Together with partners at the state and
local level and in the private sector, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) has
accomplished many gains since June 1993. These have included record-level funding
in 1993, 1994, and 1995 and innovative financing techniques that have helped create
8 million jobs during this period. Senior FHWA officials have been "on the road" talking with, listening to, and learning from thousands of people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. They have had an opportunity to see, to listen, and to learn more about how transportation impacts the lives and economies of Americans. Along the road, it has been easy to find the "good." It is in the hopes, dreams, and aspirations of those who use, construct, maintain, and manage our transportation system.
FHWA responded by authorizing more than $170 million in emergency relief (ER) funds. The partnerships established between FHWA and the affected states enabled efficient use of funds through accelerated procedures. Flooding in the Southeast and hurricane and tropical storm damage in the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and along the Gulf Coast were approached in the same way.
After the Northridge earthquake in
January 1994, FHWA worked with the California Department of Transportation, using
innovative approaches to reopen vital roads within 87 days. All repairs were completed
in a record 291 days and at a cost of about $400 million.
On Jan. 17, 1995, a major earthquake struck Kobe, Japan, and Administrator Slater joined the U.S. delegation as part of international assistance efforts. Some 18 FHWA engineers also went to Kobe to investigate earthquake-related damage to transportation structures and to evaluate the effects on structures and the adequacy of seismic design codes.
When daunting fiscal challenges in the District of Columbia threatened the viability of the transportation system in the nations capital, FHWA and D.C. officials worked together to identify the significant problem areas and develop a plan. Then, working with Congress, they crafted and accelerated the passage of legislation to make more than $175 million in federal-aid funds available.
Already in 1996, FHWA has responded to the urgent needs created by two weather-related disasters - flooding in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast states and flooding in the Northwest. In January, rain and melting snow from the Blizzard of 96 caused severe flooding, particularly in the Mid-Atlantic states, and FHWA initially allocated $34 million in ER funds: $21 million to Pennsylvania, $10 million to New York, $2 million to West Virginia, and $1 million to Maryland.
FHWA division offices in Idaho, Oregon, and Washington state are coordinating closely with their respective state highway agencies to assess the impacts and extent of flood-related damage on the federal-aid highways. In February, FHWA made initial allocations of ER funds in the amounts of $6 million to Idaho, $15 million to Oregon, and $14 million to Washington.
A major disaster on the scale of the Northwest flood is not required to qualify for ER funds. In fiscal year (FY) 1995, FHWA responded to 29 separate emergencies and provided $481 million in ER funds to the states. In FY 1994, the ER obligation was $894 million, and in FY 1993, it was $413 million.
When discussing disasters and tragedies, we remember the loss of 11 FHWA employees among the 168 people who perished in the Oklahoma City bombing on April 19, 1995. "Indeed, we remember," said Administrator Slater, "and we are grateful for the opportunity to have known these 11 people and to have counted them among our colleagues and our friends. They live on in our hearts and our memories."
Investment
is critical to NHS, and FHWA has been actively promoting new strategies to expand
it, such as the FHWA Innovative Finance Program - Test and Evaluation Project. To
date, 57 projects in 30 states, with an estimated value of more than $3.8 billion,
have been accepted as part of this program. Examples include a proposed $85 million
project using phased funding to build a second ocean-class ferry boat for use on the
Alaska Marine Highway and a $33.7 million project in Kansas City that benefits regional
travel while addressing the concerns of the minority community through which it passes.
To increase income to the Highway Trust Fund, FHWA has continued a strong commitment to ending fuel-tax evasion. Already this has resulted in a diesel fuel tax revenue increase of $1 billion in 1994 compared with 1993.
FHWA has also found ways to improve the contracting process and cut costs. This effort to encourage states and industry to practice innovative contracting techniques - such as cost-plus-time bidding, design/build contracting, and the use of warranty clauses - has gained the participation of 65 percent of the states. At the reopening ceremony of the Santa Monica Freeway after the repair of damage caused by the Northridge earthquake, Administrator Slater noted that the use of innovative contracting techniques led to project completion well ahead of expectations.
Working with partners in state and local government, FHWA employees administer one of the most extensive and most successful federal programs - the Federal-Aid Highway Program. This partnership successfully obligated more than $20 billion in highway and bridge projects in each of the last three years. The number of deficient bridges decreased about 6 percent between 1993 and 1995.
Recognizing how transportation affects the economy, FHWA has sought out partners in private industry to improve the way business is conducted in many areas:
Also, FHWA works closely with other government agencies and U.S. industry to help U.S. firms capture more of the estimated $9.5 trillion world highway market over the next 20 years. The following activities are some highlights:
NPR also stressed the need to ease the federal regulatory burden, and senior FHWA managers have listened to stakeholders' ideas on improving program delivery and service. After review of 83 FHWA-related regulatory sections, six have been eliminated and 25 were revised.
