Posted May 18, 200619 yr Transportation chief has plan to unclog traffic Mineta unveils effort to reduce congestion that hurts economy Thursday, May 18, 2006 Adam Sichko THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH The conveyor belts slowed to a halt at the Bath & Body Works shipping and receiving center in Reynoldsburg yesterday morning so that Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta could be heard. Once the din died down, Mineta discussed a new national plan aimed at untying increasingly knotted shipping and receiving pathways that slow the business world. Read more at: http://dispatch.com/business-story.php?story=dispatch/2006/05/18/20060518-B1-02.html
May 18, 200619 yr And, of course, Sec. Mineta makes no mention of passenger or freight rail, barely mentions mass transit and proposes putting more of the $$$ load on states. I love how our President has this "revelation" that we're in an energy crisis, and now Mineta discovers .... "Oh my Gawd!"..... we have traffic congestion. Where have these guys been over the last several years?
May 19, 200619 yr For Immediate Release: May 17, 2006 Contact: Colin Peppard - 202-222-0747 (office) / 202-841-4491 (cell) Friends of the Earth's Transportation Blog Without Rail and Transit, Bush Traffic Plan is a Dead End Bush’s six-point plan does little to solve traffic congestion or gas prices Washington D.C. – President Bush failed to consider the most effective ways to combat growing gridlock in the U.S. in his plan to reduce traffic, which was released yesterday. The plan virtually ignores transit and passenger rail, which could significantly help with rising gas prices in addition to traffic congestion. Instead, the plan favors measures that focus on highways and private roadways, as well as technological fixes and fast-track environmental review of projects. “President Bush had the perfect opportunity to address both gridlock and gas prices in this plan, and he decided not to take it,” said Colin Peppard, transportation policy coordinator for Friends of the Earth. “With the price of oil expected to approach $4 per gallon this summer, Americans are hardly clamoring for more roads.” As USA Today reported last month, transit systems across the country are seeing increased ridership, corresponding with the rise in gas prices. However, the Bush administration’s plan ignores such highly successful Department of Transportation transit programs such as “New Starts”, which helps support local investment in rail transit, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit systems. The New Starts program has helped hundreds of cities and communities build or expand transit systems. Many Amtrak corridors have seen double digit ridership increases as well. However, in this year’s budget, President Bush proposed cutting Amtrak funding by 30 percent. Like local and regional transit, Amtrak trains are more fuel efficient than passenger cars. All forms of transit help relieve congestion by allowing travelers to choose not to drive. “It is clear from the numbers that the consumer demand for transit is growing,” said Peppard. “Transportation planners are working to respond to the demand by building out transit and improving rail travel in this country. Yet all the president can offer is more asphalt.” The release of Bush’s narrow minded plan means the responsibility to support local and regional transit now lies with Congress, which is currently considering a transportation funding package for 2007. The Senate appropriations subcommittee that deal with transportaion is tentatively scheduled to take up their portion of the annual bill on May 24. # # # "In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck
May 20, 200619 yr As usual, Bush, Mineta & Co. issue a proposal that is more a fart in the wind than anything of substance. Hey, why don't they propose something that actually might do something to alleviate congestion AND address our addiction to oil??? This ain't rocket science. If a guy at a computer in Columbus, Ohio (me) can come up with ideas, why can't they? Or are they such feckless mental midgets that they can't?? Or are they beholden to interests other than that of the public??? How about making all the interstates into toll roads and use the proceeds to address congestion, not by simply building more roads, but by using the solution that best fits the problem? If that solution happens to be a road, fine. But I'd bet that rail transit, intercity rail freight and passenger and other things would be better in a lot of cases. Why not raise the gas tax in yearly increments to deter unnecessary driving and offsetting that with lower federal income taxes? There are any number of things---some of them quite small---that could be done. Instead we get half-baked ideas like this and kill-Amtrak budgets, when events suggest we should be doing otherwise. :whip:
May 20, 200619 yr Wouldn't adding a bunch of interstates support more sprawl... a big catalyst of congestion? They make it look like these are breakthrough ideas and it's nothing that hasn't already been thought up. I don't like the idea of toll roads because that causes traffic to come to a complete stop and that's what we're trying to prevent. If they could get the funding from people using these congested roads without doing that, then that would be great. How much does it cost to lay a foot of rail compared to a foot of freeway? Honestly..I hate those 18 wheel trucks with a burning passion. They're huge, they get in the way, they drive like maniacs because the drivers never get any sleep, they drive slower, they drive parallel to each other on two lane highways and dont let people through. If we could interlink routes of high speed rail to all big and medium sized cities carrying goods at extremely high speeds...200+ miles per hour and maybe even passengers that would eliminate traffic and would be very beneficial to our overall economic efficiency. Then truck drivers could do something more productive with their time besides sitting in their cab bullshitting on the CB radio all day.
