Transportation

Air Quality Conformity

Transportation planning in the region is heavily influenced by air quality planning, which like financial constraint, is a federal requirement. Once the financially constrained element of the long-range transportation plan (LRTP), currently called Visualize 2045, is drafted, it is tested to ensure that, the plan's projects collectively contribute to the air quality improvement goals embodied in the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. A series of tests are performed with computer models that predict how much air pollution will be generated over the next 25 years by facilities in the plan, and how much the air will be improved by cleaner gasoline standards and many other factors.

If the LRTP is found by the TPB to meet regional air quality goals, federal agencies certify that the plan is "in conformity." In other words, the TPB ensures that the constrained element "conforms" to air quality improvement goals. If the TPB encounters difficulty in meeting conformity - or expects to - it may choose to adopt Transportation Emission Reduction Measures (TERMs), such as ridesharing and telecommuting programs, improved transit and bicycling facilities, clean fuel vehicle programs or other possible actions. This information is documented in an Air Quality Conformity Determination report

News & Multimedia

  • News

    Updated "Cooperative Forecasts" Will Feed Analyses of 2015 CLRP Update

    March 10, 2015

    Before the Transportation Planning Board votes later this year to approve an annual update to the region's Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP),...

  • News

    2014 CLRP Update Enters Next Phase: Air Quality Conformity Analysis

    May 13, 2014

    The 2014 update to the region’s Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan has entered its next phase: the federally required Air Quality Conformity Analysis,...

Results: 22 found.