale Road intersection rightturn bays Craycroft Road at Ft. Lowell Park pedestrian crossing Sandario Road sidewalk/path Copper St. bike boulevard Glenn St., Country Club Road to Columbus Blvd., pedestrian path Liberty Ave. bicycle boulevard Campbell Ave. at 9th St. pedestrian crossing TRANSIT IMPROVEMENTS Grant Road at Sahuara Ave. pedestrian crossing Laos Transit Center - Sun Shuttle parking improvement Mary Ann Cleveland Way at Kush Canyon Lane pedestrian crossing FY 2014-15 RTA Projects Completed Plan Element Roadway Total Roadway 20 FY 2014-15 RTA Financial Statement (000s) Revenues Sales Tax $ 74,263 Program $ 1,448 Grants $ 6,211 Bond/Investment $ 600 Safety Total Revenues $ 82,522 Intersection 150 Expenditures Elderly & Pedestrian 124 Roadway Improvements Bus Pullouts 107 Total Roadway $ 59,312 Railroad Bridge 8 Signal Technology 71 Safety improvements 460 Total Safety Intersection $ 3,013 Environmental Transit Corridor Bus Pullouts & Economic Vitality Elderly & Pedestrian Greenways, Bikeways, At-grade Rail/ Pathways & Sidewalks 90 Bridge Deficiencies Transportation-related Signal Technology Critical Wildlife Linkages 10 Total Safety Total Environmental & Economic Vitality 100 $ 433 $ 315 $ 367 $ 230 $ 4,358 Environmental & Economic Transit Vitality Improvements Weekday Evening 21* Greenways, Bikeways, Pathways & Sidewalks $ Weekday Service 23 Transportation-related Bus Frequency & Critical Wildlife Links $ Overcrowding Relief 8** Small Business Assistance $ Park ‘n Ride Transit Centers 7*** Total Environmental Neighborhood Circulator 12 & Economic Vitality $ High Capacity Streetcar 1 Transit Improvements Express Service 7 Special Needs 3 Transit Operations $ Maintenance Sun Link Streetcar $ Storage Facility 1 Park & Rides $ Total Transit 83 Grand Total 663 * 21 routes received weekday evening service, fully implementing this service expansion ** 7 routes received overcrowding relief; construction of a bus maintenance facility was completed in October 2009 *** Includes completed temporary lots 2,254 229 713 3,196 12,562 4,570 533 Total Transit $ 17,665 Administration Expenses* $ 28,794 Total Expenditures $ 113,325 Other Financing $ 150,612 Surplus $ 119,809 Beginning of Year Fund Balance $ 72,795 Year-end Fund Balance $ 192,604 * Includes bond principal, interest and administration costs Sun Link streetcar ribbon cutting – July 25, 2014 RTA Revenue Collections The impacts of the Great Recession of 2008 continue to be felt in Regional Transportation Authority excise tax collections. The original RTA revenue forecast prepared in 2005 presumed that regional growth would occur at an average rate of 2.3 percent growth per year over the 20-year life of the RTA plan, resulting in an estimated $2.1 billion available for project costs (in 2006 dollars). The RTA conducted formal reviews of its revenue projections in 2010 and again in late 2013, based upon estimates prepared by the University of Arizona Eller College of Management. As a result, the RTA Board supports the use of other regional discretionary funding to augment RTA collections to ensure that the projects within the voterapproved RTA plan are delivered. At the same time, the RTA Board voted to continue periodic reviews of RTA revenues. The local economy continued to modestly improve during the 2014-2015 fiscal year, with RTA collections increasing 1.69 percent. By comparison, the growth in collections for the Maricopa County transportation excise tax was 5.23 percent. Near-term forecasts for RTA collections are for continued modest growth. Factors that will hold back the recovery of RTA collections in the short-term include job losses in the mining industry, slow housing growth, the contraction of the local government workforce and increases in Internet sales (which do not contribute to RTA collections). Additionally, the Arizona Department of Revenue has begun charging local governments for the cost of collecting sales taxes. This unanticipated new fee to the RTA is $511,000 in FY 2016 and, if continued, may amount to $6 million over the remaining life of the RTA tax collection period. Other regional sources of revenue which augment RTA project funding have a more positive outlook, with the exception of development impact fees, which will remain weak until housing starts improve. The recent passage of the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation Act, or FAST Act, by the U.S. Congress has established federal funding levels for the next five years, giving