May 20, 200619 yr David: You don't have to have toll booths. This can all be done with sensors that would scan you car when entering a toll road and bill your credit card. This would also make it easier to charge more for driving during peak periods.
May 21, 200619 yr David: You don't have to have toll booths. This can all be done with sensors that would scan you car when entering a toll road and bill your credit card. This would also make it easier to charge more for driving during peak periods. Of course that requires Big Brother install a sensor into EVERY automobile. Good luck with that.
May 21, 200619 yr ^ Like there's a sensor in every item you buy at the store? Or a tracking ID in every phone call you make? Or in every magnetic strip in every credit/debit card you have? On every driver's license we hand over at the request of law enforcement? On every Internet Provider number we have that tracks us as we browse the WWW? Yet I always find it interesting that anti-governmental types stay silent on governmental involvement when it benefits them. The inverse is true, too. So all of a sudden, when it comes to highways, we're going to grow some balls? As a nation, I don't see it happening. Here's a simpler solution: If you don't like the toll booths, don't go through them or you can continue to pay with cash. It's your choice whether you want to pay cash or install an EZ pass-type sensor on your car. They will have to offer both, since not everyone will need the sensor, such as out-of-town drivers or others who seldom drive that stretch of toll road. Don't have a cow. Go to the brew-thru, grab some beers, hoist a few, relax and be a good little American. Just don't forget to wave to the security camera while at the store. You never know who's gonna be watching..... "In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck
May 22, 200619 yr I couldn't help but notice that Mineta's idea of economic development seems to be to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to draw some "logistics" facilities. That means $8/hour warehouse jobs in non business-ees. I'd be interested in seeing that cost/benefit analysis.
May 22, 200619 yr • Foster the creation of three to five major interstate traffic thoroughfares, either on the ground or through the air, known as "corridors of the future." Back in the 1950s, when the Interstate Highway System was proposed, it was believed that the Interstates would permanently relieve all road congestion. How is this "new" idea any different from the same, regressive thinking we've been seeing from Mineta's DOT? If these corridors are on land, they will be traffic-choked, and require enormous amounts of real-estate (much more than rail!). If the corridors are in the air, Mineta fails to explain how adding more flights to the overburdened air traffic control system is going to help anything.
