Do You Live or Travel Along the SR 94 Corridor?
- Public Announcement
- 10 minutes ago
- 3 min read

We invite people who live, work or travel along SR 94 to help guide future corridor improvements. Share your ideas on how we can improve transportation in the area to better serve you.
The survey is open through Sunday, May 31, 2026.

We will consider factors such as climate adaptation, land use, transit, local roadways, highways, active transportation, goods movement, flexible fleets, mobility hubs, transportation systems management, social equity, and emerging technologies. SANDAG will collaborate with jurisdictions in the project area, partner agencies, regional stakeholders, tribal governments, community-based organizations, business groups, and the public to develop recommendations to improve traffic flow and build a safe, accessible, and efficient network of transportation options.
SR 94 is one of the primary east-west routes that people use to travel through Central San Diego. It is an important road for commuters going to and from Downtown San Diego, with high traffic volumes during peak commute periods. It intersects most of the major north-south metropolitan routes, such as Interstate 5 (I-5), SR 15, I-805, SR 125, and SR 54.
The SR 94 CMCP project area extends from Downtown San Diego through the neighborhoods of Greater Golden Hill, Sherman Heights, and Grant Hill, then continue southeast towards Stockton, Mount Hope, Emerald Hills, Encanto, Oak Park, Rolando Park, Webster, and Chollas View.
The project area also includes portions of the eastern cities of La Mesa and Lemon Grove, and County of San Diego communities of Spring Valley, and Casa de Oro-Mount Helix, and Jamul/Dulzura, ending at the Jamul Indian Village of California.
(We respectfully acknowledge that we live and work on traditional, ancestral and unceded land of tribal nations, including the Kumeyaay (Diegueño/Kamia/Ipai/Tipai), Luiseño, Cupeño, and Cahuilla peoples.)
Completing the CMCP will help the San Diego region compete for local, state, and federal funds, including Senate Bill 1. We expect to complete the SR 94 CMCP in 2027.
Links: connect.sandag.org/4txKrke | SANDAG.org/sr94 | Email
Click on letters to read in English or Spanish.
A parallel effort is being conducted to study the SR 94 corridor east of Jamul Indian Village to the Tecate border. The Jamul-Dulzura to Tecate Study will explore current traffic flows on the rural Highway 94 corridor and SR 188. It will also evaluate past transportation solution recommendations to improve roads and freight infrastructure in the anticipation of population growth and development. This study is a separate effort but will be completed in tandem with the SR 94 CMCP.
Objectives
The SR 94 CMCP will create a comprehensive set of safe, sustainable, and equitable transportation solutions that are tailored to the needs of the people who use the corridor and that promote community vitality and improve quality of life. The primary goals of the SR 94 CMCP are to:
Identify the transportation needs of the people who live, work, visit, and travel through the study area
Gather input from the community to create solutions that integrate with current development and land use policies while promoting an innovative, resilient, efficient, and accessible multimodal transportation system
Create a plan that enhances economic vitality, fosters safe and healthy communities, and improves equitable access to jobs, education, and services
For more information on CMCP efforts and ways to get involved, sign up for project updates, or contact the project team at cmcp@sandag.org.


Submitted by a Common Sense reader | May 5, 2026














Comments