Arizona’s chapter of the Society of Civil Engineers released a new report highlighting the state’s progress in transportation and mobility as well as the challenges ahead.
The report highlights positives, negatives and advice as “a public service to citizens and policymakers to inform them of the infrastructure needs in their state,” the report said.
“Infrastructure is interconnected with all aspects of life in Arizona and should accommodate a growing population, enable transparent economic development, promote safe and healthy communities and build resilience.”
Arizona’s Roads
The civil engineers said the state is overwhelmingly dependent on motor vehicles — 89.2% of people commute in single-vehicle use or carpools for work — and it’s important to address how roads are set up to safely handle vehicles.
They gave Arizona’s roads a “D+” rating, citing that 43% of major roads were in poor condition in 2018, based on a report from TRIP, the nonprofit national organization researching transportation issues.
“Those poorly maintained roads cost Arizona drivers $3 billion a year in extra vehicle repairs and operating costs,” the report said.
The popular motor vehicle commutes also correlate with an increase of interstate travel. It increased by 32% from 2000 to 2017, similar to the state’s population growing by 37% in the same period, the report said.
And it should increase in the years ahead as officials project tens of thousands more residents by 2040.
“Arizona’s road infrastructure is critical to the state’s economic success. Arizona’s population, 6.6 million people, is using more than 66,000 miles of public roads, each traveling an average of 36.4 miles per day,” engineers said.
However, 40% of Arizona’s urban interstates are already experiencing congestion during peak morning and evening hours, the report said.
“If completing the needed roadway improvements were possible, it could stimulate short-term and long-term economic growth by creating jobs, reducing travel delays and minimizing transportation costs.”
According to the report, Arizona can address this by providing “more money allocated to infrastructure by raising the gas tax and voting in favor of transportation initiatives.” Additionally, officials noted the gas tax was last increased in 1991 and remains the fifth-lowest gas tax in the nation.
There are initiatives locally that will help address transportation issues. The Pima County Regional Transportation Authority will again ask voters to approve another half-cent sales tax. There are nearly six years left in the 20-year, $2.1 billion deal voters approved in 2006.
The report highlights efforts of Tucson and Phoenix in implementing a Complete Streets policy to “provide additional infrastructure such as sidewalks, separation for pedestrians from vehicular traffic, and bike lanes to encourage active transportation and increase connectivity.”
Meanwhile, ADOT has improved infrastructure by “modifying existing highway sensors to detect wrong-way vehicles and alert authorities and other drivers. New sensors may be placed along the highway to alert drivers on the overhead message boards when dust creates dangerous driving conditions between Tucson and Phoenix.”
Arizona’s bridges
The report cites the National Bridge Inventory that reported Arizona’s bridge inventory includes 8,320 bridges that service over 100 million daily vehicle crossings.
However, Arizona’s transportation officials have taken good care of bridges, receiving a “B+” rating from civil engineers.
“All things considered, ADOT has done good work addressing bridges in poor condition and keeping the percentage below the national average. Now Arizona needs to plan for the future,” the report said.
“Just 137 — or 1.6% — bridges were classified as ‘poor’ in 2019, down from 223 in 2014 and far lower than the national average of 7.5%,” according to the report.
But future problems will need to be addressed as 46% of the state’s bridges were constructed before the 1970s; 17% have been constructed since 2000.
The engineers said that officials should “encourage the federal government to provide additional funding sources for the Highway Trust Fund or possibly raise the federal gas tax.”
Officials noted there should be a reduction in fee diversions from motor vehicle taxes and user fees paid to non-transportation uses.
Arizona’s Transit Systems
The engineers gave the state’s transit systems a “C” rating, citing improvements are needed as “public transportation contributes to a healthier environment by improving air quality and reducing oil consumption.”
Arizona should continue to “foster and encourage innovative solutions” to bring Arizonans to use these systems to complete their last mile of commutes.
Those solutions include the electric scooters, which were used heavily in Tucson before the pandemic.
Bus and light rail can help address alternative commutes.
