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Oregon Highway Plan
1999 Oregon Highway Plan
Registry of Highway Plan Amendments
Proposed Highway Plan Amendments
Land Use and Transportation Policy (1B)
Highway Segment Designations
Bypasses
Expressways
Transferring Roads: Handbook for Making Jurisdictional Transfers
Staff Contacts
1999 Oregon Highway Plan
The 1999 Oregon Highway Plan establishes long-range policies and investment strategies for the State Highway System. The Oregon Transportation Commission adopted the Highway Plan on March 18, 1999. This July 2006 version inculdes ammendments covering November 1999 through January 2006.
  • Table of Contents - Cover page, list of incorporated amendments, letter from Henry Hewitt, table of contents, list of tables and list of figures.
  • Executive Summary - The Vision, Policy Element and System Element.
  • Preface  
  • Vision - Vision statement, forecasts, future technologies, policy and legal context, planning process and description of the highway system
  • Policy Element (Goals, Policies and Actions) - System Definition: Classification system, Land Use and Transportation Policies, Freight System, Scenic Byways, Lifeline Routes, Highway Mobility Standards and Major Improvements, System Management, Access Management, Travel Alternatives and Environmental and Scenic Resources.
  • System Element (Investment Strategies and Implementation Plan): Inventory, needs analysis, user costs, investment scenarios, revenue projections, implementation strategies and performance measures. 
  • Appendices
    Appendix A: Glossary
    Appendix B: Highway Program Definitions
    Appendix C: Access Management Standards
    Appendix D: Highway Classification by Milepoint
    Appendix E: Intermodal Connectors on the National Highway System
    Appendix F: Environmental Laws and Regulations
    Appendix G: Members of Steering and Policy Advisory Committees
    Appendix H: Oregon Highway Plan Findings Of Compliance
  • Maps
  • Index

Registry of Highway Plan Amendments
The Registry of Highway Plan Amendments is a listing of each approved amendment to the 1999 Oregon Highway Plan.

Proposed Highway Plan Amendments
No proposals to list at this time.
 

Land Use and Transportation Policy (1B)
On August 17, 2005 the Oregon Transportation Commission (OTC) approved amendments to Policy 1B of the 1999 Oregon Highway Plan. Policy 1B, the land use and transportation policy of the Highway Plan, furthers the OTC's goal of efficient management by developing processes for working with local governments to coordinate land use and transportation planning. The amended policy clarifies the process and requirements for highway segment designations.
 
See Amendment 05-16, Policy 1B - Highway Segment Designations, in the Registry of Amendments above.
 

Highway Segment Designations
The Oregon Transportation Commission has approved highway segment designations in 76 jurisdictions.  The result is approximately 120 highway segment designations on 147 highway sections (as described by milepoint) to November 16, 2005. The highway segment designations implement Policy 1B, the land use and transportation policy of the Highway Plan. Highway segment designations include Special Transportation Areas (STAs), Urban Business Areas (UBAs), and Commercial Centers (CCs). Highway segment designations may change the applicable Oregon Department of Transportation design standards, mobility standards and access management spacing standards within the segment.
 
A table comprising a complete list of designations can be found at table.  Individual segments can be found in the Highway Segment Designation Maps.  For more information on actions by the OTC to designate highway segments, see the Registry of Amendments above.
 
 

Bypasses
  • Policy
 
The Oregon Transportation Commission adopted the Bypass Policy as an amendment to the 1999 Oregon Highway Plan at their March 19, 2003 meeting with an effective date of April 16, 2003. The policy addresses local and state policy coordination involving planning, land use, local traffic circulation, access management, design characteristics, maintenance of the bypassed facility and jurisdictional transfer. The policy applies to 18 existing bypasses named in the amendment as well as all future bypasses.
 
See Amendment 03-08 , Bypass Policy, in the Registry of Amendments above.
 
  • Bypass Study 2002, An Analysis of Oregon´s Existing Bypasses
 
The Oregon Transportation Commission is concerned about methods for maintaining the utility of bypasses and assuring that land uses around the bypass are consistent and compatible with compact urban development and the statewide land use goals. During their February 2002 meeting, the Commissioners discussed methods being used in other parts of the United States and in Australia for protecting bypasses listed in the proposed policy to see whether the policy should be modified. They were specifically interested in whether the original purposes and need for each bypass were being achieved.

Expressways
After consultation or agreement by the affected local governments, the Oregon Transportation Commission amended the 1999 Oregon Highway Plan on May 11, 2000, June 7, 2000 and August 2005 at the Commission meetings to classify a number of state highway segments as Expressways. The Commission made technical corrections to the milepoints or descriptions of the Expressways on June 7, 2000 and April 11, 2001. The Department's Director made additional technical corrections under delegated authority on July 2, 2004. These tables list the Highways Classified as Expressways  as amended and should be used for approach road permitting.
 
See Amendment 00-02, Expressway Classifications, Amendment 00-03, Expressway Classifications and Technical Corrections, Amendment 01-05, Expressway Classifications, and Amendment 04-12, Technical Corrections to the Oregon Highway Plan, and Amendment 05-16,  Grants Pass Expressway Extension from US 199 at OR 99 to Interstate 5 Map, in the Registry of Amendments above.
 

Transferring Roads: Handbook for Making Jurisdictional Transfers
This handbook outlines guidance on how to transfer a state highway to a local jurisdiction and a local roadway to state jurisdiction. Its purpose is to clarify the issues and process so that the Oregon Department of Transportation and local governments can consider the relevant issues and more easily move through the transfer process. The publication was initiated by the Oregon Highway Plan Classification Committee implementing the Highway Plan.
 
See Amendment 02-07 , Jurisdictional Transfers, in the Registry of Amendments above.

Staff Contacts
Nancy Murphy
503.986.4128
 
Michael Rock
503.986.3179

 
Page updated: June 25, 2008

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