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Building America's Future Calls for a 21st Century Federal Transportation Program

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu May-21-09 08:26 PM
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Building America's Future Calls for a 21st Century Federal Transportation Program
Building America's Future Calls for a 21st Century Federal Transportation Program


As Congress prepares to revise the federal transportation program (SAFETEA-LU), Building America’s Future – a national, bipartisan infrastructure coalition led by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Governor Ed Rendell and Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger – released a memo recently calling on Congress and the Obama Administration to make transformative changes and chart a new transportation vision for the 21st Century.

“Our nation’s current transportation system is simply outdated and unable to meet the demands of the 21st Century,” said Kerry O’Hare, policy director of Building America’s Future. “We cannot continue to channel billions of dollars through the same old programs which lack innovation, accountability and an outcome-driven focus. The country is hungry for change and Congress and the Obama Administration have a unique opportunity to transform current transportation programs and enhance our nation’s economic competitiveness and improve the quality of life for all Americans. The time to act is now and Building America’s Future stands ready to help build the political consensus to make this vision a reality.”

Included in the memo were four key principles to use in shaping this new transportation vision. Excerpts:

1. Renew Leadership at the National Level
To ensure that America has a 21st century transportation system that meets our 21st-century needs, the federal government must once again lead, by outlining key national goals that will guide how transportation investments are made in the coming years…

2. Increase Accountability at the Federal, State, and Local Levels
Federal transportation funding is no longer guided by clear objectives. Rather, funding decisions today are based more on politics than on merit. For example, the number of earmarks in surface transportation bills has ballooned from 10 in 1981 to over 6,000 in the 2005 transportation authorization. While not all of these earmarks involved funding “bridges to nowhere,” a politicized method of distribution increases the risk of funding inefficient projects that do not meet national objectives… In laying out a vision for a new national transportation policy, we challenge Congress to significantly reduce earmarking and offer alternate routes – with greater transparency and accountability – to achieve national goals… Congress and the Administration must begin to hold states and localities – and themselves – accountable for ensuring that federally-funded projects meet national goals and that taxpayer dollars are being used efficiently. Otherwise, it will simply be business as usual – and that is no longer acceptable.

3. Encourage Innovation and Flexibility at the State and Local Levels
In recent years, the federal government has begun to allow states and local governments greater flexibility in how they spend their resources, leading to increased innovation in meeting national transportation objectives. The next transportation bill should significantly accelerate this development, through streamlined processes as well as expanded financial incentive programs, such as the Urban Partnership Program…

4. Find New Ways to Fund National Goals
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) is a critical down payment on our country’s backlog of transportation capital needs. But much more needs to be done to address both that backlog of capital projects as well as ongoing and future operations and maintenance costs. If we are truly going to address our nation's transportation needs in the size and duration required, we need ongoing and stable streams of revenue that are dedicated to transportation…


http://www.masstransitmag.com/web/online/Industry-Announcements/Building-Americas-Future-Calls-for-a-21st-Century-Federal-Transportation-Program/1$8703


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bananas Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu May-21-09 09:00 PM
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1. Legislation Calls for National Plan
http://www.america2050.org/2009/05/legislation-calls-for-national-plan.html

Legislation Calls for National Plan
By Yoav on May 18, 2009 3:41 PM

Senators John D. Rockefeller IV (D-WV) and Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) introduced legislation last week calling for the creation a strategic plan for the nation's surface transportation system. The Federal Surface Transportation Policy and Planning Act of 2009 would create a cohesive national policy with performance-based outcomes. In a press statement, Senator Lautenberg said "This legislation will establish a national policy that improves safety, reduces congestion, creates jobs, and protects our environment."

Some of the major goals of the bill include:

<snip>



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