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Watson to step down as chair of CAMPO
Wednesday, December 2, 2009 by Charles Boisseau
State Sen. Kirk Watson has told a Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization (CAMPO) committee that he would not run for re-election as chair of the regional planning organization, a leadership position he has held since 2007.
Watson made his announcement in his opening remarks on Monday afternoon before a special CAMPO-appointed committee that is charged with making recommendations for changing the composition of the CAMPO board.
CAMPO is responsible for coordinating transportation and other mobility plans and projects in Travis, Hays, and Williamson counties. The organization is in the process of expanding by two counties —
Watson told members of the special CAMPO Policy Board Composition Committee at
Finally, Watson recommended that committee members come up with a method to rotate the chair of the overall CAMPO board as a way to promote regional cooperation on transportation projects throughout
“I feel so strongly about that — playing a central role in regionalism and helping with regionalism — that I am not going to continue to serve as chair following the end of this term, which will end in the following January,” Watson said.
Monday was the first meeting of the 11-member committee, which is charged with making formal recommendations concerning the addition of
Watson noted that as recently as 2006, CAMPO’s board – known as the Transportation Policy Board — had nine state legislators among 27 members, a number that has been reduced over the years to make the board less unwieldy. Now, Watson said, it is time for the remaining state-elected officials to drop off.
“I still believe strongly that local elected officials should still decide local transportation priorities,” Watson said. “Mayors, council members, county judges and commissioners are more involved in building transportation infrastructure, and have more access to technical assistance, than members of the Legislature. Adding
After Watson’s remarks, Caldwell County Judge H.T. Wright said, “I feel like a football player who comes to play for a coach and the first thing that happens is the coach leaves. You’re the reason I’m here,” Wright said, a nod to Watson’s role in leading the effort to expand CAMPO to include
Watson said he appreciated the judge’s support but nonetheless said he felt “very strongly (about) the principles that I just laid out, and I think it would be best for the region as a whole if those recommendations were followed.”
Watson then left the meeting and the eight committee members present debated the issues.
Echoing Watson, Rodriguez said he supported the move to eliminate state legislators from the board, but Travis County Judge Sam Biscoe and Wright expressed reservations about dropping them.
“I think it would be a mistake to take state elected representatives off,” Wright said.
Biscoe said, “To me the thorny issue is whether we drop the two [state] reps.”
Countering this, Bastrop County Judge Ronnie McDonald said that it wasn’t necessary to have the state senator and representatives on the CAMPO board to advocate on behalf of the region’s transportation projects. “That’s part of their job to be tuned in,” he said.
Austin Mayor Lee Leffingwell, who chairs the committee, said: “We need to be smaller. If we add counties they’ll want to have their reps.”
Answering questions from committee members, CAMPO Executive Director Joe Cantalupo noted that CAMPO is one of only three of the state’s eight largest Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPOs) to include state legislators on its board, with
Summing up the issues the members face, Leffingwell said there seemed to be agreement that
After nearly two hours, the committee agreed to adjourn and meet again on Dec. 14, when members will decide among several proposed scenarios for the new CAMPO board that Cantalupo and his staff will come up with.
After the meeting, In Fact Daily asked Leffingwell if he would consider serving as chair of CAMPO next year to replace Watson. “I’m not declaring myself as a candidate at this point,” he said. “If somebody asked me, which they haven’t done, I would consider it.”
Leffingwell also discussed whether
“Moving to strictly ‘one man, one vote’ is not practical,” Leffingwell said. “If you did it strictly by population, any members you had outside
In his presentation to the committee, Cantalupo also outlined the timeline for the planning organization’s upcoming comprehensive plan, which will spell out transportation and mobility projects for the five-county region through 2035. Expansions and improvements to U.S. 290 East, State Highway 71 East, State Highway 130, and U.S. 183 are key parts of the plan. He said that after the formal vote early in 2010 by the full board to add
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