[Congressional Bills 109th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H.R. 3 Placed on Calendar Senate (PCS)]

                                                        Calendar No. 69
109th CONGRESS
  1st Session
                                 H. R. 3


_______________________________________________________________________


                   IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

                             March 20, 2005

                                Received

                             April 6, 2005

                 Read twice and placed on the calendar

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 AN ACT


 
 To authorize funds for Federal-aid highways, highway safety programs, 
             and transit programs, and for other purposes.

    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the 
United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE, TABLE OF CONTENTS.

    (a) Short Title.--This Act may be cited as the ``Transportation 
Equity Act: A Legacy for Users''.
    (b) Secretary Defined.--In this Act, the term ``Secretary'' means 
the Secretary of Transportation.
    (c) Table of Contents.--The table of contents for this Act is as 
follows:

Sec. 1. Short title, table of contents.
                     TITLE I--FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAYS

                 Subtitle A--Authorization of Programs

Sec. 1101. Authorizations of appropriations.
Sec. 1102. Obligation ceiling.
Sec. 1103. Apportionments.
Sec. 1104. Minimum guarantee.
Sec. 1105. Project approval and oversight.
Sec. 1106. Use of excess funds.
Sec. 1107. Temporary traffic control devices.
Sec. 1108. Revenue aligned budget authority.
Sec. 1109. Pay to play reform.
Sec. 1110. Emergency relief.
Sec. 1111. Surface transportation program.
Sec. 1112. Highway use tax evasion projects.
Sec. 1113. Appalachian development highway system.
Sec. 1114. Construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities.
Sec. 1115. Interstate maintenance discretionary.
Sec. 1116. Highway bridge.
Sec. 1117. Transportation and community and system preservation 
                            program.
Sec. 1118. Deployment of magnetic levitation transportation projects.
Sec. 1119. Recreational trails.
Sec. 1120. Federal lands highways.
Sec. 1121. Conservation measures.
Sec. 1122. Pedestrian and cyclist equity.
Sec. 1123. National commissions.
Sec. 1124. Adjustments for the Surface Transportation Extension Act of 
                            2004, Part V.
Sec. 1125. Roadway safety.
Sec. 1126. Equity requirement.
                     Subtitle B--Congestion Relief

Sec. 1201. Motor vehicle congestion relief.
Sec. 1202. Transportation systems management and operations.
Sec. 1203. Real-time system management information program.
Sec. 1204. Expedited national intelligent transportation systems 
                            deployment program.
Sec. 1205. Intelligent transportation systems deployment.
Sec. 1206. Environmental review of activities that support deployment 
                            of intelligent transportation systems.
Sec. 1207. State assumption of responsibilities for certain programs 
                            and projects.
Sec. 1208. HOV facilities.
Sec. 1209. Congestion pricing pilot program.
Sec. 1210. Congestion mitigation and air quality improvement program 
                            eligibility.
Sec. 1211. Special rules for State assumption of responsibilities.
Sec. 1212. Opening of Interstate ramps.
                  Subtitle C--Mobility and Efficiency

Sec. 1301. National corridor infrastructure improvement program.
Sec. 1302. Coordinated border infrastructure program.
Sec. 1303. Freight intermodal connectors.
Sec. 1304. Projects of national and regional significance.
Sec. 1305. Dedicated truck lanes.
Sec. 1306. Truck parking facilities.
Sec. 1307. Freight intermodal distribution pilot grant program.
                       Subtitle D--Highway Safety

Sec. 1401. Highway safety improvement program.
Sec. 1402. Worker injury prevention and free flow of vehicular traffic.
Sec. 1403. High risk rural road safety improvement program.
Sec. 1404. Transfers of apportionments to safety programs.
Sec. 1405. Safety incentive grants for use of seat belts.
Sec. 1406. Safety incentives to prevent operation of motor vehicles by 
                            intoxicated persons.
Sec. 1407. Repeat offenders for driving while intoxicated.
Sec. 1408. Repair or replacement of highway features on National 
                            Highway System.
Sec. 1409. Rented or leased motor vehicles.
           Subtitle E--Construction and Contract Efficiencies

Sec. 1501. Design--build.
Sec. 1502. Warranty highway construction project pilot program.
Sec. 1503. Private investment study.
Sec. 1504. Highways for LIFE pilot program.
                          Subtitle F--Finance

Sec. 1601. Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act.
Sec. 1602. State infrastructure banks.
Sec. 1603. Interstate System reconstruction and rehabilitation toll 
                            pilot program.
Sec. 1604. Interstate System construction toll pilot program.
Sec. 1605. Special rules relating to State infrastructure bank program.
                   Subtitle G--High Priority Projects

Sec. 1701. High priority projects program.
Sec. 1702. Project authorizations.
                  Subtitle H--Miscellaneous Provisions

Sec. 1801. Budget justification.
Sec. 1802. Motorist information.
Sec. 1803. Motorist information concerning full-service restaurants.
Sec. 1804. High priority corridors on the National Highway System.
Sec. 1805. Additions to Appalachian region.
Sec. 1806. Transportation assets and needs of Delta region.
Sec. 1807. Toll facilities workplace safety study.
Sec. 1808. Pavement marking systems demonstration projects.
Sec. 1809. Work zone safety grants.
Sec. 1810. Grant program to prohibit racial profiling.
Sec. 1811. America's Byways Resource Center.
Sec. 1812. Technical adjustment.
Sec. 1813. Road user charge evaluation pilot project.
Sec. 1814. Thomas P. ``Tip'' O'Neill, Jr. Tunnel.
Sec. 1815. Conforming amendment for transportation planning sections.
Sec. 1816. Distribution of metropolitan planning funds within States.
Sec. 1817. Treatment of off ramp.
Sec. 1818. Loan forgiveness.
Sec. 1819. Lead agency designation.
Sec. 1820. Use of debris from demolished bridges and overpasses.
Sec. 1821. Hubzone program.
Sec. 1822. Technical amendments to TEA 21 projects.
Sec. 1823. National Work Zone Safety Information Clearinghouse.
Sec. 1824. Transportation conformity.
Sec. 1825. Eligibility to participate in western Alaska community 
                            development quota program.
Sec. 1826. Metropolitan regional freight and passenger transportation 
                            study.
Sec. 1827. Intermodal transportation facility expansion.
Sec. 1828. Advanced truck stop electrification system.
Sec. 1829. Technology.
Sec. 1830. Extension of public transit vehicle exemption from axle 
                            weight restrictions.
Sec. 1831. Motorcyclist Advisory Council.
Sec. 1832. Sharing of monetary recoveries.
Sec. 1833. Eligibility under CMAQ.
Sec. 1834. Sense of Congress regarding Buy America.
Sec. 1835. Community enhancement study.
Sec. 1836. Transportation and local workforce investment.
Sec. 1837. Special rule for fiscal year 2004.
Sec. 1837. Special rule for fiscal year 2004.
Sec. 1838. Amo Houghton bypass.
Sec. 1839. Inclusion of certain route segments on the Interstate 
                            System.
Sec. 1840. Rescission of unobligated balances.
Sec. 1841. Transportation development credits.
                        TITLE II--HIGHWAY SAFETY

Sec. 2001. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 2002. Occupant protection incentive grants.
Sec. 2003. Alcohol-impaired driving countermeasures.
Sec. 2004. State traffic safety information system improvements.
Sec. 2005. High visibility enforcement program.
Sec. 2006. Motorcycle crash causation study.
Sec. 2007. Child safety and child booster seat incentive grants.
Sec. 2008. Motorcyclist safety.
Sec. 2009. Driver fatigue.
Sec. 2010. Authorization of appropriations for highway safety research 
                            and development.
Sec. 2011. Safety data.
Sec. 2012. Driver performance study.
Sec. 2013. Drug impaired driving enforcement.
Sec. 2014. Transportation of schoolchildren.
Sec. 2015. Rural State emergency medical services optimization pilot 
                            program.
Sec. 2016. State apportionments.
Sec. 2017. Safe intersections.
           TITLE III--FEDERAL TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION PROGRAMS

Sec. 3001. Short title; amendments to title 49, United States Code.
Sec. 3002. Policies, findings, and purposes.
Sec. 3003. Definitions.
Sec. 3004. Metropolitan planning.
Sec. 3005. Statewide planning.
Sec. 3006. Planning programs.
Sec. 3007. Private enterprise participation.
Sec. 3008. Urbanized area formula grants.
Sec. 3009. Clean fuels formula grant program.
Sec. 3010. Capital investment grants.
Sec. 3011. Formula grants for special needs of elderly individuals and 
                            individuals with disabilities.
Sec. 3012. Formula grants for other than urbanized areas.
Sec. 3013. Research, development, demonstration, and deployment 
                            projects.
Sec. 3014. Cooperative research program.
Sec. 3015. National research and technology programs.
Sec. 3016. National Transit Institute.
Sec. 3017. Job access and reverse commute formula grants.
Sec. 3018. New Freedom program.
Sec. 3019. Bus testing facility.
Sec. 3020. Bicycle facilities.
Sec. 3021. Transit in the parks pilot program.
Sec. 3022. Human resource programs.
Sec. 3023. General provisions on assistance.
Sec. 3024. Special provisions for capital projects.
Sec. 3025. Contract requirements.
Sec. 3026. Project management oversight and review.
Sec. 3027. Investigations of safety and hazards.
Sec. 3028. State safety oversight.
Sec. 3029. Controlled substances and alcohol misuse testing.
Sec. 3030. Employee protective arrangements.
Sec. 3031. Administrative procedures.
Sec. 3032. National transit database.
Sec. 3033. Apportionments based on fixed guideway factors.
Sec. 3034. Authorizations.
Sec. 3035. Over-the-road bus accessibility program.
Sec. 3036. Updated terminology.
Sec. 3037. Project authorizations for new fixed guideway capital 
                            projects.
Sec. 3038. Projects for bus and bus-related facilities.
Sec. 3039. National fuel cell bus technology development program.
Sec. 3040. High-intensity small-urbanized area formula grant program.
Sec. 3041. Allocations for national research and technology programs.
Sec. 3042. Relationship to other laws.
Sec. 3043. Forgiveness of grant agreement.
Sec. 3044. Cooperative procurement.
Sec. 3045. Obligation ceiling.
Sec. 3046. Adjustments for the Surface Transportation Extension Act of 
                            2004, Part V.
Sec. 3047. Special rule for fiscal year 2004.
           TITLE IV--MOTOR CARRIER TRANSPORTATION AND SAFETY

              Subtitle A--Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety

Sec. 4101. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 4102. Motor carrier safety grants.
Sec. 4103. Border enforcement grants.
Sec. 4104. Commercial driver's license improvements.
Sec. 4105. Hobbs Act.
Sec. 4106. Penalty for denial of access to records.
Sec. 4107. Medical Review Board.
Sec. 4108. Increased penalties for out-of-service violations and false 
                            records.
Sec. 4109. Commercial vehicle information systems and networks 
                            deployment.
Sec. 4110. Safety fitness.
Sec. 4111. Pattern of safety violations by motor carrier management.
Sec. 4112. Motor carrier research and technology program.
Sec. 4113. International cooperation.
Sec. 4114. Performance and registration information System management.
Sec. 4115. Data quality improvement.
Sec. 4116. Driveaway saddlemount vehicles.
Sec. 4117. Completion of uniform carrier registration.
Sec. 4118. Registration of motor carriers and freight forwarders.
Sec. 4119. Deposit of certain civil penalties into Highway Trust Fund.
Sec. 4120. Outreach and education.
Sec. 4121. Insulin treated diabetes mellitus.
Sec. 4122. Grant program for commercial motor vehicle operators.
Sec. 4123. Commercial motor vehicle safety advisory committee.
Sec. 4124. Safety data improvement program.
Sec. 4125. Commercial driver's license information System 
                            modernization.
Sec. 4126. Maximum hours of service for operators of ground water well 
                            drilling rigs.
Sec. 4127. Safety performance history screening.
Sec. 4128. Intermodal chassis roadability rule-making.
Sec. 4129. Substance abuse professionals.
Sec. 4130. Interstate van operations.
Sec. 4131. Hours of service for operators of utility service vehicles.
Sec. 4132. Technical corrections.
Sec. 4133. Intrastate and foreign operations of interstate motor 
                            carriers.
Sec. 4134. Operators of vehicles transporting agricultural commodities 
                            and farm supplies.
Sec. 4135. Hours of service rules for operators providing 
                            transportation to movie production sites.
Sec. 4136. State laws relating to vehicle towing.
Sec. 4137. Special rule for fiscal year 2004.
Sec. 4138. Nebraska custom harvesters length exemption.
Sec. 4139. Truckload fuel surcharge.
               Subtitle B--Household Goods Transportation

Sec. 4201. Federal-State relations relating to transportation of 
                            household goods.
Sec. 4202. Arbitration requirements.
Sec. 4203. Civil Penalties relating to household goods brokers and 
                            unauthorized transportation.
Sec. 4204. Civil penalty for holding household goods hostage.
Sec. 4205. Working group for development of practices and procedures to 
                            enhance Federal-State relations.
Sec. 4206. Consumer handbook on DOT web site.
Sec. 4207. Release of household goods broker information.
Sec. 4208. Consumer complaint information.
Sec. 4209. Insurance regulations.
Sec. 4210. Estimating requirements.
Sec. 4211. Application of State consumer protection laws to certain 
                            household goods carriers.
Sec. 4212. Applicability to household goods motor carriers.
Sec. 4213. Violations of Out-of-Service Orders.
Sec. 4214. Criminal penalty for holding goods hostage.
             TITLE V--TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH AND EDUCATION

                          Subtitle A--Funding

Sec. 5101. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 5102. Obligation ceiling.
Sec. 5103. Findings.
            Subtitle B--Research, Technology, and Education

Sec. 5201. Research, technology, and education.
Sec. 5202. Long-term bridge performance program; innovative bridge 
                            research and deployment program.
Sec. 5203. Surface transportation environment and planning cooperative 
                            research program.
Sec. 5204. Technology deployment.
Sec. 5205. Training and education.
Sec. 5206. Freight planning capacity building.
Sec. 5207. Advanced travel forecasting procedures program.
Sec. 5208. National cooperative freight transportation research 
                            program.
Sec. 5209. Future strategic highway research program.
Sec. 5210. Transportation safety information management system project.
Sec. 5211. Surface transportation congestion relief solutions research 
                            initiative.
Sec. 5212. Motor carrier efficiency study.
Sec. 5213. Transportation research and development strategic planning.
Sec. 5214. Limitation on remedies for future strategic highway research 
                            program.
Sec. 5215. Center for Transportation Advancement and Regional 
                            Development.
Sec. 5216. Hazardous materials research projects.
      Subtitle C--University Transportation Research; Scholarship 
                             Opportunities

Sec. 5301. National university transportation centers.
Sec. 5302. University transportation research.
Sec. 5303. Transportation scholarship opportunities program.
                   Subtitle D--Advanced Technologies

Sec. 5401. Advanced heavy-duty vehicle technologies research program.
Sec. 5402. Commercial remote sensing products and spatial information 
                            technologies.
Sec. 5403. Transportation technology innovation and demonstration 
                            program.
              Subtitle E--Transportation Data and Analysis

Sec. 5501. Bureau of Transportation Statistics.
Sec. 5502. Reports of Bureau of Transportation Statistics.
        Subtitle F--Intelligent Transportation Systems Research

Sec. 5601. Short title.
Sec. 5602. Goals and purposes.
Sec. 5603. General authorities and requirements.
Sec. 5604. National architecture and Standards.
Sec. 5605. Research and development.
Sec. 5606. Infrastructure development.
Sec. 5607. Road weather research and development program.
Sec. 5608. Definitions.
Sec. 5609. Rural interstate corridor communications study.
Sec. 5610. Centers for surface transportation excellence.
Sec. 5611. Repeal.
Sec. 5612. Special rule for fiscal year 2004.
         TITLE VI--TRANSPORTATION PLANNING AND PROJECT DELIVERY

Sec. 6001. Transportation planning.
Sec. 6002. Efficient environmental reviews for project decisionmaking.
Sec. 6003. Policy on historic sites.
Sec. 6004. Exemption of Interstate System.
Sec. 6005. Interstate compacts.
Sec. 6006. Development of transportation plan.
Sec. 6007. Interstate agreements.
Sec. 6008. Regulations relating to transportation planning.
Sec. 6009. Special rules relating to project development procedures.
             TITLE VII--HAZARDOUS MATERIALS TRANSPORTATION

Sec. 7001. Amendment of title 49, United States Code.
Sec. 7002. Findings and purpose.
Sec. 7003. Definitions.
Sec. 7004. General regulatory authority.
Sec. 7005. Representation and tampering.
Sec. 7006. Technical amendments.
Sec. 7007. Training of certain employees.
Sec. 7008. Registration.
Sec. 7009. Providing shipping papers.
Sec. 7010. Rail tank cars.
Sec. 7011. Unsatisfactory safety rating.
Sec. 7012. Training curriculum for the public sector.
Sec. 7013. Planning and training grants, monitoring, and review.
Sec. 7014. Special permits and exclusions.
Sec. 7015. Uniform forms and Procedures.
Sec. 7016. International uniformity of standards and requirements.
Sec. 7017. Administrative.
Sec. 7018. Enforcement.
Sec. 7019. Civil penalty.
Sec. 7020. Criminal penalty.
Sec. 7021. Preemption.
Sec. 7022. Relationship to other laws.
Sec. 7023. Judicial review.
Sec. 7024. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 7025. Determining amount of undeclared shipments of hazardous 
                            materials entering the United States.
Sec. 7026. Conforming amendments.
Sec. 7027. National first responder transportation incident response 
                            system.
Sec. 7028. Common carrier pipeline system.
      TITLE VIII--TRANSPORTATION DISCRETIONARY SPENDING GUARANTEE

Sec. 8001. Discretionary spending limits for the highway and mass 
                            transit categories.
Sec. 8002. Adjustments to align highway spending with revenues.
Sec. 8003. Level of obligation limitations.
Sec. 8004. Enforcement of guarantee.
Sec. 8005. Transfer of Federal transit administrative expenses.
                       TITLE IX--RAIL PROVISIONS

Sec. 9001. High-speed rail corridor development.
                        TITLE X--TAX PROVISIONS

Sec. 10001. Short title.
Sec. 10002. Extension of highway-related taxes and trust funds.
Sec. 10003. Technical corrections regarding highway-related taxes.

                     TITLE I--FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAYS

                 Subtitle A--Authorization of Programs

SEC. 1101. AUTHORIZATIONS OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    (a) In General.--The following sums are authorized to be 
appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
Account):
            (1) Interstate maintenance program.--For the Interstate 
        maintenance program under section 119 of title 23, United 
        States Code, $4,323,076,000 for fiscal year 2004, 
        $4,486,153,000 for fiscal year 2005, $4,601,932,000 for fiscal 
        year, 2006, $4,715,480,000 for fiscal year 2007, $4,831,867,000 
        for fiscal year 2008, and $4,951,164,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (2) National highway system.--For the National Highway 
        System under section 103 of that title, $5,187,691,000 for 
        fiscal year 2004, $5,557,383,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
        $5,705,318,000 for fiscal year 2006, $5,831,576,000 for fiscal 
        year 2007, $5,971,240,000 for fiscal year 2008, and 
        $6,111,396,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (3) Bridge program.--For the bridge program under section 
        144 of that title, $3,709,440,000 for fiscal year 2004, 
        $3,942,176,000 for fiscal year 2005, $4,037,231,000 for fiscal 
        year 2006, $4,134,661,000 for fiscal year 2007, $4,234,528,000 
        for fiscal year 2008, and $4,336,891,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (4) Highway safety improvement program.--For the highway 
        safety improvement program under sections 130 and 152 of that 
        title, $630,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $645,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2006, $660,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, 
        $680,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $695,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2009. Of such funds \1/3\ per fiscal year shall be 
        available to carry out section 130 and \2/3\ shall be available 
        to carry out section 152.
            (5) Surface transportation program.--For the surface 
        transportation program under section 133 of that title, 
        $6,052,306,000 for fiscal year 2004, $6,950,614,000 for fiscal 
        year 2005, $6,788,704,000 for fiscal year 2006, $6,947,672,000 
        for fiscal year 2007, $7,110,614,000 for fiscal year 2008, and 
        $7,282,629,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (6) Congestion mitigation and air quality improvement 
        program.--For the congestion mitigation and air quality 
        improvement program under section 149 of that title, 
        $1,469,846,000 for fiscal year 2004, $1,521,592,000 for fiscal 
        year 2005, $1,559,257,000 for fiscal year 2006, $1,597,863,000 
        for fiscal year 2007, $1,637,435,000 for fiscal year 2008, and 
        $1,677,996,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (7) Appalachian development highway system program.--For 
        the Appalachian development highway system program under 
        section 14501 of title 40, United States Code, $460,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2004 and $470,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 
        through 2009.
            (8) Recreational trails program.--For the recreational 
        trails program under section 206 of title 23, United States 
        Code, $53,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, $70,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2005, $80,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $90,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2007, $100,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and 
        $110,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (9) Federal lands highways program.--
                    (A) Indian reservation roads.--For Indian 
                reservation roads under section 204 of title 23, United 
                States Code, $325,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, 
                $365,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $390,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2006, $395,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, 
                $420,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $420,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2009.
                    (B) Park roads and parkways.--For park roads and 
                parkways roads under section 204 of that title, 
                $170,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, $185,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2005, $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, 
                $215,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $225,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2008, and $225,000,000 for fiscal year 
                2009.
                    (C) Public lands highway.--For public lands highway 
                under section 204 of that title, $250,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2004, $260,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
                $280,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $280,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2007, $290,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, 
                and $300,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
                    (D) Refuge roads.--For refuge roads under section 
                204 of that title, $20,000,000 for each of fiscal years 
                2004 through 2009.
            (10) National corridor infrastructure improvement 
        program.--For the national corridor infrastructure improvement 
        program under section 1301 of this title, $600,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2005, $600,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, 
        $600,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $600,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2008, and $600,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (11) Coordinated border infrastructure program.--For the 
        coordinated border infrastructure program under section 1302 of 
        this title, $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $200,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2006, $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, 
        $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $225,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2009.
            (12) Projects of national and regional significance 
        program.--For the projects of national and regional 
        significance program under section 1304 of this title, 
        $1,100,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $1,100,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2006, $1,200,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $1,300,000,000 
        for fiscal year 2008, and $1,300,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (13) National scenic byways program.--For the national 
        scenic byways program under section 162 of title 23, United 
        States Code, $30,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, $40,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2005, $45,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $55,000,000 
        for fiscal year 2007, $55,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and 
        $60,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (14) Deployment of 511 traveler information program.--For 
        the 511 traveler information program under section 1204(c)(7) 
        of this title, $6,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 
        2009.
            (15) High priority projects program.--For the high priority 
        projects program under section 117 of title 23, United States 
        Code, $2,496,450,000 for fiscal year 2005, $2,244,550,000 for 
        fiscal year 2006, $2,143,250,000 for fiscal year 2007, 
        $2,192,450,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $2,050,450,000 for 
        fiscal year 2009.
            (16) Freight intermodal connector program.--For the freight 
        intermodal connector program under section 1303 of this title, 
        $421,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $421,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2006, $421,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $421,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2008, and $426,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (17) High risk rural road safety improvement program.--For 
        the high risk rural road safety improvement program under 
        section 1403 of this title, $105,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
        $110,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $120,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2007, $125,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $130,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2009.
            (18) Pedestrian and cyclist equity--safe routes to school 
        program.--For the safe routes to school program under section 
        1122(a) of this title, $175,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
        $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $200,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2007, $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $225,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2009.
    (b) Disadvantaged Business Enterprises.--
            (1) General rule.--Except to the extent that the Secretary 
        determines otherwise, not less than 10 percent of the amounts 
        made available for any program under titles I, III, and V of 
        this Act and section 403 of title 23, United States Code, shall 
        be expended with small business concerns owned and controlled 
        by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals.
            (2) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following 
        definitions apply:
                    (A) Small business concern.--The term ``small 
                business concern'' has the meaning such term has under 
                section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632); 
                except that such term shall not include any concern or 
                group of concerns controlled by the same socially and 
                economically disadvantaged individual or individuals 
                which has average annual gross receipts over the 
                preceding 3 fiscal years in excess of $17,420,000, as 
                adjusted by the Secretary for inflation.
                    (B) Socially and economically disadvantaged 
                individuals.--The term ``socially and economically 
                disadvantaged individuals'' has the meaning such term 
                has under section 8(d) of the Small Business Act (15 
                U.S.C. 637(d)) and relevant subcontracting regulations 
                promulgated pursuant thereto; except that women shall 
                be presumed to be socially and economically 
                disadvantaged individuals for purposes of this 
                subsection.
            (3) Annual listing of disadvantaged business enterprises.--
        Each State shall annually survey and compile a list of the 
        small business concerns referred to in paragraph (1) and the 
        location of such concerns in the State and notify the 
        Secretary, in writing, of the percentage of such concerns which 
        are controlled by women, by socially and economically 
        disadvantaged individuals (other than women), and by 
        individuals who are women and are otherwise socially and 
        economically disadvantaged individuals.
            (4) Uniform certification.--The Secretary shall establish 
        minimum uniform criteria for State governments to use in 
        certifying whether a concern qualifies for purposes of this 
        subsection. Such minimum uniform criteria shall include, but 
        not be limited to, on-site visits, personal interviews, 
        licenses, analysis of stock ownership, listing of equipment, 
        analysis of bonding capacity, listing of work completed, resume 
        of principal owners, financial capacity, and type of work 
        preferred.
            (5) Compliance with court orders.--Nothing in this 
        subsection limits the eligibility of an entity or person to 
        receive funds made available under titles I, III, and V of this 
        Act and section 403 of title 23, United States Code, if the 
        entity or person is prevented, in whole or in part, from 
        complying with paragraph (1) because a Federal court issues a 
        final order in which the court finds that the requirement of 
        paragraph (1), or the program established under paragraph (1), 
        is unconstitutional.

SEC. 1102. OBLIGATION CEILING.

    (a) General Limitation.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law 
but subject to subsections (g) and (h), the obligations for Federal-aid 
highway and highway safety construction programs shall not exceed--
            (1) $33,643,000,000 for fiscal year 2004;
            (2) $34,412,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
            (3) $36,287,100,000 for fiscal year 2006;
            (4) $37,616,700,000 for fiscal year 2007;
            (5) $38,876,400,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
            (6) $40,231,500,000 for fiscal year 2009.
    (b) Exceptions.--The limitations under subsection (a) shall not 
apply to obligations--
            (1) under section 125 of title 23, United States Code;
            (2) under section 147 of the Surface Transportation 
        Assistance Act of 1978;
            (3) under section 9 of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1981;
            (4) under sections 131(b) and 131(j) of the Surface 
        Transportation Assistance Act of 1982;
            (5) under sections 149(b) and 149(c) of the Surface 
        Transportation and Uniform Relocation Assistance Act of 1987;
            (6) under sections 1103 through 1108 of the Intermodal 
        Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991;
            (7) under section 157 of title 23, United States Code, as 
        in effect on June 8, 1998;
            (8) under section 105 of title 23, United States Code (but, 
        for each of fiscal years 1998 through 2013), only in an amount 
        equal to $639,000,000 per fiscal year; and
            (9) for Federal-aid highway programs for which obligation 
        authority was made available under the Transportation Equity 
        Act for the 21st Century or subsequent public laws for multiple 
        years or to remain available until used, but only to the extent 
        that such obligation authority has not lapsed or been used.
    (c) Distribution of Obligation Authority.--For each of fiscal years 
2004 through 2009, the Secretary shall--
            (1) not distribute obligation authority provided by 
        subsection (a) for such fiscal year for amounts authorized for 
        administrative expenses and amounts authorized for the highway 
        use tax evasion program and the Bureau of Transportation 
        Statistics;
            (2) not distribute an amount of obligation authority 
        provided by subsection (a) that is equal to the unobligated 
        balance of amounts made available from the Highway Trust Fund 
        (other than the Mass Transit Account) for Federal-aid highway 
        and highway safety programs for previous fiscal years the funds 
        for which are allocated by the Secretary;
            (3) determine the ratio that--
                    (A) the obligation authority provided by subsection 
                (a) for such fiscal year less the aggregate of amounts 
                not distributed under paragraphs (1) and (2), bears to
                    (B) the total of the sums authorized to be 
                appropriated for Federal-aid highway and highway safety 
                construction programs (other than sums authorized to be 
                appropriated for sections set forth in paragraphs (1) 
                through (7) of subsection (b) and sums authorized to be 
                appropriated for section 105 of title 23, United States 
                Code, equal to the amount referred to in subsection 
                (b)(8)) for such fiscal year less the aggregate of the 
                amounts not distributed under paragraph (1) of this 
                subsection;
            (4) distribute the obligation authority provided by 
        subsection (a) less the aggregate amounts not distributed under 
        paragraphs (1) and (2) for section 117 of title 23, United 
        States Code (relating to high priority projects program), 
        section 14501 of title 40, United States Code (relating to 
        Appalachian development highway system), and $2,000,000,000 for 
        such fiscal year under section 105 of title 23, United States 
        Code (relating to minimum guarantee) so that amount of 
        obligation authority available for each of such sections is 
        equal to the amount determined by multiplying the ratio 
        determined under paragraph (3) or 0.932 in any case in which 
        such ratio is less than 0.932 (except that the higher ratio 
        shall not apply to the program under section 14501 of title 40, 
        United States Code) by the sums authorized to be appropriated 
        for such section (except in the case of section 105, 
        $2,000,000,000) for such fiscal year;
            (5) distribute the obligation authority provided by 
        subsection (a) less the aggregate amounts not distributed under 
        paragraphs (1) and (2) and amounts distributed under paragraph 
        (4) for each of the programs that are allocated by the 
        Secretary under this Act and title 23, United States Code 
        (other than activities to which paragraph (1) applies and 
        programs to which paragraph (4) applies) by multiplying the 
        ratio determined under paragraph (3) or 0.932 in any case in 
        which such ratio is less than 0.932 (except that the higher 
        ratio shall not apply to the program under section 14501 of 
        title 40, United States Code) by the sums authorized to be 
        appropriated for such program for such fiscal year; and
            (6) distribute the obligation authority provided by 
        subsection (a) less the aggregate amounts not distributed under 
        paragraphs (1) and (2) and amounts distributed under paragraphs 
        (4) and (5) for Federal-aid highway and highway safety 
        construction programs (other than the minimum guarantee 
        program, but only to the extent that amounts apportioned for 
        the minimum guarantee program for such fiscal year exceed 
        $2,639,000,000, and the Appalachian development highway system 
        program) that are apportioned by the Secretary under this Act 
        and title 23, United States Code, in the ratio that--
                    (A) sums authorized to be appropriated for such 
                programs that are apportioned to each State for such 
                fiscal year, bear to
                    (B) the total of the sums authorized to be 
                appropriated for such programs that are apportioned to 
                all States for such fiscal year.
    (d) Redistribution of Unused Obligation Authority.--Notwithstanding 
subsection (c), the Secretary shall after August 1 of each of fiscal 
years 2004 through 2009 revise a distribution of the obligation 
authority made available under subsection (c) if an amount made 
available under this section will not be obligated during the fiscal 
year and redistribute sufficient amounts to those States able to 
obligate amounts in addition to those previously distributed during 
that fiscal year. In making the redistribution, the Secretary shall 
give priority to those States having large unobligated balances of 
funds apportioned under sections 104 and 144 of title 23, United States 
Code.
    (e) Applicability of Obligation Limitations to Transportation 
Research Programs.--Obligation limitations imposed by subsection (a) 
shall apply to transportation research programs carried out under 
chapter 5 of title 23, United States Code, and under title V of this 
Act; except that obligation authority made available for such programs 
under such limitations shall remain available for a period of 3 fiscal 
years.
    (f) Redistribution of Certain Authorized Funds.--Not later than 30 
days after the date of the distribution of obligation authority under 
subsection (c) for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009, the 
Secretary shall distribute to the States any funds (1) that are 
authorized to be appropriated for such fiscal year for Federal-aid 
highway programs, and (2) that the Secretary determines will not be 
allocated to the States, and will not be available for obligation, in 
such fiscal year due to the imposition of any obligation limitation for 
such fiscal year. Such distribution to the States shall be made in the 
same ratio as the distribution of obligation authority under subsection 
(c)(6). The funds so distributed shall be available for any purposes 
described in section 133(b) of title 23, United States Code.
    (g) Special Rule.--Obligation authority distributed for a fiscal 
year under subsection (c)(4) for a section set forth in subsection 
(c)(4) shall remain available until used for obligation of funds for 
such section and shall be in addition to the amount of any limitation 
imposed on obligations for Federal-aid highway and highway safety 
construction programs for future fiscal years.
    (h) Increase in Obligation Limit.--Limitations on obligations 
imposed by subsection (a) for a fiscal year shall be increased by an 
amount equal to the amount determined pursuant to section 
251(b)(1)(B)(ii)(I)(cc) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit 
Control Act of 1985 (2 U.S.C. 901(b)(2)(B)(ii)(I)(cc)) for such fiscal 
year. Any such increase shall be distributed in accordance with this 
section.
    (i) Limitations on Obligations for Administrative Expenses.--
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the total amount of all 
obligations under section 104(a) of title 23, United States Code, shall 
not exceed--
            (1) $390,000,000 for fiscal year 2004;
            (2) $395,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
            (3) $395,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
            (4) $395,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
            (5) $395,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
            (6) $400,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.

SEC. 1103. APPORTIONMENTS.

    (a) Administrative Expenses.--Section 104(a) of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking paragraphs (1) and (2) and inserting the 
        following:
            ``(1) Deduction for administrative expenses.--Whenever an 
        apportionment is made of the sums made available for 
        expenditure on the surface transportation program under section 
        133 for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall deduct $390,000,000 
        for fiscal year 2004, $365,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
        $395,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $395,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2007, $395,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $400,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2009.
            ``(2) Use of funds.--The amounts deducted by paragraph (1) 
        are authorized for the following purposes:
                    ``(A) To administer the provisions of law to be 
                financed from appropriations for the Federal-aid 
                highway program and programs authorized under chapter 
                2.
                    ``(B) To make transfers of such sums as the 
                Secretary determines to be appropriate to the 
                Appalachian Regional Commission for administrative 
                activities associated with the Appalachian development 
                highway system.''; and
            (2) in paragraph (4) by striking ``and the Federal Motor 
        Carrier Safety Administration''.
    (b) National Highway System.--Section 104(b) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``the deduction authorized by subsection 
        (a) and''; and
            (2) in paragraph (1)(A)--
                    (A) by striking ``$36,400,000 for each fiscal 
                year'' and inserting ``$40,000,000 for fiscal year 
                2004, $40,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $40,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2006, $50,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, 
                $50,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $50,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2009''; and
                    (B) by striking ``$18,800,000 for each of fiscal 
                years 1998 through 2002'' and inserting ``$20,000,000 
                for fiscal year 2004 and $30,000,000 for each of fiscal 
                years 2005 through 2009''.
    (c) Report.--Section 104(j) of title 23, United States Code, is 
amended by striking ``submit to Congress a report'' and inserting 
``transmit to Congress a report, and also make such report available to 
the public in a user-friendly format via the Internet,''.
    (d) Set-asides.--Section 104 of such title is amended by adding at 
the end the following:
    ``(m) Set-asides.--
            ``(1) Highway use tax evasion program.--Whenever an 
        apportionment is made of the sums made available for 
        expenditure on the National Highway System under section 103 
        for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall set aside for highway 
        use tax evasion projects under section 143 of this title 
        $12,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, $30,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2005, $30,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $20,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2007, $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $7,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2009.
            ``(2) Commonwealth of puerto rico highway program.--
        Whenever an apportionment is made of the sums made available 
        for expenditure on the National Highway System under section 
        103 for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall set aside for the 
        Commonwealth of Puerto Rico highway program under section 
        1214(r) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century 
        (112 Stat. 209), $115,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, 
        $125,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $130,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2006, $130,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $140,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2008, and $140,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            ``(3) Deployment of magnetic levitation transportation 
        projects.--Whenever an apportionment is made of the sums made 
        available for expenditure on the National Highway System under 
        section 103 for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall set aside 
        for carrying out section 1118 of the Transportation Equity Act: 
        A Legacy for Users, relating to deployment of magnetic 
        levitation transportation projects, $15,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2005 and $20,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 
        2009.
            ``(4) Congestion pricing pilot program.--Whenever an 
        apportionment is made of the sums made available for 
        expenditure on the congestion mitigation and air quality 
        improvement program under section 149 for a fiscal year, the 
        Secretary shall set aside for the congestion pricing pilot 
        program under section 1209 of the Transportation Equity Act: A 
        Legacy for Users $15,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, $15,000,000 
        for fiscal year 2005, $15,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, 
        $15,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $15,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2008, and $15,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            ``(5) Highways for life program.--Whenever an apportionment 
        is made of the sums made available for expenditure on the 
        Interstate maintenance program under section 119 for a fiscal 
        year, the Secretary shall set aside for the Highways for LIFE 
        program under section 1504 of the Transportation Equity Act: A 
        Legacy for Users $55,000,000 for fiscal year 2005 and 
        $60,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009.
            ``(6) Construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal 
        facilities.--Whenever an apportionment is made of the sums made 
        available for expenditure on the National Highway System under 
        section 103 for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall set aside 
        for construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities 
        under section 165 of this title $60,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2004, $70,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $75,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2006, $75,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $75,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2008, and $75,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            ``(7) ITS deployment.--Whenever an apportionment is made of 
        the sums made available for expenditure on the surface 
        transportation program under section 133 for a fiscal year, the 
        Secretary shall set aside for carrying out sections 5208 and 
        5209 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 
        Stat. 458; 112 Stat. 460), $100,000,000 for each of fiscal 
        years 2004 and 2005.
            ``(8) Safety incentive grants for use of seat belts.--
        Whenever an apportionment is made of the sums made available 
        for expenditure on the surface transportation program under 
        section 133 for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall set aside 
        for safety incentive grants for use of seat belts under section 
        157 of this title $112,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2004 
        and 2005.
            ``(9) Safety incentives to prevent operation of motor 
        vehicles by intoxicated persons.--Whenever an apportionment is 
        made of the sums made available for expenditure on the surface 
        transportation program under section 133 for a fiscal year, the 
        Secretary shall set aside for safety incentives to prevent 
        operation of motor vehicles by intoxicated persons under 
        section 163 of this title $110,000,000 for each of fiscal years 
        2004 and 2005.
            ``(10)  transportation and community and system 
        preservation program.--Whenever an apportionment is made of the 
        sums made available for expenditure on the surface 
        transportation program under section 133 for a fiscal year, the 
        Secretary shall set aside for the transportation and community 
        and system preservation program under section 1221 of the 
        Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (23 U.S.C. 101 
        note) $25,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, $30,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2005, $35,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $35,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2007, and $35,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2008 
        and 2009.''.
    (e) Conforming Amendments.--Section 104 of such title is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b) by striking ``set-aside authorized by 
        subsection (f)'' and inserting ``set-asides authorized by 
        subsections (f) and (m)'';
            (2) in subsection (f)(1)--
                    (A) by striking ``, after making the deduction 
                authorized by subsection (a) of this section,''; and
                    (B) by striking ``remaining''; and
            (3) in subsection (i) by striking ``deducted'' and 
        inserting ``authorized to be appropriated''.
    (f) Puerto Rico Highway Program.--Section 1214(r) of the 
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 209; 117 
Stat. 1114; 118 Stat. 1149) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``authorized by section 
        1101(a)(15) for each of fiscal years 1998 through 2005'' and 
        inserting ``set aside by section 104(m)(2) of title 23, United 
        States Code, for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``made available by 
        section 1101(a)(15) of this Act'' and inserting ``set aside by 
        section 104(m)(2) of title 23, United States Code,''.

SEC. 1104. MINIMUM GUARANTEE.

    (a) General Rule.--Section 105(a) of title 23, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) by striking ``1998 through 2003'' and inserting ``2004 
        through 2009'';
            (2) by striking ``and recreational trails'' and inserting 
        ``recreational trails, coordinated border infrastructure, 
        freight intermodal connectors, safe routes to school, highway 
        safety improvement, and high risk rural road safety 
        improvement''; and
            (3) by inserting ``(other than subsection (g))'' after 
        ``under this section''.
    (b) Treatment of Funds.--Section 105(c)(1) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``$2,800,000,000'' and inserting 
        ``$2,870,000,000 in fiscal year 2004, $2,941,750,000 in fiscal 
        year 2005, $3,015,293,750 in fiscal year 2006, $3,090,676,094 
        in fiscal year 2007, $3,167,942,996 in fiscal year 2008, and 
        $3,247,141,571 in fiscal year 2009''; and
            (2) by striking ``and recreational trails'' each place it 
        appears and inserting ``recreational trails, coordinated border 
        infrastructure, freight intermodal connectors, safe routes to 
        school, highway safety improvement, and high risk rural road 
        safety improvement''.
    (c) Authorization.--Section 105(d) of such title is amended by 
striking ``1998 through 2003'' and inserting ``2004 through 2009''.
    (d) Special Rule.--Section 105(e) of such title is amended to read 
as follows:
    ``(e) Special Rule.--Notwithstanding any other provision of this 
section, if, in any of fiscal years 2004 through 2009, the quotient 
obtained by dividing--
            ``(1) a State's percentage share of the total 
        apportionments for such fiscal year for programs referred to in 
        subsection (a) (other than minimum guarantee), by
            ``(2) the percentage for such State listed in subsection 
        (b),
is greater than 1.3, the Secretary shall allocate to the State with the 
highest quotient the minimum apportionment specified in subsection (a). 
The apportionments for the programs referred to in subsection (a) for 
the State with the highest quotient, estimated tax payments to the 
Highway Trust Fund attributable to highway users referred to in 
subsection (f) for such State, and percentage referred to in subsection 
(b) for such State shall be excluded from the computations required in 
subsection (f).''.
    (e) Guaranteed Specified Return.--Section 105(f) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) in the subsection heading by striking ``of 90.5'' and 
        inserting ``Specified''; and
            (2) in paragraph (1) by striking ``1999 through 2003'' and 
        inserting ``2004 through 2009''.
    (f) Equity Adjustment.--Section 105 of such title is further 
amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(g) Equity Adjustment.--
            ``(1) In general.--For each of fiscal years 2004 through 
        2009, after making the allocations under subsection (a), the 
        Secretary shall allocate among the States additional amounts 
        sufficient to ensure that no State receives an allocation under 
        this subsection and subsection (a) that in the aggregate is 
        less than the amount the State would have received under 
        subsection (a) had high priority projects not been included 
        among the list of programs referred to in subsection (a). Any 
        such additional allocations shall be excluded from the 
        computations required in subsection (f).
            ``(2) Rate of return.--For each of fiscal years 2004 
        through 2009, the Secretary shall allocate among the States 
        amounts sufficient to ensure that, for the aggregate of funds 
        distributed under subsection (a), paragraph (1) of this 
        subsection, and this paragraph, the rate of return, as defined 
        in subsection (f)(1), is not less than 90.5. The special rule 
        in subsection (e) shall not apply to the calculation made under 
        this paragraph.''.
    (g) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) Section 131.--Section 131(m) of title 23, United States 
        Code, is amended by striking ``in accordance with the program 
        of projects approval process of section 105'' and inserting 
        ``in accordance with the approval process of section 106''.
            (2) Section 140.--Section 140 of such title is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a) by striking ``programs for 
                projects as provided for in subsection (a) of section 
                105 of this title'' and inserting ``project under this 
                chapter''; and
                    (B) in subsection (c) by striking ``subsection 
                104(b)(3) of this title'' and inserting ``section 
                104(b)(3)''.
    (h) Scope Adjustment.--
            (1) Determination of set-aside.--Before allocating funds 
        provided to carry out the program under section 1301 of this 
        Act, the Secretary shall set aside an amount sufficient to 
        ensure that the quotient obtained by dividing--
                    (A) the sum of--
                            (i) the amounts authorized for the programs 
                        identified in section 105(a) of title 23, 
                        United States Code,
                            (ii) the amounts authorized under section 
                        105(g) of such title, and
                            (iii) the amount apportioned under this 
                        subsection, by
                    (B) the total contract authority authorized for the 
                Federal-aid highway program,
        equals 0.926.
            (2) Apportionment of funds.--The amount set aside under 
        paragraph (1) shall be added to the amount authorized for the 
        Surface Transportation Program under section 104(b)(3)(A) of 
        title 23, United States Code, and shall be included in the 
        calculation of minimum guarantee under section 105(a) of such 
        title.
            (3) Restoration.--The Secretary shall make available such 
        sums as may be necessary to restore to the funds made available 
        to carry out the program under section 1301 an amount equal to 
        the amount set aside under paragraph (1).
            (4) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized 
        to be appropriated out of the Highway Trust Fund (other than 
        the Mass Transit Account) such sums as may be necessary to 
        carry out this subsection.
            (5) Applicability of title 23.--Funds made available to 
        carry out this subsection shall be available for obligation in 
        the same manner as if such funds were apportioned under chapter 
        1 of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 1105. PROJECT APPROVAL AND OVERSIGHT.

    Section 106 of title 23, United States Code, is amended by striking 
subsection (h) and inserting the following:
    ``(h) Oversight Program.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish an 
        oversight program to monitor the effective and efficient use of 
        funds authorized to carry out this title. At a minimum, the 
        program shall be responsive to all areas related to financial 
        integrity and project delivery.
            ``(2) Financial integrity.--
                    ``(A) Financial management systems.--The Secretary 
                shall perform annual reviews that address elements of 
                the State transportation departments' financial 
                management systems that affect projects approved under 
                subsection (a).
                    ``(B) Project costs.--The Secretary shall develop 
                minimum standards for estimating project costs and 
                shall periodically evaluate the States' practices for 
                estimating project costs, awarding contracts, and 
                reducing project costs.
                    ``(C) Responsibility of the states.--The States are 
                responsible for determining that subrecipients of 
                Federal funds under this title have sufficient 
                accounting controls to properly manage such Federal 
                funds. The Secretary shall periodically review the 
                States' monitoring of subrecipients.
            ``(3) Project delivery.--The Secretary shall perform annual 
        reviews that address elements of a State's project delivery 
        system, which includes one or more activities that are involved 
        in the life cycle of a project from its conception to its 
        completion.
            ``(4) Responsibility of the states.--The States are 
        responsible for determining that subrecipients of Federal funds 
        under this title have adequate project delivery systems for 
        projects approved under this section. The Secretary shall 
        periodically review the States' monitoring of subrecipients.
            ``(5) Specific oversight responsibilities.--Nothing in this 
        section shall affect or discharge any oversight responsibility 
        of the Secretary specifically provided for under this title or 
        other Federal law. In addition, the Secretary shall retain full 
        oversight responsibilities for the design and construction of 
        all Appalachian development highways under section 14501 of 
        title 40.
    ``(i) Major Projects.--
            ``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision in 
        this section, a recipient of Federal financial assistance for a 
        project under this title with an estimated total cost of 
        $500,000,000 or more, or any other project in the discretion of 
        the Secretary, shall submit to the Secretary a project 
        management plan and an annual financial plan.
            ``(2) Project management plan.--The project management plan 
        shall document the procedures and processes in place to provide 
        timely information to the project decision makers to manage 
        effectively the scope, costs, schedules, and quality, and the 
        Federal requirements of the project and the role of the agency 
        leadership and management team in the delivery of the project.
            ``(3) Financial plan.--The financial plan shall be based on 
        detailed estimates of the cost to complete the project. Annual 
        updates shall be submitted based on reasonable assumptions, as 
        determined by the Secretary, of future increases in the cost to 
        complete the project.
    ``(j) Other Projects.--A recipient of Federal financial assistance 
for a project under this title with an estimated total cost of 
$100,000,000 or more that is not covered by subsection (h) shall 
prepare an annual financial plan. Annual financial plans prepared under 
this subsection shall be made available to the Secretary for review 
upon the Secretary's request.''.

SEC. 1106. USE OF EXCESS FUNDS.

    Section 106 of title 23, United States Code, is further amended by 
adding at the end the following:
    ``(k) Use of Excess Funds.--
            ``(1) Audits.--A State may audit projects funded with 
        amounts apportioned under sections 104 and 144 to determine 
        whether any amounts obligated for a project are excess funds.
            ``(2) Plans for use of excess funds.--If a State 
        determines, after conducting an audit under paragraph (1), that 
        funds obligated for a project are excess funds, the State may 
        develop a plan for obligating the funds for the design and 
        construction of--
                    ``(A) with respect to excess funds derived from the 
                surface transportation program under section 133(d)(1), 
                133(d)(2), or 133(d)(3), the highway bridge replacement 
                and rehabilitation program under section 144, the 
                congestion mitigation and air quality improvement 
                program under section 149, or the recreational trails 
                program under section 206, one or more projects that 
                are eligible for funding under that program; and
                    ``(B) with respect to excess funds derived from any 
                other program under this title, one or more projects 
                that are eligible for funding those programs or the 
                surface transportation program under section 133.
            ``(3) Certification to the secretary.--A State that has 
        developed a plan under paragraph (2) shall transmit to the 
        Secretary a certification that the State has conducted an audit 
        under paragraph (1) and developed the plan in accordance with 
        paragraph (2).
            ``(4) Implementation of plans.--After transmitting a 
        certification to the Secretary with respect to a plan under 
        paragraph (3), the State may carry out the plan.
            ``(5) Applicability of requirements.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Except as provided by 
                subparagraph (B), excess funds used to carry out a 
                project under this section shall be subject to the 
                requirements of this title that are applicable to the 
                program under which the project is carried out.
                    ``(B) Stp allocations.--Section 133(d) shall not 
                apply to excess funds used to carry out a project under 
                this section, unless such funds are derived from 
                amounts apportioned under 104(b)(3).
            ``(6) Excess funds defined.--In this subsection, the term 
        `excess funds' means funds obligated for a project that remain 
        available for the project after the project has been completed 
        or canceled.''.

SEC. 1107. TEMPORARY TRAFFIC CONTROL DEVICES.

    (a) Standards.--Section 109(e) of title 23, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``(e) No funds'' and inserting the 
        following:
    ``(e) Installation of Safety Devices.--
            ``(1) Highway and railroad grade crossings and 
        drawbridges.--No funds''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(2) Temporary traffic control devices.--No funds shall be 
        approved for expenditure on any Federal-aid highway, or highway 
        affected under chapter 2 of this title, unless proper temporary 
        traffic control devices to improve safety in work zones will be 
        installed and maintained during construction, utility, and 
        maintenance operations on that portion of the highway with 
        respect to which such expenditures are to be made. Installation 
        and maintenance of the devices shall be in accordance with the 
        Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices.''.
    (b) Letting of Contracts.--Section 112 of such title is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (f);
            (2) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection (f); and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(g) Temporary Traffic Control Devices.--
            ``(1) Issuance of regulations.--The Secretary, after 
        consultation with appropriate Federal and State officials, 
        shall issue regulations establishing the conditions for the 
        appropriate use of, and expenditure of funds for, uniformed law 
        enforcement officers, positive protective measures between 
        workers and motorized traffic, and installation and maintenance 
        of temporary traffic control devices during construction, 
        utility, and maintenance operations.
            ``(2) Effects of regulations.--Based on regulations issued 
        under paragraph (1), a State shall--
                    ``(A) develop separate pay items for the use of 
                uniformed law enforcement officers, positive protective 
                measures between workers and motorized traffic, and 
                installation and maintenance of temporary traffic 
                control devices during construction, utility, and 
                maintenance operations; and
                    ``(B) incorporate such pay items into contract 
                provisions to be included in each contract entered into 
                by the State with respect to a highway project to 
                ensure compliance with section 109(e)(2).
            ``(3) Limitation.--Nothing in the regulations shall be 
        construed to prohibit a State from implementing standards that 
        are more stringent than those required under the regulations.
            ``(4) Positive protective measures defined.--In this 
        subsection, the term `positive protective measures' means 
        temporary traffic barriers, crash cushions, and other 
        strategies to avoid traffic accidents in work zones, including 
        full road closures.''.

SEC. 1108. REVENUE ALIGNED BUDGET AUTHORITY.

    (a) Allocation.--Section 110(a)(1) of title 23, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) by striking ``2000'' and inserting ``2006'';
            (2) by inserting after ``such fiscal year'' the following: 
        ``and the succeeding fiscal year''.
    (b) Reduction.--Section 110(a)(2) of such title is amended--
            (1) by striking ``2000'' and inserting ``2006'';
            (2) by striking ``October 1 of the succeeding'' and 
        inserting ``October 15 of such''; and
            (3) by inserting after ``Account)'' the following: ``for 
        such fiscal year and the succeeding fiscal year''.
    (c) General Distribution.--Section 110(b)(1)(A) of such title is 
amended by striking ``Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century'' 
and inserting ``Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users''.
    (d) Technical Amendment.--Section 110(b)(1)(A) of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended by striking ``for'' the second place it 
appears.

SEC. 1109. PAY TO PLAY REFORM.

    Section 112 of title 23, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following:
    ``(h) Construction.--Nothing in this section may be construed to 
prohibit a State from enacting a law or issuing an order that limits 
the amount of money an individual, who is doing business with a State 
agency for a Federal-aid highway project, may contribute to a political 
campaign.''.

SEC. 1110. EMERGENCY RELIEF.

    There is authorized to be appropriated for a fiscal year such sums 
as may be necessary for allocations by the Secretary described in 
subsections (a) and (b) of sections 125 of title 23, United States 
Code, if the total of those allocations in such fiscal year are in 
excess of $100,000,000.

SEC. 1111. SURFACE TRANSPORTATION PROGRAM.

    Section 133(f)(1) of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``1998 through 2000'' and inserting ``2004 
        through 2006''; and
            (2) by striking ``2001 through 2003'' and inserting ``2007 
        through 2009''.

SEC. 1112. HIGHWAY USE TAX EVASION PROJECTS.

    (a) Eligible Activities.--
            (1) Intergovernmental enforcement efforts.--Section 
        143(b)(2) of title 23, United States Code, is amended by 
        inserting before the period the following: ``; except that of 
        funds so made available for each of fiscal years 2004 through 
        2009, $2,000,000 shall be available only to carry out 
        intergovernmental enforcement efforts, including research and 
        training''.
            (2) Conditions on funds allocated to internal revenue 
        service.--Section 143(b)(3) of such title is amended by 
        striking ``The'' and inserting ``Except as otherwise provided 
        in this section, the''.
            (3) Limitation on use of funds.--Section 143(b)(4) of such 
        title is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph 
                (F);
                    (B) by striking the period at the end of 
                subparagraph (G) and inserting a semicolon; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(H) to support efforts between States and Indian 
                tribes to address issues related to State motor fuel 
                taxes; and
                    ``(I) to analyze and implement programs to reduce 
                tax evasion associated with foreign imported fuel.''.
            (4) Reports.--Section 143(b) of such title is amended by 
        adding at the end the following:
            ``(9) Reports.--The Commissioner of the Internal Revenue 
        Service and each State shall submit to the Secretary an annual 
        report that describes the projects, examinations, and criminal 
        investigations funded by and carried out under this section. 
        Such report shall specify the annual yield estimated for each 
        project funded under this section.''.
    (b) Excise Fuel Reporting System.--
            (1) In general.--Section 143(c)(1) of such title is 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking ``August 1, 1998,'' and inserting 
                ``90 days after the date of enactment of the 
                Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users,'';
                    (B) by striking ``development'' and inserting 
                ``completion, operation,''; and
                    (C) by striking ``an excise fuel reporting system 
                (in this subsection referred to as `the system')'' and 
                inserting ``an excise summary terminal activity 
                reporting system''.
            (2) Elements of memorandum of understanding.--Section 
        143(c)(2) of such title is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``the system'' the first place it 
                appears and inserting ``the excise summary terminal 
                activity reporting system'';
                    (B) in subparagraph (A) by striking ``develop'' and 
                inserting ``complete'';
                    (C) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph 
                (B);
                    (D) by striking the period at the end of 
                subparagraph (C) and inserting ``; and''; and
                    (E) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(D) the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue 
                Service shall submit and the Secretary shall approve a 
                budget and project plan for the completion, operation, 
                and maintenance of the system.''; and
            (3) Funding priority.--Section 143(c)(3) of such title is 
        amended to read as follows:
            ``(3) Funding.--Of the amounts made available to carry out 
        this section for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009, the 
        Secretary shall make available to the Internal Revenue Service 
        such funds as may be necessary to complete, operate, and 
        maintain the excise summary terminal activity reporting system 
        in accordance with this subsection.''.
    (c) Registration System and Electronic Database.--Section 143 of 
such title is further amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(d) Pipeline, Vessel, and Barge Registration System.--
            ``(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of 
        enactment of this subsection, the Secretary shall enter into a 
        memorandum of understanding with the Commissioner of the 
        Internal Revenue Service for the purposes of the development, 
        operation, and maintenance of a registration system for 
        pipelines, vessels, and barges, and operators of such 
        pipelines, vessels, and barges, that make bulk transfers of 
        taxable fuel.
            ``(2) Elements of memorandum of understanding.--The 
        memorandum of understanding shall provide that--
                    ``(A) the Internal Revenue Service shall develop 
                and maintain the registration system through contracts;
                    ``(B) the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue 
                Service shall submit and the Secretary shall approve a 
                budget and project plan for development, operation, and 
                maintenance of the registration system;
                    ``(C) the registration system shall be under the 
                control of the Internal Revenue Service; and
                    ``(D) the registration system shall be made 
                available for use by appropriate State and Federal 
                revenue, tax, and law enforcement authorities, subject 
                to section 6103 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
            ``(3) Funding.--Of the amounts made available to carry out 
        this section for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009, the 
        Secretary shall make available to the Internal Revenue Service 
        such funds as may be necessary to complete, operate, and 
        maintain a registration system for pipelines, vessels, and 
        barges, and operators of such pipelines, vessels, and barges, 
        that make bulk transfers of taxable fuel in accordance with 
        this subsection.
    ``(e) Heavy Vehicle Use Tax Payment Database.--
            ``(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of 
        enactment of this subsection, the Secretary shall enter into a 
        memorandum of understanding with the Commissioner of the 
        Internal Revenue Service for the purposes of the establishment, 
        operation, and maintenance of an electronic database of heavy 
        vehicle highway use tax payments.
            ``(2) Elements of memorandum of understanding.--The 
        memorandum of understanding shall provide that--
                    ``(A) the Internal Revenue Service shall establish 
                and maintain the electronic database through contracts;
                    ``(B) the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue 
                Service shall submit and the Secretary shall approve a 
                budget and project plan for establishment, operation, 
                and maintenance of the electronic database;
                    ``(C) the electronic database shall be under the 
                control of the Internal Revenue Service; and
                    ``(D) the electronic database shall be made 
                available for use by appropriate State and Federal 
                revenue, tax, and law enforcement authorities, subject 
                to section 6103 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
            ``(3) Funding.--Of the amounts made available to carry out 
        this section for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009, the 
        Secretary shall make available to the Internal Revenue Service 
        such funds as may be necessary to establish, operate, and 
        maintain an electronic database of heavy vehicle highway use 
        tax payments in accordance with this subsection.
    ``(f) Reports.--Not later than March 31 and September 30 of each 
year, the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service shall provide 
reports to the Secretary on the status of the Internal Revenue Service 
projects funded under this section related to the excise summary 
terminal activity reporting system, the pipeline, vessel, and barge 
registration system, and the heavy vehicle use tax electronic 
database.''.