greater certainty to the funding for projects in the RTA plan that have federal funds programmed as a part of the funding sources, particularly for RTA interchange projects on Interstate 10 (at Ina Road and Camino del Cerro). Highway User Revenue Funds (HURF) also are up as a result of increases in vehicular travel, gasoline sales and new car purchases in the state. The RTA anticipates performing an update to its revenue forecast in late 2016 to allow for further adjustments to project funding in response to the best economic forecasts available. Magee Rd. improvements ribbon cutting RTA Plan – Element Highlights ROADWAY ELEMENT The multimodal Roadway Element is the largest element of the Regional Transportation Authority plan, with 20 projects delivered through the end of calendar year 2015, providing congestion relief to travelers along key travel corridors. Major corridor work either completed or underway includes: Construction of the first phase of Tangerine Road (RTA #1) will be initiated in 2016, widening 5 miles of the road between Dove Mountain Boulevard and La Cañada Drive to a 4-lane, divided roadway with all-weather access, multi-use paths and wildlife crossings. The first phase of La Cholla Blvd. (RTA #4) reconstructed La Cholla Blvd., from Magee Road to Overton Road, and at the same time created a needed all-weather bridge crossing over the Cañada del Oro Wash. This alleviated a longer, alternative route to the western Oro Valley neighborhoods and eliminated a hazardous low water crossing that has been a longtime public safety concern. This project was substantially completed in early fiscal year 2014-2015. Late in fiscal year 2014-2015, the long anticipated first phase of the Silverbell Road (RTA #5) project began construction. The Silverbell Road project consists of reconstructing and widening the sole continuous roadway north of downtown, between the Santa Cruz River and the Tucson Mountains. This multi-phase project will have extensive archaeological investigations as well as major flood control improvements, with the first phase anchoring the southern end of the project, between Grant and Goret roads. Magee Road (RTA #7 & #12) realigned a poorly performing corridor, eliminating an offset intersection, and constructed flood control improvements on the Nanini Wash and a widened bridge over the Cañada del Oro Wash. The Magee/ Cortaro Farms corridor is one of the key east-west corridors of movement in the northwest region. The final phase of this project was completed by the original contractor’s bonding company, in October 2015, following a suspension of work in late 2014. Sunset Road (RTA #8) will be launched with the first phase of construction in early 2016. The first phase will connect the existing Sunset Road interchange on Interstate 10 to Silverbell Road, by way of a new bridge over the Santa Cruz River. This reestablishes a roadway linkage to the Tucson Mountains that was lost with the 1983 floods. It also will provide a multi-use path, sidewalk and bike lane connection to the Santa Cruz Linear Park. The La Cañada Drive (RTA #11) project delivers Grant Rd. and Stone Ave. intersection needed arterial road capacity to the established Casas Adobes region and extends to the Town of Oro Valley, providing excellent access to the Oro Valley civic center as well as the Cañada Hills and Copper Creek neighborhoods. The final phase of this project, between River Road and Ina Road, was completed in January 2015. Also in 2016, work will begin on the first of two interchange reconstructions serving northern Pima County; the Ina Road Interchange (RTA #6) will be reconstructed to provide a gradeseparated crossing of the Union Pacific Railroad and improved capacity at the interchange. Coordinated improvements to Ina Road, including a new bridge over the Santa Cruz River and road widening, are also planned. This work will be extensive and require a complete closure of Ina Road at the interchange. Immediately following the re-opening of the Ina interchange, work will begin on the reconstruction of the Ruthrauff interchange (RTA #9), which also will be reconstructed to provide a grade-separated crossing of the Union Pacific Railroad and improved capacity at that interchange. These interchange projects are “game changers” for mobility in the region and will be completed by the end of the decade. Broadway Boulevard (RTA #17) is moving forward into design with a six-lane roadway configuration. City staff and the project