Transportation for America unveils its Blueprint for Reform on Capitol Hill

May 12, 2009 at 4:40 pm

(Source: Transportation for America)

With Congress preparing to write the bill that will determine the next six years of transportation spending, Transportation for America yesterday released a detailed plan to restructure the nation’s transportation program in order to build a smart, safe and clean transportation system that provides real choices to all Americans.

Image Courtesy: Transportation for America @Flickr

If our platform, released in February, lays out the vision and goals for America’s transportation system, then the Transportation for AmericaBlueprint contains the detailed directions for getting there.

The Route to Reform: Blueprint for a 21st Century Federal Transportation Program will serve as T4 America’s proposal for the policies and financing structures necessary to achieve real transformational change in America’s transportation system. (We’ll be highlighting and explaining pieces of the Blueprint here over the coming weeks — it’s a lot to digest at once.)

In the blueprint, Transportation for America recommends Congress include four critical reforms in the upcoming transportation authorization bill:

  1. Articulate a National Vision, Objectives, and Performance Targets for the national transportation program and hold state and local transportation agencies accountable for demonstrable progress toward goals including safety, efficiency, environment, health and equity.
  2. Restructure and consolidate federal programs for greater modal integration, with a focus on completing the second half of the national transportation system, providing more transportation options for all Americans and creating seamless transportation systems that meet the unique needs and connect metropolitan regions, small towns, and rural areas.
  3. Empower states, regions, and cities with direct transportation funding and greater flexibility to select projects, using carrots and sticks to incentivize wise transportation investments and in return require demonstrated performance on meeting national objectives.
  4. Reform how we pay for the transportation system and create a Unified Transportation Trust Fund that would achieve balanced allocations of federal funds in a portfolio of rail, freight, highway, public transportation, and non-motorized transportation investment

Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell — a co-chair of the Build America’s Future campaign and one of the leading voices calling for a renewed transportation system – gave the event’s keynote speech in the same committee where the transportation bill will be written and considered first by Chairman Oberstar’s House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

Gov. Rendell was followed by a panel that included James Corless, director of the Transportation for America Campaign; Elaine Clegg, Co-Executive Director of Idaho Smart Growth and and city council member in Boise; Astrid Glynn, former Commissioner of the New York State Department of Transportation; Andrew Cotugno, the director of planning for Metro in Portland, Oregon; andRonald Kilcoyne, the General Manager/CEO of Greater Bridgeport Transit Authority.

“This report couldn’t be more correct when it says this is a once in a lifetime opportunity,” Gov. Rendell said.

“If we don’t take advantage of this opportunity…nothing will change, and we’ll just bump along, funding some good projects almost by accident, some mediocre projects and some terrible projects. We won’t have national policy, we won’t move the ball forward, and we won’t do something that will improve our economic competitiveness – we’ll just keep moving along the way we’ve been moving along, and not solving any problems.”

Transportation for America’s Public Health and Safety Webinar Wrap

May 6, 2009 at 6:21 pm

Transportation for America hosted the fourth webinar in the ongoing series last Thursday, April 30. More than 270 people signed up to hear from health, safety and active transportation experts on the effects of our transportation policy on public health and safety.

 Following up on the webinar, we’ve released the 5th in a series of policy papers, focusing on public health and safety.

Our current transportation system puts our health and safety in jeopardy by contributing to sedentary behaviors, hazardous pollution levels, difficult access to health care, and preventable injuries and deaths.

As the panelists demonstrated, we need federal leadership to help make the critical link between health, safety, and transportation policies and create communities that promote active living, reduce pollution levels, increase accessibility, and ensure safety for all transportation users.  Panelists also addressed the transportation needs among older Americans, minorities, low-income residents, and people who live in both rural and metropolitan areas — all of whom deserve safe transportation that improves health outcomes.

Click here to learn more about the panelsist’s views.

TransportGooru Headline News Aggregator Dispatch – April 25, 2009

April 24, 2009 at 11:32 pm

LA Transportation Blog – Transportation Headlines for Friday April 24, 2009 b

Streetsblog – Today’s Headlines by 

Transportation for America – Today’s Headlines — 4/24/09by 

  • An ironic beginning to legislative efforts to tackle the nation’s transportation woes. (Associated Press)
  • LaHood is the stimulus package’s biggest Republican fan. (Washington Post)
  • DOT has the highest profile in decades — is this more to do with the times than with the new administration? (Politico)
  • NY Senate Majority Leader Malcolm Smith has proposed a $1 surcharge on NYC taxi fares to help close the MTA’s budget gap, as well as to pay for highway and bridge improvements upstate. (Crain’s New York Business)

The Infrastructrist -The Daily Dig – High Speed Rail Edition

Posted on Friday April 24th by Jebediah Reed

 

 

Now available! Policy Briefs and Audio/Video recordings from the Transportation For America Webinar on Transportation and Housing/Development

April 22, 2009 at 4:19 pm

Transportation for America’s webinar on Transportation and Housing took place last week.  This is the third one in a series of webinars that explore the deep impacts of our transportation system on our housing and job markets, public health, energy needs, climate, economic competitiveness, and nearly every other pressing issue facing our country today.   This particular webinar on Transportation and Housing/Development had almost 300 people in attendance, who heard from development experts on the connections between transportation policy, real estate development, and affordable housing.  The following links will take you to the products (policy briefs and A/V recordings) from the session.

