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<br /> <br />ATTACHMENT A <br /> <br />Pavement Preservation Funding Action History <br /> <br />The City’s current 5-cent local gas tax, together with other dedicated pavement preservation funding, <br />has allowed the City to complete nearly $16.5 million in street preservation project work since 2003, <br />with additional contracts in progress. During 2007, more than 17.4 lane miles of slurry seal projects and <br />20.5 lane miles of rehabilitation projects were completed, including the overlay of portions of 18th <br />th <br />Avenue, Chambers Street and Bailey Hill Road. Projects planned for 2008 include portions of East 13 <br />Avenue, Barger Drive, Chambers Street and Roosevelt Boulevard. <br /> <br />In spite of these accomplishments, the backlog of needed repair work continues to grow in the face of <br />rapidly rising construction costs and insufficient revenues. In late 2001, the City was facing an <br />estimated $67 million backlog in pavement preservation work. By spring of 2008, the estimated cost of <br />that backlog had grown to $173 million and, with no new funding, was projected to grow to over $280 <br />million within the next 10 years. <br /> <br />In January 2007, the council formed a Council Subcommittee on Transportation Funding Solutions <br />(subcommittee) to study transportation funding options and bring back creative solutions for adequately <br />funding Eugene’s transportation system for cars, trucks, bicycles and pedestrians in ways that collect <br />funds proportionately (or equally) from residents and non-residents who use the roads, are more <br />consistent with sustainability goals, have direct connection to use of the roads, and give incentives to <br />those who do not have a car or use one very little. <br /> <br />This proposal for a bond measure for street repairs is an integral component in a package strategy <br />recommended by the subcommittee, and approved by the council, to adequately and equitably fund <br />Eugene’s transportation system for a variety of users. The package of proposed solutions included a <br />street user fee based on parking spaces, and a street and bike/pedestrian path lighting fee, and an <br />increase in the local motor vehicle fuel tax. The council also took action to extend the local fuel tax <br />sunset provision by three additional years, leaving the fuel tax at five cents per gallon until February 28, <br />2011. <br /> <br />In the course of its work, the subcommittee learned that, in order to completely eliminate the pavement <br />reconstruction backlog within the next 10 years, an estimated $27 million in pavement preservation <br />funding would be needed per year. The subcommittee deemed this revenue target to be too aggressive <br />and, instead, recommended additional annual funding of $13 million to $14 million, bringing total <br />pavement preservation funding up to $18 million per year. While this additional funding would not <br />eliminate the backlog within 10 years, it was projected that it would stabilize the cost-effective annual <br />overlay program and begin to reduce the reconstruction backlog. <br /> <br />The subcommittee recommended that the transportation funding package include a capital local option <br />levy generating approximately $6 million net revenues annually to fund pavement capital preservation <br />projects. The council subsequently decided to allocate another $0.5 million to the capital local option <br />levy instead of allocating this amount to a solid waste collection surcharge. In addition, the <br />subcommittee recommended and the council agreed that $350,000 of that amount should be allocated <br />each year for bike and pedestrian path capital preservation. <br /> <br /> <br />