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HomeMy WebLinkAbout3.4 Informational Presentation on Plan Bay Area 2050 (2)STAFF REPORT CITY COUNCIL Page 1 of 3 Agenda Item 3.4 DATE:August 17, 2021 TO:Honorable Mayor and City Councilmembers FROM:Linda Smith, City Manager SUBJECT:Informational Presentation on Plan Bay Area 2050Prepared by:Michael P. Cass, Principal Planner EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:The City Council will receive a presentation from Metropolitan Transportation Commission and Association of Bay Area Governments Staff on Plan Bay Area 2050. Plan Bay Area 2050 is a long-range plan charting the course for the future of the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area. Plan Bay Area 2050 focuses on four key issues — the economy, the environment, housing, and transportation — and identifies a path to make the Bay Area more equitable for all residents and more resilient in the face of unexpected challenges. This regional plan outlines strategies for growth and investment through the year 2050, while simultaneously striving to meet and exceed federal and state requirements for a Regional Transportation Plan and Sustainable Communities Strategy. MTC/ABAG are expected to adopt Plan Bay Area 2050 in fall 2021. STAFF RECOMMENDATION:Receive the presentation. FINANCIAL IMPACT:None. DESCRIPTION:At the June 1, 2021 City Council meeting, under Other Business, the City Council requested a presentation on Plan Bay Area 2050.Plan Bay Area 2050 is a 30-year plan that charts the course for a Bay Area that is affordable, connected, diverse, healthy, and vibrant for all residents through 2050 and beyond. Thirty-five strategies comprise the heart of the plan to improve housing, the economy, transportation, and the environment across the Bay Area’s nine counties — Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Solano, and Sonoma. The draft plan, developed by the Bay Area’s two regional planning agencies, Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and 16 Page 2 of 3 Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), lays out a $1.4-trillion vision for a more equitable and resilient future for Bay Area residents.In the Plan Bay Area 2050 context, a strategy is a public policy or set of investments that can be implemented in the Bay Area at the city, county, regional or state level over the next 30 years. A strategy is not a near-term action, a mandate for a jurisdiction or agency, or a legislative proposal. Examples of the 35 strategies include building a complete streets network and building adequate affordable housing to ensure homes for all. For a complete list, refer to the Plan Bay Area 2050 Final Blueprint Strategies (Attachment 1).Additionally, Plan Bay Area 2050 identifies growth geographies to guide where future growth in housing and jobs would be focused under the Plan’s strategies over the next 30 years. These geographies are identified for growth either by local jurisdictions or because of their proximity to transit or access to opportunity. Within Dublin, growth geographies include Priority Development Areas (PDA) and Transit Rich and High-Resource Areas. Priority Development Areas are locallyidentified places near public transit planned for housing and job growth, which are eligible for competitive funding opportunities from MTC/ABAG. Within Dublin, PDAs are located by the two BART Stations and in eastern Dublin, as shown in Attachment 2. These growth geographies are factors used by ABAG in the methodology for assigning the Draft Regional Housing Needs Determination to local jurisdictions.While Plan Bay Area 2050 pinpoints policies and investments necessary to advance the goal of a more affordable, connected, diverse, healthy, and vibrant Bay Area, it does not change local policies. Cities and counties retain all local land use authority. Plan Bay Area 2050 does identify a potential path forward for future investments. This includes infrastructure to improve our transportation system and to protect communities from rising sea levels, as well as the types of public policies necessary to realize a future growth pattern for housing and jobs. All levels of government, as well as advocacy groups, the private sector, and Bay Area residents, have a role to play in implementing the strategies. The Draft Plan, Draft Implementation Plan, and Draft Environmental Impact Report were available for public review from June 4, 2021 to July 20, 2021. City Staff reviewed these documents and provided comments (Attachment 3). Plan Bay Area 2050 is scheduled to be adopted in fall 2021. ENVIRONMENTAL DETERMINATION:The informational presentation on Plan Bay Area 2050 is exempt from the requirements of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). STRATEGIC PLAN INITIATIVE:None. NOTICING REQUIREMENTS/PUBLIC OUTREACH:The City Council Agenda was posted. 