Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1993-18 Approves Oregon Transportation Plan RESOLUTION NO. 93-/f' A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF ASHLAND APPROVING THE OREGON TRANSPORTATION PLAN AND CALLING FOR LEGISLATIVE APPROVAL OF THE TRANSPORTATION FUNDING PACKAGE. RECITALS: A. The Oregon State Legislature has directed the development of a lon!J-range transportation plan for the State of Oregon. B. The State, in partnership with cities and counties and with the full participation of user and interest groups and the public, has developed the Oregon Transportation Plan (OTP), a plan that envisions the creation over a 20-year period of a fully integrated, balanced system that encompasses all modes of transportation. C. Implementation of the OTP will create and maintain jobs in the state, strengthen the economy, preserve and extend the infrastructure investment of the past, provide better and faster connections and mobility for people and freight throughout the state, improve air quality and the environment and reduce traffic congestion in heavily populated areas. D. The cities of Oregon support a transportation plan that recognizes the partnership among transportation jursidictions; that calls for transportation facilities appropriate to each area of the state; that makes the most efficient use possible of available and potential funding sources; and that provides adequate and stable sources to fund priority needs for each mode of transportation system, including roads and bridges, air service, local bus and transit systems, ports, rail service, and bicycle and pedestrian facilities. E. The cities of Oregon acknowledge and appreciate the actions of past legislatures that have allowed progress in addressing a backlog of transportation neElds within the state, but believe that a comprehensive funding solution for all transportation modes is required to achieve an efficient transportation system that is not in continual danger of falling further and further behind. F. The Transportation '93 Committee--an alliance of state and local governments, other transportation providers, business and civic leaders, and transportation construction and user groups--has developed and put before the 1993 Legislature a package of legislative measures that would initiate the OTP and provide sources of funding to begin its implementation. G. The cities of Oregon believe that the OTP and the proposed legislative funding package represent prudent public policy. THE CITY OF ASHLAND RESOLVES AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 1. To support the Oregon Transportation Plan and the funding proposal now before the 1993 Legislative Assembly and strongly urges the Legislature to provide adequate funding sources to implement the OTP, not just to preserve and maintain t~le past investment in transportation infrastructure, but to extend and expand the infrastructure to create the integrated, multi-modal transportation system needed in the State of Oregon. The foregoing resolution was READ and DULY ADOPTED at a regular meeting of the City Council of the City of Ashland on the / y';-;; day of ~l }7d-~/1~ ,1993. J ~L~' ( ". I . ,) , . ~ . . t:. ~ _ /.-..~c. /c:/b I<'./ Nan E. Franklin, City Recorder SIGNED and APPROVED this ;,/t'i day of )}1 cC c: j. {l ,1993. ~"./ /.' .~. ...... , /~ ..~-t/c-~ /~~-c&~ Catherine M. Golden, Mayor .- Reviewed as to form: P~J~ Paul Nolte, City Attorney (d :\council\resos93\otp)