On March 11, 2026, San Diego’s Independent Taxpayers Oversight Committee (ITOC/ITAC) convened an in-person and virtual session to scrutinize project delivery, audit follow‑through, and regional plan phasing—signaling a sharper turn toward transparency and measurable efficiency.
SANDAG staff reported progress on bikeway cost estimating and permitting. “I’m happy to report that the last three bid openings were within 10% of the engineer’s estimates and even 5%,” a project lead said, crediting recalibrated estimates and a moderating market with more bidders. Permitting delays with the City of San Diego remain a risk: two projects—the Central Avenue Bike and the Orange Bikeway—missed advertisement dates, though both have emerged from review and are moving forward. “We’re in a host city, and we need to conform to the host city’s expectations,” a manager noted, promising faster approvals in next year’s report.
The committee approved closure of 10 audit recommendations, contingent on supplemental documentation—particularly SOPs for QA/QC, peer review, and risk matrices—and asked auditors to verify completion in the next cycle. An update showed 72 of 92 TransNet performance audit actions completed, with 20 in progress. Members praised clearer tracking and date transparency, while pressing for standardized evaluations of delivery methods and support‑to‑capital ratios, especially on bikeways where city rights‑of‑way and rail corridor constraints elevate costs.
Budget briefings outlined FY27 TransNet adjustments and milestones, including funding advances for the I‑805 South HOV-to-express lane conversion and San Dieguito Lagoon double track. In parallel, SANDAG detailed grant program reforms, expanded Smart Growth construction awards, and tighter timelines to accelerate shovel‑ready projects, with compliance watch lists and geographic distribution policies under review.
Debate on the 2025 Regional Plan centered on I‑805 managed lanes: near‑term HOV-to-express conversions are advancing with Caltrans, while longer‑range lane conversions face legal hurdles. Members urged integrating emerging technologies before committing billions, prompting SANDAG to convene an Emerging Technologies Task Force for the 2029 plan.
Context: public committee meeting on regional oversight and planning.
As San Diego shifts from plans to delivery, the coming months will test whether tighter estimating, streamlined permits, and disciplined audits can restore public trust—turning policy into projects that residents can see, use, and believe in.
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