17 Page 3 of 3 ATTACHMENTS:1) Plan Bay Area 2050 Final Blueprint Strategies2) Plan Bay Area 2050 Growth Geographies Map3) City Letters on Draft Plan, Implementation Plan, and Environmental Impact Report, dated July 20, 2021 18 A BLUEPRINT FOR THE BAY AREA’S FUTURE. A BLUEPRINT FOR THE BAY AREA’S FUTURE What is Plan Bay Area 2050?What requirements must Plan Bay Area 2050 meet? Plan Bay Area 2050 is the long-range plan now being developed by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission and the Association of Bay Area Governments to guide the growth of our nine-county region for the next generation. Scheduled for completion in 2021, the plan integrates strategies for transportation, housing, the environment and the economy. The plan must work to advance the Vision and Guiding Principles adopted by MTC and ABAG in 2019 — to ensure that the Bay Area in 2050 is more affordable, connected, diverse, healthy and vibrant for all. Furthermore, among many statutory requirements, the plan must meet or exceed a 19 percent per capita greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction target for light-duty vehicles by 2035, while planning for suff icient housing at all income levels. What is the Final Blueprint? What is a “strategy”? Who implements these strategies? The Final Blueprint integrates 35 bold, equitable and resilient strategies—building upon the predecessor Horizon Initiative—to tackle the region’s transportation, housing, economic and environmental challenges. A strategy is either a public policy or set of investments that can be implemented in the Bay Area over the next 30 years. A strategy is not a near-term action, a mandate for a jurisdiction or agency, or a legislative proposal. In addition, because Plan Bay Area 2050 must be fiscally constrained, not every strategy can be integrated into the plan given finite available revenues. Strategies in Plan Bay Area 2050 can be implemented at the local, regional, or state levels. Specific implementation actions and the role for MTC and ABAG are being identified through a collaborative Implementation Plan process between fall 2020 and summer 2021. See inside to learn more about the Final Blueprint strategies. THE FINAL BLUEPRINT WINTERFALLSUMMERSPRING • Analyze DraftBlueprint Outcomes • Convene Public and Stakeholder Workshops • Revise Strategies for Final Blueprint • Adopt Final Blueprint • Advance to Environmental Impact Report (EIR) • Conduct Environmental Analysis • Develop Implementation Plan Key Milestones HOUSINGTRANSPORTATION ECONOMY ENVIRONMENTFour Elements ofPlan Bay Area2050 Attachment 1 19 FINAL BLUEPRINT STRATEGIES Transportation Strategies — Cost : $579 Billion Maintain and Optimize the Existing System Restore, Operate and Maintain the Existing System. Commit to operate and maintain the Bay Area's roads and transit infrastructure, while restoring transit service frequencies to 2019 levels no later than 2035.$390 BILLION Support Community-Led Transportation Enhancements in Communities of Concern. Provide direct funding to historically marginalized communities to fund locally identified transportation needs.$8 BILLION Enable a Seamless Mobility Experience. Eliminate barriers to multi-operator transit trips by streamlining fare payment and trip planning, while requiring schedule coordination at timed transfer hubs.$3 BILLION Reform Regional Transit Fare Policy. Streamline fare payment and replace existing operator- specific discounted fare programs with an integrated fare structure across all transit operators.$10 BILLION Implement Per-Mile Tolling on Congested Freeways with Transit Alternatives. Apply a per-mile charge on auto travel on select congested freeway corridors where transit alternatives exist, with discounts for carpoolers, low-income residents, and off -peak travel, with excess revenues reinvested into transit alternatives in the corridor. $1 BILLION Improve Interchanges and Address Highway Bottlenecks. Rebuild interchanges and widen key highway bottlenecks to achieve short-to-medium-term congestion relief.$11 BILLION Advance Other Regional Programs and Local Priorities. Fund regional programs like Clipper and 511, while supporting local transportation investments on arterials and local streets.