DOT 103-08
Contact: Sarah Echols, Tel.: (202) 366-4570
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
U.S. Transportation Secretary Peters Unveils Bush Administration’s
New Approach for America’s Transportation Future
ATLANTA – A clean and
historic break with the past is needed to encourage the future vitality of our
country’s transportation network, said U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary E.
Peters, who today unveiled the Bush Administration’s new plan to refocus, reform
and renew the national approach to highway and transit systems in America.
“Without a doubt, our federal approach to transportation is broken. And no
amount of tweaking, adjusting or adding new layers on top will make things
better,” Secretary Peters said. “It is time for a new, a different and a better
approach.”
The Secretary said the plan sets a course for reforming the nation’s
transportation programs by outlining a renewed federal focus on maintaining and
improving the Interstate highway system, instead of diverting funds for wasteful
pet projects and for programs clearly not federal priority areas like restoring
lighthouses.
Addressing urban congestion and giving greater flexibility to state and local
leaders to invest in their most needed transit and highway priorities is another
key focus of the reform plan, said Secretary Peters. Local leaders will have
greater freedom and significantly more resources to fund new subways, bus routes
or highways as they choose, based on the needs of local commuters instead of the
dictates of Washington.
As part of this focus on congestion, the plan would create a Metropolitan
Innovation Fund that rewards cities willing to combine a mix of effective
transit investments, dynamic pricing of highways and new traffic technologies,
the Secretary said.
The reform plan also calls for greatly reducing over 102 federal transportation
programs which have proliferated over the last two decades replacing them with
eight comprehensive, intermodal programs that will help focus instead of dilute
investments, and cut the dizzying red-tape forced upon local planners, she said.
Secretary Peters said a hallmark of the plan is a refocused and redoubled
emphasis on safety, using a data and technology-driven approach that also gives
states maximum flexibility to tackle their toughest safety challenges. Using a
data-driven approach, she said, we are and must continue focusing on issues that
put drivers, commercial drivers, passengers and pedestrians at risk, including
crashes involving drunk drivers, motorcycles, work zones and rural roads.
And to improve the current 13-year average it takes to design and build new
highway and transit projects in the United States, the Secretary said the
federal review process would be streamlined to ask the same stringent
environmental and planning questions, but get answers more quickly.
The Secretary emphasized that central to any reform for transportation is
finding new revenue sources to supplement the unpredictable and unsustainable
gas tax, in order to fund maintenance and pay for new needed projects. She said
the gas tax is an antiquated mechanism, underscored by the current climate of
high gas prices. Americans are driving less and taking advantage of transit
options, but less driving also results in less revenue for transit operations.
Secretary Peters said more direct pricing options like tolling are needed and
states must be empowered to take advantage of the over $400 billion available
worldwide for infrastructure investments from the private sector. “The idea is
simple: use federal funds to encourage new sources of investments for
transportation, instead of replacing them,” she said.
“Our plan will make it easier to pay for and build roads and transit systems. It
will deliver fewer traffic tie ups, better transit services and a stronger
economy. It will make our roads safer and give Americans new confidence that the
money they invest in transportation will actually deliver results,” Secretary
Peters said.
The Secretary said the plan lays out the Administrations’ framework for
completely overhauling the way U.S. transportation decisions and investments are
made, and is intended to spur local, state and federal debate about how best to
incorporate the new reforms into surface transportation legislation slated to be
considered by Congress in 2009. She will personally brief Members of Congress on
the contents of the plan this week.
“I look forward to working with my colleagues on Capitol Hill over the next few
months to really explore the innovative ideas contained in this proposal,”
Secretary Peters said. “While I understand that this plan represents a
significant departure from the status quo, I hope that Congress will shed
partisan labels and come together to consider a piece of legislation that will
keep our transportation system viable well into the next decade.”
A copy of the reform plan is available at
www.fightgridlocknow.gov.
A copy of the remarks can be found at http://www.dot.gov/affairs/peters072908.htm.
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