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Oklahoma Department of Transportation

The Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT) is an agency of the government of Oklahoma responsible for the construction and maintenance of the state's transportation infrastructure. Under the leadership of the Oklahoma secretary of transportation and ODOT executive director, the department maintains public infrastructure that includes highways and state-owned railroads and administers programs for county roads, city streets, public transit, passenger rail, waterways and active transportation. Along with the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority, the department is the primary infrastructure construction and maintenance agency of the State.[3]

Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT)
Agency overview
Formed1976
Preceding agency
  • Oklahoma Department of Highways
Headquarters200 NE 21st Street
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Employees2,383 (FY21) [1]
Annual budget$1.7 billion (FY21) [2]
Minister responsible
Agency executive
Parent agencyOklahoma Transportation Commission
WebsiteOklahoma Department of Transportation

ODOT is overseen by the Oklahoma Transportation Commission, composed of nine members appointed by the governor of Oklahoma, Oklahoma Senate and Oklahoma House of Representatives. Tim Gatz, a professional landscape architect with a bachelor's degree in landscape architecture,[4] serves as the secretary of transportation and executive director of ODOT, as appointed by Governor Kevin Stitt in 2019. Gatz is also executive director of the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority. The department was created in 1976 during the term of Governor David L. Boren.[3] It superseded the Department of Highways, which was established in 1911. The Department of Transportation's mission statement is "The mission of the Oklahoma Department of Transportation is to provide a safe, economical and effective transportation network for the people, commerce and communities of Oklahoma."[5]

History edit

The predecessor agency to ODOT was the Department of Highways, which began operations in 1911, four years after Oklahoma statehood. The Department of Highways, consisting of four employees, was given an initial budget of $3,700.[6] The state's first 29 numbered highways were commissioned on August 29, 1924.[7] As of May 1, 1926, the state highway system consisted of 3,682 miles (5,926 km) of graded dirt roads (72% of the system), 832 miles (1,339 km) of gravel roads (16%), and 634 miles (1,020 km) of paved roads, for a total system length of 5,148 miles (8,285 km).[8] By March 1, 1930, the department name had been modified slightly to simply the Oklahoma Department of Highways.[9]

In 1976, the Oklahoma Legislature restructured the Department of Highways as an overall coordinating agency for the state's highways, railways and waterways and renamed to the Oklahoma Department of Transportation.

Overview edit

The Department of Transportation is primarily funded by motor vehicle fuel taxes, income taxes, legislative appropriations, and a return of federal matching dollars from the Federal Highway Trust Fund. ODOT's annual budget of both federal and state funds is applied to highway construction and maintenance activities, railways, waterways, rural public transit programs and administration statewide.

ODOT is responsible for construction of maintenance of 30,000 miles (48,000 km) of non-tolled highway lanes and nearly 6,800 bridges and administers state and federal funding used on city and county road and bridge projects. In 2019, ODOT assessed approximately 86 of its highway bridges as being structurally deficient.[10] This is compared to 1,168 structurally deficient bridges in 2004.

The department maintains 139 miles (224 km) of state-owned railway, which are operated through leases with railroad companies, administers the Federal Highway Administration's Grade Crossing Safety Program which provides funding to make safety improvements to Oklahoma's nearly 3,800 at-grade public railway/road intersections, and manages the Amtrak Heartland Flyer passenger rail service in partnership with the Texas Department of Transportation.[11]

ODOT is also responsible for administration of state and federal funding for public transit operators in areas with less than 50,000 in population and state safety oversight of fixed guideway rail transit systems, including the Oklahoma City Streetcar.

Leadership edit

The agency is under the supervision of the Oklahoma secretary of transportation. under Governor of Oklahoma Kevin Stitt, Tim Gatz is serving as the Cabinet secretary.