$18 BILLION Build a Next- Generation Transit Network Enhance Local Transit Frequency, Capacity and Reliability. Improve the quality and availability of local bus and light rail service, with new bus rapid transit lines, South Bay light rail extensions, and frequency increases focused in lower-income communities. $31 BILLION Expand and Modernize the Regional Rail Network. Better connect communities while increasing frequencies by advancing a New Transbay Rail Crossing, BART to Silicon Valley Phase 2, Valley Link and Caltrain/High-Speed Rail Grade Separations, among other projects. $81 BILLION Build an Integrated Regional Express Lane and Express Bus Network. Complete the buildout of the Regional Express Lanes Network to provide uncongested freeway lanes for expanded express bus services, carpools and toll-paying solo drivers. $9 BILLION Create Healthy and Safe Streets Build a Complete Streets Network. Enhance streets to promote walking, biking, and other micro- mobility through sidewalk improvements, car-free slow streets, and 10,000 miles of bike lanes or multi-use paths.$13 BILLION Advance Regional Vision Zero Policy through Street Design and Reduced Speeds. Reduce speed limits to 20 to 35 miles per hour on local streets and 55 miles per hour on freeways, relying on design elements on local streets and automated speed enforcement on freeways.$4 BILLION THE FINAL BLUEPRINT @MTCBATA MTCBATA@mtcbata#BayArea205 0 20 Spur Housing Production at All Income Levels Allow a Greater Mix of Housing Densities and Types in Growth Geographies. Allow a variety of housing types at a range of densities to be built in Priority Development Areas, select Transit-Rich Areas, and select High-Resource Areas. N/A Build Adequate Aff ordable Housing to Ensure Homes for All. Construct enough deed-restricted affordable homes necessary to fill the existing gap in housing for the unhoused community and to meet the needs of low-income households. $219 BILLION Integrate Aff ordable Housing into All Major Housing Projects. Require a baseline of 10 to 20 percent of new market-rate housing developments of 5 units or more to be affordable to low-income households.N/A Transform Aging Malls and Off ice Parks into Neighborhoods. Permit and promote the reuse of shopping malls and office parks with limited commercial viability as neighborhoods with housing at all income levels. N/A Housing Strategies — Cost : $468 Billion Protect and Preserve Affordable Housing Further Strengthen Renter Protections Beyond State Legislation. Building upon recent tenant protection laws, limit annual rent increases to the rate of inflation, while exempting units less than 10 years old. $2 BILLION Preserve Existing Aff ordable Housing. Acquire homes currently affordable to low- and middle-income residents for preservation as permanently deed-restricted aff ordable housing. $237 BILLION Create Inclusive Communities Provide Targeted Mortgage, Rental and Small Business Assistance to Communities of Concern. Provide assistance to low-income communities and communities of color to address the legacy of exclusion and predatory lending, while helping to grow locally owned businesses. $10 BILLION Accelerate Reuse of Public and Community-Owned Land for Mixed-Income Housing and Essential Services. Help public agencies, community land trusts and other non-profit landowners to accelerate development of mixed-income aff ordable housing.N/A Shift the Location of Jobs Allow Greater Commercial Densities in Growth Geographies. Allow greater densities for new commercial development in select Priority Development Areas and select Transit-Rich Areas to encourage more jobs to locate near public transit. N/A Provide Incentives to Employers to Shift Jobs to Housing-Rich Areas Well Served by Transit. Provide subsidies to encourage employers to relocate off ices to housing-rich areas near regional rail stations.$10 BILLION Retain and Invest in Key Industrial Lands. Implement local land use policies to protect key industrial lands identified as Priority Production Areas, while funding key infrastructure improvements in these areas.$4 BILLION Economic Strategies — Cost : $234 Billion Improve Economic Mobility Implement a Statewide Universal Basic Income. Provide an average $500 per month payment to all Bay Area households to improve family stability, promote economic mobility and increase consumer spending. $205 BILLION Expand Job Training and Incubator Programs. Fund assistance programs for establishing a new business, as well as job training programs, primarily in historically disinvested communities.