With economic crisis putting jobs in jeopardy, homes in foreclosure and entire communities in peril, Americans are facing extraordinary challenges in finding affordable and accessible housing options. Now more than ever, we need federal leadership to help make the critical link between our housing and transportation policies and creating revitalized communities where people can find good places to live and convenient ways to get around.

Shelley Poticha, President and CEO of Reconnecting America and the Center for Transit Oriented Development moderated the discussion and provided an overview of the Transportation for America Campaign.

Christopher Leinberger, Visiting Fellow at the Brookings Institution and Partner of Arcadia Land Company; discussed the benefits of walkable urbanism and the linkages between land value and transportation systems. Ann Norton, Senior Staff Attorney at the Housing Preservation Project, provided a snapshot of Blueprint planning from the Minneapolis / St. Paul Metropolitan Area that links up transportation and land-use planning. Finally, John McIlwain, Senior Resident Fellow at the Urban Land Institute discussed policy options for locating housing around transportation nodes and creating compact, mixed use, mixed income neighborhoods.

There are still more webinars on tap.  Sign up for more sessions on the webinars page. The next session is April 30  (2-3:30PM) on Transportation, Public Health and Safety.  Here is a brief description of the upcoming session:  Transportation influences the health and safety of communities by affecting physical activity levels, traffic speeds, and air pollution. This session will investigate the needs of paratransit and transit-dependent populations, the success of Complete Streets and non-motorized transportation programs, and the connections between transportation and active living.

(Source: Transportation for America)

Careers: Transportation for America needs you – Deputy Communications Director & Policy Director

April 9, 2009 at 11:28 pm

Now Hiring: Deputy Communications DirectorTransportation for America seeks an experienced, energetic communications professional to help manage the communications activities of a dynamic, fast-paced campaign to reform the nation’s transportation spending and policies.

Now Hiring: Policy Director

The Transportation for America Campaign is looking for a highly-skilled individual with extensive knowledge and interest in federal transportation policy to serve as Policy Director for this national advocacy campaign.

 To learn more about the organization and to explore other currently open positions visit http://t4america.org

TransportGooru Headline News Aggregator Dispatch – April 9, 2009

April 9, 2009 at 11:06 pm

LA Transportation Blog – Transportation Headlines for April 9, 2009

Streetsblog – Transportation Headlines for April 9, 2009

  • Hit-and-Run Drivers Kill Two Women in Separate Incidents Wednesday Night (News)
  • Obama Appoints Federal Transit Administrator (TOW via Streetsblog.net)
  • Tom Friedman Wants a National Carbon Tax Instead of Cap-and-Trade (NYT)
  • The Economist Has Some Questions About High-Speed Rail in the U.S.
  • Brooklyn Paper: Bay Ridge Sidewalk Parking Epidemic Due to ‘Lack of Parking’ 
  • Study: 21 Percent of NYC Cyclist Fatalities Linked to Alcohol (City Room)
  • Sprawl Development Shouldn’t Qualify as ‘Green Building’ (City of Lakes via Switchboard)
  • Jeff Mapes on America’s Bike Renaissance (Infrastructurist)
  • Beijing Extends Car Restrictions Another Year (AP via Planetizen)
  • MTA Gets in the Blogging Game (Metro via 2nd Ave Sagas)

AASHTO Daily Transportation Update – April 9, 2008

Note:  TransportGooru thanks all the authors for contributing to this headline news summary. This dispatch is made possible by integrating the headline news feeds from the above mentioned sources.  At times, you may encounter a repeat of the same headline news  since they are captured by various individuals working at different organizations.   Please visit the respective source websites if you have any trouble viewing the articles behind the URLs. 

TransportGooru Headline News Aggregator Dispatch – April 8, 2009

April 8, 2009 at 7:33 pm

LA Transportation Blog – Transportation Headlines for April 8, 2009

Streetsblog – Transportation Headlines for April 8, 2009

Transportation for America – Transportation Headlines for April 8, 2009

  • Low bids for construction projects are allowing Maryland to get the bang for its buck through the stimulus. (Washington Post)
  • A new study indicates that transportation spending and investment in green jobs brings a huge economic boost. (Oregonian)
  • Without have access to adequate public transportation, Alzheimer’s patients face a tough road aheadwhen they give up driving. (Associated Press)
  • GM looks to the PUMA vehicle – a self-balancing, two-wheeled scooter – to help solve its business woes. (Wall Street Journal)
  • U.S. PIRG looks at the a few of the potential dangers of privatizing roads.