May 23, 200619 yr The following is an e-mail I got today from a friend who is President of the Texas Association of Railroad Passengers. It is a stinging and thoughtful criticism of Secretary Mineta's alledged "plan". It actually predates the initial post, but much of what Mineta put forward is what he has been spouting all along. Open Letter from Dr. Vukan R. Vuchic to Secretary Mineta Honorable Norman Y. Mineta, Secretary Department of Transportation 400 South 7th Street Washington, DC 20590 22 March 2006 Dear Secretary Mineta, I have been a professor and consultant to cities in many countries, published books and testified before the U. S. Congress on transportation policy for over 40 years. You may remember that we met at some transportation meetings many years ago. I am writing this letter to comment on your recent transportation policies and actions. In your Guest Editorial in the latest issue of the "Public Roads" journal you pointed out the increasing problem of mobility for our senior citizens. As their number grows, our country faces an increasing social and economic problem of inadequate mobility for a large segment of our population. Your presented an excellent description of this situation, but failed to identify its primary causes. The condition of our national transportation system is largely responsible for the problems facing not only seniors, but many other population groups also. Moreover, some of the policies you advocate work against the solutions we need to provide adequate transportation for all affected population groups. As people age, driving becomes not only more difficult for them, but also dangerous for them and for others. Statistics of increasing highway accidents by persons over 70 clearly show that. It is therefore well known that senior citizens increasingly use public transportation in cities and Amtrak, planes and buses for intercity travel. In our cities, as well as in most of our peer countries, seniors use transit extensively whenever a decent service is provided. Automobile dependency - transportation based on private cars which leaves large segments of population without any reasonable alternative, represents avery serious national problem. Without attractive and efficient public transportation, senior citizens together with the young, non-drivers and non-auto-owners, are second-class citizens with respect to mobility. It is quite surprising and illogical that you discuss the problem of transportation for senior citizens without addressing the problem of auto dependency. Similarly, President Bush talks (correctly) about our "addiction to cheap oil," but he seems to believe there is a single solution-alternate energy sources. Actually, the problem requires multiple solutions, particularly reducing our auto dependency through a genuinely intermodal transportation system, the concept endorsed in principle by all federal transportation acts since the ISTEA of 1991. This analysis leads to another, related set of your activities that must be challenged: your personal and the Bush Administration's extremely hostile policy toward Amtrak. You have succeeded to divert the entire discussion about Amtrak from the basic issue-our nation's need for a modern, efficient passenger rail system-to the current financial problems of Amtrak. These problems are mostly the result of Federal Government's national transportation policy. The situation with Amtrak must be seen in perspective as follows. Ever since its founding, Amtrak has been financed mostly at the level of year-to-year survival. Federal funding was never adequate to allow investment for developing a modern passenger railroad system. Amtrak has managed to resolve a substantial part of its inherited excess costs and labor inefficiencies, and continues to do so. However, no organization can find the means and employee morale to vigorously develop a long-range plan when it has to fight for immediate survival. Inadequately funded, Amtrak is then continuously criticized for its operating deficits! Both the Administration and Congress made things only worse by requiring Amtrak to achieve "self-sufficiency," the requirement no passenger transportation mode could achieve! As you certainly know, our air transportation system obtains extensive federal support, but through less direct and well hidden forms (general fund contributions to air traffic control, tax exempt bonds to assist airport construction, research and development, etc.). Should we mention highways, where well over 40% of the roughly $165 billion per year from all levels of government comes from non-user payments? By comparison, this makes federal assistance to Amtrak of molecular size. Yet, highway subsidies are quoted in annual amounts and referred to as "federal investments," while Amtrak subsidies are always compounded for its entire life of 35 years. Although this 35-year sum is still much smaller than annual highway subsidies, Amtrak is continuously criticized as "near-bankrupt","inefficient" and "heavily subsidized by tax-payers." In this day and age, most of our peer industrialized countries see passenger railroads as an increasingly important transportation system to provide an attractive alternative for large volumes of travel in ranges from 50 to 300 or 500 miles, as well as across the country. That has led to large investments in construction of high-speed rail networks in no less than 14 countries! With increasing highway travel and oil consumption, passenger rail has acquired steadily growing importance in reducing congestion and in decreasing the serious socio-economic problem of auto dependency. Our country, which has the most serious problem of auto dependency, does not show awareness of this problem. Nor does it have any vision of what the role of passenger rail should be. Our Federal policy consists of vicious attacks and propaganda against Amtrak focusing on its current financial crisis, which is the result of federal policies imposed on Amtrak. It was not confidence-inspiring to see David Gunn fired. He was recognized by transportation professionals, as well as by political leaders, as the most capable person to lead Amtrak. Moreover, the fact that for the second consecutive year you have eliminated the Next Generation High Speed Rail Development Program suggests that your rhetoric against Amtrak's long-distance trains masks contempt for all forms of intercity passenger rail.