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Thursday, June 5, 2003
Contact: Bill Outlaw, 202-366-0660
FHWA 19-03
USDOT Pledges
Continued Support Of Funding Eligibility for Bike, Pedestrian Projects At Launch
of East Coast Greenway
Assistant Secretary for
Transportation Policy Emil Frankel today underscored the Bush Administration’s
support for continued broad eligibility for federal funding of bicycle and
pedestrian projects. Frankel joined
Congressional leaders, representatives of the East Coast Greenway Alliance, and
health and environment groups on the National Mall in Washington, DC to
celebrate National Trails Day and the inauguration of the East Coast Greenway.
Frankel gave East Coast
Greenway representatives trail markers signed by U.S. Transportation Secretary
Norman Y. Mineta for posting along the Greenway route.
“We want to foster a safe and secure transportation
system that improves mobility, reduces congestion and contributes to economic
growth,” Frankel said. “Projects
like the East Coast Greenway provide an important balance in our transportation
system, giving Americans more choices as to mode of transportation while
promoting activities that can contribute to good health.”
The East Coast Greenway, when
completed, will be a 2,600-mile motor-traffic-free path linking east coast
cities from Maine to Florida. Funding
under the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA) and
the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21) is
helping to underwrite the Greenway. Using
most categories of federal highway funding and some transit funding, states and
metropolitan areas thus far have provided about $400 million for sections of the
Greenway.
The Administration’s legislative proposal for the reauthorization of these surface transportation laws, which is known as SAFETEA (Safe, Accountable, Flexible, and Efficient Transportation Equity Act of 2003), would extend states’ authority to use federal funds for such projects while giving states new flexibility in their use of federal resources.
Frankel said that travel options like the Greenway, by
providing for bicycling and walking, contribute to a better environment and to
healthier lifestyles.
Federal legislation encourages funding of these projects from a wide range of funding programs. In the early 1990s, Transportation Enhancement funds were the primary source of these funds. More recently other funding programs such as the Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ) Program, other Surface Transportation Program (STP) funds, Federal Lands Highways Program, Recreational Trails Program, Scenic Byways, and safety funding have accounted for larger shares of this funding.
Federal funding for bicycle and pedestrian projects
increased dramatically in the last 10 years but decisions to actually fund
particular projects, such as segments of the East Coast Greenway, are made by
state and local levels of government. In
1992, $22.9 million was spent nationwide on stand-alone bicycle and pedestrian
projects. In 2002, the amount
increased nearly twenty times to almost $416 million bringing total funding
since 1992 to $2.3 billion. This
does not count bicycle and pedestrian components of larger transportation
projects.
Projects like the East Coast Greenway demonstrate the strong grassroots support for pedestrian and bicycle projects that enhance safety and the quality of life in communities and offer individuals choices in how they travel.
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