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Electric vehicles, emissions and more: Here’s what PennDOT officials covered during their 12-Year Program forum

  • By Molly Bilinski/LehighValleyLive.com
Pennsylvania transportation officials on Wednesday answered questions from residents about the agency's 12-Year Program during an online public forum. From left: Ronald Drnevich, Karen Michael, both state transportation commissioners, and Larry Shifflet, PennDOT’s deputy secretary for planning.

 This Is A Screenshot Molly Took During The Broadcast.

Pennsylvania transportation officials on Wednesday answered questions from residents about the agency's 12-Year Program during an online public forum. From left: Ronald Drnevich, Karen Michael, both state transportation commissioners, and Larry Shifflet, PennDOT’s deputy secretary for planning.

Pennsylvania residents could soon see a sharp increase in electric vehicle charging stations along state roads.

“There’s a major effort on the part of PennDOT to install charging stations along with all the travel corridors,” state Transportation Commissioner Ronald Drnevich said during an online public forum Wednesday.

  • PennDOT held an online public forum Wednesday to answer questions about the agency’s 12-Year-Program
  • The program outlines projects and funding to improve state-owned road and bridge projects
  • Officials are collecting public comment through April 30

“Everybody worries how many miles they can go before they need to find a charging station, and that’s being implemented.”
They’re slated to be added over the next two years, he said.

The topic was among a handful covered by state transportations officials during the forum, held to answer questions from residents on the department’s 12-Year Program, a planning and funding tool for state-owned road and bridge projects.

In addition to Drnevich, panelists included Larry Shifflet, PennDOT’s deputy secretary for planning, and Karen Michael, also a state transportation commissioner.

“Tonight marks an important milestone in our outreach process for updating the 12-Year Program,” Drnevich said. “The current 12-Year Program update process will be completed next year.”

The hour-and-a-half-long meeting included 30 minutes of presentations before an hour allotted for public questions — all of which was used.

One resident asked how the program meets emission-reduction requirements.

“You have to go through a process to make sure that what we are doing, or what we’re proposing to do, would not increase the detriment of the air in that county, per se,” Michael said, citing federal guidelines.

Another participant asked whether the agency would commit to reducing road noise for residents when existing highways are expanded.

“Unfortunately, the money involved in something like a noise wall is very, very heavy — there’s a lot of money involved in trying to build those,” Michael said.

“So, at the present time, PennDOT’s noise abatement policy is currently limited to when there is either new alignment or an expansion of lanes.

“Unfortunately we just don’t have the money for those retrofits at this point in time.”

There are not “an extensive amount” of widening projects in the current plan, Shifflet said, citing funding and current needs.

Roadwork in the Lehigh Valley

PennDOT’s spring construction season already has begun, with crews at work in the Lehigh Valley and beyond improving roads and bridges.

The agency expects to begin more than a dozen new notable projects in Berks, Carbon, Lehigh, Monroe, Northampton and Schuylkill counties while wrapping up more than 20 others. They are expected to cost more than $700 million.

There are dozens of projects for the Valley included in the 12-Year Program, from rehabbing the South Walnut Street Bridge in Slatington and improving the Route 22 and Fullerton Interchange in Whitehall Township to a transportation study in Bangor and 25th Street Hill corridor improvements in Palmer Township.

There have been some changes since August, when the plan was first published. There were almost 1,000 project adjustments approved in mid-December, including more than a dozen in Lehigh County and three in Northampton County.

Changes included increases and decreases in funding. For example, the budget for improvements to the area of Routes 222 and 863, as well as Schantz Road in Upper Macungie Township went from $10,000 to almost $2.8 million.

A presentation from officials

Before officials began accepting questions, they spoke about the state’s most recent transportation performance report, or TPR, which lets PennDOT monitor, measure and evaluate performance trends.

The report focuses on six key performance measures: safety, mobility, preservation, accountability, funding and freight.

“It is important to note that the 2023 transportation performance report is the first to feature freight as a key performance measure,” Michael said.

“This new measure was added to account for the significant efforts PennDOT has made in innovation and resources dedicated to implementing the goals set in Pennsylvania’s 2045 freight movement plan.”

In 2020 and 2021 the commonwealth experienced an overall rise in roadway fatalities, Shifflet said.

“PennDOT continues to use a very data-driven approach to identify the things that infrastructure that influenced transportation to include a downward trend in these numbers in response to the increase in pedestrian and vulnerable road-user fatalities,” he said.

Officials also have worked to improve bridges statewide.

“In Pennsylvania, 6,400 bridges are owned and maintained by counties or municipalities,” Shifflet said.

“These locally owned bridges have improved in recent years as well. As you can find in our TPR, with the number of bridges rated poor now under 1,800 compared to over 2,000 a decade ago.

“Doesn’t sound like a monumental lift. But quite honestly, it’s quite a lift in a decade.”

Residents can viewa recording of the forum online, and the agency is collecting comments on the update through April 30 through an online survey. The department has so far received about 90% of its 10,000-responses goal.

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