SEC. 1113. APPALACHIAN DEVELOPMENT HIGHWAY SYSTEM.

    (a) Apportionment.--The Secretary shall apportion funds made 
available by section 1101(a)(7) of this Act for fiscal years 2004 
through 2009 among the States based on the latest available cost to 
complete estimate for the Appalachian development highway system under 
section 14501 title 40, United States Code.
    (b) Applicability of Title 23.--Funds made available by section 
1101(a)(7) of this Act for the Appalachian development highway system 
shall be available for obligation in the same manner as if such funds 
were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code; 
except that the Federal share of the cost of any project under this 
section shall be determined in accordance with such section 14501 of 
title 40, United States Code, and such funds shall be available to 
construct highways and access roads under such section and shall remain 
available until expended.
    (c) Use of Toll Credits.--Section 120(j)(1) of title 23, United 
States Code is amended by inserting ``and the Appalachian development 
highway system program under section 14501 of title 40'' after 
``section 125''.

SEC. 1114. CONSTRUCTION OF FERRY BOATS AND FERRY TERMINAL FACILITIES.

    (a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 1 of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 165. Construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall carry out a program for 
construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities in accordance 
with section 129(c).
    ``(b) Federal Share.--The Federal share payable for construction of 
ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities under this section shall be 
80 percent of the cost thereof.
    ``(c) Availability of Amounts.--Amounts made available to carry out 
this section shall remain available until expended.
    ``(d) Set-Aside for Projects on NHS.--
            ``(1) In general.--$20,000,000 of the amount made available 
        to carry out this section for each of fiscal years 2004 through 
        2009 shall be obligated for the construction or refurbishment 
        of ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities and approaches to 
        such facilities within marine highway systems that are part of 
        the National Highway System.
            ``(2) Alaska.--$10,000,000 of the $20,000,000 for a fiscal 
        year made available under paragraph (1) shall be made available 
        to the State of Alaska.
            ``(3) New jersey.--$5,000,000 of the $20,000,000 for a 
        fiscal year made available under paragraph (1) shall be made 
        available to the State of New Jersey.
            ``(4) Washington.--$5,000,000 of the $20,000,000 for a 
        fiscal year made available under paragraph (1) shall be made 
        available to the State of Washington.
    ``(e) Applicability.--All provisions of this chapter that are 
applicable to the National Highway System, other than provisions 
relating to apportionment formula and Federal share, shall apply to 
funds made available to carry out this section, except as determined by 
the Secretary to be inconsistent with this section.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for subchapter I of chapter 
1 of such title is amended by adding at the end the following:

``165. Construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities.''.
    (c) National Ferry Database.--
            (1) Establishment.--The Secretary, acting through the 
        Bureau of Transportation Statistics, shall establish and 
        maintain a national ferry database.
            (2) Contents.--The database shall contain current 
        information regarding ferry systems, including information 
        regarding routes, vessels, passengers and vehicles carried, 
        funding sources and such other information as the Secretary 
        considers useful.
            (3) Update report.--Using information collected through the 
        database, the Secretary shall periodically modify as 
        appropriate the report submitted under section 1207(c) of the 
        Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (23 U.S.C. 129 
        note; 112 Stat. 185-186).
            (4) Requirements.--The Secretary shall--
                    (A) compile the database not later than 1 year 
                after the date of enactment of this Act and update the 
                database every 2 years thereafter;
                    (B) ensure that the database is easily accessible 
                to the public;
                    (C) make available, from the ferry boat and ferry 
                terminal program authorized under section 165 of title 
                23, United States Code, not more than $500,000 for each 
                of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 to establish the 
                database.

SEC. 1115. INTERSTATE MAINTENANCE DISCRETIONARY.

    (a) In General.--Section 118 of title 23, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (c)(1) by striking ``2003'' and inserting 
        ``2005'';
            (2) by striking subsection (c);
            (3) in subsection (e) by inserting ``Special Rules.--'' 
        before ``Funds made''; and
            (4) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as subsections 
        (c) and (d), respectively.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 103(d)(1) of such title is 
amended by striking ``or 118(c)''.
    (c) Technical Amendments.--
            (1) Section 114.--Section 114(a) of such title is amended 
        by striking ``Except as provided in section 117 of this title, 
        such'' and inserting ``Such''.
            (2) Section 116.--Section 116(b) of such title is amended 
        by striking ``highway department'' and inserting 
        ``transportation department''.
            (3) Section 120.--Section 120(e) of such title is amended 
        in the first sentence by striking ``such system'' and inserting 
        ``such highway''.
            (4) Section 126.--Section 126(a) of such title is amended 
        by inserting ``under'' before ``section 104(b)(3)''.
            (5) Section 127.--Section 127 of such title is amended by 
        striking ``118(b)(1)'' and inserting ``118(b)(2)''.
            (6) Bicycle and pedestrian safety grants.--Section 1212(i) 
        of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 
        Stat. 196-197) is amended by redesignating subparagraphs (D) 
        and (E) as paragraphs (2) and (3), respectively, and moving 
        such paragraphs 2 ems to the left.
    (d) Limitation.--The amendments made by this section shall not 
apply to, or have any affect with respect to, funds made available 
under section 118 of title 23, United States Code, before the date of 
enactment of this section.
    (e) Effective Date.--The amendments made by paragraphs (2) through 
(4) of subsection (a) and by subsection (b) shall take effect on 
September 30, 2005.

SEC. 1116. HIGHWAY BRIDGE.

    (a) Scour Countermeasures.--Section 144(d) of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended to read as follows:
    ``(d) Applications for and Approval of Assistance.--
            ``(1) Bridge replacement or rehabilitation.--Whenever any 
        State or States make application to the Secretary for 
        assistance in replacing or rehabilitating a highway bridge 
        which the priority system established under subsections (b) and 
        (c) shows to be eligible, the Secretary may approve Federal 
        participation in replacing such bridge with a comparable 
        facility or in rehabilitating such bridge.
            ``(2) Preventive maintenance, scour measures, and 
        applications of certain compositions.--Whenever any State makes 
        application to the Secretary for assistance in painting, 
        seismic retrofit, or preventive maintenance of, or installing 
        scour countermeasures or applying calcium magnesium acetate, 
        sodium acetate/formate, or other environmentally acceptable, 
        minimally corrosive anti-icing and de-icing compositions to, 
        the structure of a highway bridge, the Secretary may approve 
        Federal participation in the painting, seismic retrofit, or 
        preventive maintenance of, or installation of scour 
        countermeasures or application of acetate or sodium acetate/
        formate or such anti-icing or de-icing composition to, such 
        structure.
            ``(3) Eligibility.--The Secretary shall determine the 
        eligibility of highway bridges for replacement or 
        rehabilitation for each State based upon the unsafe highway 
        bridges in such State; except that a State may carry out a 
        project for preventive maintenance on a bridge, seismic 
        retrofit of a bridge, or installing scour countermeasures to a 
        bridge under this section without regard to whether the bridge 
        is eligible for replacement or rehabilitation under this 
        section.''.
    (b) Bridge Discretionary Set-Aside.--Section 144(g)(1) of such 
title is amended by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(D) Fiscal years 2004 through 2009.--Of the 
                amounts authorized to be appropriated to carry out the 
                bridge program under this section for each of the 
                fiscal years 2004 through 2009, all but $100,000,000 
                shall be apportioned as provided in subsection (e). 
                Such $100,000,000 shall be available at the discretion 
                of the Secretary; except that $25,000,000 shall be 
                available only for projects for the seismic retrofit of 
                bridges, and of which $10,000,000 shall be available 
                only for the seismic retrofit of a bridge described in 
                subsection (l), and except as provided in subparagraph 
                (E).
                    ``(E) Gravina access.--
                            ``(i) In general.--Of the amounts 
                        authorized to be appropriated to carry out the 
                        bridge program under this paragraph, for each 
                        of the fiscal years 2005 through 2009, 
                        $10,000,000 shall be set aside from the 
                        $100,000,000 available at the discretion of the 
                        Secretary under subparagraph (D) for the 
                        construction of a bridge joining the Island of 
                        Gravina to the community of Ketchikan in 
                        Alaska.
                            ``(ii) Scoring.--The project described in 
                        this subparagraph shall not be counted for 
                        purposes of the reduction set forth in the 
                        fourth sentence of subsection (e).''.
    (c) Off-System Bridges.--Section 144(g)(3) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``15 percent'' and inserting ``20 
        percent'';
            (2) by striking ``1987'' and inserting ``2005'';
            (3) by striking ``2004'' the first place it appears and all 
        that follows through ``2005,'' and inserting ``2009 for the 
        bridge program,'';
            (4) by inserting ``, perform systematic preventive 
        maintenance,'' after ``paint''; and
            (5) by inserting a comma before ``to highway bridges''.
    (d) Set-Aside for Transportation Infrastructure Finance and 
Innovation Act.--Section 144(g) of such title is amended by adding at 
the end the following:
            ``(4) Transportation infrastructure finance and innovation 
        act.--Whenever an apportionment is made under subsection (e) of 
        the sums made available for carrying out the bridge program 
        under this section for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall set 
        aside $130,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $140,000,000 for 
        each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 to carry out chapter 6 
        of title 23, United States Code.''.
    (e) Technical Amendment.--Section 144(i) of such title is amended 
by striking ``at the same time'' and all that follows through 
``Congress''.

SEC. 1117. TRANSPORTATION AND COMMUNITY AND SYSTEM PRESERVATION 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) Federal Share.--Section 1221(e)(2) of the Transportation Equity 
Act for the 21st Century (23 U.S.C. 101 note; 112 Stat. 223; 118 Stat. 
879; 118 Stat. 1149) is amended by inserting before the period at the 
end ``; except that such funds shall not be transferable and the 
Federal share for projects and activities carried out with such funds 
shall be determined in accordance with section 120(b) of title 23, 
United States Code''.
    (b) Planning Activities Pilot Program.--Section 1221 of such Act is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(f) Planning Activities Pilot Program.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish a pilot 
        program using funds set aside under paragraph (4) to support 
        planning and public participation activities related to highway 
        and public transportation projects.
            ``(2) Eligible activities.--Activities eligible to be 
        carried out under the pilot program may include the following:
                    ``(A) Improving data collection and analysis to 
                improve freight movement, intermodal connections, and 
                transportation access and efficiency for all users, 
                including children, older individuals, individuals with 
                disabilities, low-income individuals, and minority 
                communities.
                    ``(B) Supporting public participation by holding 
                public meetings using an interactive workshop format 
                facilitated by design or planning experts (or both) to 
                consider public input at the initial stages of project 
                development and during other phases of a project.
                    ``(C) Using innovative planning or design 
                visualization and simulation tools to improve the 
                evaluation of alternatives and their impacts and to 
                enhance public participation in the transportation 
                planning process, including tools having a structure 
                that enables modifications to scenarios and assumptions 
                in real time.
                    ``(D) Enhancing coordination among transportation, 
                land use, workforce development, human service, 
                economic development, and other agencies to strengthen 
                access to job training services, daycare centers, 
                health care facilities, senior centers, public schools, 
                universities, and residential areas, including the use 
                of integrated planning and service delivery, especially 
                for transit dependent and low-income individuals.
                    ``(E) Contracting with nonprofit organizations, 
                universities, and local agencies to deliver community-
                oriented transportation plans and projects, including 
                public outreach, context sensitive design, transit-
                oriented development, multimodal corridor investments, 
                commuter benefits deployment, and brownfield 
                redevelopment.
                    ``(F) Measuring and reporting on the annual 
                performance of the transportation system (or parts of) 
                relative to State or locally-established criteria 
                regarding--
                            ``(i) maintenance and operating costs of 
                        the transportation system, vehicle miles 
                        traveled, peak-period travel times, 
                        transportation choices, and mode shares;
                            ``(ii) location of housing units, jobs, 
                        medical facilities, and commercial centers to 
                        transit;
                            ``(iii) improvements directed to low-income 
                        families and older individuals;
                            ``(iv) transportation-related pollution 
                        emissions into the air and water;
                            ``(v) land consumption; and
                            ``(vi) other locally-significant factors.
                    ``(G) Improving regional travel and emission 
                modeling to examine factors not currently considered, 
                such as induced travel and land use effects of 
                transportation alternatives, types of vehicles owned 
                and used by households, time-of-day of travel and 
                linkage of trips to each other throughout the day, 
                effects of urban design and pedestrian and bicycle 
                environment on travel behavior, and impacts of 
                alternatives on the distribution of benefits and 
                burdens among various groups protected under title VI 
                of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d et 
                seq.).
            ``(3) Federal share.--Notwithstanding subsection (e)(2), 
        the Federal share of the cost of activities carried out under 
        the pilot program shall be 100 percent.
            ``(4) Set aside.--The Secretary shall make available 
        $1,500,000 of the amounts made available to carry out this 
        section for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 to carry out 
        the pilot program under this subsection.''.

SEC. 1118. DEPLOYMENT OF MAGNETIC LEVITATION TRANSPORTATION PROJECTS.

    (a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Eligible project costs.--The term ``eligible project 
        costs''--
                    (A) means the capital cost of the fixed guideway 
                infrastructure of a MAGLEV project, including land, 
                piers, guideways, propulsion equipment and other 
                components attached to guideways, power distribution 
                facilities (including substations), control and 
                communications facilities, access roads, and storage, 
                repair, and maintenance facilities, but not including 
                costs incurred for a new station; and
                    (B) includes the costs of preconstruction planning 
                activities.
            (2) Full project costs.--The term ``full project costs'' 
        means the total capital costs of a MAGLEV project, including 
        eligible project costs and the costs of stations, vehicles, and 
        equipment.
            (3) MAGLEV.--The term ``MAGLEV'' means transportation 
        systems employing magnetic levitation that would be capable of 
        safe use by the public at a speed in excess of 240 miles per 
        hour.
            (4) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such term 
        has under section 101(a) of title 23, United States Code.
    (b) In General.--
            (1) Assistance for eligible projects.--The Secretary shall 
        make available financial assistance to pay the Federal share of 
        full project costs of eligible projects authorized by this 
        section.
            (2) Use of assistance.--Financial assistance provided under 
        paragraph (1) shall be used only to pay eligible project costs 
        of projects authorized by this section.
            (3) Applicability of other laws.--Financial assistance made 
        available under this section, and projects assisted with such 
        assistance, shall be subject to section 5333(a) of title 49, 
        United States Code.
    (c) Project Eligibility.--To be eligible to receive financial 
assistance under subsection (b), a project shall--
            (1) involve a segment or segments of a high-speed ground 
        transportation corridor;
            (2) result in an operating transportation facility that 
        provides a revenue producing service; and
            (3) be approved by the Secretary based on an application 
        submitted to the Secretary by a State or authority designated 
        by 1 or more States.

SEC. 1119. RECREATIONAL TRAILS.

    (a) Recreational Trails Program Formula.--Section 104(h)(1) of 
title 23, United States Code, is amended by striking ``research and 
technical'' and all that follows through ``Committee'' and inserting 
``research, technical assistance, and training under the recreational 
trails program''.
    (b) Permissible Uses.--Section 206(d)(2) of such title is amended 
to read as follows:
            ``(2) Permissible uses.--Permissible uses of funds 
        apportioned to a State for a fiscal year to carry out this 
        section include--
                    ``(A) maintenance and restoration of existing 
                recreational trails;
                    ``(B) development and rehabilitation of trailside 
                and trailhead facilities and trail linkages for 
                recreational trails;
                    ``(C) purchase and lease of recreational trail 
                construction and maintenance equipment;
                    ``(D) construction of new recreational trails, 
                except that, in the case of new recreational trails 
                crossing Federal lands, construction of the trails 
                shall be--
                            ``(i) permissible under other law;
                            ``(ii) necessary and recommended by a 
                        statewide comprehensive outdoor recreation plan 
                        that is required by the Land and Water 
                        Conservation Fund Act of 1965 (16 U.S.C. 460l-4 
                        et seq.) and that is in effect;
                            ``(iii) approved by the administering 
                        agency of the State designated under subsection 
                        (c)(1); and
                            ``(iv) approved by each Federal agency 
                        having jurisdiction over the affected lands 
                        under such terms and conditions as the head of 
                        the Federal agency determines to be 
                        appropriate, except that the approval shall be 
                        contingent on compliance by the Federal agency 
                        with all applicable laws, including the 
                        National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 
                        U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), the Forest and Rangeland 
                        Renewable Resources Planning Act of 1974 (16 
                        U.S.C. 1600 et seq.), and the Federal Land 
                        Policy and Management Act of 1976 (43 U.S.C. 
                        1701 et seq.);
                    ``(E) acquisition of easements and fee simple title 
                to property for recreational trails or recreational 
                trail corridors;
                    ``(F) assessment of trail conditions for 
                accessibility and maintenance;
                    ``(G) operation of educational programs to promote 
                safety and environmental protection as those objectives 
                relate to the use of recreational trails, but in an 
                amount not to exceed 5 percent of the apportionment 
                made to the State for the fiscal year; and
                    ``(H) payment of costs to the State incurred in 
                administering the program, but in an amount not to 
                exceed 7 percent of the apportionment made to the State 
                for the fiscal year to carry out this section.''.
    (c) Use of Apportionments.--Section 206(d)(3) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) by striking subparagraph (C);
            (2) by redesignating subparagraph (D) as subparagraph (C); 
        and
            (3) in subparagraph (C) (as so redesignated) by striking 
        ``(2)(F)'' and inserting ``(2)(H)''.
    (d) Federal Share.--Section 206(f) of such title is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by inserting ``and the Federal share of the 
                administrative costs of a State'' after ``project''; 
                and
                    (B) by striking ``not exceed 80 percent'' and 
                inserting ``be determined in accordance with section 
                120(b)'';
            (2) in paragraph (2)(A) by striking ``80 percent of'' and 
        inserting ``the amount determined in accordance with section 
        120(b) for'';
            (3) in paragraph (2)(B) by inserting ``sponsoring the 
        project'' after ``Federal agency'';
            (4) by striking paragraph (5);
            (5) by redesignating paragraph (4) as paragraph (5);
            (6) in paragraph (5) (as so redesignated) by striking ``80 
        percent'' and inserting ``the Federal share as determined in 
        accordance with section 120(b)''; and
            (7) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following:
            ``(4) Use of recreational trails program funds to match 
        other federal program funds.--Notwithstanding any other 
        provision of law, funds made available under this section may 
        be used toward the non-Federal matching share for other Federal 
        program funds that are--
                    ``(A) expended in accordance with the requirements 
                of the Federal program relating to activities funded 
                and populations served; and
                    ``(B) expended on a project that is eligible for 
                assistance under this section.''.
    (e) Planning and Environmental Assessment Costs Incurred Prior to 
Project Approval.--Section 206(h)(1) of such title is amended by adding 
at the end the following:
                    ``(C) Planning and environmental assessment costs 
                incurred prior to project approval.--The Secretary may 
                allow pre-approval planning and environmental 
                compliance costs to be credited toward the non-Federal 
                share of the cost of a project described under 
                subsection (d)(2) (other than subparagraph (I)) in 
                accordance with subsection (f), limited to costs 
                incurred less than 18 months prior to project 
                approval.''.
    (f) Encouragement of Use of Youth Conservation or Service Corps.--
The Secretary shall encourage the States to enter into contracts and 
cooperative agreements with qualified youth conservation or service 
corps to perform construction and maintenance of recreational trails 
under section 206 of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 1120. FEDERAL LANDS HIGHWAYS.

    (a) Contracts and Agreements With Indian Tribes.--Section 202(d)(3) 
of title 23, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
            ``(3) Contracts and agreements with indian tribes.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Notwithstanding any other 
                provision of law or any interagency agreement, program 
                guideline, manual, or policy directive, all funds made 
                available to an Indian tribal government under this 
                title for a highway, road, bridge, parkway, or transit 
                facility project that is located on an Indian 
                reservation or provides access to the reservation or a 
                community of the Indian tribe shall be made available, 
                on the request of the Indian tribal government, to the 
                Indian tribal government for use in carrying out, in 
                accordance with the Indian Self-Determination and 
                Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 450 et seq.), 
                contracts and agreements for the planning, research, 
                engineering, and construction relating to such project.
                    ``(B) Exclusion of agency participation.--In 
                accordance with subparagraph (A), all funds for a 
                project to which subparagraph (A) applies shall be paid 
                to the Indian tribal government without regard to the 
                organizational level at which the Department of the 
                Interior has previously carried out, or the Department 
                of Transportation has previously carried out under the 
                Federal lands highway programs, the programs, 
                functions, services, or activities involved.
                    ``(C) Consortia.--Two or more Indian tribes that 
                are otherwise eligible to participate in a project to 
                which this title applies may form a consortium to be 
                considered as a single Indian tribe for the purpose of 
                participating in the project under this section.
                    ``(D) Secretary as signatory.--Notwithstanding any 
                other provision of law, the Secretary is authorized to 
                enter into a funding agreement with an Indian tribe or 
                tribal government to carry out a highway, road, bridge, 
                parkway, or transit project under subparagraph (A) that 
                is located on an Indian reservation or provides access 
                to the reservation or a community of the Indian tribe.
                    ``(E) Funding.--The amount an Indian tribal 
                government receives for a project under subparagraph 
                (A) shall equal the sum of the funding that the Indian 
                tribal government would otherwise receive for the 
                project in accordance with the funding formula 
                established under this subsection and such additional 
                amount as the Secretary determines equal the amounts 
                that would have been withheld for the costs of the 
                Bureau of Indian Affairs for administration of the 
                project.
                    ``(F) Eligibility.--An Indian tribal government may 
                receive funding under subparagraph (A) for a project in 
                a fiscal year if the Indian tribal government 
                demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Secretary 
                financial stability and financial management capability 
                as demonstrated in the annual auditing required under 
                the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance 
                Act (25 U.S.C. 450 et seq.) and, during the preceding 
                fiscal year, had no uncorrected significant and 
                material audit exceptions in the required annual audit 
                of the Indian tribe's self-determination contracts or 
                self-governance funding agreements with any Federal 
                agency.
                    ``(G) Assumption of functions and duties.--An 
                Indian tribal government receiving funding under 
                subparagraph (A) for a project shall assume all 
                functions and duties that the Secretary of the Interior 
                would have performed with respect to projects under 
                this chapter, other than those functions and duties 
                that inherently cannot be legally transferred under the 
                Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act 
                (25 U.S.C. 450b et seq.).
                    ``(H) Powers.--An Indian tribal government 
                receiving funding under subparagraph (A) for a project 
                shall have all powers that the Secretary of the 
                Interior would have exercised in administering the 
                funds transferred to the Indian tribal government for 
                such project under this section if such funds had not 
                been transferred, except to the extent that such powers 
                are powers that inherently cannot be legally 
                transferred under the Indian Self-Determination and 
                Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 450b et seq.).
                    ``(I) Dispute resolution.--In the event of a 
                disagreement between the Secretary of Transportation or 
                the Secretary of the Interior and an Indian tribe over 
                whether a particular function, duty, or power may be 
                lawfully transferred under the Indian Self-
                Determination and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 
                450b et seq.), the Indian tribe shall have the right to 
                pursue all alternative dispute resolutions and appeal 
                procedures authorized by such Act, including 
                regulations issued to carry out such Act.''.
    (b) Alaska Native Village Inventory.--Section 202(d)(2) of such 
title is amended by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(E) Alaska native road inventory.--
                            ``(i) In general.--For fiscal year 2005 and 
                        each fiscal year thereafter, any allocation of 
                        sums authorized to be appropriated for Indian 
                        reservation roads in Alaska shall be based on 
                        an inventory of roads within the exterior 
                        boundaries of village corporation land selected 
                        pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement 
                        Act (43 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.) that includes all 
                        routes previously included in such an 
                        inventory. The Secretary of Transportation and 
                        the Secretary of the Interior may include, in 
                        the inventory of roads, those proposed for 
                        inclusion by tribal village governments from 
                        among community streets within the village and 
                        those proposed primary access routes for 
                        inclusion by tribal village governments, 
                        including roads and trails between villages 
                        (including links over water), roads and trails 
                        to landfills, roads and trails to drinking 
                        water sources, roads and trails to natural 
                        resources identified for economic development, 
                        and roads and trails that provide access to 
                        intermodal termini, such as airports, harbors, 
                        or boat landings.
                            ``(ii) Limitation on primary access 
                        routes.--For purposes of this subparagraph, a 
                        proposed primary access route is the shortest 
                        practicable route connecting 2 points of the 
                        proposed route.''.
    (c) BIA Administrative Expenses.--Section 202(d)(2) of such title 
is further amended by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(F) Administrative expenses.--Of the funds 
                authorized to be appropriated for Indian reservation 
                roads, $27,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $28,000,000 
                for fiscal year 2007, $29,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, 
                and $30,000,000 for fiscal year 2009 may be used by the 
                Secretary of the Interior for program management 
                oversight and project-related administrative 
                expenses.''.
    (d) Bridge Preconstruction Activities Eligibility.--Section 
202(d)(4)(B) of such title is amended by adding at the end the 
following: ``Of the amount reserved under this paragraph for a fiscal 
year, not more than 15 percent may be used for preconstruction 
activities, such as engineering and design.''.
    (e) Grants for Financing Transportation Debt.--Section 202(d)(2)(A) 
of such title is amended by inserting before the period at the end the 
following: ``; except that, beginning October 1, 2004, the Secretary 
may use up to 3 percent of such funds for making grants to Indian 
tribes for the purpose of financing transportation debt for individual 
Indian reservation roads subject to all requirements governing Federal 
assistance for Indian roads under this section and section 204''.
    (f) Deputy Assistant Secretary of Transportation for Tribal 
Government Affairs.--Section 102 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections 
        (g) and (h), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (e) the following:
    ``(f) Deputy Assistant Secretary for Tribal Government Affairs.--
The Department of Transportation shall have, within the office of the 
Secretary, a Deputy Assistant Secretary for Tribal Government Affairs 
appointed by the President to plan, coordinate, and implement the 
Department of Transportation policy and programs serving Indian tribes 
and tribal organizations and to coordinate tribal transportation 
programs and activities in all offices and administrations of the 
Department and to be a participant in any negotiated rulemaking related 
to, or has impact on, projects, programs, or funding associated with 
the tribal transportation program.''.
    (g) Alaska Native Village Transportation Program.--
            (1) Establishment.--Not later than 3 months after the date 
        of enactment of this Act, the Secretary and the Denali 
        Commission, in coordination with the Alaska Federation of 
        Natives, shall establish an Alaska Native Village 
        transportation program to pay the costs of planning, design, 
        construction, and maintenance of road and other surface 
        transportation facilities identified by Alaska Native Villages.
            (2) Alaska native village defined.--In this subsection, the 
        term ``Alaska Native Village'' has the same meaning such term 
        has as used by the Bureau of Indian Affairs in administering 
        the Indian reservation road program under section 202 of title 
        23, United States Code.

SEC. 1121. CONSERVATION MEASURES.

    (a) Refuge Roads.--Section 204(k)(1) of title 23, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph (B);
            (2) by redesigning subparagraph (C) as subparagraph (D);
            (3) by inserting after subparagraph (B) the following:
                    ``(C) construction, maintenance, and improvement of 
                wildlife observation infrastructure; and''; and
            (4) in subparagraph (D) (as so redesignated) by striking 
        ``maintenance and improvements'' and inserting ``construction, 
        maintenance, and improvements''.
    (b) Forest Highways.--Of the amounts made available for public 
lands highways under section 1101--
            (1) not to exceed $20,000,000 per fiscal year may be used 
        for the maintenance of forest highways;
            (2) not to exceed $2,500,000 per fiscal year may be used to 
        repair culverts and bridges on forest highways to facilitate 
        appropriate fish passage and ensure reasonable flows and to 
        maintain and remove such culverts and bridges as appropriate; 
        and
            (3) not to exceed $1,000,000 per fiscal year may be used 
        for signage identifying public hunting and fishing access.
    (c) Wildlife Vehicle Collision Reduction Study.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall conduct a study of 
        methods to reduce collisions between motor vehicles and 
        wildlife (in this subsection referred to as ``wildlife vehicle 
        collisions'').
            (2) Contents.--
                    (A) Areas of study.--The study shall include an 
                assessment of the causes and impacts of wildlife 
                vehicle collisions and solutions and best practices for 
                reducing such collisions.
                    (B) Methods for conducting the study.--In carrying 
                out the study, the Secretary shall--
                            (i) conduct a thorough literature review; 
                        and
                            (ii) survey current practices of the 
                        Department of Transportation.
            (3) Consultation.--In carrying out the study, the Secretary 
        shall consult with appropriate experts in the field of wildlife 
        vehicle collisions.
            (4) Report.--
                    (A) In general.--Not later than 2 years after the 
                date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall 
                transmit to Congress a report on the results of the 
                study.
                    (B) Contents.--The report shall include a 
                description of each of the following:
                            (i) Causes of wildlife vehicle collisions.
                            (ii) Impacts of wildlife vehicle 
                        collisions.
                            (iii) Solutions to and prevention of 
                        wildlife vehicle collisions.
            (5) Manual.--
                    (A) Development.--Based upon the results of the 
                study, the Secretary shall develop a best practices 
                manual to support State efforts to reduce wildlife 
                vehicle collisions.
                    (B) Availability.--The manual shall be made 
                available to States not later than 1 year after the 
                date of transmission of the report under paragraph (4).
                    (C) Contents.--The manual shall include, at a 
                minimum, the following:
                            (i) A list of best practices addressing 
                        wildlife vehicle collisions.
                            (ii) A list of information, technical, and 
                        funding resources for addressing wildlife 
                        vehicle collisions.
                            (iii) Recommendations for addressing 
                        wildlife vehicle collisions.
                            (iv) Guidance for developing a State action 
                        plan to address wildlife vehicle collisions.
            (6) Training.--Based upon the manual developed under 
        paragraph (5), the Secretary shall develop a training course on 
        addressing wildlife vehicle collisions for transportation 
        professionals.

SEC. 1122. PEDESTRIAN AND CYCLIST EQUITY.

    (a) Safe Routes to School Program.--
            (1) Establishment.--Subject to the requirements of this 
        subsection, the Secretary shall establish and carry out a safe 
        routes to school program for the benefit of children in primary 
        and middle schools.
            (2) Purposes.--The purposes of the program shall be--
                    (A) to enable and encourage children, including 
                those with disabilities, to walk and bicycle to school;
                    (B) to make bicycling and walking to school a safer 
                and more appealing transportation alternative, thereby 
                encouraging a healthy and active lifestyle from an 
                early age; and
                    (C) to facilitate the planning, development, and 
                implementation of projects and activities that will 
                improve safety and reduce traffic, fuel consumption, 
                and air pollution in the vicinity of schools.
            (3) Apportionment of funds.--
                    (A) In general.--Subject to subparagraphs (B), (C), 
                and (D) amounts made available to carry out this 
                subsection for a fiscal year shall be apportioned among 
                the States in the ratio that--
                            (i) the total student enrollment in primary 
                        and middle schools in each State; bears to
                            (ii) the total student enrollment in 
                        primary and middle schools in all the States.
                    (B) Minimum apportionment.--No State shall receive 
                an apportionment under this subsection for a fiscal 
                year of less than $2,000,000.
                     (C) Set-aside for administrative expenses.--Before 
                apportioning amounts made available to carry out this 
                subsection under this paragraph for a fiscal year, the 
                Secretary shall set aside not more than 2 percent of 
                such amounts for the administrative expenses of the 
                Secretary in carrying out this subsection.
                    (D) Set-aside for nonmotorized pilot program.--
                Before apportioning amounts made available to carry out 
                this subsection under this paragraph and the set-aside 
                under subparagraph (C) for a fiscal year, the Secretary 
                shall set aside for the nonmotorized pilot program 
                under subsection (b) of this section $25,000,000 for 
                each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
                    (E) Determination of student enrollments.--
                Determinations under this paragraph concerning student 
                enrollments shall be made by the Secretary.
            (4) Administration of amounts.--Amounts apportioned to a 
        State under this subsection shall be administered by the 
        State's department of transportation.
            (5) Eligible recipients.--Amounts apportioned to a State 
        under this subsection shall be used by the State to provide 
        financial assistance to State, local, and regional agencies, 
        including nonprofit organizations, that demonstrate an ability 
        to meet the requirements of this subsection.
            (6) Eligible projects and activities.--
                    (A) Infrastructure-related projects.--
                            (i) In general.--Amounts apportioned to a 
                        State under this subsection may be used for the 
                        planning, design, and construction of 
                        infrastructure-related projects that will 
                        substantially improve the ability of students 
                        to walk and bike to school, including sidewalk 
                        improvements, traffic calming and speed 
                        reduction improvements, pedestrian and bicycle 
                        crossing improvements, on-street bicycle 
                        facilities, off-street bicycle and pedestrian 
                        facilities, secure bicycle parking facilities, 
                        and traffic diversion improvements in the 
                        vicinity of schools.
                            (ii) Location of projects.--Infrastructure-
                        related projects under subparagraph (A) may be 
                        carried out on any public road or any bicycle 
                        or pedestrian pathway or trail in the vicinity 
                        of schools.
                    (B) Noninfrastructure-related activities.--
                            (i) In general.--In addition to projects 
                        described in subparagraph (A), amounts 
                        apportioned to a State under this subsection 
                        may be used for noninfrastructure-related 
                        activities to encourage walking and bicycling 
                        to school, including public awareness campaigns 
                        and outreach to press and community leaders, 
                        traffic education and enforcement in the 
                        vicinity of schools, student sessions on 
                        bicycle and pedestrian safety, health, and 
                        environment, and funding for training, 
                        volunteers, and managers of safe routes to 
                        school programs.
                            (ii) Allocation.--Not less than 10 percent 
                        and not more than 30 percent of the amount 
                        apportioned to a State under this subsection 
                        for a fiscal year shall be used for 
                        noninfrastructure-related activities under this 
                        subparagraph.
                    (C) Safe routes to school coordinator.--Each State 
                receiving an apportionment under this subsection for a 
                fiscal year shall use a sufficient amount of the 
                apportionment to fund a full-time position of 
                coordinator of the State's safe routes to school 
                program.
            (7) Clearinghouse.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary shall make grants to 
                a national nonprofit organization engaged in promoting 
                safe routes to schools to--
                            (i) operate a national safe routes to 
                        school clearinghouse;
                            (ii) develop information and educational 
                        programs on safe routes to school; and
                            (iii) provide technical assistance and 
                        disseminate techniques and strategies used for 
                        successful safe routes to school programs.
                    (B) Funding.--The Secretary shall carry out this 
                paragraph using amounts set aside for administrative 
                expenses under paragraph (3)(C).
            (8) Task force.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary shall establish a 
                national safe routes to school task force composed of 
                leaders in health, transportation, and education, 
                including representatives of appropriate Federal 
                agencies, to study and develop a strategy for advancing 
                safe routes to school programs nationwide.
                    (B) Report.--Not later than March 31, 2006, the 
                Secretary shall transmit to Congress a report 
                containing the results of the study conducted, and a 
                description of the strategy developed, under 
                subparagraph (A) and information regarding the use of 
                funds for infrastructure-related and noninfrastructure-
                related activities under subparagraphs (A) and (B) of 
                paragraph (6).
                    (C) Funding.--The Secretary shall carry out this 
                paragraph using amounts set aside for administrative 
                expenses under paragraph (3)(C).
            (9) Applicability of title 23.--Funds made available to 
        carry out this subsection shall be available for obligation in 
        the same manner as if such funds were apportioned under chapter 
        1 of title 23, United States Code; except that such funds shall 
        not be transferable and shall remain available until expended 
        and the Federal share of the cost of a project or activity 
        under this section shall be 100 percent. Notwithstanding any 
        other provision of law, projects assisted under this subsection 
        shall be treated as projects on a Federal-aid system under such 
        chapter.
            (10) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following 
        definitions apply:
                    (A) In the vicinity of schools.--The term ``in the 
                vicinity of schools'' means, with respect to a school, 
                the area within bicycling and walking distance of the 
                school (approximately 2 miles).
                    (B) Primary and middle schools.--The term ``primary 
                and middle schools'' means schools providing education 
                from kindergarten through eighth grade.
                    (C) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such 
                term has in section 101(a) of title 23, United States 
                Code.
    (b) Nonmotorized Transportation Pilot Program.--
            (1) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish and carry 
        out a nonmotorized transportation pilot program to construct, 
        in 4 communities selected by the Secretary, a network of 
        nonmotorized transportation infrastructure facilities, 
        including sidewalks, bicycle lanes, and pedestrian and bicycle 
        trails, that connect directly with transit stations, schools, 
        residences, businesses, recreation areas, and other community 
        activity centers.
            (2) Purpose.--The purpose of the program shall be to 
        demonstrate the extent to which bicycling and walking can carry 
        a significant part of the transportation load, and represent a 
        major portion of the transportation solution, within selected 
        communities.
            (3) Grants.--In carrying out the program, the Secretary may 
        make grants to State, local, and regional agencies, that the 
        Secretary determines are suitably equipped and organized to 
        carry out the objectives and requirements of this subsection. 
        An agency that receives a grant under this subsection may 
        suballocate grant funds to a nonprofit organization to carry 
        out the program under this subsection.
            (4) Statistical information.--In carrying out the program, 
        the Secretary shall develop statistical information on changes 
        in motor vehicle, nonmotorized transportation, and public 
        transportation usage in communities participating in the 
        program and assess how such changes decrease congestion and 
        energy usage, increase the frequency of biking and walking, and 
        promote better health and a cleaner environment.
            (5) Reports.--The Secretary shall transmit to Congress an 
        interim report not later than September 30, 2007, and a final 
        report not later than September 30, 2010, on the results of the 
        program.

SEC. 1123. NATIONAL COMMISSIONS.

    (a) National Commission on Future Revenue Sources to Support the 
Highway Trust Fund.--
            (1) Establishment.--There is established a National 
        Commission on Future Revenue Sources to Support the Highway 
        Trust Fund to conduct--
                    (A) a study evaluating alternative short-term 
                sources of Highway Trust Fund revenue to support the 
                requirements of section 1125; and
                    (B) a study evaluating alternative long-term 
                sources of revenue to support the Highway Trust Fund, 
                considering the findings, conclusions, and 
                recommendations of a recent study by the Transportation 
                Research Board of the National Academy of Sciences on 
                alternatives to the fuel tax to support highway program 
                financing and other relevant prior research.
            (2) Functions.--The Commission shall--
                    (A) develop recommendations to generate Highway 
                Trust Fund revenue necessary to accomplish the 
                requirements of section 1125;
                    (B) oversee a comprehensive investigation of 
                alternatives to replace the fuel tax as the principal 
                revenue source to support the Highway Trust Fund over 
                at least the next 30 years;
                    (C) consult with the Secretary of Transportation 
                and the Secretary of the Treasury to assure that their 
                views concerning essential attributes of Highway Trust 
                Fund revenue alternatives are understood;
                    (D) assure that State transportation agency views 
                on alternative revenue sources to support State 
                transportation improvement programs are appropriately 
                considered and that any recommended Federal financing 
                strategy take into account State financial 
                requirements; and
                    (E) make specific recommendations regarding actions 
                that need to be taken to develop alternative revenue 
                sources to support the Highway Trust Fund and when 
                those actions must be taken.
            (3) Specific matters to be addressed.--The study under 
        paragraph (1)(B) shall address specifically--
                    (A) advantages and disadvantages of alternative 
                revenue sources to meet anticipated Federal surface 
                transportation financial requirements;
                    (B) the time frame within which actions must be 
                taken to transition from the fuel tax to alternative 
                revenue sources to support the Highway Trust Fund;
                    (C) recommendations concerning the most promising 
                revenue sources to support long-term Federal surface 
                transportation financing requirements;
                    (D) development of a broad transition strategy to 
                move from the current tax base to new funding 
                mechanisms, including the time frame for various 
                aspects of the transition strategy;
                    (E) recommendations for additional research that 
                may be needed to implement recommended alternatives; 
                and
                    (F) the extent to which revenues should reflect the 
                relative use of the highway system.
            (4) Matters to consider and evaluate.--To the maximum 
        extent feasible, the Commission, in conducting the study under 
        paragraph (1)(B), shall consider and evaluate other related 
        work that has been done by the Department of Transportation, 
        the Department of Energy, the Transportation Research Board, 
        and others. In developing recommendations under paragraph (2), 
        the Commission shall consider--
                    (A) the ability to generate sufficient revenues to 
                meet anticipated long term surface transportation 
                financing needs;
                    (B) the roles of the various levels of government 
                and the private sector in meeting future surface 
                transportation financing needs;
                    (C) administrative costs, including enforcement, to 
                implement each option;
                    (D) potential taxpayer privacy concerns;
                    (E) likely technological advances that could ease 
                implementation of each option;
                    (F) the equity and economic efficiency of each 
                option;
                    (G) the flexibility of different options to allow 
                various pricing alternatives to be implemented; and
                    (H) potential compatibility issues with States tax 
                mechanisms under each alternative.
            (5) Membership.--
                    (A) Composition.--The Commission shall be composed 
                of nine members of whom--
                            (i) three members shall be appointed by the 
                        Secretary;
                            (ii) two members shall be appointed by the 
                        Speaker of the House of Representatives;
                            (iii) one member shall be appointed by the 
                        minority leader of the House of 
                        Representatives;
                            (iv) two members shall be appointed by the 
                        majority leader of the Senate; and
                            (v) one member shall be appointed by the 
                        minority leader of the Senate.
                    (B) Qualifications.--Members appointed under 
                subparagraph (A) shall have experience in public 
                finance, surface transportation program administration, 
                managing organizations that use surface transportation 
                facilities, academic research into related issues, or 
                other activities that provide unique perspectives on 
                current and future requirements for revenue sources to 
                support the Highway Trust Fund.
                    (C) Terms.--Members shall be appointed for the life 
                of the Commission.
                    (D) Vacancies.--A vacancy on the Commission shall 
                be filled in the manner in which the original 
                appointment was made.
                    (E) Travel expenses.--Members shall serve without 
                pay but shall receive travel expenses, including per 
                diem in lieu of subsistence, in accordance with 
                sections 5702 and 5703 of title 5, United States Code.
                    (F) Chairman.--The Chairman of the Commission shall 
                be elected by the members.
            (6) Staff.--
                    (A) In general.--The Commission may engage the 
                services of an appropriate organization, agency, or 
                firm to conduct the studies under this subsection, but 
                the Commission shall provide strategic guidance for the 
                studies.
                    (B) Detail staff.--Upon request of the Commission, 
                the Secretary may detail, on a reimbursable basis, any 
                of the personnel of the Department of Transportation to 
                the Commission to assist the Commission in carrying out 
                its duties under this subsection.
                    (C) Cooperation.--The Secretary shall cooperate 
                with the Commission in conducting the studies under 
                this subsection, including providing the Commission 
                with such nonconfidential data and information as 
                necessary for conducting and completing the study.
            (7) Administrative support services.--Upon the request of 
        the Commission, the Secretary shall provide to the Commission, 
        on a reimbursable basis, the administrative support and 
        services necessary for the Commission to carry out its 
        responsibilities under this subsection.
            (8) Reports and recommendations.--
                    (A) Revenue actions.--Not later than September 30, 
                2005, the Commission shall transmit to Congress a 
                report on revenue actions that would support the 
                requirements of section 1125.
                    (B) Alternative long-term sources of revenue.--Not 
                later than September 30, 2006, the Commission shall 
                transmit to Congress a report on the results of the 
                study conducted under paragraph (1)(B), relating to 
                alternative long-term sources of revenue to support the 
                Highway Trust Fund, including recommendations to 
                address the needs identified in the study.
            (9) Termination.--The Commission shall terminate on the 
        180th day following the date of transmittal of the report under 
        paragraph (8)(B). By such 180th day, the Commission shall 
        deliver all records and papers of the Commission to the 
        Archivist of the United States for deposit in the National 
        Archives.
            (10) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized 
        to be appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the 
        Mass Transit Account) $1,500,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 
        and 2006 to carry out this subsection.
            (11) Applicability of title 23.--Funds made available to 
        carry out this subsection shall be available for obligation in 
        the same manner as if such funds were apportioned under chapter 
        1 of title 23, United States Code; except that the Federal 
        share of the cost of activities carried out under this 
        subsection shall be 100 percent, and such funds shall remain 
        available until expended.
    (b) Declaration of Policy Regarding Future of the Interstate 
Highway System Study.--Section 101(b) of title 23, United States Code, 
is amended by striking the last paragraph and inserting the following:
    ``It is further declared that it is in the national interest to 
preserve and enhance the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of 
Interstate and Defense Highways to meet the Nation's needs for the 21st 
century. The current urban and long distance personal travel and 
freight movement demands have surpassed the vision of the original 
Interstate System and travel demand patterns are expected to change. 
Continued planning for and investment in the Interstate System is 
critical to assure it adequately meets the changing travel demands of 
the future. Among the foremost needs that the Interstate System must 
provide are safe, efficient, and reliable (1) national and 
interregional personal mobility, (2) flow of interstate commerce, and 
(3) travel movements essential for national security. To the maximum 
extent, actions under this title should address congestion, safety, and 
freight transportation to provide for a strong and vigorous national 
economy. The Interstate System is hereby declared to be the Nation's 
premiere highway system, essential for the Nation's economic vitality, 
national security, and general welfare. The Secretary of Transportation 
is directed to take appropriate actions to preserve and enhance the 
Interstate System to meet the needs of the 21st century in accordance 
with this title.''.
    (c) National Commission on Future of Interstate Highway System.--
            (1) Establishment.--There is established a National 
        Commission on the Future of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National 
        System of Interstate and Defense Highways (in this subsection 
        referred to as the ``Interstate System'').
            (2) Function.--The Commission shall--
                    (A) conduct a study of the current condition and 
                future of the Interstate System and develop a 
                conceptual plan with alternative approaches for the 
                future of the Interstate System to assure that the 
                Interstate System will continue to serve the needs of 
                the Nation;
                    (B) assure that State transportation agency views 
                are considered; and
                    (C) make specific recommendations regarding those 
                design standards, Federal policies, and legislative 
                changes that must be made to assure the national 
                interests are served in meeting future Interstate 
                System needs.
            (3) Specific matters to be addressed.--The Commission shall 
        assure that the study under this subsection specifically 
        addresses the following:
                    (A) Current condition.--The current condition and 
                performance of the Interstate System, including 
                physical condition of bridges and pavements and 
                operational characteristics and performance, shall be 
                examined, relying primarily on existing data sources.
                    (B) Future assessment.--The future of the 
                Interstate System, based on a range of legislative and 
                policy approaches for 15-, 30-, and 50-year horizons.
            (4) Specific issues and details to address.--The following 
        specific issues and details shall be addressed as a part of the 
        study under this subsection:
                    (A) Demographics.--Expected demographics and 
                business uses that impact transportation.
                    (B) Usage.--Expected system use and effects of 
                changing vehicle types, fleet size and weights, and 
                traffic volumes.
                    (C) Natural disaster.--Seismic and other 
                vulnerabilities and their potential impacts.
                    (D) Design standards.--Desirable design policies 
                and standards for future improvements, including safety 
                improvement and additional access points.
                    (E) System wide needs.--Identification of both 
                urban and rural needs.
                    (F) Potential system expansion, upgrades, or other 
                changes.--Deployment of advanced materials and 
                intelligent technologies; critical multi-state rural 
                corridors needing capacity, safety, and operational 
                enhancements; urban and multi-state corridor additions; 
                bypasses of major cities that ensure efficient long-
                haul travel; improvements to inter-modal linkages; 
                strategies to enhance asset preservation; and 
                implementation strategies.
                    (G) Community values.--Consideration of alternative 
                approaches to maintaining or enhancing community values 
                in those neighborhoods adjacent to the Interstate 
                System.
                    (H) Environmental issues.--Consideration of 
                alternative approaches to addressing environmental 
                concerns relative to recommended alternatives.
                    (I) System performance.--Evaluation and assessment 
                of the current and future capabilities for conducting 
                system-wide real-time performance data collection and 
                analysis, traffic monitoring, system operations and 
                management.
            (5) Alternatives.--A range of policy recommendations shall 
        be developed as a part of the plan under this subsection to 
        address identified future needs of the Interstate System. The 
        alternatives shall include funding needs and potential 
        approaches to provide those funds.
            (6) Membership.--
                    (A) Composition.--The Commission shall be composed 
                of nine members of whom--
                            (i) three members shall be appointed by the 
                        Secretary;
                            (ii) two members shall be appointed by the 
                        Speaker of the House of Representatives;
                            (iii) one member shall be appointed by the 
                        minority leader of the House of 
                        Representatives;
                            (iv) two members shall be appointed by the 
                        majority leader of the Senate; and
                            (v) one member shall be appointed by the 
                        minority leader of the Senate.
                    (B) Qualifications.--Members appointed under 
                subparagraph (A) shall be appointed from among 
                individuals that have a concern for maintaining a 
                strong role for the Interstate System in the future of 
                the Nation and may include representatives from 
                Federal, State, and local governments, other 
                transportation authorities or agencies, and 
                organizations representing surface transportation 
                owners and operators.
                    (C) Terms.--Members shall be appointed for the life 
                of the Commission.
                    (D) Vacancies.--A vacancy in the Commission shall 
                be filled in the manner in which the original 
                appointment was made.
                    (E) Travel expenses.--Member shall serve without 
                pay but shall receive travel expenses, including per 
                diem in lieu of subsistence, in accordance with 
                sections 5702 and 5703 of title 5, United States Code.
                    (F) Chairman.--The Chairman of the Commission shall 
                be elected by the members.
            (7) Staff.--
                    (A) In general.--The Commission may engage the 
                services of an appropriate organization, agency, or 
                firm to conduct the study under this subsection, but 
                the Commission shall provide strategic guidance for the 
                study.
                    (B) Detail staff.--Upon request of the Commission, 
                the Secretary may detail, on a reimbursable basis, any 
                of the personnel of the Department of Transportation to 
                the Commission to assist the Commission in carrying out 
                its duties under this subsection.
                    (C) Cooperation.--The Secretary shall cooperate 
                with the Commission in the study, including providing 
                the Commission with such nonconfidential data and 
                information as necessary for conducting and completing 
                the study.
            (8) Administrative support services.--Upon the request of 
        the Commission, the Secretary shall provide to the Commission, 
        on a reimbursable basis, the administrative support and 
        services necessary for the Commission to carry out its 
        responsibilities under this subsection.
            (9) Report and recommendations.--Not later than September 
        30, 2006, the Commission shall transmit to Congress a final 
        report on the results of the study conducted under this 
        subsection, including recommendations to address the needs 
        identified in the study.
            (10) Termination.--The Commission shall terminate on the 
        180th day following the date of transmittal of the report under 
        paragraph (9). By such 180th day, the Commission shall deliver 
        all records and papers of the Commission to the Archivist of 
        the United States for deposit in the National Archives.
            (11) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized 
        to be appropriated from the Highway Trust Funds (other than the 
        Mass Transit Account) to carry out this subsection $1,000,000 
        for each of fiscal years 2005 and 2006.
            (12) Applicability of title 23, united states code.--Funds 
        authorized to be appropriated by this section shall be 
        available for obligation in the same manner as if such funds 
        were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States 
        Code; except that the Federal share of the cost of activities 
        carried out under this subsection shall be 100 percent and such 
        funds shall remain available until expended.

SEC. 1124. ADJUSTMENTS FOR THE SURFACE TRANSPORTATION EXTENSION ACT OF 
              2004, PART V.

    [Reserved]

SEC. 1125. ROADWAY SAFETY.

    (a) Road Safety.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall enter into an 
        agreement to assist in the activities of a national nonprofit 
        organization that is dedicated solely to improving public road 
        safety--
                    (A) by improving the quality of data pertaining to 
                public road hazards and design features that affect or 
                increase the severity of motor vehicle crashes;
                    (B) by developing and carrying out a public 
                awareness campaign to educate State and local 
                transportation officials, public safety officials, and 
                motorists regarding the extent to which public road 
                hazards and design features are a factor in motor 
                vehicle crashes; and
                    (C) by promoting public road safety research and 
                technology transfer activities.
            (2) Funding.--There is authorized to be appropriated from 
        the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) 
        $500,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 to carry 
        out this subsection.
            (3) Applicability of title 23.--Funds made available by 
        this subsection shall be available for obligation in the same 
        manner as if such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of 
        title 23, United States Code, except that the funds shall 
        remain available until expended.
    (b) Bicycle and Pedestrian Safety Grants.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall make grants to a 
        national, not-for-profit organization engaged in promoting 
        bicycle and pedestrian safety--
                    (A) to operate a national bicycle and pedestrian 
                clearinghouse;
                    (B) to develop information and educational 
                programs; and
                    (C) to disseminate techniques and strategies for 
                improving bicycle and pedestrian safety.
            (2) Funding.--There is authorized to be appropriated from 
        the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) 
        $500,000 for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009 to carry 
        out this subsection.
            (3) Applicability of title 23.--Funds made available by 
        this subsection shall be available for obligation in the same 
        manner as if such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of 
        title 23, United States Code, except that the funds shall 
        remain available until expended.

SEC. 1126. EQUITY REQUIREMENT.

    (a) General Provisions.--The Secretary may not apportion before 
August 1, 2006, any funds for any of the programs referred to in 
subsection (b) for fiscal year 2006 unless, after the date of enactment 
of this Act, a law has been enacted that--
            (1) increases the guaranteed rate of return pursuant to 
        section 105 of title 23, United States Code, to 92 percent in 
        fiscal year 2006, 93 percent in fiscal year 2007, 94 percent in 
        fiscal year 2008, and 95 percent in fiscal year 2009; and
            (2) requires that each State receive apportionments for 
        such programs for each of such fiscal years that in the 
        aggregate are at least equal to the greater of--
                    (A) the State's minimum guaranteed rate of return 
                required under paragraph (1); and
                    (B) the State's prior fiscal year's apportioned 
                highway funds for programs referred in subsection (b) 
                plus an amount equal to the State's prior year 
                apportioned funds for such programs multiplied by the 
                percentage increase in the consumer price index during 
                the 12-month period ending June 30 of the calendar year 
                in which the fiscal year begins.
    (b) Applicability.--The withholding of apportioned funds under 
subsection (a) shall apply to the following programs:
            (1) The National Highway System program under section 
        103(b) of title 23, United States Code.
            (2) The high priority projects program under section 117 of 
        such title.
            (3) The Interstate maintenance program under section 119 of 
        such title.
            (4) The surface transportation program under section 133 of 
        such title.
            (5) Metropolitan planning under chapter 52 of title 49, 
        United States Code.
            (6) The highway bridge replacement and rehabilitation 
        program under section 144 of title 23, United States Code.
            (7) The congestion mitigation and air quality improvement 
        program under section 149 of such title.
            (8) The recreational trails program under section 206 of 
        such title.
            (9) The Appalachian development highway system under 
        subtitle IV of title 40, United States Code.
            (10) The freight intermodal connectors program under 
        section 1303 of this Act.
            (11) The coordinated border infrastructure program under 
        section 1302 of this Act.
            (12) The high risk rural road safety improvement program 
        under section 1403 of this Act.
            (13) The safe routes to schools program under section 1122 
        of this Act.
            (14) The minimum guarantee program under section 105 of 
        title 23, United States Code.
    (c) Consideration of Commission Findings.--In considering a law 
that increases the guaranteed rate of return referred to in subsection 
(a), Congress should consider the findings of the report on alternative 
short-term sources of Highway Trust Fund revenue to be published by the 
National Commission on Future Revenue Sources to Support the Highway 
Trust Fund pursuant to section 1123 of this Act.

                     Subtitle B--Congestion Relief

SEC. 1201. MOTOR VEHICLE CONGESTION RELIEF.

