National Roundabouts Week

The Federal Highway Administration is celebrating National
Roundabouts Week this week!

Did you know that roundabouts can improve safety and mobility?

Learn more at safety.fhwa.dot.gov/NRW/ !

There are over 7000 completed roundabouts in the US with 72 in Pennsylvania and 15 in the SPC region. More are being planned. SPC is currently working on a Regional Roundabout Screening Study to help identify more candidate locations for roundabouts.



Revitalization and redevelopment of existing communities is a priority. SPC’s Operations & Safety programs actively help to manage and operate the region’s transportation system, allowing it to function at its full potential. Transportation and development choices prioritize safe and secure multimodal and intermodal networks for people and goods.

Visit our Operations & Safety page to learn more about our programs!

#RoundaboutsWeek




Brodhead Road Corridor Planning Study Released

The
Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission has developed a corridor plan for Brodhead
Road (State Route 3007/State Route 18) between Old Brodhead Road and the
Allegheny County/Beaver County border. The corridor plan includes short,
medium, and long term recommendations that will improve the transportation
operations and safety for all users and serve as an investment plan that will
guide the planning and programming of transportation projects in the study
area.

The study makes recommendations that improve regional mobility and accessibility for all, enhance the quality of life and livability of the community, and advance economic and community development goals.



Learn more about Operations and Safety at SPC.




What the infrastructure bill could mean for the Pittsburgh region

As a $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill that passed the House on Friday awaits signature by President Joe Biden, the Pittsburgh business community offered their thoughts on what it could mean for the region.

Allegheny County Chief Executive Rich Fitzgerald was quick to herald the good news.

He noted how the bill is “going to put a lot of people to work” and when asked where it might help the most, he said, “it’s really all of the above.”

That includes the prospect for expanding transit, specifically referencing the potential to expand the East Busway and widen Bates Street into Oakland, as well as providing a major new source of funding to help ALCOSAN meet the demands of the federal consent decree over Allegheny County’s stormwater management issues, a multi-billion-dollar project in the coming years for the county.



“The recently passed infrastructure bill will help close the digital divide in our region. It will increase broadband access and lower prices for internet service by delivering $65 billion in broadband infrastructure deployment across the country. The bill also will infuse an additional $4 billion in new federal funds to increase PennDOT’s statewide allotment from $9 billion to $13 billon over a five-year period, helping to close the state’s growing transportation funding gap. Accordingly, Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission will work with our state and local partners to make sure that important southwestern Pennsylvania transportation priorities are addressed through this increased funding.”

Vincent Valdes, executive director, Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission

Read the full article at www.bizjournals.com




Holiday Greetings from SPC Executive Director Vincent Valdes

To our valued Members, Planning Partners and Colleagues:

As this year draws to an end, I must begin with a heartfelt thank you to our Members, whose communities comprise the region we at SPC are honored to serve. It is your unwavering support that enables and inspires us to do our best work every day, work that ultimately improves the quality of life for our region’s residents.

Thank you to our Planning Partners, without whose contributions our work would be impossible. It is your intimate knowledge of the needs of your communities and programs that informs and guides our commitment to keep southwestern Pennsylvania connected and moving forward.



Thank you to our Colleagues and the communities and residents of southwestern Pennsylvania. This region is your home, and we’re planning to keep it a great place to live. Each day in our work, we strive to advance our regional vision of a world-class, safe, well maintained and connected multimodal transportation system that provides mobility for all, empowers resilient and sustainable communities, and supports a globally competitive economy.

I would also like to take a moment to thank the SPC staff for their tireless work. Without their dedication and their collaboration with our Members, Planning Partners and Colleagues, the region would not have secured $24.8 in Build Back Better funds, completed the Broadband Connectivity Implementation Program (CIP), won the APA’s prestigious Award for a Plan for SmartMoves Connections, or adopted the 2023-2026 Transportation Improvement Program (TIP).

We look forward to 2023 with great anticipation as we will be moving into our new offices in the Strip District early in the year, leading the Regional Broadband Summit in February, planning the Expanding Career Pathways Summit and developing the long range plan update for adoption in June.

Thank you for being with us in 2022 and we look forward to even more success next year in 2023! May you and your families have a safe, healthy, and very happy holiday.

Regards,

Vincent Valdes




SPC Hosts First Annual Regional Broadband & Connectivity Summit with Federal, State, & Local Stakeholders

The Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission (SPC) hosted the first of its kind, Regional Broadband & Connectivity Summit, bringing together regional stakeholders, industry and non-profit experts, and local, state and federal governments and agencies to address equitable and affordable access to high-speed broadband internet in southwestern Pennsylvania.

