![]() |
![]() |
DOT 169-08
Contact: Sarah Echols, Tel.: (202) 366-4570
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Federal Government to Invest $110 Million in Innovative Plan
to Cut Traffic Tie-Ups in Atlanta,
U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary E. Peters Announces
Plan Will Bring Congestion Pricing to I-85, Finance New Commuter Bus Routes
ATLANTA—The federal government is investing $110 million to support an
innovative Georgia state plan to reduce traffic congestion in Metropolitan
Atlanta, U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary E. Peters announced today. The
plan will allow more commuters to take advantage of I-85’s HOV lanes northeast
of the city, and will allow for the establishment of new high-speed commuter bus
service into downtown, Secretary Peters noted.
“This ambitious plan will tame traffic, pump new money into the region’s transit
services and redefine the way people use I-85,” said Secretary Peters. “The goal
is simple, make commutes reliable, not ridiculous.”
According to the Texas Transportation Institute's 2007 Urban Mobility Report,
the Atlanta metro area is tied for the second-highest level of traffic
congestion as measured in terms of hours of delay per rush hour driver.
The first phase of the project will institute a network consisting of
dynamically-priced high occupancy toll lanes on I-85, stretching from I-285 to
Old Peachtree Road by January 2011. Future phases of Atlanta’s congestion plan
will include a 49-mile network of additional HOV-to-HOT lane conversions along
I-85, I-75 and I-20. Similar HOT lane projects have been implemented in
Minneapolis and Southern California, and these areas have already seen a
reduction in the amount of congestion during peak travel times.
Also included in the grant is $30 million for transit service enhancement that
will operate on the newly converted expressways. The funding will go towards the
purchase of new buses and the construction and expansion of park-and-ride
facilities.
Atlanta is the most recent city to receive federal funding from the Department
of Transportation for its efforts to establish a more permanent Federal program
focused on innovative solutions to improve mobility and fight increasing
congestion in metropolitan areas. Details on Secretary Peters’ innovative Reform
Proposal can be found at
www.FightGridlockNow.gov.
“The money we are providing today will make commuting faster, transit better and
small businesses more competitive,” said Secretary Peters. “Together, we’ll make
traffic in Atlanta go with the wind.”
###
For the Secretary's Speech, please visit http://www.dot.gov/affairs/peters112508.htm
For the MOU, please visit http://www.dot.gov/affairs/MOU112508