Press Releases and Newsletters
2010 Governor’s Crime Commission Grants Information
2010 Governor’s Crime Commission Grants Process Announced
Link includes grant writing workshops around the State, deadlines and a contact for questions. Click below for more information.
Governor’s Crime Commission 2010 Grants Announcement
Study Committee to look at Transportation Equity Formula Appointed
The Studies Act of 2009 (HB 945) called for the Joint Legislative Transportation Oversight Committee to study the way the State distributes transportation funding across the State before the start of the short session in May 2010. The Speaker made his appointments this week to the Committee which means they can now officially begin to meet. Membership of the Joint Committee is below.
If you are represented by a member of this Joint Committee please write a letter and/or call your legislator and strongly encourage them to convene and begin the study.
If you are not represented by a member of this Joint Committee please write a letter and/or call your legislator and ask them to speak with their peers on the Committee and encourage them to begin the study.
HOUSE APPOINTMENTS
- Rep. E. Nelson Cole (Co-Chair)
- Rep. Kelly M. Alexander, Jr.
- Rep. Becky Carney
- Rep. Lorene Thomason Coates
- Rep. James Walker Crawford, Jr.
- Rep. William A. Current, Sr.
- Rep. Robert Mitchell Gillespie
- Rep. Grier Martin
- Rep. Daniel Francis McComas
- Rep. Lucy T. Allen (Advisory Member)
- Rep. Arthur J. Williams (Advisory Member)
SENATE APPOINTMENTS
- Sen. Steve Goss (Co-Chair)
- Sen. Philip Edward Berger
- Sen. David W. Hoyle
- Sen. Neal Hunt
- Sen. Samuel Clark Jenkins
- Sen. Anthony Eden Rand
- Sen. John J. Snow, Jr.
- Sen. Richard Yates Stevens
New GAO Report on How States and Locals are spending ARRA Money
This report, the third in response to a mandate under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act), addresses the following objectives: (1) selected states’ and localities’ uses of Recovery Act funds, (2) the approaches taken by the selected states and localities to ensure accountability for Recovery Act funds, and (3) states’ plans to evaluate the impact of Recovery Act funds. GAO’s work for the report is focused on 16 states and certain localities in those jurisdictions as well as the District of Columbia (District)—representing about 65 percent of the U.S. population and two-thirds of the intergovernmental federal assistance available. Under the Recovery Act, GAO collected and analyzed documents and interviewed state and local officials. GAO also analyzed federal agency guidance and spoke with Office of Management and Budget (OMB) officials and with program officials at the federal agencies overseeing Recovery Act programs.
What GAO Recommends
GAO makes recommendations to federal agencies to address accountability and transparency issues. They are discussed on the next page and in the report. GAO also has recommendations to OMB (on pages 122 and 131-134) and a matter for congressional consideration (on page 123). The report draft was discussed with federal and state officials who generally agreed with its contents. Read more of the GAO Report.
‘TIGER’ Hunt Searches for Big-Impact Projects-NCDOT Submits Yadkin River Bridge
Stimulus Watch: ‘TIGER’ Hunt Searches for Big-Impact Projects (UPDATE 2) (ENR.com)
Posted by tom_ichniowski at 9/23/2009 3:17 PM CDT
Copyright: ANP–Fotolia.com
The hunt is on for a share of the US Dept. of Transportation’s $1.5 billion in Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery–“TIGER”–discretionary grants. The new program was created under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and it’s aimed at projects that are “game-changers”–or, in the words of the economic-stimulus statute, “projects that will have a significant impact on the nation, a metropolitan area or a region.”
Applications were due on Sept. 15. There’s no official count yet from US DOT of how many applications it received or dollars sought. But ENR’s preliminary tally–based on reports received from about 25 states–shows requests totaling more than $9.6 billion, far outpacing the amount that DOT can award.
Engineering and construction firms will be waiting anxiously to see which projects DOT will select. Secretary Ray LaHood, whose department came up with the TIGER name, plans to announce the winners in January, a month earlier than the Feb. 17 deadline Congress set in the ARRA law.