The Oklahoma Transportation Commission is the governing body of the state transportation department. The governor of Oklahoma, the president pro tempore of the Oklahoma Senate, and the speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives appoint the members of the nine-member commission. It is the duty of the commission to establish agency policies, award contracts, approve budgets and conduct oversight. The members each represent one of the eight geographic districts corresponding with the agency's eight field divisions, with an additional at-large commissioner representing the entire state. The governor serves as an ex officio member of the commission, but may only vote to break a tie.

The current members of the Oklahoma Transportation Commission are as follows:[12]

  • Governor Kevin Stitt, ex officio
  • At Large: Mr. V. Gene McKown, Chairman
  • District 1: Mr. Bob Coburn
  • District 2: Mr. James Grimsley
  • District 3: Mr. T.W. Shannon, Secretary
  • District 4: Mr. Don Freymiller
  • District 5: Mr. David Dyson
  • District 6: Mr. Bobby Alexander
  • District 7: Mr. Stephen LaForge
  • District 8: Mr. Bob Peterson, vice-chairman

Organization edit

  • Cabinet Secretary[13]
  • Transportation Commission
    • Executive Director
      • Chief Engineer
        • Director of Engineering
          • Right of Way and Utilities Division
          • Legal and Business Services Division
          • Bridge Division
          • Roadway Design Division
          • Traffic Engineering Division
          • Environmental Programs Division
          • Survey Division
        • Director of Operations
          • Maintenance Division
          • Construction Division
          • Materials Division
          • Office Engineer Division
          • Field Divisions[14]
            • Division 1 - Muskogee
            • Division 2 - Antlers
            • Division 3 - Ada
            • Division 4 - Perry
            • Division 5 - Clinton
            • Division 6 - Buffalo
            • Division 7 - Duncan
            • Division 8 - Tulsa
      • Deputy Director
        • Legislation and Policy
        • Director of Capital Programs
          • Strategic Asset and Performance Management Division
          • Rail Programs Division
          • Local Government Division
          • Project Management Division
          • Tribal Liaison
          • Facilities Management Division
          • Office of Research and Implementation
          • Waterways Program
        • Director of Finance and Administration
          • Office Services Division
          • Office of Mobility and Public Transit
          • Media and Public Relations Division
          • Comptroller Division
          • Human Resources Division
          • Procurement Division
      • General Counsel
      • Operations Review and Evaluation Division
      • Civil Rights Division

Field divisions edit

 
Map of ODOT field divisions
Division[15] Counties Headquarters
1 Adair, Cherokee, Haskell, McIntosh, Muskgoee, Okmulgee, Sequoyah, Wagoner Muskogee
2 Atoka, Bryan, Choctaw, Latimer, Le Flore, McCurtain, Marshall, Pittsburg, Pushmataha Antlers
3 Cleveland, Coal, Garvin, Hughes, Johnston, Lincoln, McClain, Okfuskee, Pontotoc, Pottawatomie, Seminole Ada
4 Canadian, Garfield, Grant, Kay, Kingfisher, Logan, Noble, Oklahoma, Payne Perry
5 Beckham, Blaine, Custer, Dewey, Greer, Harmon, Jackson, Kiowa, Roger Mills, Tillman, Washita Clinton
6 Alfalfa, Beaver, Cimarron, Ellis, Harper, Major, Texas, Woods, Woodward Buffalo
7 Caddo, Carter, Comanche, Cotton, Grady, Jefferson, Love, Murray, Stephens Duncan
8 Craig, Creek, Delaware, Mayes, Nowata, Osage, Ottawa, Pawnee, Rogers, Tulsa, Washington Tulsa

Management and finance edit

Staffing edit

The Transportation Department, with an annual budget of $1.7 billion, is one of the largest employers of Oklahoma state government. For fiscal year 2021, the department was authorized 2,395 full-time employees.[16]

Program area Number of employees
Administration
Transit programs
Railroad programs
Waterways programs
Operations
Engineering programs
Total

Budget edit

The Department of Transportation receives appropriations from the Oklahoma Legislature and direct streams of revenue authorized by State law. The primary revenue sources for the department are the state's excise tax on gasoline and diesel motor fuels and the state income tax. The agency also receives Grants through the Federal-aid Highway Program of the Federal Highway Administration.

