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April 3, 2002 - Volume 8, Issue 6
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| Hill
Update |
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Urban County Leader Seeks
Investment in Metropolitan Congestion
The
Senate Environment and Public Works Committee held its
third TEA-21 oversight hearing March 19, 2002. At the
hearing, King County Executive Ron Sims told the
Committee that the greater Seattle/King County area and
others areas others struggling with urban congestion
problems need new funding commitments in next year’s
reauthorization legislation.
Sims, a leader among the
nation’s county officials, said that “the key is to
have a metropolitan system in place that everyone has
agreed to fund.” He added that “the Federal
government can stimulate this (system development) and
then provide the funds.”
Sims also advised the
Committee about his efforts to organize a “metro
caucus” to focus on developing specific
recommendations for the upcoming TEA-21 renewal
legislation. None of the other transportation experts
taking part in the hearing were able to address the
nexus between economic growth and congestion, other than
suggesting that congestion was largely preordained, with
one of the witnesses suggesting that the public will “just
have to live with it.”
The Senate panel will
continue its hearings in April with a session focusing
on ‘Operations and Security in Metropolitan Areas.’
The House Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee
on Highways and Transit held a March 20 hearing with key
federal officials to examine the financial health of the
Highway Trust Fund. The House Committee has yet to
release its full schedule of hearing topics for 2002.
To view the Senate
Committee hearing transcript, click
here.
New Appointment
Emil Frankel, a
former board member of STPP and the former Commissioner
of the Connecticut Department of Transportation, has
been officially appointed to his new position as
Assistant Secretary of Transportation for Transportation
Policy. The appointment was made on Friday, March 29 as
a recess appointment by President Bush.
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| Clean
Air Standards Upheld |
A
three-judge panel of the United States Federal Court of
Appeals ruled for the second time on March 26, 2002 on
critical new health-based clean air standards, firmly
rejecting industry's renewed challenges to overturn the
standards. On May 14, 1999, the same panel of judges ruled
2-1 that the standards were unconstitutional, only to be
reversed in a unanimous decision by the United States
Supreme Court on February 27, 2001. The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) established the clean air
standards at issue in 1997 to protect public health by
limiting nationwide pollution levels of smog (ground-level
ozone) and fine, sooty particles.
When EPA issued the
standards in 1997, it estimated that when implemented the
standards would protect 125 million Americans from adverse
health effects of air pollution. Since then, a body of
scientific research has only strengthened the medical
basis for the standards. On March 6, 2002, the Journal of
the American Medical Association published a study of
500,000 people across the country finding that prolonged
exposure to air contaminated with fine particles
significantly raises the risk of dying of lung cancer or
other heart and lung diseases. Other recent studies have
linked the pollutants at issue with increased risk of
asthma in children (The Lancet, 2002; JAMA, 2001); acute
stroke mortality (Environmental Health Perspectives,
2002); and birth defects (American Journal of Epidemiology,
2002). A study of the 90 largest U.S. cities found strong
evidence linking daily increases in particulate pollution
at contemporary levels to increases in daily death rates,
and in hospital admissions of the elderly (Health Effects
Institute, 2000). Another study has indicated that chronic
exposure to particulate pollution may shorten lives by one
to three years (Environmental Health Perspectives, 2000).
-from environmentaldefense.org
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| Bike
Advocates Mourn the Death Of Susie Stephens
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Hundreds
of bicycle advocates from Washington State to Washington DC held
simultaneous wakes the evening of Monday, April 1st to honor the
memory of Susie Stephens, a national leader in bicycle advocacy who
was killed March 21st. Stephens was struck by a tour bus while walking
across a street in downtown St. Louis, where she was working on a
conference for the National Center for Bicycling and Walking.
Stephens, 36, helped create the
Thunderhead Alliance, representing bicycle advocacy groups across the
country, and organized annual Thunderhead retreats to train and
inspire the groups’ Executive Directors. She served as Managing
Director of the Thunderhead Alliance and had served as Executive
Director of the Bicycle Alliance of Washington. She lived in Winthrop,
Washington. Barbara McCann, Director of Campaign Support for STPP,
said, "Susie multiplied the effectiveness of the transportation
reform movement by helping create and support a national network of
effective bicycle advocacy groups. Perhaps most importantly, she
taught many of us how to have fun while working for change."
The police in St. Louis are
investigating the crash and have not yet decided whether to charge the
driver. In lieu of flowers, Stephen’s family suggests that donations
be made in her name to one of the following organizations: Bicycle
Alliance of Washington, the Methow
Conservancy, or the Thunderhead
Alliance. Please contact any of these organizations for more
information.
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| California
Bill to "Fund the ADA"
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A new bill introduced in the California
legislature (AB2369) would provide state funds to improve
access for persons with disabilities. The Transportation
Accessibility Bond Act is a bond measure (dollar amount
yet to be determined) to help local governments and public
transit agencies meet the federal requirements of the
American with Disabilities Act (ADA). The transportation
costs of complying with ADA are high yet vital for
allowing access to jobs, services and recreation for all
Californians. Introduced by Rep. Salinas in February, the
bill has attracted enthusiastic support from the disabled
rights advocacy community, who are working in coalition
with the California office of the Surface Transportation
Policy Project to pass it.
To download the bill (in .pdf
format), click
here.
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| New
Report on Transit Investment
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A
new national report by the Michigan Land Use Institute and United
Cerebral Palsy of Michigan, "New Economic Engine," points to
a state's investment in transit as key to the its economic health and
ability to leverage public dollars. The report examines how transit is
funded in twelve states from federal, state, and local sources. It
attributes high transit ridership and high levels of federal support
to diverse and reliable sources of state and local funding. In a
ranking of total funding per capita, the five cities spending the most
per resident on transit in 1999-2000 were New York, Dallas,
Pittsburgh, Houston and Atlanta. The report points to dedicated
sources of state and local funding as the reason these regions have
received large federal matching grants for expanding transit services.
"First rate transit," the report states, "can provide
the cost savings and transportation options needed to enhance quality
of life and put cities on course to better compete nationally and
globally for public and private investment."
For more information, click
here.
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In
Brief... |
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Rails-to-Trails Conservancy is pleased to announce the launch of their
new Web site designed for trail users, builders, advocates and
enthusiasts of all ages. Visit the new site at http://www.railtrails.org.
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Calendar |
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Transportation
and University Communities Conference
June 15-18, 2002: Amherst,
MA
House
Transportation Committee Schedule
April. 11: Subcommittee
hearing on passenger rail
Senate
EPW Hearing
Date TBA: Operations
and Security in Metropolitan Areas
Transportation
and University Communities Comference
June 15-18, 2002: Amherst,
MA
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Quote
of the Week |
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"Walking 30 minutes a day will dramatically improve your life.
Playing a game with your children in your backyard will help. Walking
in a park can make a difference to your health. [...] The doc and I
are going to encourage all our country to either run or walk or swim
or bicycle for the good of their families, for the good of their own
health, and for the good of the health of the nation."
- President Bush, in a March 26 news conference announcing his
nomination of Richard Carmona for Surgeon General
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Transfer is written and
edited by John Goldener of the Surface Transportation Policy Project,
with contributions by Barbara McCann, Andrea Broaddus and Kevin McCarty.
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