A tip of the ENR hard hat to American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials spokesman Tony Dorsey, who kindly forwarded my request for information to all the state DOTs. Thanks also to the state DOT public information officials who sent responses, as well as to Progressive Railroading, which posted an early story on its web page last week listing some of the states’ TIGER proposals for rail projects.
ENR’s $9.6-billion figure is almost surely low. For one thing, I’ve yet to hear from more than 20 states. In addition, cities, counties and other jurisdictions are eligible to apply for the TIGER money. ENR counts an application from the City of Atlanta, for example, which is seeking $298.3 milion for a light-rail project. In Missouri, 15 counties, cities or other entities applied for TIGER grants, as well as the state’s DOT. And in California, Caltrans says it knows of 83 applications from jurisdictions within the Golden State. Caltrans did submit some applications itself, but most of the 83 are from other localities in the state. Nevertheless, there probably are TIGER applications from many other U.S. localities that our count is missing.
Confusing things a bit further, pairs or groups of states are combining to seek funds for multi-state projects. For example, Pennsylvania is applying as lead state for a five-state group, seeking a total of $300 million for new intermodal terminals and track improvements along portions of the Crescent Corridor freight rail network, which runs from New Jersey to Louisiana.
The maximum TIGER grant amount is $300 million per project. In addition, no state’s total TIGER grants can exceed $300 million.
States are seeking TIGER money across a range of transportation modes. Many of the individual items are major highway and bridge projects. According to reports ENR has received so far, here’s a list of large projects contained in the applications:
Alabama: $200 million for U.S. 280 elevated roadway, Birmingham area
Arizona: $98 million to reconstruct the Arizona Eastern Railway, which runs from Bowie to Miami.
California: Rebuild US 101/Doyle Drive in San Francisco.
Colorado: $160 million to $260 million to construct part of the first phase of improvements in the U.S. Route 36 corridor from Denver to Boulder.
District of Columbia: $158.5 million, part of package of Priority Bus Transit projects, including K Street Transitway.
Florida: $98.7 million for improved I-75 and local road links to Southwest Florida International Airport in Lee County.
Illinois: $300 million for the “CREATE” program of rail and highway improvements in the Chicago area.
Iowa: $143.4 million, for U.S. 34-U.S. 75 Missouri River connector, including new Missouri River bridge, reconstruction of section of U.S. 75 in Nebraska and upgrade to I-29/U.S. 34 interchange.
Kansas: $87.5 million for a 10.5-mile U.S. Route 54 bypass around Kingman.
Maine (with New Hampshire): $70 million for improvements to Memorial Bridge over the Piscataqua River.
Maryland: $58 million for road improvements near three military installations slated for expansion under the current Base Realignment and Closure round.
Missouri: $200 million to construct up to 30 miles of dedicated truck lanes on I-70 in Saline and Cooper counties.
North Carolina: $300 million for improvements to the I-85 corridor between Rowan and Davidson counties, including new bridge over the Yadkin River.
Ohio: $90 million to improve Interstate 70/71 in Columbus.
Oklahoma: $95 million for I-244 bridge over Arkansas River.
Pennsylvania (with Va., Ala., Miss., Tenn.), $300 million in rail improvements (intermodal terminals, track improvements, etc.) along Crescent Corridor, which runs from New Jersey to Louisiana
Rhode Island: $80 million for first two phases of a replacement for the Providence Viaduct Bridge on I-95.
Tennessee: $98 million for I-69 corridor project in Obion County.
Texas: $211.2 million, for I-35, highway expansion, from Lacy Lakeview, Texas, to West, Texas (near Waco).
Vermont: $65 million for an intelligent-transportation system fiber optic network..
Washington: $300 million for the state route 520 bridge replacement program in King County.
Wyoming: $100 million for statewide network of wildlife-crossing underpasses and overpasses.