> Many of your recent speeches about Amtrak have contained numerous factual and conceptual inaccuracies and distortions, as has been richly documented by the National Association of Railroad Passengers - NARP. That organization has also produced the only document with vision about our national needs for an efficient rail passenger system. May I respectfully suggest that as the Secretary of Transportation, you should cease your destructive actions against Amtrak and produce a positive, constructive and realistic plan for creation of a sound national passenger rail system. Such a plan should be based on the following 10 facts: 1. In all corridors which passenger rail serves, shift of trips from freeways to Amtrak has benefits on both sides: it justifies improving the rail service, making it more attractive, and decreases highway congestion, reducingwasted time, oil consumption and environmental deterioration. 2. For trips up to 250 miles (with high-speed rail up to 400 miles) rail center-to-center city travel is superior to air and bus travel, and it can attract many trips from the automobile, which the other modes cannot. Most heavily traveled corridors are in that distance range. With fares structured to maximize ridership, this diversion to rail would support improved Amtrak services. The present extremely high fares are counterproductive because they decrease Amtrak competitiveness and divert many potential train riders to parallel, often overloaded freeways. 3. Long-distance travel on the national rail network, if convenient and reasonably priced, has multiple important roles, such as service to many smaller cities without bus service, travel by persons who do not want to or cannot fly, families, students and tourists, domestic and foreign. 4. Amtrak's ability to attract passengers in both dense corridors and across the country is clearly demonstrated by increasing ridership despite the extremely high fares which Congress forced Amtrak to charge in recent years. 5. The U.S. rail system is by its nature, function and geography interstate, and therefore even more in the domain of the federal government than highways. 6. You are correct that further efforts on increasing Amtrak's operating efficiency and passenger-friendly policies and attitudes should continue to be vigorously pursued. 7. Financing: the amount of $1.5 to $2.0 billion annually for Amtrak operations is minute compared to federal financing of other modes of transportation. Different options can be considered for providing several billion dollars annually to finance development of an efficient and attractive national rail system. For example, a very logical solution would be to earmark a "nickel for Amtrak" added to the federal tax on gasoline. Public opposition to increased price of gasoline is undermined by the fact that fluctuations of up to 50 cents/gallon have been accepted by auto drivers with very little reduction of driving - which would be a national goal anyway. Federal tax on gasoline is lower than it was ever since 1956, and each cent per gallon brings $1.1 billion per year. Thus, 2 cents per gallon would provide adequate funding for Amtrak, while a nickel would provide for the development of a truly modern national passenger rail system. Alternatively or in addition, serious consideration should be given to bonding proposals, such as those proposed by Senators Lott and Lautenberg in connection with their rail passenger reauthorization proposal. 8. Rail offers unique travel that allows walking around, talking to fellow passengers, using food services and often enjoying superb views of the surroundings - features greatly superior to traveling strapped in seats on airplanes and in buses. 9. Extensive records show that improved service quality and reasonable prices would result in major increases in ridership, greater mobility of population and increased competitiveness of our cities with their foreign peers. 10. Our tourism industry is also hampered by its excessive car-dependency. In that respect, we are not competitive with our peers, such as Europe, Japan and Australia. An efficient national rail network would greatly increase attraction of tourists because they would be totally car-dependent. On a broader scale, I suggest that you, as well as the entire Administration including President Bush, recognize that the "addiction of Americans to cheap oil (foreign or domestic)" is not a set of frivolous habits, but a result of federal and state policies that have led to the present auto dependency, affecting the majority of our population. Although we need alternate energy sources, they will not increase mobility of the elderly nor decrease the problems of auto dependency, highway congestion and environmental degradation. Development of a financially sound national passenger rail system, a properly financed Amtrak without obstacles by the Administration, would be a major step forward. Respectfully yours, Vukan R. Vuchic, Ph.D. UPS Foundation Professor of Transportation Systems Engineering Professor of City & Regional Planning University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA 19104-6315
May 23, 200619 yr ^ Outstanding. :clap: "In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck
May 23, 200619 yr What strikes me the strongest out of Prof. Vuchic's letter is that he more than adequately shows that President Bush and his adminsitration not only fail to offer solutions... they are purposeful impediments.
May 23, 200619 yr FYI: Vukan Vuchic is a well known expert on public transportation, mostly transit. This is the first time I have ever seen anything from him on Amtrak. :-)
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