It's great to see Lee County's TIGER grant highlighted in last week's USDOT Secretary Foxx's blog, "FastLane".
By
Todd Solomon
USDOT
Fast Lane
January
16, 2014
Each year, the Transportation Research Board's Annual
Meeting brings thousands of professionals to Washington, DC, to discuss an
extraordinary range of transportation topics from the 30,000-foot policy view
down to the minute details of pavement performance data. It's a real highlight
of the calendar for many in the transportation community, including a lot of us
here at DOT.
If you attended TRB this week, you probably heard the
words "partnership" and "collaborate" more than once. And
if you work in transportation, you'll probably be hearing a lot more of them.
At one of the TRB sessions, a
team of DOT leaders talked about the future of Metropolitan Planning Organizations.
MPOs bring together representatives from many different communities to
collaborate on regional priorities. After all, the roads, parking, and transit
in one community can make a difference in a neighboring community and in the
economy of an entire region. Because the transportation ideas that have
regional support tend to be successful, MPOs that represent full regions and
include all stakeholders in decision making also tend to be successful.
You can see
evidence of this success among the grantees in DOT's competitive TIGER program. For example, in Florida, the
Lee County MPO proposed an integrated system of walking, bicycling, and transit
facilities that connect major commercial, residential, and recreational
centers. The MPO's Complete Streets initiative--agreed upon by the communities
of Bonita Springs, Cape Coral, Fort Myers, Fort Myers Beach, Sanibel, and
unincorporated parts of Lee County--will connect the entire region. That serves
the interests of downtown business districts as well as the commuters and
customers who fuel those businesses.
In the Kansas City area, the Mid-America Regional Council
(MARC) brings together 119 cities, 9 counties, and 2 states into a single,
effective MPO. With support from MARC, Kansas City's Green Impact Zone was
selected for one of our first TIGER grants in 2009. And last year, the downtown
Kansas City Streetcar project also earned a TIGER grant. If you want to see a
great example of a regional partnership truly serving its constituents, we
encourage you to read MARC's Transportation
Blog.
We're happy to be able to look forward to another round
of TIGER in 2014, with additional funds to support repairing existing
infrastructure; connecting people to new jobs and opportunities; and
contributing to our nation’s economic growth. TIGER grants will receive an
increase of $126 million, or 27 percent, above the FY 2013 operating level for
a total of $600 million.
In his remarks to TRB
yesterday, Secretary Foxx referred to another kind of collaboration that MPOs
are already familiar with: cooperation across modes of transportation. As
Secretary Foxx noted, "Americans don’t only travel by car or only travel
by bus. They use all the modes, and we need to make sure they can do that more
easily."
It makes sense. Some modes of transportation are more
situationally appropriate than others, but to get people and freight where they
need to go, we need to ensure they can transfer between modes as easily and
seamlessly as possible. From car to rapid transit to sidewalk, and from port to
rail to truck.
We also need to make sure that freight and passenger
transportation interests cooperate. In Austin, Texas, the Capital Metropolitan
Transportation Authority is working on a upgrades that will enhance freight and
commuter rail in Central Texas. And, by improving signal timing, the
"Moving Central Texas" initiative will also reduce delays on the
region's roads. That's a single partnership that combines regional cooperation,
partnership across modes, and an effort to improve both freight and passenger
transportation.
As we've been learning at TRB this week, that could very
well be the future of American transportation.
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