File #: 22-289    Version: 1 Name: SB 1 FY 23 Projects
Type: Staff Report Status: Filed
In control: City Council
Meeting Date: 5/16/2022 Final action: 5/16/2022
Enactment date: Enactment #: 2022-071
Title: Resolution for the Approval of Fiscal Year 2023 Proposed Projects Paid from the State's Road Maintenance and Rehabilitation Account to City's Gas Tax Fund (152-31-057) for Streets Maintenance
Sponsors: Debbie Pollart
Attachments: 1. Att A Reso 2022- FY 2023 Proposed Projects Gas Tax Fund

 Title

Resolution for the Approval of Fiscal Year 2023 Proposed Projects Paid from the State’s Road Maintenance and Rehabilitation Account to City's Gas Tax Fund (152-31-057) for Streets Maintenance

 

Staffreport

 

SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS

In order to receive funding from the State’s Road Maintenance and Rehabilitation Account, the City must annually submit to the State (by July 1st) a list of streets maintenance projects anticipated for completion in the coming fiscal year.

 

BACKGROUND

 

Existing law provides various sources of funding for transportation purposes, including funding for the state highway system and the local streets and roads system. These funding sources include, among others, fuel excise taxes, commercial vehicle weight fees, local transactions and use taxes, and federal funds. Existing law imposes certain registration fees on vehicles, with revenues from these fees deposited in the Motor Vehicle Account to fund the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Department of the California Highway Patrol. Existing law provides for the monthly transfer of excess

balances in the Motor Vehicle Account to the State Highway Account.

 

SB 1, signed by Governor Brown in April 2017, created the Road Maintenance and Rehabilitation Program (RMRP) to address deferred maintenance on the state highway system and local streets and roads systems. The bill requires that the County Transportation Commission (CTC) adopt performance criteria, consistent with a specified asset management plan, to ensure efficient use of certain funds available for the program.

 

SB 1 provides for the deposit of various funds for the program in the Road Maintenance and Rehabilitation Account (RMRA), which SB 1 created in the State Transportation Fund, including the following:

 

                     Revenues attributable to a $0.12 per gallon increase in the motor vehicle fuel (gasoline) tax imposed by the bill with an inflation adjustment;

                     50% of a $0.20 per gallon increase in the diesel excise tax, with an inflation adjustment;

                     A portion of a new transportation improvement fee imposed under the Vehicle License Fee Law with a varying fee between $25 and $175 based on vehicle value and with an inflation adjustment; and

                     A new $100 annual vehicle registration fee applicable only to zero-emission vehicles model year 2020 and later, with an inflation adjustment.

 

Under SB 1, the fuel excise tax increases took effect on November 1, 2017, the transportation improvement fee took effect on January 1, 2018, and the zero-emission vehicle registration fee took effect on July 1, 2020.

 

Analysis

 

Similar to the Highway Users Tax Account (HUTA), the Road Maintenance and Rehabilitation Account (RMRA) is continuously appropriated and apportioned to local jurisdictions on a monthly basis. There is not a set monthly amount because it is use-based; it is not reimbursement based.

 

The following revenues will flow to local jurisdictions:

                     New Gas Tax

                     Transportation Improvement Fee

                     Portion of Diesel Excise Tax

 

Fifty percent (50%) of the revenue goes to the state, and 50% to local jurisdictions, with the local share split evenly between cities and counties. City revenues are allocated per capita; County revenues are allocated 75% by registered vehicles, and 25% by road mileage.

 

Eligible projects “shall be prioritized for expenditure on basic road maintenance and road rehabilitation projects, and on critical safety projects.” (Streets and Highways Code Section 2030(a).) There is no use-it-or-lose-it requirement in SB 1, so multi-year projects are eligible.

 

Eligible projects include, but are not limited to:

                     Road maintenance and rehabilitation;

                     Safety projects;

                     Railroad grade separations;

                     Complete streets components, including active transportation, bike/ped, transit facilities, and stormwater capture projects;

                     Traffic control devices; and

                     Match for state/federal funds for eligible projects.

 

Per implementation guidelines, basic maintenance and safety projects should be prioritized, and to the extent possible, include complete streets components and advanced technologies.

 

Prior to receiving funds, local agencies must annually submit a list of projects proposed to be funded with RMRA funds to the CTC. Although the CTC is not an “approving” body, project lists will be reviewed to ensure that they include statutorily required information to establish eligibility for funding. Failure to submit a project list to the CTC and establish annual eligibility will result in forfeiture of monthly apportionments. Currently, there is no process to recoup lost apportionments, which would be distributed to eligible agencies.