“The goal of this summit was to identify the region’s state of broadband access and affordability, discuss challenges and opportunities at the regional, state and federal level, and understand how local government, providers, and community institutions will need to work together to achieve digital equity and maximize broadband investments here in southwestern Pennsylvania,” said Butler County Commissioner Leslie Osche, who also chairs SPC.



In 2019, SPC identified broadband connectivity as a high priority for southwestern Pennsylvania’s long-range plan. To that end, SPC worked with a coalition of stakeholders to develop the Regional Connectivity Roadmap, which identifies and guides the deployment of high-speed connectivity programs and projects throughout the region. “It only makes sense that SPC, the agency that coordinates transportation & economic development investments, should coordinate broadband and accessibility investments also,” Osche said.

The summit included five sessions, during which panelists addressed the State of the Region, Legislative updates, federal and state funding programs, Digital Equity and Affordability, and Pennsylvania’s Statewide Implementation Plan. The State of the Region session began with an update from, Andy Waple, Deputy Executive Director for Programs for SPC, who told the audience “Within SPC, we have created a connectivity resource center to provide on-call technical services to our constituents and our members. Implementation, technical assistance, public engagement, media outreach: we are poised and ready to assist our members and constituents with whatever their broadband planning needs may be, and to help fund those activities over the coming years. We see connectivity as a form of transportation and that’s been so evident since the pandemic. An increasing amount of regional planning organizations around the country are taking similar approaches.” Commissioner Mike Belding of Greene County spoke about his county’s broadband development efforts, saying “this is a big problem with local solutions. As we say in Greene County, we’re rural but reachable.”

During the Internet for All Funding Panel, an attendee asked the panel if smaller boroughs that neighbor rural communities would be encouraged to partner together and take a regional approach to broadband development. Brandon Carson, Executive Director of PA DCED, PA Broadband Development Authority (PBDA), responded “Absolutely! We have $279 million available through the American Rescue Plan dollars allocated to the Commonwealth. We’re in the process of developing guidelines for three new programs. One of those is geared towards funding regional solutions.”

SPC was honored to have Anna Read, of The Pew Charitable Trusts, as their Keynote Speaker. Ms. Read, leads Pew’s efforts to examine how states and the federal government are working to connect millions of Americans to affordable, high-speed, reliable internet as part of the Trust’s broadband access initiative.

Armstrong County Commissioner and SPC Vice Chairman Pat Fabian closed out the Regional Broadband & Connectivity Summit by saying “at SPC, we believe that by working together with private and public partners and across local, regional, state and federal levels, we can lead the effort to make our vision of affordable, equitable broadband access a reality in every part of southwestern Pennsylvania.”

Further details, program slides and a recording of the day’s presentations can be found on SPC’s Connected website under the Resources tab.

Summit sponsors include Armstrong, AT&T, Comcast, DQE Communications, Henry L. Hillman Foundation, Michael Baker International, Buchanan Ingersoll Rooney, First Light, Kimley Horn, Crown Castle and Butler County Chamber of Commerce.




McKeesport gets bridge repair funds

McKeesport was recently approved to receive $500,000 in preliminary engineering funds for repairs to the Versailles Avenue bridge. The Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission awarded the funds through its Transportation Improvement Program. The initiative will utilize over $5.6 billion in state, federal and local funds to improve transportation systems over the next four years.

Read the full article at monvalleyindependent.com




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PG: Highlights from Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey’s proposed 2024 budget

The budget proposal is the first window into the mayor’s priorities for next year.

Increased infrastructure spending, expanding city departments to improve services, and planning for future debt payments are some key elements of Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey’s proposed 2024 budget.



While still subject to change through City Council amendments, the budget proposal released late last month is the first window into Mr. Gainey’s priorities for next year.

“Our budget is a reflection of the values of our city,” Mr. Gainey said in a statement. “We are committed to doing all we can to provide truly excellent core services while protecting our bridge infrastructure, and furthering our work to make Pittsburgh the safest city in America.”

Next year is the last that Pittsburgh will have federal pandemic relief funds to help support operational costs. The Gainey administration is expecting 2025 and 2026 to be difficult budget years with the loss of that funding and a looming increase in fixed debt service payments.

The mayor’s proposed 2024 budget wouldn’t increase taxes. After Mr. Gainey’s budget address in November, City Council will have until the end of December to make amendments.

Highlights from the capital budget

The proposed 2024 capital budget totals about $155.5 million, compared to $168 million this year, and looks to invest in areas like bridge infrastructure and traffic calming.

Bridges

In the wake of the 2022 Fern Hollow Bridge collapse, which occupied much of the start of Mr. Gainey’s term, there has been renewed urgency around bridge infrastructure. Multiple bridge projects are would receive funding in 2024 under the mayor’s budget.