    (a) In General.--Title 23, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting after section 138 the following:
``Sec. 139. Motor vehicle congestion relief
    ``(a) In General.--Each State that has an urbanized area with an 
urbanized area population of over 200,000 individuals shall obligate in 
each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 a portion of the State's 
apportionments under section 104(b) in such fiscal year, as calculated 
under subsection (b), for congestion relief activities in such 
urbanized areas in accordance with this section.
    ``(b) Calculation of Amount.--The portion of a State's 
apportionments for a fiscal year to be obligated for congestion relief 
activities under subsection (a) shall be determined by multiplying--
            ``(1) the total of amounts apportioned to the State under 
        each of paragraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4) of section 104(b) in 
        such fiscal year; by
            ``(2) 10 percent; by
            ``(3) the percentage of the State's population residing in 
        urbanized areas of the State with an urbanized area population 
        of over 200,000 individuals.
    ``(c) Allocation Between Under One and Under Three Congestion 
Relief Activities.--Of the total amount of a State's apportionments to 
be obligated for congestion relief activities for a fiscal year as 
calculated under subsection (b)--
            ``(1) 40 percent shall be obligated for under one 
        congestion relief activities;
            ``(2) 35 percent shall be obligated for under three 
        congestion relief activities; and
            ``(3) 25 percent shall be obligated at the discretion of 
        the State department of transportation for 1 or more of the 
        following:
                    ``(A) Under one congestion relief activities.
                    ``(B) Under three congestion relief activities.
                    ``(C) Capital costs for transit projects that are 
                eligible for assistance under chapter 53 of title 49.
                    ``(D) Demand relief projects and activities that 
                shift demand to non-peak hours or to other modes of 
                transportation or that reduce the overall level of 
                demand for roads through such means as telecommuting, 
                ridesharing, alternative work hour programs, and value 
                pricing.
    ``(d) Obligation of Amounts.--
            ``(1) In general.--In complying with the requirements of 
        this section, the amounts obligated by a State for congestion 
        relief activities under subsection (a) shall be allocated among 
        the individual programs for which funds are apportioned under 
        sections 104(b)(1), 104(b)(2), 104(b)(3), and 104(b)(4).
            ``(2) Limitation on statutory construction.--Nothing in 
        this subsection shall be construed as requiring a State to 
        obligate proportional or equal amounts under sections 
        104(b)(1), 104(b)(2), 104(b)(3), and 104(b)(4) for any 
        congestion relief activity under this section.
    ``(e) Limitation on Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this 
section shall be construed as altering or otherwise affecting the 
applicability of the requirements of this chapter (including 
requirements relating to the eligibility of a project for assistance 
under the program, the location of the project, and the Federal-share 
payable on account of the project) to amounts apportioned to a State 
for a program under section 104(b) that are obligated by the State for 
congestion relief activities under subsection (a).
    ``(f) Joint Responsibility.--Each State, each affected metropolitan 
planning organization, and the Secretary shall jointly ensure 
compliance with this section.
    ``(g) Transfers.--
            ``(1) In general.--A State may transfer a portion of the 
        amount that the State must obligate for under one congestion 
        relief activities in a fiscal year under this section to the 
        amount the State must obligate for under three congestion 
        relief activities under this section if the State certifies to 
        the Secretary that there are no under one congestion relief 
        activities for which such portion can be obligated in such 
        fiscal year and the Secretary does not disapprove such transfer 
        within 30 days after the date of such certification.
            ``(2) Limitation.--The amount that a State may transfer in 
        a fiscal year under this subsection may not reduce the amount 
        the State must obligate for under one congestion relief 
        activities to less than 10 percent of the total amount of the 
        State's apportionments to be obligated for congestion relief 
        activities for such fiscal year as calculated under subsection 
        (b).
            ``(3) Treatment.--Amounts transferred by a State under this 
        subsection for a fiscal year shall be included in the amount of 
        the State's apportionments allocated for under three congestion 
        relief activities for such fiscal year under subsection (c)(2).
    ``(h) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Congestion relief activities.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The term `congestion relief 
                activity' means any activity, project, or program that 
                has as its primary purpose, as determined by the State 
                transportation department, the relief of motor vehicle 
                congestion.
                    ``(B) Inclusions.--Such term includes the 
                following:
                            ``(i) Relief of motor vehicle congestion 
                        through additional capacity, construction of 
                        additional lanes, improvements to interchanges, 
                        improved access to major terminals, 
                        construction of parallel roads, construction of 
                        truck only lanes, and major arterial 
                        improvements.
                            ``(ii) Transportation systemwide 
                        operational improvements targeted at increasing 
                        motor vehicle travel reliability through such 
                        means as incident management programs, traffic 
                        monitoring and surveillance, and traveler 
                        information initiatives.
                            ``(iii) Maximizing efficient use of 
                        existing motor vehicle travel capacity through 
                        such means as reversible lanes, coordinated 
                        traffic signalization, and managed lanes or 
                        other lane management strategies.
                    ``(C) Exclusions.--Such term does not include 
                demand relief projects and activities that shift demand 
                to non-peak hours or to other modes of transportation 
                or that reduce the overall level of demand for roads 
                through such means as telecommuting, ridesharing, 
                alternative work hour programs, and value pricing.
            ``(2) Under one congestion relief activities.--The term 
        `under one congestion relief activity' means a congestion 
        relief activity that--
                    ``(A) will be completed within one year after the 
                date of commencement of onsite improvements;
                    ``(B) has a total projected cost of less than 
                $1,000,000; and
                    ``(C) will improve conditions in the applicable 
                urbanized area or is an element of the congestion 
                management system of the applicable metropolitan 
                planning organization.
            ``(3) Under three congestion relief activities.--The term 
        `under three congestion relief activities' means congestion 
        relief activities that--
                    ``(A) will be completed within 3 years after the 
                date of commencement of onsite improvements; and
                    ``(B) will improve conditions in the applicable 
                urbanized area or is an element of the congestion 
                management system of the applicable metropolitan 
                planning organization.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter I of such title 
is amended by inserting after the item relating to section 138 the 
following:

``139. Motor vehicle congestion relief.''.
    (c) Motor Vehicle Defined.--Title 23, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in section 154(a)(2), relating to the definition of 
        motor vehicle, by inserting ``streets, roads, and'' before 
        ``highways'';
            (2) by redesignating paragraph (2) of section 154(a) as 
        paragraph (38);
            (3) by moving such redesignated paragraph from section 
        154(a) to the end of section 101(a);
            (4) by redesignating paragraphs (3) and (4) of section 
        154(a) as paragraphs (2) and (3), respectively;
            (5) in section 153(i)--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (2); and
                    (B) by redesignating paragraphs (3) and (4) as 
                paragraphs (2) and (3), respectively;
            (6) in section 164(a)(4) by striking ``means'' and all that 
        follows through ``rail line or'' and inserting ``does not 
        include''; and
            (7) in section 405(f)--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (2); and
                    (B) by redesignating paragraphs (3), (4), (5), and 
                (6) as paragraphs (2), (3), (4), and (5).

SEC. 1202. TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONS.

    (a) Definitions.--
            (1) Operating costs for traffic monitoring, management, and 
        control.--Section 101(a)(17) of title 23, United States Code, 
        is amended by inserting ``transportation systems management and 
        operations and'' after ``associated with''.
            (2) Operational improvement.--Section 101(a)(18)(A)(i) of 
        such title is amended--
                    (A) by inserting ``transportation systems 
                management and operations, including'' after ``for''; 
                and
                    (B) by inserting ``equipment and programs for 
                transportation response to natural disasters,'' after 
                ``incident management programs,''.
            (3) Transportation systems management and operations.--
        Section 101(a) of such title is further amended by adding at 
        the end the following:
            ``(39) Transportation systems management and operations.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The term `transportation systems 
                management and operations' means an integrated program 
                to optimize the performance of existing infrastructure 
                through the implementation of multimodal and 
                intermodal, cross-jurisdictional systems, services, and 
                projects designed to preserve capacity and improve the 
                security, safety, and reliability of Federal-aid 
                highways.
                    ``(B) Included activities and improvements.--The 
                term includes regional operations collaboration and 
                coordination activities between transportation and 
                public safety agencies and improvements such as traffic 
                detection and surveillance, arterial management, 
                freeway management, demand management, work zone 
                management, emergency management, electronic toll 
                collection, automated enforcement, traffic operations 
                measures to improve capacity, traffic signal 
                coordination, optimization of traffic signal timing, 
                traffic incident management, communications equipment 
                related to traffic incident management (including 
                integrated, interoperable, emergency communications 
                equipment), roadway weather management, traveler 
                information services, commercial vehicle operations, 
                traffic control, freight management, and coordination 
                of highway, rail, transit, bicycle, and pedestrian 
                operations.''.
    (b) Surface Transportation Program Eligibility.--Section 133(b) of 
such title is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraphs (13) and (14) as paragraphs 
        (12) and (13), respectively; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(14) Regional transportation operations collaboration and 
        coordination activities that are associated with regional 
        improvements, including activities for traffic incident 
        management, technology deployment, emergency management and 
        response, traveler information, and regional congestion 
        relief.''.
    (c) National Highway System Eligibility.--Section 103(b)(6) of such 
title is amended by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(Q) Capital, operating, and systems maintenance 
                costs for transportation systems management and 
                operations.''.
    (d) Transportation Systems Management and Operations.--Subchapter I 
of chapter 1 of such title is further amended by adding at the end the 
following:
``Sec. 166. Transportation systems management and operations
    ``(a) Authority.--The Secretary may--
            ``(1) encourage transportation system managers, operators, 
        public safety officials, and transportation planners within an 
        urbanized area, who are actively engaged in and responsible for 
        conducting activities relating to day-to-day management, 
        operations, public safety, and planning of transportation 
        facilities and services, to collaborate and coordinate on a 
        regional level in a continuous and sustained manner for 
        improved transportation systems management and operations, 
        including, at a minimum--
                    ``(A) developing a regional concept of operations 
                that defines a regional strategy shared by all 
                transportation and public safety participants for how 
                the region's systems should be managed, operated, and 
                measured;
                    ``(B) sharing of information among operators, 
                service providers, public safety officials, and the 
                general public; and
                    ``(C) guiding, in a regionally-coordinated manner, 
                the implementation of regional transportation system 
                management and operations initiatives, including 
                emergency evacuation and response, traffic incident 
                management, technology deployment, and traveler 
                information systems delivery, in a manner consistent 
                with and integrated into the ongoing metropolitan and 
                statewide transportation planning processes and 
                regional intelligent transportation system 
                architecture, if required; and
            ``(2) encourage States to establish a system of basic real-
        time monitoring capability for the surface transportation 
        system and provide the capability and means to share that data 
        among agencies (including highway, transit, and public safety 
        agencies), jurisdictions (including States, cities, counties, 
        and areas represented by metropolitan planning organizations), 
        private-sector entities, and the traveling public.
    ``(b) Execution.--To support the successful execution of 
transportation systems management and operations activities, the 
Secretary may undertake the following activities:
            ``(1) Assist and cooperate with other Federal departments 
        and agencies, State and local governments, metropolitan 
        planning organizations, private industry representatives, and 
        other interested parties to improve regional collaboration and 
        real-time information sharing between transportation system 
        managers and operators, public safety officials, emergency 
        managers, and the general public to increase the security, 
        safety, and reliability of Federal-aid highways.
            ``(2) Issue, if necessary, new guidance or regulations for 
        the procurement of transportation system management and 
        operations facilities, equipment, and services, including 
        equipment procured in preparation for natural disasters and 
        emergencies, system hardware, software, and software 
        integration services.''.
    (e) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is further 
amended by adding at the end the following:

``166. Transportation systems management and operations.''.
    (f) Intelligent Transportation System Procurement Policy.--
            (1) Study.--The Secretary shall--
                    (A) conduct a study of the current policies and 
                practices for the procurement of intelligent 
                transportation system facilities, equipment, and 
                services; and
                    (B) develop a conceptual plan with alternative 
                approaches for expediting and streamlining such 
                procurements at the State level.
            (2) Recommendations.--Based on the results of the study, 
        the Secretary shall make recommendations in the report under 
        paragraph (4) regarding procurement standards, including 
        recommendations regarding any changes in Federal and State 
        statutes, regulations, and policies necessary to ensure that 
        national interests are served in meeting future intelligent 
        transportation system needs.
            (3) Specific matters to be addressed.--The study under this 
        subsection shall specifically address the following:
                    (A) Current condition.--The current practices and 
                policies relating to procurement of intelligent 
                transportation system facilities, equipment, and 
                services, including equipment procured in preparation 
                for natural disasters and emergencies, system hardware, 
                software, and software integration services.
                    (B) Assessment of need for policy reform.--The 
                ability of current practices and policies to achieve 
                the successful implementation of intelligent 
                transportation system goals and the need for national 
                policy reform to expedite and streamline procurements 
                necessary to meet such goals.
                    (C) Alternatives.--The range of legislative, 
                regulatory, and policy alternatives to address 
                identified needs and goals, including funding needs.
                    (D) Recommendations.--Recommendations regarding 
                procurement standards, including recommendations 
                regarding any changes in Federal and State statutes, 
                regulations, and policies necessary for expedited and 
                streamlined procurements.
            (4) Report and recommendations.--Not later than March 31, 
        2006, the Secretary shall transmit to the appropriate 
        committees of Congress a final report regarding the results of 
        the study conducted under this subsection and recommendations 
        to address the needs identified in such study.
            (5) Initiation of rulemaking proceeding.--To the extent any 
        recommendation made by the Secretary under this subsection may 
        be implemented by regulation, the Secretary shall initiate a 
        rulemaking proceeding to address such recommendation not later 
        than the 90th day following the date of submission of the 
        report under paragraph (4).
            (6) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized 
        to be appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the 
        Mass Transit Account) $1,000,000 in fiscal year 2005 to carry 
        out this subsection.
            (7) Applicability of title 23.--Funds made available to 
        carry out this subsection shall be available for obligation in 
        the same manner as if such funds were apportioned under chapter 
        1 of title 23, United States Code; except that the Federal 
        share of the cost of the study under this subsection shall be 
        100 percent and such funds shall remain available until 
        expended.

SEC. 1203. REAL-TIME SYSTEM MANAGEMENT INFORMATION PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish a real-time 
        system management information program to provide, in all 
        States, the capability to monitor, in real-time, the traffic 
        and travel conditions of the Nation's major highways and to 
        share that information to improve the security of the surface 
        transportation system, to address congestion problems, to 
        support improved response to weather events and surface 
        transportation incidents, and to facilitate national and 
        regional highway traveler information.
            (2) Purposes.--The purposes of the real-time system 
        management information program are to--
                    (A) establish, in all States, a system of basic 
                real-time information for managing and operating the 
                surface transportation system;
                    (B) identify longer range real-time highway and 
                transit monitoring needs and develop plans and 
                strategies for meeting such needs; and
                    (C) provide the capability and means to share that 
                data with State and local governments and the traveling 
                public.
    (b) National Steering Committee.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish a national 
        steering committee to assist in the development of data 
        exchange formats under subsection (c).
            (2) Representatives.--The national steering committee shall 
        consist of representatives of State transportation departments, 
        metropolitan planning organizations, local governments, 
        nonprofit entities, the private sector, and academia.
            (3) Purpose.--The purpose of the national steering 
        committee shall be to provide guidance regarding the content 
        and uniformity of data exchange formats.
    (c) Data Exchange Formats.--Not later than 2 years after the date 
of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall establish data exchange 
formats based on recommendations of the steering committee established 
under subsection (b) to ensure that the data provided by highway and 
transit monitoring systems, including statewide incident reporting 
systems, can readily be exchanged across jurisdictional boundaries, 
facilitating nationwide availability of information.
    (d) Regional Intelligent Transportation System Architecture.--
            (1) Addressing information needs.--As State and local 
        governments develop or update regional intelligent 
        transportation system architectures, described in section 940.9 
        of title 23, Code of Federal Regulations, such governments 
        shall explicitly address real-time highway and transit 
        information needs and the systems needed to meet such needs, 
        including addressing coverage, monitoring systems, data fusion 
        and archiving, and methods of exchanging or sharing highway and 
        transit information.
            (2) Data exchange.--States shall incorporate the data 
        exchange formats established by the Secretary under subsection 
        (c) to ensure that the data provided by highway and transit 
        monitoring systems may readily be exchanged with State and 
        local governments and may be made available to the traveling 
        public.
    (e) Eligibility.--Subject to project approval by the Secretary, a 
State may obligate funds apportioned to the State under sections 
104(b)(1), 104(b)(2), and 104(b)(3) of title 23, United States Code, 
for activities related to the planning and deployment of real-time 
monitoring elements that advance the goals and purposes described in 
subsection (a).
    (f) Limitation on Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this section 
shall be construed as altering or otherwise affecting the applicability 
of the requirements of chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code 
(including requirements relating to the eligibility of a project for 
assistance under the program, the location of the project, and the 
Federal-share payable on account of the project), to amounts 
apportioned to a State for a program under section 104(b) that are 
obligated by the State for activities and projects under this section.
    (g) Statewide Incident Reporting System Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``statewide incident reporting system'' means a statewide 
system for facilitating the real-time electronic reporting of surface 
transportation incidents to a central location for use in monitoring 
the event, providing accurate traveler information, and responding to 
the incident as appropriate.

SEC. 1204. EXPEDITED NATIONAL INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS 
              DEPLOYMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a comprehensive 
program to accelerate the integration, interoperability, and deployment 
of intelligent transportation systems in order to improve the 
performance of the surface transportation system in metropolitan and 
rural areas.
    (b) Selection of Model Projects.--Under the program, the Secretary 
may make grants, through competitive solicitation, for projects that 
will serve as models to improve transportation efficiency, promote 
surface transportation safety (including safe freight movement), 
increase traffic flow (including the flow of intermodal travel at ports 
of entry), reduce emissions of air pollutants, improve traveler 
information, enhance alternative transportation modes, build on 
existing intelligent transportation system projects, and promote 
tourism.
    (c) Other Projects, Programs, and Activities.--Under the program, 
the Secretary may make grants for projects, programs, and activities in 
metropolitan and rural areas that--
            (1) contribute to national deployment goals and objectives 
        outlined in the national intelligent transportation system 
        program plan;
            (2) promote cooperation among agencies, jurisdictions, and 
        the private sector, as evidenced by signed memoranda of 
        understanding that clearly define the responsibilities and 
        relations of all parties to a partnership arrangement, 
        including institutional relationships and financial agreements 
        needed to support deployment of intelligent transportation 
        systems;
            (3) encourage private sector involvement and financial 
        commitment to such deployment to the maximum extent practicable 
        through innovative financial arrangements, especially public-
        private partnerships, including arrangements that generate 
        revenue to offset public investment costs;
            (4) enhance fully integrated intelligent transportation 
        system deployment;
            (5) create technical capacity for effective operations and 
        maintenance of such systems;
            (6) improve safety, mobility, geographic and regional 
        diversity, and economic development in deployment of such 
        systems;
            (7) advance deployment of the 511 traveler information 
        program; and
            (8) advance deployment of other national systems, including 
        a statewide incident reporting system, wireless e-911 system, 
        and road weather information system.
    (d) Applicability of Title 23, United States Code.--Funds 
authorized to be appropriated under section 1101(a)(16) of this Act 
shall be available for obligation to carry out subsection (c)(7) in the 
same manner and to the same extent as if such funds were apportioned 
under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code; except that the 
Federal share of the cost of projects carried out under subsection 
(c)(7) shall be 80 percent and such funds shall remain available until 
expended.

SEC. 1205. INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS DEPLOYMENT.

    (a) Purpose.--The purpose of this section is to ensure that a 
minimum of $2,500,000,000 of the amounts authorized to be appropriated 
for the National Highway System, Interstate maintenance, surface 
transportation, and congestion mitigation and air quality improvement 
programs for fiscal years 2005 through 2009 is utilized to expand 
deployment of intelligent transportation systems.
    (b) In General.--Chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 149 the following:
``Sec. 150. Deployment of intelligent transportation systems
    ``(a) In General.--In each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009, each 
State shall obligate a portion of the funds apportioned to the State 
under sections 104(b)(1), 104(b)(2), 104(b)(3), and 104(b)(4) for such 
fiscal year, calculated under subsection (b), for projects described in 
subsection (c) that support deployment of intelligent transportation 
systems in the State.
    ``(b) Calculation of Amount.--The portion of a State's 
apportionments to be obligated under subsection (a) for projects 
described in subsection (c) in a fiscal year shall be determined by 
multiplying $500,000,000 by the ratio that--
            ``(1) the aggregate of amounts apportioned to the State for 
        such fiscal year under sections 104(b)(1), 104(b)(2), 
        104(b)(3), and 104(b)(4); bears to
            ``(2) the aggregate of amounts apportioned to all States 
        for such fiscal year under such sections.
    ``(c) Intelligent Transportation Systems Deployment Projects.--
Projects for which funds must be obligated under this section include 
the following:
            ``(1) Performance.--Establishment and implementation of 
        operations systems and services that improve performance in the 
        areas of traffic operations, emergency response to surface 
        transportation incidents, surface transportation incident 
        management, weather event response management by State and 
        local authorities, surface transportation network and facility 
        management, construction and work zone management, and traffic 
        flow information.
            ``(2) Networks.--Conducting activities that support the 
        creation of networks that link metropolitan and rural surface 
        transportation systems into an integrated data network, capable 
        of collecting, sharing, and archiving transportation system 
        traffic condition and performance information.
            ``(3) Safety.--Implementation of intelligent transportation 
        system technologies that improve highway safety through 
        linkages connecting the vehicle, the infrastructure, and 
        information to the driver.
            ``(4) Operation and management.--Provision of services 
        necessary to ensure the efficient operation and management of 
        intelligent transportation systems infrastructure, including 
        costs associated with communications, utilities, rent, 
        hardware, software, labor, administrative costs, training, and 
        technical services.
            ``(5) Interagency support.--Provision of support for 
        institutional relationships between transportation agencies, 
        police, emergency medical services, private emergency 
        operators, freight operators, and shippers.
            ``(6) Planning.--Conducting cross-jurisdictional planning 
        and deployment of regional transportation systems operations 
        and management approaches.
    ``(d) Obligation of Amounts.--
            ``(1) In general.--In complying with the requirements of 
        this section, the amounts obligated by a State for projects 
        under subsection (c) that support deployment of intelligent 
        transportation systems in such State under subsection (a) shall 
        be allocated among the individual programs for which funds are 
        apportioned under sections 104(b)(1), 104(b)(2), 104(b)(3), and 
        104(b)(4).
            ``(2) Limitation on statutory construction.--Nothing in 
        this subsection shall be construed as requiring a State to 
        obligate proportional or equal amounts under sections 
        104(b)(1), 104(b)(2), 104(b)(3), and 104(b)(4) for any 
        congestion relief activity under this section.
    ``(e) Limitation on Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this 
section shall be construed as altering or otherwise affecting the 
applicability of the requirements of this chapter (including 
requirements relating to the eligibility of a project for assistance 
under the program, the location of the project, and the Federal-share 
payable on account of the project) to amounts apportioned to a State 
for a program under section 104(b) that are obligated by the State for 
projects under this section.
    ``(f) Joint Responsibility.--Each State, each affected metropolitan 
planning organization, and the Secretary shall jointly ensure 
compliance with this section.''.
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended 
by inserting after the item relating to section 149 the following:

``150. Deployment of intelligent transportation systems.''.

SEC. 1206. ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES THAT SUPPORT DEPLOYMENT 
              OF INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS.

    (a) Categorical Exclusions.--Not later than one year after the date 
of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall initiate a rulemaking 
process to establish, to the extent appropriate, categorical exclusions 
for activities that support the deployment of intelligent 
transportation infrastructure and systems from the requirement that an 
environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement be 
prepared under section 102 of the National Environmental Policy Act of 
1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) (42 U.S.C. 4332) in compliance with the 
standards for categorical exclusions established by that Act.
    (b) Nationwide Programmatic Agreement.--
            (1) Development.--The Secretary shall develop a nationwide 
        programmatic agreement governing the review of activities that 
        support the deployment of intelligent transportation 
        infrastructure and systems in accordance with section 106 of 
        the National Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470f) and the 
        regulations of the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation.
            (2) Consultation.--The Secretary shall develop the 
        agreement under paragraph (1) in consultation with the National 
        Conference of State Historic Preservation Officers and the 
        Advisory Council on Historic Preservation established under 
        title II of the National Historic Preservation Act (26 U.S.C. 
        470i et seq.) and after soliciting the views of other 
        interested parties.
    (c) Intelligent Transportation Infrastructure and Systems 
Defined.--In this section, the term ``intelligent transportation 
infrastructure and systems'' means intelligent transportation 
infrastructure and intelligent transportation systems, as such terms 
are defined in section 5607.

SEC. 1207. STATE ASSUMPTION OF RESPONSIBILITIES FOR CERTAIN PROGRAMS 
              AND PROJECTS.

    (a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 1 of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 167. State assumption of responsibilities for certain programs 
              and projects
    ``(a) Assumption of Secretary's Responsibilities Under Applicable 
Federal Laws.--
            ``(1) Pilot program.--
                    ``(A) Establishment.--The Secretary may establish a 
                pilot program under which States may assume the 
                responsibilities of the Secretary under any Federal 
                laws subject to the requirements of this section.
                    ``(B) First 3 fiscal years.--In the first 3 fiscal 
                years following the date of enactment of this section, 
                the Secretary may allow up to 5 States to participate 
                in the pilot program.
            ``(2) Scope of program.--Under the pilot program, the 
        Secretary may assign, and a State may assume, any of the 
        Secretary's responsibilities (other than responsibilities 
        relating to federally recognized Indian tribes) for 
        environmental reviews, consultation, or decisionmaking or other 
        actions required under any Federal law as such requirements 
        apply to the following projects:
                    ``(A) Projects funded under section 104(h).
                    ``(B) Transportation enhancement activities under 
                section 133, as such term is defined in section 
                101(a)(35).
                    ``(C) Projects as defined in section 101(a)(39) and 
                section 5607 of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy 
                for Users.
    ``(b) Agreements.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall enter into a 
        memorandum of understanding with a State participating in the 
        pilot program setting forth the responsibilities to be assigned 
        under subsection (a)(2) and the terms and conditions under 
        which the assignment is being made.
            ``(2) Certification.--Before the Secretary enters into a 
        memorandum of understanding with a State under paragraph (1), 
        the State shall certify that the State has in effect laws 
        (including regulations) applicable to projects carried out and 
        funded under this title and chapter 53 of title 49 that 
        authorize the State to carry out the responsibilities being 
        assumed.
            ``(3) Maximum duration.--A memorandum of understanding with 
        a State under this section shall be established for an initial 
        period of no more than 3 years and may be renewed by mutual 
        agreement on a periodic basis for periods of not more than 3 
        years.
            ``(4) Compliance.--
                    ``(A) In general.--After entering into a memorandum 
                of understanding under paragraph (1), the Secretary 
                shall review and determine compliance by the State with 
                the memorandum of understanding.
                    ``(B) Renewals.--The Secretary shall take into 
                account the performance of a State under the pilot 
                program when considering renewal of a memorandum of 
                understanding with the State under the program.
    ``(c) Selection of States for Pilot Program.--
            ``(1) Application.--To be eligible to participate in the 
        pilot program, a State shall submit to the Secretary an 
        application that contains such information as the Secretary may 
        require. At a minimum, an application shall include--
                    ``(A) a description of the projects or classes of 
                projects for which the State seeks to assume 
                responsibilities under subsection (a)(2); and
                    ``(B) a certification that the State has the 
                capability to assume such responsibilities.
            ``(2) Public notice.--Before entering into a memorandum of 
        understanding allowing a State to participate in the pilot 
        program, the Secretary shall--
                    ``(A) publish notice in the Federal Register of the 
                Secretary's intent to allow the State to participate in 
                the program, including a copy of the State's 
                application to the Secretary and the terms of the 
                proposed agreement with the State; and
                    ``(B) provide an opportunity for public comment.
            ``(3) Selection criteria.--The Secretary may approve the 
        application of a State to assume responsibilities under the 
        program only if--
                    ``(A) the requirements under paragraph (2) have 
                been met; and
                    ``(B) the Secretary determines that the State has 
                the capability to assume the responsibilities.
            ``(4) Other federal agency views.--Before assigning to a 
        State a responsibility of the Secretary that requires the 
        Secretary to consult with another Federal agency, the Secretary 
        shall solicit the views of the Federal agency.
    ``(d) State Defined.--With respect to the recreational trails 
program, the term `State' means the State agency designated by the 
Governor of the State in accordance with section 206(c)(1).
    ``(e) Preservation of Public Interest Consideration.--Nothing in 
this section shall be construed to limit the requirements under any 
applicable law providing for the consideration and preservation of the 
public interest, including public participation and community values in 
transportation decisionmaking.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for subchapter I of chapter 
1 of such title is amended by adding at the end the following:

``167. State assumption of responsibilities for certain programs and 
                            projects.''.

SEC. 1208. HOV FACILITIES.

    (a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 1 of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 168. HOV facilities
    ``(a) In General.--
            ``(1) Authority of state agencies.--A State agency that has 
        jurisdiction over the operation of a HOV facility shall 
        establish the occupancy requirements of vehicles operating on 
        the facility.
            ``(2) Occupancy requirement.--Except as otherwise provided 
        by this section, no fewer than 2 occupants per vehicle may be 
        required for use of a HOV facility.
    ``(b) Exceptions.--Notwithstanding the occupancy requirements of 
subsection (a)(2), the following exceptions shall apply with respect to 
a State agency operating a HOV facility:
            ``(1) Motorcycles and bicycles.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B), the 
                State agency shall allow motorcycles and bicycles to 
                use the HOV facility.
                    ``(B) Safety exception.--A State agency may 
                restrict use of the HOV facility by motorcycles or 
                bicycles (or both) if the agency certifies to the 
                Secretary that such use would create a safety hazard 
                and the Secretary accepts the certification. The 
                Secretary may accept a certification under this 
                subparagraph only after the Secretary publishes notice 
                of the certification in the Federal Register and 
                provides an opportunity for public comment.
            ``(2) Public transportation vehicles.--The State agency may 
        allow public transportation vehicles to use the HOV facility if 
        the agency--
                    ``(A) establishes requirements for clearly 
                identifying the vehicles; and
                    ``(B) establishes procedures for enforcing the 
                restrictions on the use of the facility by such 
                vehicles.
            ``(3) High occupancy toll vehicles.--The State agency may 
        allow vehicles not otherwise exempt pursuant to this subsection 
        to use the HOV facility if the operators of such vehicles pay a 
        toll charged by the agency for use of the facility and the 
        agency--
                    ``(A) establishes a program that addresses how 
                motorists can enroll and participate in the toll 
                program;
                    ``(B) develops, manages, and maintains a system 
                that will automatically collect the toll; and
                    ``(C) establishes policies and procedures to--
                            ``(i) manage the demand to use the facility 
                        by varying the toll amount that is charged; and
                            ``(ii) enforce violations of use of the 
                        facility.
            ``(4) Low emission and energy-efficient vehicles.--
                    ``(A) Inherently low-emission vehicle.--Before 
                September 30, 2009, the State agency may allow vehicles 
                that are certified as inherently low-emission vehicles 
                pursuant to section 88.311-93 of title 40, Code of 
                Federal Regulations, and are labeled in accordance with 
                section 88.312-93 of such title, to use the HOV 
                facility if the agency establishes procedures for 
                enforcing the restrictions on the use of the facility 
                by such vehicles.
                    ``(B) Other low emission and energy-efficient 
                vehicles.--Before September 30, 2009, the State agency 
                may allow vehicles certified as low emission and 
                energy-efficient vehicles under subsection (e), and 
                labeled in accordance with subsection (e), to use the 
                HOV facility if the operators of such vehicles pay a 
                toll charged by the agency for use of the facility and 
                the agency--
                            ``(i) establishes a program that addresses 
                        the selection of vehicles under this paragraph; 
                        and
                            ``(ii) establishes procedures for enforcing 
                        the restrictions on the use of the facility by 
                        such vehicles.
                    ``(C) Amount of tolls.--Under subparagraph (B), a 
                State agency may charge no toll or a toll that is less 
                than tolls charged under paragraph (3).
    ``(c) Requirements Applicable to Tolls.--
            ``(1) In general.--Tolls may be charged under subsections 
        (b)(3) and (b)(4) notwithstanding section 301 and, except as 
        provided in paragraphs (2) and (3), subject to the requirements 
        of section 129.
            ``(2) HOV facilities on the interstate system.--
        Notwithstanding section 129, tolls may be charged under 
        subsections (b)(3) and (b)(4) on a HOV facility on the 
        Interstate System.
            ``(3) Excess toll revenues.--If a State agency makes a 
        certification under the last sentence of section 129(a)(3) with 
        respect to toll revenues collected under subsections (b)(3) and 
        (b)(4), the State, in the use of tolls revenues under that 
        sentence, shall give priority consideration to projects for 
        developing alternatives to single occupancy vehicle travel and 
        projects for improving highway safety.
    ``(d) HOV Facility Management, Operation, Monitoring, and 
Enforcement.--
            ``(1) In general.--A State agency that allows vehicles to 
        use a HOV facility under subsection (b)(3) or (b)(4) in a 
        fiscal year shall certify to the Secretary that the agency will 
        carry out the following responsibilities with respect to the 
        facility in the fiscal year:
                    ``(A) Establishing, managing, and supporting a 
                performance monitoring, evaluation, and reporting 
                program for the facility that provides for continuous 
                monitoring, assessment, and reporting on the impacts 
                that such vehicles may have on the operation of the 
                facility and adjacent highways.
                    ``(B) Establishing, managing, and supporting an 
                enforcement program that ensures that the facility is 
                being operated in accordance with the requirements of 
                this section.
                    ``(C) Limiting or discontinuing the use of the 
                facility by such vehicles if the presence of such 
                vehicles has degraded the operation of the facility.
            ``(2) Degraded facility.--
                    ``(A) In general.--For purposes of paragraph (1), 
                the operation of a HOV facility shall be considered to 
                be degraded if vehicles operating on the facility are 
                failing to maintain a minimum average operating speed 
                90 percent of the time over a consecutive 6-month 
                period during morning or evening weekday peak hour 
                periods (or both).
                    ``(B) Minimum average operating speed defined.--In 
                subparagraph (A), the term `minimum average operating 
                speed' means--
                            ``(i) 45 miles per hour, in the case of a 
                        HOV facility with a speed limit of 50 miles per 
                        hour or greater; and
                            ``(ii) not more than 10 miles per hour 
                        below the speed limit, in the case of a HOV 
                        facility with a speed limit of less than 50 
                        miles per hour.
    ``(e) Certification of Low Emission and Energy-Efficient 
Vehicles.--Not later than 6 months after the date of enactment of this 
section, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency shall 
issue a final rule establishing requirements for certification of 
vehicles as low emission and energy-efficient vehicles for purposes of 
this section and requirements for the labeling of such vehicles.
    ``(f) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Alternative fuel vehicle.--The term `alternative fuel 
        vehicle' means a vehicle that operates on--
                    ``(A) methanol, denatured ethanol, or other 
                alcohols;
                    ``(B) a mixture containing at least 85 percent of 
                methanol, denatured ethanol, and other alcohols by 
                volume with gasoline or other fuels;
                    ``(C) natural gas;
                    ``(D) liquefied petroleum gas;
                    ``(E) hydrogen;
                    ``(F) coal derived liquid fuels;
                    ``(G) fuels (except alcohol) derived from 
                biological materials;
                    ``(H) electricity (including electricity from solar 
                energy); or
                    ``(I) any other fuel that the Secretary prescribes 
                by regulation that is not substantially petroleum and 
                that would yield substantial energy security and 
                environmental benefits.
            ``(2) HOV facility.--The term `HOV facility' means a high 
        occupancy vehicle facility.
            ``(3) Low emission and energy efficient vehicle.--The term 
        `low emission and energy-efficient vehicle' means a vehicle 
        that--
                    ``(A) has been certified by the Administrator of 
                the Environmental Protection Agency as meeting the Tier 
                II emission level established in regulations prescribed 
                by the Administrator under section 202(i) of the Clean 
                Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7521(i)) for that make and model 
                year vehicle; and
                    ``(B)(i) has been certified by the Administrator to 
                have a 45-mile-per-gallon or greater fuel economy 
                highway rating; or
                    ``(ii) is an alternative fuel vehicle.
            ``(4) Public transportation vehicle.--The term `public 
        transportation vehicle' means a vehicle that provides public 
        transportation (as defined in section 5302(a) of title 49).
            ``(5) State agency.--The term `State agency', as used with 
        respect to a HOV facility, means an agency of a State or local 
        government having jurisdiction over the operation of the 
        facility and includes a State transportation department.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) Program efficiencies.--Section 102 of title 23, United 
        States Code, is amended by striking subsection (a) and 
        redesignating subsections (b) and (c) as subsections (a) and 
        (b), respectively.
            (2) Chapter analysis.--The analysis for subchapter I of 
        chapter 1 of such title is amended by adding at the end the 
        following:

``168. HOV facilities.''.
    (c) Technical Amendment.--Section 102(b) of title 23, United States 
Code, as redesignated by subsection (b)(1) of this section, is amended 
by striking ``10 years'' and all that follows through ``after'' and 
inserting ``10 years (or such longer period as the State requests and 
the Secretary determines to be reasonable) after''.
    (d) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
Secretary and the States should provide additional incentives 
(including the use of high occupancy vehicle lanes on State and 
Interstate highways) for the purchase and use of hybrid and other fuel 
efficient vehicles, which have been proven to minimize air emissions 
and decrease consumption of fossil fuels.

SEC. 1209. CONGESTION PRICING PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--Section 1012(b)(1) of the Intermodal Surface 
Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (23 U.S.C. 149 note; 105 Stat. 
1938) is amended to read as follows:
            ``(1) Establishment.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Secretary may enter into 
                cooperative agreements with State and local governments 
                to carry out not more than 25 congestion pricing pilot 
                projects.
                    ``(B) Previously approved projects.--Projects 
                carried out under paragraph (1) shall include each 
                project approved under this subsection before the date 
                of enactment of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy 
                for Users and under which highway tolls are being 
                collected as of such date of enactment.''.
    (b) Set-Aside for Projects not Involving Highway Tolls.--At the end 
of section 1012(b)(8) of such Act add the following:
                    ``(D) Set-aside for projects not involving highway 
                tolls.--Of the amounts made available to carry out this 
                subsection, $3,000,000 per fiscal year shall be 
                available only for congestion pricing pilot projects 
                that do not involve highway tolls.''.
    (c) Conforming Amendments.--Section 1012(b) of such Act is 
amended--
            (1) in the subsection heading by striking ``Value Pricing'' 
        and inserting ``Congestion Pricing'';
            (2) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by striking ``(2) Notwithstanding'' and 
                inserting the following:
            ``(2) Federal share; eligible costs.--Notwithstanding'';
                    (B) in the first sentence by striking ``programs'' 
                and inserting ``projects''; and
                    (C) in the second sentence by striking ``program'' 
                and inserting ``project'';
            (3) in paragraph (3) by striking ``(3) Revenues'' and 
        inserting the following:
            ``(3) Use of revenues.--Revenues'';
            (4) in paragraph (4)--
                    (A) by striking ``(4) Notwithstanding'' and 
                inserting the following:
            ``(4) Use of tolls on interstate system.--
        Notwithstanding'';
                    (B) by striking ``value pricing pilot program'' and 
                inserting ``congestion pricing pilot project'';
            (5) in paragraph (5)--
                    (A) by striking ``(5) The Secretary'' and inserting 
                the following:
            ``(5) Monitoring.--The Secretary''; and
                    (B) by striking ``programs'' the first and second 
                place it appears and inserting ``projects''; and
            (6) in paragraph (6) by striking ``value pricing pilot 
        program'' and inserting ``congestion pricing pilot project''.

SEC. 1210. CONGESTION MITIGATION AND AIR QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM 
              ELIGIBILITY.

    Section 149(b)(5) of title 23, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting ``improve transportation systems management and operations,'' 
after ``intersections,''.

SEC. 1211. SPECIAL RULES FOR STATE ASSUMPTION OF RESPONSIBILITIES.

    (a) Limitations.--Section 167(a) of title 23, United States Code, 
as added by section 1207(a) of this Act, is amended by adding at the 
end the following:
            ``(3) Limitations.--
                    ``(A) Procedural and substantive requirements.--A 
                State that assumes the responsibilities of the 
                Secretary under this section shall be subject to the 
                same procedural and substantive requirements as would 
                apply if the responsibilities were carried out by the 
                Secretary. When a State assumes responsibilities for 
                carrying out a Federal law under this section, the 
                State assents to Federal jurisdiction and shall be 
                solely responsible and solely liable for complying with 
                and carrying out that law instead of the Secretary.
                    ``(B) Assumption of responsibilities.--Any 
                responsibility of the Secretary not assumed by the 
                State in a memorandum of understanding shall remain a 
                responsibility of the Secretary.
                    ``(C) Powers of other agencies.--Nothing in this 
                section preempts or limits any power, jurisdiction, 
                responsibility, or authority of an agency, other than 
                the Department of Transportation, with respect to a 
                project.''.
    (b) Acceptance of Federal Courts Jurisdiction; Termination of 
Agreements.--Section 167(b) of title 23, United States Code, as added 
by section 1207(a) of this Act, is amended by adding at the end the 
following:
            ``(5) Acceptance of federal courts jurisdiction.--A 
        memorandum of understanding with a State under this section 
        shall include a provision under which the State consents to 
        accept the jurisdiction of the Federal courts for the 
        compliance, discharge, and enforcement of any responsibility of 
        the Secretary that the State may assume under the memorandum.
            ``(6) Termination of agreements.--A memorandum of 
        understanding with a State under this section shall include a 
        provision authorizing the Secretary to terminate the agreement 
        if the Secretary, after providing an opportunity for a hearing, 
        issues a finding that the State is not in compliance with the 
        terms of the agreement.''.
    (c) State Subject to Federal Laws.--Section 167 of title 23, United 
States Code, as added by section 1207(a) of this Act, is further 
amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(f) State Subject to Federal Laws.--For purposes of assuming 
responsibilities of the Secretary under this section, a State agency 
entering into a memorandum of understanding under subsection (b) is 
deemed to be a Federal agency to the extent the State is carrying out 
the Secretary's responsibilities under the National Environmental 
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), this title, and any other 
provision of Federal law.''.

SEC. 1212. OPENING OF INTERSTATE RAMPS.

    (a) In General.--Not later 30 days after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary shall open the ramp connecting Interstate Route 
495 and Arena Drive in Prince George's County, Maryland, for the 
purpose of allowing motor vehicles to exit Interstate Route 495 in both 
northern and southern directions onto Arena Drive. Such ramp shall be 
open for 24 hours a day, every day during the calendar year.
    (b) Fully Opening Arena Drive Ramp.--
            (1) Study.--The Secretary shall conduct a study to 
        determine the most appropriate method for opening the ramps for 
        allowing motor vehicles to enter Interstate Route 495 from 
        Arena Drive.
            (2) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall transmit to Congress 
        a report on the results of the study.
    (c) Limitation on Statutory Construction.--Nothing in the section 
shall be construed as altering current traffic management protocols to 
the Arena Drive ramps during stadium events.

                  Subtitle C--Mobility and Efficiency

SEC. 1301. NATIONAL CORRIDOR INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish and implement a 
program to make allocations to States for highway construction projects 
in corridors of national significance to promote economic growth and 
international or interregional trade pursuant to the selection factors 
provided in this section. A State must submit an application to the 
Secretary in order to receive an allocation under this section.
    (b) Selection Process.--
            (1) Priority.--In the selection process under this section, 
        the Secretary shall give priority to projects in corridors that 
        are a part of, or will be designated as part of, the Dwight D. 
        Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways 
        after completion of the work described in the application 
        received by the Secretary and to any project that will be 
        completed within 5 years of the date of the allocation of funds 
        for the project.
            (2) Selection factors.--In making allocations under this 
        section, the Secretary shall consider the following factors:
                    (A) The extent to which the corridor provides a 
                link between 2 existing segments of the Interstate 
                System.
                    (B) The extent to which the project will facilitate 
                major multistate or regional mobility and economic 
                growth and development in areas underserved by existing 
                highway infrastructure.
                    (C) The extent to which commercial vehicle traffic 
                in the corridor--
                            (i) has increased since the date of 
                        enactment of the North American Free Trade 
                        Agreement Implementation Act (16 U.S.C. 4401 et 
                        seq.); and
                            (ii) is projected to increase in the 
                        future.
                    (D) The extent to which international truck-borne 
                commodities move through the corridor.
                    (E) The extent to which the project will make 
                improvements to an existing segment of the Interstate 
                System that will result in a decrease in congestion.
                    (F) The reduction in commercial and other travel 
                time through a major freight corridor expected as a 
                result of the project.
                    (G) The value of the cargo carried by commercial 
                vehicle traffic in the corridor and the economic costs 
                arising from congestion in the corridor.
                    (H) The extent of leveraging of Federal funds 
                provided to carry out this section, including--
                            (i) use of innovative financing;
                            (ii) combination with funding provided 
                        under other sections of this Act and title 23, 
                        United States Code; and
                            (iii) combination with other sources of 
                        Federal, State, local, or private funding.
    (c) Period of Availability.--Funds allocated for a project to a 
State under this section shall remain available for obligation in that 
State until 6 months from the day on which they are allocated. Sums not 
obligated within 6 months of the day on which they are allocated shall 
be available to the Secretary to be allocated for other projects 
eligible under this section.
    (d) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of a project 
under this section shall be determined in accordance with section 
120(b) of title 23, United States Code.
    (e) Applicability of Title 23.--Except as provided in subsections 
(c) and (d), funds made available by section 1101(a)(10) of this Act to 
carry out this section shall be available for obligation in the same 
manner as if such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, 
United States Code.
    (f) State Defined.--In this section, the term ``State'' has the 
meaning such term has under section 101 of title 23, United States 
Code.

SEC. 1302. COORDINATED BORDER INFRASTRUCTURE PROGRAM.

    (a) General Authority.--The Secretary shall implement a coordinated 
border infrastructure program under which the Secretary shall 
distribute funds to border States to improve the safe movement of motor 
vehicles at or across the border between the United States and Canada 
and the border between the United States and Mexico.
    (b) Eligible Uses.--A State may use funds apportioned under this 
section only for--
            (1) improvements in a border region to existing 
        transportation and supporting infrastructure that facilitate 
        cross-border motor vehicle and cargo movements;
            (2) construction of highways and related safety and safety 
        enforcement facilities in a border region that facilitate motor 
        vehicle and cargo movements related to international trade;
            (3) operational improvements in a border region, including 
        improvements relating to electronic data interchange and use of 
        telecommunications, to expedite cross border motor vehicle and 
        cargo movement;
            (4) modifications to regulatory procedures to expedite safe 
        and efficient cross border motor vehicle and cargo movements; 
        and
            (5) international coordination of transportation planning, 
        programming, and border operation with Canada and Mexico 
        relating to expediting cross border motor vehicle and cargo 
        movements.
    (c) Apportionment of Funds.--On October 1 of each fiscal year, the 
Secretary shall apportion among border States sums authorized to be 
appropriated to carry out this section for such fiscal year as follows:
            (1) 20 percent in the ratio that--
                    (A) the total number of incoming commercial trucks 
                that pass through the land border ports of entry within 
                the boundaries of a border State, as determined by the 
                Secretary; bears to
                    (B) the total number of incoming commercial trucks 
                that pass through such ports of entry within the 
                boundaries of all the border States, as determined by 
                the Secretary.
            (2) 30 percent in the ratio that--
                    (A) the total number of incoming personal motor 
                vehicles and incoming buses that pass through land 
                border ports of entry within the boundaries of a border 
                State, as determined by the Secretary; bears to
                    (B) the total number of incoming personal motor 
                vehicles and incoming buses that pass through such 
                ports of entry within the boundaries of all the border 
                States, as determined by the Secretary.
            (3) 25 percent in the ratio that--
                    (A) the total weight of incoming cargo by 
                commercial trucks that pass through land border ports 
                of entry within the boundaries of a border State, as 
                determined by the Secretary; bears to
                    (B) the total weight of incoming cargo by 
                commercial trucks that pass through such ports of entry 
                within the boundaries of all the border States, as 
                determined by the Secretary.
            (4) 25 percent of the ratio that--
                    (A) the total number of land border ports of entry 
                within the boundaries of a border State, as determined 
                by the Secretary; bears to
                    (B) the total number of land border ports of entry 
                within the boundaries of all the border States, as 
                determined by the Secretary.
    (d) Applicability of Title 23.--Funds made available to carry out 
this section shall be available for obligation in the same manner as if 
such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States 
Code; except that such funds shall not be transferable and shall remain 
available until expended and the Federal share of the cost of a project 
under this section shall be 80 percent.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Border region.--The term ``border region'' means any 
        portion of a border State within 20 miles of an international 
        land border with Canada or Mexico.
            (2) Border state.--The term ``border State'' means any 
        State that has an international land border with Canada or 
        Mexico.
            (3) Commercial truck.--The term ``commercial truck'' means 
        a commercial motor vehicle as defined in section 31301(4) 
        (other than subparagraph (B)) of title 49, United States Code.
            (4) Motor vehicle.--The term ``motor vehicle'' has the 
        meaning such term has under section 101(a) of title 23, United 
        States Code.
            (5) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such term 
        has in section 101(a) of such title 23.

SEC. 1303. FREIGHT INTERMODAL CONNECTORS.

    (a) In General.--
            (1) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a freight 
        intermodal connector program to improve productivity and 
        improve the efficiency of the transportation of freight, while 
        mitigating congestion in the area of freight intermodal 
        connectors.
            (2) Purposes.--The purposes of the program shall be--
                    (A) to facilitate and support intermodal freight 
                transportation initiatives at the State and local 
                levels in order to improve freight intermodal 
                connectors and mitigate the impact of congestion in the 
                area of such connectors; and
                    (B) to provide capital funding to address 
                infrastructure and freight operational needs at freight 
                intermodal connectors.
    (b) State Responsibilities.--Under the program, each State shall 
ensure that intermodal freight transportation and trade facilitation 
and are adequately addressed integrated into the project development 
process, including transportation planning, through final design and 
construction of freight related transportation projects.
    (c) Eligible Projects.--
            (1) In general.--Projects eligible for funding under this 
        section may include the construction of and improvements to 
        publicly owned freight intermodal connectors, the provision of 
        access to such connectors, and operational improvements for 
        such connectors (including capital investment for intelligent 
        transportation systems); except that a project located within 
        the boundaries of an intermodal freight facility shall only 
        include highway infrastructure modifications necessary to 
        facilitate direct intermodal access between the connector and 
        the facility.
            (2) Special rule.--If a State that does not have any 
        freight intermodal connectors within its boundaries or has only 
        freight intermodal connectors within its boundaries that are in 
        good condition and provide an adequate level of service, 
        projects within the boundaries of the State that are eligible 
        for assistance under section 103(b)(6) of title 23, United 
        States Code, relating to the National Highway System, shall be 
        eligible for funding under this section.
    (d) Priority.--Under the program, a State shall give priority to 
projects on freight intermodal connectors to the National Highway 
System as identified according to the criteria set forth in the report 
of the Department of Transportation to Congress entitled ``Pulling 
Together: The NHS and its Connections to Major Intermodal Terminals''.
    (e) Apportionment.--On October 1 of each fiscal year after the 
deductions under subsection (i), the Secretary shall apportion among 
the States sums made available to carry out this section for such 
fiscal year as follows:
            (1) 33.3 percent in the ratio that--
                    (A) the number of freight intermodal connectors 
                identified in the most recent Intermodal Freight 
                Connectors study of the Federal Highway Administration 
                within the boundaries of a State; bears to
                    (B) the total number of such connectors within the 
                boundaries of all the States.
            (2) 33.3 percent in the ratio that--
                    (A) the total of each State's annual contributions 
                to the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
                Account) attributable to commercial motor vehicles; 
                bears to
                    (B) the total of such annual contributions by all 
                States.
            (3) 33.4 percent in the same ratios as funds are 
        apportioned for the National Highway System under clauses (i), 
        (ii), (iii), and (iv) of section 104(b)(1)(A) of title 23, 
        United States Code.
    (f) Applicability of Title 23.--Funds made available to carry out 
this section shall be available for obligation in the same manner as if 
such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States 
Code; except that such funds shall not be transferable and shall remain 
available until expended and the Federal share of the cost of a project 
under this section shall be 80 percent.
    (g) Update Report.--Not later than August 1, 2005, the Secretary 
shall publish an update to the report entitled ``Pulling Together: the 
National Highway System and its Connections to Major Intermodal 
Terminals''.
    (h) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Freight intermodal connectors.--The term ``freight 
        intermodal connector'' means the roadway that connects to an 
        intermodal freight facility that carries or will carry 
        intermodal traffic.
            (2) Intermodal freight facility.--The term ``intermodal 
        freight facility'' means a port, airport, truck-rail terminal, 
        and pipeline-truck terminal.
            (3) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such term 
        has in section 101(a) of title 23, United States Code.
    (i) Deductions.--
            (1) Freight intermodal distribution pilot grant program.--
        Whenever an apportionment is made of the sums made available 
        for carrying out this section for a fiscal year, the Secretary 
        shall deduct $6,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 
        2009 for the freight intermodal distribution pilot grant 
        program under section 1307 of this Act.
            (2) Dedicated truck lanes.--Whenever an apportionment is 
        made of the sums made available for carrying out this section 
        for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall deduct for dedicated 
        truck lanes under section 1305 of this title $165,000,000 for 
        each of fiscal years 2005 through 2008 and $170,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2009.

