94-15293. National Transportation System Initiative: Outreach for Issues, Positions, Problems, and Recommended Solutions  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 120 (Thursday, June 23, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-15293]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: June 23, 1994]
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
     
    
    National Transportation System Initiative: Outreach for Issues, 
    Positions, Problems, and Recommended Solutions
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, DOT.
    
    ACTION: Request for comments.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Department of Transportation seeks to broaden its 
    knowledge and develop consensus on the physical components, performance 
    characteristics, and other aspects of a National Transportation System 
    (NTS). The information will be used to develop the Department's 
    proposals for future transportation legislation and to enhance 
    transportation decisionmaking to better achieve national goals.
    
    DATE: Comments must be received on or before August 22, 1994, to be 
    fully considered in reviewing the proposed approach for conducting the 
    Department's NTS initiative.
    
    ADDRESS: Three copies of comments for the public docket on the NTS 
    should be sent to: Office of the Secretary, Documentary Services 
    Division C-55, Attn: NTS Public Docket 49617, Room 4107, 400 Seventh 
    Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Questions on the NTS initiative can 
    also be directed to the Departmental Offices designated as leads for 
    the NTS outreach and planning initiatives:
    
    Mr. Michael P. Huerta, Associate Deputy Secretary, Room 10200, 400 
    Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590, Ph: (202) 366-5781
    Mr. Stephen Palmer, Assistant Secretary for Governmental Affairs, Room 
    10408, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590, Ph: (202) 366-
    4573
    Mr. Frank Kruesi, Assistant Secretary for Transportation Policy, Room 
    10228, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590, Ph: (202) 366-
    4450
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Transportation programs and administrative 
    structures, combined with current shortcomings of information and 
    analytic tools, can result in transportation decisions being made that 
    do not meet national transportation needs effectively and efficiently.
        The NTS will delineate the most important elements of the 
    transportation system in terms of their collective contribution to 
    those national objectives in which transportation plays an important 
    role--economic strength, environmental and resource conservation, 
    community vitality and social welfare. It will include components from 
    aviation, highways (initially, the National Highway System, as defined 
    by Congress), railroads, ports and waterways, pipelines, and public 
    transportation.
        The NTS outreach program seeks to involve private citizens, the 
    business community, Congress, State and local officials, and interest 
    groups to discuss all aspects of the NTS. These outreach activities 
    will seek feedback on the basic NTS concept through several channels 
    including Federal Register notices, regional workshops, community 
    forums, etc. Information on upcoming opportunities for public comment 
    will be announced through notices in the Federal Register, local 
    newspapers and broadcast facilities, trade publications, and other 
    media outlets.
        The following text sets forth the DOT's framework for defining and 
    establishing the National Transportation System. It reflects current 
    thinking about the concept of the National Transportation System--its 
    purpose, use and benefits--and describes the process we are using to 
    define the system and ensure its continuing evolution in response to 
    the changing needs of our Nation.
    
    Why a National Transportation System?
    