$5 BILLION Invest in High-Speed Internet in Underserved Low-Income Communities. Provide direct subsidies and construct public infrastructure to ensure all communities have aff ordable access to high-speed internet.$10 BILLION @MTCBATA MTCBATA@mtcbata#BayArea2050 21 Reduce Climate Emissions Expand Commute Trip Reduction Programs at Major Employers. Set a sustainable commute target for major employers as part of an expanded Bay Area Commuter Benefits Program, with employers responsible for funding incentives and disincentives to shift auto commuters to any combination of telecommuting, transit, walking, and/or bicycling. N/A Expand Clean Vehicle Initiatives. Expand investments in clean vehicles, including more fuel-eff icient vehicles and electric vehicle subsidies and chargers. $4 BILLION Expand Transportation Demand Management Initiatives. Expand investments in programs like vanpools, bikeshare, carshare and parking fees to discourage solo driving. $1 BILLION Expand Access to Parks and Open Space Maintain Urban Growth Boundaries. Using urban growth boundaries and other existing environmental protections, confine new development within areas of existing development or areas otherwise suitable for growth, as established by local jurisdictions. N/A Protect and Manage High-Value Conservation Lands. Provide strategic matching funds to help conserve and maintain high-priority natural and agricultural lands, including but not limited to Priority Conservation Areas and wildland-urban interface lands. $15 BILLION Modernize and Expand Parks, Trails and Recreation Facilities. Invest in quality parks, trails and open spaces that provide inclusive recreation opportunities for people from all backgrounds, abilities and ages to enjoy. $30 BILLION ADVANCING EQUITYWITH BOLD STRATEGIES AFFORDABLE CONNECTED Consistent regional means-based discounts for fares and tolls. Service frequency increases in currently underserved PDAs and community- prioritized transportation improvements. DIVERSE HEALTHY VIBRANT Emphasis on growth in High-Resource Areas to address the legacy of race-based exclusion. Prioritization of retrofit assistance and sea level rise infrastructure in lower- income communities. Universal basic income to help enable greater economic mobility. As a cross-cutting issue of Plan Bay Area 2050, staff has worked to weave equity into every single strategy for the Final Blueprint. Environmental Strategies — Cost : $102 Billion Reduce Risks from Hazards Adapt to Sea Level Rise. Protect shoreline communities affected by sea level rise, prioritizing areas of low costs and high benefits and providing additional support to vulnerable populations. $19 BILLION Provide Means-Based Financial Support to Retrofit Existing Residential Buildings. Adopt building ordinances and incentivize retrofits to existing buildings to meet higher seismic, wildfire, water and energy standards, providing means-based subsidies to off set associated costs. $15 BILLION Fund Energy Upgrades to Enable Carbon-Neutrality in All Existing Commercial and Public Buildings. Support electrification and resilient power system upgrades in all public and commercial buildings.$18 BILLION @MTCBATA MTCBATA@mtcbata#BayArea2050 Visit planbayarea.org to stay informed on the Plan Bay Area 2050 process and learn about future opportunities to provide your input. You can also follow MTC BATA on social media. StayInvolved! 22 DRAFT Plan Bay Area 2050 19 DRAFT 05.25.21PBA2050 Book INTRODUCTION SMF SJC SFO STS OAK 5 1521 1 17 113 101 680 24 84 84 580 580 80 880 92 35 92 680 4 4 1 1 101 80 80 29 29 160 128 128 128 121 101 280 1 1 84 280 17 880 101 152 37 12 80 680 29 12 12 505 12 4 580 121 85 116 116 Pleasanton Dublin Gilroy San Rafael Berkeley Vallejo Milpitas Richmond Cupertino Fremont Brentwood PaloAlto Livermore San Ramon Santa Clara Petaluma Alameda Vacaville San Mateo Novato Redwood City Pittsburg DalyCity Antioch Napa Santa Rosa Hayward WalnutCreek Fairfield Sunnyvale Concord OAKLANDSAN FRANCISCO SAN JOSE SANTACLARA SANMATEO ALAMEDA CONTRACOSTA MARIN SONOMA NAPA SOLANO YOLO SANTA CRUZ LAKE Miles Kilometers Plan Bay Area 2050 Growth Geographies Plan Bay Area 2050 Growth Geographies MAP 1.1MAP 1.1 Plan Bay Area 2050 Growth Geographies Plan Bay Area 2050 Growth Geographies > 350,000OAKLAND 50,000 – 350,000Novato SCALE Source: TomTom North America, 2019 Map Author: PB, 4/21 * Priority Development Areas are locally designated geographies that, in general, meet state Transit Priority Area criteria as well as additional MTC/ABAG criteria. ** Peak