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  • Highway construction spending expected to show little growth in 2009
  • SmartFIX40 improvements reach halfway point
  • INRIX announces expansion in utilization of real-time traffic
  • CSX calls for public and private sector cooperation to meet infrastructure needs
  • FHWA supports innovative state transportation projects
  • Liebherr and John Deere modify crawler deal
  • NTSB releases report on I-35W bridge collapse
  • Rising salt prices force states to make do with less
  • SmartWay ITS starts monitoring Memphis traffic
  • New Jersey commissioner calls for transportation stimulus
  • Kansas suspends road work contract awards
  • California high-speed train forecasts $1B annual revenue surplus
  • PCA revises cement forecast downward
  • Report notes Alaska transportation funding shortfall
  • Last report due on Minn. bridge collapse
  • AGC hopeful for bipartisan legislative priorities under new president
  • Voters approve $71 billion in transportation funding
  • Largest transit measure on the ballot has strong support
  • Illinois may investigate salt prices
  • Officials seek federal help for financial woes
  • Georgia's 411 Connector reaches major milestone
  • Girder falls from Louisiana bridge
  • Economist believes transportation investment can spur economic recovery and job creation
  • New data show Americans drove 15 billion fewer miles than a year ago
  • Two landmark bridges take home top transportation prizes
  • Oberstar talks tough
  • Construction market will continue to slide in 2009
  • N.C. highway spending cut by $50 million
  • AGC launches Education Excellence Awards
  • ITS America announces departure of William Anderson
  • Transportation secretary announces decreasing revenues in Virginia
  • FHWA warns about the need for new revenue source
  • New York State unveils plan to replace Tappan Zee Bridge
  • Mass. Turnpike Authority may merge with other state agencies
  • Pa. Turnpike responds to FHWA request
  • Illinois lawmakers again debating infrastructure program
  • U.S. Chamber, associations launch "FasterBetterSafer" campaign
  • Report examines worsening travel infrastructure in Massachusets
  • Cat, Navistar join forces
  • Senators announce plan to address HTF shortfall
  • ODOT honored for I-5 environmental work
  • W.Va. still waiting for that boom
  • Transportation receives mixed reviews in Va.
  • Private resistance in Florida
  • Not even close
  • Attorney General demands end to free rides in New York
  • Georgia looking at toll option
  • Private group may run Turnpike
  • VDOT releases emergency response report
  • Debate on FAA reauthorization bill postponed
  • Oberstar presses for I-35W hearing
  • MoDOT engineers find no bridge damages so far after earthquake
  • Pennsylvania readies itself for privatization
  • Vermont agency may have to scale back $5 million
  • Florida may suspend its gas tax
  • AGC protests McCain’s proposed gas tax moratorium
  • Legislators reject one toll bill, accept another
  • Congressman subpoenas EPA for greenhouse gas waiver documents
  • California governor highlights need for trained workforce
  • Construction faces tumultuous year for projects, prices, labor, economist says
  • Consortium achieives financial close on Texas toll road project
  • CONTECH acquires European rights to CDS technology
  • Iowa bridges ranked fourth most deficient in nation
  • Court invalidates Ultimax patents
  • Kentucky governor: State resources not misused in traffic signal approval
  • U.S. Rep. Matheson stresses Utah’s need for road money
  • Capka steps down from FHWA chief post
  • Texas DOT opens new transportation management center
  • Budget office estimates $1.4B shortfall in Highway Trust Fund
  • Big Dig contractors to pay $458.2M
  • Econolite & PTV America integrate transportation technologies

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  • R&B readers support McCain; V.P. hopeful Palin supported "Bridge to Nowhere"

    Survey respondents go Republican, but questions surround his running mate
    September 3, 2008

    According to a recent survey conducted by Roads & Bridges magazine, a majority of those in the transportation industry support Sen. John McCain over Sen. Barack Obama for president. Those who responded overwhelmingly chose McCain (49.3%), while just under 22% supported Obama. Almost 30% were undecided.

    McCain’s choice for vice president, however, may have approved the same pork-barrel infrastructure projects the Arizona Congressman has been targeting for years. According to the Dayton Daily News, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin supported the bridge between the town of Ketchikan on Revillagigedo Island and Gravina Island—the infamous “Bridge to Nowhere” project--when she ran for the state’s top office back in 2006. Although Palin has said publicly she did not support the bridge, reports discovered by the Dayton Daily News revealed the governor actually canceled the project last year, saying Alaska simply did not have the funds. In reality, Congress had deleted the SAFETEA-LU requirement that $223 million of Alaska’s federal funding allocation be used for the troubled span.

    McCain was quick to hammer U.S. Rep. Don Young’s (R-Alaska) “Bridge to Nowhere” as wasteful government spending.

    “[Palin] knew and she knows today that the state got every single cent [of federal funding],” Bob Weinstein, a democrat and mayor of Ketchikan, told the Dayton Daily News, which also reported that Palin went to the extent of hiring a lobbying firm to get nearly $27 million in earmarked funds when she was mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, between 1996-2002.

    More results of the Roads & Bridges magazine presidential survey will be available in the September issue.

    Source: Dayton Daily News   September 3, 2008




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