Class Information
Instructor InformationThis class is offered in partnership with the California Department of Transportation, Division of Local Assistance. Registration fees are subsidized with funding from the Cooperative Training Assistance Program. Reduced rates are available to employees of California's city, county, regional, and other public agencies only.
Check for other dates/locationsCEUs: CEUs: 1.60
Credits
This course grants 1.6 CEUs and 16 AICP CM credits. (AICP CMs pending approval)Description
The course will examine the origins of changing the transportation metric from level of service (LOS) to vehicle-miles-of-travel (VMT). We will discuss VMT and its relationship to climate change impacts; the legislative history of VMT in California, including Senate Bills (SBs) 375 and 743; and an overview of the new CEQA Guidelines update. We will also discuss means by which local agencies can continue to address the issue of traffic congestion outside of the CEQA process. OPR has selected vehicle-miles-of-travel VMT as the preferred metric to comply with SB 743. The recommended changes to the CEQA Guidelines include a Technical Advisory that provides recommendations about VMT screening, methodology, and thresholds. These recommendations require fundamental changes in current transportation impact analysis practices and have implications for transportation planning as part of general plans and regional transportation plans. This course will explain the technical details of how to address these changes and include detailed step-by-step flow-chart explanations of how to analyze land use projects, transportation projects, land use plans (e.g., general plans), and regional transportation plans under SB 743.Click here for a detailed outline.
Topics Include
- What is vehicle miles travelled (VMT)?
- VMT and its relationship to greenhouse gas emissions
- The legislative evolution of VMT
- SB 375 - Sustainable Communities Strategy
- SB 743 - mandate to update the CEQA Guidelines
- The CEQA Guidelines
- Role of the Guidelines
- OPR's task to update the CEQA Guidelines
- The underlying philosophy - encourage infill, discourage sprawl
- What the CEQA Guidelines say
- OPR's technical advisory
- Is LOS still a thing?
- Exception for "roadway capacity projects"
- Local development standards to limit congestion take the place of CEQA mitigation
- Local traffic impact ordinances can live on
- Role of VMT in environmental impact analysis versus transportation planning
- VMT estimation and forecasting methods
- Data and models
- Project versus cumulative analysis
- Differences in methods for energy, air quality, GHG, and transportation impacts
- Induced Travel
- Role of the ARB's Mobile Source Strategy in establishing substantial evidence for significance thresholds
- Role of RTPs and general plans in setting significance thresholds
- Mitigation sources, strategies, and limitations
What You Will Learn
This class will provide attendees with a background of CEQA's VMT traffic metric, including an understanding of the origins of the new traffic metric; a discussion of the new CEQA Guidelines provisions on VMT, including an introduction to the OPR technical advisory; and suggestions on how local agencies can adapt so that concerns about congestion and traffic impact fee programs can be addressed outside of CEQA. Students will obtain a rich set of practical information to help them navigate SB 743 compliance. This will include how to estimate and forecast VMT using a variety of methods and what limitations apply; how to relate VMT reduction goals across technical topic areas including energy, air quality, greenhouse gases, and transportation; how to select the form of VMT that is most useful in measuring transportation impacts; how to select appropriate thresholds; and what constitutes substantial evidence to support these decisions.Who Should Attend
This course is intended for planners, engineers, policy analysts, and CEQA practitioners, among others, in private or public practice who want to understand the technical details associated with SB 743 implementation and the fundamental changes in current transportation impact analysis practices. It will also provide a foundational understanding of the origins and underlying philosophy behind California's new VMT traffic metric.For More Information
About our courses and credits, see our FAQAbout payments, refunds, confirmations, and accessibility, see How to Enroll
Or email us with your questions at registrar@techtransfer.berkeley.edu
Cancellation Policy
To cancel your registration and receive a refund less a $75 processing fee, you must notify TechTransfer at least five (5) working days before the course is scheduled to begin. Notifications must be made in writing and sent by email to registrar@techtransfer.berkeley.edu. We reserve the right to charge the full course fee if proper notification is not sent to TechTransfer. We don't offer refunds for classes with registration fees of $75 or less.
In lieu of canceling your registration, you have three additional options: you may (1) transfer your registration to another class, (2) receive a tuition credit for the total amount, useable toward a future class, or (3) send a substitute in your place. Please contact us at least 5 full working days before the class is scheduled to begin so we may process your request.
If you’ve registered for a self-paced class, you cannot receive a refund once you start the class.
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