The engineers say transit officials may want to “Prioritize the movement of public transportation through bus rapid transit, transit signal priority and transit only lanes.”
Tucson is trying to make its way in this area by planning to address bus rapid transit from the Tucson International Airport to the Tucson Mall area.
Down the Road
Nogales I-19 ramp to close 2 nights: The southbound Interstate 19 off-ramp to Mariposa Road will be closed overnight Sunday and Monday because of the improvement projects between the international border.
The closures will begin at 8 p.m. each night and end by 6 a.m.
Drivers who need to access Mariposa Road should use the Grand Avenue ramp instead.
Photos: Sun Link Tucson streetcar through the years
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Old Pueblo Trackworks workers look over the newly installed 720 foot section of track near University and 4th Ave. on May 30, 2012.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Construction crews begin work on tearing up asphalt for streetcar construction on East Broadway Boulevard between South Scott and South Arizona Avenues in 2013.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Congress Street was closed off to vehicular traffic between Toole Ave. and Stone Ave. in 2012.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Comstock Company workers part of a crew that are putting up headspans that hold the trolly car wire that the trolly is going to run on here at the intersection of University and Park Ave. in 2013.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Keith Drennen with Railworks checks out the switch section of tracks they are installing to connect the old 4th Ave. tracks with the new tracks that will run west of I-10 here near Hotel Congress in 2013.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Tracks for the modern streetcar are laid out along North Forth Avenue looking south in 2012.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Looking towards the west, construction of the streetcar in downtown Tucson continues on East Congress Street as many businesses suffer from its affects with fewer customers in the area on April 20, 2012. The work stretches from East Toole Avenue to North Stone Avenue along East Congress Street.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Granite construction workers working on the rails as they are pouring cement here downtown on Broadway between 6th Ave. and Scott in 2013.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Ray Ballard of Progressive Hardscapes wipes down the mosaic tile artwork installed at one of the streetcar stops on North Fourth Avenue between Sixth and Seventh Streets in 2013. Mary Lucking, the artist, says the inspiration is a psychedelic cactus to match the colorful and playful nature of North Fourth Avenue.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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After grouting, workers from Railworks Track Systems clean up along the modern streetcar on the Cushing Street Bridge near downtown Tucson in 2013.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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PVB Fabrications workers putting up one of the streetcar station stops here at 4th avenue and 9th street March 26, 2013.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Old Pueblo Trackworks workers Eduardo Trejo lifts a section of flangeway filler as part of the new 270 foot section of street car track near University and 4th Ave. on May 30, 2012. The first 720 feet of track for the modern streetcar project.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Old Pueblo Trackworks workers take measurements on the new 720 foot section of track near University and 4th Ave., May 30, 2012, for the modern streetcar project.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Donny Sondej, lower right, of Railworks Track Systems, makes sure the switches on the track stays aligned as the streetcar is towed along Eighth Street towards North Fourth Avenue in Tucson, Arizona. Workers from Sun Link and Railworks Track Systems performed some tests on the modern streetcar along North Fourth Avenue and on the University of Arizona campus in 2013.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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The modern streetcar is housed inside the Sun Link Operations and Maintenance facility in Tucson. Workers from Sun Link and Railworks Track Systems performed some tests on the modern streetcar along North Fourth Avenue and on the University of Arizona campus on Tuesday night. Photo taken Tuesday September 10, 2013 .
