Intermodal Proponent Makes His Case in Washington
Gil Carmichael, leader of the Intermodal
Transportation Institute (ITI) at the University of Denver and
a former federal railroad administrator, told a of group of
industry experts at the National Press Club last week that
ignorance of intermodal freight transportation is almost universal
in the United States.
In a speech entitled "The New Science of Transportation,"
Carmichael warned that the nation's governmental agencies have not
kept pace with the evolution of intermodal transportation and that
they have not been able to deal effectively with the current energy
crisis nor have they addressed the increasing need for intermodal
education to meet the transportation demands of the 21st
century.
"Traditionally government agencies have concentrated on single
modes of transportation," said Carmichael. "But over the past
quarter-century, intermodalism has become the global standard for
moving freight. Therefore, if we are to develop a new
transportation infrastructure, it will require placing a priority
on the education of an entire new generation of transportation
leaders to the horizontal efficiencies of this ‘new science
of transportation.'"
Carmichael said this ignorance about freight transportation leads
to bad decision-making, missed opportunities and economic problems.
He suggested that the executive functions of government
transportation agencies be separated into two categories--freight
and passenger transportation. Policy making, planning, program
development and the awarding of grant monies would be based upon
customers, not individual modes.
"Doing so would make a powerful statement that the U.S. does, in
fact, understand that the world has changed when it comes to
transportation infrastructures," he said. "Congress still operates
as if this were the 1950s. Members talk about intermodalism but
still vote for traditional--and outdated--highway projects that
fail to address our energy needs or our national transportation
system that is stretched beyond capacity."
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© 2012 Penton Media Inc.
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