The city’s Bridge Preservation and Restoration Fund would see about a $1.2 million boost from 2023 under Mr. Gainey’s budget, up to about $3.6 million. Budget projections look to allocate $1.7 million in 2025 and 2026, but after that there is zero dollars in allocations to the fund for 2027-2029.

There is no money allocated to general bridge upgrades, despite a nearly $4.8 million investment last year. But the budget does have about $1.5 million left over from previous years.

The Charles Anderson Bridge in Oakland, which has been closed since February when an inspection showed the need for immediate repairs to the 85-year old steel deck truss bridge, is slated to receive $27 million, some of which would come from the state.

After some controversy over funding for the bridge, the city’s Department of Mobility and Infrastructure worked with the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission, an intergovernmental agency, and the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation to delay other projects so Charles Anderson could receive funding sooner.

A report commissioned by the city last year found that 32 city-owned bridges were rated poorly. Six of those bridges — the 28th Street bridge, the Larimer Bridge, the Maple Avenue Bridge, Elizabeth Street bridge, the Corley Street Bridge, and the Calera Street bridge — are all slated to receive funding in 2024.

Other poorly rated bridges such as the Swinburne and Swindell Bridges are slated for large investments in 2025.

Big infrastructure projects, particularly bridge renovations, are chosen based on criteria such as safety implications but also project readiness. Many of the bridges scheduled to receive funding in 2024 already have contractors in place to begin the work.

Traffic Calming

Throughout the spring and summer, the mayor’s office held community listening sessions about what investments residents want to see in the next budget. Much of that input involved more traffic calming programs

As a result, about $14.5 million would be doled out to the complete streets program, which focuses on improving intersections and adding pavement markings and signage.

“A complete streets network will increase the mobility options available to residents of Pittsburgh resulting in lower greenhouse gasses, more affordable transportation options, healthier residents, and increased revenue for neighborhood businesses,” the administration said in its budget proposal.

The city also has close to $10 million in unspent funds from prior years for this project

That money would go to projects such as adding lighting inside the Armstrong Tunnel and traffic light replacement at Muriel and 10th Streets on the South Side, as well as adding traffic calming measures like speed humps to various roads around the city.

Other initiatives

The capital budget also includes $855,000 to explore “the design and site for a new public safety training complex.” The current public safety training facility is located in Highland Park, and residents have taken complaints to the mayor about noise from its outdoor shooting range.

Officials have indicated it would take millions of dollars to renovate the shuttered Veterans Affairs hospital in Lincoln-Lemington to make it a new training facility — former Mayor Bill Peduto’s plan for the site. Mr. Gainey has not committed to using the former hospital as a training facility.

Jake Pawlak, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, recently told WESA that Mr. Peduto’s plan had been scrapped.

The capital budget also allocates about $1.8 million for the demolition of condemned buildings and about $1.3 million for the city’s Urban Redevelopment Authority to offer grants to homeowners and developers.

Highlights from the operating budget

The city’s overall budget would be about $839.2 million, $39 million higher than this year.

The budget could change next year even after City Council approves it. Multiple contracts with unionized city workers expire at the end of 2023, and the budget proposal doesn’t include an increase in those salaries.

Multiple departments, including City Planning and Permits, Licenses and Inspections, would see their workforces grow under the budget.

And after much talk over the last few months about the ideal number of police, the budget calls for a decrease in the number of uniformed officers.

In previous years, the city has budgeted for 900 officers, but the 2024 budget is for 849 — which it says “reflects the anticipated strength of the Bureau in 2024 with planned recruit classes and anticipated retirements.”

Robert Swartzwelder, president of the local police union, said his group wasn’t consulted about this change, but that the “theory is [the city] isn’t going to be able to get to 900, so they’re lowering it to shift the funding somewhere else.”

The city has started holding recruitment classes again, but is still struggling to fill empty positions. Officials have indicated that they intend to return to a full compliment of 900 officers at some point, but Mr. Swartzwelder remains skeptical. 

”Until they make the salaries competitive, that’s when they’re going to be able to have competitive staffing,” he said.

The department has already been below its fully-budgeted complement of 900 officers since before the pandemic. As of Friday, the force was staffed at about 775 officers, including command staff, “which puts patrol force everyday rank and file to just over 300 officers spread across six patrol zones,” said Mr. Swartzwelder.

The budget would also add 12 new Community Service Aides to the police budget to “begin civilianization” — the process of hiring civilians, not uniformed police, to perform specific functions currently done by officers.

Civilianizing part of the bureau is a goal that new police Chief Larry Scirotto outlined when he was hired in the spring.

View the full article at post-gazette.com




WCCS Radio: Public Participation Panel for TIP Plans to be held Today

A meeting will be held today to update the public on the Transportation Improvement Program for 2025-28.