Note:  TransportGooru thanks all the authors for contributing to this headline news summary. This dispatch is made possible by integrating the headline news feeds from the above mentioned sources.  At times, you may encounter a repeat of the same headline news  since they are captured by various individuals working at different organizations.    Please visit the respective source websites if you have any trouble viewing the articles behind the URLs.  

 

CNN’s “State of the Union” explores the impact of transit cuts on communities across the U.S.

April 2, 2009 at 6:27 pm

(Source: Transportation For AmericaCNN via Youtube)

As painful transit cuts cripple more and more agencies across the country, major national networks are gradually tuning in to the story and seeing just how bad things are. CNN is the latest to cover the transit cuts phenomenon that’s wreaking havoc on the largest and smallest of our public transportation systems.

In a four-minute segment last week, CNN used Transportation for America’s handy map — which we created to document the 85 communities that are being forced to either cut service, increase fares, or lay off workers due to budget crises at the local and state level — and took an in-depth look at some of the impacts of cutting back public transportation at a time when Americans are riding transit in record numbers.   This peice on transit is part of CNN’s “State of the Union,” in which host and chief national correspondent John King goes outside the Nation’s  to report on the issues affecting communities across the country. 

 

At one stop Wednesday, a handful of developmentally disabled passengers boarded outside a local facility where they work. One told CNN she optimistic “something will get done about it” but said she isn’t sure how she is supposed to get around after Friday.

Kimberly Barge is a staff attorney at Paraquad, the gym where the Falks and other local disabled residents attend classes.

“People are frustrated, angry — almost to the point of hopeless in some cases because there aren’t many other alternatives for the disability community as far as transportation goes,” Barge told CNN.

Jean McPherson boarded the bus with her infant daughter. The 20-year-old is going back to school to get her high school diploma and though short on cash, she says she is now forced to explore buying a used car.

“I might end up losing my job or not being able to take my daughter to day care,” is how she sees the consequence of her bus route being shortened so that it no longer stretches out to her community. “You can’t afford a car; that is why you use public transportation. So a lot of people are going to be in a bad situation.”

 

Click here to read more.

TransportGooru Headline News Aggregator Dispatch – April 2, 2009

April 2, 2009 at 5:29 pm

LA Taansportation Blog – Transportation Headlines for Thursday April 2, 2009

StreetsBlog – Headline News for April 2, 2009

 

Note:  TransportGooru thanks all the authors for contributing to this headline news summary. This dispatch is made possible by integrating the headline news feeds from the above mentioned sources.  At times, you may encounter a repeat of the same headline news  since they are captured by various individuals working at different organizations.    Please visit the respective source websites if you have any trouble viewing the articles behind the URLs.  

TransportGooru Headline News Aggregator Dispatch – April 1, 2009

April 2, 2009 at 12:07 am

LA Transportation Blog – Headlines for Wednesday April 1, 2009

TransportGooru wishes Happy 16th birthday for Metro!
  • MTA Rescue Talks in Chaos as Suburban Senate Dems Balk at Payroll Tax (NYTNewsNY1)
  • 50-Cent Cab Surcharge Was on the Table (NewsPost)
  • Tom Robbins Skewers Comrades Kruger and Espada (Voice)
  • Bill Hammond: Beware an MTA Plan From Three Men in a Room (News)
  • Bike Theft in NYC: How Widespread Is It? Don’t Ask NYPD (City Room)
  • NJ Turnpike Widening a Total Waste of Money (MTR)
  • House Dems From NYC Aren’t Taking the Metro to Work (News)
  • Conservatives Who Bike (Utne)
  • The New Haven BRT Line That Might Have Been (DNH via Streetsblog.net)
  • 60 Years of Transportation Investment Collapse in Giant Ponzi Scheme (Faking Places)
  • Obama Hands TransAlt Critical Task of Rebranding American Car Models

Transportation for America – Headlines for April 1, 2009

  •  Bay Area transit officials are ready to declare that the San Francisco Municipal Transit Agency is in a state of “fiscal emergency.”
  • Paratransit riders in Phoenix face tough times. (USA Today)
  • Greenwire looks at the details on emissions standards in the proposed climate bill. (Via New York Times)

Note:  TransportGooru thanks all the authors for contributing to this headline news summary. This dispatch is made possible by integrating the headline news feeds from the above mentioned sources.  At times, you may encounter a repeat of the same headline news  since they are captured by various individuals working at different organizations.    Please visit the respective source websites if you have any trouble viewing the articles behind the URLs.