SEC. 1304. PROJECTS OF NATIONAL AND REGIONAL SIGNIFICANCE.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Under current law, surface transportation programs rely 
        primarily on formula capital apportionments to States.
            (2) Despite the significant increase for surface 
        transportation program funding in the Transportation Equity Act 
        of the 21st Century, current levels of investment are 
        insufficient to fund critical high-cost transportation 
        infrastructure facilities that address critical national 
        economic and transportation needs.
            (3) Critical high-cost transportation infrastructure 
        facilities often include multiple levels of government, 
        agencies, modes of transportation, and transportation goals and 
        planning processes that are not easily addressed or funded 
        within existing surface transportation program categories.
            (4) Projects of national and regional significance have 
        national and regional benefits, including improving economic 
        productivity by facilitating international trade, relieving 
        congestion, and improving transportation safety by facilitating 
        passenger and freight movement.
            (5) The benefits of such projects described in paragraph 
        (4) accrue to local areas, States, and the Nation as a result 
        of the effect such projects have on the national transportation 
        system.
            (6) A program dedicated to constructing projects of 
        national and regional significance is necessary to improve the 
        safe, secure, and efficient movement of people and goods 
        throughout the United States and improve the health and welfare 
        of the national economy.
    (b) Establishment of Program.--The Secretary shall establish a 
program to provide grants to qualified entities for projects of 
national and regional significance.
    (c) Definitions.--
            (1) Eligible project costs.--The term ``eligible project 
        costs'' means the costs of--
                    (A) development phase activities, including 
                planning, feasibility analysis, revenue forecasting, 
                environmental review, preliminary engineering and 
                design work, and other preconstruction activities; and
                    (B) construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, 
                and acquisition of real property (including land 
                related to the project and improvements to land), 
                environmental mitigation, construction contingencies, 
                acquisition of equipment, and operational improvements.
            (2) Eligible project.--The term ``eligible project'' means 
        any surface transportation project eligible for Federal 
        assistance under title 23, United States Code, including 
        freight railroad projects and activities eligible under such 
        title.
            (3) Qualified entity.--The term ``qualified entity'' means 
        a State as defined in section 101(a) of title 23, United States 
        Code.
    (d) Eligibility.--To be eligible for assistance under this section, 
a project shall have eligible project costs that are reasonably 
anticipated to equal or exceed the lesser of--
            (1) $500,000,000; or
            (2) 75 percent of the amount of Federal highway assistance 
        funds apportioned for the most recently completed fiscal year 
        to the State in which the project is located.
    (e) Applications.--Each qualified entity seeking to receive a grant 
under this section for an eligible project shall submit to the 
Secretary an application in such form and in accordance with such 
requirements as the Secretary shall establish.
    (f) Competitive Grant Selection and Criteria for Grants.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall--
                    (A) establish criteria for selecting among projects 
                that meet the eligibility criteria specified in 
                subsection (d);
                    (B) conduct a national solicitation for 
                applications; and
                    (C) award grants on a competitive basis.
            (2) Criteria for grants.--The Secretary may approve a grant 
        under this section for a project only if the Secretary 
        determines that the project--
                    (A) is based on the results of preliminary 
                engineering;
                    (B) is justified based on the project's ability--
                            (i) to generate national economic benefits, 
                        including creating jobs, expanding business 
                        opportunities, and impacting the gross domestic 
                        product;
                            (ii) to reduce congestion, including 
                        impacts in the State, region, and Nation;
                            (iii) to improve transportation safety, 
                        including reducing transportation accidents, 
                        injuries, and fatalities;
                            (iv) to otherwise enhance the national 
                        transportation system; and
                            (v) to garner support for non-Federal 
                        financial commitments and provide evidence of 
                        stable and dependable financing sources to 
                        construct, maintain, and operate the 
                        infrastructure facility; and
                    (C) is supported by an acceptable degree of non-
                Federal financial commitments, including evidence of 
                stable and dependable financing sources to construct, 
                maintain, and operate the infrastructure facility.
            (3) Selection considerations.--In selecting a project under 
        this section, the Secretary shall consider the extent to which 
        the project--
                    (A) leverages Federal investment by encouraging 
                non-Federal contributions to the project, including 
                contributions from public-private partnerships;
                    (B) uses new technologies, including intelligent 
                transportation systems, that enhance the efficiency of 
                the project.
                    (C) helps maintain or protect the environment.
            (4) Preliminary engineering.--In evaluating a project under 
        paragraph (2)(A), the Secretary shall analyze and consider the 
        results of preliminary engineering for the project.
            (5) Non-federal financial commitment.--
                    (A) Evaluation of project.--In evaluating a project 
                under paragraph (2)(C), the Secretary shall require 
                that--
                            (i) the proposed project plan provides for 
                        the availability of contingency amounts that 
                        the Secretary determines to be reasonable to 
                        cover unanticipated cost increases; and
                            (ii) each proposed non-Federal source of 
                        capital and operating financing is stable, 
                        reliable, and available within the proposed 
                        project timetable.
                    (B) Considerations.--In assessing the stability, 
                reliability, and availability of proposed sources of 
                non-Federal financing under subparagraph (A), the 
                Secretary shall consider--
                            (i) existing financial commitments;
                            (ii) the degree to which financing sources 
                        are dedicated to the purposes proposed;
                            (iii) any debt obligation that exists or is 
                        proposed by the recipient for the proposed 
                        project; and
                            (iv) the extent to which the project has a 
                        non-Federal financial commitment that exceeds 
                        the required non-Federal share of the cost of 
                        the project.
            (6) Regulations.--Not later than 120 days after the date of 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall issue regulations on 
        the manner in which the Secretary will evaluate and rate the 
        projects based on the results of preliminary engineering, 
        project justification, and the degree of non-Federal financial 
        commitment, as required under this subsection.
            (7) Project evaluation and rating.--A proposed project may 
        advance from preliminary engineering to final design and 
        construction only if the Secretary finds that the project meets 
        the requirements of this subsection and there is a reasonable 
        likelihood that the project will continue to meet such 
        requirements. In making such findings, the Secretary shall 
        evaluate and rate the project as ``highly recommended'', 
        ``recommended'', or ``not recommended'' based on the results of 
        preliminary engineering, the project justification criteria, 
        and the degree of non-Federal financial commitment, as required 
        under this subsection. In rating the projects, the Secretary 
        shall provide, in addition to the overall project rating, 
        individual ratings for each of the criteria established under 
        the regulations issued under paragraph (6).
    (g) Letters of Intent and Full Funding Grant Agreements.--
            (1) Letter of intent.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary may issue a letter 
                of intent to an applicant announcing an intention to 
                obligate, for a project under this section, an amount 
                from future available budget authority specified in law 
                that is not more than the amount stipulated as the 
                financial participation of the Secretary in the 
                project.
                    (B) Notification.--At least 60 days before issuing 
                a letter under subparagraph (A) or entering into a full 
                funding grant agreement, the Secretary shall notify in 
                writing the Committee on Transportation and 
                Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and the 
                Committee on Environment and Public Works of the Senate 
                of the proposed letter or agreement. The Secretary 
                shall include with the notification a copy of the 
                proposed letter or agreement as well as the evaluations 
                and ratings for the project.
                    (C) Not an obligation.--The issuance of a letter is 
                deemed not to be an obligation under sections 1108(c) 
                and (d), 1501, and 1502(a) of title 31, United States 
                Code, or an administrative commitment.
                    (D) Obligation or commitment.--An obligation or 
                administrative commitment may be made only when 
                contract authority is allocated to a project.
            (2) Full funding grant agreement.--
                    (A) In general.--A project financed under this 
                subsection shall be carried out through a full funding 
                grant agreement. The Secretary shall enter into a full 
                funding grant agreement based on the evaluations and 
                ratings required under subsection (f)(7).
                    (B) Terms.--If the Secretary makes a full funding 
                grant agreement with an applicant, the agreement 
                shall--
                            (i) establish the terms of participation by 
                        the United States Government in a project under 
                        this section;
                            (ii) establish the maximum amount of 
                        Government financial assistance for the 
                        project;
                            (iii) cover the period of time for 
                        completing the project, including a period 
                        extending beyond the period of an 
                        authorization; and
                            (iv) make timely and efficient management 
                        of the project easier according to the laws of 
                        the United States.
                    (C) Agreement.--An agreement under this paragraph 
                obligates an amount of available budget authority 
                specified in law and may include a commitment, 
                contingent on amounts to be specified in law in advance 
                for commitments under this paragraph, to obligate an 
                additional amount from future available budget 
                authority specified in law. The agreement shall state 
                that the contingent commitment is not an obligation of 
                the Government. Interest and other financing costs of 
                efficiently carrying out a part of the project within a 
                reasonable time are a cost of carrying out the project 
                under a full funding grant agreement, except that 
                eligible costs may not be more than the cost of the 
                most favorable financing terms reasonably available for 
                the project at the time of borrowing. The applicant 
                shall certify, in a way satisfactory to the Secretary, 
                that the applicant has shown reasonable diligence in 
                seeking the most favorable financing terms.
            (3) Amounts.--The total estimated amount of future 
        obligations of the Government and contingent commitments to 
        incur obligations covered by all outstanding letters of intent 
        and full funding grant agreements may be not more than the 
        greater of the amount authorized to carry out this section or 
        an amount equivalent to the last 2 fiscal years of funding 
        authorized to carry out this section less an amount the 
        Secretary reasonably estimates is necessary for grants under 
        this section not covered by a letter. The total amount covered 
        by new letters and contingent commitments included in full 
        funding grant agreements may be not more than a limitation 
        specified in law.
    (h) Grant Requirements.--
            (1) In general.--A grant for a project under this section 
        shall be subject to all of the requirements of title 23, United 
        States Code, and chapter 52 of title 49, United States Code.
            (2) Other terms and conditions.--The Secretary shall 
        require that all grants under this section be subject to all 
        terms, conditions, and requirements that the Secretary decides 
        are necessary or appropriate for purposes of this section, 
        including requirements for the disposition of net increases in 
        value of real property resulting from the project assisted 
        under this section.
    (i) Government's Share of Project Cost.--Based on engineering 
studies, studies of economic feasibility, and information on the 
expected use of equipment or facilities, the Secretary shall estimate 
the cost of a project receiving assistance under this section. A grant 
for the project is for 80 percent of the project cost, unless the grant 
recipient requests a lower grant percentage. A refund or reduction of 
the remainder may be made only if a refund of a proportional amount of 
the grant of the Government is made at the same time.
    (j) Fiscal Capacity Considerations.--If the Secretary gives 
priority consideration to financing projects that include more than the 
non-Government share required under subsection (i) the Secretary shall 
give equal consideration to differences in the fiscal capacity of State 
and local governments.
    (k) Reports.--
            (1) Annual report.--Not later than the first Monday in 
        February of each year, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Environment and Public 
        Works of the Senate a report that includes a proposal on the 
        allocation of amounts to be made available to finance grants 
        under this section.
            (2) Recommendations on funding.--The annual report under 
        this paragraph shall include evaluations and ratings, as 
        required under subsection (f). The report shall also include 
        recommendations of projects for funding based on the 
        evaluations and ratings and on existing commitments and 
        anticipated funding levels for the next 3 fiscal years and for 
        the next 10 fiscal years based on information currently 
        available to the Secretary.
    (l) Applicability of Title 23.--Funds made available to carry out 
this section shall be available for obligation in the same manner as if 
such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States 
Code; except that such funds shall not be transferable and shall remain 
available until expended and the Federal share of the cost of a project 
under this section shall be as provided in this section.

SEC. 1305. DEDICATED TRUCK LANES.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish and implement a 
pilot program to make allocations to States for the construction of 
projects that separate commercial truck traffic from other motor 
vehicle traffic. A State must submit an application to the Secretary in 
order to receive an allocation under this section.
    (b) Selection Process.--
            (1) Priority.--In the selection process under this section, 
        the Secretary shall give priority to projects that provide 
        additional capacity.
            (2) Selection factors.--In making allocations under this 
        section, the Secretary shall consider the following factors:
                    (A) The extent to which the project will improve 
                the safe and efficient movement of freight.
                    (B) The extent to which the project provides 
                positive separation of commercial trucks from other 
                motor vehicle traffic.
                    (C) The extent to which the project connects an 
                intermodal freight facility or an international port of 
                entry to the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of 
                Interstate and Defense Highways by providing limited 
                access lanes that allow commercial truck traffic to 
                enter the Interstate System at the posted speed limit.
                    (D) The extent to which the project will remove 
                truck traffic from surface streets.
                    (E) The extent to which travel time is expected to 
                be reduced as a result of the proposed project.
                    (F) The extent of leveraging of Federal funds 
                provided to carry out this section, including--
                            (i) use of innovative financing;
                            (ii) combination with funding provided 
                        under other sections of this Act and title 23, 
                        United States Code; and
                            (iii) combination with other sources of 
                        Federal, State, local, or private funding.
    (c) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of a project 
under this section shall be determined in accordance with section 
120(b) of title 23, United States Code.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Commercial truck.--The term ``commercial truck'' means 
        a self-propelled or towed vehicle used on highways in commerce 
        principally to transport cargo if the vehicle has a gross 
        vehicle weight rating or gross vehicle weight of at least 
        10,001 pounds, whichever is greater.
            (2) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such term 
        has under section 101 of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 1306. TRUCK PARKING FACILITIES.

    (a) Establishment.--In cooperation with appropriate State, 
regional, and local governments, the Secretary shall establish a pilot 
program to address the shortage of long-term parking for commercial 
motor vehicles on the National Highway System.
    (b) Allocation of Funds.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall allocate funds made 
        available to carry out this section among States, metropolitan 
        planning organizations, and local governments.
            (2) Applications.--To be eligible for an allocation under 
        this section, a State, metropolitan planning organization, or 
        local government shall submit to the Secretary an application 
        at such time and containing such information as the Secretary 
        may require.
            (3) Eligible projects.--Funds allocated under this 
        subsection shall be used by the recipient for projects 
        described in an application approved by the Secretary. Such 
        projects shall serve the National Highway System and may 
        include the following:
                    (A) Constructing safety rest areas, as defined in 
                section 120(c) of title 23, United States Code, that 
                include parking for commercial motor vehicles.
                    (B) Constructing commercial motor vehicle parking 
                facilities adjacent to commercial truck stops and 
                travel plazas.
                    (C) Opening existing facilities to commercial motor 
                vehicle parking, including inspection and weigh 
                stations and park-and-ride facilities.
                    (D) Promoting the availability of publicly or 
                privately provided commercial motor vehicle parking on 
                the National Highway System using intelligent 
                transportation systems and other means.
                    (E) Constructing turnouts along the National 
                Highway System for commercial motor vehicles.
                    (F) Making capital improvements to public 
                commercial motor vehicle parking facilities currently 
                closed on a seasonal basis to allow the facilities to 
                remain open year-round.
                    (G) Improving the geometric design of interchanges 
                on the National Highway System to improve access to 
                commercial motor vehicle parking facilities.
            (4) Priority.--In allocating funds made available to carry 
        out this section, the Secretary shall give priority to 
        applicants that--
                    (A) demonstrate a severe shortage of commercial 
                motor vehicle parking capacity in the corridor to be 
                addressed;
                    (B) have consulted with affected State and local 
                governments, community groups, private providers of 
                commercial motor vehicle parking, and motorist and 
                trucking organizations; and
                    (C) demonstrate that their proposed projects are 
                likely to have positive effects on highway safety, 
                traffic congestion, or air quality.
    (c) Funding.--
            (1) In general.--There is authorized to be appropriated 
        from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
        Account) to carry out this section $5,000,000 for each of 
        fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
            (2) Contract authority.--Funds authorized under this 
        subsection shall be available for obligation in the same manner 
        as if the funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, 
        United States Code.
    (d) Report to Congress.--Not later than 5 years after the date of 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall transmit to Congress a 
report on the results of the pilot program.
    (e) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of a project 
carried out using amounts made available under this section shall be 
determined in accordance with sections 120(b) and 120(c) of title 23, 
United States Code.
    (f) Applicability of Title 23.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
of law, projects funded under this section shall be treated as projects 
on a Federal-aid system under chapter 1 of title 23, United States 
Code.

SEC. 1307. FREIGHT INTERMODAL DISTRIBUTION PILOT GRANT PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish and implement a 
freight intermodal distribution pilot grant program.
    (b) Purposes.--The purposes of the program established under 
subsection (a) shall be--
            (1) to facilitate and support intermodal freight 
        transportation initiatives at the State and local levels to 
        relieve congestion and improve safety; and
            (2) to provide capital funding to address infrastructure 
        and freight distribution needs at inland ports and intermodal 
        freight facilities.
    (c) Selection Process.--
            (1) Applications.--A State shall submit an application to 
        the Secretary containing such information as the Secretary may 
        require to receive funding under this section.
            (2) Priority.--In selecting projects to be funded under the 
        pilot program, the Secretary shall give priority to projects 
        that will--
                    (A) reduce congestion into and out of international 
                ports located on the west coast of the United States;
                    (B) demonstrate ways to increase the likelihood 
                that freight container movements involve freight 
                containers carrying goods; and
                    (C) establish or expand intermodal facilities that 
                encourage the development of inland freight 
                distribution centers.
    (d) Eligible Projects.--Funds made available under this section 
shall be used by the recipient for projects described in an application 
approved by the Secretary. Such projects shall help relieve congestion, 
improve transportation safety, facilitate international trade, and 
encourage public-private partnership. Such projects may include 
developing and constructing intermodal freight distribution and 
transfer facilities at inland ports.
    (e) Treatment of Projects.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
law, projects assisted under this section shall be treated as projects 
on a Federal-aid system under such chapter.

                       Subtitle D--Highway Safety

SEC. 1401. HIGHWAY SAFETY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) Safety Improvement Project Defined.--Section 101(a)(30) of 
title 23, United States Code, is amended by inserting ``installs 
fluorescent, yellow-green signs at pedestrian or bicycle crossings or 
school zones,'' after ``call boxes,''.
    (b) Operation Lifesaver.--Section 104(d)(1) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``subsection (b)(3) of this section'' and 
        inserting ``section 130(f)''; and
            (2) by striking ``$500,000'' and inserting ``$600,000''.
    (c) Railway-Highway Crossing Hazard Elimination in High Speed Rail 
Corridors.--
            (1) In general.--Section 104(d)(2) of such title is 
        amended--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A) by striking ``$5,250,000'' 
                and inserting ``$7,500,000 for each of fiscal years 
                2004 and 2005, $10,000,000 for each of fiscal years 
                2006 and 2007, and $15,000,000 for each of fiscal years 
                2008 and 2009''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (E)--
                            (i) by striking ``Not less than $250,000 of 
                        such set-aside'' and inserting ``Of such set-
                        aside, not less than $875,000 for each of 
                        fiscal years 2004 and 2005, $1,500,000 for each 
                        of fiscal years 2006 and 2007, and $2,750,000 
                        for each of fiscal years 2008 and 2009''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``per fiscal year''.
            (2) Designation of corridors.--Of the rail corridors 
        selected by the Secretary in accordance with section 104(d)(2) 
        of title 23, United States Code--
                    (A) the Northern New England High Speed Rail 
                Corridor is expanded to include the train routes from 
                Boston, Massachusetts, to Albany, New York, and from 
                Springfield, Massachusetts, to New Haven, Connecticut; 
                and
                    (B) the South Central Corridor is expanded to 
                include the train route from Killeen, Texas, to 
                Houston, Texas, via Bryan-College Station.
    (d) Railway-Highway Crossings.--
            (1) Funds for protective devices.--Section 130(e) of such 
        title is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``At'' and inserting the following:
            ``(1) In general.--At''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(2) Special rule.--If a State demonstrates to the 
        satisfaction of the Secretary that the State has met all its 
        needs for installation of protective devices at railway-highway 
        crossings, the State may use funds made available by this 
        subsection for other purposes by this section.''.
            (2) Apportionment.--Section 130(f) of such title is amended 
        to read as follows:
    ``(f) Apportionment.--
            ``(1) Formula.--Fifty percent of the funds authorized to be 
        appropriated to carry out this section shall be apportioned to 
        the States in accordance with the formula set forth in section 
        104(b)(3)(A), and 50 percent of such funds shall be apportioned 
        to the States in the ratio that total public railway-highway 
        crossings in each State bears to the total of such crossings in 
        all States.
            ``(2) Minimum apportionment.--Notwithstanding paragraph 
        (1), each State shall receive a minimum of \1/2\ of 1 percent 
        of the funds apportioned under paragraph (1).
            ``(3) Federal share.--The Federal share payable on account 
        of any project financed with funds authorized to be 
        appropriated to carry out this section shall be 90 percent of 
        the cost thereof.''.
            (3) Biennial report to congress.--The third sentence of 
        section 130(g) of such title is amended by striking ``not later 
        than April 1 of each year,'' and inserting ``, not later than 
        April 1, 2006, and every 2 years thereafter,''.
            (4) Expenditure of funds.--Section 130 of such title is 
        further amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(k) Expenditure of Funds.--Not more than 2 percent of funds 
apportioned to a State to carry out this section may be used by the 
State for compilation and analysis of data in support of activities 
carried out under subsection (g).''.
    (e) Surface Transportation Program.--
            (1) In general.--Section 133(d) of such title is amended--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (1); and
                    (B) by redesignating paragraphs (2) through (5) as 
                paragraphs (1) through (4), respectively; and
                    (C) in paragraph (2) (as so redesignated)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (A) by striking ``80 
                        percent'' and inserting ``90 percent'';
                            (ii) in subparagraph (B) by striking 
                        ``tobe'' and inserting ``to be''; and
                            (iii) in subparagraph (D) by adding a 
                        period at the end.
            (2) Conforming amendments.--
                    (A) Section 133.--Section 133(e) is amended by 
                striking ``(d)(2)'' and inserting ``(d)(1)'' in each of 
                paragraphs (3)(B)(i), (5)(A), and (5)(B).
                    (B) Section 126.--Section 126(b) of such title is 
                amended--
                            (i) by striking ``to the last sentence of 
                        section 133(d)(1) or'';
                            (ii) by striking ``section 133(d)(3)'' and 
                        inserting ``section 133(d)(2)''; and
                            (iii) by striking ``or 133(d)(2)''.
    (f) Hazard Elimination Program.--
            (1) Purposes.--Section 152(a)(1) of such title is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``and'' after ``bicyclists,''; and
                    (B) by inserting after ``pedestrians,'' the 
                following: ``and the disabled, identify roadway safety 
                improvement needs for such locations, sections, and 
                elements,''.
            (2) Hazards.--Section 152(a)(2)(A) of such title is amended 
        by inserting ``the disabled,'' after ``pedestrians,''.
            (3) Approval of projects.--Section 152(b) of such title is 
        amended by inserting before the period at the end the 
        following: ``that reduces the likelihood of crashes involving 
        road departures, intersections, pedestrians, the disabled, 
        bicyclists, older drivers, or construction work zones''.
            (4) Expenditure of funds.--Section 152(c) of such title is 
        amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (2) by striking ``or'' at the end;
                    (B) in paragraph (3) by striking the period at the 
                end and inserting a semicolon; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(4) police assistance for traffic and speed management in 
        construction work zones;
            ``(5) installation of barriers between construction work 
        zones and traffic lanes for the safety of motorists and 
        workers;
            ``(6) installation of protective devices at railway-highway 
        crossings; and
            ``(7) compilation and analysis of data under subsections 
        (f) and (g) if the funds used for this purpose by a State do 
        not exceed 2 percent of the amount apportioned to such State to 
        carry out this section.''.
            (5) Apportionment.--Section 152(d) of such title is amended 
        to read as follows:
    ``(d) Apportionment.--
            ``(1) Formula.--Funds authorized to be appropriated to 
        carry out this section shall be apportioned to the States in 
        accordance with the formula set forth in section 104(b)(3)(A).
            ``(2) Minimum apportionment.--Notwithstanding paragraph 
        (1), each State shall receive a minimum of \1/2\ of 1 percent 
        of the funds apportioned under paragraph (1).
            ``(3) Federal share.--The Federal share payable on account 
        of any project financed with funds authorized to be 
        appropriated to carry out this section shall be 90 percent of 
        the cost thereof.''.
            (6) Biennial report to congress.--
                    (A) In general.--Section 152 of such title is 
                amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(i) Biennial Report to Congress.--Not later than 2 years after 
the date of enactment of this subsection, and every 2 years thereafter, 
the Secretary shall transmit to the Committee on Transportation and 
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and the Committee on 
Environment and Public Works of the Senate a report on the results of 
the program under this section. The report shall include, at a minimum, 
the following:
            ``(1) A summary of State projects completed under this 
        section categorized by the types of hazards and a statement of 
        the cost of such projects.
            ``(2) An analysis of the effectiveness of such categories 
        of projects in reducing the number and severity of crashes at 
        high hazard locations.
            ``(3) An assessment of the adequacy of authorized funding 
        for the program and State use of such funding to address the 
        national need for such projects.
            ``(4) Recommendations for funding and program improvements 
        to reduce the number of high hazard locations.
            ``(5) An analysis and evaluation of each State program, an 
        identification of any State found not to be in compliance with 
        the schedule of improvements required by subsection (a), and 
        recommendations for future implementation of the hazard 
        elimination program.''.
                    (B) Conforming amendment.--Section 152(g) of such 
                title is amended by striking the third sentence through 
                the last sentence.
    (g) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsections (b)(1), 
(d), (e), and (f) shall take effect on September 30, 2005.

SEC. 1402. WORKER INJURY PREVENTION AND FREE FLOW OF VEHICULAR TRAFFIC.

    Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the 
Secretary shall issue regulations to decrease the likelihood of worker 
injury and maintain the free flow of vehicular traffic by requiring 
workers whose duties place them on or in close proximity to a Federal-
aid highway (as defined in section 101 of title 23, United States Code) 
to wear high visibility garments. Such regulations may also require 
such other worker-safety measures for workers with those duties as the 
Secretary determines appropriate.

SEC. 1403. HIGH RISK RURAL ROAD SAFETY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish and implement a 
high risk rural road safety improvement program in accordance with this 
section.
    (b) Eligible Projects.--
            (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), a 
        State may obligate funds apportioned to it under this section 
        only for construction and operational improvement projects on 
        high risk rural roads and only if the primary purpose of the 
        project is to improve highway safety on a high risk rural road.
            (2) Special rule.--A State may use funds apportioned to it 
        under this section for any project approved by the Secretary 
        under section 152 of title 23, United States Code, if the State 
        certifies to the Secretary that it has no projects described in 
        paragraph (1).
    (c) State Allocation System.--Each State shall establish a system 
for allocating funds apportioned to it under this section among 
projects eligible for assistance under this section that have the 
highest benefits to highway safety. Such system may include a safety 
management system established by the State under section 303 of title 
23, United States Code, or a survey established pursuant to section 
152(a) of such title.
    (d) Apportionment of Funds.--On October 1 of each fiscal year, the 
Secretary shall apportion among States sums authorized to be 
appropriated to carry out this section for such fiscal year as follows:
            (1) \1/3\ in the ratio that--
                    (A) each State's public road lane mileage for rural 
                minor collectors and rural local roads; bears to
                    (B) the total public road lane mileage for rural 
                minor collectors and rural local roads of all States.
            (2) \1/3\ in the ratio that--
                    (A) the population of areas other than urbanized 
                areas in each State, as shown by the most recent 
                Government decennial census of population; bears to
                    (B) the population of all areas other than 
                urbanized areas in the United States, as shown by that 
                census.
            (3) \1/3\ in the ratio that--
                    (A) the total vehicle miles traveled on public 
                roads in each State; bears to
                    (B) the total number of vehicle miles traveled on 
                public roads in all States.
    (e) Applicability of Title 23.--Funds made available to carry out 
this section shall be available for obligation in the same manner as if 
such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States 
Code; except that such funds shall not be transferable and shall remain 
available until expended and the Federal share of the cost of a project 
under this section shall be 80 percent. Notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, projects assisted under this section shall be treated 
as projects on a Federal-aid system under such chapter.
    (f) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) High risk rural road.--The term ``high risk rural 
        road'' means any roadway functionally classified as a rural 
        major or minor collector or a rural local road--
                    (A) on which the accident rate for fatalities and 
                incapacitating injuries exceeds the statewide average 
                for these functional classes of roadway; or
                    (B) which will likely have increases in traffic 
                volume that are likely to create an accident rate for 
                fatalities and incapacitating injuries that exceeds the 
                statewide average for these functional classes of 
                roadway.
            (2) State and urbanized area.--The terms ``State'' and 
        ``urbanized area'' have the meaning such terms have under 
        section 101(a) of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 1404. TRANSFERS OF APPORTIONMENTS TO SAFETY PROGRAMS.

    (a) Use of Safety Belts and Motorcycle Helmets.--Section 153(h) of 
title 23, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) in the paragraph heading by striking 
                ``Thereafter.--'' and inserting ``Fiscal years 1995-
                2004.--''; and
                    (B) by inserting ``and ending before October 1, 
                2004,'' after ``September 30, 1994,'';
            (2) by redesignating paragraphs (3) through (5) as 
        paragraphs (4) through (6), respectively;
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following:
            ``(3) Fiscal year 2005 and thereafter.--On October 1, 2004, 
        and each October 1 thereafter, if a State does not have in 
        effect a law described in subsection (a)(2), the Secretary 
        shall transfer from the funds apportioned to the State on that 
        date under each of subsections (b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3) of 
        section 104 to the apportionment of the State under section 402 
        an amount equal to 3 percent of the funds apportioned to the 
        State under such subsections for fiscal year 2003.''; and
            (4) in paragraph (5) (as so redesignated)--
                    (A) by striking ``which is determined by 
                multiplying'' and inserting ``which, for fiscal year 
                2005 and each fiscal year thereafter, is determined by 
                multiplying''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (B) by striking ``such fiscal 
                year'' each place it appears and inserting ``fiscal 
                year 2003''.
    (b) Open Container Requirements.--Section 154(c) of title 23, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) in the paragraph heading by striking ``fiscal 
                years thereafter'' and inserting ``fiscal year 2004'' ; 
                and
                    (B) by striking ``and each October 1 thereafter,'';
            (2) by redesignating paragraphs (3) through (7) as 
        paragraphs (4) through (8), respectively;
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following:
            ``(3) Fiscal year 2005 and thereafter.--On October 1, 2004, 
        and each October 1 thereafter, if a State has not enacted or is 
        not enforcing an open container law described in subsection 
        (b), the Secretary shall transfer from the funds apportioned to 
        the State on that date under each of paragraphs (1), (3), and 
        (4) of section 104(b) an amount equal to 3 percent of the funds 
        apportioned to the State under such paragraphs for fiscal year 
        2003 to be used or directed as described in subparagraph (A) or 
        (B) of paragraph (1).'';
            (4) in paragraph (5) (as so redesignated) by striking 
        ``paragraph (3)'' and inserting ``paragraph (4)'';
            (5) in paragraphs (4), (5), and (6) (as so redesignated) by 
        striking ``paragraph (1) or (2)'' and inserting ``paragraph 
        (1), (2), or (3)''; and
            (6) in paragraph (7)(B) (as so redesignated)--
                    (A) by striking ``The amount'' and inserting ``For 
                fiscal year 2005 and each fiscal year thereafter, the 
                amount''; and
                    (B) in subclauses (I) and (II) of clause (ii) by 
                striking ``the fiscal year'' and inserting ``fiscal 
                year 2003''.
    (c) Minimum Penalties for Certain Repeat Offenders.--Section 164(b) 
of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) in the paragraph heading by striking ``and 
                fiscal years thereafter'' and inserting ``fiscal year 
                2004'' ; and
                    (B) by striking ``and each October 1 thereafter,'';
            (2) by redesignating paragraphs (3) through (7) as 
        paragraphs (4) through (8), respectively;
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following:
            ``(3) Fiscal year 2005 and thereafter.--On October 1, 2004, 
        and each October 1 thereafter, if a State has not enacted or is 
        not enforcing a repeat intoxicated driver law, the Secretary 
        shall transfer from the funds apportioned to the State on that 
        date under each of paragraphs (1), (3), and (4) of section 
        104(b) an amount equal to 3 percent of the funds apportioned to 
        the State under such paragraphs for fiscal year 2003 to be used 
        or directed as described in subparagraph (A) or (B) of 
        paragraph (1).'';
            (4) in paragraph (5) (as so redesignated) by striking 
        ``paragraph (3)'' and inserting ``paragraph (4)'';
            (5) in paragraphs (4), (5), and (6) (as so redesignated) by 
        striking ``paragraph (1) or (2)'' and inserting ``paragraph 
        (1), (2), or (3)''; and
            (6) in paragraph (7)(B) (as so redesignated)--
                    (A) by striking ``The amount'' and inserting ``For 
                fiscal year 2005 and each fiscal year thereafter, the 
                amount''; and
                    (B) in subclauses (I) and (II) of clause (ii) by 
                striking ``the fiscal year'' and inserting ``fiscal 
                year 2003''.

SEC. 1405. SAFETY INCENTIVE GRANTS FOR USE OF SEAT BELTS.

    Section 157(g) of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1) by inserting ``and'' after ``2002,'';
            (2) in paragraph (1) by striking ``2003,'' and all that 
        follows through ``2005'' and inserting ``2003'';
            (3) in paragraph (2) by inserting ``or set aside for fiscal 
        year 2004 or 2005 under section 104(m)(8)'' after ``paragraph 
        (1)'';
            (4) in paragraph (3)(B) by striking ``2005'' and inserting 
        ``2003''; and
            (5) in paragraph (3)(B) by inserting ``or the amounts set 
        aside for any of fiscal years 2004 and 2005 under section 
        104(m)(8)'' after ``paragraph (1)''.

SEC. 1406. SAFETY INCENTIVES TO PREVENT OPERATION OF MOTOR VEHICLES BY 
              INTOXICATED PERSONS.

    (a) Codification of Penalty.--Section 163 of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (f); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (d) the following:
    ``(e) Penalty.--
            ``(1) In general.--On October 1, 2003, and October 1 of 
        each fiscal year thereafter, if a State has not enacted or is 
        not enforcing a law described in subsection (a), the Secretary 
        shall withhold from amounts apportioned to the State on that 
        date under each of paragraphs (1), (3), and (4) of section 
        104(b) an amount equal to the amount specified in paragraph 
        (2).
            ``(2) Amount to be withheld.--If a State is subject to a 
        penalty under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall withhold for a 
        fiscal year from the apportionments of the State described in 
        paragraph (1) an amount equal to a percentage of the funds 
        apportioned to the State under paragraphs (1), (3), and (4) of 
        section 104(b) for fiscal year 2003. The percentage shall be as 
        follows:
                    ``(A) For fiscal year 2004, 2 percent.
                    ``(B) For fiscal year 2005, 4 percent.
                    ``(C) For fiscal year 2006, 6 percent.
                    ``(D) For fiscal year 2007, and each fiscal year 
                thereafter, 8 percent.
            ``(3) Failure to comply.--If, within 4 years from the date 
        that an apportionment for a State is withheld in accordance 
        with this subsection, the Secretary determines that the State 
        has enacted and is enforcing a law described in subsection (a), 
        the apportionment of the State shall be increased by an amount 
        equal to the amount withheld. If, at the end of such 4-year 
        period, any State has not enacted or is not enforcing a law 
        described in subsection (a) any amounts so withheld from such 
        State shall lapse.''.
    (b) Authorization of Appropriations.--Section 163(f)(1) of such 
title, as redesignated by subsection (a)(1) of this section, is 
amended--
            (1) by inserting ``and'' after ``2002,''; and
            (2) by striking ``, $110,000,000 for fiscal year 2004'' and 
        all that follows through ``2005''.
    (c) Repeal.--Section 351 of the Department of Transportation and 
Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2001 (23 U.S.C. 163 note; 114 
Stat. 1356A-34) is repealed.
    (d) Conforming Amendment.--Section 163(f)(2) of such title, as 
redesignated by subsection (a)(1) of this section, is amended by 
inserting after ``by this subsection'' the following: ``and the funds 
set aside to carry out this section''.

SEC. 1407. REPEAT OFFENDERS FOR DRIVING WHILE INTOXICATED.

    Section 164(a)(5)(A) of title 23, United States Code, is amended to 
read as follows:
                    ``(A) receive (i) a driver's license suspension for 
                not less than 1 year, or (ii) a combination of 
                suspension of all driving privileges of an individual 
                for the first 45 days of the suspension period followed 
                by a reinstatement of limited driving privileges for 
                the propose of getting to and from work, school, or an 
                alcohol treatment program if an ignition interlock 
                device is installed on each of the motor vehicles owned 
                or operated, or both, by the individual;''.

SEC. 1408. REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF HIGHWAY FEATURES ON NATIONAL 
              HIGHWAY SYSTEM.

    (a) Rulemaking Proceeding.--The Secretary shall conduct a 
rulemaking proceeding to determine the appropriate conditions under 
which a State when choosing to repair or replace damaged highway 
features on the National Highway System with State funds (rather than 
with available Federal financial assistance) should be required to 
repair or replace such features with highway features that have been 
tested, evaluated, and found to be acceptable under the guidelines 
contained in the report of the Transportation Research Board of the 
National Research Council entitled ``NCHRP Report 350-Recommended 
Procedures for the Safety Performance Evaluation of Highway Features''.
    (b) Matters to Be Considered.--The rulemaking proceeding shall 
cover those highway features that are covered by the guidelines 
referred to in subsection (a). The conditions to be considered by the 
Secretary in the rulemaking proceeding shall include types of highway 
features, cost-effectiveness, and practicality of replacement with 
highway features that have been found to be acceptable under such 
guidelines.
    (c) Regulations.--Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary shall issue regulations regarding the 
conditions under which States when choosing to repair or replace 
damaged highway features described in subsection (a) will be required 
to repair or replace such features with highway features that have been 
tested, evaluated, and found to be acceptable as described in 
subsection (a).

SEC. 1409. RENTED OR LEASED MOTOR VEHICLES.

    (a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 301 of title 49, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 30106. Rented or leased motor vehicle safety and responsibility
    ``(a) In General.--An owner of a motor vehicle that rents or leases 
the vehicle to a person (or an affiliate of the owner) shall not be 
liable under the law of any State or political subdivision thereof, by 
reason of being the owner of the vehicle (or an affiliate of the 
owner), for harm to persons or property that results or arises out of 
the use, operation, or possession of the vehicle during the period of 
the rental or lease, if--
            ``(1) the owner (or an affiliate of the owner) is engaged 
        in the trade or business of renting or leasing motor vehicles; 
        and
            ``(2) there is no negligence or criminal wrongdoing on the 
        part of the owner (or an affiliate of the owner).
    ``(b) Financial Responsibility Laws.--Nothing in this section 
supersedes the law of any State or political subdivision thereof--
            ``(1) imposing financial responsibility or insurance 
        standards on the owner of a motor vehicle for the privilege of 
        registering and operating a motor vehicle; or
            ``(2) imposing liability on business entities engaged in 
        the trade or business of renting or leasing motor vehicles for 
        failure to meet the financial responsibility or liability 
        insurance requirements under State law.
    ``(c) Applicability and Effective Date.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, this section shall apply with respect to any action 
commenced on or after the date of enactment of this section without 
regard to whether the harm that is the subject of the action, or the 
conduct that caused the harm, occurred before such date of enactment.
    ``(d) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Affiliate.--The term ``affiliate'' means a person 
        other than the owner that directly or indirectly controls, is 
        controlled by, or is under common control with the owner. In 
        the preceding sentence, the term ``control'' means the power to 
        direct the management and policies of a person whether through 
        ownership of voting securities or otherwise.
            ``(2) Owner.--The term `owner' means a person who is--
                    ``(A) a record or beneficial owner, holder of 
                title, lessor, or lessee of a motor vehicle;
                    ``(B) entitled to the use and possession of a motor 
                vehicle subject to a security interest in another 
                person; or
                    ``(C) a lessor, lessee, or a bailee of a motor 
                vehicle, in the trade or business of renting or leasing 
                motor vehicles, having the use or possession thereof, 
                under a lease, bailment, or otherwise.
            ``(3) Person.--The term `person' means any individual, 
        corporation, company, limited liability company, trust, 
        association, firm, partnership, society, joint stock company, 
        or any other entity.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended 
by inserting after the item relating to section 30105 the following:

``30106. Rented or leased motor vehicle safety and responsibility.''.

           Subtitle E--Construction and Contract Efficiencies

SEC. 1501. DESIGN--BUILD.

    (a) Qualified Projects.--Section 112(b)(3)(C) of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended to read as follows:
                    ``(C) Qualified projects.--A qualified project 
                referred to in subparagraph (A) is a project under this 
                chapter for which the Secretary has approved the use of 
                design-build contracting under criteria specified in 
                regulations issued by the Secretary.''.
    (b) Experimental Procurement.--Section 112(b)(3) of such title is 
further amended--
            (1) by redesigning subparagraph (D) as subparagraph (G); 
        and
            (2) by inserting after subparagraph (C) the following:
                    ``(D) Experimental procurement.--As part of any 
                experimental program carried out under this section, 
                the Secretary shall evaluate the use of procurement 
                procedures under this paragraph where subjective 
                evaluation criteria account for the majority of the 
                selection determination.
                    ``(E) Limitation on statutory construction.--
                Nothing in this section shall be construed as effecting 
                the authority to carry out any experimental program 
                concerning design-build contracting that is being 
                carried out by the Secretary on the date of enactment 
                of this subparagraph.
                    ``(F) Report.--Not later than 3 years after the 
                date of enactment of this subparagraph, the Secretary 
                shall transmit to Congress a report on the 
                effectiveness of design-build contracting procedures in 
                which the majority of the selection determinations are 
                made based on subjective criteria in accordance with 
                subparagraph (D).''.

SEC. 1502. WARRANTY HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION PROJECT PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish and implement a 
pilot program designed to encourage States to incorporate warranties in 
the letting of contracts for highway construction projects.
    (b) Maximum Number of Projects.--The Secretary may allow not more 
than 15 projects a year to be carried out under the pilot program.
    (c) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the costs of a project 
under the pilot program may not exceed 90 percent.
    (d) Minimum Project Cost.--The estimated total cost of a project to 
be carried out under the pilot program must be greater than 
$15,000,000.
    (e) Selection Process.--In the selection process for the pilot 
program, the Secretary shall select, to the extent possible, projects 
from several different regions of the United States in order to 
demonstrate the effects that different climates and traffic patterns 
have on warranty highway construction projects.
    (f) Rulemaking.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 1 year after the date of 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall issue a rule to 
        implement the pilot program. The rule shall include the 
        following factors for eligibility of a highway construction 
        project to be included in the program:
                    (A) A requirement that the contract for the project 
                must include a long-term limited warranty that is of a 
                duration sufficient to ensure that--
                            (i) the cost to the State of the project 
                        that will be carried out is less than the 
                        estimated cost to construct the project without 
                        the warranty plus the estimated costs that 
                        would be incurred by the State and that would 
                        otherwise be covered during the proposed 
                        warranty period if a warranty were in effect; 
                        and
                            (ii) the estimated cost to road users 
                        during the warranty period is less than such 
                        estimated cost without a warranty.
                    (B) In determining the sufficient duration of a 
                long-term limited warranty under subparagraph (A), the 
                Secretary shall establish separate sufficient durations 
                for different types of projects, such as initial 
                construction, pavement resurfacing and rehabilitation, 
                and pavement markings.
                    (C) A requirement that the limited warranty must 
                address, at a minimum--
                            (i) the responsibilities of the warranty 
                        provider;
                            (ii) the responsibilities of the Department 
                        of Transportation;
                            (iii) the terms of the warranty, including 
                        duration and, if applicable, traffic volumes 
                        and vehicle classification; and
                            (iv) performance criteria to be met to 
                        determine if maintenance is required.
            (2) Factors to consider.--In issuing the rule, the 
        Secretary may consider the following factors as requirements 
        for the warranty contract for eligibility under the pilot 
        program:
                    (A) A plan to account for inflation during the 
                warranty period.
                    (B) The frequency of performance assessments 
                performed.
                    (C) The response time for repairs.
                    (D) A plan for emergency repairs.
                    (E) Clearly set out limits of liability under the 
                warranty, if any.
                    (F) Dispute resolution provisions.
                    (G) A severability provision.
                    (H) Other provisions the Secretary considers 
                necessary for carrying out the program.
    (g) Savings.--Section 112 of title 23, United States Code, shall 
apply to the projects carried out under this section unless the 
Secretary determines that applying such section to such projects is 
inconsistent with the provisions of this section.
    (h) Reports.--Not later than 5 years after the date of enactment of 
this Act and every year thereafter, the Secretary shall transmit to the 
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Environment and Public Works of 
the Senate a report outlining activities carried out under the program 
and the results of the program.

SEC. 1503. PRIVATE INVESTMENT STUDY.

    (a) Study.--Not later than 6 months after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary shall enter into an agreement with the National 
Academy of Sciences to conduct a comprehensive study of private 
investment in surface transportation infrastructure.
    (b) Matters to Be Evaluated.--Under the agreement, the National 
Academy of Sciences shall evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of 
private investment in surface transportation infrastructure and the 
impact of such investment on the ability of State and local authorities 
to use innovative financing, including--
            (1) preconstruction funding requirements;
            (2) integration of private investment in the transportation 
        planning process;
            (3) use of toll revenues by State and local authorities;
            (4) use of toll credits by State and local authorities;
            (5) requirements for debt financing instruments, 
        reimbursable expenses, and conditions on payments;
            (6) limitation on fees charged at federally funded fringe 
        and corridor parking facilities;
            (7) revenues needed to provide a reasonable rate of return 
        to private investors;
            (8) costs to users of facilities due to imposition of 
        tolls;
            (9) sales-in-lease-out arrangement of transportation 
        assets; and
            (10) such other matters as the Secretary considers 
        appropriate.
    (c) Report.--
            (1) To secretary.--Under the agreement, the National 
        Academy of Sciences shall submit to the Secretary a report on 
        the results of the study by such date as the Secretary may 
        require.
            (2) To congress.--Not later than January 1, 2007, the 
        Secretary shall transmit to the Committee on Transportation and 
        Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and the 
        Committee on Environment and Public Works of the Senate a copy 
        of the report of the National Academy of Sciences, together 
        with such recommendations as the Secretary considers 
        appropriate.

SEC. 1504. HIGHWAYS FOR LIFE PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish and 
        implement a pilot program to be known as the ``Highways for 
        LIFE pilot program''.
            (2) Purpose.--The purpose of the pilot program shall be to 
        advance longer-lasting highways using innovative technologies 
        and practices to accomplish the fast construction of efficient 
        and safe highways and bridges.
            (3) Objectives.--Under the pilot program, the Secretary 
        shall provide leadership and incentives to demonstrate and 
        promote state-of-the-art technologies, elevated performance 
        standards, and new business practices in the highway 
        construction process that result in improved safety, faster 
        construction, reduced congestion from construction, and 
        improved quality and user satisfaction.
    (b) Projects.--
            (1) Applications.--To be eligible to participate in the 
        pilot program, a State shall submit to the Secretary an 
        application that is in such form and contains such information 
        as the Secretary requires. Each application shall contain a 
        description of proposed projects to be carried by the State 
        under the pilot program.
            (2) Eligibility.--A proposed project shall be eligible for 
        assistance under the pilot program if the project--
                    (A) constructs, reconstructs, or rehabilitates a 
                route or connection on a Federal-aid highway eligible 
                for assistance under chapter 1 of title 23, United 
                States Code;
                    (B) uses innovative technologies, manufacturing 
                processes, financing, or contracting methods that 
                improve safety, reduce congestion due to construction, 
                and improve quality; and
                    (C) meets additional criteria as determined by the 
                Secretary.
            (3) Project proposal.--A project proposal submitted under 
        paragraph (1) shall contain--
                    (A) an identification and description of the 
                projects to be delivered;
                    (B) a description of how the projects will result 
                in improved safety, faster construction, reduced 
                congestion due to construction, user satisfaction, and 
                improved quality;
                    (C) a description of the innovative technologies, 
                manufacturing processes, financing, and contracting 
                methods that will be used for the proposed projects; 
                and
                    (D) such other information as the Secretary may 
                require.
            (4) Selection criteria.--In selecting projects for approval 
        under this section, the Secretary shall ensure that the 
        projects provide an evaluation of a broad range of technologies 
        in a wide variety of project types and shall give priority to 
        the projects that--
                    (A) address achieving the Highways for LIFE 
                performance standards for quality, safety, and speed of 
                construction;
                    (B) deliver and deploy innovative technologies, 
                manufacturing processes, financing, contracting 
                practices, and performance measures that will 
                demonstrate substantial improvements in safety, 
                congestion, quality, and cost-effectiveness;
                    (C) include innovation that will lead to change in 
                the administration of the State's transportation 
                program to more quickly construct long-lasting, high-
                quality, cost-effective projects that improve safety 
                and reduce congestion;
                    (D) are or will be ready for construction within 12 
                months of approval of the project proposal; and
                    (E) meet such other criteria as the Secretary 
                determines appropriate.
            (5) Financial assistance.--
                    (A) Funds for highways for life projects.--Out of 
                amounts made available to carry out this section for a 
                fiscal year, the Secretary may allocate to a State up 
                to 20 percent, but not more than $15,000,000, of the 
                total cost of a project approved under this section. 
                Notwithstanding any other provision of law, funds 
                allocated to a State under this subparagraph may be 
                applied to the non-Federal share of the cost of 
                construction of a project under title 23, United States 
                Code.
                    (B) Use of apportioned funds.--A State may obligate 
                not more than 10 percent of the amount apportioned to 
                the State under 1 or more of paragraphs (1), (2), (3), 
                and (4) of section 104(b) of title 23, United States 
                Code, for a fiscal year for projects approved under 
                this section.
                    (C) Increased federal share.--Notwithstanding 
                sections 120 and 129 of title 23, United States Code, 
                the Federal share payable on account of any project 
                constructed with Federal funds allocated under this 
                section, or apportioned under section 104(b) of such 
                title, to a State under such title and approved under 
                this section may amount to 100 percent of the cost of 
                construction of such project.
                    (D) Limitation on statutory construction.--Except 
                as provided in subparagraph (C), nothing in this 
                subsection shall be construed as altering or otherwise 
                affecting the applicability of the requirements of 
                chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code (including 
                requirements relating to the eligibility of a project 
                for assistance under the program and the location of 
                the project), to amounts apportioned to a State for a 
                program under section 104(b) that are obligated by the 
                State for projects approved under this subsection.
            (6) Project selections.--In the period of fiscal years 2005 
        through 2009, the Secretary shall approve at least one project 
        in each State for participation in the pilot program and for 
        financial assistance under paragraph (5) if the State submits 
        an application and the project meets the eligibility 
        requirements and selection criteria under this subsection.
    (c) Technology Partnerships.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary may make grants or enter 
        into cooperative agreements or other transactions to foster the 
        development, improvement, and creation of innovative 
        technologies and facilities to improve safety, enhance the 
        speed of highway construction, and improve the quality and 
        durability of highways.
            (2) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of an 
        activity carried out under this subsection shall not exceed 80 
        percent.
    (d) Technology Transfer and Information Dissemination.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall conduct a Highways for 
        LIFE technology transfer program.
            (2) Availability of information.--The Secretary shall 
        ensure that the information and technology used, developed, or 
        deployed under this subsection is made available to the 
        transportation community and the public.
    (e) Stakeholder Input and Involvement.--The Secretary shall 
establish a process for stakeholder input and involvement in the 
development, implementation, and evaluation of the Highways for LIFE 
pilot program. The process may include participation by representatives 
of State departments of transportation and other interested persons.
    (f) Project Monitoring and Evaluation.--The Secretary shall monitor 
and evaluate the effectiveness of any activity carried out under this 
section.
    (g) Contract Authority.--Funds authorized to be appropriated to 
carry out this section shall be available for obligation in the same 
manner as if the funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, 
United States Code.
    (h) State Defined.--In this section, the term ``State'' has the 
meaning such term has under section 101(a) of title 23, United States 
Code.

                          Subtitle F--Finance

SEC. 1601. TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE FINANCE AND INNOVATION ACT.

    (a) Definitions.--Section 181 of title 23, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (3)--
                    (A) by striking ``category''; and
                    (B) by striking ``offered into the capital 
                markets'';
            (2) by striking paragraph (7);
            (3) by redesignating paragraphs (8) through (15) as 
        paragraphs (7) through (14), respectively;
            (4) by striking the period at the end of paragraph (8)(B) 
        (as so redesignated) and inserting a semicolon; and
            (5) in paragraph (10) (as so redesignated) by striking 
        ``bond'' and inserting ``credit''.
    (b) Determination of Eligibility.--Section 182(a) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) by striking paragraphs (1) and (2) and inserting the 
        following:
            ``(1) Inclusion in transportation plans and programs.--The 
        project shall satisfy the applicable planning and programming 
        requirements of sections 134 and 135 at such time as an 
        agreement to make available a Federal credit instrument is 
        entered into under this subchapter.
            ``(2) Application.--A State, a local government, public 
        authority, public-private partnership, or any other legal 
        entity undertaking the project and authorized by the Secretary, 
        shall submit a project application to the Secretary.'';
            (2) in paragraph (3)(A)(i) by striking ``$100,000,000'' and 
        inserting ``$50,000,000'';
            (3) in paragraph (3)(B) by striking ``$30,000,000'' and 
        inserting ``$15,000,000''; and
            (4) in paragraph (4)--
                    (A) by striking ``Project financing'' and inserting 
                ``The Federal credit instrument''; and
                    (B) by inserting before the period at the end 
                ``that also secure the project obligations''.
    (c) Project Selection.--Section 182(b) of such title is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``criteria'' the second 
        place it appears and inserting ``requirements''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2)(B) by inserting ``, which may be the 
        Federal credit instrument,'' after ``obligations''.
    (d) Secured Loans.--
            (1) Agreements.--Section 183(a)(1) of such title is 
        amended--
                    (A) in each of subparagraphs (A) and (B) by 
                inserting ``of any project selected under section 602'' 
                after ``costs''; and
                    (B) by striking the semicolon at the end of 
                subparagraph (B) and all that follows through ``under 
                section 602''.
            (2) Investment-grade rating requirement.--Section 183(a)(4) 
        of such title is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``The funding'' and inserting ``The 
                execution''; and
                    (B) by striking the first comma and all that 
                follows through ``1 rating agency''.
            (3) Terms and limitations.--Section 183(b) of such title is 
        amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (2) by inserting ``the lesser of'' 
                after ``exceed'';
                    (B) in paragraph (2) by inserting ``or the amount 
                of the senior project obligations'' after ``costs'';
                    (C) in paragraph (3)(A)(i) by inserting ``that also 
                secure the senior project obligations'' after 
                ``sources''; and
                    (D) in paragraph (4) by striking ``marketable''.
            (4) Repayment.--Section 183(c) is amended--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (3); and
                    (B) by redesignating paragraphs (4) and (5) as 
                paragraphs (3) and (4), respectively.
    (e) Lines of Credit.--
            (1) Terms and limitations.--Section 184(b) of such title is 
        amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (3)--
                            (i) by striking the first comma; and
                            (ii) by striking ``any debt service reserve 
                        fund, and any other available reserve'' and 
                        inserting ``but not including reasonably 
                        required financing reserves'';
                    (B) in paragraph (4)--
                            (i) by striking ``marketable'';
                            (ii) by striking ``on which'' and inserting 
                        ``of execution of''; and
                            (iii) by striking ``is obligated'' and 
                        inserting ``agreement''; and
                    (C) in paragraph (5)(A)(i) by inserting ``that also 
                secure the senior project obligations'' after 
                ``sources''; and
            (2) Repayment.--Section 184(c) of such title is amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) by striking ``scheduled'';
                            (ii) by inserting ``be scheduled to'' after 
                        ``shall''; and
                            (iii) by striking ``be fully repaid, with 
                        interest,'' and inserting ``conclude, with full 
                        repayment of principal and interest,''; and
                    (B) by striking paragraph (3).
    (f) Program Administration.--Section 185 of such title is amended 
to read as follows:
``Sec. 185. Program administration
    ``(a) Requirement.--The Secretary shall establish a uniform system 
to service the Federal credit instrument made available under this 
chapter.
    ``(b) Fees.--The Secretary may establish fees at a level to cover 
all or a portion of the costs to the Federal Government of servicing 
the Federal credit instrument.
    ``(c) Services.--The Secretary may identify a financial entity to 
assist the Secretary in servicing a Federal credit instrument. The 
services--
            ``(1) shall act as the agent for the Secretary; and
            ``(2) shall receive a servicing fee, subject to approval by 
        the Secretary.
    ``(d) Assistance From Expert Firms.--The Secretary may retain the 
services of one or more expert firms, including counsel, in the field 
of municipal and project finance to assist in the underwriting and 
servicing of Federal credit instruments.''.
    (g) Funding.--Section 188 of such title is amended to read as 
follows:
``Sec. 188. Special rules
    ``(a) Availability.--Amounts made available to carry out this 
chapter shall remain available until expended.
    ``(b) Administrative Costs.--From funds made available to carry out 
this chapter, the Secretary may use, for the administration of this 
subchapter, not more than $3,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2004 
through 2009.
    ``(c) Limitations on Credit Amounts.--For each of fiscal years 2004 
through 2009, principal amounts of Federal credit instruments made 
available under this chapter shall be limited to $2,600,000,000.''.

SEC. 1602. STATE INFRASTRUCTURE BANKS.

