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DOT 95-07 Contact:
Ian Grossman, Tel.: (202) 366-0660
Monday, September 10, 2007
U.S. Department of Transportation Names Six Interstate
Routes as “Corridors of the Future” to Help Fight Traffic Congestion
I-95, I-70, I-15, I-5, I-10, and I-69 selected
The U.S. Department of Transportation today announced six interstate routes
that will be the first to participate in a new federal initiative to develop
multi-state corridors to help reduce congestion.
“We are using a comprehensive approach to fighting congestion along these major
interstate routes. What we are doing represents a real break from past
approaches that have failed to address growing congestion along our busiest
corridors,” said Deputy U.S. Secretary of Transportation Thomas J. Barrett.
Today’s announcement follows a year-long competition to select a handful of
interstate corridors from among the 38 applications received from public and
private sector entities to join the Department’s “Corridors of the Future”
program aimed at developing innovative national and regional approaches to
reduce congestion and improve the efficiency of freight delivery. The selected
corridors carry 22.7 percent of the nation’s daily interstate travel.
The routes will receive the following funding amounts to implement their
development plans: $21.8 million for I-95 from Florida to the Canadian border;
$5 million for I-70 in Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio; $15 million for
I-15 in Arizona, Utah, Nevada, and California; $15 million for I-5 in
California, Oregon, and Washington; $8.6 million for I-10 from California to
Florida; and $800,000 for I-69 from Texas to Michigan.
The proposals were selected for their potential to use public and private
resources to reduce traffic congestion within the corridors and across the
country. The concepts include building new roads and adding lanes to existing
roads, building truck-only lanes and bypasses, and integrating real-time traffic
technology like lane management that can match available capacity on roads to
changing traffic demands.
The Department and the states will now work to finalize formal agreements by
spring 2008 that will detail the commitments of the federal, state, and local
governments involved. These agreements will outline the anticipated role of the
private sector as well as how the partners will handle the financing, planning,
design, construction, and maintenance of the corridor.
For more information on the selected corridors and the proposals, please visit
CORRIDORS OF THE
FUTURE FACT SHEET.htm.
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