September 18, 2008
Transportation Infrastructure at Risk
Shooting Ourselves in the Foot
However, Blakey said, "the current administration believes that transportation planning should occur at the state level, but freight moves across state lines from one side of the country to the other and the need for a national strategic plan is obvious." Moreover, when federal transportation money is dispensed, she says that freight projects are always last in line.
Movement in Congress
The Need for a National Grade Separation Fund
The Fuel Factor
Things Will Get Better
The Midwest in Trouble?
A disturbing message for the Midwest, but a positive outlook for Will County, came from Richard Longworth, the summit's keynote speaker. Longworth is a veteran journalist who toured the Midwest in researching his new book: Caught in the Middle--America's Heartland in the Age of Globalism. The conclusion of the book is that the Midwest is not faring well at all, or as he put it, "We've got a lot of problems." The basic issue is that Midwest manufacturing and small family farming are disappearing in the global economy. Yet, Longworth says, Midwesterners are in denial and cling to the past even as the last factories close and the small family farms disappear. As the result, the Midwest falls further and further behind in the global economy.
What's needed, he says, is for the Midwest to think of itself-and complete globally--as a unified region, based on its global assets, which cut across state lines. "Globalization couldn't care less about state lines drawn two centuries ago," he said. "Big universities must stop competing and pool their research knowledge and states must stop competing with each other for federal dollars and business investment."
Lawson Touts Benefits of CED Membership
Curt Lawson, of Interstate Warehousing and chairman of the Will County Transportation and Logistics Council stressed the benefits of membership in the council and of being an investor with the Will County Center for Economic Development (CED).
For transportation and logistics practitioners, the council fosters the exchange of information, experience, ideas and best practices, Lawson said, while the CED creates new jobs and investments in part by facilitating proactive cooperation and relationships with key stakeholders.
Thanks to Our Sponsors and Exhibitors
information, contact Nicole Puracchio at (815) 774-6069