LOCAL NEWS
01:20 PM EST on Thursday, December 9, 2004
People visiting the Virginia Beach oceanfront could find themselves
zipping around the resort strip on modern buses known as "bus rapid
transit."
Governor Mark Warner announced Thursday $10 million in state money for
the program as part of his Transportation Partnership Act of 2005.
The rest of the estimated $45 million cost would come from the city and
the federal government.
The buses could be running by 2007 if the legislature approves the
funding when the General Assembly convenes on January 12.
It's one of several transportation projects desired by Virginia's
largest city.
The buses run on alternate fuels, such as electricity or natural gas.
They can carry 120 passengers -- or about three times as many as a
standard city bus can.
The Transportation Partnership Act of 2005 provides $824 million in new
funding to jump-start promising public-private partnerships, promote
greater use of rail and transit, encourage local oversight of road
projects and eliminate deficits on completed projects in Virginia’s
six-year transportation program.
"I am pleased to announce the next step in our continuing efforts to
reform VDOT and strengthen transportation in Virginia,” Governor Warner
said. “This plan will improve the quality of our citizens’ lives, ease
traffic congestion, and help sustain Virginia’s rebounding economy.”
Warner added the package -- 80 percent of it a one-time infusion of cash
-- won't end a transportation crisis billions of dollars short of its
needs.
Still, he said, because some of the money is aimed at transit projects
that could ease congestion in the state's most populous regions and
could "jump-start" public-private projects, the package may produce more
benefit quicker than a greater sum of cash devoted solely to new
pavement.
The initiative that will be part of the budget he offers the General
Assembly next week.
(Copyright 2004 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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