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Archive for the 'Pikes Peak Rural Transportation Authority' Tag

Councilwoman mulls support for PPRTA extension

July 20th, 2012, 2:38 pm by

City Councilwoman Angela Dougan said she is still considering whether or not to support an extension of the Pikes Peak Rural Transportation Authority sales tax.

“I have to raise my concerns,” said Dougan, one of three City Council members on the PPRTA board.

Among Dougan’s contentions is that the mayor isn’t a member of PPRTA board and that the majority of the sales tax revenue is generated in the city of Colorado Springs but the city only has three representatives on the 10-member board.

The council on Tuesday will consider an intergovernmental agreement among the participating governments that spells out the make up of the PPRTA board and what projects would be funded if voters approve the tax extension, which is poised to appear on the November ballot.

PPRTA was approved by voters in 2004; 55 percent of the one-cent sales tax goes to a voter-improved list of capital projects, 35 percent to road and bridge maintenance and 10 percent to metro transit improvements.

Dougan also questions whether the “right projects” to be funded with the proposed sales tax extension have been selected.

“I just feel we need to slow down,” she said. “We need to do this right. We need to look at the IGA. We need to look at the funding. We need to look at the projects.”

The sales tax expires Dec. 31, 2014, but supporters of the sales tax extension want to put it on the ballot in November and ask voters to extend it to 2024.

“Are we doing this when we should? Two years out is too early,” Dougan said.

While a list of projects has been identified, Dougan is concerned that a future board could decide to shelve all the projects in the city.

“The contract has to have teeth to make sure we are protected,” she said.

“Technically, the board could vote to fund all the county projects, all the Calhan projects, all the Ramah projects, and never touch a city project,” Dougan added.

“We have to look at this IGA, and now is the time. Just going with, ‘Well, we never had this problem before.’ That’s not how we build contracts. We all know at some point in time someone may not play nice.”

Bach administration never asked PPRTA for money to continue FREX, officials say

June 20th, 2012, 7:01 am by

Assurances that the Bach administration went to the Pikes Peak Rural Transportation Authority asking for money to continue FREX are now in dispute, raising questions about whether the commuter bus service could have continued through 2012.

According to interviews and an email obtained by The Gazette, the city of Colorado Springs never asked the PPRTA for “potential financial support” following last week’s City Council vote to continue FREX.

“In reviewing the statements from the City of Colorado Springs concerning PPRTA funding, in particular transit funding, I’ve noticed several inaccuracies,” Robert MacDonald, executive director of the Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments, said in an email Tuesday to Chief of Staff Laura Neumann.

“First, the city staff has not met with the PPRTA Board to ask for additional funding for FREX, FREX is fully funded by the PPRTA through the end of the year,” he wrote.

El Paso County Commissioner Dennis Hisey, who chairs the PPRTA board, said Tuesday he was surprised to read in The Gazette that morning that the city had asked for additional funds and that further financial support “was not an option.”

“At our commissioner meeting (on Tuesday), I made the comment that what I read in the paper where the city had come to the RTA and asked for more money, I don’t know when that happened,” he said.

“We did have a discussion about FREX a couple of months ago, but it was not a request from the city for more money to fund FREX, and we didn’t have any discussion about it at the last RTA meeting,” he said. “There had been some talk of having a late item added to the agenda to talk about FREX, but it didn’t happen.”

Councilwoman Angela Dougan, who also serves on the RTA board, has a different recollection.

During last week’s PPRTA board meeting, she said, she asked whether “the PPRTA board would like to look at funding the FREX system” and that no one raised a hand to have that discussion.

“Not a peep,” she said.

When Mayor Steve Bach formally announced the discontinuation of FREX at a press conference on Tuesday, he said he believed the city had been having “ongoing conversations” and that “this matter” has come up several times.

“We went to the PPRTA and asked if they could help additionally, and they were not able to do so,” Bach said during the press conference.

“That’s really what drives the decision today is that we’ve exhausted our efforts to try to find funding help from PPRTA, from the county, from Monument, from Denver,” he said.

After the press conference, Neumann, the mayor’s chief of staff, said she didn’t have those conversations with the PPRTA.

“However, staff of the city were present, and (the PPRTA board) didn’t have the appetite to talk about any more additional funding as it relates to supporting FREX or any other transportation matter at that time,” she said.

“We went seeking an answer, and the answer was no,” she added.

But in an email Wednesday morning, Neumann said “obviously there is a disconnect as to who remembers what” and that she was going to find out what happened.

“You may rest assured I will get to the bottom of this matter and resolve not only “who said what”; but, more importantly, if are there are actually monies available to continue FREX,” she said.

The Gazette has requested a tape of the PPRTA board meeting and will update this story as soon as possible.

Bach: ‘We’ll collaborate with PPRTA’

June 19th, 2012, 2:01 pm by

The city plans to use Pikes Peak Rural Transportation Authority funds now being spent on FREX for local transit service in Colorado Springs.

Mayor Steve Bach said the City Attorney’s Office believes the city has the discretion on how to use those funds.

“We’ll collaborate with PPRTA and hopefully reach an agreement with them,” he said.

Video from the mayor’s press conference on Tuesday:

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(The real) Quote of the Day

January 23rd, 2012, 9:01 pm by

Today’s Quote of the Day was met with big disappointment.

“Yawn.”

That was the first comment it received on Facebook.

So, let’s try again.

“As a founding member of original PPRTA Board,  I can recall that one of our most important founding objectives was to engage the entire region in solving our transportation problems. I find the Colorado Springs objective and weak reasoning to exclude a community to be most offensive. To City Council,  I appeal to you to support regionalism and stop thinking only of City power. You are already an 800-pound gorilla and should not fear for anything. You are sending the wrong message to all of your smaller neighbors,” Dick Bratton, mayor pro-tem of the Town of Green Mountain Falls, said today in an email to city and county officials.

Bratton was referring to the city of Colorado Springs’ opposition to letting the Town of Calhan join the Pikes Peak Rural Transportation Authority with a vote on the board.

 

RTA board rejects city funding proposal — again

January 13th, 2010, 5:03 pm by

The Pikes Peak Rural Transportation Authority board today shot down a request from its Citizen Advisory Committee to reconsider a proposal to pay city employees to manage RTA-funded road projects.

Only Colorado Springs Mayor Lionel Rivera supported reconsidering the board’s 5-4 vote last month.

The proposal, which has been somewhat controversial, received a cold reception from several RTA board members from the very beginning, prompting the city to withdraw it initially.

But Ray Ferguson, a member of the advisory committee, “expressed his concern” about the board’s vote last month and asked the committee to discuss the proposal again at its Jan. 6 meeting, according to the committee’s monthly report.

That discussion led a unanimous vote on the committee to ask the board to reconsider its decision.

Committee Chairman Tom Harold, who presented the committee’s request at today’s meeting, said he wasn’t disappointed or shocked by the board’s decision not to reconsider its vote from last month.

“That’s their prerogative,” he said. “I think the system worked.”

El Paso County Commissioner Sallie Clark said voters had been promised that RTA money wouldn’t be used by member governments to hire permanent employees when they approved the RTA five years ago. The RTA was intended to contract the work out, not supplement member governments’ general fund budgets, she said.