Here are the TIGER grant requests for states (and District of Columbia, City of Atlanta) reporting to ENR as of Sept. 23, 4 pm. (Most totals exclude applications from cities, counties, etc.):
State Amount (in millions of dollars)
Calfornia $2.350*
Missouri 812.2**
Ohio 587.9
Washington 482.0
Arizona 464.7***
Alabama 455.2
Iowa 440.2
Texas 366.8
Tennessee 357.0
Illinois 300.0
North Carolina 300.0
Pennsylvania (lead for 5-state group) 300.0
Florida 278.2
National Capital Region (Washington, DC, two other jurisdictions) 266.7
Kansas 261.7
Wyoming 230.5
Maryland 204.0
Maine 166.2
Colorado 160.0-260.0****
Oklahoma 154.0
Kentucky-Indiana 120.0
Vermont 109.1
Rhode Island 80.0
Maine-New Hampshire 70.0
Multi-state***** 37.3
City of Atlanta 298.3
Total: $9,652-9,752
*State DOT estimate, includes some, but possibly not all, applications from local government agencies. Caltrans says most TIGER applications from California came from various jurisdictions, not from Caltrans itself.
**Missouri DOT applied for $200 million. Other cities,counties, port authorities, etc. in the state filed total of 15 applications, seeking total of $612.2 million.
***state estimate
****Colorado is requesting range of federal TIGER aid for Denver-Boulder corridor, includes extension of HOV/HOT lanes, bus rapid transit service and connection to a bikeway
*****Joint Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Tennessee proposal for Appalachian Regional Short Line Project
House Approves 3-Month Authorization Extension;Does Not Address Rescissions
September 23, 2009
House Approves 3-Month Authorization Extension; Does Not Address Rescissions (AASHTO)
The House of Representatives voted 335-85 this evening to approve a bill that would extend federal highway and transit programs until the end of this year. Federal law authorizing spending on federal-aid highways, transit projects, and highway safety programs is set to expire Sept. 30.
House Democratic leaders brought the measure, HR 3617, sponsored by House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman James Oberstar, D-MN, to the floor late this afternoon using an expedited procedure known as suspension of the rules. This process allowed the bill to bypass a committee markup and also precludes amendments to the bill.
The legislation does not address a looming $8.7 billion rescission of existing contract authority (enacted in the 2005 transportation law known as SAFETEA-LU and amended by a 2007 energy law), which will be executed next week by the Federal Highway Administration if not repealed.
Rep. John Mica, R-FL and ranking minority member of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said one of his concerns about the bill is that is does not deal with the $8.7 billion rescission.
Oberstar did not discuss the rescission issue on the House floor, but his spokesman said a repeal of the rescission was left out of the measure because House rules would require an offset to pay for it through higher taxes or reduced spending elsewhere.
The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials issued a statement today supporting the efforts of the House of Representatives to pass legislation extending authorization of federal-aid highway and transit programs. AASHTO noted the urgency of ensuring that federal-aid highway and transit programs do not shut down Oct. 1, the day after the current act expires.
However, AASHTO added that state transportation departments will be negatively impacted because the legislation does not repeal the $8.7 billion highway contract authority rescission that will take effect Sept. 30.
“This rescission will amount to real dollar losses to programs and projects, and will have a devastating effect on many state departments of transportation and reverse the positive economic gains brought about by the recovery act,” said John Horsley, AASHTO executive director. “For example, Missouri will lose $202 million in contract authority and the cut will have a disproportionate impact on local bridges and metropolitan planning organizations. Colorado would lose $115 million in contract authority. Michigan’s share of the rescission is $263 million, which amounts to approximately a quarter of what that state received for highway and bridge funding through the recovery act.
“States are just starting to pick up some momentum through economic recovery,” Horsley added. “Now is not the time to turn back the clock.”
The three-month extension bill now heads to the Senate, which has not yet acted on a proposal approved by three committees to extend authorization by 18 months, as requested by the Obama administration. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chairwoman Barbara Boxer, D-CA, has vowed to address the rescission matter when her chamber takes action. The Senate continues debating appropriations measures this week. It is unclear when the transportation extension will come up for floor debate.