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January TxDOT Highway Letting
Dates
The Texas Department of Transportation
has scheduled its next highway letting for Jan. 11 and 12.
Ninety-five projects are approved to be let with an estimated
total of $523,991,322.
A TxDOT report said projects may be added, advanced or delayed
as deemed necessary.
Perry Praises TxDOT for
Bringing Projects Online
Gov. Rick Perry recently released
a statement commending the Texas Department of Transportation
for "its continued progress on state transportation projects."
"These construction dollars will directly translate
into reduced traffic congestion, less pollution from auto
emissions and more moms and dads making it to their children's
softball games and other activities on time," Perry said
in the statement. "Texas is a national leader in progressive
transportation solutions, and we're pouring by far more concrete
than any other state so that commuters and cargo can move
more efficiently."
During a meeting earlier this year, TxDOT commissioners awarded
contracts totaling $650 million for 125 projects, bringing
the fiscal year 2004 total to approximately $4 billion in
transportation construction contracts-more than any other
state. Texas invested almost a $1 billion more in transportation
projects than California and $2.9 billion more than New York
for fiscal year 2004.
The construction pace was made possible with new financing
tools that the Legislature gave TxDOT and that voters approved
in constitutional amendments in 2001 and 2003.
Perry said the new transportation projects will continue
to assist the state's job creation and economic development
efforts. He cited safe and efficient goods delivery and increased
quality-of-life benefits as key components in many businesses'
relocation and expansion decisions.
"We still have a long way to go to get traffic moving,
and that is going to require innovative solutions like the
Trans Texas Corridor," Perry said. "To further reduce
gridlock and pollution, remove hazardous cargo from city centers
and create more jobs and opportunity, we need to build new
routes and not just expand existing ones."
Texas
Sterling Awarded $58.6 Million Eastex Freeway Contract
Texas Sterling Construction Inc. of Houston was recently
awarded the $58.6 million contract for the expansion of the
Eastex Freeway (U.S. 59 North) from a four-lane freeway to
an eight-lane freeway with three-lane frontage roads from
the Harris County line to Northpark Drive.
The contract represents the first expansion of the reconstruction
of U.S. 59 into Montgomery County. The freeway will remain
open throughout the construction period, which is scheduled
to be complete in September 2007.
State Unveils Strategic Plan to Address
Traffic Mobility
The Texas Transportation Commission has laid the framework
for distributing $3 billion in new transportation funds.
The strategic plan for the Texas Mobility Fund, which is
funded primarily through traffic fines, was approved by the
commission at its monthly meeting. That action paves the way
for disbursement of the money to bridge the gap between transportation
needs and available funding.
"Traditional revenue is not sufficient to meet the growing
transportation demand in Texas caused by a growing population
traveling more miles on already congested roads," said
Mike Behrens, TxDOT's executive director. "The Texas
Mobility Fund is a new source of financing that we need to
stretch as far as we can to reduce congestion and improve
safety as quickly as possible."
The plan's guiding principles include:
- · Managing the fund in the most effective way to
accelerate needed transportation improvements to reduce
congestion, improve safety, expand economic opportunity
and enhance statewide connectivity.
- Implementing a multimodal approach including highways,
rail, public transportation and other transportation modes
to effectively address transportation needs statewide.
- Making regional transportation decisions at the local
level.
- Accelerating previously requested, locally supported projects
as identified in TxDOT's Statewide Mobility Program.
- Leveraging the fund with toll projects, user fees, other
private funds and other revenue sources to stretch limited
transportation funds and establish a revenue-generating
asset to be used to fund future transportation projects
in the region and across the state.
NTTA Board of Directors Selects new Chair,
Vice Chair
The North Texas Tollway Authority announced that David D.
Blair has been named chairman of its board of directors. Since
its inception in 1997, Blair has been one of the two Dallas
County appointees on the board. Blair is a former mayor of
Farmers Branch.
Blair fills the position that was held for four years by
Don Dillard. Dillard will remain on the board as a director
representing Collin County.
The board also unanimously appointed Jack Miller, the Denton
County appointee and former mayor of Denton, to serve as vice
chairman. He replaces Donna Parker, who resigned from the
board earlier this year.
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