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Tucson's Modern Streetcar undergoes testing on North Fourth Avenue, just south of East Sixth Street on Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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The Sun Link streetcar heads west on Congress St. past the old Chicago Music Store just west of 6th Ave. in Tucson, AZ. on March 30, 2017. The parking area on the south side here is one of two that accounted for about one third of all Sun Link Blockages in 2016.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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As the Tucson Modern Streetcar rumbles across the Luis G. Gutierrez Bridge, water flows bank to bank along the Santa Cruz River after a morning monsoon storm on July 15, 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Tucson Mayor Jonathan Rothschild, center, and city councilman Richard Fimbres have a laugh as they start of board the streetcar as dignitaries and city officials take a ride to the western-most section of the line to dedicate the stop for US Rep. Raul Grijalva in 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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The streetcar travels along University Boulevard and Park Avenue in the Main Gate area of the University of Arizona after dignitaries and city officials took a ride on a streetcar to dedicate a stop for US Rep. Raul Grijalva. The photo was taken on Monday, July 21, 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Lane Mandle, public information specialist with the city managers office, looks out the window while hanging on to the hand rail in the Sun Link Streetcar on Thursday, July 24, 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Streetcar operator Rolando Balance radios back to the Operations and Maintenance Facility before he takes media and guests on an evening ride on the streetcar route on Thursday, July 24, 2014, in Tucson.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Streetcar operator Rolando Balance departs a Sun Link streetcar stop on North Fourth Avenue after he took media and guests on an evening ride on the streetcar route on Thursday, July 24, 2014, in Tucson.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Lane Mandle, public information specialist with the city managers office, hangs on to the hand rail in the Sun Link Streetcar on Thursday, July 24, 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Passengers stream across University as two trains make the stop at Tyndall at the same time on the first day of operation for the modern streetcar in the Main Gate Square, Friday, July 25, 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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A pedestrian crosses East Broadway Boulevard at Sixth Avenue on this second anniversary of Tucson's modern streetcar on July 25, 2016.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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The scene on North Fourth Avenue on Friday, March 15, 2013, near downtown Tucson, Ariz.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Jim Harms, a bike safety instructor with the Pima County Bike and Pedestrian Program, left, moves in to help a student who got her tires caught in the tracks as she was attempting to cross on University Blvd. near Tyndall Ave. in 2012.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Under a vast web of wires and cables, a pair of streetcars pass each other on North Fourth Avenue on their second anniversary in Tucson on July 25, 2016.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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The Sun Link Streetcar was filled to the brim on Saturday July 28, 2018 in Tucson. The Streetcar had free rides sponsored by Rio Nuevo and Main Gate Square, as well as live performances on board in celebration of the fourth anniversary of its installation.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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The Modern Streetcar passes through North Fourth Avenue underpass in 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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People enjoy the nightlife of North Fourth Avenue and downtown by way of Sun Link streetcar as it turns onto East Congress Street from Fourth Avenue on July 26, 2014, in Tucson.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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People enjoy the nightlife of North Fourth Avenue and downtown by way of Sun Link streetcar on July 26, 2014, in Tucson. With several stops in the entertainment districts, the Sun Link streetcar presents a new way to enjoy dozens of restaurants, bars and clubs.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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People enjoy the nightlife of North Fourth Avenue and downtown by way of Sun Link streetcar as it picks up passengers on North Fourth Avenue in 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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This bicyclist, umbrella in hand to shade himself on a sunny day, crosses the Sun Link streetcar tracks at the intersection of North Park Avenue and East University Boulevard near the University of Arizona in 2015.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Workers from Sun Link maintenance clear out water from an area along Congress Street at Linda Ave. to restore modern streetcar service as a monsoon storm passed over Tucson on Tuesday August 9, 2016.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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A crowd of students, employees leaving work and folks looking for Bear Down Thursday entertainment shuffle on and off the SunLink Streetcar along East University Boulevard at North Tyndall Avenue in 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Bicyclists traveling along East University Boulevard and North Fourth Avenue may have trouble with the tight squeeze between parked cars and the streetcar in 2014.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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A man gets some cover from the heavy rain at a modern streetcar stop at Fourth Avenue and Ninth Street on September 28, 2016.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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Members of Palo Verde Class of '66 study the map on the SunLink Tucson streetcar. About 60 people, in town for their 50th reunion, took the streetcar from Mercado de San Agustin to Maynards Market & Kitchen in Tucson in 2016.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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University of Arizona students form a moving rope line to escort the streetcar through the crowds on University Blvd prior to the homecoming bonfire and pep rally on the West side of Old Main in Tucson in 2015.
Sun Link Tucson Streetcar
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The streetcar passes over the Cushing Street bridge along the Santa Cruz River west of Interstate 10 on Sept. 7, 2017.




