Maine Code § 23-73

Transportation policy
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1. Short title. This section may be known and cited as the "Sensible Transportation Policy Act."
[IB 1991, c. 1, §1 (NEW).]
2. Purposes and findings. The people of the State find that decisions regarding the State's
transportation network are vital to the well-being of Maine citizens, to the economic health of the State
and to the quality of life that the citizens treasure and seek to protect.
The people also find that these decisions have profound, long-lasting and sometimes detrimental
impacts on the natural resources of the State, including its air quality, land and water.
The people further find that substantial portions of the state highway system are in disrepair and
improvements to the State's roads and bridges are necessary to provide a safe, efficient, and adequate
transportation network throughout the State.
The people further find that the State's transportation network is heavily dependent on foreign oil, that
such reliance is detrimental to the health of the State's economy and that the health and long-term
stability of the State's economy require increased reliance on more efficient forms of transportation.
The people further find that improvements to the transportation network are necessary to meet the
diverse transportation needs of the people of the State including rural and urban populations and the
unique mobility requirements of the elderly and disabled.
The people further find that the decisions of state agencies regarding transportation needs and facilities
are often made in isolation, without sufficient comprehensive planning and opportunity for meaningful
public input and guidance.
[IB 1991, c. 1, §1 (NEW).]
3. Transportation policy. It is the policy of the State that transportation planning decisions,
capital investment decisions and project decisions must:
A. Minimize the harmful effects of transportation on public health and on air and water quality,
land use and other natural resources; [RR 1991, c. 2, §88 (COR).]

B. Require that the full range of reasonable transportation alternatives be evaluated for all
significant highway construction or reconstruction projects and give preference to transportation
system management options, demand management strategies, improvements to the existing system,
and other transportation modes before increasing highway capacity through road building
activities; [RR 1991, c. 2, §88 (COR).]
C. Ensure the repair and necessary improvement of roads and bridges throughout the State to
provide a safe, efficient and adequate transportation network; [RR 1991, c. 2, §88 (COR).]
D. Reduce the State's reliance on foreign oil and promote reliance on energy-efficient forms of
transportation; [RR 1991, c. 2, §88 (COR).]
E. Meet the diverse transportation needs of the people of the State, including rural and urban
populations and the unique mobility needs of older adults and persons with disabilities, including
the employment of alternative modes of transportation; [PL 2023, c. 319, §1 (AMD).]
F. Be consistent with the purposes, goals and policies of Title 30-A, chapter 187, subchapter 2;
[PL 2023, c. 646, Pt. A, §29 (RPR).]
G. Incorporate a public participation process in which local governmental bodies and the public
have timely notice and opportunity to identify and comment on concerns related to transportation
planning decisions, capital investment decisions and project decisions. The Department of
Transportation and the Maine Turnpike Authority shall take the comments and concerns of local
citizens into account and must be responsive to them; [RR 2023, c. 1, Pt. A, §19 (COR).]
H. Ensure opportunity for public input whenever the Department of Transportation or the Maine
Turnpike Authority plans to install a solar energy project that will involve the disturbance of more
than 1,000 square feet of land area. The department or the authority shall hold a public hearing in
the municipality where the solar energy project is to be located; and [RR 2023, c. 1, Pt. A, §20
(COR).]
REVISOR'S NOTE: (Paragraph H as enacted by PL 2023, c. 319, §4 is REALLOCATED TO
TITLE 23, SECTION 73, SUBSECTION 3, PARAGRAPH I)
I. (REALLOCATED FROM T. 23, §73, sub-§3, ¶H) Facilitate and support the public
transportation systems in the State to achieve accessibility, affordability and convenience for the
average person's mobility needs. [PL 2023, c. 319, §4 (NEW); RR 2023, c. 1, Pt. A, §21
(RAL).]
[PL 2023, c. 646, Pt. A, §29 (AMD).]
4. Rulemaking. The Department of Transportation shall adopt a rule within one year of the
effective date of this Act, in coordination with the Maine Turnpike Authority and state agencies
including the Department of Economic and Community Development, the Department of Agriculture,
Conservation and Forestry and the Department of Environmental Protection, to implement the
statewide comprehensive transportation policy. The rule must incorporate a public participation
process that provides municipalities and other political subdivisions of the State and members of the
public notice and opportunity to comment on transportation planning decisions, capital investment
decisions, project decisions and compliance with the statewide transportation policy.
The Department of Transportation shall adopt a rule, in coordination with the Department of
Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry, that establishes linkage between the planning processes
outlined in this section and those promoted by Title 30-A, chapter 187, subchapter 2 and that promotes
investment incentives for communities that adopt and implement land use plans that minimize over-
reliance on the state highway network. This rule is a major substantive rule as defined in Title 5, chapter
375, subchapter 2-A.

The Department of Transportation shall adopt rules, to the extent possible, to ensure that all persons
are safe on public ways, including bicyclists, pedestrians, persons of all ages and abilities, transit users
and motor vehicle users, and that all persons have safe and efficient access to the transportation system.
Rules adopted pursuant to this paragraph are routine technical rules as defined in Title 5, chapter 375,
subchapter 2-A.
[PL 2023, c. 237, §1 (AMD); PL 2023, c. 237, §5 (AFF).]
5. Applicability to Department of Transportation. Transportation planning decisions, capital
investment decisions and project decisions of the Department of Transportation are governed by and
must comply with the transportation policy set forth in this section and rules implementing that policy.
[IB 1991, c. 1, §1 (NEW).]
6. Capital goals and reporting.
[PL 2011, c. 610, Pt. B, §1 (RP).]
7. Priorities, service levels, asset management goals and reporting. The Department of
Transportation shall classify the State's public highways as Priority 1 to Priority 5 using factors such as
safety metrics, crash data, the federal functional classification system, regional economic significance,
heavy haul truck use and relative regional traffic volumes. The department shall also establish customer
service levels related to safety, condition and serviceability appropriate to the priority of the highway,
resulting in a system that grades each highway as Good, Fair or Poor.
To provide a capital transportation program that is geographically balanced and that addresses urban
and rural needs and meets customer expectations and transportation system needs, the department shall
include the following goals as part of its asset management and work plan preparation. The goals are
to:
A. [PL 2021, c. 239, §1 (RP).]
A-1. Maintain Priority 1 highways in accordance with the department's federally required
transportation asset management plan and the department's customer service measures so that no
more than 15% of the highways are rated as Poor; [PL 2021, c. 239, §1 (NEW).]
B. [PL 2021, c. 239, §1 (RP).]
B-1. Maintain Priority 2 and Priority 3 highways so that no more than 15% of the highways are
rated as Poor; and [PL 2021, c. 239, §1 (NEW).]
C. [PL 2021, c. 239, §1 (RP).]
D. Continue the light capital paving program on a 7-year cycle for Priority 4 highways outside
compact areas as defined in section 754. [PL 2021, c. 239, §1 (AMD).]
E. [PL 2021, c. 239, §1 (RP).]
The department shall report to the joint standing committee of the Legislature having jurisdiction over
transportation matters by March 1st of each odd-numbered year quantifying the status of each of the
goals. The department shall recommend any remedial actions, including additional funding or revisions
to the goals, that the department determines to be necessary or appropriate.
[PL 2023, c. 237, §2 (AMD).]

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