The SACOG Transportation Committee meets today, Thursday, November 6, 2025, starting at 10:00 AM. This is a thin agenda, but may still be of interest for the trails strategy.
This was unintentionally not posted in a timely manner, but may still be of use.
The SACOG Transportation Committee will meet this Thursday, August 7, 2025. The meeting may be viewed online during the meeting via the link provided on the SACOG Meetings & Agendas page. Comments may be made in person or ahead of time (48 hours if requested to be read during the meeting, otherwise they will not be read nor seen by committee members before the meeting) by email to clerk lespinoza@sacog.org. Comments may not be made online. The meetings are held at SACOG offices, 1415 L Street, Suite 300, Sacramento, CA, starting at 10:00 AM, usually lasting two hours. There is an optional presentation at 12:00 PM on Green Means Go.
The agenda items below have not been looked at in detail. If time permits, and there are significant issues, they will be added to this post.
Following committee roll call, public comment: Any person wishing to address the committee on any item not on the agenda may do so at this time. After ten minutes of testimony, any additional testimony will be heard following the action items.
Consent:
Approve Minutes of the June 5, 2025, Transportation Committee Meeting
Accept and Pass Through Federal Transit Administration Areas of Persistent Poverty and Innovative Coordinated Access and Mobility Funds to Paratransit, Inc.
The SACOG Transportation Committee will meet Thursday, May 15, 2025, at 10:00 AM. The meeting is at 1415 L St, Ste 300, Sacramento, CA. It can be viewed livestream via the link on the Meetings and Agendas page. Comments may be made in-person or by email ahead of time to the clerk, lespinoza@sacog.org. To be seen by the committee members, they must be emailed at least 48 hours beforehand, though they become part of the record if emailed after that deadline.
Agenda (pdf; the agenda below is abbreviated, see the full pdf agenda for details; for staff reports and other documents, select html agenda on the Meetings and Agendas page)
Consent:
Approve Minutes of the April 3, 2025, Committee Meeting
Engage, Empower, Implement Grant Reallocation
Approve Scope Change for City of Marysville Sustainable Mobility Program project
Approve Scope Change for City of West Sacramento “Great Delta Trail: Clarksburg Branch Line Extension”
Action:
Request for Project Funding Transfers (Miguel Mendoza)
Mobility Zones Adoption (Kathleen Hanley)
Information:
2025 Four-County State Funding Program Progress Report (David Pape)
Federal Fiscal Year 2024 Project Delivery Report (Miguel Mendoza)
The SACOG Transportation Committee will meet on Thursday, April 3, 2025, at 10:00 AM, in person at 1415 L Street, Suite 300, Sacramento, CA 95814. The meetings often last about two hours.
The agenda is available on the SACOG Meetings & Agendas page, but I have also provided the overall agenda and the specific agenda items below. The single, large agenda packet contains 10 agenda items, only some of which would be of interest to most readers. I have rotated all the presentations so they are readable in vertical. Usually presentations are attached as separate items, so I’m not sure whether these will be presented during the meeting or are there for information.
Comments may be made in person, or by email ahead of time to the Board Clerk, lespinoza@sacog.org. No comments are taken via streaming or by phone.
Though nearly all items that come before the Transportation Committee also go to the Board of Directors, at the next or soon-after meeting, items are often discussed in more detail at the Transportation Committee than the Board, so if an item is of particular interest to you, you may want to follow it now. Proposals are sometimes modified at the Transportation Committee meeting, or as a result of Transportation Committee discussion, before they go to the Board.
I have skimmed the agenda items, and don’t have any strong comments now, but may if I have a chance to look at them more closely.
The proposal for a tolling authority JPA for the Sacramento region came before a special meeting the SACOG Transportation Committee yesterday. Agenda item 2 was to recommend to the SACOG Board that the JPA effort move forward, and that was passed after a whole lot of information and even more discussion. The reason for it coming back is that several options for governance membership are now included, which were not available in December. The tolling authority would be called Capital Area Regional Tolling Authority (CARTA). The meeting can be viewed on YouTube, and the supporting documents are available from SACOG.
presentation page on tolling JPA governance options
For reasons that were not clear to me, SACOG staff added an addendum to the item at the last minute, Evaluation of Voting Options, about how votes might be allocated on use of excess revenue. At least one-third of the meeting time was taken up by discussing this issue, though it was not to be voted on, and is not even relevant in the near future. It will be years before there is any excess revenue to be spent, there will not likely be a large amount of excess revenue, and there is already a long list of mitigations to be funded by excess revenue that are part of the Yolo 80 project. Just when the committee was ready to move on from this topic, SACOG staff brought it up again. Argh!
It is typical of government councils or boards, when composed of more than one government agency, to spend an absurd amount of time haggling over membership. The situation is created when these boards adopt a one-member/one-vote policy, where the vote of each member weighs equally with each other. This sounds like representative government, analogous to one-person/one-vote that our democracy is founded on (with the exception of the US Senate, of course). But it is NOT analogous, and it is NOT representative. Smaller agencies have an outsized affect on the outcome, which is the case of transportation related boards means that smaller cities and rural areas have a much larger voice than they would have if voting were population weighted. We recognize this in creating city council districts, supervisor district, legislative districts, and US House of Representative districts, where each district has an approximately equal number of people. And it is why we do redistricting, so that this balance is maintained over time as population shifts. But for some reason, when it comes to transportation, the usual solution is to give each entity the same voice. I believe this is wrong. In most cases, voting should be population weighted.
In the case of the tolling authority, however, I believe that membership and voting should be weighted by tolled lane miles. This means that initially, only Yolo County, through YoloTD, would have that voice, and other counties would gain that voice over time as they added tolled lane miles. It would make sense to add membership and voting rights at the beginning of construction, not at opening of the toll facility, since decisions about tolling amounts, discounts or exceptions, and hours would start to be made at that point. Since Sacramento County has the largest number of freeways likely to be eventually tolled, it would end up with the highest membership and weighted voting, but not at this time.
Caltrans spend an inordinate amount of time in the meeting defending their right to one or two voting memberships. They had a long list of expertise they could provide, though when challenged to put a dollar value on in-kind or contracted work, was flummoxed. Though both Caltrans District 3 denied it, it was pretty clear to me that they had their eye on excess revenue for future capacity expansion projects. Caltrans has never really had to justify its work or existence to anyone, and when challenged to do so, is quite inept at it.
I spoke at the meeting, the only member of the public to do so. My points were:
Support creation of regional tolling JPA
Support governance options with one Caltrans voting member, not two
Support inclusion of Sacramento Transportation Authority as Sac county agency
Voting options for excess revenue can be deferred because there likely won’t be any for a while
Tolling advances user pays concept, which transportation advocates support
HOV lanes don’t work for management because they are routinely violated
Support does not indicate that I support adding lanes in Yolo, but if lanes are added, they should be tolled
For additional posts on managed lanes in general, this regional tolling authority, and the Yolo 80 project, see category ‘managed lanes‘.