    (a) In General.--Section 189 of title 23, United States Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 189. State infrastructure bank program
    ``(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Capital project.--The term `capital project' has the 
        meaning such term has under section 5302 of title 49, United 
        States Code.
            ``(2) Other forms of credit assistance.--The term `other 
        forms of credit assistance' includes any use of funds in an 
        infrastructure bank--
                    ``(A) to provide credit enhancements;
                    ``(B) to serve as a capital reserve for bond or 
                debt instrument financing;
                    ``(C) to subsidize interest rates;
                    ``(D) to insure or guarantee letters of credit and 
                credit instruments against credit risk of loss;
                    ``(E) to finance purchase and lease agreements with 
                respect to transit projects;
                    ``(F) to provide bond or debt financing instrument 
                security; and
                    ``(G) to provide other forms of debt financing and 
                methods of leveraging funds that are approved by the 
                Secretary and that relate to the project with respect 
                to which such assistance is being provided.
            ``(3) State.--The term `State' has the meaning such term 
        has under section 401 of this title.
            ``(4) Capitalization.--The term `capitalization' means the 
        process used for depositing funds as initial capital into a 
        State infrastructure bank to establish the infrastructure bank.
            ``(5) Cooperative agreement.--The term `cooperative 
        agreement' means written consent between a State and the 
        Secretary which sets forth the manner in which the 
        infrastructure bank established by the State in accordance with 
        this section will be administered.
            ``(6) Loan.--The term `loan' means any form of direct 
        financial assistance from a State infrastructure bank that is 
        required to be repaid over a period of time and that is 
        provided to a project sponsor for all or part of the costs of 
        the project.
            ``(7) Guarantee.--The term `guarantee' means a contract 
        entered into by a State infrastructure bank in which the bank 
        agrees to take responsibility for all or a portion of a project 
        sponsor's financial obligations for a project under specified 
        conditions.
            ``(8) Initial assistance.--The term `initial assistance' 
        means the first round of funds that are loaned or used for 
        credit enhancement by a State infrastructure bank for projects 
        eligible for assistance under this section.
            ``(9) Leverage.--The term `leverage' means a financial 
        structure used to increase funds in a State infrastructure bank 
        through the issuance of debt instruments.
            ``(10) Leveraged.--The term `leveraged', as used with 
        respect to a State infrastructure bank, means that the bank has 
        total potential liabilities that exceed the capital of the 
        bank.
    ``(b) Cooperative Agreements.--Subject to the provisions of this 
section, the Secretary may enter into cooperative agreements with 
States for the establishment of State infrastructure banks for making 
loans and providing other forms of credit assistance to public and 
private entities carrying out or proposing to carry out projects 
eligible for assistance under this section.
    ``(d) Funding.--
            ``(1) Highway account.--Subject to subsection (j), the 
        Secretary may permit a State entering into a cooperative 
        agreement under this section to establish a State 
        infrastructure bank to deposit into the highway account of the 
        bank not to exceed--
                    ``(A) 10 percent of the funds apportioned to the 
                State for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 under 
                each of sections 104(b)(1), 104(b)(3), 104(b)(4), and 
                144; and
                    ``(B) 10 percent of the funds allocated to the 
                State for each of such fiscal years under section 105.
            ``(2) Transit account.--Subject to subsection (j), the 
        Secretary may permit a State entering into a cooperative 
        agreement under this section to establish a State 
        infrastructure bank, and any other recipient of Federal 
        assistance under section 5307, 5309, or 5311 of title 49, to 
        deposit into the transit account of the bank not to exceed 10 
        percent of the funds made available to the State or other 
        recipient in each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 for capital 
        projects under each of such sections.
            ``(3) Rail account.--Subject to subsection (j), the 
        Secretary may permit a State entering into a cooperative 
        agreement under this section to establish a State 
        infrastructure bank, and any other recipient of Federal 
        assistance under subtitle V of title 49, to deposit into the 
        rail account of the bank funds made available to the State or 
        other recipient in each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 for 
        capital projects under such subtitle.
            ``(4) Capital grants.--
                    ``(A) Highway account.--Federal funds deposited 
                into a highway account of a State infrastructure bank 
                under paragraph (1) shall constitute for purposes of 
                this section a capitalization grant for the highway 
                account of the bank.
                    ``(B) Transit account.--Federal funds deposited 
                into a transit account of a State infrastructure bank 
                under paragraph (2) shall constitute for purposes of 
                this section a capitalization grant for the transit 
                account of the bank.
                    ``(C) Rail account.--Federal funds deposited into a 
                rail account of a State infrastructure bank under 
                paragraph 3 shall constitute for purposes of this 
                section a capitalization grant for the rail account of 
                the bank.
            ``(5) Special rule for urbanized areas of over 200,000.--
        Funds in a State infrastructure bank that are attributed to 
        urbanized areas of a State with urbanized populations of over 
        200,000 under section 133(d)(3) may be used to provide 
        assistance with respect to a project only if the metropolitan 
        planning organization designated for such area concurs, in 
        writing, with the provision of such assistance.
            ``(6) Discontinuance of funding.--If the Secretary 
        determines that a State is not implementing the State's 
        infrastructure bank in accordance with a cooperative agreement 
        entered into under subsection (b), the Secretary may prohibit 
        the State from contributing additional Federal funds to the 
        bank.
    ``(e) Forms of Assistance From Infrastructure Banks.--An 
infrastructure bank established under this section may make loans or 
provide other forms of credit assistance to a public or private entity 
in an amount equal to all or a part of the cost of carrying out a 
project eligible for assistance under this section. The amount of any 
loan or other form of credit assistance provided for the project may be 
subordinated to any other debt financing for the project. Initial 
assistance provided with respect to a project from Federal funds 
deposited into an infrastructure bank under this section may not be 
made in the form of a grant.
    ``(f) Eligible Projects.--Subject to subsection (e), funds in an 
infrastructure bank established under this section may be used only to 
provide assistance for projects eligible for assistance under this 
title and capital projects defined in section 5302 of title 49, and any 
other projects related to surface transportation that the Secretary 
determines to be appropriate.
    ``(g) Infrastructure Bank Requirements.--In order to establish an 
infrastructure bank under this section, the State establishing the bank 
shall--
            ``(1) deposit in cash, at a minimum, into each account of 
        the bank from non-Federal sources an amount equal to 25 percent 
        of the amount of each capitalization grant made to the State 
        and deposited into such account; except that, if the deposit is 
        into the highway account of the bank and the State has a non-
        Federal share under section 120(b) that is less than 25 
        percent, the percentage to be deposited from non-Federal 
        sources shall be the lower percentage of such grant;
            ``(2) ensure that the bank maintains on a continuing basis 
        an investment grade rating on its debt, or has a sufficient 
        level of bond or debt financing instrument insurance, to 
        maintain the viability of the bank;
            ``(3) ensure that investment income derived from funds 
        deposited to an account of the bank are--
                    ``(A) credited to the account;
                    ``(B) available for use in providing loans and 
                other forms of credit assistance to projects eligible 
                for assistance from the account; and
                    ``(C) invested in United States Treasury 
                securities, bank deposits, or such other financing 
                instruments as the Secretary may approve to earn 
                interest to enhance the leveraging of projects assisted 
                by the bank;
            ``(4) ensure that any loan from the bank will bear interest 
        at or below market interest rates, as determined by the State, 
        to make the project that is the subject of the loan feasible;
            ``(5) ensure that repayment of any loan from the bank will 
        commence not later than 5 years after the project has been 
        completed or, in the case of a highway project, the facility 
        has opened to traffic, whichever is later;
            ``(6) ensure that the term for repaying any loan will not 
        exceed 30 years after the date of the first payment on the 
        loan; and
            ``(7) require the bank to make an annual report to the 
        Secretary on its status no later than September 30 of each year 
        and such other reports as the Secretary may require under 
        guidelines issued to carry out this section.
    ``(i) United States not Obligated.--The deposit of Federal funds 
into an infrastructure bank established under this section shall not be 
construed as a commitment, guarantee, or obligation on the part of the 
United States to any third party, nor shall any third party have any 
right against the United States for payment solely by virtue of the 
contribution. Any security or debt-financing instrument issued by the 
infrastructure bank shall expressly state that the security or 
instrument does not constitute a commitment, guarantee, or obligation 
of the United States.
    ``(j) Management of Federal Funds.--Sections 3335 and 6503 of title 
31, shall not apply to funds deposited into an infrastructure bank 
under this section.
    ``(k) Program Administration.--For each of fiscal years 2005 
through 2009, a State may expend not to exceed 2 percent of the Federal 
funds contributed to an infrastructure bank established by the State 
under this section to pay the reasonable costs of administering the 
bank.''.
    (b) Preparatory Amendments.--
            (1) Section 181.--Section 181 of such title is further 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking the section designator and heading 
                and inserting the following:
``Sec. 181. Generally applicable provisions'';
                    (B) by striking ``In this subchapter'' and 
                inserting ``(a) Definitions.--In this chapter'';
                    (C) in paragraph (5) by striking ``184'' and 
                inserting ``604'';
                    (D) in paragraph (11) (as redesignated by section 
                1601(a) of this Act) by striking ``183'' and inserting 
                ``603''; and
                    (E) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(b) Treatment of Chapter.--For purposes of this title, this 
chapter shall be treated as being part of chapter 1.''.
            (2) Section 182.--Section 182(b)(2)(A)(viii) of such title 
        is further amended by inserting ``and chapter 1'' after ``this 
        chapter''.
            (3) Section 183.--Section 183(a) of such title is further 
        amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (1) by striking ``182'' and 
                inserting ``602''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (3) by striking ``182(b)(2)(B)'' 
                and inserting ``602(b)(2)(B)''.
            (4) Section 184.--Section 184 of such title is further 
        amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a)(1) by striking ``182'' and 
                inserting ``602'';
                    (B) in subsection (a)(3) by striking 
                ``182(b)(2)(B)'' and inserting ``602(b)(2)(B)''; and
                    (C) in subsection (b)(10) by striking ``183'' and 
                inserting ``603''.
            (5) References in subchapter.--Subchapter II of chapter 1 
        of such title is amended by striking ``this subchapter'' each 
        place it appears and inserting ``this chapter''.
            (6) Subchapter headings.--Chapter 1 of such title is 
        further amended--
                    (A) by striking ``subchapter i--general 
                provisions'' preceding section 101; and
                    (B) by striking ``subchapter ii--infrastructure 
                finance'' preceding section 181.
    (c) Chapter 6.--Such title is further amended by adding at the end 
the following:

                  ``CHAPTER 6--INFRASTRUCTURE FINANCE

``Sec.
``601. Generally applicable provisions.
``602. Determination of eligibility and project selection.
``603. Secured loans.
``604. Lines of credit.
``605. Program administration.
``606. State and local permits.
``607. Regulations.
``608. Special rules.
``609. State infrastructure bank program.''.
    (d) Moving and Redesignating.--Such title is further amended--
            (1) by redesignating sections 181 through 189 as sections 
        601 through 609, respectively;
            (2) by moving such sections from chapter 1 to chapter 6 (as 
        added by subsection (c)); and
            (3) by inserting such sections after the analysis for 
        chapter 6.
    (e) Analysis for Chapter 1 and Table of Chapters.--
            (1) Analysis for chapter 1.--The analysis for chapter 1 of 
        such title is amended--
                    (A) by striking the headings for subchapters I and 
                II; and
                    (B) by striking the items relating to sections 181 
                through 189.
            (2) Table of chapters.--The table of chapters for such 
        title is amended by inserting after the item relating to 
        chapter 5 the following:

``6. Infrastructure Finance.................................     601''.

SEC. 1603. INTERSTATE SYSTEM RECONSTRUCTION AND REHABILITATION TOLL 
              PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish and implement an 
Interstate System reconstruction and rehabilitation toll pilot program 
under which the Secretary, notwithstanding sections 129 and 301 of 
title 23, United States Code, may permit a State to collect tolls on a 
highway, bridge, or tunnel on the Interstate System for the purpose of 
reconstructing and rehabilitating the facility.
    (b) Limitation on Number of Facilities.--The Secretary may permit 
the collection of tolls under this section on 3 facilities on the 
Interstate System. Each of such facilities shall be located in a 
different State.
    (c) Eligibility.--To be eligible to participate in the pilot 
program, a State shall submit to the Secretary an application that 
contains, at a minimum, the following:
            (1) An identification of the facility on the Interstate 
        System proposed to be a toll facility, including the age, 
        condition, and intensity of use of the facility.
            (2) In the case of a facility that affects a metropolitan 
        area, an assurance that the metropolitan planning organization 
        designated under chapter 52 of title 49, United States Code, 
        for the area has been consulted concerning the placement and 
        amount of tolls on the facility.
            (3) An analysis demonstrating that financing the 
        reconstruction or rehabilitation of the facility with the 
        collection of tolls under the pilot program is the most 
        efficient and economical way to advance the project.
            (4) A facility management plan that includes--
                    (A) a plan for implementing the imposition of tolls 
                on the facility;
                    (B) a schedule and finance plan for the 
                reconstruction or rehabilitation of the facility using 
                toll revenues;
                    (C) a description of the public transportation 
                agency that will be responsible for implementation and 
                administration of the pilot program;
                    (D) a description of whether consideration will be 
                given to privatizing the maintenance and operational 
                aspects of the facility, while retaining legal and 
                administrative control of the portion of the Interstate 
                route; and
                    (E) such other information as the Secretary may 
                require.
    (d) Selection Criteria.--The Secretary may approve the application 
of a State under subsection (c) only if the Secretary determines that--
            (1) the State's analysis under subsection (c)(3) is 
        reasonable;
            (2) the facility has a sufficient intensity of use, age, or 
        condition to warrant the collection of tolls;
            (3) the State plan for implementing tolls on the facility 
        takes into account the interests of local, regional, and 
        interstate travelers;
            (4) the State plan for reconstruction or rehabilitation of 
        the facility using toll revenues is reasonable;
            (5) the State will develop, manage, and maintain a system 
        that will automatically collect the tolls; and
            (6) the State has given preference to the use of a public 
        toll agency with demonstrated capability to build, operate, and 
        maintain a toll expressway system meeting criteria for the 
        Interstate System.
    (e) Prohibition on Noncompete Agreements.--Before the Secretary may 
permit a State to participate in the pilot program, the State must 
enter into an agreement with the Secretary that provides that the State 
will not enter into an agreement with a private person under which the 
State is prevented from improving or expanding the capacity of public 
roads adjacent to the toll facility to address conditions resulting 
from traffic diverted to such roads from the toll facility, including--
            (1) excessive congestion;
            (2) pavement wear; and
            (3) an increased incidence of traffic accidents, injuries, 
        or fatalities.
    (f) Limitations on Use of Revenues; Audits.--Before the Secretary 
may permit a State to participate in the pilot program, the State must 
enter into an agreement with the Secretary that provides that--
            (1) all toll revenues received from operation of the toll 
        facility will be used only for--
                    (A) debt service;
                    (B) reasonable return on investment of any private 
                person financing the project; and
                    (C) any costs necessary for the improvement of and 
                the proper operation and maintenance of the toll 
                facility, including reconstruction, resurfacing, 
                restoration, and rehabilitation of the toll facility; 
                and
            (2) regular audits will be conducted to ensure compliance 
        with paragraph (1) and the results of such audits will be 
        transmitted to the Secretary.
    (g) Limitation on Use of Interstate Maintenance Funds.--During the 
term of the pilot program, funds apportioned for Interstate maintenance 
under section 104(b)(4) of title 23, United States Code, may not be 
used on a facility for which tolls are being collected under the 
program.
    (h) Program Term.--The Secretary may approve an application of a 
State for permission to collect a toll under this section only if the 
application is received by the Secretary before the last day of the 10-
year period beginning on the date of enactment of this Act.
    (i) Interstate System Defined.--In this section, the term 
``Interstate System'' has the meaning such term has under section 101 
of title 23, United States Code.
    (j) Report.--Not later than September 30, 2011, the Secretary shall 
transmit to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the 
House of Representatives and the Committee on Environment and Public 
Works of the Senate a report on traffic congestion on, pavement wear 
of, and incidence of accidents, injuries, and fatalities on public 
roads adjacent to toll facilities established under this section and 
section 1604.
    (k) Repeal.--Section 1216(b) of the Transportation Equity Act for 
the 21st Century (23 U.S.C. 129 note; 112 Stat. 212) is repealed.

SEC. 1604. INTERSTATE SYSTEM CONSTRUCTION TOLL PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish and implement an 
Interstate System construction toll pilot program under which the 
Secretary, notwithstanding sections 129 and 301 of title 23, United 
States Code, may permit a State or an interstate compact of States to 
collect tolls on a highway, bridge, or tunnel on the Interstate System 
for the purpose of constructing Interstate highways.
    (b) Limitation on Number of Facilities.--The Secretary may permit 
the collection of tolls under this section on 3 facilities on the 
Interstate System.
    (c) Eligibility.--To be eligible to participate in the pilot 
program, a State shall submit to the Secretary an application that 
contains, at a minimum, the following:
            (1) An identification of the facility on the Interstate 
        System proposed to be a toll facility.
            (2) In the case of a facility that affects a metropolitan 
        area, an assurance that the metropolitan planning organization 
        designated under chapter 52 of title 49, United States Code, 
        for the area has been consulted concerning the placement and 
        amount of tolls on the facility.
            (3) An analysis demonstrating that financing the 
        construction of the facility with the collection of tolls under 
        the pilot program is the most efficient and economical way to 
        advance the project.
            (4) A facility management plan that includes--
                    (A) a plan for implementing the imposition of tolls 
                on the facility;
                    (B) a schedule and finance plan for the 
                construction of the facility using toll revenues;
                    (C) a description of the public transportation 
                agency that will be responsible for implementation and 
                administration of the pilot program;
                    (D) a description of whether consideration will be 
                given to privatizing the maintenance and operational 
                aspects of the facility, while retaining legal and 
                administrative control of the portion of the Interstate 
                route; and
                    (E) such other information as the Secretary may 
                require.
    (d) Selection Criteria.--The Secretary may approve the application 
of a State under subsection (c) only if the Secretary determines that--
            (1) the State's analysis under subsection (c)(3) is 
        reasonable;
            (2) the State plan for implementing tolls on the facility 
        takes into account the interests of local, regional, and 
        interstate travelers;
            (3) the State plan for construction of the facility using 
        toll revenues is reasonable;
            (4) the State will develop, manage, and maintain a system 
        that will automatically collect the tolls; and
            (5) the State has given preference to the use of a public 
        toll agency with demonstrated capability to build, operate, and 
        maintain a toll expressway system meeting criteria for the 
        Interstate System.
    (e) Prohibition on Noncompete Agreements.--Before the Secretary may 
permit a State to participate in the pilot program, the State must 
enter into an agreement with the Secretary that provides that the State 
will not enter into an agreement with a private person under which the 
State is prevented from improving or expanding the capacity of public 
roads adjacent to the toll facility to address conditions resulting 
from traffic diverted to such roads from the toll facility, including--
            (1) excessive congestion;
            (2) pavement wear; and
            (3) an increased incidence of traffic accidents, injuries, 
        or fatalities.
    (f) Limitations on Use of Revenues; Audits.--Before the Secretary 
may permit a State to participate in the pilot program, the State must 
enter into an agreement with the Secretary that provides that--
            (1) all toll revenues received from operation of the toll 
        facility will be used only for--
                    (A) debt service;
                    (B) reasonable return on investment of any private 
                person financing the project; and
                    (C) any costs necessary for the improvement of and 
                the proper operation and maintenance of the toll 
                facility, including reconstruction, resurfacing, 
                restoration, and rehabilitation of the toll facility; 
                and
            (2) regular audits will be conducted to ensure compliance 
        with paragraph (1) and the results of such audits will be 
        transmitted to the Secretary.
    (g) Limitation on Use of Interstate Maintenance Funds.--During the 
term of the pilot program, funds apportioned for Interstate maintenance 
under section 104(b)(4) of title 23, United States Code, may not be 
used on a facility for which tolls are being collected under the 
program.
    (h) Program Term.--The Secretary may approve an application of a 
State for permission to collect a toll under this section only if the 
application is received by the Secretary before the last day of the 10-
year period beginning on the date of enactment of this Act.
    (i) Interstate System Defined.--In this section, the term 
``Interstate System'' has the meaning such term has under section 101 
of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 1605. SPECIAL RULES RELATING TO STATE INFRASTRUCTURE BANK PROGRAM.

    (a) Interstate Compacts.--Section 189 of title 23, United States 
Code, as amended by section 1602(a) of this Act, is amended by 
inserting after subsection (b) the following:
    ``(c) Interstate Compacts.--
            ``(1) In general.--Congress grants consent to 2 or more of 
        the States, entering into a cooperative agreement under 
        subsection (a) with the Secretary for the establishment by such 
        States of a multi-State infrastructure bank in accordance with 
        this section, to enter into an interstate compact establishing 
        such bank in accordance with this section.
            ``(2) Reservation of rights.--The right to alter, amend or 
        repeal interstate compacts entered into under this subsection 
        is expressly reserved.''.
    (b) Applicability of Federal Law.--Section 189 of title 23, United 
States Code, as amended by section 1602(a) of this Act, is further 
amended by inserting after subsection (g) the following:
    ``(h) Applicability of Federal Law.--
            ``(1) In general.--The requirements of this title and title 
        49 that would otherwise apply to funds made available under 
        this title or such title and projects assisted with those funds 
        shall apply to--
                    ``(A) funds made available under this title or such 
                title and contributed to an infrastructure bank 
                established under this section, including the non-
                Federal contribution required under subsection (g); and
                    ``(B) projects assisted by the bank through the use 
                of the funds;
        except to the extent that the Secretary determines that any 
        requirement of such title (other than sections 113 and 114 of 
        this title and section 5333 of title 49), is not consistent 
        with the objectives of this section.
            ``(2) Repayments.--The requirements of this title and title 
        49 shall apply to repayments from non-Federal sources to an 
        infrastructure bank from projects assisted by the bank. Such a 
        repayment shall be considered to be Federal funds.''.

                   Subtitle G--High Priority Projects

SEC. 1701. HIGH PRIORITY PROJECTS PROGRAM.

    (a) Authorization of High Priority Projects.--Section 117(a) of 
title 23, United States Code, is amended by striking ``1602 of the 
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century'' and inserting ``1701 
of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users''.
    (b) Allocation Percentages.--Section 117(b) of such title is 
amended by striking paragraphs (1) through (6) and inserting the 
following:
            ``(1) 22.4 percent of such amount shall be available for 
        obligation beginning in fiscal year 2005;
            ``(2) 20.2 percent of such amount shall be available for 
        obligation beginning in fiscal year 2006;
            ``(3) 19.3 percent of such amount shall be available for 
        obligation beginning in fiscal year 2007;
            ``(4) 19.7 percent of such amount shall be available for 
        obligation beginning in fiscal year 2008; and
            ``(5) 18.4 percent of such amount shall be available for 
        obligation beginning in fiscal year 2009.''.
    (c) Federal Share.--Section 117(c) of such title is amended by 
striking ``; except'' and all that follows through ``cost thereof''.
    (d) Advance Construction.--Section 117(e) of such title is amended 
by striking ``1602 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st 
Century'' each place it appears and inserting ``1701 of the 
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users''.
    (e) Availability of Obligation Limitation.--Section 117(g) of such 
title is amended by striking ``Transportation Equity Act for the 21st 
Century'' and inserting ``Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for 
Users''.
    (f) Federal-State Relationship.--Section 145(b) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) by inserting after ``described in'' the following: 
        ``section 1702 of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for 
        Users,'';
            (2) by inserting after ``for such projects by'' the 
        following: ``section 1101(a)(17) of the Transportation Equity 
        Act: A Legacy for Users,''; and
            (3) by striking ``117 of title 23, United States Code,'' 
        and inserting ``section 117 of this title,''.

SEC. 1702. PROJECT AUTHORIZATIONS.

    Subject to section 117 of title 23, United States Code, the amount 
listed for each high priority project in the following table shall be 
available (from amounts made available by section 1101(a)(17) of the 
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users) for fiscal years 2005 
through 2009 to carry out each such project:

