Skip to main content

Ex-USDoT bosses urge Congress to reauthorise Fast 

The Metropolitan Civic Leadership Alliance is calling on US Congress to reauthorise the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (Fast) Act which is set to expire this autumn. 
By Ben Spencer March 25, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
US alliance calls on Congress to reauthorise Fast Act (© William Perry | Dreamstime.com)

The Fast Act is a decade-long commitment to provide funding for surface transportation infrastructure planning and investment. It authorised $305 billion for highway and motor vehicle safety, public transportation from 2016-20. 
 
Ray LaHood, US Department of Transportation (USDoT) secretary from 2009-13, says: “Reauthorisation is an opportunity to fundamentally improve how our nation invests in transportation. Metropolitan regions are our nation’s economic engines. To remain competitive, they need a strong federal infrastructure investment programme.”
 
Civic organisations within the alliance - which include the Bay Area Council and Civic Committee of Commercial Club of Chicago - sent a letter to Congress outlining a platform for a transportation package that would reward high-capacity regions with greater funding and flexibility.
 
Sam Skinner, who was USDoT secretary from 1989-91, says: “We need to build on previous generations’ investments in our roads, rail and transit. By making federal funding more flexible and targeting it to metropolitan areas, we will be able to leverage innovation and get more out of every dollar spent.”
 
The letter claimed US Congress and USDoT are increasingly limiting competition to less populated states or rural areas and that grant programmes should not be off-limits to large metropolitan areas. 
 
It recognised that cities and regions can help achieve national transportation goals in areas such as congestion and air quality improvement when they can access federal funding and financing directly. The funding programme should reward cities and metropolitan regions that can deliver results with greater funding, the letter added.
 
The alliance is also calling on funds to be targeted on urban areas to create multimodal solutions via grant programmes that reward congestion-reducing solutions.
 
Other members involved in the alliance include the Greater Washington Partnership, Massachusetts Competitive Partnership, Metro Atlanta Chamber, Silicon Valley Leadership Group and the Columbus Partnership.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ITS World Congress 2025 in Atlanta will look to tomorrow
    June 11, 2024
    'Deploying Today, Empowering Tomorrow' is theme of ITS America-hosted event
  • Prime Minister’s ‘roads revolution’ good news for industry
    November 11, 2014
    Responding to the UK Prime Minister’s announcement which outlined a ‘roads revolution,’ the Freight Transport Association (FTA) has said that plans to deliver roads improvements across the country are good news for the freight and logistics industry. David Cameron stated that plans for the biggest road building programme for almost half a century will be unveiled in next month's Autumn Statement and would contain a US$24 billion overhaul of 100 of Britain's busiest roads and motorways by the end of the
  • Let’s explore Phoenix: Getting transit right in the hottest city in the US
    March 4, 2024
    Ahead of ITS America's Conference & Expo in Phoenix, ITS International asked Transit Unplugged's Paul Comfort (with Tris Hussey) to offer some thoughts on urban mobility in this part of Arizona
  • Auckland considers road user charging to plug funding shortfall
    October 29, 2014
    Auckland, New Zealand, faces a US$9.5 billion transport funding gap to build the fully-integrated transport network set out in the 30-year Auckland Plan that includes new roads, rail, ferries, busways, cycle-ways and supporting infrastructure needed to cope with a population set to hit 2.5 million in the next three decades. If Auckland opts to pay for the fully-integrated Auckland Plan, Auckland Council officials claim the transport network congestion is expected to improve by 20 per cent over the next 1