U.S. DOT Announces
Semi-Finalists for
Corridors for the Future
Program
February 2, 2007
Out of 38 projects
submitted to reduce
congestion along the
nation’s busiest
interstate highway
corridors U.S.
Transportation Secretary
Mary Peters Thursday
announced the selection
of 14 semi-finalists in
the Corridors of the
Future program. That
figure will be whittled
down to five this
summer, the U.S.
Department of
Transportation
announced.
Peters said that the
U.S. DOT is using this
national congestion
relief effort “to fight
back against the traffic
that is choking our
major roads.” She said
the Corridors of the
Future effort is a
progressive approach
that includes
transportation planning
across state lines in
ways that reduce
congestion and preserve
the efficient flow of
goods and commerce
across America. She went
on to caution that “if
we don’t act today, our
economy will be facing a
standstill in the
future.”
The proposals are
located on eight major
transportation corridors
including: I-95 between
Florida and Maine; I-15
in southern California
and Nevada; I-80/94 and
I-90 linking Illinois,
Indiana, and Michigan;
I-5 in California,
Washington and Oregon;
I-70 from Missouri to
Ohio;
I-69 from Texas to
Michigan; I-80 in Nevada
and California; and
I-10
from California to
Florida.
The proposals
currently include
various combinations of
expanded highway
capacity, truck-only
lanes, increased freight
and passenger rail
development, and
extensive use of
innovative technologies
to keep traffic moving
and improve overall
safety. Peters said the
applicants “exhibited
creativity and
innovation in their
initial proposals to
reduce congestion.” She
indicated that the
department looks forward
to the next phase of the
program in which these
ideas will be further
developed and refined.
The 14 projects were
selected based on the
potential of each to
reduce congestion on the
eight corridors of
national and regional
significance using
innovative financing and
project delivery
techniques.
Peters said the U.S.
DOT will aggressively
support the development
of the Corridors of the
Future by accelerating
permitting schedules,
identifying new
financing options, and
promoting innovative
project delivery methods
to “move these projects
from the drawing board
to completion faster
than ever before.”
The Corridors of the
Future program is one
element of the U.S.
DOT’s six-point National
Strategy to Reduce
Congestion on America’s
Transportation Network
launched in May 2006.
The overall national
congestion initiative is
focused on reducing
traffic on highways,
relieving freight
bottlenecks, and
reducing flight delays.