                         HIGH PRIORITY PROJECTS
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 No.    State               Project Description                Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1        CA Construct safe access to streets for            $500,000
                 bicyclists and pedestrians including
                 crosswalks, sidewalks and traffic calming
                 measures, Covina.........................
    2        CA Develop and implement ITS master plan in      $1,500,000
                 Anaheim..................................
    3      TN   Improve circuitry on vehicle protection          $59,000
                 device installed at highway--RR crossing
                 in Athens, TN............................
    4        CA Builds a pedestrian bridge from Hiller        $2,450,000
                 Street to the Bay Trail, Belmont.........
    5      OH   Renovate and expand National Packard          $3,000,000
                 Museum and adjacent historic Packard
                 facilities...............................
    6      IL   Land acquisition for the widening of Rt.      $1,000,000
                 47 in Yorkville, IL......................
    7      NE   Interstate 80 Interchange at Pflug Road,      $2,000,000
                 Sarpy County, Nebraska...................
    8      TX   Construction of Segment #1 of Morrison        $2,000,000
                 Road for the City of Brownsville.........
    9      MI   I-96 at Latson Road Interchange               $6,000,000
                 Improvements.............................
   10      IL   Preconstruction and Construction of IL 83     $1,000,000
                 at IL 132................................
   11      TN   Add third lane on U.S. 27 (State Route 29)    $6,000,000
                 for truck-climbing lane and realignment
                 of roadway at Wolf Creek Road to Old U.S.
                 27 north of Robbins......................
   12      MI   Reconfiguration of U.S. 31 from the             $750,000
                 Manistee Basquel Bridge to Lincoln Street
                 in the city of Manistee..................
   13      AR   Bentonville, Arkansas--widen and improve I-   $1,420,000
                 540 and SH-102 Interchange...............
   14      WA   41st St. Interstate 5 Interchange Project     $4,850,000
                 in Everett...............................
   15        CA Reconstruct and deep-lift asphalt on          $5,000,000
                 various roads throughout the district in
                 Santa Barbara County.....................
   16      OK   Improving the I-35 Interchange at Milepost    $2,000,000
                 1 Near Thackerville......................
   17      NJ   Laurel Avenue Bridge replacement in           $1,000,000
                 Holmdel Township.........................
   18      OH   Construct overpass over CSX Railroad on         $460,000
                 Columbia Road (State Route 252), Olmsted
                 Falls....................................
   19      TN   Reconstruct and widen U.S. 72 from south      $1,000,000
                 of State Route 175 to State Route 57,
                 Shelby County............................
   20      NY   Construct roundabout at Oregon Road--           $475,000
                 Westbrook Dr--Red Mill Road in Town of
                 Cortlandt................................
   21      IL   Construct Bike, Pedestrian Paths, Orland        $400,000
                 Hills....................................
   22      PA   Construct I-79/Rte 3025 missing ramps at      $1,150,000
                 Jackson Township, PA.....................
   23      PR   Construction of PR 833 to PR 831. PR 831      $6,000,000
                 to PR 5. Bridge #667 PR 830, KM 2.40 PR 5
                 connector from PR 167 to intersation with
                 PR 5 and Las Cumbres Ave.................
   24      TX   Extension of SH 349 to US 87 Relief Route     $2,500,000
                 in Dawson County.........................
   25      IL   Parking facility in Peoria, IL............    $1,000,000
   26      IL   Construct Interchange on Interstate 255 at   $19,000,000
                 Dupo/Columbia............................
   27      MN   Construction and right-of-way acquisition     $4,000,000
                 for interchange at TH65 and TH242 in
                 Blaine, MN...............................
   28        CA Huntington Beach, Remove off-ramp on I-405      $500,000
                 at Beach Blvd. Construct fourth lane on I-
                 405 North, at the Beach Blvd. interchange
   29      TN   Addition of an interchange on I-40 in         $3,000,000
                 Roane County at Buttermilk Road and I-40.
   30      NY   Purchase Three Ferries and Establish         $15,000,000
                 System for Ferry Service from Rockaway
                 Peninsula to Manhattan...................
   31      IL   Reconstruction of Mockingbird Lane and        $2,000,000
                 Stratford St, Granite City...............
   32      FL   Construction a new multi-lane tunnel below      $500,000
                 the channel to link the Port of Miami on
                 Dodge Island with I-395 on Watson Island
                 and I-95 in Downtown Miami...............
   33      MD   Rehabilitation of West Baltimore Trail and      $900,000
                 Implementation of Pedestrian Improvements
                 Along Associated Roadways................
   34      TN   Removal and Reconfiguration of Interstate     $3,000,000
                 Ramps--I-240, Memphis....................
   35        CA Replace structurally unsafe Winters Bridge    $2,000,000
                 for vehicles, bicycles and pedestrians
                 between Yolo and Solano Counties.........
   36      IL   City of Havana, Illinois Upgrades to            $952,572
                 Broadway Street..........................
   37      MN   Construction of Gitchi-Gami State Trail         $900,000
                 from Cascade River to Grand Marais.......
   38      LA   Develop master transportation plan for the      $500,000
                 New Orleans Regional Medical Center......
   39      VA   Final Design and Construction for             $1,000,000
                 improvements at I-64 and City Line Road,
                 Virginia Beach and Chesapeake............
   40      MA   Replacement of Cross Street Bridge            $1,000,000
                 spanning flood prone Aberjona River,
                 Winchester...............................
   41       NC  Construction of and improvement to I-73, I-  $11,000,000
                 74, U.S. 220 in Montgomery and Randolph
                 Counties, NC.............................
   42      IA   Access and transportation enhancements to     $2,000,000
                 access Lake Belva Deer, Sigourney........
   43        CA Roadway surface improvements, street            $800,000
                 lighting, and storm drain improvements to
                 South Center Street from Baughman Road to
                 State Route 78/86, Westmorland...........
   44      TX   Construct two connectors between SH 288       $5,000,000
                 and Beltway 8............................
   45      NY   Implement Central NY highway grade            $2,000,000
                 crossing and grade separation project....
   46        CA Douglas St. Improvements, El Segundo......    $4,000,000
   47      MA   Reconstruction of Massachusetts Avenue        $2,000,000
                 including safety improvements and related
                 pedestrian, bike way in Arlington........
   48      NY   Reconstruction of Rt 5, 8, 12 (North South    $1,000,000
                 Arterial) Burrstone Rd. to Oriskany
                 Circle, City of Utica....................
   49      OK   Construction of Norman highway-rail Grade     $2,000,000
                 Separation...............................
   50      PA   Construction of the Montour Trail, Great      $2,000,000
                 Allegheny Passage........................
   51        CA Route 1 San Pedro Creek Bridge replacement    $3,000,000
                 in Pacifica..............................
   52      MI   South Lyon, 2nd St. between Warren and          $125,000
                 Haggadorn................................
   53      PA   Street improvements, Abington Township....    $2,000,000
   54      IA   Study of a direct link to I 80, Pella.....      $500,000
   55      TN   Sweetwater, TN Improving Vehicle                 $96,000
                 Efficiencies at At-Grade highway-railroad
                 Crossings................................
   56      OR   Construct bike/pedestrian path, Powers....      $440,000
   57      IL   IL 6 to I-180--Phase 2 study and land         $2,000,000
                 acquisition..............................
   58      FL   Construct a new bridge at Indian Street,      $1,000,000
                 Martin County............................
   59      GA   Improve sidewalks, upgrade lighting, and        $500,000
                 add landscaping in downtown Glennville...
   60      LA   Continue planning and construction of the     $1,900,000
                 New Orleans Regional Planning Commission
                 Mississippi River trail in St. John,
                 Plaquemines St. Bernard and St. Charles
                 parishes.................................
   61      MO   Road widening and curb and gutter             $3,000,000
                 improvements on Hwy 33 in Kearney........
   62      TX   The SH146, Port Rd direct connectors         $13,200,000
                 allows traffic bypass several rail lines
                 & traffic signals at, near intersection
                 of SH146 and Port Rd.....................
   63      UT   Reconstruct South Moore Cut-off Road in       $7,500,000
                 Emery County.............................
   64      PA   Improvements to exits along Interstate 81     $8,200,000
                 in Franklin County, PA--Antrim Road......
   65      OH   Plan and construct the Southeast Arterial     $5,000,000
                 Connector highway at Delaware, Ohio......
   66      TN   To construct transportation enhancements      $8,000,000
                 on a multi-faceted greenway in downtown
                 Columbia on the Duck River...............
   67      RI   New Interchange constructed from I-195 to     $5,800,000
                 Taunton and Warren Avenue in East
                 Providence...............................
   68      NY   Town of Chester reconstruction of Walton         $80,000
                 Lake Estates subdivision and related
                 roads....................................
   69       NC  Extend M.L. King Jr. Boulevard in Monroe..    $2,000,000
   70      NY   Town of Fishkill Old Glenham Road (aka          $325,500
                 Washington Ave) reconstruction...........
   71      PA   U.S. Route 13 Corridor Reconstruction,        $4,000,000
                 Redevelopment and Beautification, Bucks
                 County...................................
   72      NY   Rochester & Southern Highway-Rail Grade       $1,500,000
                 Crossing Bypass, Silver Springs, New York
   73      IL   Upgrade streets in the City of Rushville,     $1,000,000
                 IL.......................................
   74      MO   Construct 2 lanes on Chouteau Trafficway      $2,000,000
                 from MO 210 to I-35......................
   75      AZ   US 60 to Gonzalez Pass....................    $3,500,000
   76      LA   Interstate lighting system (I 10 and LA         $300,000
                 93)......................................
   77      GU   Reconstruct Hagatna River Bridges,            $6,600,000
                 Municipality of Hagatna..................
   78      WA   SR 704 Cross-Base Highway, Spanaway Loop      $1,500,000
                 Road to SR 7.............................
   79      NY   Village of Brewster Main Street and Route       $975,000
                 6 related construction and improvements..
   80      PA   Design and construct relocation of US 11      $5,680,000
                 between Ridge Hill and Hempt Roads.......
   81      VA   Improve Route 42 (Main Street) in               $500,000
                 Bridgewater, Virginia....................
   82      NY   Construction of Route 59 Palisades            $1,000,000
                 Interstate Parkway to Route 303..........
   83      IL   Improve University Drive, Macomb..........      $500,000
   84        CA Adams Street Rehabilitation Project,            $388,000
                 Glendale.................................
   85      NY   Construct grade separation-interchange        $1,450,000
                 between Taconic Parkway and Pudding
                 Street...................................
   86      IA   Construction of 100th St interchange on I-    $1,000,000
                 35--80, Urbandale........................
   87      MO   Lewis and Clark Expressway................    $2,000,000
   88      PA   Mercer County, PA I-79 and PA 208             $3,000,000
                 Interchange Improvement Project..........
   89      WA   Plan to relieve traffic until North-South       $550,000
                 freeway HWY 2............................
   90        CA San Diego River Multiuse Bicycle and            $500,000
                 Pedestrian Path..........................
   91      PA   Construction of the Lafayette Street         $10,400,000
                 extension project in Montgomery County,
                 PA.......................................
   92      NJ   Construct new ramps between I-295 and         $5,000,000
                 Route 42.................................
   93      PA   Construct S.R. 29 Wal-mart to River           $1,700,000
                 Betterment, Eaton Tunkhannock, Wyoming
                 County...................................
   94      WV   Construct Shawnee Parkway.................    $1,100,000
   95      FL   Improve pedestrian and bicycle sidewalks,       $600,000
                 lighting, and ADA ramps--Main Street,
                 Canal Street, Miramar....................
   96      MN   Reconstruct CSAH 19 from CSAH 36 to CSAH        $200,000
                 2, Morrison County.......................
   97      TN   Develop trails, bike paths and                  $250,000
                 recreational facilities on Bird Mountain,
                 Morgan County for Cumberland Trail State
                 Park.....................................
   98      MN   Lyndale Avenue Bridge, Richfield..........   $13,000,000
   99      MI   Provide a bypass around the Village of          $100,000
                 Almont during M-53 reconstruction which
                 is contiguous with Macomb County.........
  100      NY   Town of Wallkill new construction road-       $1,000,000
                 tunnel under Rt. 17......................
  101      NY   Village of Cold Spring Main Street and          $820,000
                 ancillary road and sidewalk improvements.
  102      IL   West Ridge Nature Preserve, Chicago.......    $3,000,000
  103      TN   widen Campbell Station Road in Knoxville,     $1,800,000
                 TN.......................................
  104      AL   Widen Hwy. 84 to 4 lanes west of I-65 from    $6,000,000
                 Evergreen to Monroeville and beyond to
                 the State of AL line.....................
  105      MS   Widen State Highway 57 from I-10 through      $6,000,000
                 Vancleave................................
  106      WA   Widening SR 527 from 2 lanes to 5 from        $1,500,000
                 Bothell to Mill Creek....................
  107      OH   Construct proposed connection SR 207, SR      $2,000,000
                 104, and US 23 in Ross County............
  108      MI   Construct improvements to Finkbeiner Road     $4,400,000
                 from Patterson Road to Whitneyville Road
                 in Barry County, and new bridge over
                 Thornapple River.........................
  109      PA   York Road improvements from Horsham Road      $1,250,000
                 to Summit Avenue, Borough of Hatboro.....
  110      OH   Construct Highland Road pedestrian path         $612,000
                 and intersection improvements at Highland
                 and Bishop Roads in the City of Highland
                 Heights, OH..............................
  111      WI   Reconstruct Wisconsin State Highway 21 at     $3,000,000
                 I-94 interchange.........................
  112      MN   Safety improvements and intersection          $1,800,000
                 enhancements of TH 95 and TH 169,
                 Princeton................................
  113      NY   Wading River Bicycle and Pedestrian           $1,200,000
                 Project in Riverhead.....................
  114      FL   Widen County Line Road (CR 578) from          $6,000,000
                 Suncoast Parkway to US 41 to four lanes..
  115      IL   Improve Great River Road, Warsaw..........      $750,000
  116      WA   SR 518 3rd lane construction, King County.    $2,000,000
  117      FL   Construct East Central Regional Rail Trail    $1,000,000
                 in Volusia County, Florida...............
  118      MO   Y Highway US 71 to MO 58, Cass County.....    $2,000,000
  119      WY   WYO 59 Reconstruction.....................    $2,000,000
  120      LA   Plan and construct bike/pedestrian            $4,000,000
                 crossings of Washington-Palmetto Canal in
                 the vicinity of Xavier University, New
                 Orleans..................................
  121       NC  Winston-Salem Northern Beltway, Eastern       $5,000,000
                 Section and Extension, NC................
  122        CA Willow and Herndon Traffic Flow                 $300,000
                 Improvements, City of Clovis, California.
  123      MO   US 71 at Y Highway North and Southbound       $2,000,000
                 Ramps....................................
  124        CA Will add landscaping enhancements along       $2,900,000
                 the Ronald Reagan Freeway Route 118 for
                 aesthetic purposes.......................
  125       NC  Widens US 29 Business Freeway Drive from     $10,000,000
                 South Scales St. to NC 14 in Rockingham
                 County...................................
  126      PA   Widening, rechannelization, signalization       $800,000
                 to 2nd ave and Bates street, replace
                 Elisa Furnace bridge over Bates Street...
  127      KS   Resurfacing, grading, replacing guardrails      $784,000
                 & adding shoulders to Highway 77 in Geary
                 Cty, to accommodate expected traffic
                 increase.................................
  128      MO   Widening, curb and gutter improvements on     $3,000,000
                 Hwy 92 as part of Hwy 33 redevelopment
                 project in Kearney.......................
  129      IL   Construct streetscape along Morse avenue      $2,000,000
                 from Clark street to Sheridan road,
                 Chicago..................................
  130       SC  Build extension of North Rhett Boulevard      $7,000,000
                 from Liberty Hall Road to US 176 in SC...
  131      NH   Construct and upgrade intersection of         $1,000,000
                 Route 3 and Franklin Industrial Drive in
                 Franklin.................................
  132      GA   Construct Waycross East Bypass from US 84     $3,200,000
                 in Pierce County, Georgia to US 1 in Ware
                 County, Georgia..........................
  133      NY   Design and Construction of a                  $1,500,000
                 transportation enhancement project at the
                 Erie Canal Aqueduct in downtown Rochester
  134        CA Improvement of intersection at Balboa           $500,000
                 Blvd. and San Fernando Rd................
  135      TN   Impove Vehicle Efficiencies at highway At-       $99,000
                 Grade Railroad Crossing in Athens, TN....
  136      WI   Develop pedestrian and bike connections       $2,100,000
                 that link to Hank Aaron State Trail in
                 Milwaukee................................
  137      AK   Keystone Drive Road Improvements..........    $1,000,000
  138      GA   Pedestrian and streetscape improvements,        $400,000
                 Ellaville................................
  139      NY   Construct and improve pedestrian access on    $2,000,000
                 Main Street in Hempstead.................
  140      IL   Preconstruction activities IL 336 from        $2,000,000
                 Macomb to Peoria.........................
  141      OH   Purchase of right-of-ways for construction      $500,000
                 of pedestrian and bicycle improvements in
                 the City of Aurora, OH...................
  142      IL   Replacement of bridge on Harlem Avenue,       $1,000,000
                 The Village of River Forest..............
  143        CA State Route 86S and Ave 66 highway safety     $4,500,000
                 grade separation.........................
  144      IL   Construct Bissel Street Roadway Connector,    $1,000,000
                 Tri-City Regional Port District..........
  145        CT Improve Route 1 between East Avenue and       $2,000,000
                 Belden Avenue, Norwalk, CT...............
  146      IA   Central IA Trail Loop, bicycle and            $1,000,000
                 pedestrian, Ankeny to Woodward section...
  147      MI   Chippewa County, Upgrade Tilson Road          $1,000,000
                 between M-28 South to intersection of M-
                 48 at Rudyard............................
  148      WA   Coal Creek Parkway Bridge Replacement,        $1,000,000
                 Newcastle WA.............................
  149      PA   Complete gaps in the Pittsburgh Riverfront      $750,000
                 Trail Network including the Hot Metal
                 Bridge...................................
  150      TX   Construct passing lanes on Texas State          $797,000
                 Highway 16 in Atascosa County............
  151      TX   Construct street and drainage improvements      $250,000
                 to road system in Encinal................
  152      MN   Environmental assessment and right of way     $2,000,000
                 acquisition at US 52 and CSAH 24
                 Interchange, Cannon Falls, Goodhue Cnty,
                 MN.......................................
  153      NY   Construction for Peace Bridge                $10,000,000
                 Redevelopment Project, Buffalo...........
  154      MN   Construct recreational visitor center on      $1,300,000
                 the Mesabi Trail, City of Virginia.......
  155      NE   Engineering, right-of-way and construction      $500,000
                 of the 23rd Street Viaduct in Fremont,
                 Nebraska.................................
  156      MN   Phase III of Devil Track Road Project,        $1,200,000
                 Cook County..............................
  157      ME   Relocation of southbound on-ramp to I-95      $1,500,000
                 at exit 184, Bangor......................
  158      MA   Construct access roads to Hospital Hill       $2,000,000
                 project in Northampton, MA...............
  159      IN   Construct interchange for 146th St. and I-    $3,000,000
                 69, Hamilton County, Indiana.............
  160      NY   Design & Construct a Bicycle and                $950,000
                 Pedestrian Walkway along the
                 Decommissioned Putnam Rail Line..........
  161      AK   False Pass Road construction from small       $3,000,000
                 boat harbor dock to airport and town.....
  162      IL   Improve North Illinois St and related         $6,937,000
                 roads, Belleville........................
  163      AR   Construction of I-49, Highway 71: Arkansas    $9,000,000
                 portion of Bella Vista Bypass............
  164      NM   Coors--I-40 Interchange Reconstruction,      $17,000,000
                 Albuquerque..............................
  165      GA   Extend the south Toccoa Bypass east of        $2,900,000
                 Toccoa to CR 311, four lanes for
                 approximately 5.7 miles on new location..
  166      TX   Construct SH 183 from SH 360 to Belt Line     $2,000,000
                 Road in Irving, Texas....................
  167        CA Construct pedestrian, bicycle and ADA           $300,000
                 accessible boardwalks at the Pismo Beach
                 Promenade in San Luis Obispo County......
  168      TX   SH 44 E of Alice near SH 359 to US 281,       $2,000,000
                 Jim Wells County.........................
  169      AR   Conway Western Loop--For engineering,           $500,000
                 rights-of-way, relocations, and continued
                 planning and design......................
  170      PA   For design, land & ROW acquisition, &         $1,000,000
                 construction of a parking facility and
                 associated activities in the City of
                 Wilkes-Barre.............................
  171      TN   Hawkins County, Tennessee SR-31               $1,000,000
                 reconstruction...........................
  172      WI   Reconstruct US Highway 41--STH 67               $650,000
                 interchange (Dodge County, Wisconsin)....
  173      MA   Reconstruct Route 24/Route 140               $14,750,000
                 Interchange, replace bridge and ramps,
                 widen and extend acceleration and
                 deceleration lanes.......................
  174      OR   Study landslides on U.S. Hwy. 20 between      $1,000,000
                 Cascadia and Santiam Pass to develop long-
                 term repair strategy.....................
  175      MS   Upgrade Alex Gates Road and Walnut Road in    $1,750,000
                 Quitman County, and roads in Falcon,
                 Sledge and Lambert.......................
  176      IL   Upgrades for Muller Road in the City of         $280,000
                 Washington, IL...........................
  177      AL   Construction of Valleydale Road Flyover       $6,000,000
                 and widening and improvements from U.S.
                 31 to I-65 (Shelby County Rd 17).........
  178      MS   Upgrade roads in Beauregard (U.S. Hwy 51),    $1,000,000
                 Crystal Springs (U.S. Hwy 51 and I-55),
                 and Hazelhurst (U.S. Hwy 51 and I-55),
                 Copiah County............................
  179      NY   Westchester County, NY Rehabilitation of        $650,000
                 June Road Town of North Salem............
  180        CA Implement streetscape improvements on         $1,200,000
                 segments of Laurel Canyon Blvd. and
                 Victory Blvd. in North Hollywood.........
  181      OH   Construct loop road along US 23 in City of    $8,700,000
                 Fostoria, Seneca County..................
  182      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition, &       $2,000,000
                 construction of street improvements,
                 parking, safety enhancements & roadway
                 redesign in Nanticoke....................
  183      LA   Improve Ralph Darden Memorial Parkway           $350,000
                 Between LA 182 and Martin Luther King
                 Road, St. Mary Parish....................
  184        CA Reconstruct segments of Hollister Avenue      $2,500,000
                 between San Antonio Road and State Route
                 154 in Santa Barbara County..............
  185      NY   Reconstruction of Schenck Avenue from         $5,000,000
                 Jamaica Avenue to Flatlands Avenue,
                 Brooklyn.................................
  186        CO Construct Wadsworth Interchange over US 36    $2,000,000
                 in Broomfield............................
  187      NY   Enhance Battery Park Bikeway Perimeter,       $2,000,000
                 New York City............................
  188      FL   I-95 Interchange in the City of Boca Raton   $14,250,000
  189      NJ   Construct Long Valley Bypass..............    $1,000,000
  190      MI   Alpena County, Resurface 3.51 miles of          $640,000
                 Hamilton and Wessel Roads................
  191        CA Construct a 2.8 mile bikeway along Lambert    $2,500,000
                 Road from Mills Ave. to Valley Home Ave.
                 in the City of Whittier, CA..............
  192      TX   Hidalgo County Loop.......................    $1,000,000
  193      ME   Improvements to Route 108 to enhance          $1,500,000
                 access to business park, Rumford.........
  194      NY   Installation of new turning lane from           $425,000
                 Mohansic Ave onto eastbound Route 202, &
                 addition of new striped crosswalk........
  195      NY   Rockland County Hudson River Greenway         $2,000,000
                 Trail Project construction...............
  196      TX   Construct a segment of FM 110 in San          $1,000,000
                 Marcos...................................
  197      TX   Big Spring, TX Construction of the Big        $2,800,000
                 Spring Reliever Route....................
  198      NY   Improvements to Intermodal Transportation     $2,800,000
                 Facility and Construction of Waterfront
                 Esplanade at Fort Totten.................
  199      PA   Reconstruction and repair of Haverford          $300,000
                 Ave. Between 68th St. and Lansdowne Ave..
  200      ND   Bismarck/Mandan Liberty Memorial Bridge      $30,000,000
                 over the Missouri River..................
  201      WI   City of Glendale, WI. Develop and             $3,000,000
                 rehabilitate exit ramps on I-43, and
                 improvements at West Silver Spring Dr.
                 and North Port Washington Rd.............
  202      TX   Construction of Lake Ridge and US 67          $3,000,000
                 Project, Cedar Hill, TX..................
  203      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 including in the vicinity of PS K277.....
  204      WI   Resurface USH 8 between CTH C and Monico..    $1,100,000
  205      PA   South Phila. Access Rd. Design and            $3,000,000
                 construction of port access road from
                 South Phila Port and intermodal
                 facilities, Philadelphia.................
  206      NY   Implement ITS system and apparatus to           $100,000
                 enhance citywide truck route system on
                 Broadway to Irwin Ave between 232 to 231
                 in the neighborhood of Kingsbridge, NY...
  207      PA   SR 219 Purchase of Right of Way and          $17,000,000
                 completion of four lane extension from
                 the Town of Somerset to the Maryland
                 border...................................
  208      WI   Expand USH 41 between Oconto and Peshtigo,    $2,000,000
                 Wisconsin (Oconto and Marinette Counties,
                 Wisconsin)...............................
  209      IA   Study for NE Beltway, Polk Co.............      $500,000
  210      NY   This project involves a full                  $2,400,000
                 reconstruction of all the streets in Long
                 Island City surrounding 11th Street......
  211      AZ   Upgrade and Widen SR85 to I-10 (Mileposts     $1,500,000
                 120-141).................................
  212      MS   Upgrade Dog Pen Road and Galilee Road in      $1,000,000
                 Holmes County, and roads in Cruger,
                 Pickens, and Goodman.....................
  213      GA   U.S. 19/SR92 median work from Ellis RD to     $1,500,000
                 West Taylor ST, Griffin..................
  214      MS   Upgrade roads at Coahoma Community            $1,500,000
                 College, and roads in Coahoma and
                 Jonestown, Coahoma County................
  215      IN   Construction of Dixon Road from Markland        $500,000
                 Avenue to Judson Road in Kokomo, Indiana.
  216        CA Construction of Cross Vally Connector         $5,000,000
                 between I-5 and SR 14....................
  217      MA   State Street Corridor Redevelopment           $6,000,000
                 Project includes street resurfacing,
                 pedestrian walkway improvements and
                 ornate lighting from Main Street to St.
                 Michael's Cemetery, Springfield..........
  218      MI   Resurfacing of Stephenson Highway in            $350,000
                 Madison Heights..........................
  219        CA Soundwall construction on the 210 Freeway,    $1,800,000
                 Pasadena.................................
  220      GA   Streetscape-Ashburn.......................      $250,000
  221      NY   Design, Study and Construct Ferry Terminal    $2,000,000
                 Facilities at Floyd Bennett Field........
  222      WI   Improve Superior Avenue: Interstate 43 to     $1,000,000
                 State Highway 32, Sheboygan County,
                 Wisconsin................................
  223      TX   Design and construction streetscape           $1,000,000
                 improvements to enhance pedestrian
                 access, pedestrian access to bus services
                 and facilities...........................
  224      IL   Upgrade roads, The Village of Berkeley....    $1,000,000
  225      GA   Upgrade sidewalks and lighting,                 $400,000
                 Wrightsville.............................
  226      PA   Upgrades to Bedford Route 220 at the          $2,100,000
                 entrance of the Bedford Business Park to
                 Beldon Ridge intersection................
  227      MI   Widen Baldwin Road from Morgan to Waldon      $4,000,000
                 in Orion Township........................
  228      FL   Construct Saxon Boulevard Extension,          $2,100,000
                 Volusia County, Florida..................
  229      NY   Construction and rehabilitation of East       $1,020,000
                 and West Gates Avenues in the Village of
                 Lindenhurst, NY..........................
  230      TN   Widen Interstate 240 from Interstate 55 to    $1,000,000
                 Interstate 40 West of Memphis, Shelby
                 County...................................
  231      NJ   Rahway River Corridor Greenway Bicycle and    $1,500,000
                 Pedestrian Path, South Orange............
  232        CT Reconstruct Pearl Harbor Memorial Bridge,     $2,000,000
                 New Haven................................
  233      PA   Development of Northwest Lancaster County       $250,000
                 River Trail..............................
  234        CA Widen SR 89 at existing mousehole two lane    $3,534,680
                 RR underpass.............................
  235      LA   Construct Mississippi River Trail and           $500,000
                 Bikepath, New Orleans....................
  236      NY   Utica Marsh-Reestablish Water Street......    $2,650,000
  237      AR   Widen to 5 lanes, improvement, and other      $3,200,000
                 development to U.S. Highway 79 B/
                 Univeristy Ave. in Pine Bluff............
  238      WA   SR 9 & 20th St. SE Intersection               $1,000,000
                 Reconstruction in Snohomish County.......
  239      OH   Streetscape and related safety                  $350,000
                 improvements to US 20 in Painesville
                 Township, OH.............................
  240      PA   Design, construct intersection and other      $1,000,000
                 upgrades on PA 24 and 124 in York County,
                 PA.......................................
  241      WA   Issaquah Historical Society, Issaquah           $250,000
                 Valley Trolley Project...................
  242      IL   Construct new bridge on Illinois Prairie        $300,000
                 Path over East Branch River in Milton
                 Township, IL.............................
  243      TN   Plan and construct improvements,                 $50,000
                 Livingston public square.................
  244      GA   Construction on US 82 from Dawson to          $1,000,000
                 Alabama Line.............................
  245      IA   Construct I-74 Bridge in Bettendorf, IA...    $1,500,000
  246        CA Operations and management improvements,       $1,000,000
                 including ITS technologies, on U.S.
                 Highway 101 in Santa Barbara County......
  247      OH   Plan and construct new interchange on         $5,000,000
                 Interstate 71 at Big Walnut Road in
                 Delaware County, Ohio....................
  248      PA   Design and construct access to intermodal     $2,000,000
                 facility in York County..................
  249      WA   Complete preliminary engineering and          $3,000,000
                 environmental analysis for SR 14 through
                 Camas and Washougal......................
  250      UT   Construct Bingham Junction Boulevard in       $7,000,000
                 Midvale City.............................
  251      MD   Construct Centreville, MD spur of Queen         $382,000
                 Annes County Cross Island Trail,
                 Centreville to US Route 301..............
  252      MN   Polk, Pennington, Marshall County 10-Ton      $5,600,000
                 Corridor in Northwestern Minnesota.......
  253        CA Quincy-Oroville Highway Rehabilitation in     $1,000,000
                 Plumas County............................
  254        CA Construct Coyote Creek Trail Project from     $2,500,000
                 Story Road to Montague Expressway in San
                 Jose.....................................
  255      TX   Construct Depression of Belt Line Road at     $6,000,000
                 I-35 E Intermodal Transportation Project
                 in Carrollton, TX........................
  256      AL   Construct Anniston Eastern Bypass from       $27,000,000
                 Golden Springs Road to US Hwy 431........
  257      NY   Construct greenway along East River           $1,250,000
                 waterfront between East River Park (ERP)
                 and Brooklyn Bridge, and reconstruct
                 South entrance to ERP, in Manhattan......
  258      NE   Construction of I-80-Cherry Avenue            $8,000,000
                 Interchange and East Bypass, Kearney,
                 Nebraska.................................
  259      MN   Corridor study, EIS, and ROW acquisition      $1,000,000
                 for a future highway and bridge over the
                 Mississippi River, City of Brainerd......
  260        CA Escondido, CA Construction of Bear Valley     $2,000,000
                 Parkway, East Valley Parkway.............
  261      AR   Junction Bridge--rehabilitation &             $1,600,000
                 conversion from rail to pedestrian use...
  262      WA   Port of Tacoma Rd.--Construct a second          $500,000
                 left turn lane for traffic from westbound
                 Pac. Hwy E. to Port of Tacoma Rd. and I-5
  263      NY   Realign Union Valley Road in Town of            $330,000
                 Carmel...................................
  264      MO   Roadway improvements to U.S. 67 in St.        $4,000,000
                 Francois County..........................
  265      FL   Homestead, FL Widening of SW 328 from SW      $7,000,000
                 137 Ave to 152 Ave.......................
  266        CA Reconstruct I-710 southern terminus off       $3,000,000
                 ramps, Long Beach........................
  267      GA   SR 4 widen from Milledgeville Road to         $4,000,000
                 Government Street, Richmond County.......
  268      TN   Develop trails, bike paths and                  $250,000
                 recreational facilities on Western Slope
                 of Black Mountain, Cumberland County for
                 Cumberland Trail State Park..............
  269      NJ   Routes 1 & 9 Secaucus Road to Broad Avenue    $1,000,000
                 in Hudson and Bergen Counties............
  270      MA   Massachusetts Avenue Reconstruction,          $5,000,000
                 Boston...................................
  271      NY   Improve Ashburton Ave. from the Saw Mill      $1,500,000
                 River Parkway to the waterfront, Yonkers.
  272      MN   Trail extensions to Mesabi Trail, City of       $294,745
                 Aurora...................................
  273      LA   I-10 Ryan Street exit ramp to include         $5,000,000
                 relocation and realignment of Lakeshore
                 Drive to include portions of Front Street
                 and or Ann Street, and to include
                 expansion of Contraband Bayou Bridge.....
  274      MI   Van Buren, Belleville Road widen to 5         $1,100,000
                 lanes between Tyler and Ecorse...........
  275      IA   Widening University Blvd, Clive...........    $1,000,000
  276      HI   Construct Waimea Bypass...................    $1,000,000
  277      IL   Widening two blocks of Poplar St from Park      $480,000
                 Ave to 13th Street, Williamson County....
  278        CA Widening the highway and reconstructing       $7,000,000
                 off ramps on Hwy 101 between Steele Lane
                 and Windsor, CA to reduce traffic and
                 promote carpools.........................
  279      WA   Granite Falls Alternate Freight Route in      $2,930,000
                 Granite Falls............................
  280      NY   Construction and rehabilitation of North        $770,000
                 Queens Avenue and Grand Avenue in the
                 Village of Lindenhurst, NY...............
  281       SC  Extension & Expansion of Lower Richland       $1,000,000
                 Roads Phase I............................
  282      OR   Kuebler Boulevard improvements, Salem.....    $1,500,000
  283       NC  Upgrade US 1 in Rockingham................   $10,000,000
  284        CA Implement Southwest San Fernando Valley       $2,300,000
                 Road and Safety Improvements.............
  285      VA   Upgrade DOT crossing #467662S to constant       $201,800
                 warning time devices.....................
  286      TX   Construct new location highway &             $16,000,000
                 interchanges on Inner Loop, from Global
                 Reach to Loop 375 including the Global
                 Reach ext., El Paso......................
  287        CA Rehabilitation, repair, and/or                $3,500,000
                 reconstruction of deficient two-lane
                 roads that connect to Interstate 5, SR
                 180, SR 41 and SR 99 countywide, Fresno
                 County...................................
  288      OH   Relocate SR 149 from 26th Street to Trough      $650,000
                 Run in Bellaire..........................
  289      WA   Auburn, Washington--M Street SE                 $500,000
                 rehabilitation between 29th Street SE and
                 37th Street SE...........................
  290      KY   Replace Bridge over Stoner Creek, 2 Miles     $1,000,000
                 East of US 27 Junction, Bourbon County...
  291      NM   Development of Paseo del Volcan corridor      $2,000,000
                 located in Sandoval County from Iris Road
                 to U.S. Highway 550......................
  292      OH   Stan Hywet Hall and Gardens to restore,         $180,000
                 expand, construct, and improve pedestrian
                 paths and bike trail system..............
  293      MS   Construct bicycle path, Petal.............      $200,000
  294      NJ   Construction of Route 206 Chester             $2,000,000
                 Township, NJ.............................
  295      IL   For IDOT to conduct Phase II engineering      $1,000,000
                 for reconstruction of 159th St-US 6-IL 7
                 in Will and Cook Counties................
  296      IL   For Will County to begin Phase II             $2,000,000
                 engineering and preconstruction
                 activities for a high level bridge
                 linking Caton Farm Road with Bruce Road..
  297        CA Study of Thomas Bridge to meet future         $2,000,000
                 cargo and passenger traffic needs of the
                 ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles......
  298      TX   US377 Hood Co., TX--From BU377H east of       $1,500,000
                 Granbury to the new location of FM 4.....
  299      IL   Construct Citywide bicycle path network,        $250,000
                 city of Evanston.........................
  300        CA Mount Vernon Avenue grade separation and      $2,000,000
                 bridge expansion in Colton...............
  301      NJ   Widening Routes 1 and 9, Production Way to      $500,000
                 East Lincoln Avenue, Union County........
  302      PA   Design, construct and upgrade interchange     $4,000,000
                 of US 15 and US 30 in Adams County.......
  303      OH   State Route 8 Improvements in Northern        $3,000,000
                 Summit County............................
  304        CO US 50 East, State Line to Pueblo..........    $7,500,000
  305      IN   Widening road (along Gordon Road, Sixth      $14,400,000
                 Street, and West Shafer Drive) to 3-lane
                 street, with sidewalk and improvements to
                 existing bridge White County/Monticello,
                 Indiana..................................
  306      OH   Widening Pleasant Valley Bagley Road (Rte     $1,000,000
                 27), Parma and Middleburg Heights........
  307      MA   Rehabilitation of I-95 Whittier Bridge--      $2,000,000
                 Amesbury and Newburyport.................
  308        CA Streetscape improvements at East 14th St-       $750,000
                 Mission Blvd in Alameda County...........
  309      NY   Construct W. 79th St Rotunda, New York        $2,000,000
                 City.....................................
  310      TX   Acquire Kelly Parkway Corridor Right-of-      $2,000,000
                 way through San Antonio..................
  311       NC  Construct new route from US 17 to US 421      $1,000,000
                 in Brunswick and New Hanover Counties....
  312      PA   Construct safety and capacity improvements      $250,000
                 to Route 309 and Old Packhouse Road......
  313      OR   Delta Ponds Bike/Pedestrian Path..........    $2,880,000
  314      FL   Hollywood US Route 1 Young Circle Safety      $2,300,000
                 Improvement..............................
  315      MI   Houghton County, Gravel and paving of           $430,000
                 remaining 3.2 miles in 5.5 mile stretch
                 of Jacobsville Rd........................
  316      PA   Improve access to Airport Connector from      $1,000,000
                 PA 283 to the terminus of the Airport
                 Connector at State Route 230 and adjacent
                 access roads.............................
  317        CA Construct one additional all purpose lane     $3,210,000
                 in each direction on I 405 and provide
                 additional capital improvements from SR
                 73 through the LA County line............
  318      IL   Improve Roads and Bridges, Cook County....    $4,000,000
  319        CA Improve traffic safety, including             $1,400,000
                 streetlights, from Queen to Barclay to
                 Los Angeles River to Riverside in Elysian
                 Valley, Los Angeles......................
  320      MI   Construction and improvements to Western      $2,300,000
                 Avenue and associated streets betweeen
                 Third Street and Terrace Street in
                 Muskegon.................................
  321      IL   Construct Reed Station Parkway Extension      $2,068,755
                 to IL Rt 3, Carbondale...................
  322      AL   Construction of Patton Island Bridge         $10,000,000
                 Corridor.................................
  323      MI   Highland, Clyde Road from Hickory Ridge to      $125,000
                 Strathcona...............................
  324      MI   Alger County, Repaving a portion of H-58      $1,600,900
                 between Sullivan Creek towards Little
                 Beaver Road..............................
  325      TX   Improvements to US 183 in Gonzales County.      $500,000
  326        CA Construct a raised landscaped median on         $400,000
                 Alondra Blvd between Clark Ave and
                 Woodruff Ave in Bellflower...............
  327      MN   Right of way acquisition for TH 23            $2,500,000
                 Paynesville Bypass.......................
  328      FL   Construct interchange improvements at I-75      $500,000
                 and University Parkway...................
  329        CO For construction and architectural            $6,000,000
                 improvements of Wadsworth Bypass (SH121)
                 Burlington Northern Railroad and
                 Grandview Grade Separation...............
  330      KS   Construction of 4-lane improvement on K-18    $2,500,000
                 in Riley County, Kansas..................
  331      NJ   Replace Rockaway Road Bridge, Randolph        $1,000,000
                 Tonwhsip, New Jersey.....................
  332      FL   Construction of paved road over existing      $3,000,000
                 unpaved roadway on SE 144th Ave from SR
                 100 to US 301, distance of 1.2 miles.....
  333      FL   Construct I-4 Frontage Rd, Volusia County,    $2,000,000
                 Florida..................................
  334      MD   Construction of Fringe and Corridor           $4,000,000
                 Parking Facility at intersection of
                 Clinton Street and Keith Avenue in
                 Baltimore................................
  335      OH   Purchase of Right of Way for                  $1,440,000
                 transportation enhancement activities in
                 Bainbridge Township, OH..................
  336      NJ   Rowan Boulevard Parking adjacent to           $1,000,556
                 Highway 322 Corridor in Glassboro
                 Township.................................
  337        CA Construct interchange on US 50 at Empire      $1,800,000
                 Ranch Road in Folsom.....................
  338      FL   Bicycle and Pedestrian Improvements in the      $300,000
                 Town of Windermere, Florida..............
  339      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and              $3,000,000
                 pedestrian trail, Smyrna.................
  340        CA Santa Anita Avenue Corridor Improvement       $3,000,000
                 project, Arcadia, California.............
  341      AS   Shoreline protection and drainage             $1,000,000
                 mitigation for Nuuuli village roads......
  342      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition, &         $600,000
                 construction of a connector road between
                 Pennsylvania Rt. 93 & Pennsylvania Rt.
                 309 in Hazle Township....................
  343      GA   South Tifton Bypass from US 82/SR 520 west      $500,000
                 to US 319/SR 35 east, Tift County........
  344      NJ   Streetscape and Traffic Improvement           $1,000,000
                 Project to Downtown West Orange..........
  345      NJ   Bergen County, NJ On Route 17, address        $5,500,000
                 congestion, safety, drainage,
                 maintenance, signing, access, pedestrian
                 circulation and transit access...........
  346        CA Road widening, construct bike path,           $6,500,000
                 lighting, and safety improvements on road
                 leading to Hansen Dam Recreation Area,
                 Los Angeles..............................
  347      TX   Construct additional 2 lanes to Loop 335      $3,000,000
                 in Amarillo from .3 miles West of Western
                 street to .5 miles West of Broadway......
  348      NY   Reconstruct a historic bridge crossing          $580,000
                 Maxwell Creek in the Town of Sodus, NY...
  349      NJ   Safety and operation improvements on Route    $1,200,000
                 73 in Berlin, Voorhees and Evesham.......
  350      NJ   Study and preliminary engineering designs     $1,000,000
                 for a boulevard on State Route 440 and
                 U.S. Highway Route 1 & 9, Jersey City....
  351      VA   Construction of Route 17 Dominion             $8,000,000
                 Boulevard, Chesapeake, VA................
  352      LA   Installation of proper lighting standards       $200,000
                 to illuminate inbound and outbound ramps
                 of I-10 and portions of HWY 95...........
  353      IN   Cyntheanne Rd. Interchange and Corridor       $1,000,000
                 Improvements, Town of Fishers, Indiana...
  354      ME   Plan and construct North-South Aroostook      $4,000,000
                 highways, to improve access to St. John
                 Valley, including Presque Isle Bypass and
                 other improvements.......................
  355      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and              $1,500,000
                 pedestrian trail, LaVergne...............
  356      TX   Build Arkansas Street Grade Separation in     $1,000,000
                 Laredo...................................
  357        CA Construct new left turn lane at State           $700,000
                 Route 19 and Telstar in El Monte.........
  358      NY   Meadow Drive Extension--North Tonawanda,      $2,000,000
                 New York.................................
  359        CA Reconstruct I-880 & Coleman Avenue           $10,000,000
                 Interchange & implement other I-880
                 Corridor operational improvements in
                 Santa Clara County.......................
  360      OR   Improve Millican, West Butte Road which       $2,000,000
                 connects U.S. Highway 20 with U.S.
                 Highway 126..............................
  361      VA   Metropolitan Washington, D.C. Regional        $2,000,000
                 Transportation Coordination Program......
  362      NY   Brooks Landing Transportation Improvements      $500,000
                 and Enhancement project, Rochester.......
  363      NJ   Construct CR 538 Coles Mill Road Bridge         $500,000
                 over Scotland Run, Gloucester County.....
  364      TX   Convert discontinuous two-way frontage        $5,000,000
                 roads to continuous one-way frontage
                 roads on IH 30 in Texarkana, TX..........
  365      TX   Regional bicycle routes on existing           $1,000,000
                 highways in Austin, TX...................
  366      IN   Construct Interchange at I-65 and 109th       $7,454,219
                 Avenue, Crown Point......................
  367      GA   Intersection improvement at Harris Drive        $600,000
                 at SR 42.................................
  368      IL   Engineering and construction of the East        $100,000
                 Branch DuPage River Greenway Trail in
                 central DuPage County, IL................
  369      NY   Rehabilitate a historic transporation-          $600,000
                 related warehouse on the Erie Canal in
                 the Town of Lyons, NY....................
  370      NY   Relocating Miller Highway W 59th-72 St.       $2,500,000
                 Manhattan under future expansion of
                 Riverside Park...........................
  371      MI   Allen Road under the CN Railroad Grade        $4,450,000
                 Separation, Woodhaven....................
  372      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Larksville Borough, Luzerne County....
  373      AR   Northeast Arkansas Connector (relocation      $3,000,000
                 of Highway 226)..........................
  374      NJ   Reconstruct Route 168 from Route 41 to 6th      $658,000
                 Avenue in Runnemede......................
  375      NY   Renovation of Metropolitian Avenue center     $1,700,000
                 islands..................................
  376      PA   Rt 60 Millennium Park Interchange,              $800,000
                 construct new interchange on Rt 60 to
                 provide access to new Lawrence County
                 Industrial Park..........................
  377      AR   Bentonville, Arkansas--widen Arkansas         $1,500,000
                 Highway 102 between U.S. 71B and the west
                 city limits..............................
  378      PA   Purchase of right-of-way, utilities and       $3,000,000
                 construction for Northern Access to
                 Altoona from Interstate 99, Blair County,
                 PA.......................................
  379        CA Construct Class I bike and pedestrian path      $400,000
                 from San Luis Obispo to Avila Beach......
  380      MN   Reconstruct CSAH 61 from south county line      $316,000
                 to TH 73, Moose Lake.....................
  381      AZ   Improving Lone Pine Dam Road in Navajo        $2,000,000
                 County...................................
  382      MI   Construct Road Improvements to North Henry    $2,700,000
                 St. from Vermont Ave. to Wilder Rd. Bay
                 City.....................................
  383      TX   Reconstruct I-35E Trinity River Bridge,      $15,000,000
                 Dallas...................................
  384      NY   Town of Greenville rehabilitation of            $125,000
                 Grahamtown Rd. & Burnt Corners Rd........
  385      NJ   Completion of Hudson River Waterfront         $1,000,000
                 Walkway through Stevens Institute of
                 Technology in Hoboken....................
  386       NC  Construct US 74 Bypass, Shelby, NC........    $3,000,000
  387      WA   Tukwila Urban Access Improvement Project--    $1,000,000
                 address necessary improvements to
                 Southcenter Parkway in Tukwila to relieve
                 congestion...............................
  388        CA Construction of a traffic signal at the         $125,000
                 intersection of Independence Avenue and
                 Sherman Way..............................
  389      NH   Design and construction of intersection of    $1,000,000
                 Rte 101A and Rte 13 in Milford...........
  390      NJ   Construct Rte 30--Pomona Road Intersection    $5,000,000
                 Improvements, Atlantic County............
  391        CA I-10 and Indian Ave Interchange, Palm         $2,750,000
                 Springs, CA..............................
  392      NY   Reconstruction of street, sidewalks and         $500,000
                 curbs outside of Museum of Modern Art
                 (MOMA)...................................
  393      KY   Right of way for and construction of          $3,200,000
                 Pennyrile Parkway Extension from 41A S.
                 to I-24..................................
  394      TN   Sevier County, Tennessee SR-66 widening...    $1,750,000
  395      TN   Plan and construct interchange                  $400,000
                 improvements, I-65 at Highland Road......
  396      IA   Reconstruction of NW Madrid Dr, Polk Co...    $1,000,000
  397      NH   Relocation and Reconstruction of              $1,300,000
                 intersection at Route 103 and North
                 Street in Claremont......................
  398      IL   To construct a new 2-lane road extending        $500,000
                 1650 feet north from intersection with
                 University Park Drive, Edwardsville......
  399      NY   Town of Highlands reconstruction of bridge      $225,000
                 on School Street.........................
  400      AK   Unalaska, AK Construction of AMHW ferry       $7,500,000
                 terminal including approach, staging, and
                 upland improvements......................
  401      PA   Design and construct interchange and          $3,500,000
                 related improvements to I 83 Exit 4......
  402      OR   U.S. 101 Improvements, Bandon.............    $3,300,000
  403      MI   Northwestern Highway Extension projects in    $9,100,000
                 Oakland County...........................
  404      PA   PA Route 61 safety improvements, Leesport     $3,000,000
                 Borough and Ontelaunee and Muhlenburg
                 Townships................................
  405      OH   Improve Rt 62 (Main and Town Streets)         $6,500,000
                 Bridges over Scioto River, Columbus......
  406      AK   Planning, design, and construction of a     $125,000,000
                 bridge joining the Island of Gravina to
                 the Community of Ketchikan...............
  407      MN   U.S. Trunk Highway 14 from Waseca to         $14,000,000
                 Owatonna, Minnesota......................
  408      TX   Construct Mission Trails Project Packages     $5,500,000
                 4 & 5 in San Antonio.....................
  409      MS   Upgrade Roads in Carthage, Leake County...      $200,000
  410      MI   Construct access road at intersection of         $26,000
                 Doerr Road and Schell Street to Develop
                 65-Acre of Municipal Tract of Industrial
                 Land. Village of Cass City, Tuscola
                 County...................................
  411      MS   Upgrade roads in Humphreys County               $850,000
                 Districts 1 and 5 and Isola..............
  412      IN   126th Street Project, Town of Fishers,        $1,250,000
                 Indiana..................................
  413      HI   Construct Puanaiko Street.................    $1,000,000
  414      AZ   Burro Creek section between Wikieup and       $1,000,000
                 the Santa Maria River....................
  415      PA   Conduct Environmental Impact Statement        $1,000,000
                 study for Parkway West corridor..........
  416       SC  Build Railroad Avenue Extension in            $2,000,000
                 Berkeley County, SC--SCDOT...............
  417      MD   Construct a visitors center and related       $4,700,000
                 roads serving Ft. McHenry................
  418      OH   Construction of Gracemont Street Exchange     $3,000,000
                 Interstate 77--Bethlehem Township and
                 Pike Township, Ohio......................
  419      MI   Design, Right-of-Way and Construction of     $18,400,000
                 the I-196 Chicago Drive (Baldwin Street)
                 Interchange Modificaiton, Michigan.......
  420        CA Folsom Blvd. Transportation Enhancements,     $7,000,000
                 City of Rancho Cordova...................
  421      TN   improve streetscape and pavement repair,        $300,000
                 Monroe County, TN........................
  422      TX   IH37 frontage roads in Mathis.............    $2,000,000
  423      WV   Construct New River Parkway...............    $4,500,000
  424      NY   Construct sidewalk and improvements on          $330,000
                 Broadway in the Town of Cortlandt........
  425      PA   Erie, PA Powell Avenue Bridge Replacement,    $4,000,000
                 Asbury Road Improvement Project..........
  426      VA   Liberty Street Construction in                $1,000,000
                 Martinsville, Virginia...................
  427        CA Implement streetscape project on Central      $4,000,000
                 Avenue from 103rd Street to Watts/103rd
                 Street Station, Watts....................
  428      MA   Realignments and reconstruction of a          $3,200,000
                 section of Route 32 in Palmer to the Ware
                 town line................................
  429        CA Seismic retrofit of the Golden Gate Bridge   $11,000,000
  430        CA Upgrade and extend Commerce Avenue, City      $2,000,000
                 of Concord...............................
  431      MA   Somerville Roadway Improvements...........    $2,300,000
  432      LA   Replace Almonaster Bridge, New Orleans....      $500,000
  433      IN   Upgrade Traffic Signals Phase III in the        $640,000
                 City of Muncie, Indiana..................
  434      FL   Sharpes Ferry Bridge replacement in Marion    $2,800,000
                 County...................................
  435      IA   US 34 Missouri River bridge relocation and    $2,500,000
                 replacement..............................
  436      NY   Village of Highland Falls repaving and          $150,000
                 sidewalk construction of Oak Avenue......
  437      MN   Interchange Reconstruction at CSAH 4 and      $1,000,000
                 US 169...................................
  438      IL   Development and construction of an            $6,000,000
                 interchange at Brisbin Rd and Interstate
                 80.......................................
  439      NE   Design, right-of-way and construction of     $15,000,000
                 rail-grade separations throughout
                 Nebraska as identified by Nebraska Dept.
                 of Roads.................................
  440      MO   Redesign & Reconstruction of the I-270        $2,000,000
                 Dorsett Road Interchange Complex in the
                 City of Maryland Heights.................
  441       SC  Build Berlin Myers Extension in               $8,000,000
                 Summerville, SC..........................
  442      IN   Improve 100 South, Porter County..........    $1,000,000
  443      NY   Improve safety measures at the railroad       $1,600,000
                 grade crossings on the West Short River
                 Line, Rockland County....................
  444      NJ   Street Improvements and Traffic Signal          $800,000
                 Replacement in Union City Central
                 Business District........................
  445      GA   Streetscape project to replace sidewalks        $300,000
                 in downtown Forsyth......................
  446      AK   Westside development Williamsport-Pile Bay    $5,000,000
                 Road.....................................
  447      NV   Construct Interstate 15--Las Vegas Beltway   $10,250,000
                 Interchange..............................
  448      NY   Palisades Trailway Phase 2--Rockland            $200,000
                 County, New York.........................
  449      PA   Replace a Highway Rail Grade crossing in        $500,000
                 Jeanette, PA at Wegleys Road.............
  450        CA Conduct project design and environmental      $3,500,000
                 analysis of Heritage Bridge on Heritage
                 Road linking Chula Vista to Otay Mesa....
  451      MA   Assabet River National Wildlife Refuge,         $500,000
                 MA, Design and Construction of parking
                 areas....................................
  452      NY   Reconstruct Main Street in the Town of           $90,000
                 Lewisboro................................
  453      MA   Study and analysis of Lowell Westford St.       $600,000
                 Wood St. Rourke Bridge Corridor, Lowell..
  454      OR   Highway 20, Lincoln County................    $7,000,000
  455      MN   Construction of 8th Street North: Stearns     $2,000,000
                 C.R. 120 to T.H. 15 in St. Cloud, MN.....
  456      IL   Construction of a pedestrian sidewalk           $145,000
                 along S. Chicago Street in Geneseo, IL...
  457      OH   Construct Bike and Walking Path from West       $250,000
                 210 St to Metroparks Fairview Park.......
  458      NY   Improve Bronx River Greenway 180th St Park      $800,000
                 Link to Bronx Park.......................
  459      MN   City of East Grand Forks Construct 13th St    $1,200,000
                 SE Extension.............................
  460      NY   Improvements to Clark Pl and Cherry Ln--        $370,000
                 Rt. 6 and 6 N in Putnam County...........
  461      NJ   Construct Garden State Parkway Grade         $40,000,000
                 Separation, Cape May County..............
  462      VA   High Knob Horse Trails--construction of         $750,000
                 horse riding trails and associated
                 facilities in High Knob area of Jefferson
                 National Forest..........................
  463      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and              $2,500,000
                 pedestrian trail, Cookeville.............
  464      UT   Provo, Utah Westside Connector from I-15      $1,000,000
                 to Provo Municipal Airport...............
  465        CA I-5 Santa Clarita-Los Angeles Gateway         $2,000,000
                 Improvement Project......................
  466      NY   Project will revitalize staircases used as    $1,000,000
                 streets due to steep grade of terrain in
                 areas in which they are located, the
                 Bronx....................................
  467      TX   Construct and rehabilitate pedestrian         $1,000,000
                 walkways along the Main Street Corridor
                 to improve transit-related accessibility.
  468      MD   Reconstruct East North Avenue (US Route 1)    $5,000,000
                 in Baltimore.............................
  469        CT Reconstructoin of Lakeville Center to           $895,000
                 improve pedestrian and vehicle safety at
                 the intersection of Routes 41 and 44.....
  470       SC  Widen 8 miles of S-83 (Hardscrabble Road)     $2,000,000
                 from intersection with SC Route 555
                 (Farrow Road) to Road S-54 (Langford
                 Road)....................................
  471        CA San Gabriel Blvd Rehabilitation Project--       $300,000
                 Mission Rd to Broadway, San Gabriel......
  472       NC  To plan, design, and construct the 10th       $9,000,000
                 Street Connector Project in Greenville,
                 NC.......................................
  473      OH   To widen Western Reserve Road from SR 7 to    $2,500,000
                 Hitchcock Road, Mahoning Co..............
  474      NY   Binghamton, Improve Front Street..........    $5,000,000
  475      FL   U.S. Highway 19 Bayside Segment...........    $2,000,000
  476      MI   Arenac County, Upgrade Maple Ridge Road       $1,646,000
                 from Briggs Road east to M-65............
  477      NY   Village of Highland Falls repaving and          $225,000
                 sidewalk construction of Mearns Ave......
  478      NY   Village of Nelsonville improvements,            $250,000
                 paving & sidewalk installation to North
                 Pearl St, Crown St, Pine St, & Wood Ave..
  479        CA Widen Firestone Blvd between Ryerson Blvd     $2,000,000
                 and Stewart and Gray Road in Downey......
  480        CA Construct Air Cargo Access Road to Oakland      $900,000
                 International Airport....................
  481      MD   Peer review study of conflicts between          $100,000
                 road system and light rail operations in
                 Linthicum, MD............................
  482      GA   Resurface and widen Jac-Art Road as part        $200,000
                 of the Bleckley County Development
                 Authority project........................
  483      VA   Construction of Virginia Blue Ridge Trail       $300,000
                 in Amherst County, VA....................
  484      FL   Implement NE 6th Street/Sistrunk Boulevard    $1,000,000
                 Streetscape and Enhancement Project, City
                 of Ft. Lauderdale........................
  485        CA Widen Lakewood Blvd between Telegraph Rd      $2,000,000
                 and Fifth St in Downey...................
  486      TX   Widen Motor Street thoroughfare in Dallas     $5,500,000
                 to improve accessibility to Southwestern
                 Medical District.........................
  487      MN   Construction of Gitchi-Gami State Trail,        $500,000
                 Lutsen Phase, CR 34 to Lockport store....
  488      PA   Widen of SR 309 through the Borough of        $3,000,000
                 Coopersburg to create left-turn lanes and
                 complete the Rt. 309 Corridor Improvement
                 Project..................................
  489        CA Pasadena Ave/Monterey Rd Partial Grade          $300,000
                 Separation--Preliminary Engineering--
                 Feasibility, South Pasadena..............
  490      OH   Intermodal Bikeway, Independence..........    $2,500,000
  491      MO   Widen shoulder and resurface US 136 and       $3,000,000
                 replace 2 deficient bridges between Rock
                 Port and Bethany, Missouri...............
  492      FL   S.R. 43 (U.S.301) Improvement Project--       $4,000,000
                 Ellentown to Parrish, Florida............
  493      GA   Bike and pedestrian paths and other             $800,000
                 transportation enhancements at Georgia
                 Veterans Memorial Park...................
  494      AK   Citywide pavement rehabilitation in City      $1,000,000
                 of North Pole............................
  495      GA   Replace and upgrade sidewalks, Glenwood...       $50,000
  496      NY   Bruckner blvd along Bronx River Ave, Story    $1,600,000
                 Ave to Soundview Park Greenway...........
  497      GA   Widen SR 133 from Spence Field to SR 35 in    $1,000,000
                 Colquitt County, Georgia.................
  498        CA Mariposa County, CA Improve 16 roads,         $3,500,000
                 bridge and one bike path.................
  499      LA   Upgrade highway-rail crossings at Madison       $200,000
                 Street, City of Gretna...................
  500      PA   Two-lane Extension of Bristol Road, Bucks     $2,000,000
                 County...................................
  501      TN   Widen SR30 From Athens to Etowah,             $5,758,000
                 Tennessee................................
  502      MI   Iosco County, Reconstruct Bissonette Road       $322,500
                 from Lorenz Road to Chambers Road........
  503      TX   Development of one-story 300-vehicle          $1,200,000
                 parking facility.........................
  504      WA   Design and construct improved I-182           $2,000,000
                 interchange ramps at Broadmoor Blvd. in
                 Pasco, WA................................
  505      NY   Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor      $3,250,000
                 in Lockport, NY--Transportation
                 Enhancements.............................
  506      MI   M-6 Paul Henry Freeway trail design and       $2,780,000
                 construction.............................
  507        CT Reconstruction and conversion of Union        $1,705,000
                 Station in North Canaan to establish a
                 transportation museum....................
  508      OR   Construct passing lanes on U.S. 199,          $1,827,000
                 Josephine County.........................
  509        CA Scenic preservation and run-off mitigation    $1,500,000
                 in the Santa Monica Mountains National
                 Recreation Area near PCH and US101.......
  510      IL   South Shore Drive and 67th Underpass......    $1,300,000
  511        CA Mission Boulevard/State Route 71              $4,200,000
                 Interchange--Corridor Improvements.......
  512      OR   For purchase of right of way, planning,      $11,000,000
                 design and construction of a highway,
                 Newberg..................................
  513      VA   Smith River Trail--Construction of trail        $500,000
                 along Smith River in Henry County........
  514      IL   Resurface Clifton Park Ave. and S. Louis        $400,000
                 Ave., Village of Evergreen...............
  515      NJ   University Heights Connector for                $637,000
                 improvements to First Street in Newark
                 from Sussex Street to West Market Street.
  516      GA   Broad Avenue Bridge: Albany...............      $500,000
  517        CA Caelsbad, CA Construction of Poinsettia       $2,000,000
                 Lane.....................................
  518        CA Construct pedestrian enhancements on          $2,500,000
                 Broadway in Los Angeles..................
  519      NJ   Construct Rt 56 Maurice River Bridge          $2,000,000
                 Replacement, Salem & Cumberland Counties.
  520      WA   Conduct route analysis for community             $50,000
                 pathway through Chehalis.................
  521      WA   Construct a multi-jurisdictional non-         $2,000,000
                 motorized transportation project parallel
                 to SR 99 called the Interurban Trail.....
  522      FL   Construct Downtown Bypass Roadway               $500,000
                 Connector, Lake Mary, Florida............
  523      NY   To study, design and construct the            $8,250,000
                 Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway in Red Hook,
                 Greenpoint, and the Navy Yard in Brooklyn
  524      NY   Update all county and town traffic signage      $275,000
                 in Wayne County, NY......................
  525        CA Construct Route 101 Auxiliary Lanes 3rd       $5,000,000
                 Ave in the City of San Mateo to Millbrae
                 Ave in Millbrae..........................
  526        CA Undertake Cordelia Hill Sky Valley            $3,000,000
                 transportation enhancement project,
                 including upgrade of pedestrian and
                 bicycle corridors, Solano County.........
  527      MS   Construct I-20 Interchange at Hawkins         $2,000,000
                 Crossing, Lauderdale County..............
  528      TN   Sevier, Jefferson, Cocke Counties,            $1,750,000
                 Tennessee SR-35 & U.S. 411 widening......
  529      GA   Upgrade Safety of Bicycle and Pedestrian      $3,000,000
                 Access to Public Schools, Dekalb County..
  530      OH   Construction of Safety and related              $120,000
                 improvements on Rutlege Transfer Road in
                 Vernon Township, OH......................
  531      WI   Reconstruct USH 45 in Antigo..............    $2,020,000
  532      WA   SR 2/Main Street/Old Owen Road                  $480,000
                 Intersection in Monroe...................
  533      GA   Install landscaping and upgrade lighting        $350,000
                 on Fall Line Freeway, Reynolds...........
  534      WA   Congestion relief on I-405 with added         $1,000,000
                 lanes from SR 520-SR 522 including 2
                 lanes each way from NE 85th-NE 124th.....
  535      NY   Conduct NYS 5 construction study..........       $80,000
  536      PA   Widen lanes, add left turn lanes and          $1,500,000
                 update & install traffic signals at
                 SR309, SR 4010 interchange in North
                 Whitehall Township.......................
  537      KY   Reconstruct I-64-KY 180 Interchange, Boyd     $2,000,000
                 County, Kentucky.........................
  538      TX   Widen US 271 from a 2-lane facility to a 4-   $2,000,000
                 lane divided facility from Paris, TX to
                 Pattonville, TX..........................
  539      TN   Carter County, Tennessee SR-362                 $500,000
                 reconstruction...........................
  540      OH   Construct Ohio River Trail, Anderson            $275,000
                 Township.................................
  541      MI   Delta County, CR 515 from US 2 and US 41        $320,000
                 in Rapid River to County Road 446 at Days
                 River Road-Bituminous overlay and joint
                 repair...................................
  542      FL   Fund design phase for widening US 41 north    $1,000,000
                 of Dunnellon to four lanes...............
  543      TN   Construction of Elizabethton Connector in     $1,000,000
                 Carter County, Tennessee.................
  544      NJ   Newark Waterfront Pedestrian and Bicycle      $1,500,000
                 Access project...........................
  545      ME   Plan and construct Lewiston/Auburn            $5,800,000
                 Downtown Connector.......................
  546      OH   Conduct Miami St along SR Route 53 safety     $1,000,000
                 enhancement project to improve access to
                 railroad crossing........................
  547      AK   Planning, design, and construction of        $15,000,000
                 Juneau access roads in Juneau, Alaska....
  548      TN   Construction of an intersection/              $2,400,000
                 interchange in the City of Cleveland
                 along I-75...............................
  549      FL   Construct Flagler Avenue Improvements,        $1,010,000
                 City of Key West, Florida................
  550        CA Rehabilitate street surface of Cedros            $43,000
                 Avenue between Burbank Blvd. and Magnolia
                 Blvd.....................................
  551      VA   Engineering and Right of Way to widen         $1,250,000
                 Route 221 in Forest, Virginia............
  552      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 including in the vicinity of PS Q200.....
  553      TX   SH 146 grade separation over Red Bluff Rd.   $17,000,000
  554      TN   construction of park access road and            $300,000
                 adjacent trails at the Athens Regional
                 Park in Athens, TN.......................
  555      IL   State Street Road Improvements from 43rd      $3,850,000
                 Street to IL Rt 157, East St. Louis......
  556      GA   Streetscape-Dawson........................      $200,000
  557       SC  Build Carolina Bays Parkway Segment from      $3,000,000
                 SC 544 to US 17 in Myrtle Beach, SC......
  558      GA   US 341 US 41 SR 7 from Barnesville to SR      $4,000,000
                 3, Georgia...............................
  559      OH   Reconstruct and widen State Route 82 in       $1,000,000
                 North Royalton...........................
  560      FL   Acquisition, engineering, and construction    $1,000,000
                 of West Avenue Connector Bridge, City of
                 Miami Beach, FL..........................
  561      ME   Safety Enhancements on Routes 11, 6, and        $400,000
                 16 for Piscataquis County Industrial
                 Development..............................
  562      IL   Study, design, and construction of a          $1,132,000
                 designated truck route through the City
                 of Monticello............................
  563        CA Improvement of intersection at Aviation       $2,000,000
                 Blvd. and Rosecrans Ave. to reduce
                 congestion, City of Hawthorne............
  564      WI   Preliminary engineering for upgrading I 94    $9,000,000
                 between Illinois State Line and Mitchell
                 Interchange in SE Wisconsin..............
  565      MI   Cogshall Road Crossing Improvement and        $1,200,000
                 Life Safety Access Project in Holly, MI..
  566      MI   Ontonagon County, Improve Fed Forest Hwy        $500,000
                 16 from M-38 to Houghton County Line.....
  567      UT   Forest Street Improvements, Brigham City,     $2,500,000
                 UT.......................................
  568       NC  I40 Union Cross Road Interchange in           $1,000,000
                 Forsyth County, NC.......................
  569      NJ   Construct Sea Isle Boulevard                  $2,000,000
                 Reconstruction from Garden State Parkway
                 to Ludlams Thoroughfare, Cape May County.
  570        CA I-5 HOV Improvements from Route 134 to          $500,000
                 Route 170................................
  571      NY   Reconfiguration of intersection and             $500,000
                 redesign of traffic signal timing at
                 Mohegan Ave and Lakeland St..............
  572        CA Shoal Creek Pedestrian Bridge (San Diego).    $1,500,000
  573      GA   Streetscape-Cordele.......................      $250,000
  574        CA Construct I-605 Interchange Capacity          $2,000,000
                 Improvements in Irwindale................
  575       SC  Construction of interchange at I-385 and      $2,200,000
                 SC 14, Exit 19, in Laurens County, South
                 Carolina.................................
  576      NE   Design, right-of-way and construction of      $9,500,000
                 Nebraska Highway 35 between Norfolk and
                 South Sioux City.........................
  577      MO   Complete impact study for North Oak             $500,000
                 Highway corridor redevelopment...........
  578      MA   Design and construct the 1.5 mile East        $1,500,000