headways of 16 to 30 minutes (January 2020). *** Includes intercity rail, commuter rail, and heavy rail systems.New Transbay Rail Crossing alignment is representative only. Priority Development Area* Transit-Rich Area Priority Production Area Transit-Rich and High-Resource Area Regional Rail Station (Existing) Regional Rail Station (Plan Bay Area 2050) Major Airport Major Seaport High-Resource Area with Basic Bus Service** Areas shown are conceptual, and do not supersede local government land use authority. Specific levels and types of development will be determined through local planning. The following areas are excluded from the map: wildland urban interface areas; unmitigated High Hazard Areas; areas of unmitigated sea level rise; areas outside locally-adopted urban growth boundaries; and parks and open spaces within urbanized areas. To complement adopted PDAs, High-Resource and Transit -Rich Areas are shown in jurisdictions that have nominated a total land area for PDAs that is less than 50% of the area within its boundaries eligible for PDA designation. Regional Transit (Existing) Regional Rail (Plan Bay Area 2050)*** Attachment 2 23 Page 1 of 8 July 20, 2021 MTC Public Information Attn.: Plan Bay Area 2050 375 Beale Street, Suite 800 San Francisco, CA 94105 Email: info@planbayarea.org RE: Plan Bay Area 2050, - Draft Plan and Draft Implementation Plan To Whom It May Concern, Thank you for the opportunity to review the Draft Plan Bay Area 2050, Draft Implementation Plan, and Supplemental Reports. The City appreciates Plan Bay Area’s 30-year vision to create a Bay Area that is affordable, connected, diverse, healthy, and vibrant for all residents. However, the City of Dublin offers the following notable concerns: Draft Forecasting and Modeling Report 1.Figure 12 (Households per Acre by Zone, 2015) depicts the City as having zero to five households per acre. However, this depicted density is extremely low and does not accurately reflect the existing density particularly in Downtown Dublin, near the West Dublin/Pleasanton BART Station, and at the Dublin Transit Center, near the Dublin/Pleasanton BART Station. For example, the Avalon Dublin Station project, located at, 5200 Iron Horse Parkway, Connelly Station, located at 7550 Saint Patrick Way, and Dublin Station by Windsor, located at 5300 Iron Horse Parkway, have a density of 84-85 dwelling units per acre. 2.Figure 15 (Mall/Office Park Conversion Development Projects) depicts multiple concentric circles demonstrating thousands of residential developments at the I-580 and I-680 interchange. However, the map and supplemental information do not identify which malls or office parks are anticipated to be redeveloped, nor does the information clearly identify whether those properties are in Pleasanton or Dublin. The City requests this information be clarified to adequately assess the projected growth and related impacts. 3.Figure 16 (Public-Owned Land Development Projects) depicts multiple concentric circles demonstrating thousands of residential developments at the I-580 and I-680 interchange. However, the map and supplemental information do not identify which public-owned properties are anticipated to be redeveloped, nor does the information clearly identify whether those properties are in Pleasanton or Dublin. The City requests this information be clarified to adequately assess the projected growth and related impacts. Attachment 3 24 Page 2 of 8 Draft Transportation Projects List 4. The Draft Transportation Projects List identifies projects and programs to alter the demand on the transportation system or alter the supply of the transportation system. The City compared the project list in the Draft Transportation Projects List Supplemental Report with other approved transportation plans, including the Alameda County Transportation Plan (2020) and the Tri-Valley Transportation Council (TVTC) Fee Update (2021). Refer to the attached Table 1: Transportation Projects Implementation Comparison. The City identified the following notable differences: ▪ The funding of $316 million for corridor and interchange improvements (Project 21-T06- 019) may be adequate for planned I-580 interchange projects at Hacienda Drive, Tassajara Road, and Fallon Road, but may not be adequate for Phase 1 of the I-580/I- 680 interchange and is certainly not adequate for Phase 2 of the I-580/I-680 interchange improvements. The full I-580/I-680 interchange improvement project is included in the Alameda County and TVTC plans. The City requests this funding be in creased to