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Regional Response
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About Long-Term Regional Transportation Planning

In order for the people of our region to enjoy broad-based prosperity, they must be mobile. Mobility allows people to efficiently exchange services, ideas, and goods within a large market. Mobility allows us to enjoy the benefits of living in metropolitan Chicago, such as markets, education, culture, recreation, and employment.

Providing long-term mobility for our region requires planning. We need to assure that our goods and services reach world-wide markets, while at the same time assuring that the elderly and and schoolchildren can reach the stores and schools that may lie across the street. Thus, transportation planning in metropolitan Chicago is multi-modal and is concerned with both small-scale and large-scale improvements.MPOPlanningArea2-shrunk.jpg

Assuring mobility for our region will require substantial financial resources. Resources are needed to maintain the system we have as well as to improve it for future benefit. Some of the resources will be federal. However, we will also need substantial state and local resources to maintain and improve the system to accommodate the transportation needs of our growing region.

To receive the federal funds to improve transit and highway systems, our region must have a long-range transportation plan developed according to specific federal regulations. The approved 2030 Regional Transportation Plan (RTP) was adopted by the MPO Policy Committee in 2003, and is being periodically updated.  However, new research and analysis is focusing on the development of the 2040 Regional Comprehensive Plan, which will include not only a plan for our transportation system, but such issues as land use, water supply, and recreation.  The 2040 Regional Comprehensive Plan is scheduled for adoption by the MPO Policy Committee and the Board of the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning in October 2010.  For more information about this plan, Go To 2040

Until the adoption of the 2040 Regional Comprehensive Plan, the 2030 Regional Transportation Plan is the adopted transportation plan for the Chicago region. 

The MPO Policy is designated by the Illinois governor and locally elected officials as the Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) for northeastern Illinois, responsible for developing these plans. The Policy Committee has been developing transportation plans for the region since 1955.  The Chicago Metropolitan Planning Area, for which the MPO Policy Committee is responsible, includes Cook, DuPage, Kane, Kendall,  Lake, McHenry, and Will Counties, and Aux Sable Township in Grundy County. The MPO Policy Committee includes representatives of government agencies and transportation providers.  The MPO Policy Committee is responsible for developing and approving  the RTP.

The RTP is based on regional population, household, and job growth projections.  The plan is also developed according to expected and anticipated funding, which requires making tough decisions. With the region's mature highway and transit infrastructure, a large part of the resources in the plan are directed toward maintenance of the existing system.

Below are some answers to some frequently asked questions.  Additional information is provided in the links to the right.

 

Frequently Asked Questions
 

WHAT IS THE REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION PLAN?

The Regional Transportation Plan (RTP) is the long-range guide for major transportation investments in northeastern Illinois' multi-modal ground transportation system. The RTP recommends major transportation projects, systems, policies and strategies designed to maintain our existing systems and serve the region's future travel needs.

WHERE IS THE AREA  AFFECTED BY THE REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION PLAN?

The area included in the RTP consists of the counties of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Lake, McHenry, Will, and part of Grundy County.

WHEN WILL THE REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION PLAN BE FINISHED?

Transportation planning is a continuous process. The first 2030 RTP was completed in October, 2003. The plan must then be updated periodically.  A new Regional Comprehensive Plan is scheduled for adoption in 2010. 

WHO DEVELOPS THE REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION PLAN?

The Transportation Committee of the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (CMAP) is given the day-to-day responsibility for developing the RTP.  The City of Chicago, the Regional Transportation Authority, the Illinois Department of Transportation, the Council of Mayors (representing suburban municipal governments), county governments, Class I railroads, and private transportation providers are all represented on the Transportation Committee.

The Transportation Committee accomplishes some of its work through task forces and working groups, in which broad membership and participation is especially encouraged.

HOW WAS THE REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION PLAN DEVELOPED?

The RTP was developed with a series of technical analyses, policy development endeavors, and project selection tasks, all accomplished within a framework of continuous public involvement..

WHY IS THE REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION PLAN NECESSARY?

Having the RTP is a good idea. The plan prioritizes expenditures and provides a guide to the development and maintenance of the transportation system. The plan development process also serves as a tool for coordination and communication among various transportation implementers and among other governmental units.

In addition, the Regional Transportation Plan is required by federal regulations. If we do not have an approved Regional Transportation Plan, approval of federally funded transportation projects is threatened.

Several of the facilities now integral to our transportation system were first identified as part of earlier regional transportation planning efforts, dating back to the first long range plan completed in 1962. 

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Regional Transportation Plan Links

2030 Regional Transportation Plan and Maps

Tell Me About Transportation Planning

How Do I Participate

2030 Planning Process Documentation

Historical Documents 

Transportation Project and Proposal Links

Shared Path 2030 Outreach Materials and Processes

Shared Path 2030 is the process for developing and updating the Regional Transportation Plan (RTP) for northeastern Illinois. This plan will guide long-term transportation decisions and investments in the years to come. Past regional transportation plans have laid the groundwork for major transportation system improvements such as the CTA Orange Line to Midway Airport and the Elgin/O'Hare Expressway.

The 2030 RTP includes strategies, systems, and projects to enhance the accessibility of northeastern Illinois communities and improve the mobility of people and goods in our region.  Key strategies of the Regional Transportation Plan include an emphasis on improving our communities by assuring that they are walkable and bikeable; improving commercial goods movement through such programs as CREATE; reducing vehicle delay through the application of technology; more efficient roadway designs; and the adoption of value pricing strategies to encourage efficient use of the system (e.g., discounts for Chicago Card and I-Pass users as well as congestion pricing).

The 2030 RTP, originally adopted in 2003, includes such projects as Metra's extensions to Manhattan and Elburn, the Dan Ryan Expressway and Kingery Expressway Reconstruction projects, the Illinois Tollway's I-355 Extension and extensive widening projects, and the CTA Brown Line capacity expansion.   

The CMAP Board and the MPO Policy Committee approved the update of the capital element of the 2030 Regional Transportation Plan in October, 2006.  To comply with federal regulatory requirements, our Regional Transportation Plan needed to be updated again in June, 2007.  The scope of this update was focused on new requirements under SAFETEA-LU, the federal law authorizing federally-funded metropolitan transportation system planning and projects.

In adopting the 2006 update to the 2030 RTP, the MPO Policy Committee called for additional funding for our transportation system.  New funding will be required to provide the mobility and accessibility necessary for our metropolis to prosper.  Projects included in the 2030 RTP for which new funding might be required include the CTA Circle Line, the Prairie Parkway, Metra's STAR line and Southeast Service, and travel improvements in the Cook-DuPage Corridor.

The money spent to develop this transportation system comes from tax dollars, tolls, fares, and other user fees.  It is your transportation system.  We encourage you to become involved in the long-range planning for it.