FHWA is taking a leading role in implementing
the Government Performance and Results Act, which requires that all federal agencies
develop strategic plans and performance goals. On Jan. 31, 1994, the Office of Management
and Budget approved the FHWA Federal Lands Highway Program Office as a pilot agency
for performance plans and performance budget reports.
Opportunities to participate in federal highway programs have been actively advanced for all segments of American society. In December 1994, FHWA established a Civil Rights Task Force, whose recommendations are now being implemented. Federal-aid contracts and subcontracts awarded to Disadvantaged Business Enterprises rose more than $2 billion over the previous year's totals in both fiscal years 1993 and 1994. Opportunities for women in skilled highway construction trades are being energetically and effectively promoted with particular success in some states; North Carolina has dramatically increased the percentage of women entering and succeeding in training for highway construction careers.
Partnership agreements with Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) have resulted in FHWA awards of more than $16 million to these institutions, and an additional $500,000 to Hispanic-serving institutions.
Looking to the future, an Urban Youth Corps (UYC) was established in DOT in 1993 to expose young people to public service and to improve public works and transportation projects in urban areas. This is only one of many youth-oriented educational and career opportunity programs in which FHWA is an active participant and funding organization.
The state-of-the-art freeway incident response technology at the Chicago Emergency Traffic Patrol Headquarters illustrates the potential for an ITS application. Assistance personnel, dubbed "minutemen," are directed by the headquarters emergency management team to aid motorists and quickly clear roadways of obstructions.
FHWA is working to ensure that state and local governments and the private sector have access to the latest technology through the Strategic Highway Research Program (SHRP) and the Local Technical Assistance Program (LTAP). The products of SHRP research assist state highway departments in delivering a roadway system that is safer, more durable, and more cost-effective. Six LTAP technology transfer centers serve Native American tribal governments, and all 50 states and Puerto Rico have an LTAP technology transfer center.
On Jan. 8, 1996, Secretary Peña announced that the building of the Intelligent Transportation Infrastructure (ITI) is a national goal. ITI consists of traffic detection and monitoring, communications, and control systems required to support a variety of ITS products and services in metropolitan and rural areas. ITI provides the building blocks needed to effectively deploy and operate, as locally appropriate: traffic signal control systems, freeway management systems, transit management systems, incident management systems, electronic fare payment systems, electronic toll collection systems, and multimodal traveler information systems.
The first initiative of ITI is Operation Timesaver. Operation Timesaver encourages state and local transportation officials to invest in ITI with the objective of shaving 15 percent from the daily travel time of most Americans by 2005.
In April 1994, FHWA kicked off its first
nationwide multimedia campaign aimed at teaching motorists to share the road safely
with commercial vehicles. Sharing the Road: "No Zone" included a television
commercial that has been shown about 1,500 times by more than 100 stations across
the country.FHWA has also developed a first-of-its-kind print guide focusing on those elements of highway safety directly related to highway engineering, such as signs, signals, and markings. This National Highway Users Guide - entitled "Read Your Road!" - was completed in 1995.
Other critical areas of FHWA highway safety activity include:
The FHWA Office of Program Development
has taken a proactive position in environmental relations. In August 1993, FHWA, the
Federal Transit Administration, and the Environmental Protection Agency released a
joint report, Clean Air Through Transportation: Challenges in Meeting National Air
Quality Standards, which received praise from both transportation and environmental
professionals. FHWA completed a major challenge with the November 1993 publication
of the Transportation Conformity Rule.Extensive review of the Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ) program prompted substantial changes in CMAQ eligibility and more flexibility in the use of CMAQ funds. The Congestion Pricing Pilot Program has focused on the role of market pricing in reducing congestion and improving air quality.
FHWA is supporting President Clinton's Global Climate Change Action Plan by leading an interagency working group charged with developing a commuter-choice initiative to transform the current tax exemption for employer-provided parking into a positive incentive to use modes of transportation other than single-occupancy vehicles.
Other noteworthy FHWA environmental initiatives include:
Since ISTEA was enacted, $1.6 billion in transportation enhancement (TE) funds have been made available, and $723 million have been obligated. Taking a proactive role, Administrator Slater initiated a review of the TE program, and on April 11, 1995, he signed a memorandum allowing states to adjust the federal share on enhancement projects up to 100 percent.
Across the country, projects have been implemented that exemplify FHWAs commitment to fostering a positive relationship between transportation and the environment. For example:
During the initial road tour by Administrator
Slater from the Canadian border to the Mexican border, a poignant stop in Henning,
Tenn., provided a phrase that captures the essence of all FHWA has accomplished in
the past three years. It was a simple statement on the grave marker of the noted author
Alex Haley: "Find the Good and Praise It." Finding the good has been easy. There is much good work to find, and there are many dedicated individuals at FHWA and its partner organizations to praise for that work. On local, state, regional, national, and international levels, much has been accomplished to make highways better and safer conduits for highway users. This has also made highways more of an asset to businesses, communities, and millions of individuals who derive economic and personal quality-of-life benefits from our nation's highway system.
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