accommodate the additional improvements cited. ▪ The proposed $5.7 billion for minor regional roadway improvements (Project ID 21-T07- 056) is laudable. However, the project list lacks specificity to determine if the funding is sufficient for the Dublin Boulevard/North Canyons Parkway extension. The City requests the Plan be revised to provide breakdown of allocation for minor roadway projects. ▪ The following Alameda County Transportation Plan active transportation projects are not specifically identified in the Plan Bay Area 2050 project list and should be included: 1) ID 36 Dublin/Pleasanton BART Station Active Access Improvements; 2) ID 66A Iron Horse Trail Crossing (old SPRR ROW) at Dublin Boulevard ; and 3) ID 202 SR2S Improvements, Dublin. ▪ The following Alameda County Transportation Plan road projects are not specifically identified in the Plan Bay Area 2050 project list and should be included: 1) ID 109 Dougherty Road Widening; 2) ID 148 Tassajara Road Widening from N. Dublin Ranch Drive to City Limit; and 3) ID 239 Downtown Dublin Streetscape Plan Implementation. Please note the City also issued a letter, dated July 20, 2021, expressing issues and concerns with the Draft Environmental Report. See attachment. Should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact Michael Cass, Principal Planner, at (925) 833-6610 or Michael.Cass@dublin.ca.gov. Sincerely, Michael P. Cass, Principal Planner City of Dublin 25 Page 3 of 8 Enc.: Table 1: Transportation Projects Implementation Comparison City Letter on Draft Environmental Impact Report, dated July 20, 2021 CC Linda Smith, City Manager Jeff Baker, Community Development Director Kristie Wheeler, Assistant Community Development Director Michael P. Cass, Principal Planner Laurie Sucgang, Assistant Public Works Director/City Engineer Pratyush Bhatia, Transportation and Operations Manager Kan Xu, Senior Civil Engineer Shannan Young, Environmental and Sustainability Manager 26 Page 4 of 8 Table 1: Transportation Projects Implementation Comparison Plan Bay Area 2050 Alameda County Transportation Plan (2020) Tri-Valley Transportation Council Fee Update (2021) ID 21-T06-019 Corridor & Interchange Improvements, I-580, Alameda County This program includes funding to implement Design Alternatives Assessments between the Bay Bridge Toll Plaza and SR-238; for interchange improvements at Hacienda Dr/Fallon Rd and Santa Rita Rd/Tassajara Rd; and funding for a planning study to scope interchange improvements at I-680. $316 million ID 48 I-580/Fallon/El Charro Interchange Modernization (Phase 2), Dublin/Pleasanton $32 million ID 21 I-580/I-680 Interchange (Phase 1), Dublin/Pleasanton $300 million ID 132 I-580/I-680 Interchange (Phase 2) $1,200 million ID 147 I-580 Interchange Improvements at Hacienda, Dublin $36 million ID 179 Santa Rita Road I-580 Overcrossing Widening, Pleasanton $49 million ID B-1 I-580/I-680 Interchange (Westbound to Southbound) The proposed project limits are from 1,700 feet east of the Hacienda Drive Overcrossing to 2,000 feet west of the San Ramon Road Overcrossing along I-580, and from the Amador Valley Boulevard Undercrossing to 3,400 feet south of the Stoneridge Drive Overcrossing along I-680. $1,785.65 million ID C-8 Santa Rita/I-580 Interchange This project will construct a 2nd southbound left turn lane from Santa Rita onto Pimilico Drive. The left turn vehicle queue length exceeds the length of the left turn pocket and blocks the #1 southbound lane, thus reducing the Level of Service. $10.33 million ID C-12 I-580 Interchange Improvements at Hacienda Drive Implement I-580 Hacienda Drive Interchange Improvements, which includes reconstructing the overcrossing to add lanes. I- 580/Hacienda Drive interchange Improvements will include; reconstruction of overcrossing to provide additional northbound lane; widening of the eastbound off-ramp to include an additional lane to be used as a combined left and right turn lane; modifying signal and striping, modifying the westbound loop on-ramp; and 27 Page 5 of 8 widening of the westbound off- ramp to include a third left-turn lane. $39.13 million ID C-13 I-580/Fallon/El Charro Interchange Improvements (Phase 2) Reconstruction of overcrossing to provide four-lanes in each direction with bike lanes; reconstruction of the southbound to eastbound loop on-ramp; widening of the eastbound off-ramp to provide two exit lanes with two left turn and two right tum lanes; widening of the eastbound on- ramp; widening of the westbound off-ramp to provide two left tum and two right tum lanes; and widening