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Keyword: highways

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  • Highway chiefs approve 'enhancement' projects in Dallas area (your highway tax dollars at work)

    07/30/2010 10:18:13 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 16 replies · 4+ views
    Dallas Transportation Blog (Dallas Morning News) ^ | July 29, 2010 | Michael Lindenberger
    On Thursday, the state highway chiefs approved $77 million in so-called transportation enhancement projects for the next year. Enhancement projects are funded by the federal government, which sets aside 10 percent of federal gas tax dollars for the program. The local government requesting the money must pay for the project up front, and the state -- using federal money -- reimburses 80 percent of the cost. The program has been criticized -- see stories here and here -- but often provides money for projects that stoke the biggest enthusiasm from nearby residents. An example in Dallas has been the Woodall...
  • Pennsylvania Turnpike to become nation's costliest toll road

    07/17/2010 8:56:06 AM PDT · by Willie Green · 94 replies · 1+ views
    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ^ | Friday July 16, 2010 | Jon Schmitz
    E-ZPass customers will get price break over those paying cashA toll increase on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in January likely will make it the most expensive long toll road in the nation. The turnpike commission on Wednesday approved a 3 percent increase for users of E-ZPass electronic fare collection and 10 percent for cash customers, effective Jan. 2. That will raise the cash cost of driving the turnpike to 8.5 cents per mile, highest of the 11 U.S. toll roads of 100 miles or longer. Currently, the Pennsylvania and New Jersey turnpikes are tied at 7.7 cents per mile. Shorter toll...
  • 8-lane bridge seems dead-end idea

    06/26/2010 2:47:25 PM PDT · by Willie Green · 43 replies
    The Columbian ^ | Saturday, June 26, 2010 | Erik Robinson
    Engineers’ assessment is that traffic will require more capacity by 2030PORTLAND — An eight-lane bridge across the Columbia River would be too small to accommodate future traffic demand unless there is a major increase in the number of drivers deciding to take the bus or avoiding rush hour altogether, according to an engineering firm hired by the city of Portland to consider a smaller Interstate 5 bridge. Concerned about the mammoth size of the 10-lane Columbia River Crossing currently being proposed, the city wanted to look at a slimmer version. The engineering firm delivered its assessment Friday during a meeting...
  • State shifting focus to mass transit

    06/15/2010 7:37:46 PM PDT · by Willie Green · 7 replies · 196+ views
    Connecticut Mirror ^ | June 16, 2010 | Christine Woodside
    In recent years, commuters crossing the Quinnipiac River on I-95 in New Haven have had more to distract them than veering out of exit-only lanes, avoiding potholes and dodging swarms of fellow drivers. Cranes and work crews visible from the infamous "Q Bridge" are evidence of a massive, $2.2 billion project to replace the old and overcrowded span-a long-overdue improvement, most area motorists would agree. But the project stands for more than a smoother ride to work: It is the last highway expansion of its size in Connecticut, at least for the near future, as the state Department of Transportation...
  • America's Scariest Highways

    05/26/2010 7:26:55 AM PDT · by US Navy Vet · 85 replies · 1,735+ views
    YAHOO Travel ^ | By Tim Kiladze
    Mark Sedenquist and Megan Edwards' California home was destroyed by a forest fire in 1993. Instead of rebuilding, the couple bought an RV and took to the open road, traveling across the U.S. and Canada for almost seven years. The couple has since settled in Las Vegas, but they continue to take driving vacations and encourage others to do the same on their website, RoadTrip America, which they run through Flattop Productions, their small business. Sedenquist and Edwards estimate they've traveled over 650,000 miles.
  • Surprise: Pa. roads getting worse, study says

    05/24/2010 10:04:45 AM PDT · by Willie Green · 30 replies · 521+ views
    Pocono Record ^ | Monday, May. 24, 2010 | ???
    PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pennsylvania's roads are getting worse. A new report released Monday by the American Society of Civil Engineers says the state's roads get a D-minus grade. That's down from the D the engineers gave Pennsylvania's roads in a 2006 report. The grade for the state's transit systems also went down, from D-plus to D-minus, while its bridges stayed at a C. The ASCE says the state's bridges would be worse off if it weren't for stepped up efforts, including the use of $390 million in federal stimulus money for repairs. But there could still be tough times ahead....
  • Private company proposes tearing down and rebuilding part of I-35W