                 Longmeadow Redstone rail Trail bike path.
  579      NY   Improve bicycle and pedestrian safety on        $100,000
                 Main Street, Holbrook....................
  580        CA Tuolumne, Stanislaus and Merced Counties      $2,500,000
                 Upgrade existing county highway, J59.....
  581      FL   U.S. 19 Continuous right turn lanes in        $7,200,000
                 Pasco County.............................
  582      NJ   Union Boulevard Revitalization and              $500,000
                 Streetscape Enhancements, Totowa.........
  583      IL   Improve roads, The Village of Westchester.    $1,000,000
  584      IN   Reconstruct 45th Avenue from Colfax Street    $2,700,000
                 to Grant Street, Lake County.............
  585      IN   Construct Grade Separation Underpass on       $2,000,000
                 Main Street in Mishawaka, Indiana........
  586      UT   Construct two-lane divided highway from       $6,000,000
                 the Atkinville Interchange to the new
                 replacement airport access road in St.
                 George...................................
  587        CA Diamond Bar On-Off Ramp at Lemon Ave on SR-  $12,000,000
                 60.......................................
  588      NY   Transportation parking facility serving      $10,000,000
                 the Harlem Hospital Complex..............
  589      MA   Downtown revitalization for Pleasant          $1,900,000
                 Street, Malden...........................
  590      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 in the vicinity of Prospect Park Yeshiva.
  591      NY   Emergency vehicle preemption system at          $500,000
                 traffic signals, Smithtown...............
  592        CA Reconstruct interchange for south-bound       $3,900,000
                 traffic entering I-80 from Central
                 Avenue, City of Richmond.................
  593      KY   Reconstruct KY 393, Oldham County,            $2,000,000
                 Kentucky.................................
  594        CA Reduce Orange County Congestion Program...      $250,000
  595        CA Street Closure at Chevy Chase Drive,            $800,000
                 Glendale.................................
  596      PA   Allegheny County Urban Runoff Mitigation-     $1,000,000
                 eliminate urban highway runoff and the
                 discharge of culverted streams into
                 municipal combined sewers................
  597       SC  Construct Briggs-Pearson-DeLaine Connector   $25,000,000
  598      NM   Construct an interchange on I-25 to           $6,000,000
                 provide access to Mesa del Sol in
                 Albuquerque..............................
  599      OR   Short Haul Intermodal Pilot Project,          $2,500,000
                 Eugene...................................
  600      VA   Rivermont Ave. (Lynchburg) Bridge             $2,200,000
                 improvements.............................
  601      MA   Construct new interchange on I-95 between       $500,000
                 existing Route 1 A ramp to the north and
                 Route 123 ramp to the south, Attleboro...
  602      OH   Construct Waverly, Ohio South Connector       $3,200,000
                 from US 23 to SR 104 to SR 220...........
  603      VA   Craig County Trail--improvements to trail       $150,000
                 in Craig County..........................
  604        CO US 160, State Highway 3 to East of the        $6,000,000
                 Florida River............................
  605      AS   Village road improvements for Ta'u, Ofu,      $1,400,000
                 and Olosega-Sili counties in Manu'a
                 district.................................
  606      PR   Construction of 4 lane connector serving      $1,950,000
                 PR 9922, PR 9939 and PR 183..............
  607      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking, garage & roadway
                 redesign in Duryea Borough, Luzerne
                 County...................................
  608      OK   SH-33, Widen SH-33 from the Cimarron River    $8,000,000
                 East to U.S. 177 Payne County, OK........
  609      TX   Washington Boulevard Improvements in          $2,600,000
                 Beaumont, Texas..........................
  610      FL   Widen Midway Road from South 25th Street      $2,000,000
                 to U.S. 1 in St. Lucie County............
  611      NY   Enhance road and transportation facilities    $5,000,000
                 in the vicinity of W. 65th St and
                 Broadway, New York City..................
  612      LA   Construct Kansas-Garrett Connector and I-     $5,000,000
                 20 Interchange Improvements..............
  613      PA   Construct the SR 1058 Connector between PA    $1,600,000
                 309 and the Pennsylvania Turnpike
                 Northeast Extension in Montgomery County.
  614      OK   Reconstruct the Interstate 44 193rd street    $3,000,000
                 interchange..............................
  615      NY   Roadway improvements to Woodbury Rd at        $2,000,000
                 intersection with Syosset-Woodbury Rd....
  616      RI   Construct a handicapped accessible trail        $200,000
                 and platform at Kettle Pond Visitor
                 Center Administrative Facility...........
  617      NJ   Construct Great Swamp National Wildlife         $250,000
                 Refuge Road..............................
  618        CA Grade Separation at 32nd Street between I-    $1,000,000
                 15 and Harbor Drive, San Diego...........
  619      IN   Widen Old Meridian Street from 2 to 4         $1,125,000
                 lanes, City of Carmel, Indiana...........
  620      WI   Construct a bicycle/pedestrian path, City     $2,200,000
                 of Portage...............................
  621      VA   Widen Route 17 in Stafford................    $5,000,000
  622      VA   Widen Route 820 in Bergton, Virginia......    $1,550,000
  623      IL   Construction of 2 North/South Blvds. and 2    $7,500,000
                 East/West Blvds. in the vicinity of
                 Northern Illinois University.............
  624        CA Begin construction of road from U.S. 395      $1,000,000
                 west towards SR-14.......................
  625      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Old Forge Borough, Lackawanna County..
  626      PA   Improvements to Amtrak Keystone Corridor        $500,000
                 grade crossings at Irishtown Rd., New
                 Comer Rd., and a new bridge at Ebychiques
                 Rd.......................................
  627      TN   Acquire and construct trail and bikeway       $1,600,000
                 along S. Chickamauga Creek in
                 Chattanooga, TN..........................
  628      TX   Interchange improvements IH-30 Arlington      $2,000,000
                 at FM 157 (Collins Street) and Center
                 Street...................................
  629      MO   Highway 350 Access Management Study from      $1,000,000
                 I435 to I470.............................
  630      TX   Reconstruct Mile 6 W from US83 to SH 107,     $1,000,000
                 Hidalgo County...........................
  631      NJ   Pedestrian facilities and street lighting       $433,000
                 on Haddon Avenue from Albertson Avenue to
                 Glenwood Avenue, Haddon Township.........
  632      NY   Rehabilitate highway bridges--Ithaca          $2,500,000
                 secondary line...........................
  633      WA   Buckley, WA; New Road alignments on 112th     $2,000,000
                 Street Corridor..........................
  634      ID   Construct Washington Street North from        $4,500,000
                 Addison Avenue to Pole Line Road.........
  635       SC  Construction of the U.S. 15/SC-341            $4,500,000
                 connector parallel to I-20, Lee County...
  636      PA   Construct Recreational Trail from Oil City    $1,500,000
                 to Rynd Farm (Venango County)............
  637      TX   FM 1637 from FM 3051 to FM 185, Waco......    $2,000,000
  638      VA   Green Cove Station--improvements to             $100,000
                 existing Forest Service facility located
                 at trailhead of Virginia Creeper Trail...
  639      NJ   South Essex Street Bridge Pedestrian            $578,000
                 Access Improvements, Orange..............
  640      TX   FM 3391 (East Renfro St.) from I-35W to CR    $2,000,000
                 602, Burleson............................
  641      WI   Replace Wisconsin Street Bridge (STH 44)     $10,000,000
                 in Oshkosh, Wisconsin....................
  642        CT Construct Route 11 Extension and bicycle     $16,000,000
                 and pedestrian path from Salem to
                 Waterford................................
  643      TX   Drainage Study and Engineering for US 83      $1,000,000
                 in Starr County..........................
  644      TN   widen SR-62 in Knox County, TN............    $6,500,000
  645      GA   Widen US 17 SR 25 from Yacht Drive to         $2,000,000
                 Harry Driggers Boulevard, Glynn County,
                 Georgia..................................
  646      KY   Widen US 25 from US 421 North to KY 876,      $1,000,000
                 Madison County...........................
  647      GA   Widen US 280/SR 30 from east of Flint         $1,000,000
                 River to SR 300 Connector west of Cordele
  648      MS   Upgrade roads in Gunnison, Mound Bayou,       $2,000,000
                 Beulah, Benoit, and Shaw, Bolivar County.
  649      NY   Construct and enhance Fillmore Avenue and     $1,500,000
                 traffic down-grade and infrastructure
                 improvements to Humboldt Parkway, Buffalo
  650      NJ   Construct Route 46 & Main Street              $2,000,000
                 intersection in Lodi.....................
  651      MN   Phase III construction of Trunk Highway       $5,000,000
                 610-10 Minnesota.........................
  652      NM   NM 128 JCT NM 31 East to Texas State Line.    $4,000,000
  653      NJ   Replacement of Prospect Avenue Culvert,         $400,000
                 City of Summit, County of Union..........
  654      FL   US 441 Traffic Improvements--Road surface,      $900,000
                 road access, curb, gutter, and right of
                 way, Miami Gardens.......................
  655      MN   Environmental studies and right of way        $5,000,000
                 acuisition for Trunk Highway 55 Corridor
                 Protection Project.......................
  656      NY   Roadway improvements on Woodbine Avenue         $800,000
                 between 5th Avenue and Beach Avenue......
  657      NY   Saugerties, Improve downtown streets......    $1,200,000
  658      IN   Widen US 31 Hamilton County, Indiana......    $1,000,000
  659      GA   Build a bridge across Big Indian Creek,       $1,500,000
                 Perry....................................
  660      MI   Carpenter Road Reconstruction--700 feet       $2,000,000
                 South of Textile Road to I-94, Washtenaw
                 County...................................
  661      IN   Resurface and widen Shelby County Indiana     $1,000,000
                 400 North Phases IV and V................
  662       SC  Widen West Georgia Road from Neely Ferry      $2,000,000
                 Road to Fork Shoals Road.................
  663      TX   Construct Phase II of City of Killeen SH-     $6,000,000
                 201......................................
  664      MN   Interchange improvements at I-94 and CSAH     $1,000,000
                 19 and at CSAH 37 in the city of
                 Albertville, MN..........................
  665      KY   Construction of bypass between KY 55 and      $1,500,000
                 US 68 at Lebanon in Marion County........
  666      NY   Peruville Road. Creating overpass to          $2,000,000
                 address intersection safety issue........
  667      OR   Add a southbound lane to section of I-5       $5,000,000
                 through Portland, OR between Delta Park
                 and Lombard..............................
  668      MN   10th Street Bridge Expansion in St. Cloud,    $1,000,000
                 MN.......................................
  669      NJ   Intermodal Access Improvements to the         $2,000,000
                 Peninsula at Bayonne Harbor..............
  670      TX   Nolana Loop from FM 1426 to FM 88, Hidalgo    $2,000,000
                 County...................................
  671      OH   Perry Park Road Improvements and                 $67,000
                 Pedestrian Trail Expansion at Call Road
                 in the Village of Perry, OH..............
  672      NV   Implement Regional Transportation of          $5,000,000
                 Southern Nevada FAST system..............
  673      NY   Bronx River Greenway 233rd Street             $1,000,000
                 Connection...............................
  674      PA   Construction of turn lanes, increase curve      $435,000
                 radius at the intersection of SR 3041 and
                 Industrial Park Road, Somerset, Pa.......
  675      FL   Planning and design for development of          $500,000
                 future highway connections to the
                 Southwest Florida International Airport..
  676      WI   Reconstruct and rebuild St. Croix River       $7,000,000
                 Crossing, connecting Wisconsin State
                 Highway 64 in Houlton, Wisconsin to
                 Minnesota State Highway 36 in Stillwater
                 Minnesota................................
  677      TN   Conduct study for SR 45 to SR 386               $500,000
                 Connector................................
  678      IN   Reconstruct and widen Shelby County           $1,000,000
                 Indiana 500 East from 1200 N to US 52....
  679      MO   Removal and Replacement of the Grand          $3,500,000
                 Avenue Bridge in the City of St. Louis...
  680      TX   Conduct reconstruction and managed lanes      $5,000,000
                 project on Airport Freeway (SH 183-SH
                 121) from IH 820 to the Dallas County
                 Line.....................................
  681      FL   Reconstruction of Hanford Boulevard, North    $2,750,000
                 Miami Beach..............................
  682      MA   Commonwealth Ave/Kenmore Sq. Roadway &        $5,000,000
                 Pedestrian Improvements..................
  683      NY   Pedestrian walkway and bikeway                $3,200,000
                 improvements along the NYC Greenway
                 System in Coney Island...................
  684      PA   Restore Route 222 in Maxatawny and            $2,500,000
                 Richmond Townships, Berks County, PA.....
  685      OH   Study and design of modifications to I-75     $3,000,000
                 interchanges at M.L. King-Hopple, I-74,
                 and Mitchell in Cincinnati...............
  686      VA   Widen Route 10 to six lanes from Route 1      $1,000,000
                 to Meadowville Road, Chesterfield........
  687      GA   Rebuild sidewalks, install sidewalks, and       $250,000
                 add speed monitoring system, Alamo.......
  688        CA Widen Wilmington Ave from 223rd street        $5,000,000
                 including ramp modifications, Carson.....
  689      WI   Construct STH 32 (Claude Allouez) bridge        $500,000
                 in DePere, Wisconsin (Brown County,
                 Wisconsin)...............................
  690      NY   Construction of drainage improvements and       $510,000
                 aethetic enhancements to Oak Beach Road
                 in the Town of Babylon, NY...............
  691      WI   Construct an alternative connection to        $4,000,000
                 divert local traffic from I-90, a major
                 highway, and allow movement through the
                 Gateway commercial development project...
  692      WA   East Marine View Drive Widening in Everett    $3,500,000
  693      OH   Construction of safety improvements at          $300,000
                 intersection of US 422 and SR 700 in
                 Geauga County, OH........................
  694      WV   Upgrade Route 10, Logan Co................    $5,000,000
  695      TX   Conduct Preliminary Engineering for Funnel    $4,000,000
                 Project on SH 114 from BS 114L to Dallas
                 County Line and on SH 121 from SH 360 to
                 Dallas Co Line...........................
  696       NC  Install ITS on US 70 Clayton Bypass.......    $1,000,000
  697      PA   Brighton Road Extension-add new street to     $1,000,000
                 N Shore roadway network to facilitate
                 access to amphitheater...................
  698      NJ   Broad Street Streetscape Project in             $700,000
                 Elizabeth to provide physical
                 improvements and to enhance
                 transportation flow and efficiency.......
  699      FL   Construction of 4 lane highway around         $3,000,000
                 Jacksonville connecting US1 to Route 9A..
  700      WA   510-507 Loop--Conduct engineering, design,    $2,500,000
                 and ROW acquisition for alternative route
                 to two existing highways that bisect
                 Yelm, WA.................................
  701        CA Develop and implement traffic calming         $2,000,000
                 measures for traffic exiting the I-710
                 into Long Beach..........................
  702        CA San Diego, CA Construction of the I-5 and     $6,000,000
                 SR-56 Connectors.........................
  703      IL   Upgrade Ridge Avenue, Evanston............    $3,000,000
  704       SC  Widening and Improvements for Highway 901,    $2,000,000
                 York County..............................
  705      IA   Widening and Reconstruction, I 235, Des      $10,900,000
                 Moines...................................
  706        CA Bay Road improvements between University      $6,000,000
                 Avenue to Fordham, and from Clarke Avenue
                 to Cooley Landing. Northern access
                 improvements between University and
                 Illinois Avenues, East Palo Alto.........
  707       NC  Project to widen US 501 from NC 49 in         $4,000,000
                 Roxboro to the VA state line with part on
                 new location.............................
  708      NY   Congestion reduction, traffic flow              $640,000
                 improvement and intermodal transfer study
                 at Roosevelt Avenue/74th Street in Queens
  709        CA Construct bicycle and pedestrian bridge         $750,000
                 between Oyster Bay Regional Park in San
                 Leandro and Metropolitan Golf Course in
                 Oakland..................................
  710      TX   For right-of-way aquisition and               $6,000,000
                 construction of Seg 5 and 6 of SH 130
                 from 183 to Seguin, TX...................
  711      NJ   Construct the Airport Circle Elimination      $1,000,000
                 at Tilton and Delilah Roads, Atlantic
                 County...................................
  712        CA The Alameda Corridor SR 47 Port Access        $5,000,000
                 Expressway design funding................
  713      NV   Construct US Highway 95--Las Vegas Beltway   $10,000,000
                 Interchange..............................
  714      NY   Repair and repave the north side of the         $150,000
                 Mineola train station....................
  715      IL   Repair of CH 29 and reconstruction of CH 8    $1,000,000
                 at interchanges with Interstate 55 at
                 Towanda and Lexington Illinois...........
  716        CA Conduct a Project Study Report for new          $500,000
                 Highway 99 interchange between SR 165 and
                 Bradbury Road, serving Turlock/Hilmar
                 region...................................
  717      PA   Construction of U.S. 22 to I-79 Section of    $1,500,000
                 Southern Beltway, Pittsburgh,
                 Pennsylvania.............................
  718      MN   Construction of new highway between the       $3,000,000
                 bridge over Partridge River on CR 565 in
                 Hoyt Lakes to the intersection of CSAH 21
                 and 70, Babbitt..........................
  719        CA State Route 1 improvements between Soquel     $3,670,000
                 and Morrissey Blvd including merge lanes
                 and the La Fonda overpass, Santa Cruz....
  720      WA   The West Corridor Coalition in Washington       $500,000
                 state....................................
  721      WA   North Sound Connecting Communities            $1,200,000
                 Transportation Project Planning..........
  722      FL   West Relief Bridge Rehabilitation, Bay        $1,500,000
                 Harbor Islands...........................
  723      NE   Western Douglas County Trails Project,        $7,000,000
                 Nebraska.................................
  724      TN   Bristol, Tennessee highway--RR grade            $100,000
                 Crossing improvement--Hazelwood Street...
  725      GA   Extend East Greene Street, install street       $400,000
                 lights, utilities, and landscaping,
                 Milledgeville............................
  726        CA Grade Separation at Vanowen and               $1,000,000
                 Cliveborne, Burbank......................
  727      MA   Improve traffic signal operations,            $1,500,000
                 pavement markings & regulatory signage,
                 Milton-Boston City Line..................
  728      NY   Port Jervis, NY downtown pedestrian mall        $650,000
                 and promenade............................
  729      MN   Construct Soo Line Trail from north of          $495,000
                 Bowlus to the east side of Mississippi
                 River....................................
  730      WI   Construct traffic mitigation signals,           $400,000
                 signs, and other upgrades for Howard Ave,
                 St. Francis..............................
  731      NH   Reconstruction of NH 11 and NH 28               $700,000
                 Intersection in Alton....................
  732        CA Riverside Drive Improvements, Los Angeles.      $400,000
  733        CA Upgrade CA SR 4 East from the vicinity of    $20,000,000
                 Loveridge Road to G Street, Contra Costa
                 County...................................
  734      TX   Widen SH 24 from a 2-lane facility to 4-      $2,000,000
                 lane divided facility from SH 19 to
                 Cooper, TX...............................
  735      PA   Rail crossing signalization upgrade,            $325,400
                 Willow Street, Fleetwood, Berks..........
  736      IL   25th Avenue Grade Separation, Melrose Park      $500,000
  737       SC  Construct Hub City Connector Passage (12.5    $1,000,000
                 miles of bicycle-pedestrian improvements,
                 176-SC 56), part of State-wide Palmetto
                 Trail Project............................
  738      FL   Construct US 1/SR 100 Connector, Bunnell,     $2,500,000
                 Florida..................................
  739      MN   Construction of Gitchi-Gami State Trail         $700,000
                 from Gooseberry Falls State Park Trail
                 Head parking lot to 2.3 miles east.......
  740        CA Design and environmental analysis for         $1,000,000
                 State Route 11 connecting State Route 905
                 to the new East Otay Mesa Port of Entry,
                 San Diego................................
  741      NY   Improve North Fork Trail, Southold........      $200,000
  742      HI   Interstate Route H1 Deck Repair, Airport      $4,770,000
                 Viaduct..................................
  743      OH   Replace Grade Separation at Eastland and        $750,000
                 Sheldon Road, Berea......................
  744      WA   Widen I-5 through Lewis County............    $5,350,000
  745       SC  Engineering design and construction of I-    $10,000,000
                 73 from the North Carolina State Line to
                 I-95.....................................
  746      OH   Planning and construction of a bicycle        $2,500,000
                 trail adjacent to the I-90 and SR 615
                 Interchange in Lake County, OH...........
  747       SC  Widening of Boiling Springs 9 from Rainbow    $6,000,000
                 Lake Rd. to SC 292.......................
  748      IL   Construct Streetscape Project, Orland           $400,000
                 Hills....................................
  749      IL   Widening of Lake Cook Road ITS in               $540,000
                 Deerfield, IL............................
  750      OR   Widening of Oregon Hwy 217 between           $10,000,000
                 Tualatin Valley Hwy and the US 26
                 interchange, Beaverton...................
  751      PR   Widening of PR 111 at the intersections of    $6,000,000
                 PR-444 through PR-423....................
  752      MI   Widen M-72 from U.S. 31 easterly 7.2 miles    $2,500,000
                 to Old M-72..............................
  753      PA   Widening of Rt.22 and SR.26 in Huntingdon.    $3,375,000
                 Upgrades to the interchange at US RT 22
                 and SR26.................................
  754      MN   Widening of US Highway 61 at Frontenac          $800,000
                 Station, MN..............................
  755      KS   Construction and reconstruction of four       $4,000,000
                 interchanges on I-435, I-35 and U.S. 69
                 in Johnson Co............................
  756      MA   Melnea Cass Blvd Reconstruction...........    $2,700,000
  757      NH   Improve Meredith Village Traffic Rotary...    $1,000,000
  758      FL   Implement Blue Heron Boulevard Streetscape    $2,500,000
                 Improvements, City of Riviera Beach......
  759      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 including in the vicinity of PS Q114.....
  760      WI   Reconstruct STH 181 between Florist Ave       $4,500,000
                 and North Milwaukee County Line..........
  761      LA   Replace the Prospect Street Bridge (LA        $3,000,000
                 3087), Houma.............................
  762      GA   Streetscape improvements along LaVista          $200,000
                 Road in the Northlake business district
                 of DeKalb County, Georgia................
  763      MD   Study Greater Towson Area traffic flow and      $200,000
                 future needs.............................
  764      FL   Construct US 1 Improvements, Cities of          $400,000
                 Holly Hill and Ormond Beach, Florida.....
  765      OH   Transportation Enhancements to the              $700,000
                 downtown area of the Village of Chagrin
                 Falls, OH................................
  766      MA   Pedestrian Walkway for the Town of Norwood      $780,000
  767      NJ   Restoration of Route 35 in Ocean County,      $2,000,000
                 New Jersey...............................
  768      PA   Extension of Third Street from Interstate     $5,000,000
                 83 to Chestnut Street, Harrisburg........
  769      TX   Carlton road grade separation, Laredo, TX.    $5,000,000
  770      OH   Construct connector roadway between SR13        $250,000
                 13 and Horns Hill Road in north Newark...
  771      TN   Construct new lighting on Veterans              $250,000
                 Memorial Bridge, Loudon County, Tennessee
  772      NY   Roadway improvements on CR3 between Ruland    $2,220,000
                 Rd and I-495.............................
  773      TN   Construct State Route 385 (North and East)    $3,150,000
                 around the city of Memphis...............
  774      NY   Waterloo, NY by-pass project..............    $7,000,000
  775      IN   Extend Everbrook Drive from SR 332 to           $640,000
                 Bethel Avenue in the City of Muncie,
                 Indiana..................................
  776      TN   Construct Proposed SR 397 extension from      $2,225,000
                 SR96 West to US 431 North to Franklin
                 WIlliamson County........................
  777      AK   Construct linking road from airport to        $1,500,000
                 port in Akutan...........................
  778      PA   Uniontown to Brownsville section of           $5,000,000
                 Pennsylvania Mon/Fayette Expressway......
  779      NY   Ashburton Avenue Reconstruction, Yonkers,     $1,000,000
                 New York.................................
  780      OR   Highway 22, Polk County...................    $1,000,000
  781      FL   I-75 Widening and Improvements in Collier    $45,000,000
                 and Lee County, Florida..................
  782      WI   Pioneer Road Rail Grade Separation (Fond      $4,000,000
                 du Lac, Wisconsin).......................
  783      FL   Design and construction of double-deck        $4,000,000
                 roadway system exiting FLL airport
                 connecting Y.S. 1 and I-595..............
  784      MI   Wayne, Reconstruct one quarter of a mile        $125,000
                 stretch of Laurenwood....................
  785      GA   Construct the West Cleveland Bypass from      $2,900,000
                 US 129 SR 11 near Hope Road exteding west
                 of Cleveland, on new and existing
                 locations to SR 75.......................
  786      IL   Reconstruct Highway-Railway crossing over     $2,000,000
                 US 14 and realignment of US 14, Des
                 Plaines..................................
  787      OR   Highway 22-Cascade Highway interchange          $500,000
                 improvements, Marion County..............
  788      VA   Widen Route 29 between Eaton Place and        $3,000,000
                 Route 123 in Fairfax City, VA............
  789      WI   Reroute State Hwy 11 near Burlington, WI      $4,000,000
                 (Walworth and Racine Counties, WI).......
  790      IL   East Peoria, Illinois Technology Blvd.        $1,000,000
                 upgrades.................................
  791       DC  Metro Branch Trail Construction...........    $2,000,000
  792      MA   Study and design I-93/Mystic Ave.               $500,000
                 Interchange at Assembly Sq...............
  793      NM   Widening of US 491 from Navajo 9 to           $2,000,000
                 Colorado state border....................
  794      FL   Construct access road to link Jacksonville    $5,000,000
                 International Airport to I-95............
  795      FL   Widening of SR 60 from 66th Avenue to I-95    $1,000,000
                 in Indian River County, FL...............
  796      GA   Widening of SR 133: Colquitt Co./Daughtery    $1,000,000
                 Co.......................................
  797      PA   Rail Bridge Removal and intersection          $1,400,000
                 improvements, Cameron and Paxton Streets,
                 Harrisburg...............................
  798      PA   Widening of SR 1001 Section 601 in Clinton    $1,000,000
                 County...................................
  799      PA   Widening of Route 40 in Wharton Township,     $2,000,000
                 Fayette County, Pa.......................
  800      NJ   Widening of Route 1 and intersection          $1,000,000
                 improvements in South Brunswick..........
  801      PA   construct PA 706 Wyalusing Bypass Bradford    $1,000,000
                 County, Pennsylvania.....................
  802      IL   Construct four lane extension of IL RT29        $600,000
                 from Rochester to Taylorville............
  803      IL   Widening of Old Madison Road, St. Clair       $2,000,000
                 County...................................
  804      NY   Construction of Bicycle Path and                $500,000
                 Pedestrian Trail in City of Dunkirk......
  805      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Plains Township, Luzerne County.......
  806        CA Replace I-880 overpass at Davis St in San       $750,000
                 Leandro..................................
  807      PA   DuBois-Jefferson County Airport Access        $1,500,000
                 Road Construction........................
  808      GA   Streetscape project to improve                  $500,000
                 accessibility and safety for pedestrians,
                 Mount Vernon.............................
  809      IL   Replacement of Fullerton Avenue Bridge and    $4,800,000
                 Pedestrian Walkway.......................
  810      NH   Construct intersection at US 3 and              $700,000
                 Pembroke Hill Road in Pembroke...........
  811      FL   A new interchange with the Pineda Causeway   $13,000,000
                 Extension and I-95.......................
  812        CT Make Improvements to Groton Bicycle and         $380,000
                 Pedestrian Trails and Facilities.........
  813      MN   TH 36--Stillwater Bridge; cut-and-cover         $500,000
                 approach to river crossing...............
  814      NM   US 54 Reconstruction, Tularosa to Santa       $3,000,000
                 Rosa.....................................
  815      VA   Daniel Boone Wilderness Trail Corridor--      $3,200,000
                 acquire site; design and construction of
                 interpretative center, enhancement of
                 trail corridor...........................
  816      MI   Widening of M-24 from two lanes to four       $1,000,000
                 lanes with a boulevard from I-69 to the
                 county line..............................
  817      IN   Construct US 231 in Spencer and Dubois        $6,000,000
                 Counties in Indiana......................
  818      TN   Construct overpass at Highway 321 and         $6,500,000
                 Highway 11 Loudon County, Tennessee......
  819      SD   Improve the SD Advanced Traveler              $1,000,000
                 Information System.......................
  820      NV   Construct I-15 Widening--U.S. 95/I-515        $8,000,000
                 Interchange to Apex Road.................
  821      NY   Implement ITS system and apparatus to           $100,000
                 enhance citywide truck route system on
                 Avenue P between Coney Island Avenue and
                 Ocean Avenue in the 9th District of New
                 York.....................................
  822      GA   Install sidewalks, trails, lighting, and      $1,250,000
                 amenities in Balls Ferry Park, Wilkinson
                 County...................................
  823        CA Construct Inland Empire Transportation        $1,500,000
                 Management Center in Fontana to better
                 regulate traffic and dispatch personnel
                 to incidents.............................
  824      IL   Reconstruct Milwaukee Avenue, including      $17,000,000
                 Six Corners..............................
  825      TX   Implementation and quantification of         $34,984,000
                 benefits of large-scale landscaping along
                 freeways and interchanges in the Houston
                 region...................................
  826      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $250,000
                 construction of a connector road between
                 PA 115 & Interstate 81 in Luzerne County.
  827      AL   Pedestrian Improvements for Homewood, AL..      $300,000
  828      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and                $665,000
                 pedestrian trail, Gallatin...............
  829      MA   Conduct design, feasibility and               $2,000,000
                 environmental impact studies of proposal
                 to relocate New Bedford/Fairhaven bridge.
  830      IA   Iowa City, IA Construction of arterial        $2,500,000
                 extension project connecting Coralville
                 to west and south Iowa City..............
  831      NJ   Rehabilitate Route 139 in Jersey City--       $2,000,000
                 Portway..................................
  832      NJ   Route 605 extension to U.S. 206...........    $1,000,000
  833      OH   Widen SR 170 Calcutta.....................    $2,500,000
  834      IA   Widening of Hwy 44, Grimes................    $1,000,000
  835      VA   Widening of Highway 15 in Farmville,          $5,700,000
                 Virginia.................................
  836      MA   Design and construct intersection             $1,000,000
                 improvements at Memorial Park II on
                 Roosevelt Ave from Bay St to Page
                 Boulevard, Springfield...................
  837       SC  Widening of Frontage Road from U.S. 72 to     $2,800,000
                 U.S. 56, Laurens, SC.....................
  838      NY   Mill Road: NY Rte 261 to North Avenue in      $2,500,000
                 the Town of Greece.......................
  839       NC  Widening of Beckford Drive, City of             $960,000
                 Henderson................................
  840      NY   Realignment of Clove Road and Rt 208,         $1,200,000
                 access management improvements in Orange
                 County...................................
  841      NY   City of Peeskill,NY Street Resurfacing           $52,000
                 Program. Brown Street....................
  842      FL   Fund advanced Right-of-Way Acquisition        $3,700,000
                 along SR 52 in Pasco County, Florida.....
  843      MA   Design, engineer, permit, and construct       $1,000,000
                 ``Border to Boston Bikeway'' rails-trails
                 project, from Salisbury to Danvers.......
  844      FL   Soutel Drive Road Enhancements,               $1,500,000
                 Jacksonville.............................
  845      NJ   Bicycle facilities in West Deptford             $115,000
                 Township.................................
  846      PA   Create a direct connection between State      $3,000,000
                 Road 29 and State Route 113..............
  847      MA   Design and construction of the north and      $1,500,000
                 southbound ramps on Interstate 91 at Exit
                 19.......................................
  848      IA   NW 70th Ave reconstruction, Johnston......    $5,000,000
  849      NY   Town of Minisink South Plank Road.........      $275,000
  850      VA   Town of St. Paul--restoration of historic       $150,000
                 Hillman House to serve as trail system
                 information center and construction of
                 stations on trails.......................
  851      PA   Conduct environmental review and acquire      $4,200,000
                 right of way for preferred alternative to
                 improve PA 41............................
  852      FL   Acquire Right-of-Way for Ludlam Trail,          $500,000
                 Miami, Florida...........................
  853      NY   Construct Safe Routes to Schools projects     $3,500,000
                 in New York City.........................
  854        CO Construction of US 24--Tennessee Pass,        $6,000,000
                 Colorado.................................
  855        CA Implement Riverside Avenue Railroad Bridge      $500,000
                 improvements, south of Interstate 10 in
                 Rialto...................................
  856      MA   Longwood Ave/Urban Ring Tunnel Study......      $450,000
  857      IL   Traffic Signal Coordination at US 45 at IL      $100,000
                 132 (Grand Avenue) and IL 132 at Rollins
                 Road and US 45 at Rollins Road...........
  858      IA   US 63 improvement near New Hampton, Iowa..    $8,700,000
  859      NY   Village of Unionville reconstruction of          $80,000
                 Main Street..............................
  860      TX   Widening from two lanes to four of SH 36      $9,000,000
                 from Bellville, TX to Sealy, TX..........
  861      KY   Comprehensive Traffic Study for                 $600,000
                 intersection of Main Street and Berea
                 College Campus, Berea....................
  862      TN   Improve State Route 62 in Morgan County       $4,500,000
                 near U.S. 27 in Wartburg to Petit Lane
                 from existing two lane highway to four
                 lanes....................................
  863      IL   Construct West Corbin Overpass over           $5,000,000
                 Illinois 255, Bethalto...................
  864      OR   I-5/99W connector.........................      $250,000
  865      FL   Improvements to I-75 in the City of           $7,500,000
                 Pembroke Pines, Florida..................
  866        CA Planning, design, engineering and             $5,000,000
                 construction of Naval Air Station, North
                 Island access tunnel on SR 75-282
                 corridor, San Diego......................
  867        CA Construct road from Mace Blvd in Yolo         $1,000,000
                 County to federally supported Pacific
                 Flyway wildlife area.....................
  868      PA   Construction of ramps on I-95 and US 322,     $3,000,000
                 widening of streets and intersections....
  869      NY   Construct and restore pedestrian and          $1,000,000
                 residential roadways in downtown business
                 district in Rockville Centre.............
  870      LA   Plan, design and construct Pointe Clair       $3,000,000
                 Expressway in Iberville Parish...........
  871      MA   Construction of East Milton Parking Deck      $1,000,000
                 over Interstate/Rt. 93...................
  872      PA   Reconstruction of I-176 in Cumru and          $5,000,000
                 Robeson Townships, Berks County..........
  873      MI   Resurfacing of Masonic Boulevard in Fraser    $1,160,000
  874      OH   Construct Ohio River Trail from Downtown      $2,000,000
                 Cincinnati, Ohio to Salem Road...........
  875      PA   Realignment and reconstruction of SR 60       $2,000,000
                 interchange with U.S. 22-30 and
                 reconstruct adjacent Tonidale-Bayer
                 intersection.............................
  876      NY   Construtction and rehabilitation of East      $1,045,000
                 and West John Streets in the Village of
                 Lindenhurst, NY..........................
  877      NY   Construct Northern State Parkway and Long     $6,000,000
                 Island Expressway access at Marcus Avenue
                 and Lakeville Road and associated Park
                 and Ride.................................
  878      PA   Deployment of an Intelligent                  $4,000,000
                 Transportation System along I-476 Pa Tpke
                 NE Ext/Pa-309 and I-76 Schuylkill Exwy in
                 Montgomery County........................
  879      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 including in the vicinity of PS Q153.....
  880      TX   Build 36th Street Extension in San Antonio    $2,000,000
  881        CA North Atlantic Pedestrian Bridge, Monterey      $600,000
                 Park.....................................
  882        CA Reconstruct Eastern Ave from Muller St to     $1,000,000
                 Watcher St in Bell Gardens...............
  883      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in West Pittston, Luzerne County.........
  884        CA Design Traffic Flow Improvements Azusa and    $1,250,000
                 Amar, City of West Covina................
  885      MI   Reconstruction of Nine Mile Road in           $1,120,000
                 Eastpointe...............................
  886      WA   Redmond, WA City-wide ITS.................    $1,000,000
  887      IL   Reconstruction and realignment of Baseline    $2,080,000
                 Rd, Montgomery, IL.......................
  888      NY   Transportation Enhancements to support          $750,000
                 Development of Erie Canal in Niagra and
                 Orleans Counties.........................
  889        CO US 160, East of Wolf Creek Pass...........   $15,000,000
  890      MA   Design, engineering and construction at I-    $2,500,000
                 93 The Junction Interchange, Andover,
                 Tewksbury and Wilmington.................
  891        CA Rosemead Boulevard/Highway 19 Renovation        $100,000
                 Project, Pico Rivera.....................
  892      PA   Intersection improvements at PA Route 209       $750,000
                 and Water Company Road, construction of a
                 bridge and access enhancements to Nature
                 and Arts Center, Upper Paxton Township...
  893      TX   Improvements to FM 1979 in Caldwell County      $300,000
  894      HI   Interstate Route H 1 guard rail and           $3,800,000
                 shoulder improvements, Waikele Bridge to
                 Airport Interchange, Honolulu............
  895      MI   M-168 Reconstruction in the village of        $2,200,000
                 Elberta..................................
  896        CA Colima Road at Fullerton Road Intersection    $1,000,000
                 Improvements.............................
  897      OH   Design and construct Youngstown State         $2,500,000
                 University Roadway and Pedestrian Safety
                 Improvements, Youngstown.................
  898      MO   Reconstruct Interstate 44 and Highway 39      $5,000,000
                 Interchange..............................
  899      WA   Complete final Columbia River crossing          $800,000
                 Environmental Impact Statement for SR35
                 in Klickitat County......................
  900      KY   Reconstruct US 127 at Bellows Road, Mercer      $600,000
                 County...................................
  901      NY   Roadway and Pedestrian Improvements for       $4,000,000
                 Times and Duffy Squares in New York City.
  902      FL   Six lane expansion of State Road 200 (A1A)    $4,000,000
                 from Interstate 95 east to Amelia Island.
  903      MI   Widen and reconstruct Tienken Road in        $13,500,000
                 Rochester Hills from Livernois to Sheldon
  904      NV   Design and Construct I-580 Meadowood          $2,000,000
                 Complex Improvements, Washoe County......
  905      NY   Town of Chester reconstruction of 13            $200,000
                 independent town roads...................
  906      NY   Implement ITS system and apparatus to           $100,000
                 enhance citywide truck route system at
                 9th Street and 3rd Avenue intersection in
                 Kings County.............................
  907      TX   Construction of highway infrastructure to     $1,000,000
                 provide flood protection for Nueces
                 County...................................
  908      FL   Widen State Road 80, Hendry County........    $3,500,000
  909      NE   Construction of the Columbus, Nebraska        $4,500,000
                 North Arterial Road......................
  910      KY   Extension of Newtown Pike from West Main     $20,000,000
                 Street to South Limestone Street,
                 Lexington................................
  911      OH   Road construction and related improvements      $500,000
                 in the Village of Gates Mills, OH........
  912      IL   Widening and Reconstruction of 55th Street    $1,500,000
                 from Holmes Avenue to Williams Street in
                 Westmont and Clarendon Hills.............
  913      IL   Road upgrades for the Village of Oreana,        $884,000
                 IL.......................................
  914      ID   Widen Amity Road from Chestnut Street to      $2,000,000
                 Robinson Road in Nampa, Idaho............
  915      TX   Widening FM 60 (University Drive) from SH     $3,000,000
                 6 to FM 158, College Station.............
  916      GA   Widening Cedarcrest Road from Paulding        $3,150,000
                 County line to Governors Towne...........
  917        CA Widening Avenue 416 in Dinuba California..    $1,500,000
  918      MA   Design and construction of streetscape          $600,000
                 improvements on Main and Maywood Streets,
                 Worcester................................
  919      TX   Extend Munn Street from Demaree Ln to         $1,000,000
                 Gellhorn Drive...........................
  920      MN   City of Moorhead SE Main GSI, 34th St. and    $3,000,000
                 I94 Interchange and Moorhead
                 Comprehensive Rail Safety Program........
  921      AL   Widening and safety improvements to SR-216    $3,000,000
                 between SR-215 and I-59, I-20............
  922      GA   The Carrollton Greenbelt Project, City of       $350,000
                 Carrollton, Georgia......................
  923      IL   Improve safety of culvert replacement on        $320,000
                 250th Rd between 460th St and Cty Hwy 20
                 in Grandview Township, Edgar County, IL..
  924      NY   Kingston, Improve uptown streets..........    $1,000,000
  925      PA   Replace Blair Creek Bridg over the Little     $1,600,000
                 Lehigh Creek, just west of the Maple
                 Grove Bridge, in Longswamp Township,
                 Berks County.............................
  926        CA Construct highway connecting State Route      $9,500,000
                 78/86 and State Route 111, Brawley.......
  927      GA   Widening and improvements on Colerain Road    $1,000,000
                 in St. Marys, Georgia....................
  928      MD   Implement Pedestrian and Roadway              $2,000,000
                 Improvements Contained in the Druid Hill
                 Park Neighborhood Access Program in
                 Baltimore................................
  929      AZ   Kabba Wash project between I-40 and           $2,000,000
                 Wikieup..................................
  930      ME   Route 2 Improvements from Bethel to Gilead    $2,500,000
  931      FL   Widening and Improvements for I-75 in        $27,000,000
                 Collier and Lee County...................
  932      TX   Widening 349 Dawson and Martin County.....    $2,000,000
  933      WI   Widen Wisconsin State Highway 64 between      $4,000,000
                 Houlton and New Richmond.................
  934      IN   Widen Wheeling Avenue from Centennial to        $960,000
                 McGalliard Road in the City of Muncie,
                 Indiana..................................
  935      MN   Construct a bike trail along the north          $540,000
                 side of TH 11 to the Voyageurs National
                 Park Visitor Center on Black Bay of Rainy
                 Lake.....................................
  936      FL   Construct pedestrian underpass and safety     $1,600,000
                 improvements at SR A1A and Castillo
                 Drive, City of St. Augustine.............
  937        CA Rehabilitate street surfaces in Sherman         $124,000
                 Oaks.....................................
  938        CA Repair and realignment of Brahma Dr. and        $300,000
                 Winnetka Ave.............................
  939      NJ   Riverwalk in Millburn along the West            $750,000
                 Branch of the Rahway River...............
  940      AL   I-20 widening and safety improvements in      $5,000,000
                 St. Clair County.........................
  941      TN   Plan and construct Rutherford County            $500,000
                 visitor's center/ transportation
                 information hub..........................
  942      UT   Streetscape a two-lane road and add           $1,250,000
                 turning lanes at key intersections on
                 Santa Clara Drive in Santa Clara.........
  943        CA US 101 Operational Improvements, San Jose.    $5,000,000
  944      IL   Upgrade traffic signal system on 87th           $500,000
                 Street, Chicago..........................
  945      LA   Water Well Road Gateway Cooridor (LA 478)--   $5,650,000
                 Design, Right of Way, and Construction of
                 3.6 miles from I-49 to LA 1..............
  946        CO East 104th and US 85 Intersection: Study,     $1,000,000
                 design and construction of needed
                 improvements to intersection.............
  947      FL   Widen West Virginia Drive from Floresta       $3,000,000
                 Drive to US 1 in St. Lucie...............
  948      ID   Widen U.S. 95 in Idaho from Jct. SH-1 to      $3,000,000
                 Canadian Border..........................
  949      IL   Engineering of the Willow Creek Trail           $200,000
                 Extension from Rock Cut State Park to the
                 Long Prairie Trail.......................
  950        CA Widen Interstate 8 overpass at Dogwood        $2,122,500
                 Road, Imperial County....................
  951        CA Improve bridge 58-7 on SR 115 that crosses    $1,000,000
                 the Alamo River in Holtville and also
                 project design and environmental analysis
                 of a new bridge over the same river......
  952      ID   Widen U.S. 95 from Worley to Mica Creek,      $3,000,000
                 Idaho....................................
  953      MI   Complete the 2 segments of U.S. 127 from      $5,000,000
                 Ithaca to St. Johns to a limited access
                 freeway..................................
  954        CA Construct a new interchange where I-15       $10,000,000
                 meets Cajalco Road in Corona, CA.........
  955      OH   Construct interchange at CR 80 on IR 77       $5,000,000
                 near Dover...............................
  956      TX   US 67, widening from Nolan River to West      $3,000,000
                 Buffalo Creek, Cleburne..................
  957       NC  Widen and improve I 85 through Cabarrus       $8,000,000
                 County from US 29--49 to 29--601.........
  958       NC  US 401 from Raleigh to Fayetteville.......    $4,000,000
  959      GA   Construct and Improve Westside Parkway,       $4,000,000
                 Northern Section, in Fulton County.......
  960      NY   City of Peeskill,NY Street Resurfacing          $130,000
                 Program. Hudson Avenue...................
  961        CA Construction of CA 101 Auxiliary Lanes,       $2,250,000
                 Marsh Rd. to Santa Clara County Line.....
  962      NY   For the acquisition of ferry boats and        $1,500,000
                 ferry terminal facilities and operation
                 of ferry service from Rockland County-
                 Yonkers-Manhattan........................
  963      IL   For engineering, right-of-way acquisition     $2,125,000
                 and reconstruction of two existing lanes
                 on Arsenal Road from Baseline Rd to Rt 53
  964      PA   For the Scranton City Redevelopment           $2,500,000
                 Authority to design, engineer, acquire
                 ROW & construct streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting & safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign.
  965      FL   Construct landscaped sidewalks, bus lanes,    $1,536,041
                 pedestrian/bicycle paths, vehicular
                 lanes, City of Plantation................
  966      NY   Improve Route 17--Access Control, Elmira      $2,500,000
                 to Chemung...............................
  967      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Plymouth Borough, Luzerne County......
  968      ID   Improve SH 75 from Timmerman to Ketchum...    $7,000,000
  969      OR   Improve U.S. 97 from Modoc Point to Algoma    $2,000,000
  970      SD   Construct an interchange on I-90 at Marion    $7,000,000
                 Road west of Sioux Falls.................
  971        CA Realign First St between Mission Rd and       $1,250,000
                 Clarence St in Los Angeles...............
  972      MO   Relocation of Route 13 Branson West Bypass    $5,200,000
  973      IL   Resurfacing Congress Parkway, The Illinois      $500,000
                 Department of Transportation.............
  974      RI   Establish interchange between Route 4 and     $6,000,000
                 Interstate 95............................
  975      TX   Improvements to FM 676 in Alton...........      $500,000
  976      MA   Reconstruction of Goddard Memorial Drive      $2,000,000
                 from State Route 9 to Airport Drive,
                 Worcester................................
  977      FL   Homestead, FL Widening of SW 320 Street       $2,500,000
                 (Mowry Drive) from Flagler Avenue to SW
                 187 Avenue...............................
  978        CT Broad Street Reconstruction Project in New    $2,500,000
                 Britain..................................
  979      PA   Construct Johnsonburg Bypass..............    $4,400,000
  980        CT Construct Valley Service Road Extension,      $2,000,000
                 North Haven..............................
  981      VA   Construction of transportation related        $1,000,000
                 enhancements and infrastructure of the
                 VMFA project.............................
  982      MI   Reconstruct and Widen I-94 in Kalamazoo,     $16,000,000
                 MI.......................................
  983      MD   Land Acquistion for Highway Mitigation in    $19,500,000
                 Cecil and Worcester Conties, MD..........
  984        CA Construct overpass on Central Ave at the        $750,000
                 railroad crossing in Newark..............
  985      IL   City of Bartonville, Street widening and        $952,572
                 improvements and sidewalk improvements...
  986      OH   Construct Williamsburg, Ohio to Batavia,        $300,000
                 Ohio Hike & Bike Trail...................
  987      IL   The continuation of US Route 12 from the      $3,000,000
                 Wisconsin state line to the intersection
                 of Tryon Grove Road, Route 12 and
                 Illinois State Route 31..................
  988      FL   U.S. 17-92 and French Ave. Roundabout,          $500,000
                 Sanford..................................
  989      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Hanover Township, Luzerne County......
  990      MI   Reduction from 3.5 miles of travel to 1.0     $3,000,000
                 miles of travel crossing over the
                 Tittabawassee River on Meridian Road.....
  991      ID   Widen U.S. 95 from Top of Lewiston Hill to    $2,000,000
                 Moscow, Idaho............................
  992      TX   Construct a pedestrian/bicycle trail in         $750,000
                 the Sunnyside area of Houston............
  993      TX   Construct remaining 800-foot 4-lane           $1,160,000
                 divided thoroughfare for Preston Rd
                 segment between Beltway 8 and Genoa Red
                 Bluff Rd.................................
  994      AS   Shoreline protection and drainage             $1,000,000
                 mitigation for Aua village roads.........
  995       SC  Medical University of South Carolina          $4,000,000
                 Roadway Enhancement......................
  996      PR   Replacement ferries on Culebra and Vieques    $2,000,000
                 routes...................................
  997      MI   Livonia, reconstruct Stark Rd. between        $1,000,000
                 Plymouth Rd. and I-96....................
  998      PA   PA Route 309 roadway construction and         $2,000,000
                 signalization improvements in Tamaqua
                 Borough..................................
  999      MA   Union Square Roadway & Streetscape              $500,000
                 Improvements.............................
 1000      TX   Improvements to South McColl Road in          $2,400,000
                 Hidalgo County...........................
 1001      MS   Widen US Hwy 61 and improve major             $2,000,000
                 intersections, Natchez...................
 1002      TX   Widen US 82 from 2-lane facility to 4-lane    $4,500,000
                 facility from FM 1417 in Sherman, TX to
                 US 69 in Bells, TX.......................
 1003      TX   Widen US 79, from FM 1512 near Jewett to      $2,000,000
                 IH-45 to a four-lane divided highway.....
 1004      TN   Construct shoulder and turn lane on SR 35     $1,500,000
                 in Seymour, Tennessee....................
 1005      NE   Construction of Heartland Expressway          $7,500,000
                 between Alliance and Minatare, NE........
 1006      WA   Pedestrian Sidewalk Construction in             $175,000
                 Snohomish................................
 1007      TN   North Second Street Corridor Upgrade,         $2,000,000
                 Memphis..................................
 1008      OH   Purchase High Speed Ferries for Black           $750,000
                 River Excursion Boat Service, Lorain.....
 1009      MD   MD4 at Suitland Parkway...................    $4,000,000
 1010      OK   Widen US 60 from approximately 2 miles        $2,000,000
                 east of the US 60-US 75 interchange east
                 approximately 5.5 miles..................
 1011       NC  Widen US 401 from Wake County to Louisburg    $3,000,000
 1012      PA   CUPSS, Pennsylvania, Urban Maglev             $5,000,000
                 Demonstration Test Project...............
 1013      TX   Widen US 287 Bypass at Ennis from two to      $8,000,000
                 four lanes...............................
 1014      KY   Widen US 27 from KY 34 to US 150 Bypass,      $2,000,000
                 Garrard County and Lincoln County........
 1015      MN   Right of way acquisition for Mississippi      $1,000,000
                 River Bridge connecting I 94 and US 10
                 between US 169 and TH 101................
 1016      WI   Rehabilitate Highway 53 between Chippewa      $4,000,000
                 Falls and New Auburn.....................
 1017      IL   Widen U.S. Route 67 from Macomb to            $2,000,000
                 Illinois 101.............................
 1018      IL   Widen U.S. Route 51 from Pana to Vandalia.    $3,000,000
 1019      IL   Widen U.S. Route 34 from U.S. 67 to Carmen    $4,000,000
                 Road.....................................
 1020      WA   Alaskan Way Viaduct and Seawall...........   $14,000,000
 1021      NJ   East Coast Greenway bicycle and pedestrian    $1,000,000
                 path from New Brunswick to Hudson River..
 1022      FL   Construct bicycle and pedestrian              $1,500,000
                 undperpass and park under I-95, Miami....
 1023        CA Implement Van Nuys Road and Safety              $500,000
                 Improvements.............................
 1024      FL   New systems interchange ramps at SR 417       $8,000,000
                 and Boggy Creek Road in Orange County, FL
 1025      NY   Reconstruction of Tappan Street Bridge in     $1,000,000
                 Town of Newark Valley....................
 1026      IL   Widen Rakow Road from Ackman Road to IL Rt    $7,150,000
                 31 in McHenry County, Illinois...........
 1027      IL   Widen U.S. Route 30 from Rock Falls to          $500,000
                 Round Grove, Whiteside County............
 1028      TN   Bristol, Tennessee highway-RR grade              $50,000
                 crossing improvement--Cedar Street.......
 1029      IL   Perform Broadway and Sheridan Road signal     $1,500,000
                 interconnect project, Chicago............
 1030      IL   Widen U.S. Highway 30 in Whiteside County,    $1,000,000
                 Illinois.................................
 1031      WI   Rehabilitate existing bridge and construct    $7,000,000
                 new bridge on Michigan Street in Sturgeon
                 Bay, Wisconsin...........................
 1032      ME   Replacement of the Route 201-A ``covered''    $4,000,000
                 bridge, Norridgewock.....................
 1033      AR   Widen to four lanes, improvement, and         $5,000,000
                 other development to U.S. Highway 167
                 from LA state line north to I-530........
 1034      PA   Widen the Route 412 corridor from I-78       $10,000,000
                 into the City of Bethlehem...............
 1035      HI   Construct access road for Kahului Airport.    $1,000,000
 1036      IL   Improve Highway-Railroad Crossings,             $750,000
                 Galesburg................................
 1037      MN   Sauk Rapids Bridge and Roadway Replacement    $6,000,000
                 in Sauk Rapids, MN.......................
 1038      TN   Construct Transportation and Heritage         $1,000,000
                 Museum in Townsend, Tennessee............
 1039        CA Widen State Route 98, including storm         $3,000,000
                 drain developments, from Kloke Road to
                 State Route 111, Calexico................
 1040        CA Widen State Route 98 from Route 111 to        $5,000,000
                 State Route 7, Calexico..................
 1041      GA   Construction of bypass around town of         $2,000,000
                 Hiram, from SR 92 to US 278, Paulding
                 County, Georgia..........................
 1042      TX   Construction of the interchanges at BI20      $2,500,000
                 and IH20 for JBS Parkway.................
 1043        CA Widen State Route 46 between Airport Road    $33,461,000
                 and the Shandon Rest Stop in San Luis
                 Obispo County............................
 1044      TN   Widen State Route 4 (US-78) from              $1,000,000
                 Mississippi State Line to Getwell Road
                 (SR-176) in Memphis, Shelby County.......
 1045      MI   Baraga County, Reconstruction of county         $750,000
                 primary road on Bayshore Drive from
                 Haanpaa Road northerly 1.7 miles to
                 Whirligig Road...........................
 1046      NY   Town of Warwick, NY walking and biking          $500,000
                 trail....................................
 1047      AK   Bridge over Fish Creek in Matanuska-          $1,000,000
                 Susitna Borough..........................
 1048      GA   GA 400 and McGinnis Ferry Road                $3,000,000
                 Interchange, Forsyth County, GA..........
 1049      NY   Implement Improvements for Pedestrian         $1,000,000
                 Safety in Kings County...................
 1050      NY   Reconfigure road through FDR VA Hospital        $395,000
                 to provide access to Battery Place in
                 Town of Cortlandt........................
 1051        CA Widen State Route 262, replace two            $4,000,000
                 railroad overpass structures, and rebuild
                 on and off ramps between SR 262 and Kato
                 Rd in Fremont............................
 1052      TN   Widen State Route 101 in Cumberland County    $8,000,000
                 from two lane highway to five lanes
                 between State Routes 282 (Dunbar Road)
                 and 392 in Crossville....................
 1053      FL   Widen State Road 50 in Lake County,           $7,000,000
                 Florida..................................
 1054      AZ   Widen SR 95 through Lake Havasu City......    $2,000,000
 1055      GA   Widen SR 85 from SR 74 to County Route 126    $3,000,000
                 Bernhard Road, Fayette County, Georgia...
 1056        CT Construct New arterial roadway from Boston   $10,000,000
                 Avenue north to proposed Lake Success
                 Business Park in Bridgeport, CT..........
 1057      MI   M-13 Washington Avenue Streetscape            $1,500,000
                 Project. Phase II of High Priority
                 Project 192 in Pub. L. 105-550. City of
                 Saginaw..................................
 1058      TX   Improvements to FM 716 in Duval County....    $1,000,000
 1059      NY   Town of Chester Surrey Meadow subdivision       $300,000
                 road improvements........................
 1060      PA   Cresheim Valley Drive Revitalization          $1,100,000
                 project involving scenic enhancements &
                 pedestrian safety improvements from
                 Lincoln Drive to Navajo Street...........
 1061       NC  Transportation Improvements at Piedmont       $3,000,000
                 Triad Research Park, Winston-Salem, NC...
 1062      MO   Upgrade and partially relocate MO Rt 141      $3,600,000
                 from I-64 to Rt 340......................
 1063      NY   Construct Millennium Parkway in the Towns    $10,500,000
                 of Dunkirk and Sheridan..................
 1064      AZ   Construct the Rio Salado Parkway to           $8,000,000
                 connect I-10 and Loop 202 freeways to 7th
                 Street in downtown Phoenix...............
 1065      TN   Improving Vehicle Efficiencies at At-Grade      $104,000
                 highway-Railroad Crossing in Lenoir City,
                 TN.......................................
 1066      NJ   Replacement of Monmouth County bridges W-     $3,000,000
                 7, W-8, and W-9..........................
 1067      OK   US-54, Widen US-54 from North of Optima       $1,000,000
                 Northeast to Kansas State Line, Texas
                 County, OK...............................
 1068      FL   Widen Palm Coast Parkway and I-95             $2,900,000
                 interchange and overpass, Flagler County,
                 Florida..................................
 1069      FL   Delray Beach Federal Highway pedestrian       $2,000,000
                 improvements SE 4th Street to NE 4th
                 Street...................................
 1070      WI   Expand Highway 10 between Marshfield and     $20,000,000
                 Stevens Point............................
 1071      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 including in the vicinity of IS R72/PS
                 R69......................................
 1072      TN   Upgrade roads for Slack Water Port            $1,875,000
                 facility and industrial park Lake County.
 1073      AK   Emergency evacuation road at Point Hope in    $3,000,000
                 North Slope Borough......................
 1074      MI   Construct railroad grade separation on M-     $2,000,000
                 85 (Fort Street) North of Van Horn Road,
                 Trenton..................................
 1075      IL   Land acquisition, engineering, and            $1,000,000
                 construction for the initial 2-lane
                 segments of the Corridor between IL 31 to
                 IL 25 and other segments of the Corridor
                 as appropriate...........................
 1076      PA   Modernize traffic signals, complete minor       $480,000
                 roadway realignment, and improve
                 channelization at US 322 and PA 10
                 intersection.............................
 1077      KS   Construction of a four-lane access           $10,686,000
                 controlled improvement for 4 miles on US-
                 54/400 in Pratt County...................
 1078      IN   Upgrade rail crossing at 93rd Avenue, St.       $200,000
                 John.....................................
 1079      FL   Widen SR 710 by 2 lanes from Congress         $3,000,000
                 Avenue to US-1...........................
 1080      GA   Widen SR 234/Gillionville Road from Eight     $1,000,000
                 Mile Road to Lockett Station, Dougherty
                 County...................................
 1081        CA Widen SR 12 to four lanes through Jamieson    $8,000,000
                 Canyon (between I-80 and SR 29) for
                 safety concerns and economic growth......
 1082      GA   Widen SR 104 from SR 383/Belaire Road to      $4,000,000
                 CR 515/Cumberland Drive (including
                 bridges) in Columbia County..............
 1083      IN   Study Traffic on Muncie By-Pass from            $120,000
                 Centennial Avenue to McGalliard Road in
                 the City of Muncie and Delaware County,
                 Indiana..................................
 1084      FL   Construct US 17-92 improvements, Maitland,    $1,500,000
                 Florida..................................
 1085        CA Widen South Main St.-Soda Bay Rd. between     $4,000,000
                 CR 400A (mile marker 0.0-miler marker and
                 0.7) and CR 502 (mile marker 0.0 and 0.9)
 1086      VA   Replacement of the 635 Bridge in Orange         $500,000
                 County, VA...............................
 1087      TX   construct Loop 20 in Laredo...............    $2,000,000
 1088      IA   Construct SE Connector/MLK Pkwy, Des          $9,000,000
                 Moines...................................
 1089      FL   Construction and Design of Miami River        $2,000,000
                 Greenway Road Improvements and 5th Street
                 Improvements.............................
 1090      TX   Widen SH 317 from two lanes to four lane      $2,000,000
                 divided facility.........................
 1091      TX   Widen SH 205 from two lanes to a six lane     $1,000,000
                 urban divided highway from North of SH 66
                 to proposed SH 276.......................
 1092        CA Widen Santa Maria River Bridge on U.S.        $3,400,000
                 Highway 101 between Santa Barbara County
                 and San Luis Obispo County...............
 1093        CA Widen San Fernando Road North, including      $1,060,000
                 streetscape projects, Sylmar.............
 1094      PA   Central Susquehanna Valley Transportation     $6,100,000
                 Project US 15: $5 million for the final
                 design...................................
 1095      NJ   Construct Rt 49 Cohansey River Bridge         $3,000,000
                 Replacement, Cumberland County...........
 1096      ME   Construction and snowmobile safety            $4,000,000
                 accommodations for Route 116 Bridge,
                 Medway...................................
 1097      MI   Construct pedestrian trail and bridge in        $100,000
                 Kearsley Park in Flint...................
 1098      IA   Coralville, IA Implementation of final        $2,000,000
                 phase of Safety Improvements Project from
                 12th Ave to 22nd Ave.....................
 1099      IL   Expand and improve Illinois Route 47          $7,150,000
                 Roadway from Reed Road to Kreutzer Road
                 in Huntley, Illinois.....................
 1100      NY   Build Route 15, Pennsylvania to Presho....   $10,000,000
 1101      GA   I-285 Riverside interchange                   $2,000,000
                 reconstruction, Fulton County, Georgia...
 1102      MN   Construct 3 segments of Cuyuna Lakes          $1,200,000
                 Trails, Crow Wing County.................
 1103      WA   Improve I-5 interchange at 134th Street in   $12,000,000
                 Clark County.............................
 1104      GA   Construct Pedestrian Safety Improvements      $3,000,000
                 on Buford Hwy (SR-13), Dekalb County.....
 1105       DC  11th St. Bridges, Rehabilitation of          $32,000,000
                 structures as well as new ramps to
                 provide for traffic at Navy Yard,
                 Southeast Federal Ctr., and Gateway
                 Government Ctr...........................
 1106      MO   Improve U.S. 36 to divided four lane         $10,000,000
                 expressway from Macon to Route 24........
 1107      VA   Mill Road Slip Ramp.......................      $500,000
 1108      NY   Construct sidewalks and curbing on Tate         $375,000
                 Avenue in Village of Buchanan............
 1109      MI   Delta County, Widen, pulverize, improve         $575,000
                 drainage at County Rd 497 from US 2 at
                 Nahma Junction southerly 4.75 miles to
                 the village of Nahma.....................
 1110      UT   Construction of 200 North Street highway-     $4,000,000
                 rail graded crossing separation,
                 Kaysville, Utah..........................
 1111      FL   Kennedy Blvd. Reconstruction, Eatonville..    $2,000,000
 1112      VA   Improvements to public roadways within the    $3,000,000
                 campus boundaries of the Virginia
                 Biotechnology Park, Richmond, VA.........
 1113      VA   Install Transporation Critical Incident         $400,000
                 Mobile Data Collection Device in
                 Charlottesville..........................
 1114      NY   Ithaca, Design and construct pedestrian         $544,000
                 and bicycle path.........................
 1115      AZ   Navajo Mountain Road on the Navajo Nation.    $1,300,000
 1116      PA   Expansion of existing PA Turnpike ITS         $4,100,000
                 System...................................
 1117      TX   Construction of ferryboat for City of Port      $400,000
                 Aransas..................................
 1118      NY   Project will rehabilitate and reopen          $5,000,000
                 historic High Bridge, which crosses the
                 Harlem River between Manhattan and the
                 Bronx....................................
 1119      NJ   Route 17 Congestion Improvements and         $12,000,000
                 Widening, from Williams Avenue to the
                 Garden State Parkway and Route 4 in
                 Bergen County............................
 1120      IN   Design and construct Tanner Creek Bridge      $1,240,000
                 on US 50, Dearborn County Indiana........
 1121       NC  Environmental studies and construction of     $6,000,000
                 US 74 Monroe Bypass Extension............
 1122      OH   Construct Pedestrian Bridge from east of      $2,140,000
                 Dock 32 to Voinovich Park southwest
                 corner, Cleveland........................
 1123      GA   Extension of Sugarloaf Parkway, Gwinnett      $3,000,000
                 County...................................
 1124      ME   Construct bicycle and pedestrian bridge       $1,000,000
                 over Stillwater River, Orono.............
 1125      IL   For widening from two to four lanes, the      $1,000,000
                 Brookmont Boulevard Viaduct in Kankakee,
                 IL and adjusting approach grades.........
 1126      GA   I-285 SR 400 interchange reconstruction       $1,000,000
                 and HOV interchange, Fulton County,
                 Georgia..................................
 1127      MN   Construct a road between Highway 332 and        $300,000
                 TH 11 including a signalized rail road
                 crossing, Koochiching County.............
 1128      MO   Hanley Road from I-64 to south of State      $10,000,000
                 Route 100, St. Louis County..............
 1129      AL   Expand SR-167 from Troy, AL to Enterprise,    $3,000,000
                 AL.......................................
 1130      MN   Construction of primary and secondary         $4,250,000
                 access roadways to the Duluth Air
                 National Guard Base, City of Duluth......
 1131        CT Construct high-speed rail crossing to bike    $2,300,000
                 and pedestrian trails -Enfield, CT.......
 1132      TX   Expansion of Port Rd at Northbound            $7,340,000
                 Frontage Rd of SH 146 east to
                 intersection with Cruise Terminal Rd to 6-
                 lane section with raised median..........
 1133      TN   Constuct Western Bipass from Zinc Plant       $3,400,000
                 Road to Dotsonville Road, Montgomery
                 County...................................
 1134        CA Improvements to SR-67, Mapleview to Dye       $5,000,000
                 Road (San Diego).........................
 1135      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and                $250,000
                 pedestrian trail, Springfield............
 1136      TX   Expansion of Daniel McCall Dr., Lufkin, TX    $2,750,000
 1137      NY   Rehabilitate the Pines Bridge Road and        $2,765,000
                 Lake Avenue and Ryder Road, in Ossining,
                 Yorktown, and New Castle.................
 1138        CA Construct Valley Boulevard Drainage             $750,000
                 Improvements, El Monte...................
 1139      NJ   Route 82 Union County Streetscape and         $1,000,000
                 Intersection Improvements................
 1140      NY   Short Clove Road Rail Overpass, Haverstraw    $1,000,000
 1141      FL   Construct Atlantic Boulevard Improvements,    $1,000,000
                 Key West, Florida........................
 1142        CA Implement intelligent management &            $3,000,000
                 logistics measures to improve freight
                 movement, Gateway Cities.................
 1143      WI   Expand USH 45 between CTH G and               $5,000,000
                 Winchester, Winnebago County, WI.........
 1144      NY   Implement ITS system and apparatus to           $100,000
                 enhance citywide truck route system on
                 LIE Eastbound Service Road at 74th Street
                 to Caldwell Ave, Grand Ave from 69th
                 Street to Flushing Ave, and Eliot Ave
                 from 69th Street to Woodhaven Blvd.......
 1145      IA   Construct IA-32 Arterial from US 20 in       $19,000,000
                 Dubuque Co, IA to US 61 and US 151.......
 1146      HI   Kapolei Transportation Improvements,          $1,000,000
                 Island of Oahu...........................
 1147      MA   Quincy Avenue Bridge Replacement..........    $1,000,000
 1148        CA Los Angeles Regional Diesel Emissions           $500,000
                 Reduction Program For Engine Retrofit,
                 Gateway Cities...........................
 1149      IL   Reconstruct intersection of Wood Dale and    $14,300,000
                 Irving Park roads in DuPage County, IL...
 1150      GA   Social Circle bypass completion, from         $3,000,000
                 Stanford Road to SR 11, Social Circle....
 1151      GA   Streetscape Project to install sidewalks        $500,000
                 and bicycle trails, Gray.................
 1152      MO   Reconstruction of the Tucker Street Bridge    $7,000,000
                 in the City of St. Louis.................
 1153      PA   Bethlehem Pike improvements from Valley       $1,000,000
                 Green Road to South of Gordon Lane,
                 Springfield Township.....................
 1154      GA   Construct I-75 I-575 HOV interchange, Cobb      $600,000
                 County, Georgia..........................
 1155      IL   Construct multi-use pedestrian path             $250,000
                 between Oakton St. and Dempster St.,
                 Skokie...................................
 1156      AZ   Construct link from Twin Peaks Road to I-     $6,000,000
                 10 and Linda Vista Blvd. including bridge
                 over Santa Cruz River and overpass of
                 Union Pacific Rail Road..................
 1157      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Newport Township, Luzerne County......
 1158      VA   Fries Train Station and Trail--restoration    $1,000,000
                 of former train station for use as
                 visitors center and construction of trail
                 along New River..........................
 1159      PA   Construction SR 3024, Middle Creek Bridge       $700,000
                 II, South Canaan, Wayne County...........
 1160      WI   Expand USH 141 between STH 22 and STH 64      $2,000,000
                 (Oconto and Marinette Counties,
                 Wisconsin)...............................
 1161      IL   Development of a coordinated trail system,    $3,200,000
                 parking and trial systems in Dixon, IL...
 1162      PA   Installation of comprehensive signage           $900,000
                 system across 1700 acres of urban parks
                 in Pittsburgh............................
 1163      GA   Interstate 75/Windy Hill Road Interchange.    $2,000,000
 1164      NJ   Bridge replacement and SR 31 widening over    $1,000,000
                 the Raritan Valley Line in Glen Garnder,
                 Hampton, Hunterdon County................
 1165      VA   Bristol Train Station--historic                 $500,000
                 preservation and rehabilitation of former
                 Bristol, VA train station................
 1166        CO I-25 Improvements--Douglas--Arapahoe          $6,000,000
                 County Line to El Paso County Line.......
