Publication Detail
Can We Align VMT and LOS Analysis and Mitigation? Assessing Implementation of Senate Bill 743
UCD-ITS-RR-24-43 Research Report National Center for Sustainable Transportation
Available online at
https://doi.org/10.7922/G2VH5M5T
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Suggested Citation:
Barbour, Elisa, Jamey Volker, Francois Kaeppelin (2024)
Can We Align VMT and LOS Analysis and Mitigation? Assessing Implementation of Senate Bill 743
. Institute of Transportation Studies, University of California, Davis, Research Report UCD-ITS-RR-24-43This report investigates how local governments (cities and counties) are implementing California’s Senate Bill 743, adopted in 2013 to eliminate traffic delay, measured using level-of-service (LOS) standards, as a basis for analyzing and mitigating transportation-related impacts of development projects and plans as called for under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). Based on a survey of local planning directors in California, administered in Spring, 2024, the report finds that more thanfour-fifths of localities are continuing to apply LOS standards on an “off-CEQA” basis in the permitting process for individual development projects, as well as in community-level plans and policies. Most respondent localities reported that using both VMT and LOS at both the project- and plan-level has not created conflicts, indicating that they are able to align VMT and LOS. Mitigation strategies reported as effective in reducing VMT and also improving LOS include improving active travel facilities,supporting mixed-use development, and relaxing parking requirements; these strategies can be deemed “best practices” foraligning VMT and LOS objectives.
Key words:
Senate Bill 743; California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) analysis and mitigation; level of service (LOS) standards; environmental review of transportation impacts of development; VMT impact standards and implementation