The meeting will be held today from 3-5 PM at the PA CareerLink building on Indian Springs Road in Indiana.  The TIP is currently being developed and this public “open house” meeting will serve as an introduction and status update on the efforts before a draft plan is made available for public review in the Spring of 2024.  Officials from the Southwestern PA Commission, PennDOT, county officials and other area stakeholders will be on hand, answering questions from the public pertaining to specific transportation projects and infrastructure planning.



The meeting is open to the public, and will also be held over Zoom video chat.  You can join in online by clicking the link below.

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82352838029

View the full article at wccsradio.com.




WPXI-TV: 11 Investigates wrong-way crashes on local roads and what’s being done to prevent them

Channel 11 Morning News covers what seem like a lot of wrong-way crashes. That’s because a lot of them happen in the early morning hours.

Anchor Jennifer Tomazic came upon the aftermath of one just minutes after it happened.

Ever since then, she wanted to find out what’s being done in Pennsylvania to stop wrong-way drivers.



The Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission told her there were 56 wrong-way crashes in our region in the last five years, likely on a road that you drive on.

“Which means if you’re driving your vehicle down that road, you are in potentially in a lot of danger and harm and or possibly death,” said Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Rocco Gagliardi.

A local woman vividly recalls the smallest details from the night that changed her life.

“The last thing I thought before impact was ‘I’m dead,’” said Jordan Rogachesky of Greensburg, “and then I woke up.”

On Sept. 22, 2022, she was driving home to take her dog out after work on Route 30 in Hempfield Township.

“And when I came around the bend, there was another driver in my lane and I didn’t have time to react,” said Jordan.

A driver going the wrong way hit Jordan head-on on the divided highway near Tollgate Hill Road, according to state police.

Nine broken ribs and two legs broken from hip to heel prevented her from getting out of her car.

But when help finally got Jordan to the hospital, she wasn’t thinking about herself.

“I just kept screaming at them that I was pregnant,” Jordan recalls. “Our baby didn’t make it, though.”

Jordan is missing that piece in her new reality that’s included countless surgeries and relearning to walk.

She still drives.

“But there is there’s a lot of anxiety,” said Jordan.

She’s sharing her story in hopes of spurring change on Pennsylvania roads in stopping wrong-way drivers.

A change we did find on the same road as Jordan’s crash, Route 30, about 15 miles east: wrong-way signs at the intersection of Route 30 and 217 near Idlewild. They have LED lights that light up red when a wrong-way driver is detected.

They were installed sometime after Lt. Eric Eslary of Ligonier was killed while patrolling Route 30 in the early morning hours of May 2015 by a wrong-way driver.

“From the research that we have, that is probably where that driver started going the wrong way,” said Bryan Walker, district plans engineer for PennDOT District 12.

Jennifer asked Walker, on a priority list, as far as signage and implementation, where wrong-way driving is for PennDOT.

“We take every crash seriously. We don’t want to see any fatalities,” said Walker.

Channel 11 has learned that LED wrong-way signs are the most advanced technology our region’s roads currently have to stop wrong-way drivers.

“Especially if our goal is to make our roads as safe as possible, technology has got to be a tool in the toolbox,” said Domenic D’Andrea, director of the Office of Transportation Planning at Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission.

He let Channel 11 in on more initiatives to make our roads safer.

PennDOT installed low-cost and low-tech countermeasures like larger do-not-enter signs and higher visibility pavement markings on 121 Interstate ramps.

Walker adds that his PennDOT district can add oversize signs to make them more visible to drivers, in addition to attaching red reflective tape to select posts to get drivers’ attention.

Delineators, or hip-height posts, can be added with reflective tape and so can reflective pavement markers. Walker says road lenses can be installed red so a driver going the wrong way can see they’re going the wrong way.

“Safety is PennDOT’s most important priority. Even one fatality is one too many. According to PennDOT data, there were 53 crashes on expressways involving wrong-way drivers last year, resulting in 15 fatalities and 18 suspected serious injuries. Annually, PennDOT reviews crash data to determine locations that would make good candidates for low-cost safety countermeasures, such as enhanced signage, pavement markings, and delineation,” Jennifer Kuntch, deputy communications director for PennDOT said in a statement to Channel 11.

Walker told us they put “Do Not Enter” signs in places where there has been a crash history or complaints. They can add a second one if there are issues in that spot.

He offered this tip for drivers to make sure they’re going in the right direction:

“If you’re going down the road, you want to see yellow (line) on your left side and white (line) on your right.”

Kuntch tells Channel 11 wrong-way drivers represent a low percentage of total crashes in the state. While law enforcement and transportation officials agree, the outcome of a wrong-way crash is typically more devastating than other crashes.

Jordan is living through it.

“I would love to see something done just so that no one else has to have that worry in their head,” said Jordan.

View the full article at wpxi.com