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State Issues Call for Transportation Projects
The call for transportation enhancement
projects that can be funded by SAFETEA-LU ends April 28.
TxDOT Call for Ehnacement
Projects
TxDOT is accepting proposals for transportation enhancement
projects that can be funded through the new federal transportation
bill.
The federal program provides funding for transportation related
activities that promote the quality of the environment through
aesthetic enhancements associated with transportation.
The funding is provided in the new federal transportation
bill, SAFETEA-LU. The project call ends April 28. Projects
will be selected on a competitive basis.
Approved projects will receive funding on a cost-reimbursement
basis. The funding does not constitute a grant. Enhancement
projects are eligible for reimbursement for up to 80 percent
of allowable costs. The entity nominating a project is responsible
for the remaining cost share, including all cost overruns.
Eligible projects must demonstrate a relationship to the
surface transportation system through either function or impact.
They must go beyond standard transportation activities, incorporating
one of the following 12 categories: pedestrians and bicycles
facilities; safety and education activities for pedestrians
and bicyclists; acquisition of scenic easements and scenic
and historic properties; scenic or historic highway programs
(including providing tourist and welcome center facilities);
landscaping and other scenic beautification; historic preservation;
rehabilitation and operation of historic transportation buildings,
structures, or facilities (including historic railroad facilities
and canals); preservation of abandoned railway corridors (including
conversion and use for pedestrian and bicycle facilities);
control and removal of outdoor advertising; archaeological
planning and research; environmental mitigation to address
water pollution due to highway runoff or reduce vehicle-caused
wildlife mortality while maintaining habitat connectivity;
establishment of transportation museums.
UT Engineer to Chair External
Review Panel
The American Society of Civil Engineers recently announced
the team members of an external review panel commissioned
as part of the federal effort to provide credible answers
to the fundamental questions concerning the performance of
the hurricane protection system in New Orleans during Hurricane
Katrina. Along with the ASCE external review panel, the federal
response includes an Interagency Performance Evaluation Task
Force, organized by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and a
National Research Council independent review panel, convened
at the direction of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.
Rumsfeld authorized ASCE to convene an external review panel
to conduct continuing expert peer review of the work performed
by the IPET, and report findings directly to the NRC.
University of Texas at Dallas' president, David Daniel, a
renowned civil engineer and member of the National Academy
of Engineering, will chair the external review panel.
The ASCE external review panel will provide an objective
technical review of the IPET report findings. The scope of
work will include: data collection about the condition of
the hurricane protection systems before and after Hurricane
Katrina; review of project construction and maintenance; numerical
modeling to characterize the storm surge; analysis of floodwalls,
pumping stations and levee performance; analysis of the impacts
of economic decisions associated with hurricane protection
systems; and examination of the engineering and operational
risk and reliability of the system.
The study is expected to take eight months. All findings
will be available to the public.
Perry Has Plan to Accelerate IH-69
Gov. Rick Perry recently announced a plan to partner with
the private sector to develop an interstate-quality highway
corridor with additional rail freight capacity that connects
the Lower Rio Grande River Valley to IH-37 and continues along
the south and east portions of Texas from Corpus Christi through
Houston all the way to northeast Texas. The visionary transportation
project, TTC-69, will connect industrial hubs in South Texas
and the Midwest.
"When construction is complete, Texas will benefit from
unprecedented trade opportunities, a faster, more reliable
transportation system, and thousands of new jobs," Perry
said.
Perry made the announcement at the annual meeting of the
IH-69 Alliance, a non-profit group of public and private sector
leaders from East and South Texas. The alliance was formed
12 years ago to advance the goal of developing the IH-69 corridor.
IH-69 is the combination of two federally designated High
Priority Corridors, which together form the shortest route
between the industrial northeast and the South Texas border
with Mexico.
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