The department's annual budget is primarily divided between two major areas: Operations and Capital Programs.[16]

Supporting agencies edit

  • Highway Construction Materials Technician Certification Board[17]
  • Tribal Advisory Board
  • Waterways Advisory Board
  • County Advisory Board

References edit

  1. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation. "ODOT Fiscal and Organizational Strategy" (PDF).
  2. ^ Oklahoma Transportation Commission. "June 2020 Commission Meeting minutes" (PDF).
  3. ^ a b Okla. Stat. tit. 47, § 2-106.2A
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 April 2019.
  5. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation. "Oklahoma Dept. of Transportation". Retrieved 19 April 2010.
  6. ^ Off, Gavin (17 January 2011). "Paving the Way: Tiny office grew into vital part of our lives". Tulsa World.
  7. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation. "Memorial Dedication and Revision History". Retrieved 4 November 2007.
  8. ^ Oklahoma State Highway System (PDF) (Map) (1926 ed.). Oklahoma State Highway Department. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  9. ^ Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System (PDF) (Map) (March 1, 1930 ed.). Oklahoma State Highway Department. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  10. ^ . www.ok.gov (Press release). ODOT. Archived from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  11. ^ Transportation System Funding (Map). ODOT. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  12. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation. "Transportation Commissioners".
  13. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation. "ODOT Org Chart" (PDF).
  14. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation. "ODOT Field Divisions". Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  15. ^ . Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on 27 February 2019. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  16. ^ a b https://omes.ok.gov/sites/g/files/gmc316/f/publications/bud21.pdf , Oklahoma Office of Management and Enterprise Services
  17. ^ http://www.odot.org/Publications/19_FO_Publication_AnimatedPages_3.swf

