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Infrastructure Impact ProgramThe City of San Diego's Infrastructure Impact Program was created in 1993 to minimize the negative impacts on small businesses due to large-scale public improvement projects, such as San Diego Trolley lines, water and sewer upgrades, major road and freeway construction and significant streetscape improvement projects.
How the Program WorksBy advocating the concerns of the small business community and initiating dialogue between other city departments, developers and various governmental agencies, such as the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans), San Diego County Water Authority and Metropolitan Transit Development Board, the program works to ensure that small businesses have access to information, assistance and decision-making during major and potentially disruptive infrastructure projects. Program staff devise plans that cater to the respective project issues and needs of the specific business community. Oftentimes, key strategies of intervention plans include:
Project ExamplesThe Infrastructure Impact Program has been used in more than 30 projects throughout the City of San Diego. The following are two prime examples:Morena ProjectHost to three major, overlapping construction projects by three different agencies, the Morena Shopping Quarter was due for significant impacts to area businesses. Beginning in January 1996 and continuing into 1997, these projects included the Mission Valley West Trolley Line, the Miramar Pipeline, and undergrounding of utilities. City Infrastructure Impact Program staff immediately stepped in and worked with the businesses to assess their concerns and coordinate mitigation plans with each of the agencies. The City worked with Caltrans to keep the Morena Boulevard off-ramp from Interstate 8 open during construction of the trolley line, reversing a plan that would have severely limited access to the shopping district. Better traffic management, easing of sign code enforcement, and helping to organize the Morena Shopping District merchants were all Infrastructure Impact Program successes.Interstate 15 (40th Street) ProjectThe impacts from the three-year construction of the Interstate 15 freeway connection through Mid-City could have potentially reached thousands of businesses in five business improvement districts: Adams Avenue, City Heights, El Cajon Central, El Cajon Gateway and North Park. To offset some of these far-reaching and lengthy impacts, the Infrastructure Impact Program worked with the business improvement districts, Caltrans, City Council District 3, state Assembly District 76, and other City departments to set up a structure to keep information flowing, minimize impacts and to create strategies, and help the businesses outlast the unavoidable inconveniences of such a massive construction project.Contact InformationFor more information on the Infrastructure Impact Program, contact the City's Office of Small Business. |
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