Dave Bauer doesn’t really have many sleepless nights. He might sleep, though, with one eye open, just in case. “We have become a much more divided country politically,” says Bauer, president of ARTBA – American Road and Transportation Builders Association. “Whether you are thinking about federal government, or state or local government, there’s a hostility now in our political system. We don’t have broadscale dysfunction but there has certainly been examples of it. Fortunately, infrastructure has been more of a tool to bring together people from the two [political] parties. But the overall political dynamic can’t be controlled.” 
     
Everyone can agree that the country needs good infrastructure. “Then it usually comes down to some variation of the other guy should pay for it, which is where you get into the political discussion,” he says. “Certainly states have had more success than the federal government in terms of raising new revenues. The big difference is that 49 states operate under a balanced budget requirement and federal government doesn’t. I think if you track federal investment in transportation over the past decade, you will probably find steady growth, although relative growth compared to other federal programmes. It’s a positive outlook but [political] dysfunction remains a risk. And I am not talking about our current president. Certainly there were periods of lengthy shutdown of government under President Obama, but they have all been blips. I think what we are in danger of losing as a society is that there is a lot more we agree upon than disagree upon. Infrastructure is front and centre where people can come together.”
     
The challenge facing ARTBA and its member companies and organisations is to advance infrastructure solutions for legislatures everywhere, at local, state and federal levels. “We must have a public education programme to make sure people understand that road infrastructure impacts them every day, whether they know it or not.”
     
ARTBA is arguably the most vociferous and effective voice for infrastructure investment in the US. The primary goal is to grow transportation infrastructure investment to meet the public and business demand for safe and efficient travel. Key words: ‘safe’ and ‘efficient’.
     
ARTBA was established in 1902 by Michigan public official Horatio Earle to advocate for the construction of a federally-led Capital Connecting Government Highway that he said would connect “every state capital with every other state capital and every capital with the US capital”. That mission was accomplished in 1956 with President Eisenhower’s Interstate road system.
     
The association’s members designed, built and continue to manage the Interstates and the country’s intermodal surface transportation network. But ARTBA has morphed over the decades from a pure advocacy association to a much more sophisticated organisation operating in a much more sophisticated transportation sector. It produces major national economic reports and analyses aimed at giving industry executives greater transportation insights to make smart business decisions.
     
 
Finding cash
     Bauer notes that 30 states have raised their fuel taxes since 2013 and another five have come up with different types of road investment. “But we in the US don’t have a country-wide national road strategy,” he points out. Each state is responsible for their section of the Interstate road system. The federal government owns a few roads, such as in Yosemite National park.
 
     
“Most  members of Congress will be able to tell a state how much money is  likely to be coming this year and the year after, a very deliberated  model. But unlike state funds, the federal funds by law must be spent on  capital projects. In the current fiscal year, we have $46 billion of  federal [highway] investment and 90% of that is capital investment.  There is a handful of other things such as research and emerging  technology projects.”
     
Local  money is not likely being spent on Interstate projects because local  communities don’t own them. There is also an element of private  investment but Bauer figures it is only around 2-3% of transportation  projects that are public-private partnerships (PPP), although it is  becoming more common.
     
“Still  you have 17 states that don’t have legal authority to do PPP,” he  explains. “When you look at the states that have been successful, it’s  not a big number. Most have done some experimenting with PPP, such as  Texas, California, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, all of which are  high population states with a lot of mileage and miles travelled. That  makes PPP work. It’s not that it can’t happen in rural areas, but it  will be more difficult. Public money wants a return on investment by  enhancing the public good but the private sector wants a monetary return  on its monetary investment.” Things fall apart when traffic volume  projections have not been reached.
     
 
Safety first
     Invariably  the discussion turns toward electric, connected and autonomous vehicles  (C/AVs). “All our members recognise that this might change their  business in some way,” he notes.
     
“Remember,  though, 10 years ago we were all going to be driving hoverboards. And  10 years ago the discussion around AVs was they were 10 years away. If  you talk to people now it’s still 10 years away. When the time comes,  our members will reply to tenders that want a road that will support AVs  but the highways sector is not there yet.”
     
But  in an age of AVs, what happens to the very road crews which are out on  the highway constructing these roads of the future? How safe are workers  as an AV approaches a construction site at 100kph? Will the vehicle  understand the temporary layout that was completed only minutes before?
     
In  the UK, the central government is proposing to share road network data,  including roadworks, with makers of mobile apps to warn drivers of  potential congestion months in advance. Tech firms could soon get access  to the necessary data, thanks to a UK government review of legislation  around Traffic Regulation Orders. The orders are behind restrictions on  the road network which allow for temporary roadworks or permanent  changes to the road. Opening up Traffic Regulation Orders data could  help with route-planning systems for self-driving vehicles.
     
“This  is something we are all going to have to come to grips with,” says  Bauer. “There is no higher priority within our membership than safety.”  The advent of more data and more vehicle technology is going to have to  be factored into workzone protection planning.
     
“Importantly,  our members work for the owner of under construction as well as the  roads leading up to that workzone,” he continues. “We already have  variable message signs through many metropolitan regions telling  travellers what is going on elsewhere along the road network.  Integrating AVs with workzone activity will increasingly be a  multi-partner endeavour and these are the conversations that are  happening now. To that extent, ARTBA has been participating in a variety  of forms held by the Federal Highways Administration over the past  several years. There has been a focus on Vehicle to Vehicle issues but  we are concerned that Vehicle to Infrastructure is taking a back seat.  Nobody should believe that a vehicle talking to another vehicle is going  to be sufficient for safe travel.”
    
        
        
        



