Calling
congestion one of the single largest threats to the economy, U.S.
Secretary of Transportation Norman Y. Mineta today announced a new
national initiative to tackle highway, freight and aviation congestion.
During remarks to the National Retail Federation,
Mineta said that “congestion kills time, wastes fuel and costs money.”
He noted that America loses an estimated $200 billion a year due to
freight bottlenecks and delayed deliveries. The Secretary added that
consumers lose 3.7 billion hours and 2.3 billion gallons of fuel
sitting in traffic jams and that airline delays waste $9.4 billion a
year.
“Congestion is not a fact of life,” Secretary Mineta said. “We need a new approach and we need it now.”
The
new initiative, the National Strategy to Reduce Congestion on America’s
Transportation Network, provides a blueprint for federal, state and
local officials to tackle congestion, Mineta said. He noted that over
the coming months, the U.S. Department of Transportation will focus its
resources, funding, staff and technology to cut traffic jams, relieve
freight bottlenecks and reduce flight delays.
The
initiative will seek Urban Partnership Agreements with a handful of
communities willing to demonstrate new congestion relief strategies and
encourages states to pass legislation giving the private sector a
broader opportunity to invest in transportation. It calls for more
widespread deployment of new operational technologies and practices
that end traffic tie ups, designates new interstate “corridors of the
future,” targets port and border congestion, and expands aviation
capacity.
The Secretary also announced that he would
convene the Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Commission for
its first meeting on Wednesday, May 24th. He said he would task the
commission with finding solutions that not only raise revenue for
highway and transit projects, but also reduce the cost of congestion by
focusing more on system performance.
Mineta
acknowledged that some of the measures in the plan would be considered
controversial by those he called “wedded to the status quo.” But he
added that new solutions were needed to successfully reduce congestion.
“The
bottom line is that every person and every business in America has a
vested interest in reducing congestion,” Mineta said. “We don’t have to
let traffic delays put our lives on hold any longer."
To download a copy of the plan, please go to http://isddc.dot.gov/OLPFiles/OST/012988.pdf.
The Secretary's remarks can be found at http://www.dot.gov/affairs/minetasp051606.php. |