Maricopa Association of Governments: Metro Phoenix Regional Planning

The Maricopa Association of Governments (MAG) functions as the designated metropolitan planning organization (MPO) for the greater Phoenix region, coordinating transportation, air quality, and land use planning across one of the largest and fastest-growing metropolitan areas in the United States. MAG's authority derives from federal statute and extends across a multi-jurisdictional geography that encompasses Maricopa County and portions of adjacent counties. The scope of this reference covers MAG's structure, planning mechanisms, jurisdictional boundaries, and the regulatory frameworks that define what falls within — and outside — its authority.

Definition and scope

MAG is a council of governments established under Arizona Revised Statutes § 11-1401 et seq. governing intergovernmental planning bodies. As an MPO, MAG is federally designated under 23 U.S.C. § 134 and 49 U.S.C. § 5303, which require MPO designation for urbanized areas with populations exceeding 50,000. The Phoenix urbanized area, with a population exceeding 4.9 million as of the 2020 Census (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census), places MAG among the largest MPOs in the country by geographic service area.

MAG membership includes Maricopa County, 27 incorporated municipalities within the county, two Native American communities — the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community and the Ak-Chin Indian Community — and relevant state agencies. The Arizona Department of Transportation participates as a non-voting member in transportation planning processes.

The Maricopa Association of Governments operates parallel to — but independently from — the Pima Association of Governments, which serves the Tucson metro region. These are distinct entities with separate jurisdictions, governance boards, and planning cycles.

Scope boundary: MAG's planning authority is geographically limited to its designated urbanized area and does not extend to rural Maricopa County areas outside MPO boundaries, to other Arizona counties not under its jurisdiction, or to federal lands managed exclusively by agencies such as the Bureau of Land Management or the U.S. Forest Service. Tribal governance on sovereign lands operates under separate federal frameworks and is not subject to MAG's land use directives, though tribal governments participate voluntarily in regional coordination processes. For a broader orientation to Arizona's governmental structure, the Arizona Government Authority index page provides jurisdictional context across state, county, and municipal levels.

How it works

MAG operates through a formal governance structure organized as follows:

  1. Regional Council — The primary governing body, composed of elected officials representing member jurisdictions, voting on the Regional Transportation Plan (RTP) and other binding policy documents.
  2. Policy Committee — Oversees transportation planning functions and coordinates with the Arizona Department of Transportation on the Statewide Transportation Improvement Program (STIP).
  3. Management Committee — Handles administrative coordination, budget approval, and interagency agreements.
  4. Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) — Composed of professional staff from member jurisdictions; performs technical review of plans, models, and data before policy committee consideration.

The Transportation Improvement Program (TIP) — MAG's 4-year programming document — must be updated at minimum every 4 years under federal regulation (23 C.F.R. Part 450) and must be financially constrained, meaning only projects with identified funding sources may be included. The Long Range Transportation Plan (LRTP), branded by MAG as the Regional Transportation Plan, extends to a 20-year planning horizon.

Air quality conformity determinations are a legally binding function: under the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. § 7506), transportation plans and TIPs for non-attainment and maintenance areas must conform to the State Implementation Plan (SIP). Maricopa County has historically been designated a non-attainment area for particulate matter (PM-10) and ozone, making conformity determinations a federally enforceable precondition for project funding. The Arizona Department of Environmental Quality maintains the SIP and coordinates with MAG on conformity analyses.

Common scenarios

MAG planning processes affect a defined set of decision points and stakeholder interactions across the Phoenix metro region:

Decision boundaries

MAG authority is advisory in land use matters — zoning and general plan decisions remain with individual municipalities and Maricopa County under Arizona law. MAG cannot override local zoning decisions, condemn property, or impose development standards. Its binding authority is limited to:

A contrast relevant to practitioners: MAG's transportation programming authority (binding on federal fund allocation) differs fundamentally from its regional land use coordination role (advisory and consensus-based). Projects not included in the MAG TIP are ineligible for federal-aid highway or transit funding, making TIP inclusion a gateway decision regardless of local approval status.

Phoenix metro area governance encompasses a broader set of inter-jurisdictional arrangements beyond MAG's MPO-specific functions, including utility districts, flood control, and Arizona special districts that operate independently of the MAG planning framework.

References