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Local Street Repair and Local Street Safety

Filling potholes, maintaining driving surfaces and adding roadway safety features are important to pedestrians, cyclists and motorists throughout San Joaquin County. People who live, work and travel in San Joaquin County benefit directly from these projects funded by Measure K. Money from Measure K’s Local Street Repair fund goes to repairing streets and the Local Street Safety fund pays for adding fog reflectors, median barriers, roadway shoulders, Safe Routes to Schools, and more. The benefits from these projects include improving safety, fixing deteriorating streets and roads, and improving traffic flow, which can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve air quality. The county and cities receive 35% of Measure K revenue – in Fiscal Year 2022-23 that was nearly $29.23 million.

Local Street Repair
Local Street Safety 
Escalon$258,000Escalon$42,000
Lodi$1,326,604Lodi$215,959
Manteca$1,730,922Manteca$281,778
Ripon$318,429Ripon$51,837
Stockton$6,426,547Stockton$2,046,182
Tracy$1,883,949Tracy$306,689
Lathrop$624,363Lathrop$101,640
San Joaquin County $12,568,825San Joaquin County $2,046,086
Total for FY 2022-23$25,137,629Total for FY 2022-23$4,092,171

EscalonOngoing Roadway Improvements - Escalon

Escalon has an ongoing program to improve aging roadways in the city that require repair and repaving, and for sidewalk modifications for accessibility. A multi-year plan for these improvements is used to determine the locations of these repairs for each funding cycle.



Escalon rd main 1

Escalon rd main 2



Lathrop Logo

Street repairs and safety improvements – Lathrop

Lathrop used Measure K funding for street repairs and safety improvements. A pavement maintenance project included repairs, filling cracks, slurry sealing, and new striping on residential streets throughout the city. Pavement resurfacing improved driving conditions and striping enhanced safety for motorists, cyclists and pedestrians. Improvements were made on Golden Valley Parkway, River Islands Parkway, Lathrop Road, Barbara Terry Boulevard and Slate Street. Funds were also used to add warning signs and install a guardrail on Harlan Road adjacent to a one-way street to help prevent vehicles from traveling through the curve. And speed humps were installed in residential neighborhoods to help reduce vehicle speeds. 













Stockton LogoOngoing Maintenance Program – Stockton

Stockton used Measure K funds to help with its yearly ongoing maintenance program to repair the city’s roadway infrastructure and street lighting throughout the city. Street repair improvements were done along McAuliffe Road between Iron Canyon Circle and Trinity Parkway, Wagner Heights Road between Thornton Road and Don Avenue, Lincoln Road between Harding Way and Walnut Street and Bay Court. Streetlight repairs were done citywide. 



seal_fullPavement Maintenance Program - San Joaquin County

San Joaquin County used Measure K funds to treat 91 miles of roadways throughout the county as part of its seven-year cyclical crack seal, chip seal, and slurry seal programs. These pavement preservation programs help to prolong the life of the pavement and protect the public's investment in the roadway infrastructure.




Street Repairs and Safety Improvements - Tracy

Tracy logo 1Tracy used Measure K funds for pavement repair, asphalt grinding, asphalt concrete paving, slurry seal, signage and striping of approximately 5.8 miles of streets in neighborhoods throughout the city. Those neighborhoods included the Sienna Park, Hearthstone, Parkside Estates, Ironwood, and Muirfield subdivisions, and the residential neighborhood bordered by Sycamore Parkway to the east, Corral Hollow Road to the west, Dove Drive to the south, and Summertime Drive to the north. The project added bike lanes and bike route striping on the pavement following the city’s Bikeway Master Plan.