        Congress, in landmark legislation for transportation, the 
    Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA), 
    declared:
        ``It is the policy of the United States to develop a National 
    Intermodal Transportation System that is economically efficient and 
    environmentally sound, provides the foundation for the Nation to 
    compete in the global economy, and will move people and goods in an 
    energy efficient manner.''
        In December 1993, the DOT designated a 159,000-mile National 
    Highway System for approval by Congress. It is now time to develop a 
    full National Transportation System. Congress intended, and we concur, 
    that the National Transportation System encompass all modes of 
    transportation--including those yet to be developed. It intended that 
    all these modes be inter-connected to promote interests that are of 
    critical importance to our country, including: clean air, reduced 
    energy consumption and safe, comfortable and cost effective 
    transportation--the real engine of economic development and a measure 
    of the quality of our lives.
        Commitment to a multimodal National Transportation System marks a 
    departure from the historic perspective of the Federal Government, 
    which in the past traditionally focused on developing and financing 
    individual forms of transportation. The result, although the most 
    extensive and safest transportation infrastructure in the world, has 
    been the development of a separate, often fragmented and less than 
    adequate infrastructure of airports, highways, rail, urban transit, 
    ports and waterways. Federal transportation dollars have been invested 
    in individual projects with little consideration of the impact of the 
    investment on other forms of transportation or on the economy. Often, 
    investments were driven mainly by the availability of federal funds. 
    For years, overlapping levels of government and special jurisdictions 
    have undercut efforts at more comprehensive planning, resulting in 
    infrastructure disconnects and inadequacies--inefficiencies that 
    reverberate adversely through the economies of states, regions and 
    indeed the country as a whole.
        Transportation planning and coordination have improved 
    substantially in recent years. Still, however, suburban areas make 
    decisions inconsistent with urban areas and vice versa; states and 
    their transportation departments vary on the extent to which they 
    cooperate with neighboring states or consider decisions made by their 
    own cities and Metropolitan Planning Organizations.
        Meanwhile, America's transportation infrastructure crosses these 
    lines, and America's need for a well maintained, uncongested, seamless 
    transportation system that serves the present and opens the future, 
    requires that we make a bold step and shift from nurturing individual 
    transportation needs and fragmented projects to enhancing the 
    effectiveness of the Nation's transportation system as a whole.
    
    What Will the National Transportation System Do?
    
        The Department of Transportation's Strategic Plan states our 
    intention to establish, in keeping with ISTEA, a National 
    Transportation System that integrates all modes of transportation for 
    people and freight and emphasizes connections, choices, and 
    coordination of services to position this country as an effective 
    economic competitor in the global market. The National Transportation 
    System will:
        (1) Map the Nation's major transportation networks for all modes.
        (2) Identify local, regional and national bottlenecks, missing 
    linkages and needed new components in our existing infrastructure 
    across all modes--which will lead all levels of governments and the 
    private sector towards targeting investments to meet those needs.
        (3) Enable the Department, for the first time, to assess the 
    conditions and performance of the entire national system, so we can 
    better develop national and global policies, and identify strategic 
    investments.
        (4) Implement ISTEA's mandates to integrate all modes into the 
    metropolitan and statewide transportation planning processes so that 
    cost-benefit analyses for capital projects, and management systems that 
    address operations, congestion relief and intermodal system 
    requirements take into account the full transportation picture. 
    Decision makers should be able to choose, for example when considering 
    short-haul needs, between building additional airport capacity or rail 
    passenger service.
        (5) Encourage transportation decision-makers at all levels to favor 
    investments that further the interdependence of local, regional and 
    national networks, thus leveraging the benefits of all.
        (6) Engender confidence among our citizens that their tax dollars 
    are being invested wisely and strategically. In meeting these 
    objectives we will:
         Help accomplish our national goals of economic growth, 
    international trade, national defense, environmental improvement, and 
    transportation safety and security.
         Enable the Nation to respond more effectively to national 
    defense emergencies and to disasters such as earthquakes, floods and 
    hazardous materials spills.
         Develop transportation services that respond more rapidly 
    to market changes and to the ever-changing needs of users.
    
    What Constitutes the NTS?
    
        The National Transportation System cannot include every road, bus 
    line or port, important as these are to the immediate users. Rather, 
    the National Transportation System is a concept, only now evolving, to 
    encompass the transportation components that make important 
    contributions to regional, national and international interests--
    economic interests, security interests and safety interests.
        One component of the system, the National Highway System, has, 
    after much outreach and analysis, been initially defined and is 
    currently being considered by Congress. In the course of the next 
    months we will add transportation components from all modes--aviation, 
    intercity buses, pipelines, ports, waterways, transit and freight and 
    passenger railroads, as well as the connecting links that enable the 
    entire system to operate effectively.
        Ideally, criteria for becoming part of the NTS should be clear and 
    consistent, measuring the contribution that a facility makes to our 
    national or regional economic, defense, social and environmental goals. 
    We will focus initially on identifying fixed facilities such as rights 
    of way and terminals. But the National Transportation System is far 
    more than a map and list of infrastructure facilities. We need to 
    understand how our transportation facilities are used, how well they 
    serve our population and how they affect key national objectives. To 
    this end, we will consider high use transportation facilities for 
    inclusion in the NTS--facilities that carry large numbers of vehicles, 
    passengers or freight. But some national objectives cannot be captured 
    by volume measures alone. We might well consider small facilities that 
    help fill the gaps within and between our existing modal facilities, or 
    facilities which acquire particular importance in emergency situations, 
    or have social benefits not easily quantifiable for providing access to 
    health care, education and recreation. Some components of privately 
    owned and operated transportation facilities will be part of the 
    National Transportation System, and this designation would likely 
    encourage public-private partnerships to further a unified and 
    integrated transportation system.
        In all, the National Transportation System will provide us a policy 
    framework within which we can evaluate and measure service levels as 
    well as the impacts and effectiveness of our laws and regulations, and 
    plan the Federal Government's infrastructure investments.
    