of the westbound on-ramp $34.51 million ID 21-T07-056 Minor Roadway Improvements, Regional This program includes funding to implement minor roadway improvements. This program generally implements projects exempt from regional air quality conformity, but it does include non-exempt local roadway widenings or extensions. Improvements include local road extensions or new lanes (less than 1/4-mile) and intersection improvements such as channelization and signalization. Example projects include improvements to Oakland Army Base, Quarry Lakes Pkwy, Decoto Rd, Dublin Blvd, El Charro Rd, and Auto Mall Pkwy (ALA); Newell Dr and Airport Junction (NAP); implementation of Envision ID 47 Dublin Blvd. - North Canyons Pkwy Extension, Dublin $164 million ID 110 Dublin Boulevard widening, Dublin $7 million ID C-3 Dublin Boulevard - North Canyons Parkway Extension This project will construct the street extension to connect Dublin Blvd at Fallon Road in Dublin with North Canyons Pkwy. in Livermore at Doolan Road. The preliminary phase (currently underway) of this planned project will update the project by incorporating multimodal travel, and the current State, regional, and local priorities. $160.39 million 28 Page 6 of 8 Expy program, Calaveras Blvd, and Mary Ave (SCL); Hunters Point Shipyard and Candlestick Point, Alemany Rd, and Treasure Island (SF); and Farmers Ln (SON). $5.700 million ID 21-T11-114 Rail Service Expansion, San Joaquin County- Dublin/Pleasanton ("Valley Link") This program includes funding to implement new rail service between San Joaquin Valley and the Dublin/Pleasanton BART station, including three new stations within Alameda County and three-car trains (12 min peak headways), 2021 - 2035 $2,910 million ID 88 Valley Link $2,142 million ID C-14 Valley Link Rail (Phase 1) This project will connect Northern San Joaquin County communities to the Tri-Valley and Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) through 41 miles of rail and 7 stations. The project will extend from the planned ACE N Lathrop Station in the San Joaquin Valley through the Altamont Pass, then readily connect with the Dublin/Pleasanton BART terminus. $258.25 million ID 21-T12-122 Express Bus, Service Expansion, I-680 This program includes funding to implement new express bus service along I-680 (on express lanes where available) between Martinez and San Jose (20 min peak headways). Improvements include bus-on-shoulder and park-and-ride facilities, 2021 – 2035 $398 million ID 135 I-680 Express Bus to Silicon Valley $75 million ID C-16 I-680 Express Bus Service This project proposes to construct capital improvements and purchase buses in order to establish an express bus service on I-680. This project requires the construction of the I-680 Express Lane Gap Closure project, closing the gap in the express lanes between Alcosta Blvd and State Route 84, in order to utilize the express lanes to avoid congestion, reduce travel time, and improve reliably, as part of an express bus service between the Tri- Valley communities and Silicon Valley. This express bus service would likely be combined with and become part of similar efforts by Contra Costa Transportation Authority (CCTA) and their Innovate 680 program, with the intent to serve the entire I-680 corridor extending 29 Page 7 of 8 from Martinez to San Jose, utilizing buses to provide access to additional commute options, including BART, Amtrak, Caltrain, VTA light rail, local bus service, and Greyhound, for those living along the corridor. $59.35 million ID T12 21-T12-116 Express Lanes, Regional This program includes funding to implement express lanes through HOV lane conversions on I-80 (ALA); partial HOV lane conversions on I-80 (SOL), I-280 (SF) and US-101 (SF); freeway lane conversions on I-580 (ALA) and I-880 (ALA); new lanes on I- 80 (SOL), I-680 (ALA) and US- 101 (SM); new dual lanes with HOV lane conversions on SR-85 (SCL); and new dual lanes on US-101 (SCL). $4,530 million ID 19 I-680 Express Lanes: SR-84 to Alcosta (Phase 1 - Southbound), Dublin/Pleasanton $260 million ID 134 I-680 Express Lanes: SR- 84 to Alcosta (Phase 2 – northbound) $228 million ID C-7 I-680 Express Lanes - Hwy 84 to Alcosta This project will close the gap between existing and in- progress hi-occupancy vehicle (HOV) express lane projects to the north and south. The project extends for approximately nine miles on northbound I-680 through Sunol, Pleasanton, Dublin and San Ramon. $527.57 million ID 36 Dublin/Pleasanton BART Station Active Access Improvements, Dublin/Pleasanton $16 million ID 