    05/21/2010 8:58:36 AM PDT · by Willie Green · 5 replies · 367+ views
    Star-Telegram ^ | Thursday, May 20, 2010 | GORDON DICKSON
    A toll road developer has offered to tear down and rebuild 10 miles of Interstate 35W from downtown to far north Fort Worth to relieve one of Tarrant County's biggest bottlenecks with a combination of toll and nontoll lanes. The proposal by NTE Mobility Partners, submitted this week to the Texas Department of Transportation, would allow motorists to pay their way out of congestion on toll lanes that would extend from Interstate 30 near downtown to North Tarrant Parkway, south of Alliance Airport. For motorists who can't or don't want to pay tolls, the project would include reconstruction of existing...
  • Leaders stand idly by as Columbia River juggernaut rolls on

    04/25/2010 7:29:29 AM PDT · by Bean Counter · 16 replies · 637+ views
    The Oregonian ^ | April 25, 2010 | ETHAN SELTZER
    With the spring primaries only weeks away, most voters probably assume that elected leaders seeking new terms have been busy representing us and leading this state into the future. Seems simple enough. But what, more precisely, do we expect? For starters, showing up, not lying and obeying the law, but that goes for every citizen. Certainly we expect more of leaders. At a minimum, we should expect them to pay attention to the long-term needs of our state, and the long-term consequences of the decisions made today to meet needs now and likely to emerge. You and I get to...
  • Will India's highways project be path to growth?

    04/22/2010 6:09:27 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 6 replies · 324+ views
    BBC ^ | April 21, 2010 | Brajesh Upadhyay
    As India aspires to a double digit annual economic growth, infrastructure development is the new priority. Prime minister Manmohan Singh has underscored the need to double infrastructure spending from $500bn (£325bn) to $1 trillion in the next five-year plan if the country plans to lift millions out of poverty. Roads and highways are a particular focus of attention and the government's high-profile highways minister Kamal Nath has set himself a tough target of 20km of roads a day from June, meaning 7,000km a year and 20,000km of work in progress. It could easily be the biggest and the most ambitious...
  • Viewpoint: Limit highway damage by limiting weight loads trucks can carry

    04/06/2010 11:53:39 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 6 replies · 375+ views
    mlive.com ^ | April 6, 2010 | Dennis Weber
    The "American Heritage Invention and Technology" magazine has an article on interstate highway bridge construction. The article was prompted by the collapse of the I-35W bridge in Minneapolis a few years ago. The legal weight limit for semi-trucks was quoted as 80,000 pounds. This weight limit is what interstate highway construction in America is designed to carry. The article also mentioned that Nevada has found one in 14 trucks exceed the 80,000-pound legal limit. It was not clear from the article if the legal limit of 80,000 pounds is a federal limit and applies anywhere in the United States or...
  • "Using Our Federally Funded Highways?" (Lib Poke At Tea Party Express)

    04/03/2010 8:15:02 AM PDT · by buccaneer81 · 31 replies · 951+ views
    The Columbus Dispatch ^ | April 3, 2010 | Jeff Stahler
  • North Carolina discusses I-95 as a toll road

    03/31/2010 8:06:04 AM PDT · by Willie Green · 35 replies · 890+ views
    Land Line Magazine ^ | March 30, 2010 | David Tanner
    Tolling and public-private partnerships are on the table in North Carolina as state officials look into improving Interstate 95. The North Carolina Department of Transportation recently hired two consulting firms, PBS&J and Baker Engineering – at a cost of $6.4 million – to evaluate the state’s 182 miles of I-95 and to develop recommendations for financing. The report, titled “I-95 Corridor Planning and Finance Study,” is scheduled to be completed in the fall of 2011. “Renewing I-95 through upgrades and widening is an expensive process, and NCDOT is researching both traditional and non-traditional methods of funding as part of this...
  • Industry groups decry non-highway earmarking

    03/01/2010 8:16:11 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 2 replies · 284+ views
    FleetOwner ^ | March 1, 2010 | Sean Kilcarr
    Several industry groups are publicly condemning what they claim is the Obama administration’s effort to earmark an ever larger share of highway funds for non-highway projects. They are particularly livid over the administration’s proposal to take $200 million in highway taxes normally distributed to the states and re-direct them into a new Livable Communities program unveiled by the U.S. Dept. of Transportation (DOT) in January. “It takes a lot for a group like ours to publicly criticize a Presidential administration this way,” Greg Cohen, president & CEO of the American Highway Users Alliance (AHUA), which represents motorists, bus companies, truckers,...
  • Why Government Shouldn’t Build Roads

    02/06/2010 7:05:10 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 15 replies · 753+ views
    Whiskey and Gunpowder ^ | February 5, 2010 | Linda Brady Traynham
    Dr. William Anderson’s superb article concerns a subject some of the Shooters and I have been kicking around recently. Our focus was on why governments shouldn’t build roads at all, part of which is that it is always inefficient to filter money through some bureaucracy. Between waste, the misallocation of funds to pay for the departments and personnel, inferior products, social engineering, and the inevitable corruption when tax dollars are being scattered around “public” roads are a very poor solution to the problem of how to move traffic from points A through Z. As is always the case, unfettered private...
  • RTA saves possums from road kill