SB 1 requires that the project list include four components:

 

                     Project Description;

                     The location of each proposed project (“citywide” is not an option);

                     Schedule for completion; and

                     Estimated useful life of improvement

 

California Streets and Highways Code Section 2034(a)(1) stipulates that the list must be pursuant to an adopted budget (or budget amendment), approved at a public meeting, and that all projects proposed to receive funding shall be included in the City’s budget.

 

The list cannot limit flexible use of funds, provided that funds are only used for eligible projects, meaning that a city can fund projects in a given year not on the project list, or not fund projects that were on the project list. At the end of the fiscal year, the City must report back to the CTC on the locations of work performed. Per established guidelines, any listed projects not started/completed can be moved to the next year’s list. Changes to the list do not require going back to the CTC for an amendment.

 

In order to receive RMRA funding, a city or county must annually expend from its general fund for street, road, and highway purposes an amount not less than the annual average of its expenditures from its General Fund during Fiscal Years 2009-2010, 2010-2011, and 2011-2012 (Streets and Highways Code Section 2036(b)). This is referred to as the ‘Maintenance of Effort’, or MOE. If a city or county fails to meet the MOE in a fiscal year, it can be made up in the following fiscal year. The CTC can audit to determine that the MOE was met, and non-compliant agencies may have to reimburse the state.

 

Included in the MOE are unrestricted, discretionary funds including vehicle in-lieu tax revenues and revenues from fines and forfeitures, expended for street, road, and highway purposes. One-time allocations expended for street and highway purposes, but which may not be available on an ongoing basis, including revenue provided under the Teeter Plan Bond Law of 1994, are excluded. Additionally, HUTA funds are not part of the MOE calculation.

 

The projects performed in San Leandro by Public Works staff are coordinated with the Engineering & Transportation Department to ensure that any required ADA ramp work  is coordinated (to the extent feasible).

 

The information below lists proposed work for Fiscal Year 2023.

 

 

 

 

 

 


City of San Leandro In-House Streets Maintenance - FY 2023

 

LOCATION                     EX./PROP. PCI                     EST. LIFE                     START/COMPLETION

 

Chapel Ct. (Residential); From                                          6/100                     20 years                                          July/July 2022

Chapel Ave to end. Remove and

replace asphalt surface (estimate

167 tons).

 

Beatty St. (Residential); From                                          16/100                     20 years                                          July/July 2022

Manor Blvd. to 15130 Beatty and

From Fargo to Trojan. Remove and

replace asphalt surface (estimate

750 tons).

 

Wiley St. (Residential); From Manor                     20/100                     20 years                                          Aug/Aug 2022

to Dayton and Dayton to Trojan.

Remove and replace asphalt surface

(estimate 844 tons).

 

Hilding Ave. (Residential): From                     18/100                     20 years                                          Sept/Sept 2022

Williams to Castro. Remove and

replace asphalt surface (estimate

171 tons).

 

136th Ave. (Residential): From                                          9/100                     20 years                                          Sept/Oct 2022

E. 14th west, to terminus. Remove

and replace asphalt surface (estimate

518 tons).

 

Thornton St. (Residential): From                     27/100                     20 years                                          Oct/Nov 2022

E. 14th to Washington. Remove and

replace asphalt surface (estimate

324 tons).

 

Elsie Ave. (Residential): From                                          12/100                     20 years                                          April/April 2023

Bancroft to San Rafael. Remove and

replace asphalt surface (estimate 977

tons).

 

Santa Maria St. (Residential): From                     0/100                     20 years                                          May/May 2023

Estudillo to Dolores. Remove and

replace asphalt surface (estimate

457 tons).

 

Pershing Dr. (Residential): From                     11/100                     20 years                                          May/June 2023

Best to Stoakes. Remove and

replace asphalt surface (estimate

(495 tons).

 

Please note that all FY 22 projects are anticipated to be completed by June 30, 2022, so no projects are planned to be rolled over into FY 23.

 

 

Budget Authority

 

The City’s MOE, as established by the State Controller’s Office (SCO) is $3,127,163. This amount is the average of the reported General Fund expenditures for Fiscal Years 2010, 2011, and 2012. In coordination with both the Finance and Engineering & Transportation Departments, it is anticipated that the required MOE will be met. No budgetary actions are required.

 

ATTACHMENT(S)

 

Att A                     Resolution

 

PREPARED BY:  Debbie Pollart, Director, Public Works Department