design team are working with adjacent landowners to identify the final alignment, based upon design parameters approved by the Tucson City Council and RTA Board. The design concept report is expected to be completed in early 2016. The Grant Road (RTA #18) project is in demolition and moving to construction for the second project phase, between Stone Avenue and Park Avenue. Design also is well underway on the stretch between Swan Road and Dodge Blvd., which will immediately follow the second phase construction work. The RTA also supported the use of regional funds to repave the roadway in those areas not expected to go to construction in 2016. Construction ended on the 22nd Street (RTA #19) and the Kino Parkway intersection in September 2015. The next phase of work, likely to commence in 2017, will reconstruct the roadway east of the intersection to Tucson Blvd. This will include a reconstruction of the viaduct over the Union Pacific Railroad and have a tie in to the BarazzaAviation corridor (State Route 210). The final phase of the Downtown Links (RTA #16) project is expected to go to construction in 2017. The project will include a new grade separation with the Union Pacific Railroad on Sixth Street, extend the Barazza-Aviation corridor (SR-210) to Interstate 10 and remove substantial areas of the warehouse district and 4th Avenue from the Tucson Arroyo floodplain. The final phase of work on the Kolb Road Connection (RTA #25), extending Sabino Canyon Road adjacent to Udall Park and across the Vincent Mullins Landfill and Pantano Wash, commenced construction in December 2015. This project is expected to be completed in approximately 12 months. Shared-use Path on Houghton Rd. Valencia Road, Ajo Way to Mark Road (RTA #21), is nearing completion for the first phase, from Wade Road to Mark Road. This project includes a crossing of the Black Wash and improves access to the Casino del Sol Resort. Valencia Road, Alvernon Way to Kolb Road (RTA #24), continues from the intersection work completed at Alvernon Way, eastward through the Wilmot Road intersection. This improvement, completed in November 2015, added travel lanes in each direction, bike lanes, sidewalks and landscaping along this key corridor. Associated improvements improved access to the Desert View High School campus and the newly completed southern access to the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base. Nearing completion is the design for the continuation of Valencia easterly through the Kolb Road intersection. This work will go to construction in 2016 and will reconfigure the intersection to add indirect left turns for more efficient turning movements. Houghton Road (RTA #32), the easternmost RTA corridor extending from Tanque Verde on the north and southerly to Interstate 10, has been continuously under construction. The intersections with Broadway Blvd. and Mary Ann Cleveland Way (Old Vail Road) have been completed, as has the section between Irvington Road and Valencia Road. This project is the second largest project in the RTA plan, and has 11 separate work phases. Current construction is underway between Broadway Blvd. and 22nd Street, with work between Interstate 10 and Valencia Road to commence in late 2016. The Sahuarita Road (RTA #34) project was concluded with completion of the final phase of work between Old Nogales Highway and Country Club Road in September 2015. The Town of Sahuarita reconstructed the original two-lane roadway between I-19 and Country Club Road beginning in 2010. The final roadway included a pedestrian underpass, a relocated railroad crossing and a new 4-lane bridge over the Santa Cruz River. TRANSIT, SAFETY and ENVIRONMENTAL and ECONOMIC VITALITY ELEMENTS Safety, Environmental and Economic Vitality Element projects include river park improvements along the Cañada del Oro Wash, pedestrian improvements serving schools, stand-alone intersection improvements, bridge safety improvements, wildlife crossings, traffic signal upgrades to improve safety, reliability and performance, and business assistance services to provide assistance to the businesses most affected by construction. Transit service has been expanded as a result of the RTA plan passage. Notably, fiscal year 201415 marked the commencement of the Sun Link streetcar service, as well as new eastside parkand-rides at the Broadway Blvd./Houghton Road intersection and at Rita Ranch. 1 E. Broadway Blvd., Suite 401, Tucson, AZ 85701 (520) 792-1093 [tel] (520) 620-6981 [fax]