    01/03/2010 2:07:46 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 8 replies · 668+ views
    The Daily Telegraph ^ | January 3, 2010 | Rosie Squires
    THE Roads and Traffic Authority has proudly announced the success of a road safety program - for our State's native wildlife. To reduce the number of animals killed on NSW roads each year, the RTA has installed more than 200 animal crossings on NSW highways. Rather than wait for a break in the constant flow of traffic, native animals are using specifically built tunnels and bridges to cross roads. And some of Australia's favourite native creatures have been smiling for the cameras as they scurry by. A little possum was snapped crossing over a rope bridge that hangs above the...
  • Driving really fast to cost more starting Friday (Georgia)

    12/28/2009 10:31:25 AM PST · by Colonel Kangaroo · 33 replies · 1,140+ views
    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ^ | December 28, 2009 | Ariel Hart
    To those who feel the need to speed: Be warned. For the fastest of fast drivers, it’s about to get really expensive. Going 85 miles per hour or more on most Georgia roads -- including interstates -- will cost a speeder an additional $200, when a new "super-speeder" law takes effect on Friday. On two-lane roads, meaning one lane each way, the extra fine kicks in at 75 mph. That’s on top of whatever ticket the speeder gets for going over the speed limit. “It’s a lifesaving law,” said Bob Dallas, director of the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety, noting...
  • State Agencies Pilfer Highway and Bridge Funds

    11/13/2009 11:09:19 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 10 replies · 1,080+ views
    Hudson Valley Press Online ^ | November 11, 2009 | Thomas DiNapoli
    New York State’s Dedicated Highway and Bridge Trust Fund hasn’t been all that dedicated. Since 1991, only 34.9 percent of the money in the fund went directly toward the repair and improvement of the state’s deteriorating roads and bridges. And over the next four years, that will shrink to about one fifth. It’s supposed to be a “locked box,” but apparently the lock wasn’t very strong. If only one-third of the money in the Highway and Bridge Trust Fund has actually been used to pay for highways and bridges, the question, is, where did the money go? The answer is...
  • Pr. William declines to join [race-baiting] anti-HOT lanes lawsuit

    10/08/2009 8:20:29 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 12 replies · 930+ views
    The Washington Business Journal ^ | October 7, 2009 | Sarah Krouse
    Prince William County decided not to join Arlington County in its lawsuit against high-occupancy toll lanes on Interstates 95 and 395, citing what it characterizes as race-baiting and class warfare in the suit. The county considered joining the suit because it shared concerns about the HOT lanes’ proceeding without a proper environmental study and their effect on traffic, but Board Chairman Corey Stewart, R-At large, said the board unanimously agreed Arlington’s suit raised too many concerns. “The board had a closer look at the suit and there are allegations in there about Pierce Homer, the secretary of transportation, and about...
  • Trans-state highway in Arunachal by 2013: PM (Chinese border incursions into India)

    10/04/2009 5:48:14 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 3 replies · 520+ views
    The Morung Express ^ | October 3, 2009 | Agencies, PTI
    Itanagar, October 3 (Agencies): Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Saturday said a Rs.125 billion trans-state highway in Arunachal Pradesh would be completed by 2013, a step that would boost infrastructure in the strategic northeastern state bordering China. “The Trans-Arunachal Highway, rail and air connectivity, and construction of two small hydro projects would meet the requirement of many remote areas, especially villages located on border areas, suffering from isolation,” Manmohan Singh said, addressing an election rally at Pasighat in East Siang district. “The highway would be completed by 2013 and would go a long way in boosting infrastructure in the region....
  • Deaths, Injuries Increase With Higher Speed Limits

    07/16/2009 7:26:44 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 105 replies · 1,942+ views
    MSN Health and Fitness ^ | July 16, 2009 | Steven Reinberg, HealthDay Reporter
    THURSDAY, July 16 (HealthDay News) -- Deaths and injuries on America's interstates have increased since the repeal of the federal 55-mile-per-hour speed limit in 1995, a new study finds, and some believe it's time to slow down again. Researchers tracking fatalities attributed 12,545 deaths and 36,582 injuries in fatal crashes to higher speed limits implemented during the 1995-2005 study period. "Our study clearly shows that policy can directly result in more deaths as well as reducing deaths on our country's roads," said lead researcher Lee S. Friedman of the division of environmental and occupational health sciences in the School of...