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June 2008

June 13, 2008

The Washington Post Should Know Better

Today the Washington Post ran a letter I sent in response to an editorial about the federal transit program (Screeching to a Halt, 6/8/08).  Unfortunately, the letter was edited to delete some of my more significant concerns.  For example, the final letter omitted my observation of the contradictions in the Post’s call for increased reliance on transit funding through fuel consumption while simultaneously calling for a reduction in fuel consumption.  The final letter also omitted my concerns about the Post’s call for fewer accountability measures associated with federal transit funding. 

As a result, I wanted to provide a fuller analysis of last Sunday's Washington Post editorial for you to consider:

I have mixed feelings about this weekend’s Washington Post editorial on transit funding.  On one hand, I’m always excited anytime a major media outlet decides to focus on transportation issues.  Not only is everyone in America involved in transportation, but our ability to move goods and services more efficiently than most other nation’s is at the core of our continued economic success.  So it is good to see papers like the Post taking time to discuss transportation issues.   

Yet I was extremely disappointed to see how much the editorial writers at the Washington Post don’t know about basic transportation facts, or how little they understand transportation policy.  For example, they aren’t aware that this Administration is investing record amounts in transit programs.  And they don’t know that as important as the size of that commitment is, we have also applied meaningful economic criteria to a substantial taxpayer investment for the first time.

Even worse, the editorial writers showed just how little they know about transportation policy, despite the fact that the Post recently gave the issue front page treatment.  If they had only read their own paper, the editorial writers would know that our Urban Partnership program is driving billions of dollars into innovative new transit projects in cities like Chicago, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Miami, Seattle and San Francisco.

I wonder if the Post’s editorial writers even read their own editorial page.  How else can you explain the simplistic support for higher gas taxes from an editorial page that has long written about the need to move away from our dependence on oil?  You can’t urge Americans to consume less oil while simultaneously encouraging them to burn more oil as the best way to fund transit.  Yet that is exactly what the Post seems to be doing with Sunday’s editorial.

The part that frustrated me the most, however, is that the Post is calling for massive increases in federal transit investments (on top of existing massive increases to federal transit spending) while calling for an end to performance standards designed to ensure that money is invested wisely.  That the Post’s writers consider it bad policy to set performance standards, demand greater accountability and require honest ridership estimates before investing billions of the taxpayer’s dollars is nothing short of shocking.

Instead of providing an informed analysis of our substantial transportation record, the Post’s editorial writers offered a simplistic rehash of special interest groups’ talking points.  Instead of asking whether transit agencies are using the money they have today either wisely or well, they called for fewer federal investment standards.  And instead of offering a relevant contribution to the transportation dialogue, they offered rusty rhetoric and faulty facts.  The Post should know better.

June 12, 2008

Improving Safety at Highway-Rail Grade Crossings

Railroad Crossing sign Every day there are on average about eight train-vehicle collisions at the approximately 227,000 locations across the country where the rails meet the road.  Each one of these crossings has the potential for a dangerous collision between a motor vehicle and a train, and the Department intends to make things safer.

To help lower the number of accidents at railroad crossings, we announced today three safety initiatives that will be completed by the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) by the end of 2008 that can improve grade crossings safety across the country in the years to come.

We made the announcements as part of our status update of the Department’s ongoing Highway-Rail Crossing Safety and Trespass Prevention Action Plan that was originally released in 2004.  This safety campaign has contributed, in part, to a 10.8 percent decline in collisions and a 9.1 percent reduction in fatalities at grade crossings from 2004 to 2007.  And while this decline is a good sign, more work needs to be done.

Continue reading "Improving Safety at Highway-Rail Grade Crossings" »

June 10, 2008

Environmental Benefits of Congestion Reduction

Greenwire published a piece today outlining some of the progress being made by the Department’s Urban Partnership communities as they employ new approaches to taming congestion.

Of the San Francisco congestion reduction initiative that focuses on parking, Greenwire wrote: “Adjusting meter prices to ensure the availability of parking spaces is aimed at reducing the number of drivers circling the block in search of that elusive open spot, the plan's supporters say. The increased cost of parking at peak times, they say, will also provide an incentive for people to take a bus, ride a bicycle or walk…
 
“The Department of Transportation gave San Francisco more than $18 million to help buy technology needed for the parking plan, such as sensors under parking spots to provide real-time feedback on space availability.

“The Bush administration is moving overall to shift the financial burden of transportation financing from federal taxpayers to drivers and transit riders. Transportation Secretary Mary Peters told a Washington forum this spring that the ultimate goal was a ‘pay as you drive’ system that will charge for every mile traveled (Greenwire, April 28)...

Los Angeles will use express toll lanes, while Chicago's plan includes a congestion-price parking scheme that officials there say should be ready by the end of the year…”

-Secretary Peters

June 04, 2008

Guest Blogger: Michael Replogle, Transportation Director, Environmental Defense Fund

High Performance Transportation Management

With today's gas prices, America cannot afford to spur added driving and sprawl instead of high performance transportation, public transportation, and smart growth. America's transportation systems are both broke and broken.

Transportation accounts for a third of America's greenhouse gas pollution. Forecast fuel economy improvements and lower carbon fuels won't solve the problem, with traffic growth countering these gains. 

It's time to hold public agencies accountable for greenhouse gas and health impacts of transportation plans, investments, and operations.  It's time to tie transportation spending to cutting traffic growth and greenhouse pollution. Let's align how we raise revenues for transportation with broader system goals and use pricing to shape choices and boost transportation equity.

Continue reading "Guest Blogger: Michael Replogle, Transportation Director, Environmental Defense Fund" »

June 03, 2008

Opening Roads, Airports and Minds In Afghanistan

Reflections on a Day in Kabul

Secretary Peters in Afghanistan I finished up a productive and extremely eye-opening trip to the Middle East with a visit today to Kabul, Afghanistan.  After decades of war and strife, transportation systems throughout this country had fallen into a state of disrepair by the time the Taliban fell earlier this decade.  Ever since, the Department has been supporting the global effort to bring Afghanistan’s transportation network into the 21st century.

As we heard time and again today, wherever there are roads, there is victory in Afghanistan.  The good news is that since 2001, more than 4,000 miles worth of new roads and bridges have been built throughout the country.  As a result, once remote regions are now connected to trade, security and ultimately, prosperity.

Building roads is an important first step, but in an isolated land like this, having strong air service is vital.  So we’ve been working closely with the international community and the U.S. Agency for International Development to make more than $26 million available for investments in Afghanistan’s civil aviation infrastructure. 

Continue reading "Opening Roads, Airports and Minds In Afghanistan" »