66A Iron Horse Trail Trail Crossing (old SPRR ROW) at Dublin Boulevard, Dublin $10 million ID C-11c Iron Horse Trail, Dublin Blvd. Overcrossing $11.60 million ID 109 Dougherty Road Widening Dublin, $23 million ID 148 Tassajara Road Widening from N. Dublin Ranch Drive to City Limit, Dublin $23 million ID B-8 Camino Tassajara/Tassajara Rd Widening Project (East of Blackhawk Drive to North Dublin Ranch Dr), Contra Costa Cty/Dublin $39.50 million (roadway widening project) $55.09 million (safety improvement project) 30 Page 8 of 8 ID 202 SR2S Improvements, Dublin $7 million ID 239 Downtown Dublin Streetscape Plan Implementation, Dublin $40 million ID 240 Technology Enhancements to connect arterials with freeways for Connected and autonomous vehicles, Dublin $20 million 31 Page 1 of 2 July 20, 2021 MTC Public Information Attn.: Draft EIR Comments 375 Beale Street, Suite 800 San Francisco, CA 94105 Email: eircomments@bayareametro.gov RE: Plan Bay Area 2050 - Draft Environmental Impact Report To Whom It May Concern, Thank you for the opportunity to review the Plan Bay Area 2050 Draft Environmental Impact Report (“DEIR”). The City appreciates Plan Bay Area’s 30-year vision to create a Bay Area that is affordable, connected, diverse, healthy, and vibrant for all residents. However, the City of Dublin offers the following notable concerns: 1.On page 2-30, the DEIR states that more information on the regional growth forecast is available on the www.planbayarea.org website. The Draft Plan breaks up the Bay Area into 34 subcounty areas, called super- districts, which are a combination of cities, towns, and unincorporated areas. The City of Dublin is located in a super-district which also includes Livermore, Pleasanton, San Ramon, and Sunol. However, there is no document on the website that describes the growth forecasts specifically for the City of Dublin and growth forecasts are limited to super-districts or counties. In particular, the City of Dublin should have access to the number of housing units and employees by type assumed for the year 2050 within the City, as well as the same information for Priority Development Areas (PDAs) within the City, and detailed mapping that clearly shows the boundaries of the PDAs. 2.Figure 3.11-1 (Urban Land and Open Space) does not identify Urban Limit Lines. In 2000, the Dublin City Council adopted Resolution No. 209-00, establishing an Urban Limit Line within the Western Extended Planning Area to protect land from development for a period of 30 years. In 2014, the City Council adopted the Dublin Open Space Initiative, removing the 30-year sunset clause for the Urban Limit Line in the Western Extended Planning Area, and establishing an additional Urban Limit Line along the eastern edge of the Eastern Extended Planning Area to protect approximately 3,828 acres of land known as the Doolan -Collier Canyons from development. In addition to updating the map, the corresponding tables, such as Table 3.11-2: Acreage of parks and Open Space, should be updated. 32 Page 2 of 2 3. Figure 3.11-3 (Access to Parks and Open Space Lands) does not appear to accurately reflect existing parks within Dublin. Specifically, the Dublin Sports Grounds, Don Biddle Community Park, and Wallis Ranch Community Park do not appear to be identified. A complete list of park facilities is included in Figure 3 of the Parks and Recreation Master Plan, which is available at: https://dublin.ca.gov/DocumentCenter/View/5063/Park-and-Recreation- Master-Plan---2015-Update?bidId=. In addition to updating the map, the corresponding tables, such as Table 3.11-2: Acreage of Parks and Open Space, should be updated. Please note the City also issued a letter, dated July 20, 2021, expressing issues and concerns with the Draft Plan and Draft Implementation Plan, specifically the Draft Forecasting and Modeling Report and the Draft Transportation Projects List. See attachment. Should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact Michael Cass, Principal Planner, at (925) 833-6610 or Michael.Cass@dublin.ca.gov. Sincerely, Michael P. Cass, Principal Planner City of Dublin Enc.: City Letter on Draft Plan and Draft Implementation Plan, dated July 20, 2021 CC Linda Smith, City Manager Jeff Baker, Community Development Director Kristie Wheeler, Assistant Community Development Director Michael P. Cass, Principal Planner Laurie Sucgang, Assistant Public Works Director/City Engineer Pratyush Bhatia, Transportation and Operations Manager Kan Xu, Senior Civil Engineer Shannan Young, Environmental and Sustainability Manager 33