The Fed Finally is Facing Up to Congestion
Norman Y. Mineta, U.S. Secretary of Transportation, has
announced a national initiative to ease congestion in freight,
aviation and on the highways. "Congestion kills time, wastes fuel
and costs money,” Mineta observed in remarks to the National
Retail Federation.
Mineta referred to statistics that say America loses $200
billion a year due to freight bottlenecks and delayed deliveries
and that consumers, generally, lose 3.7 billion hours and 2.3
gallons of fuel sitting in traffic jams, while airline delays waste
some $9.4 billion a year.
The Secretary offered a 16-page plan, the National Strategy to Reduce Congestion on America’s Transportation Network (download it at http://isddc.dot.gov/OLPFiles/OST/012988.pdf), which offers some propositions that have already begun to stir up controversy.
The DOT will be willing to offer aid and encouragement to
communities willing to join in Urban Partnership Agreements to
demonstrate new congestion relief strategies. The initiative also
seeks wider deployment of operational technologies and practices to
end traffic snarls, while designating new interstate
“Corridors of the Future", and targeting port and border
congestion and expanding aviation capacity.
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© 2012 Penton Media Inc.
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