Improving U.S. Freight Transportation System

October 29, 2013

The Panel on 21st Century Freight Transportation published its final report on United States freight transportation, offering an assessment of its current condition with recommendations for strengthening nationwide infrastructure and U.S. economy.

The panel, led by its Chairman, U.S. Rep John J. Duncan, Jr. (R-TN) and Ranking Member Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.), was founded by Full Committee Chairman Bill Shuster (R-Pa.) and Ranking Member Nick J. Rahall, II (D-W.Va.) in April 2013 to examine U.S. freight transportation, the role it plays on the nation’s economy and ways in which it may be improved, including financially, structurally and technologically.

The Freight Panel offered to Congress a list of suggestions to “safely and efficiently meet the needs of freight movement in the 21st century:”


Though not much is remarkably new in the 104-page report, what is new is the more significantly unified, bipartisan Congressional support behind it. Freight infrastructure undoubtedly requires an up and down enhancement to advance its position in global trade markets, and the House now seems ready to back it. The renewed vision includes an open search for ongoing, sustained revenue sources to improve U.S. freight infrastructure across all modes.

Ports, harbors, rail, bridges, roads, etc. are all targets for improvement, but the question remains as to how infrastructural developments can be funded, and new taxes are not off the table. The Freight Panel remains optimistic that a solution will be reached. They believe it’s no longer a matter of if, but when a Congressional Bill is prepared.

 

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