Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Buttigieg: A new era of transporta­tion on horizon

Believes infrastruc­ture has to look to future

- Hope Yen

WASHINGTON – Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Thursday that an infrastruc­ture plan expected soon from President Joe Biden will offer a “once in a century” opportunit­y to remake transporta­tion in the United States, where cars and highways are no longer king.

Speaking at the Austin, Texas-based South by Southwest conference, which is being held virtually this year, Buttigieg compared the new possibilit­y to the creation of an interstate highway system under President Dwight Eisenhower in the 1950s and a transconti­nental railroad under President Abraham Lincoln a century before that.

“We start with something unglamorou­s, which is fixing and improving what we’ve already got – there’s been a trillion dollar backlog just in the roads and bridges we already have,” he said. “But I’ll add there are some things that need to be reduced … sometimes roads need to go on a diet.”

He said the U.S. can no longer follow a 1950s mentality of building roads and communitie­s based on moving as many cars as possible, but must adapt to the reality of climate change and ensure the safety of growing numbers of bicyclists and pedestrian­s on the streets.

“The design choices we make, how fast cars move, whether there’s bike lanes and sidewalks … green space even, all of this is part of that view,” Buttigieg said. “Sometimes we do need to add a road or widen one. Just as often, I think we need to subtract.”

Buttigieg’s remarks came after a report on Wednesday forecast that global gasoline demand has peaked and is unlikely to return to pre-pandemic levels due to shifts in consumer behavior, such as increasing telework and people moving to electric vehicles. People also are shifting to other modes of transporta­tion, such as bicycles or scooters, for shorter trips.

A closely divided Congress is preparing for major fights over the shape and scope of an infrastruc­ture package, including the level of federal investment­s in public transit versus roads and highways.

The recently passed COVID-19 bill included $30.5 billion for struggling transit agencies. Public transporta­tion groups are urging even bigger investment­s in infrastruc­ture legislatio­n, which historical­ly has sent 80% of its money to roads and highways over transit with the support of rural, Republican­leaning states.

During the presidenti­al campaign, Biden laid the groundwork by proposing $2 trillion to address infrastruc­ture and climate change. But the White House hasn’t yet committed to a timeline for the release of a detailed plan, which already faces resistance from Republican­s over Biden’s focus on the environmen­t and the cost.

On Thursday, Buttigieg said he saw opportunit­ies to build out high-speed and other passenger rail in strongly Republican states, not just coastal, Democratic areas in the Northeast and California. He said that could reduce cardepende­nce, create jobs and help the environmen­t.

The former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, and former Democratic presidenti­al candidate made his return Thursday to the annual Texas festival. SXSW Chief Programmin­g Officer Hugh Forrest lauded Buttigieg as the “most successful startup” after making his first appearance at the event when running for president in 2019.

Buttigieg made clear his work on the Biden team is just getting started.

“When I leave this job whenever that is, I want to be able to look back and say my presence here helped make the 2020s a turning point in the story of American transporta­tion,” he said, to make it more “equitable” and as a primary driver of solutions on climate change.

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