HomeMy WebLinkAbout7.12.22 Board Correspondence - FW_ CTC Allocations for District 2 Projects - July 2022
From:Paulsen, Shaina
To:BOS
Subject:Board Correspondence - FW: CTC Allocations for District 2 Projects - July 2022
Date:Tuesday, July 12, 2022 8:44:44 AM
Please see Board Correspondence below.
Shaina Paulsen
Associate Clerk of The Board
Butte County Administration
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200, Oroville, CA 95965
T: 530.552.3304 | F: 530.538.7120
From: Caltrans District 2 - PIO Office <d2pio@dot.ca.gov>
Sent: Friday, July 1, 2022 10:56 AM
To: Clerk of the Board <clerkoftheboard@buttecounty.net>
Subject: CTC Allocations for District 2 Projects - July 2022
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Date:
July 1, 2022
Contact:
Kurt Villavicencio
Phone:
(530) 225-3426
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
California Allocates More Than $3 Billion
for Transportation Infrastructure
SACRAMENTO — The California Transportation Commission (CTC) allocated
more than $3 billion today to repair and improve transportation infrastructure
throughout the state, including $1.3 billion in funding from the federal
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to support local projects and to protect
local roads and bridges from extreme weather and natural disasters. Senate
Bill (SB) 1, the Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017, accounts for more
than $930 million of the total funding.
“The CTC’s decision to invest in our state highways while protecting city and
county infrastructure will help make California’s roadways safer and more
resilient one shovel, one project and one community at a time,” said Caltrans
Director Tony Tavares.
District 2 projects approved this week include:
Cascade SHOPP (In Redding on Interstate 5 just north of Cypress
Ave Undercrossing in Shasta County): Replace overhead signs,
concrete and cable barrier, guardrail, improve vertical clearance and
replace Transportation Management System (TMS)
Pit One Grade Rockfall Mitigation (Near Fall River Mills 3 miles west
of Glenburn Road in Shasta County): Construct mitigation measures to
prevent rockfall onto the roadway, establish disposal sites, and
rehabilitate drainage systems.
Grass Lake Maintenance Station (Near Macdoel at Grass Lake
Maintenance Station in Siskiyou County): Construct new maintenance
station building, fuel facility, wash rack, salt house, and a materials
storage facility.
SIS 263 Bridge Repairs (Near Yreka, at Dry Gulch Bridge and Shasta
River Bridge in Siskiyou County) Rehabilitate bridges.
South Ave Safety (Near Los Molinos, from 0.3 mile south to 0.3 mile
north of South Avenue in Tehama County): Construct roundabout.
Pit Rivers Seismic (Near Bieber, at Pit River Overflow Bridge and Pit
River Bridge in Lassen County): Seismic retrofit.
Beckwourth CAPM (Near Portola, from west of Grizzly Rd to 0.9 mile
west of Summit School Drive in Plumas County): Rehabilitate
pavement, add intersection lighting, upgrade signs and guardrail, and
rehabilitate drainage systems.
Almanor West Rehab (Near Canyondam from 0.6 mile north of SR
147 to SR 36, in Plumas County): Rehabilitate roadway, upgrade
guardrail and signs, rehabilitate drainage systems, and construct 3.7
miles of Class 1 bike lanes as complete streets.
Fawndale Culverts (In and near Shasta Lake City, from 0.7 mile
south of Pine Grove Ave to north of Bridge Bay Rd in Shasta
County): Rehabilitate drainage system.
Lake Shasta Viaducts (Near Shasta Lake City, at Tunnel Gulch
Sidehill Viaduct, Johns Cove Sidehill Viaduct, Island View Sidehill
Viaduct in Shasta County): Apply polyester concrete overlay to bridge
decks.
Flume Creek CAPM (In and near Dunsmuir, from 0.6 mile north of
Sims Rd to Siskiyou County line; also in Siskiyou County, from
Shasta County line to south of Siskiyou Ave in Shasta and Siskiyou
Counties): Rehabilitate pavement, upgrade guardrails, bridge rail,
concrete barrier, signs, and drainage systems. Also install lighting and
wildlife fencing, and upgrade TMS elements.
Shingle Station Paving and Drainage (Near Shingletown and Old
Station, from east of Shingletown Ridge Road to Lassen County line
in Shasta County): Rehabilitate pavement and drainage systems, and
replace TMS elements.
Burney Falls Pavement (Near Burney, from north of SR 299 to 1.4
miles north of Lake Britton Bridge in Shasta County): Rehabilitate
pavement, construct maintenance vehicle pullouts, replace guardrail and
signs, and rehabilitate drainage systems.
Thompson Creek Bridge (Near Happy Camp, at Thompson Creek
Bridge in Siskiyou County): Replace a portion of the bridge deck and
apply polyester concrete overlay.
Klamath Lake Rehab 2R (Near Dorris, from 4.5 miles east of Route
97 to 2.1 miles west of Fugate Rd in Siskiyou County): Rehabilitate
roadway, replace signs, upgrade facilities to current ADA standards at
vista point.
Riverside Drive Reconstruction & Class 1 Pedestrian Bike
Lane (Near Susanville, Riverside Drive in the unincorporated area of
Lassen County): Construct Class 1 bike-pedestrian trail.
Yreka Rehab (In Yreka, from 0.4 mile north of Laura Lane to Juniper
Drive; also on Route 263, from Route 3 to 1.0 mile south of Long
Gulch Rd in Siskiyou County): Rehabilitate roadway, replace sidewalk
and driveways, upgrade drainage system and bridge rail, upgrade curb
ramps and pedestrian signals to meet current ADA standards, and
designate bikeways with new signage and pavement delineation.
West Street School Connectivity Project (In Corning city limits,
Tehama County, adjacent to West Street School along Marin, Hoag,
South, and Solano Streets, and Houghton and McKinley Avenues in
Tehama County): Funding for new sidewalks, curbs, gutters, crosswalks
and bike lanes to close gaps in the existing sidewalks infrastructure
adjacent to West Street Elementary School.
ATP Olive View School Connectivity Project (In Corning city limits,
Tehama County, adjacent to Olive View School along Pear Street,
Almond Street and Fig Street in Tehama County): Funding for new
sidewalks, curbs, gutters, crosswalks to close gaps in the existing
sidewalks infrastructure adjacent to Olive View Elementary School.
The $1.3 billion federal local assistance allocation in fiscal year 2023 is thanks
to programs that were created or expanded under the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act, also referred to as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
Caltrans oversees funds that are available to more than 600 cities, counties,
and regional agencies for the purpose of improving their transportation
infrastructure and services. Funding from new programs that were created by
the law includes $45 million to build community resilience in the face of
extreme weather and natural disasters and $63 million to help develop carbon
reduction strategies that address the climate crisis.
SB 1 provides $5 billion in annual transportation funding annually that is split
between the state and local agencies. Road projects progress through
construction phases more quickly based on the availability of SB 1 funds,
including projects that are partially funded by SB 1.
For more information about transportation projects funded by SB 1,
visit RebuildingCA.ca.gov
.
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