Transit Industry Asks Congress to Quadruple Annual Security Funding
The American Public Transportation Association (APTA), the D.C. lobbying arm for much of the transit industry, today asked the House committee in charge of homeland security spending for $1.1 billion next year to beef up rail and bus security, a four-fold increase over the level that Congress approved for 2010.
APTA president William Millar told members of the House appropriations committee that a recent survey of member agencies’ unmet security needs totaled $6.4 billion, or nearly twice as much money authorized in the 2007 law that codified the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission.
“Public transportation systems
have taken many steps to improve security,”Millar said, “but almost 9 years since 9/11, we
still need significant investment in order to protect our citizens who take 35
million trips each weekday on the nation’s public transit systems.”
In the 2010 fiscal year, federal funding for transit security upgrades totaled $253 million, according to APTA. After last month’s fatal terrorist attacks on the Moscow subway system, several U.S. cities escalated security along their rail lines, but even the largest transit agencies in the nation are short of underground cameras and other monitoring equipment.
Millar carefully contrasted the federal government’s focus on aviation security with the requirements of securing local surface transport networks. “[T]he scope and scale of the disproportionate attention and dedication of
resources to one mode of travel over all others is hard to ignore,” he said, observing that the estimated 35 million daily trips on U.S. transit last year — or 10.2 billion in total — amount to about 18 times the numbers of daily airline boardings.
Read More:
Support Streetsblog
More from Streetsblog USA
Motorist Careens onto North Beach Sidewalk, Killing Pedestrian
Driver kills pedestrian at another location where a safety project festered
The post Motorist Careens onto North Beach Sidewalk, Killing Pedestrian appeared first on Streetsblog San Francisco.
Comments Are Temporarily Disabled
Streetsblog is in the process of migrating our commenting system. During this transition, commenting is temporarily unavailable.
Once the migration is complete, you will be able to log back in and will have full access to your comment history. We appreciate your patience and look forward to having you back in the conversation soon.