    What Process Will We Use to Shape the NTS?
    
        The Department believes that the NTS concept must be developed in 
    concert with Congress, other federal agencies, state and local 
    officials, the transportation industry and interested citizens.
        To this end we are embarking upon a nationwide outreach effort, 
    discussing all aspects of the NTS with interested groups and 
    individuals. We will use this outreach effort to help us sharpen the 
    concept and purpose of the NTS, develop identification criteria for 
    inclusion in the NTS, and forge the NTS into a powerful and dynamic 
    tool for citizens, policy makers, and elected officials. By the end of 
    1994, the Department will have developed and received public comments 
    on specific criteria for identifying the system and guidance for the 
    participation of state and local governments and the private sector in 
    the identification process. By September of 1995, we plan to have an 
    initial NTS map, a process for updating it, and will use what we have 
    learned to develop the Administration's proposal for comprehensive 
    transportation legislation to succeed ISTEA.
        Throughout this process we expect state and local officials to use 
    the metropolitan and state-wide intermodal planning processes and 
    management systems already established by ISTEA. These efforts, as well 
    as information on the conditions and performance of transportation 
    facilities, will comprise the base line data for developing the NTS. We 
    believe that the development of the National Transportation System 
    concept, with full public participation, will form a sound basis for 
    the next generation of federal transportation policy--beyond ISTEA.
        The Department invites the public and private sector to join us in 
    a National Transportation System dialogue. The Department seeks public 
    input in developing an integrated approach to decisionmaking that 
    utilizes better information and analytical processes to maximize the 
    benefits derived from transportation investments. Public comments are 
    sought on the full spectrum of policy issues associated with the NTS, 
    but the Department is particularly interested in responses to the 
    following questions:
        (1) We have suggested how an NTS might be used by the Department. 
    Do you agree? What changes would you propose?
        (2) Do you think an NTS will be useful to State and local officials 
    and to private entities? How might it be made more useful to them?
        (3) We have suggested that the identification of an NTS can flow 
    from the outreach process and from the metropolitan and statewide 
    planning processes. What suggestions do you have for identifying and 
    designating an NTS? How can we achieve a national perspective in the 
    selection process?
        (4) How should we deal with community impact, safety and 
    environmental consequences?
        (5) What aspects of local and regional transportation should be 
    included in an NTS, and why?
        (6) How should the private sector be involved in the identification 
    process?
        (7) How can we ensure that the NTS is designed to include a future 
    orientation and will improve transportation practices and decisions?
        (8) What regulatory or legislative changes would be useful to 
    support the NTS concept?
        (9) What other suggestions do you have concerning the NTS, its 
    uses, and the process by which it is established?
        Comment by all parties on these and other transportation issues is 
    welcome.
    
        Issued this 20th day of June, 1994, in Washington, DC.
    Michael P. Huerta,
    Associate Deputy Secretary and Director, Office of Intermodalism.
    [FR Doc. 94-15293 Filed 6-22-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-62-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/23/1994
Department:
Transportation Department
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Request for comments.
Document Number:
94-15293
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before August 22, 1994, to be fully considered in reviewing the proposed approach for conducting the Department's NTS initiative.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: June 23, 1994