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Orange Cones for the Economic Good
January 21, 2004 @ 6:33 am and 8:20 am on 90.3
Winter
might be beating up the roads now, but in just a few short months
the orange cones will be out and the work of repairing winter’s
damage - improving the region’s highways - will begin. Keeping
our roads in prime condition isn’t just for commuters' benefits;
it’s also a way for the state to sustain Northeast Ohio’s
status as one of the most transportation-friendly in the country.
As part of Making Change: Reinventing Our Economy, ideastream’s
Shula Neuman reports on how Northeast Ohio’s transportation
infrastructure is a key to a healthy region.


The last time
you careened down the highway - maybe you're there now - did you
notice the trucks, by any chance? There're a lot of them out there
and they're hauling a lot of cargo, about 6 billion tons worth this
year.
Tracy
Drake: U.S. Department of Transportation predicts
that will grow to 12 billion tons in the next 10 to 15 years.
To Tracy Drake, CEO of the Port Authority in Columbiana County, just
south of Youngstown, that growth is good news. Drake says, state and
federal departments of transportation can't afford to build new highways
to accommodate that kind of traffic, which means shippers will be
looking to the waterways, especially the Ohio River, which happens
to be under the Columbiana Port Authority's jurisdiction.
Tracy
Drake: We are the northern-most
point which connects with the Mississippi River. So we are an international
port system.
The
Cleveland-Pittsburgh trade zone, or corridor, is the fourth-largest
market in the nation, Drake says. It's located pretty much in the
center of New York, Chicago and Atlanta, making it a prime location
for shippers. Drake says the region's appeal is about to grow even
more. By mid-2004, the port will have a new "Intermodal Industrial
Facility" - that's a place where cargo packed in containers
can move directly from truck to rail or rail to boat or boat to
truck - and it will only cost $15 million to build.
Tracy
Drake: If you compare
that to the cost of building highways, that's approximately the
cost of two miles of interstate highway. It's a very good bang for
the buck, if you will. It's a good use of taxpayer dollars, at least
by my way of thinking.
As David Goss sees it, getting the multi-modal facility up and running
is another feather in Northeast Ohio's cap.
David
Goss: I'm very bullish about the future as it
relates to the transportation infrastructure here.
He
should know. Goss is senior director of transportation and development
at the Greater Cleveland Growth Association. He says new shipping
opportunities isn't the only thing that's about to improve the region's
business climate.
David
Goss: We've got some major projects
on the drawing board moving into engineering. Rebuilding the inner
belt, reconfiguring the Shoreway a whole new potential of a Lake
Erie ferry, which has major implications for trade with Canada.
All
of these improvements could cost as much as $5 billion over the
next decade. But it's a worthwhile investment, he says. It will
connect the region to the Lake and it will connect Cleveland, the
region's core, to the rest of Northeast Ohio. Even people in Medina
County see the benefit of that, says Medina County Commissioner
Steve Hambley. Medina is the fastest growing county in the region-population
there jumped 23% in the past decade. Hambley says road construction
in Medina County is struggling just to catch up with that growth.
He says any improvement to the state's highways will provide his
constituents with a fundamental need.
Steve
Hambley: Access to what we don't have here in my
county.
That
means a way to get to jobs, higher education opportunities, cultural
institutions.
Steve
Hambley: It's
just not... I've got a nice house with some acreage and some woods
around it and a nice neighborhood. It's also access to the airport,
access to the sports arena, access to the Brown's game, access
to the museums, access to some of the best medical systems in
the world. Thirty minutes away. That's what defines my quality
of life.
Hambley says
any improvements to the region's transportation infrastructure enhances
quality of life for Medina County residents, and that includes the
new multi-modal facility two hours away in Columbiana County. Hambley
says increased commerce, even in Columbiana County, trickles out
to the rest of the region in the form of jobs and increased business
opportunities.
The Growth Association's
Dave Goss says when both outlying communities and the City of Cleveland
understand the mutual benefit of enhancing the entire region's transportation
network, then Northeast Ohio is that much more likely to enjoy a
hearty economy.
David
Goss: Infrastructure
isn't the only piece of that. But by providing good access to
and from and a system that supports a manufacturing economy and
that gets people to jobs, that becomes a key foundation. You've
got to provide the amenities, you've got to get the jobs and hopefully
they go together.
Goss says it's
not enough just to have highways, waterways, railroads and airports.
None of that alone gives the region a competitive advantage. What
makes the region stand out to national and international distributors
is the extent of the region's transportation system and the ease
of moving goods through Northeast Ohio. Maintain a smooth system,
Goss says, and the economic benefits are sure to raise the quality
of life for everyone in the region. In Cleveland, Shula Neuman,
90.3.
Resources:
- Expansion
Management
The publication produced a study that ranked cities across the
country based on how logistics-friendly they are for shippers
and manufacturers. The Cleveland Metro Area ranked fourth out
of more than 300 cities.
- The
Center for Public Management at Cleveland State University
A wing of Cleveland State University's college of urban affairs.
The center studies, among other things, the effectiveness of public
policy on things like transportation. The center produced a study
that looked at the distribution of gas taxes for transportation
in the state of Ohio.
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