Orange County NC Website
ORANGE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TITLE VI PLAN <br /> <br />7 <br /> <br />x In 2013, the Durham-Chapel Hill-Carrboro Metropolitan Planning Organization <br />(DCHC MPO), which covers a large portion of the OPT service area, developed <br />an update to its Coordinated Public Transportation-Human Service <br />Transportation Plan, which provides a framework for the development of projects <br />intended to address the transportation needs of persons with disabilities, older <br />adults, and individuals with lower incomes through a better coordinated <br />transportation system. Federal transit law (MAP-21) requires that projects <br />selected for funding under the Elderly and Individuals with Disabilities Program <br />(Section 5310) be derived from a coordinated plan. The development of the plan <br />update involved a survey and a stakeholder workshop to assess transportation <br />needs and develop strategies to address those needs. The plan will be updated <br />in future years and will involve continued public input. <br />x In 2013, the Triangle Area Rural Planning Organization (TARPO), which also <br />covers a large portion of the OPT service area, developed an update to its <br />Coordinated Public Transportation-Human Service Transportation Plan, which <br />involved stakeholder workshops. The plan will be updated in future years and will <br />involve continued public input. <br />x On its website, Orange Public Transportation solicits feedback and complaints to <br />be directed to the system’s transportation administrator by phone or email. <br />These efforts are carried out on a continuous basis to involve the public, with particular <br />emphasis on engaging minority and limited English proficiency (LEP) populations as <br />much as possible. OPT stresses serving areas of concentrated transit-dependent <br />populations (i.e., elderly, low-income, no vehicle, disabled, and youth populations) with <br />its fixed-route transit operation, which by extension also directly involves minority and <br />limited-English-proficient communities. In doing so, OPT targets communities directly <br />served by its operations with its public participation and outreach efforts by holding <br />easily accessible small-format meetings that are squarely located within the heart of the <br />applicable communities and that are scheduled during times the majority of the public <br />can attend. OPT also targets specific organizations representing minority, transit- <br />dependent, and LEP communities when advertising public participation processes and <br />opportunities. Most notices posted and/or published for public hearings and public <br />meetings are translated to Spanish to encourage participation from the Spanish- <br />speaking community, which is the largest LEP population group in Orange County. <br />47 <br />ReturntoAgenda