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<br />Regional Council of Mayors <br />Statement on Transportation Priority <br /> <br />Regional COllnal of Malors <br /> <br />As Mayors representing cities in Minnesota's fast-growing 11-county metropolitan <br />region, we hereby declare our belief that transportation has become one of the most <br />vexing problems facing our communities and requires urgent attention from our state's <br />leaders. Too many of our communities are choking under congestion and suffer undue <br />economic hardship from inadequate transit and road infrastructure. <br /> <br />Although many positive transportation improvements have been implemented in recent <br />years, Minnesota's investment in roads and transit continues to fal! behind our peer <br />regions around the country. Our roadways are our economic lifeline. If we don't act <br />now, the implications of an inadequate transportation system wili affect the productive <br />growth and development of the entire state for decades. <br /> <br />Far too many of our fellow Minnesotans unnecessarily waste time and money stuck in <br />traffic gridlock. Every day, thousands of people and business vehicles sit in traffic. <br />According to researchers, metropolitan area drivers each absorb a "congestion tax" of <br />over $700 per year, and collectively waste over 93 million gallons of fuel annually. <br /> <br />One million more people are expected to move to our metropolitan region in the next <br />two decades and unless something is done, traffic congestion will only continue to <br />increase. Clogged highways hinder economic prosperity and erode the quality of life <br />Minnesotans have come to expect. <br /> <br />As local government leaders, we see daily how congested and unsafe roads complicate <br />numerous aspects of life in Minnesota: parents spend less time with their kids and <br />more time in traffic, hospital ambulances take longer to get to and from accident scenes, <br />and truckloads of consumer goods increase in price as commerci,al vehicles take longer <br />to travel. <br /> <br />As public officials, we recognize that solving our transportation problem is a complex <br />and long-term challenge that will require various strategies: <br /> <br />v' Minnesota needs to adequately and strategically invest additional resources in <br />superior transit and roads with predictable, accountable, and long-term funding <br />that supports a variety of options, including transit and roads. <br />-/ New transportation resources must prioritize public transit within a <br />comprehensive, multi-modal, interconnected transportation system that serves <br />the 11-county metro area. Additional light rail and commuter rail lines, along with <br />expanded bus service, must be employed to support our fast-growing region. <br />./ Courageous and visionary leadership is vital to forging a sustainable, long-term <br />transportation plan for our state and region. Dedicated leadership must drive <br />progress on that plan and maintain accountability for the process to the public. <br />./ Urqent attention to this challenge is essential. We call on our state leaders in the <br />legislative and executive branches to get to the table, to work on a solution to our <br />transportation needs, and to get something done in 2005. <br /> <br />4.05.05 <br />