External links edit

  • Official website

oklahoma, department, transportation, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Oklahoma Department of Transportation ODOT is an agency of the government of Oklahoma responsible for the construction and maintenance of the state s transportation infrastructure Under the leadership of the Oklahoma secretary of transportation and ODOT executive director the department maintains public infrastructure that includes highways and state owned railroads and administers programs for county roads city streets public transit passenger rail waterways and active transportation Along with the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority the department is the primary infrastructure construction and maintenance agency of the State 3 Oklahoma Department of Transportation ODOT Agency overviewFormed1976Preceding agencyOklahoma Department of HighwaysHeadquarters200 NE 21st StreetOklahoma City OklahomaEmployees2 383 FY21 1 Annual budget 1 7 billion FY21 2 Minister responsibleTim Gatz Secretary of TransportationAgency executiveTim Gatz Executive DirectorParent agencyOklahoma Transportation CommissionWebsiteOklahoma Department of TransportationODOT is overseen by the Oklahoma Transportation Commission composed of nine members appointed by the governor of Oklahoma Oklahoma Senate and Oklahoma House of Representatives Tim Gatz a professional landscape architect with a bachelor s degree in landscape architecture 4 serves as the secretary of transportation and executive director of ODOT as appointed by Governor Kevin Stitt in 2019 Gatz is also executive director of the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority The department was created in 1976 during the term of Governor David L Boren 3 It superseded the Department of Highways which was established in 1911 The Department of Transportation s mission statement is The mission of the Oklahoma Department of Transportation is to provide a safe economical and effective transportation network for the people commerce and communities of Oklahoma 5 Contents 1 History 2 Overview 3 Leadership 4 Organization 5 Field divisions 6 Management and finance 6 1 Staffing 6 2 Budget 7 Supporting agencies 8 References 9 External linksHistory editThe predecessor agency to ODOT was the Department of Highways which began operations in 1911 four years after Oklahoma statehood The Department of Highways consisting of four employees was given an initial budget of 3 700 6 The state s first 29 numbered highways were commissioned on August 29 1924 7 As of May 1 1926 the state highway system consisted of 3 682 miles 5 926 km of graded dirt roads 72 of the system 832 miles 1 339 km of gravel roads 16 and 634 miles 1 020 km of paved roads for a total system length of 5 148 miles 8 285 km 8 By March 1 1930 the department name had been modified slightly to simply the Oklahoma Department of Highways 9 In 1976 the Oklahoma Legislature restructured the Department of Highways as an overall coordinating agency for the state s highways railways and waterways and renamed to the Oklahoma Department of Transportation Overview editThe Department of Transportation is primarily funded by motor vehicle fuel taxes income taxes legislative appropriations and a return of federal matching dollars from the Federal Highway Trust Fund ODOT s annual budget of both federal and state funds is applied to highway construction and maintenance activities railways waterways rural public transit programs and administration statewide ODOT is responsible for construction of maintenance of 30 000 miles 48 000 km of non tolled highway lanes and nearly 6 800 bridges and administers state and federal funding used on city and county road and bridge projects In 2019 ODOT assessed approximately 86 of its highway bridges as being structurally deficient 10 This is compared to 1 168 structurally deficient bridges in 2004 The department maintains 139 miles 224 km of state owned railway which are operated through leases with railroad companies administers the Federal Highway Administration s Grade Crossing Safety Program which provides funding to make safety improvements to Oklahoma s nearly 3 800 at grade public railway road intersections and manages the Amtrak Heartland Flyer passenger rail service in partnership with the Texas Department of Transportation 11 ODOT is also responsible for administration of state and federal funding for public transit operators in areas with less than 50 000 in population and state safety oversight of fixed guideway rail transit systems including the Oklahoma City Streetcar Leadership editThe agency is under the supervision of the Oklahoma secretary of transportation under Governor of Oklahoma Kevin Stitt Tim Gatz is serving as the Cabinet secretary The Oklahoma Transportation Commission is the governing body of the state transportation department The governor of Oklahoma the president pro tempore of the Oklahoma Senate and the speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives appoint the members of the nine member commission It is the duty of the commission to establish agency policies award contracts approve budgets and conduct oversight The members each represent one of the eight geographic districts corresponding with the agency s eight field divisions with an additional at large commissioner representing the entire state The governor serves as an ex officio member of the commission but may only vote to break a tie The current members of the Oklahoma Transportation Commission are as follows 12 Governor Kevin Stitt ex officio At Large Mr