The Nation's Mayors Commend Oberstar's Plan for Metropolitan Mobility
Posted on: Thursday, 18 June 2009, 14:36 CDT
"The Conference's top priority in the next federal surface transportation authorization is the creation of a robust Metropolitan Mobility Program," said Mayor Nickels on the heels of his inauguration as spokesperson for the organization of U.S. mayors.
Referencing a report recently issued by the Conference titled American Recovery and Reinvestment: Surface Transportation and Infrastructure and The Role of Metro Areas, Mayor Nickels continued, "Cities and their metro areas have been and continue to be short-changed by state departments of transportation. And federal stimulus infrastructure funds administered by state departments of transportation continue this practice."
Prepared by IHS Global Insight for the USCM, the report reveals that state departments of transportation have not allocated funds effectively to reduce congestion costs. Report data also shows that the nation's largest 85 metro areas account for 86.6% of traffic congestion costs, but receive only 48.2% of state-approved funding. For example, the three most congested areas in the country --
During his inaugural speech at the Conference's annual gathering, Mayor Nickels said, "For too long, the federal government has relied on cookie cutter formulas that don't produce the outcomes we all want. It is time to allocate funds in a way that most effectively reduces congestion in our nation's cities and targets transportation investments to centers of housing and employment."
USCM Transportation Committee Chair Denver Mayor
"As local and as metropolitan leaders, mayors must be empowered to decide transportation investments in their areas. We believe that a Metropolitan Mobility Program will help to get us there," Hickenlooper concluded.
Nickels added, "As Congress and the Administration look for funding for a long-term authorization of the transportation bill, the nation's mayors are pleased with U.S. Transportation Secretary
The U.S. Conference of Mayors is the official nonpartisan organization of cities with populations of 30,000 or more. There are 1,139 such cities in the country today, each represented in the Conference by its chief elected official, the Mayor.
SOURCE U.S. Conference of Mayors
Source: PR Newswire
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