MPO Designation & Organization
Transportation planning includes a number of steps:
- Monitoring existing conditions;
- Forecasting future population and employment growth, including assessing projected land uses in the region and identifying major growth corridors;
- Identifying current and projected future transportation problems and needs and analyzing, through detailed planning studies, various transportation improvement strategies to address those needs;
- Developing long-range plans and short-range programs of alternative capital improvement and operational strategies for moving people and goods;
- Estimating the impact of recommended future improvements to the transportation system on environmental features, including air quality; and
- Developing a financial plan for securing sufficient revenues to cover the costs of implementing strategies.
Cooperative Agreement
Transportation planning must be cooperative because no single agency has responsibility for the entire transportation system. For example, some roads that are part of the Interstate Highway System and are subject to certain standards are maintained by KDOT. Others are county arterials or city streets which are designed, operated, and maintained by the County or local municipalities. The Lawrence Transit System is operated and maintained by the City of Lawrence.The L-DC MPO is responsible for actively seeking the participation of all relevant agencies and stakeholders in the planning process. The Cooperative Agreement/Memorandum of Understanding is an agreement that outlines the working relationships of the MPO, KDOT, and the Lawrence Transit System in conducting the 3C (continuing, comprehensive, cooperative) regional transportation planning process in the Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Area.
Cooperative Agreement (PDF, 7 MB)
L-DC MPO Re-Designation Agreement
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission served as the MPO since 1982 when the area first reached the population threshold requiring an MPO. In 2008 the MPO was re-designated to better comply with the current federal transportation planning regulations. The re-designation was accomplished with the approval of a MPO Re-Designation Agreement that was signed by city and county officials and executed by KDOT Secretary Deb Miller. The re-designation transformed the MPO from an appointed joint city-county planning commission to a group composed primarily of local elected officials.Re-Designation Agreement (PDF, 5 MB)
MPO Policy Board Members and Bylaws
Federal Regulations
Federal transportation planning regulations are implemented jointly by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and are designed to carry out the provisions of the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU) signed into law by President Bush on August 10, 2005.Statewide Transportation Planning; Metropolitan Transportation Planning: Final Rule – Effective March 16, 2007 (Federal Register Notice published February 14, 2007) (PDF, 398 KB)