V Gene McKown Chairman District 1 Mr Bob Coburn District 2 Mr James Grimsley District 3 Mr T W Shannon Secretary District 4 Mr Don Freymiller District 5 Mr David Dyson District 6 Mr Bobby Alexander District 7 Mr Stephen LaForge District 8 Mr Bob Peterson vice chairmanOrganization editCabinet Secretary 13 Transportation Commission Executive Director Chief Engineer Director of Engineering Right of Way and Utilities Division Legal and Business Services Division Bridge Division Roadway Design Division Traffic Engineering Division Environmental Programs Division Survey Division Director of Operations Maintenance Division Construction Division Materials Division Office Engineer Division Field Divisions 14 Division 1 Muskogee Division 2 Antlers Division 3 Ada Division 4 Perry Division 5 Clinton Division 6 Buffalo Division 7 Duncan Division 8 Tulsa Deputy Director Legislation and Policy Director of Capital Programs Strategic Asset and Performance Management Division Rail Programs Division Local Government Division Project Management Division Tribal Liaison Facilities Management Division Office of Research and Implementation Waterways Program Director of Finance and Administration Office Services Division Office of Mobility and Public Transit Media and Public Relations Division Comptroller Division Human Resources Division Procurement Division General Counsel Operations Review and Evaluation Division Civil Rights DivisionField divisions edit nbsp Map of ODOT field divisionsDivision 15 Counties Headquarters1 Adair Cherokee Haskell McIntosh Muskgoee Okmulgee Sequoyah Wagoner Muskogee2 Atoka Bryan Choctaw Latimer Le Flore McCurtain Marshall Pittsburg Pushmataha Antlers3 Cleveland Coal Garvin Hughes Johnston Lincoln McClain Okfuskee Pontotoc Pottawatomie Seminole Ada4 Canadian Garfield Grant Kay Kingfisher Logan Noble Oklahoma Payne Perry5 Beckham Blaine Custer Dewey Greer Harmon Jackson Kiowa Roger Mills Tillman Washita Clinton6 Alfalfa Beaver Cimarron Ellis Harper Major Texas Woods Woodward Buffalo7 Caddo Carter Comanche Cotton Grady Jefferson Love Murray Stephens Duncan8 Craig Creek Delaware Mayes Nowata Osage Ottawa Pawnee Rogers Tulsa Washington TulsaManagement and finance editStaffing edit The Transportation Department with an annual budget of 1 7 billion is one of the largest employers of Oklahoma state government For fiscal year 2021 the department was authorized 2 395 full time employees 16 Program area Number of employeesAdministrationTransit programsRailroad programsWaterways programsOperationsEngineering programsTotalBudget edit The Department of Transportation receives appropriations from the Oklahoma Legislature and direct streams of revenue authorized by State law The primary revenue sources for the department are the state s excise tax on gasoline and diesel motor fuels and the state income tax The agency also receives Grants through the Federal aid Highway Program of the Federal Highway Administration The department s annual budget is primarily divided between two major areas Operations and Capital Programs 16 For fiscal year 2021 the Department of Transportation had the following budget by division areas Division area BudgetTransit 71 5 millionRailroads 14 8 millionHighways 1 5 billionCounty roads 158 millionTotal 1 7 billion For fiscal year 2021 the Department of Transportation had the following budget by program area Program area BudgetTransit operations 1 5 millionRailroads operations 1 2 millionWaterways operations 196 000Highway operations 368 millionInformation technology 34 millionCapital outlay 1 5 billionCounty projects 217 millionTransit projects 37 millionRail projects 19 millionTotal 1 7 billionSupporting agencies editHighway Construction Materials Technician Certification Board 17 Tribal Advisory Board Waterways Advisory Board County Advisory BoardReferences edit Oklahoma Department of Transportation ODOT Fiscal and Organizational Strategy PDF Oklahoma Transportation Commission June 2020 Commission Meeting minutes PDF a b Okla Stat tit 47 2 106 2A Tim J Gatz Archived from the original on 15 April 2019 Oklahoma Department of Transportation Oklahoma Dept of Transportation Retrieved 19 April 2010 Off Gavin 17 January 2011 Paving the Way Tiny office grew into vital part of our lives Tulsa World Oklahoma Department of Transportation Memorial Dedication and Revision History Retrieved 4 November 2007 Oklahoma State Highway System PDF Map 1926 ed Oklahoma State Highway Department Retrieved 20 January 2011 Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System PDF Map March 1 1930 ed Oklahoma State Highway Department Retrieved 20 January 2011 Oklahoma bridges go from worst to best www ok gov Press release ODOT Archived from the original on 14 August 2020 Retrieved 15 September 2020 Transportation System Funding Map ODOT Retrieved 26 February 2019 Oklahoma Department of Transportation Transportation Commissioners Oklahoma Department of Transportation ODOT Org Chart PDF Oklahoma Department of Transportation ODOT Field Divisions Retrieved 26 February 2019 ODOT Field Divisions Oklahoma Department of Transportation Archived from the original on 27 February 2019 Retrieved 26 February 2019 a b https omes ok gov sites g files gmc316 f publications bud21 pdf Oklahoma Office of Management and Enterprise Services http www odot org Publications 19 FO Publication AnimatedPages 3 swfExternal links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oklahoma Department of Transportation amp oldid 1175363904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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