 1167      TN   Reconstruct connection with Hermitage           $500,000
                 Avenue to Cumberland River Bluff in
                 Nashville................................
 1168      IL   For Village of Lemont to construct a            $100,000
                 bridge over Chicago Ship and Sanitary
                 Canal linking Centennial Trail to I&M
                 Canal Trail..............................
 1169      OH   Construct roadway improvement along State       $100,000
                 Route 62 in Berlin.......................
 1170      NY   Reconstruction and improvements of            $2,000,000
                 University Avenue and the extension of
                 the ARTWalk project, Rochester...........
 1171      NH   Reconstruction and Improvements to NH         $2,000,000
                 Route 110 in Berlin......................
 1172      PA   Route 6 Resurfacing from Mansfield Borough    $1,500,000
                 in Richmond Township to the Village of
                 Mainesburg in Sullivan Township..........
 1173      WA   SR 167--Right of way acquisition for a new    $2,500,000
                 freeway connecting SR 509 to SR 161......
 1174      MD   I-70: Frederick...........................    $2,000,000
 1175      NY   Planning and Construction of Fort Drum        $6,500,000
                 Connector Rd.............................
 1176        CA Study and construct highway alternatives      $4,000,000
                 between Orange and Riverside Counties,
                 directed by RCTC, working with local
                 transp. authorities, and guided by the
                 current MIS..............................
 1177        CA Fresno County, CA Widen Friant Road to        $1,500,000
                 four lanes with class II bicycle lanes...
 1178      MO   Study for Highway 160 & Kansas Expressway     $2,000,000
                 Corridor.................................
 1179      FL   Construct Route 9B from US 1 to Route 9A      $5,000,000
                 (I-295) to the Duval County line.........
 1180      PA   Design, const. widening of PA 94 from York-   $3,000,000
                 Adams County line to Elm Street in
                 Hanover, PA..............................
 1181        CA Improvement of intersection at Burbank          $160,000
                 Blvd. and Woodley Ave....................
 1182      NY   I-81 Corridor Improvements in Syracuse, NY    $2,000,000
 1183      WA   Perform final interchange design and          $1,050,000
                 property acqusition at Fleshman Way where
                 it crosses SR 129, that enhances safety
                 and passenger and freight mobility and
                 reduces congestion.......................
 1184      WA   Roosevelt Extension at Urban Avenue to        $4,000,000
                 Cameron Way in Mount Vernon..............
 1185      NJ   Hazel Street reconstruction, Passaic          $4,000,000
                 County...................................
 1186      FL   Improvements to Eller Drive including         $1,000,000
                 right-of-way acquisition and construction
                 of return loop connector.................
 1187      MO   Study Highway 37-60 Entire Corridor.......    $2,500,000
 1188      TX   The District-Tyler Outer Loop 49              $6,480,000
                 Construction.............................
 1189      PA   Tidal Schuylkill Riverfront project           $1,680,000
                 consists of an eight mile bike and
                 pedestrian recreation trail from Locust
                 Street to Historic Bartram's Gardens.....
 1190      NY   Town of Fishkill reconstruct Maple Ave....       $24,500
 1191      IL   For IDOT to expedite pre-construction and     $3,500,000
                 construction to widen I-55 from
                 Naperville Road south to I-80............
 1192      UT   200 East Minor Arterial, Logan City, Utah.      $900,000
 1193      NJ   Construct I-287, I-80, Route 202              $1,000,000
                 Interchange..............................
 1194      NY   Design and construction of Fulton Street      $5,600,000
                 from Clinton Avenue to Bedford Avenue in
                 Brooklyn, New York.......................
 1195      TX   Port of Corpus Christi Joe Fulton               $500,000
                 International Trade Corridor for
                 congestion and safety enhancements.......
 1196      MO   Renovations and Enhancements on the             $800,000
                 Bicycle Pedestrian Facility on the Old
                 Chain of Rocks Bridge spanning the
                 Mississippi River........................
 1197        CT Construct Shoreline Greenway Trail,           $2,000,000
                 Guilford, Branford, East Haven...........
 1198      NJ   Transportation Improvements in Liberty        $5,000,000
                 Corridor.................................
 1199      OH   Construct SR 104 into a 4 lane facility       $6,000,000
                 with a turning lane in Ross County.......
 1200      MO   Construct 2 lanes on Hwy 45 from Hwy 9 to     $3,000,000
                 Graden Road in Platte County.............
 1201      MS   Plan and Construct Highway 45 Bypass in       $4,000,000
                 Columbus.................................
 1202      PA   Reconstruct hwy & replace of bridge on US     $1,500,000
                 422 between the Berks County Line and the
                 Schuylkill River in Montgomery and
                 Chester Counties.........................
 1203      FL   Construct SR 20 connection to SR 100 via      $4,300,000
                 CR 309-C, Putnam County, Florida.........
 1204      OH   Road and related pedestrian improvements        $100,000
                 at SR 283 in the Village of Grand River,
                 OH.......................................
 1205      NY   Road infrastracture projects to improve       $8,150,000
                 commercial access in the Towns of Malta
                 and Stillwater and the Village of Round
                 Lake, Saratoga County, New York..........
 1206      NY   Replace structurally deficient bridge over    $1,000,000
                 the Pocantico River, the Village of
                 Pleasantville............................
 1207      IL   Complete Heavy Truck Loop for DuQuoin           $625,000
                 Industrial Park..........................
 1208      MD   Construction and dualization of US 113....   $15,000,000
 1209      GA   Streetscape-Quitman.......................      $200,000
 1210      NY   Town of New Windsor Toleman & Station           $715,000
                 Roads Reconstruction and area
                 Improvements.............................
 1211      IL   Turning lanes to US Rt. 14 (Northwest         $1,100,000
                 Highway) at the Arthur Ave Union Pacific
                 Grade in Arlington Heights...............
 1212      WA   Design and construct pedestrian land          $2,000,000
                 bridge spanning SR 14....................
 1213      MI   Construction of Greenways in Pittsfield         $299,000
                 Charter Township--2.5 miles to existing
                 Ann Arbor Greenways, Pittsfield Charter
                 Township.................................
 1214        CA Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy--      $6,200,000
                 Plan and Implement Trails & Bikeways Plan
                 for the Golden Gate National Recreation
                 Area and Presidio........................
 1215      NY   State of NY Village of Kiryas Joel              $750,000
                 sidewalk project.........................
 1216      OH   Tuscarawas Township, Stark County, Ohio.        $800,000
                 Improvements to Alabama Ave..............
 1217      IL   Transportation Enhancement and road             $952,572
                 improvements necessary for Downtown Plaza
                 improvements in Jacksonville, IL.........
 1218        CA Upgrade and reconstruct I-580/Vasco Road      $2,500,000
                 Interchange, City of Livermore...........
 1219      TX   Build Bike Trail at Chacon Creek in Laredo    $3,300,000
 1220      UT   3200 South Project, Nibley, Utah..........    $1,000,000
 1221      NJ   Expand Route 440--State Street Interchange    $5,000,000
                 in Perth Amboy...........................
 1222      GA   Improvement and construction of SR 40 from    $1,000,000
                 east of St. Marys cutoff at mile post
                 5.0, Charlton County to County Route 61,
                 Camden County, Georgia...................
 1223      PA   Erie, PA Regional upgrades to urban-rural     $1,600,000
                 corridors................................
 1224      GA   Georgia Construct Three Greenway Trail        $2,000,000
                 Project, Dekalb County...................
 1225      FL   Cross Creek Boulevard Widening............    $1,800,000
 1226      MD   Implement Intelligent Transportation          $1,400,000
                 System in Baltimore......................
 1227      OH   Construct an access road into the               $800,000
                 industrial park near SR 209 and CR 345 in
                 Guernsey County..........................
 1228        CA Improve the Rosecrans Ave and Alondra Blvd       $50,000
                 bridges over the San Gabriel River in
                 Bellflower...............................
 1229      PA   Independence National Historic Park scenic    $4,500,000
                 enhancement and pedestrian walkways
                 improvement project in conjunction with
                 the park's Executive Mansion Exhibit.....
 1230        CA Modesto, Riverbank & Oakdale, CA Improve      $2,000,000
                 SR 219 to 4-lanes........................
 1231      ME   Modifications to Exit 7/I-295 and to          $3,380,000
                 Franklin Arterial, Portland..............
 1232      KY   Replace Bridge and Approaches on Searcy         $875,000
                 School Road over Beaver Creek, Anderson
                 County...................................
 1233      NJ   Route 22 Sustainable Corridor Plan........    $3,000,000
 1234      NY   Conduct studies, if necessary, and            $5,000,000
                 construct the High Line Trail Project,
                 New York City............................
 1235      WA   Install dual left turn lanes and              $1,750,000
                 intersection signal modifications at SR
                 432 and Columbia Blvd....................
 1236      OK   Transportaion enhancements for Highway 19     $3,000,000
                 from Ada to Stratford....................
 1237        CA Interstate 15-Base Line Road Interchange      $5,000,000
                 Project, Rancho Cucamonga, California....
 1238       SC  Build Interchange at US 17 and Bowman Road    $6,000,000
                 in Mount Pleasant, SC....................
 1239        CA Complete Monterey Bay Sanctuary Scenic        $6,000,000
                 Trail between Monterey and Santa Cruz
                 counties.................................
 1240      NY   Improve Hospital Road Bridge between CR99     $6,000,000
                 and CR101, Patchogue.....................
 1241      NV   Construct Martin Luther King Blvd.--          $8,000,000
                 Industrial Rd. Connector.................
 1242      MI   I-96 Beck,Wixom Road Interchange, design,     $3,000,000
                 ROW, and construction....................
 1243      IA   Muscatine, IA Construction of 4.2 mile          $500,000
                 multi-purpose trail from Musser Park to
                 Weggens Road.............................
 1244      GA   Historic preservation of a city bus             $134,917
                 station in downtown Eastman..............
 1245      TX   Construction of internal roads at Port of     $2,500,000
                 Brownsville to make roads safer with less
                 wear and tear............................
 1246      NY   NYSDOT Route 55 turning lane at Gardner         $500,000
                 Hollow Road..............................
 1247      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and                $100,000
                 pedestrian trail, Lewisburg..............
 1248      TX   Reconstruct Danieldale Rd from I-35E to       $2,000,000
                 Houston School Rd in Lancaster...........
 1249        CT Relocation of Edmond Road in Newtown and      $2,000,000
                 construction of additional turning lanes
                 at Rte 6 and Commerce and Edmond Rds.....
 1250      OH   Construction of Interchange at State Route    $1,500,000
                 8 and Seasons Road, Stow, OH.............
 1251      NJ   North Avenue-Route 1 Elizabeth Pedestrian        $75,000
                 and Bicycle Project......................
 1252      AL   Pedestrian Improvements for Morris, AL....      $100,000
 1253      NY   Preliminary design and environmental          $7,360,000
                 impact study for a collector-distributor
                 road along I-95 from Westchester Ave. to
                 Bartow Ave...............................
 1254      NJ   Replacement of Signals at the                   $490,000
                 Intersections of Centennial Ave @ Lincoln
                 Ave and Walnut Ave @ Lincoln Ave,
                 Cranford, NJ.............................
 1255      KS   Replacement or rehabilitation of the          $2,500,000
                 Amelia Earhart US-59 Bridge in Atchison
                 County, Kansas...........................
 1256        CA San Diego, CA Interstate 15 Managed Lanes.    $1,000,000
 1257        CA Central Galt & State Route 99 Interchange     $3,000,000
                 and Access Improvements..................
 1258      OH   Springfield, OH Relocation of North Street    $3,450,000
 1259      KY   Reconstruct KY 89 from Irvine Bypass to         $750,000
                 2000 Feet North of Estill County High
                 School, Estill County....................
 1260      NY   Town of East Fishkill new construction          $800,000
                 Bypass road..............................
 1261        CA Establish new grade separation at Sunset      $2,000,000
                 Ave in Banning...........................
 1262        CT Construct and Widen Stamford Rail             $1,000,000
                 Underpass & Road Realignment Project.....
 1263      TN   Hamblen County, Tennessee US 11E (SR 34)      $1,000,000
                 interchange improvements.................
 1264      IL   Implement ITS and congestion Mitigation       $4,000,000
                 Project on I-294 and I-90................
 1265      AZ   Bridge at 59th Ave and Glendale Ave.......    $2,000,000
 1266      TX   Hike and bike trail will tie into the         $1,000,000
                 Gellhorn Dr. project providing an
                 improved multi-modal transportation
                 facility.................................
 1267      OH   Jackson Township, Ohio--Hill and Dales        $2,000,000
                 Road widening............................
 1268       SC  Build 701 Connector (Southern Conway          $5,000,000
                 Bypass) in SC............................
 1269      MN   Reconstruct I-694 White Bear Avenue (CSAH       $500,000
                 65) Interchange in White Bear Lake.......
 1270      WI   Replace 17th Street Lift Bridge, Two          $6,000,000
                 Rivers, Wisconsin........................
 1271      MA   Route 116 and Bay Road Intersection           $4,000,000
                 Improvements- Amherst....................
 1272      IL   Streetscape improvements on Blue Island       $1,000,000
                 from 19th-21st St, Chicago...............
 1273      TN   Construct and improves intersections in         $100,000
                 Niota, Tennessee.........................
 1274        CA Upgrade Bellflower intersections at             $350,000
                 Alondra Blvd and at Rosecrans Ave in
                 Bellflower...............................
 1275      NJ   Construct Riverbank Park Bike Trail,          $2,500,000
                 Kearny...................................
 1276       NC  Install ITS on US 52 in Forsyth County....      $400,000
 1277      MD   Construction and dualization of MD 404 in     $7,000,000
                 Queen Anne, Talbot and Caroline Counties.
 1278      NY   Land acquisition and improvements on            $925,000
                 Louisa Street, Peekskill, NY.............
 1279      IL   Upgrade connector road from IL Rt I-255 to    $2,400,000
                 IL Rt 3, Sauget..........................
 1280      NJ   Reconstruction of Route 46/Route 3/Valley    $12,000,000
                 Rd/Notch Rd Interchange..................
 1281      MS   Upgrade roads in Attala County District 4     $1,000,000
                 (Roads 4211 and 4204), Kosciusko, Ward 3
                 (U.S. Hwy 16), and Ethel (U.S. Hwy 12),
                 Attala County............................
 1282      TX   Construction of streets in the White          $9,250,000
                 Heather area of Houston..................
 1283      MS   Upgrade roads in Canton (U.S. Hwy 51, 22,       $400,000
                 16 and I-55), Madison County.............
 1284      IA   Reconstruction of the Neal Smith Trail,       $3,600,000
                 bicycle and pedestrian, Polk Co..........
 1285        CA Rehabilitate pavement on Azusa Avenue and       $500,000
                 San Gabriel Avenue in Azusa..............
 1286        CA South Bay Cities COG Coastal Corridor         $2,000,000
                 Transportation Initiative, Phase 3, El
                 Segundo..................................
 1287      MS   Upgrade roads in Terry, Edwards,Utica and     $1,250,000
                 Bolton, Hinds County.....................
 1288      FL   US 1 six laning from St. Lucie County line    $1,000,000
                 to south of 4th St in Indian River
                 County, FL...............................
 1289      MD   Expand Route 29 in Howard County..........    $6,800,000
 1290      WA   Issaquah SE Bypass........................    $5,000,000
 1291      NY   Town of Patterson Couch Road project......       $75,000
 1292      MD   US 220 MD 53 North South Corridor.........    $1,000,000
 1293      NJ   Improvements to Clove Road and Long Hill      $3,500,000
                 Road in Little Falls and Upper Mountain
                 Ave. in Montclair........................
 1294      HI   Study of East Hawaii Alternative Road,          $200,000
                 Island of Hawaii.........................
 1295      FL   Town of Southwest Ranches Urban               $2,000,000
                 Interchange..............................
 1296        CA Long Beach Intelligent Transportation         $3,000,000
                 System: Integrate functioning traffic
                 management center that includes the port,
                 transit, airport as well as the city's
                 police and fire departments, Long Beach..
 1297        CA Almaden Expressway Improvements between       $3,500,000
                 Branham Lane and Blossom Road, San Jose..
 1298      AR   Construct and rehabilitate University of      $1,200,000
                 Arkansas Technology Corridor Enhancement
                 Project..................................
 1299        CO US 550, New Mexico State Line to Durango..    $6,000,000
 1300      TX   Construct bicycle and pedestrian trails in      $750,000
                 Houston's historic Third Ward............
 1301      NY   Village of Cold Spring Main St. sidewalk        $250,000
                 and lighting improvements................
 1302      NY   Village of Goshen Hatfield Lane                 $250,000
                 reconstruction...........................
 1303       SC  Plan and build Interstate 73 from NC line    $10,000,000
                 to Myrtle Beach, SC......................
 1304      TX   IH-35E Bridge Reconstruction over Lake        $1,000,000
                 Lewisville...............................
 1305      FL   Construct College Road Improvements, Key        $500,000
                 West, Florida............................
 1306      NY   West Harlem Waterfront-ferry, intermodal     $14,000,000
                 and street improvements..................
 1307        CA Construct sound barriers at the I-805/S.R.      $850,000
                 54 Interchange, National City............
 1308      NY   Road projects that develop Access to Port     $1,250,000
                 Byron and Erie Canal.....................
 1309      FL   West Palm Beach, Florida, Flagler Drive       $1,000,000
                 Reconfiguration..........................
 1310      AL   Construct extension of I-565 westward         $5,000,000
                 fromexisting interchange to existing
                 Tennessee River bridges at Decatur, AL...
 1311        CT Construct Farmington Canal Greenway, City     $2,500,000
                 of New Haven and Hamden..................
 1312      GA   Replace sidewalks, upgrade lighting, and        $400,000
                 install landscaping, Helena..............
 1313      IA   Upgrade US 30 Liberty Square in City of       $9,500,000
                 Clinton, Iowa............................
 1314      HI   Study of Waianae Coast Emergency Access         $500,000
                 Road.....................................
 1315      NY   Westchester County,NY Rehabilitation of         $500,000
                 Lexington Ave, Mt. Kisco.................
 1316        CA Widen and Improve County Line Road in         $2,000,000
                 Calimesa.................................
 1317      OH   Construct turn lane, install traffic            $600,000
                 light, and reorient traffic on SR 146
                 near Bussemer Lane in Muskingum County...
 1318      RI   Restore and Expand Maritime Heritage site     $1,000,000
                 in Bristol...............................
 1319      OH   City of Green, Ohio. Lauby Road exit          $1,500,000
                 improvements.............................
 1320      NY   Construct Bicycle Path in Town of Bedford.      $650,000
 1321        CA Compton Arterial Reconstruction and           $4,000,000
                 Improvement Program, Compton.............
 1322      MT   Construction of S. 323 from Alzada to        $12,000,000
                 Ekalaka in Carter County.................
 1323      IL   Improve Great River Road, Mercer County...      $500,000
 1324      FL   Normandy Blvd. & Cassat Ave.                    $500,000
                 Transportation Enhancements, Jacksonville
 1325      OH   North Canton, OH Applegrove St. road          $3,000,000
                 widening.................................
 1326      MA   Design & Build Cape Cod Bike Trail, with      $4,000,000
                 Shining Sea Bikeway, to link core with
                 outer Cape communities & heavily visited
                 national sites...........................
 1327      TN   Plan and construct N. Tennessee Boulevard       $500,000
                 enhancements.............................
 1328      NJ   Quinn Road realignment, Clifton...........    $3,000,000
 1329      MO   Reconstruct Interstate 44 and Highway 65     $16,300,000
                 Interchange..............................
 1330      MN   Reconstruct TH 61 from Beaver Bay to          $6,800,000
                 Silver Bay. Construction of Gitchi-Gami
                 Spur Trail between main trail and Silver
                 Bay Marina along TH 61 roadway segment...
 1331      KY   Reconstruction of KY 259 in Edmonson          $1,500,000
                 County from Green River Bridge at
                 Brownsville to Kyrock Elementary School..
 1332      LA   Construction of a merge lane at the             $500,000
                 intersection of I-49 and US 190..........
 1333      AL   Expand SR-210 (Ross Clark Circle) from US     $4,000,000
                 231 North to US 231 South in Dothan, AL..
 1334      MD   Construct interchange at MD Route 355 at      $2,000,000
                 Montrose and Randolph Roads in Montgomery
                 County...................................
 1335        CA Construct new interchange and related road    $3,670,000
                 improvements on US 101 near Airport Blvd,
                 Salinas..................................
 1336      PA   COnstruct the French Creek Parkway in         $5,000,000
                 Phoenixville, PA.........................
 1337      MN   Capacity and safety improvements to TH 8,     $7,200,000
                 west of 306th St. to eastern city limits,
                 Lindstrom................................
 1338      VA   Eastern Seaboard Intermodal Transportation    $1,500,000
                 Applications Center (ESITAC) in Hampton
                 Roads....................................
 1339      IL   Construct underpass at intersection of        $5,500,000
                 Damen/Fullerton/Elston Avenues, Chicago..
 1340      AR   Highway 165: Railroad Overpass............    $2,000,000
 1341      FL   Implement Snake Road (BIA Route 1281)         $1,000,000
                 Widening and Improvements................
 1342        CA Construction of new freeway between I-15      $5,000,000
                 and US-395, including new interchange at
                 I--15....................................
 1343      OH   Lake Township, Ohio. Market Avenue-Lake       $2,200,000
                 Center intersections improvement.........
 1344        CT Construct Quinnipiac Linear Trail,            $1,000,000
                 Wallingford..............................
 1345      MI   Construction of a hike and bike path from       $500,000
                 Riverbends Park, 22 Mile Road, to Stony
                 Creek Park, 25 Mile Road in Shelby
                 Township.................................
 1346      IN   Reconstruct Boston Street, from State Road      $750,000
                 2 to Bach St., Larson-Whirlpool St. in
                 LaPorte, Indiana.........................
 1347      OR   Improvements to Bandon-Charleston State       $4,200,000
                 Scenic Tour on Randolph Road and North
                 Bank Lane................................
 1348      VA   Conduct study of Route 460 Corridor,          $5,000,000
                 Virginia.................................
 1349      NJ   Construct Sparta Stanhope Road Bridge (AKA    $1,000,000
                 Bridge K-07).............................
 1350      KY   Reconstruct Turkeyfoot Road, Kenton           $3,000,000
                 County, Kentucky.........................
 1351      OH   Construct additional lane to alleviate          $800,000
                 traffic congrestion on US 40 in and
                 adjacent to St. Clairsville..............
 1352        CO CO 56th Avenue & Quebec Street                $6,500,000
                 Improvements Phase I, Denver.............
 1353      OH   Construct Truck Bypass-Orville, Ohio......    $6,004,400
 1354      PA   Conversion of Penn and Park Bridges              $50,000
                 located over Spring Run in Altoona, Pa
                 into pedestrian bridges..................
 1355        CA Coyote Creek Trail Project--Story Road to     $2,500,000
                 Montague Expressway......................
 1356      PA   Construct Cameron Street Bridge               $1,000,000
                 Northumberland County, Pennsylvania......
 1357      OH   Construct upgrade of SR 16 to 4 lanes from    $3,000,000
                 SR 60 to SR 16 in Coschocton County......
 1358      OH   Medina, Ohio. Guilford Avenue urban road      $1,960,000
                 collector pavement reconstruction........
 1359      TN   Improvements to I-40 interchange at I-240     $3,000,000
                 East of Memphis (Phase II)...............
 1360      WY   Casper Bypass: Reconstruct Old Yellowstone    $5,000,000
                 Hwy and 2nd St...........................
 1361      NY   Construct sidewalks and roadway                 $600,000
                 improvements on Oscawana Lake Road in the
                 Town of Putnam Valley....................
 1362      LA   Engineering and right of way acquisition     $10,000,000
                 for I-49 Corridor........................
 1363      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Edwardsville Borough, Luzerne County..
 1364      IL   Foster Avenue at Kedzie Avenue Streetscape    $2,000,000
 1365      WV   Construct I-73/74 High Priority Corridor,    $11,200,000
                 Mercer Co................................
 1366      NY   Improve Long and Short Beach Road,            $2,100,000
                 Southampton..............................
 1367        CA Modify I-880 & Stevens Creek Boulevard       $12,000,000
                 Interchange to ease traffic congestion in
                 San Jose.................................
 1368      NY   Improve road and streetscape along            $1,000,000
                 Prospect Avenue in North Hempstead.......
 1369        CA Palm Drive & Interstate 10 interchange        $2,750,000
                 project..................................
 1370      MN   Reconstruct TH 36 from expressway to          $6,000,000
                 freeway in North St. Paul................
 1371        CA Construct I-580 Interchange Improvements      $1,200,000
                 in Castro Valley.........................
 1372      AL   Expand US 331 from Luverne, AL to             $3,000,000
                 Montgomery, AL...........................
 1373      TX   Construction of highway medians,                $500,000
                 pedestrian walkways for City of South
                 Padre Island.............................
 1374      NY   Construct Rt. 12 intersection between         $2,400,000
                 Pamela Drive-River Road-Located in the
                 Town of Chenango.........................
 1375      IL   Construct Streetscape Project, Village of       $800,000
                 Robbins..................................
 1376      GA   Effingham Parkway to Connect SR119 to SR30    $3,000,000
 1377      MD   Construct Phase 2 of the Jones Falls Trail    $4,000,000
                 from Baltimore Penn Station to the
                 Maryland Science Center on the Inner
                 Harbor...................................
 1378      IL   For Will County for engineering and right-      $500,000
                 of-way acquisition to extend 95th Street
                 from Plainfield-Naperville Road east to
                 Boughton Road............................
 1379      PA   Construct Valley Business Park Access Road    $2,700,000
                 C, Bradford County.......................
 1380      LA   Improve by widening, realigning, &            $3,000,000
                 resurfacing 3.2 miles of LA Hwy 820 btwn
                 LA Hwy 145 & LA Hwy 821..................
 1381      IN   45th Street Improvements, Munster.........      $500,000
 1382      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 including in the vicinity of PS K124.....
 1383      VT   Construction and engineering for the          $1,085,514
                 Vermont Smugglers Notch Scenic Highway
                 Corridor Southern Gateway and Notch
                 Proper Facilities........................
 1384      OH   Planning and construction of a network of       $950,000
                 recreational trails in Perry Township....
 1385      GA   Construction of the Truman Linear Park        $1,260,000
                 Trail-Phase II...........................
 1386      NJ   Pedestrian and bicycle facilities, and          $750,000
                 street lighting in Haddon Heights/
                 Barrington...............................
 1387        CA Reconstruct interchange at I-10 and           $2,000,000
                 Riverside Avenue to improve traffic in
                 Rialto...................................
 1388        CA Reconstruct Bloomfield Av. with medians         $400,000
                 from Carson St. to north city limits in
                 Hawaiian Gardens.........................
 1389       SC  Extension of Wells Highway, Oconee County,    $2,000,000
                 South Carolina...........................
 1390        CA Reconstruct Paramount Bl. with medians and      $600,000
                 improve drainage from Artesia Bl. to
                 Candlewood St. in Long Beach.............
 1391      IL   Reconstruction of 5th Street Road (FAS          $952,570
                 569)in Logan County, IL..................
 1392      WA   Reconstruction of SR 99 (Aurora Ave N)        $2,000,000
                 between N 145th St and N 205th St........
 1393      NY   Page Green--Phase III--Reconstruction of      $3,600,000
                 2.6 miles. Town of Virgil, Cortland
                 County...................................
 1394      MI   Gogebic County, Reconstruct Lake Road in        $805,000
                 Ironwood from Margaret Street to Airport
                 Road.....................................
 1395      GU   Piti, GU Construct Cabras Island              $6,000,000
                 Intermodal Facility......................
 1396      IN   Redevelop and Complete the Cardinal           $3,000,000
                 Greenway and Starr-Gennett Area in the
                 City of Richmond, Indiana................
 1397      NY   Rehabilitate and redesign Erie Canal            $500,000
                 Museum in Syracuse, NY through the Erie
                 Canalway National Heritage Corridor
                 Commission...............................
 1398      OH   Construction of 6.25 mile bicycle project       $500,000
                 in Mahoning County.......................
 1399      NM   I-40/Munoz Reconstruction in the City of      $1,500,000
                 Gallup...................................
 1400      TX   Rehabilitate Yale Street between IH 10 to     $1,000,000
                 IH 610...................................
 1401        CA Reconstruct Long Beach Bl. with medians       $3,000,000
                 and improve drainage from Palm Av. to
                 Tweedy Bl. in Lynwood....................
 1402        CA Expand carsharing pilot program to serve      $2,000,000
                 low- and moderate-income neighborhoods in
                 the City and County of San Francisco.....
 1403      FL   Implement Kennedy Boulevard corridor          $2,500,000
                 improvements to improve safety in Tampa..
 1404      MD   Construct Broadneck Peninsula Trail, Anne     $1,500,000
                 Arundel County, Maryland.................
 1405      MO   Relocation and reconstruction of Rt MM       $17,180,000
                 from Rt 21 to Rt 30......................
 1406      MN   Replace three at-grade highway-railroad       $2,000,000
                 crossings with grade-separated crossings
                 adjacent to Winona State University......
 1407        CA Construct Traffic flow improvements             $750,000
                 Vincent and Lakes Drive, West Covina.....
 1408        CA Construction of an interchange located at     $3,000,000
                 the intersection of future State Route 65
                 and Ferrari Ranch Road-Westwood in Placer
                 County...................................
 1409      KS   Construct highway-rail grade separation      $14,000,000
                 from Douglas Avenue to 17th Street North
                 in Wichita, KS...........................
 1410      OH   Conduct Phase II of U.S. Route 68 bypass      $2,300,000
                 project in Urbana........................
 1411      GA   Construct sidewalks and install                 $500,000
                 landscaping, Vienna......................
 1412      TX   Extension of FM 1427 in Penitas...........      $700,000
 1413      MD   MD 124, Woodfield Road, from Midcounty        $2,000,000
                 Highway to Warfield Road.................
 1414        CA Rio Vista Bridge Realignment Study &            $700,000
                 Street Sign Safety Program...............
 1415        CO SH 121--Bowles Ave Intersection and           $2,000,000
                 Roadway Improvements, Jefferson County
                 Colorado.................................
 1416      NY   Implement Improvements for Pedestrian         $1,000,000
                 Safety in Queens County..................
 1417      NY   Repair and improve Jericho Turnpike (NYS      $2,000,000
                 HWY 25) and construct streetscapes along
                 the Turnpike in New Hyde Park............
 1418      GA   SR 316/SR 20 interchange construction           $500,000
                 Gwinnett, County.........................
 1419      IL   Construct Pedestrian walkways and             $4,210,000
                 streetscaping projects in the Village of
                 Western Springs..........................
 1420      WA   SR 518 corridor--Improvements to SR 518-      $1,000,000
                 509 interchange and addition of eastbound
                 travel lane on a portion of the corridor.
 1421        CA Development and construction of               $3,000,000
                 improvements to State Route 79 in the San
                 Jacinto Valley...........................
 1422      MN   Construct roadway improvements on the         $6,960,000
                 Great River Road on CSAH 10 and CSAH 21,
                 Aitkin County............................
 1423      WA   Conduct preliminary engineering and EIS      $12,854,000
                 for Columbia River Crossing in WA and OR.
 1424       NC  Greensboro Signal System Replacement ITS     $12,500,000
                 Enhancement Project......................
 1425      MN   Reconstruction of 1 mile of CR 107 from         $500,000
                 CSAH 2 to Highway 11 and 71, Koochiching
                 County...................................
 1426      OH   Plain Township, Ohio. Market Avenue           $5,000,000
                 widening.................................
 1427      LA   Construct right of way improvements from      $3,000,000
                 Third St. at James St. to LA. Hwy. One at
                 Broadway St. Acquire property at Third
                 St. and Winn St..........................
 1428      PA   State Street Bridge Rehabilitation,           $1,500,000
                 Hamburg..................................
 1429      OH   Construct Flats East Bulkhead and             $4,650,000
                 Riverwalk: construct bulkhead and
                 riverwalk connecting Front and Maine Ave.
 1430      NY   Construct/reconstruct Lincoln Road:             $900,000
                 Commercial Street to Route 31F in the
                 Town-Village of East Rochester...........
 1431      OH   Acquire land and construct Portage Bike       $1,000,000
                 and Hike Trail, Portage Co...............
 1432       NC  Continued development of Cary, NC             $1,500,000
                 pedestrian bike paths....................
 1433      TX   Cottonflat Road overpass at Interstate 20.    $1,500,000
 1434      NY   Improve Rt. 17M access, safety and traffic      $750,000
                 management...............................
 1435      OH   Safety improvements to Paris Avenue           $1,500,000
                 intersections and Meese Rd. and Easton
                 St. -Nimishillen Township, Ohio..........
 1436        CA Alameda Corridor-East Construction              $300,000
                 Authority, San Gabriel Valley............
 1437      WA   Construct a tunnel as part of the            $21,000,000
                 Bremerton Pedestrian-Bremerton
                 Transportation Center Access Improvement
                 project..................................
 1438       NC  Eliminate highway-railway crossings in the    $1,000,000
                 city of Fayetteville, NC.................
 1439      NJ   Hoboken Observer Highway Operational and      $2,500,000
                 Safety Improvements......................
 1440        CA Reconfigure San Fernando Road from            $7,000,000
                 Fletcher Drive to I-5 Fwy, Los Angeles...
 1441      NY   Construction of an access road, drainage      $2,695,000
                 improvements, and aesthetic enhancements
                 adjacent to Ocean Parkway in the Town of
                 Babylon, NY..............................
 1442      TX   Construct highway improvements on E.          $2,800,000
                 Tidwell, Ley Rd, and E. Little York Rd...
 1443      AZ   Construct pedestrian and bicycle overpass     $3,000,000
                 at McDowell Road & 35th Avenue in Phoenix
 1444      TX   Reconstruct I-30 Trinity River Bridge,       $25,000,000
                 Dallas...................................
 1445      PA   Armstrong and Indiana County,                 $2,000,000
                 Pennsylvania, U.S. 422 Improvements......
 1446      TX   Bicycle and Pedestrian Trail Network in       $9,600,000
                 East Austin..............................
 1447      NV   Construct I-15 Cactus Avenue..............   $10,000,000
 1448      AL   I-65 Widening from U.S. 31 in Alabaster       $8,000,000
                 (Exit 238) to AL 25 in Calera (Exit 228).
 1449      NY   Improve Route 4 Streetscape and replace       $4,350,000
                 waterlines, Town and Village of Fort
                 Edward, Washington County................
 1450      OH   Planning and construction on bike paths       $1,000,000
                 and trails as part of Phases III-VI in
                 Ashtabula Metroparks Western Reserve
                 Greenway.................................
 1451        CO Construction of Powers Boulevard and         $10,000,000
                 Woodman Road interchange, Colorado
                 Springs..................................
 1452      MN   Environmental review for TH 8 upgrade,          $600,000
                 Forest Lake to Chisago City..............
 1453      MD   Construct Pedestrian Bridge and Garage at     $3,000,000
                 Coppin State University in Baltimore.....
 1454      MD   Historic Preservation and Traffic             $1,900,000
                 Improvements along Liberty Heights Ave.
                 and in Druid Hill Park in Baltimore......
 1455       NC  I-85 in Vance County......................    $1,000,000
 1456      PA   Design and construct interchange and          $6,000,000
                 related improvements at I 83 Exit 19.....
 1457      IL   Preconstruction and Construction at IL 31     $2,420,000
                 from Bull Valley Road to IL 176..........
 1458      MS   Replace Popps Ferry Road Bridge, Biloxi...    $5,000,000
 1459      IL   Reconstruct Lakeshore Drive Overpass over     $1,500,000
                 Wilson avenue, Chicago...................
 1460      AL   Pedestrian Improvements for Moody, AL.....      $100,000
 1461      MA   Design and construct Canal and Union            $800,000
                 Street Corridor improvements, Lawrence...
 1462      OH   Construct new two lane road to Sycamore       $1,250,000
                 Street in Gallia County..................
 1463      AL   Construct interchange on Interstate 85 at       $500,000
                 Beehive Road in Auburn, AL...............
 1464      ME   Improvements to the Interconnecting Trail       $500,000
                 System for bike/pedestrian trails near
                 Baxter State Park........................
 1465      TX   ROW acquisition for 87 Relief Route.......    $1,500,000
 1466      WA   Restore and construct historic Naches           $500,000
                 Depot and Trail project..................
 1467      GA   S.R. 20 widening from I-575 to S.R. 369,      $1,000,000
                 Cherokee County..........................
 1468      IL   Road Construction and reconstruction in       $2,300,000
                 the Village of Hampshire: Keyes Ave.,
                 Industrial Drive Overlay, and Mill Avenue
 1469      IL   Conduct study and design of Chicago North     $1,000,000
                 lakefront path expansion project.........
 1470      MS   I-59 interchange at US 84 and SR 15,          $5,000,000
                 Laurel...................................
 1471      TX   Improvements to IH-35E from US 77 North of    $4,000,000
                 Waxahachie to US 77 South of Waxahachie..
 1472      MO   Scudder Road and I-170 Interchange            $2,000,000
                 Improvements, St. Louis County...........
 1473      GA   Construct and Improve Cobb County Trails..    $1,500,000
 1474      MS   Extend SR 590 from US 11 to SR 29 near        $4,000,000
                 Ellisville...............................
 1475      IN   Improve Intersection at Jackson Street and      $560,000
                 Morrison Road in the City of Muncie,
                 Delaware County, Indiana.................
 1476        CO Construction of McCaslin Boulevard US 36      $1,000,000
                 Interchange in Superior..................
 1477      MA   Route 128 Improvements--Route 114 in          $2,000,000
                 Peabody to Route 62 in Danvers...........
 1478      TX   Lubbock, Texas Construction for Marsha       $15,550,000
                 Sharp Freeway main lanes between Chicago
                 and Salem Avenues........................
 1479      NH   South Road Mitigation in Londonderry......    $1,500,000
 1480      NY    Paul Road--Fisher Road Improvements, Town    $4,000,000
                 of Chili, Monroe County..................
 1481        CA Construct truck lane on Keystone Road from    $2,500,000
                 State Route 111 to Austin Road, Imperial
                 County...................................
 1482      MS   Construct East Metropolitan Corridor          $5,000,000
                 linking I-20 at Brandon to Hwy 25 at
                 Flowood..................................
 1483      LA   Leeville Bridge, Port Fourchon to Golden      $5,000,000
                 Meadow...................................
 1484      GA   National Infantry Museum Transporation        $3,000,000
                 Network..................................
 1485      AL   Interchange at I-65 and Limestone County      $1,000,000
                 Road 24 Constuction......................
 1486      PA   Project to realign intersection of King of    $1,649,000
                 Prussia Road and Upper Gulph Road to
                 provide turning lanes and signalization..
 1487      FL   Widen State Road 80, Hendry County........    $1,000,000
 1488      SD   Construction of four-lane highway on US 79    $8,000,000
                 between Maverick Junction, and the
                 Nebraska border..........................
 1489      IL   130th and Torrance Avenue Intersection        $9,000,000
                 Improvement, Chicago.....................
 1490      OK   Improvements to Hereford Lane and US69        $1,000,000
                 Interchange, McAlester...................
 1491      GA   Athens-Clarke County Bike Trail Project...    $1,400,000
 1492        CT Construct UCONN Storrs Campus-Hillside        $5,000,000
                 Road.....................................
 1493      NM   I-25, Tramway North to Bernalillo,            $3,000,000
                 Reconstruction...........................
 1494      NJ   Planning for Liberty Corridor.............      $500,000
 1495      OR   Sellwood Bridge Replacement,--Multnomah       $3,000,000
                 County...................................
 1496      NM   Statewide ITS Deployment..................    $2,000,000
 1497      FL   Acquire Land and Construct the Englewood      $3,000,000
                 Interstate Connector in Sarasota County,
                 Florida..................................
 1498      NY   Elevate and construct drainage                $3,000,000
                 improvements to Beach Road, Canal Road,
                 and Sea Breeze Road in Massapequa, New
                 York.....................................
 1499      TX   Design and construction streetscape           $1,000,000
                 improvements in Midtown, enhance
                 pedestrian access........................
 1500      NY   Replace sidewalk along Route 9A in Hamlet       $330,000
                 of Montrose, Town of Cortlandt...........
 1501      MN   Construction and widening of TH 241 in the    $2,000,000
                 city of St. Michael, MN..................
 1502      GA   I-75 lanes from Aviation Boulevard to SR      $1,500,000
                 54, Clayton County.......................
 1503      VT   Construction and rehabilitation of the        $1,386,000
                 Cross Vermont Trail for the Cross Vermont
                 Trail Association........................
 1504      NY   Construction of a new ramp from 9A            $1,775,000
                 Southbound to Taconic State Parkway
                 Southbound, Westchester County...........
 1505      NY   Restore vehicular traffic to Main Street      $5,000,000
                 in Downtown Buffalo......................
 1506      MI   Construction of 5 lane concrete pavement     $10,000,000
                 with curb, gutter and sewer on Romeo
                 Plank Road from M-59 to 23 Mile Road in
                 Macomb Township..........................
 1507      NY   Enhance road and transportation facilities      $550,000
                 in the vicinity of the Brooklyn
                 Children's Museum........................
 1508      IL   Construct and expand Northwest Illinois US    $4,000,000
                 Rte 20 from Freeport to Galena, IL.......
 1509        CA Construction of new roadway lighting on       $1,000,000
                 major transportation corridors in the
                 Southwest San Fernando Valley............
 1510      MO   Construct Interstate flyover at Hughes       $19,000,000
                 Road and Liberty Drive to 76th Street.
                 Part of Liberty Parkway Project..........
 1511        CA Freeway 180 Improvements Fresno...........    $9,500,000
 1512      NY   Construct sidewalks and curbs on Valley         $450,000
                 Road in Town of Bedford..................
 1513      OK   Construction of rail crossing in Claremore    $2,000,000
                 at Blue Star Drive and SH 66.............
 1514      IL   Improve U.S. Route 34 from Kewanee to           $500,000
                 Kentville Road...........................
 1515      IL   For Naperville Township to fund                 $200,000
                 improvements to North Aurora Road........
 1516      WA   Kent--Construct a single point urban          $1,000,000
                 interchange (SPUI) under I-5 at South
                 272nd St.................................
 1517      TN   Construct Interpretive Visitor Center for     $1,000,000
                 the Cherokee Removal Memorial Park Trail
                 of Tears site in Meigs County, TN........
 1518      GA   Create a greenway trail along the Oconee      $2,000,000
                 River connecting parks, preserving
                 historic sites, and promoting economic
                 development..............................
 1519      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition, &         $400,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Dunmore Borough, Lackawanna County....
 1520      PA   Add turn lane, modify signals and install     $2,430,000
                 pavement markings at intersection of PA
                 422 and PA 662 in Amity Township.........
 1521      WI   Construct bicycle/pedestrian path and         $3,500,000
                 facilities in the Central park area of
                 Madison..................................
 1522      VA   Expand Route 15 29 in Culpeper, Virginia..    $2,000,000
 1523      WV   Fairmont Gateway Connector System to         $22,000,000
                 provide an improved highway link between
                 downtown Fairmont and I-79 in the
                 vicinity of Fairmont.....................
 1524      OR   Construct Barber Street extension,            $3,000,000
                 Wilsonville..............................
 1525      FL   Four-laning SR 281 (Avalon Boulevard) in     $14,500,000
                 Santa Rosa County from Interstate 10 to
                 north of CSX RR Bridge...................
 1526      OR   Interstate 5 Interchange at City of Coburg    $9,000,000
 1527      IL   Construction of a bridge at Stearns Road      $2,000,000
                 in Kane County, Illinois.................
 1528      TX   East 7th Street Improvements in Austin....      $525,000
 1529      GA   Rebuild SR-10 Memorial Drive for bicycle      $2,000,000
                 and pedestrian safety, from Mountain
                 Drive to Goldsmith Road, Dekalb County...
 1530      NJ   Provide an alternative route for traffic      $2,500,000
                 passing though congested SR 31 corridor
                 in Flemington NJ.........................
 1531        CA Construction of a smart crosswalk system         $50,000
                 at the intersection of Arminta St. and
                 Mason Ave................................
 1532      WI   Reconstruct U.S. Highway 41 north of Lake    $15,400,000
                 Butte des Morts Bridge, Wisconsin........
 1533      PA   Improvements to 8th and 9th Street bridges      $490,000
                 between Pleasant Valley Blvd. and Valley
                 View Blvd, Altoona, Pa...................
 1534      LA   Construction of a direct intermodal truck    $13,000,000
                 access road from Interstate 210 to the
                 City Docks of the Port of Lake Charles...
 1535      TX   Construct Links Hike & Bike Trail Project.      $500,000
                 2.2 mile trail project connecting Gaylord
                 Texan to Grapevine Mills Mall. Grapvine,
                 TX.......................................
 1536      GA   Construct sidewalks between Marion Middle       $300,000
                 School, City Park, and Community Center,
                 Buena Vista..............................
 1537      IL   Construct a four lane connection between      $2,000,000
                 Rt. 13 and Rt. 45 and upgrades to Netty
                 Green Road in Saline Co Illinois.........
 1538      MI   Plymouth, Haggerty Road from Plymouth Rd.       $500,000
                 to Schoolcraft Rd........................
 1539      TN   Provide streetscape improvements and            $250,000
                 pavement repair, Greenback, Tennessee....
 1540      IA   Reconstruction of NE 56th St, eastern Polk    $1,000,000
                 Co.......................................
 1541      IL   Relocate Pocket Road for Access to              $900,000
                 Racehorse Business Park, Alorton.........
 1542        CT Construct roadway on East Commerce Drive,       $500,000
                 Oxford, CT...............................
 1543      TN   Niota, TN Improve vehicle efficiencies at        $57,000
                 highway At-Grade Railroad Crossing.......
 1544      FL   Plan and Construct 17th Street connector      $2,000,000
                 in the City of Sarasota, FL..............
 1545      VT   Reconstruction and widening of U.S. Route     $1,500,000
                 5 for the Town of Hartford...............
 1546      MO   Relocate the entrance to the Shaw Nature        $500,000
                 Reserve that is being altered due to a
                 redesign of the Gray Summit I-44
                 interchange project......................
 1547       DC  Replace and reconstruct South Capitol        $50,000,000
                 Street/Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge
 1548      MI   Complete 13.8 miles of nonmotorized           $2,700,000
                 pedistrain Fred Meijer Heartland Trail of
                 30.1 miles...............................
 1549      MO   Roadway improvements on U.S. 60 from         $10,000,000
                 Willow Springs to the Van Buren Area.....
 1550      UT   Construct Parley's Creek Trail............    $5,000,000
 1551      ME   Construction of Calais/St. Stephen Border     $8,500,000
                 Crossing Project.........................
 1552      FL   Alleviate congestion at Atlantic Corridor     $3,000,000
                 Greenway Network, City of Miami Beach, FL
 1553      MD   Construction of MD 331 Dover Bridge.......    $4,318,000
 1554      NY   Improve Traffic Flow on Noel Road between     $1,000,000
                 Church and Crossbay Boulevard Including
                 Work Necessary to Demolish and
                 Reconstruct the Firehouse Facility.......
 1555      PA   Construct 9th and 10th Street bridges over    $8,000,000
                 Norfolk Southern Tracks, Lebanon.........
 1556      AS   Drainage mitigation in Malaeloa-Leone         $1,400,000
                 village roads............................
 1557        CA Improve I-8 off ramp at Ocotillo to the       $1,000,000
                 Imperial Valley College Desert Museum/
                 Regional Traveler Visitor Center,
                 Imperial County..........................
 1558        CA Install new grade separation at Ranchero      $5,000,000
                 Road in Hesperia.........................
 1559      NY   Bartow Ave Ramp and Reconstruction at the     $1,600,000
                 Hutchinson Parkway.......................
 1560      FL   Airport Access Rd., Gainesville...........    $2,000,000
 1561      WA   Intersection project at South Access-522      $3,000,000
                 beginning and ending at the UWB-CCC
                 campus to improve access and alleviate
                 congestion...............................
 1562      NJ   Reconstruction of CR 530 from RT 206 to CR   $10,000,000
                 644. Construct shoulders, travel lanes,
                 center turn lane, drainage improvements &
                 traffic signal...........................
 1563      NY   Improve SCCC roads, Fallsburg.............    $1,500,000
 1564        CA Add turn lane and adaptive traffic control    $1,600,000
                 system at intersection of San Tomas
                 Expressway and Hamilton Avenue in
                 Campbell.................................
 1565        CA Interchange improvements at Rice Avenue       $3,300,000
                 and U.S. Highway 101 in the City of
                 Oxnard...................................
 1566      GA   Northside Drive Multi Modal Corridor......    $2,000,000
 1567      GA   Replace sidewalks, meet ADA guidelines,         $400,000
                 and install a crosswalk, McRae...........
 1568      TX   Ritchie Road from FM 1695 to US 84, Waco..    $3,000,000
 1569      AR   Maumelle Interchange--for third entrance      $1,000,000
                 into Maumelle............................
 1570        CT Construct Housatonic Riverwalk, Shelton...    $1,000,000
 1571      MD   Rehabilitate Roadways Around East             $8,500,000
                 Baltimore Life Science Park in Baltimore.
 1572      AL   City of Vestavia Hills Pedestrian Walkway       $700,000
                 to Cross U.S. 31.........................
 1573      IN   Replace Samuelson Road Underpass, Portage.    $3,162,890
 1574      IL   Construct Commuter Parking Structure in       $3,700,000
                 the Central Business District in the
                 vicinity of La Grange Road...............
 1575      PA   Design and construct inner loop roadway         $500,000
                 around Shippensburg Boro.................
 1576      WV   Construct I-73/74 High Priority Corridor,    $12,000,000
                 Mingo Co.................................
 1577      NY   Roadway improvements to Jackson Avenue        $2,250,000
                 between Jericho Turnpike and Teibrook
                 Avenue...................................
 1578      OR   Rogue River Bikeway/Pedestrian Path, Curry      $600,000
                 County...................................
 1579        CA San Gabriel Blvd Intersection Improvements      $200,000
                 at Broadway and at Las Tunas, San Gabriel
 1580      NY   Improvements to Erie Station Road, Town of    $1,000,000
                 Henrietta, Monroe County.................
 1581      IA   Sioux City, Iowa Hoeven Corridor--Outer       $2,000,000
                 Drive Project............................
 1582      KY   Study & rehabilitate the I-471 corridor,      $2,000,000
                 Campbell County, Kentucky................
 1583      WA   Improve NE 10th Avenue in Vancouver.......    $1,000,000
 1584      NY   Construction and rehabilitation of North        $870,000
                 and South Delaware Avenues in the Village
                 of Lindenhurst, NY.......................
 1585      NY   Study on extending Rt. 5 to Auburn........      $150,000
 1586      AL   Expand US-84 from Andalusia, AL to            $3,000,000
                 Enterprise, AL...........................
 1587      NJ   Susse County, NJ Safety and Operational       $4,300,000
                 Improvements on Route 23 in Hardyston
                 Township and Franklin Borough............
 1588      PA   State Street and Mulberry Street Bridge       $4,000,000
                 Lighting project, Harrisburg.............
 1589      AS   To upgrade, repair and continue               $1,600,000
                 construction of Ta'u harbor/ferry
                 terminal facility on Manu'a island.......
 1590        CA Interstate 15 and State Route 79 South        $2,000,000
                 Freeway Interchange and Ramp Improvement
                 Project..................................
 1591      OH   Road Improvements, streetscapes, and          $1,000,000
                 pedestrian safety additions in Ashtabula
                 Harbor...................................
 1592      NY   Town of East Fishkill improvements to           $500,000
                 Robinson La & Lake Walton Road at NYS
                 Route 376................................
 1593      WI   Construct a bicycle/pedestrian path,          $2,000,000
                 Wisconsin Dells..........................
 1594      NY   Construct improvements in Sight Distance        $200,000
                 at Road Grade and Trail Corssings in
                 Oneida and Herkimer Counties.............
 1595      NY   Repair Silver Mine Bridge in the Town of        $150,000
                 Lewisboro................................
 1596      IL   River walk Reconstruction, City of Chicago      $600,000
 1597      AR   Rogers, Arkansas--Construct new               $4,400,000
                 interchange on I-540 near the existing
                 Perry Road overpass......................
 1598      IN   Design and construct Indiana Ohio River      $20,000,000
                 Bridges Project on I-65 and 265..........
 1599      RI   Transportation Enhacements at Blackstone        $500,000
                 Valley Heritage Corridor.................
 1600      TX   Reconstruction of US 79 from FM 1460 to       $2,000,000
                 Williamson County Road 195...............
 1601        CA Transportation enhancements to Children's     $1,200,000
                 Museum of Los Angeles....................
 1602      IN   Construct Shelby County Indiana                 $500,000
                 Shelbyville Parkway......................
 1603      NY   Reconstruct the Niagara Street culvert/         $400,000
                 bridge which crosses over Two Mile Creek,
                 City of Tonawanda........................
 1604      MA   Reconstruction of Main Street and Lebanon       $700,000
                 Street in Melrose........................
 1605      OH   Construct the existing IR 70 interchange     $11,550,000
                 at US 40, SR 331 west of St. Clairsville.
 1606      GA   Install traffic lights and pedestrian           $500,000
                 walkways on Highway 441 at MLK, Jr.
                 Boulevard, Dublin........................
 1607      OH   Pike County, OH Fog Road Upgrade..........    $1,200,000
 1608        CA Project design, environmental assessment,       $500,000
                 and roadway construction of Lonestar Road
                 from Alta Road to Enrico Fermi Drive San
                 Diego County.............................
 1609        CA Project Study Reports for I-105 and I-405       $400,000
                 Interchanges at Los Angeles International
                 Airport..................................
 1610        CA Reconstruct Whittier Blvd. and improve        $1,700,000
                 parkway drainage from Philadelphia Av. to
                 Five Points in Whittier..................
 1611      NY   Rockland County Railroad Grade Crossings      $1,400,000
                 Safety Study.............................
 1612      TX   San Angelo Ports-to-Plains Route Loop 306     $1,500,000
                 at F.M. 388..............................
 1613      MN   City of Hutchinson School Road Underpass      $1,000,000
                 of TH7 and TH22 Improvements.............
 1614      TN   construct and widen SR-33 in Monroe           $5,000,000
                 County, TN...............................
 1615      PA   Construct the realignment of Cool Creek       $1,000,000
                 Road in York County, PA..................
 1616      NJ   Construct Waterfront Walkway from North       $2,000,000
                 Sinatra Drive and 12th St. south to
                 Sinatra Drive in Hoboken.................
 1617      TX   Add shoulders to FM 156 from Ponder, Texas    $2,000,000
                 to Krum, Texas...........................
 1618      NJ   Bridge replacement on Section 6V of Route     $2,000,000
                 1 from Ryders Lane to Milltown Road,
                 North Brunswick..........................
 1619      MN   Construct Two Harbors High School Trail         $891,600
                 connecting Two Harbors High School to Two
                 Harbors City.............................
 1620       SC  Construct I-85 Brockman-McClimon              $1,000,000
                 Interchange between Greenville
                 Spartanburg Airport and SC Highway 101
                 interchanges.............................
 1621      IA   Fort Madison, IA Construction of US 61        $3,400,000
                 bypass around Fort Madison to create a
                 safer and faster route...................
 1622      PA   Germantown Avenue Revitalization with Mt.     $2,320,000
                 Airy USA for landscaping, scenic
                 enhancements and pedestrian safety
                 improvements along the heavily traveled
                 thoroughfare.............................
 1623      NM   I-10 Reconstruction, Las Cruces to Texas      $3,000,000
                 State Line...............................
 1624      TX   IH 820 Widening Project...................    $2,000,000
 1625      IL   For Naperville Township to fund                 $800,000
                 improvements to Diehl Road between Eola
                 Road and Route 59........................
 1626      KS   Remove and Replace Topeka Blvd. Bridge        $7,000,000
                 over the Kansas River....................
 1627      VA   Clifton, VA Main Street parking and             $250,000
                 sidewalk improvements....................
 1628       SC  Replace Milford Road Bridge, Anderson, SC.      $500,000
 1629      LA   Improvements to Essen Lane at I-12; and to   $30,000,000
                 Perkins Rd.; and to Central Thruway; and
                 to O'Neal Lane; an to Burbank Dr.; and to
                 Essen Park Extension; and for LA408 study
 1630      GA   Streetscape project for lighting and            $300,000
                 landscaping on Main Street along Georgia
                 Highway 231, Davisboro...................
 1631      IA   City of Council Bluffs and Pottawattamie      $1,500,000
                 county East Beltway Roadway and
                 Connectors Project.......................
 1632      OR   U.S. 199/Laurel Road Intersection.........    $2,880,000
 1633        CA Conduct project report study on Old River       $500,000
                 School Rd--Firestone Blvd intersection
                 reconfiguration..........................
 1634      FL   Conduct study for Port of Miami Tunnel,       $2,000,000
                 Miami, FL................................
 1635      NY   Ithaca, Design and construct pedestrian       $1,200,000
                 and bicycle path (Cayuga Waterfront
                 Trail)...................................
 1636       NC  Rails to Trails Project, Elizabeth City...      $640,000
 1637      IL   Reconstruct Lakeshore Drive overpass over     $1,500,000
                 Lawrence Avenue..........................
 1638       SC  Replace Murphy Road West Bridge, Anderson,      $235,000
                 SC.......................................
 1639        CA Resurface and construct truck lane at CA      $3,000,000
                 Hwy 94 and Interstate 8 interchange,
                 Boulevard................................
 1640        CT Undertake road improvements associated        $2,000,000
                 with Coltsville Area Redevelopment,
                 Hartford.................................
 1641      AZ   Upgrade and Re-opening of Main Street in      $1,200,000
                 Yuma.....................................
 1642      NJ   Pedestrian facilities, street lighting and      $596,324
                 streetscaping improvements in downtown
                 Laurel Springs...........................
 1643      MS   Upgrade Blue Cane Road in Tallahatchie          $750,000
                 County, and roads in Webb and Tutwiler...
 1644      OH   Upgrade circuitry on vehicle protection         $140,000
                 device at Sheldon Road rail crossing in
                 Berea....................................
 1645      NY   Design and construct Upper Delaware Scenic      $500,000
                 Byway Visitor Center, Cochecton..........
 1646      NY   Construct sidewalks and curbing on              $275,000
                 Westchester Avenue in Village of Buchanan
 1647       NC  Downtown Redevelopment Project, City of       $6,336,000
                 Rocky Mount..............................
 1648      TX   Construction of divided four lane concrete    $1,000,000
                 arterial with drainage improvements--
                 Sandy Lake Road: Denton Tap Rd to North
                 Coppell Road.............................
 1649      IL   Preconstruction and Construction at IL 120    $1,365,000
                 at Bacon Road and Cedar Lake Road........
 1650      GA   Revitalization project will extend and          $500,000
                 resurface the Roberta Walking Trail,
                 Roberta..................................
 1651      KY   Construct Westbound Access to Mountain        $2,900,000
                 Parkway from Exit 18 (KY 1057), Powell
                 County...................................
 1652       NC  Development of 2 miles of road parallel to    $1,500,000
                 I-95 located approximately between the I-
                 95/NC-125 interchange and I-95/US-158
                 interchange..............................
 1653        CA Engineering, right of way and construction    $5,000,000
                 of HOV lanes on I-580 in the Livermore
                 Valley, California.......................
 1654      IL   Construct Streetscape Project, City of          $500,000
                 Markham..................................
 1655        CA Landscape south side of the 91 fwy at           $250,000
                 Bellflower Blvd in Bellflower............
 1656      MA   Southwick and Westfield Rail Trail, Design    $5,000,000
                 & Construction...........................
 1657      VA   Upgrade DOT crossing #467665M to constant       $194,600
                 warning time devices.....................
 1658      TX   Reconstruct and add two lanes to US 287       $3,000,000
                 from the Oklahoma State line to US 54 in
                 Stratford................................
 1659      WY   Casper West Belt Loop.....................    $2,000,000
 1660      MN   Munger Trail extension, City of Duluth....    $3,200,000
 1661      AK   Bogard/Sheldon Extension in Matanuska-        $4,000,000
                 Susitna Borough..........................
 1662        CA City of Redondo Beach Esplanade               $1,000,000
                 Improvement Project......................
 1663      MN   Kandiyohi and Meeker Counties Hwy 7           $2,000,000
                 between TH 71 and TH 22..................
 1664      NJ   Construction of Rowan Boulevard from US         $600,000
                 Route 322 to Main Street, Glassboro......
 1665        CA Conduct Study of SR 130 Realignment           $2,000,000
                 Project, San Joaquin County & Santa Clara
                 County, CA...............................
 1666        CA Passons Grade Separation in the City of       $3,700,000
                 Pico Rivera..............................
 1667      MD   Construct South Shore Trail, Anne Arundel     $1,000,000
                 County, MD...............................
 1668      NJ   Realignment of the Routes35/36                $2,000,000
                 intersection in Eatontown................
 1669      IN   Construct Hoosier Heartland Highway in        $3,000,000
                 Cass and Carroll County, Indiana.........
 1670      MI   Oscoda County, Reconstruction and               $960,000
                 surfacing of Valley Road from M-33 west
                 to Mapes Road............................
 1671      TX   Reconstruct Precinct Line Road 2-lane         $1,000,000
                 bridge as 4-lane bridge and widen
                 Precinct Line Road to 4-lane roadway from
                 SH 10 to Trammel Davis Rd................
 1672        CT Reconstruct Waterfront Street Corridor,       $1,500,000
                 City of New Haven........................
 1673      TN   Improving Vehicle Efficiencies at At-Grade       $99,000
                 highway-Railroad Crossing in
                 Philadelphia, Tn.........................
 1674      TX   Reconstruct Mile 2 W from Mile 12 N to US     $1,000,000
                 83, Hidalgo County.......................
 1675      NY   Reconstruction of West Neck Road from         $3,000,000
                 Huntington-Lloyd Harbor boundary to the
                 end of the Village-maintained road.......
 1676      GA   Rehabilitate sidewalks and replace street       $500,000
                 lights, Swainsboro.......................
 1677       SC  Replace Murphy Road East Bridge, Anderson,      $265,000
                 SC.......................................
 1678      MO   Access improvements and safety and            $5,000,000
                 mobility upgrades along US 7 as part of
                 the Highway 7 Corridor Development Plan
                 in Blue Springs..........................
 1679      OH   Construct Stearns Road Grade Separation,      $3,750,000
                 Olmsted Township.........................
 1680        CA Implement Grove Avenue Corridor Interstate    $3,000,000
                 10 interchange improvements in Ontario...
 1681      MA   Construct & Replace West Corner Bridge &      $1,000,000
                 Culvert, Rte 228, spanning Weir River
                 Estuary & Straits Pond Inlet.............
 1682      OK   Complete Reconstruction of the I-35--SH 9     $4,000,000
                 West Interchange.........................
 1683      NJ   Construct Rte 50 Tuckahoe River Bridge        $4,000,000
                 Replacement, Cape May and Atlantic
                 Counties.................................
 1684      NY   Rt. 12 reconstruction- Town and Village of    $4,110,000
                 Greene...................................
 1685      MN   Becker County CR 143 and CR 124                 $960,000
                 Improvements.............................
 1686      NY   Construct and extend existing pedestrian      $1,350,000
                 streetscape areas in Valley Stream.......
 1687      MI   Construct Interchange at I-675 and M-13       $2,300,000
                 (Washington Avenue). Northbound Exit.
                 Phase I of Construction. City of Saginaw.
 1688      OH   Construct Cleveland Towpath Trail. 6-mile     $5,000,000
                 extension towards downtown. Cleveland....
 1689      FL   Construct widening of US 17 to 4 lanes       $16,300,000
                 from San Mateo to Volusia County line,
                 Putnam County, Florida...................
 1690      MD   Construct Phase 1 of the South Shore Trail    $1,000,000
                 in Anne Arundel County from Maryland
                 Route 3 at Millersville Road to I-97 at
                 Waterbury Road...........................
 1691      MI   Construction of 5 lane concrete pavement      $2,079,500
                 with curb, gutter and storm sewer on Van
                 Dyke Ave. from 23 Mile Road to 26 Mile
                 Road, Macomb Co..........................
 1692      FL   Design and construct replacement for A.      $10,000,000
                 Max Brewer Bridge, Titusville............
 1693      NY   Implement ITS system and apparatus to           $100,000
                 enhance citywide truck route system on
                 Victory Blvd Between Travis Ave and West
                 Shore Expressway Travis Section of SI....
 1694      MI   Purchase and implementation of various       $12,430,000
                 Intelligent Transportation System
                 technologies in the Grand Rapids metro
                 region...................................
 1695      WI   Recondition USH 45 between New London and     $2,000,000
                 Clintonville, Wisconsin (Waupaca County,
                 Wisconsin)...............................
 1696        CA Reconstruction of The Strand in the City      $2,000,000
                 of Manhattan Beach to improve beach
                 access and accommodate increased
                 pedestrian traffic.......................
 1697        CA Construction of new roadway lighting on         $500,000
                 major transportation corridors in the
                 Northeast San Fernando Valley............
 1698      MD   Rehabilitate Hanover Street Bridge in         $1,500,000
                 Baltimore................................
 1699      NY   Rehabilitation of Hornbeck Road in the          $426,000
                 Town of Poughkeepsie.....................
 1700        CA Rehabilitation of Tulare County Farm to       $4,000,000
                 Market road system.......................
 1701      GA   Riverside Drive Streetscape Project, Macon      $500,000
 1702      GA   South Lumpkin Road Trail-Columbus.........      $500,000
 1703        CA Implement Northeast San Fernando Valley         $200,000
                 Road and Safety Improvements.............
 1704      NY   Big Ridge Road : Spencerport Village Line     $2,500,000
                 to Gillet Road in the Town of Ogden......
 1705      TX   Build south bound ramp from east bound I-     $5,000,000
                 20 to Clark Road at the southern terminus
                 of Spur 408. Duncanville, TX.............
 1706      MS   Plan and construct intermodal connector       $1,000,000
                 linking I-20 to Hwy 49, Pearl-Richland...
 1707      TN   Reconstruct US 64 from west of Bolivar to     $5,225,000
                 the Lawrence County Line in Hardemant,
                 McNairy, Hardin, Wayne Counties..........
 1708      PA   Improve safety of Route 145 in Whitehall      $2,225,000
                 Township.................................
 1709      GA   Construct Stone Mountain-Lithonia road        $1,000,000
                 Bike Lane and Sidewalks, Dekalb County...
 1710      OK   Texanna Road improvements around Lake         $1,000,000
                 Eufaula..................................
 1711      PR   To build an extension of PR-53 between        $5,000,000
                 Yabucoa and Maunabo......................
 1712      IL   To contruct a new intersection of a public      $550,000
                 road and US Route 50 and a new street....
 1713       NC  To plan, design, and construct the            $2,000,000
                 Northwest Corridor-Western Blvd. Project
                 in Jacksonville, NC......................
 1714        CT Upgrade Mark Twain Drive, Hartford........    $2,000,000
 1715        CO CO I-70 East Multimodal Corridor (Highway     $2,500,000
                 Expansion), Denver.......................
 1716      MS   Upgrade roads in Indianola, Ruleville,        $2,000,000
                 Moorehead, Doddsville, Sunflower and
                 Drew, Sunflower County...................
 1717      MS   Upgrade roads in North Carrollton (U.S.         $400,000
                 Hwy 35 and 82) McCain Street, South
                 Street, Love Street, and Colver Street,
                 Carroll County...........................
 1718      NJ   Passaic-Bergen intermodal transportation     $15,000,000
                 deployment initiative....................
 1719      IL   Upgrade roads, The Village of Maywood.....    $1,000,000
 1720      PA   Upgrade Route 30 Corridor and Airport         $1,000,000
                 Access...................................
 1721      GA   Upgrade sidewalks and lighting, Lyons.....      $500,000
 1722        CA State Route 88--Pine Grove Corridor             $500,000
                 Improvement Project......................
 1723      WA   Tacoma--Lincoln Avenue Grade Separation...    $1,000,000
 1724      NY   Improve NY 112 from Old Town Road to NY      $10,000,000
                 347......................................
 1725      NJ   Construct I-195 Noise Barrier, Hamilton       $2,500,000
                 Twp, Mercer County.......................
 1726      AR   Highway 77 Rail Grade Separation..........    $1,000,000
 1727      WA   Kent, WA Willis Street BNSF Railroad Grade      $500,000
                 Separation Project.......................
 1728      MI   Menominee, Ogden Street Bridge                  $200,000
                 rehabilitation project-replacement of
                 deck, expansion joints, sidewalks,
                 railing and all other joints.............
 1729      VA   Pochantas Trail--development and                $500,000
                 construction of trail from Bluestone
                 Junction to Pochantas adjacent to
                 abandoned rail line......................
 1730      NY   Suffolk County ITS arterial monitoring and    $1,500,000
                 performance measures.....................
 1731      LA   Conduct study for Highway 25 in Washington      $500,000
                 Parish...................................
 1732      IL   Construction of the 43rd Street Bicycle         $600,000
                 Pedestrian Bridge over Lake Shore Drive,
                 City of Chicago..........................
 1733      NY   To design and reconstruct Nassau Avenue,      $2,400,000
                 improve sidewalks and include pedestrian
                 amenities in Greenpoint, Brooklyn........
 1734      OH   Upgrade the I-480 and Tiedman Road            $1,000,000
                 interchange, Brooklyn....................
 1735      NJ   Interchange improvements and bridge           $5,000,000
                 replacement, Route 46, Passaic County....
 1736      PR   Construction of community bridge at Los         $500,000
                 Lopez Sector, Quebrada Arenas Community..
 1737      IA   Construction of a Four Lane U.S. Highway     $10,000,000
                 20 between Moville in Woodbury County,
                 through Ida County and Sac County to U.S.
                 71 at Early, IA..........................
 1738      AZ   Paving of Navajo Route 9010-off of I-40 at    $3,500,000
                 Houck, AZ (Exit 348) to Pine Springs Day
                 School...................................
 1739      OH   Red Bank Road Improvements from I-71 to       $3,900,000
                 Fair Lane in Eastern Hamilton County,
                 Ohio.....................................
 1740        CA Construct earthen berm along Esperanza        $2,000,000
                 Road from Yorba Linda Blvd. to the west
                 city limits to mitigate noise............
 1741      TX   US 90--Construct 6 mainlines from east of     $2,000,000
                 Mercury to east of Wallisville...........
 1742      NY   Town of Chester Trout Brook road                 $70,000
                 improvements and reconstruction..........
 1743      OR   Upgrade the I-5 Fern Valley Interchange       $3,000,000
                 (Exit 24)................................
 1744        CA Construct I-80 Gilman Street interchange      $1,500,000
                 improvements in Berkeley.................
 1745      NJ   Construct Vineland Boulevard and Sherman      $1,750,000
                 Avenue Intersection Improvements,
                 Vineland, Cumberland County..............
 1746      WA   Terry's Corner Park and Ride on Camano        $1,400,000
                 Island...................................
 1747      OR   Upgrade U.S. 101 and Utility Relocation,        $200,000
                 Gold Beach...............................
 1748      WI   Upgrade USH 41 from DePere to Suamico,        $2,500,000
                 Wisconsin (Brown County, Wisconsin)......
 1749      IL   Upgrade Veterans Drive in Pekin Illinois..    $1,000,000
 1750      NY   Saugerties, Improve Tissle Road-Old Kings       $500,000
                 Highway intersection.....................
 1751      TX   Design and Construct the Cottonwood Trail     $1,000,000
                 pedestrian-bicycle connection............
 1752      NY   Rehabilitation of the Ashford Ave. bridge     $2,600,000
                 over I-87 in the Villages of Dobbs Ferry
                 and Ardsley..............................
 1753      OH   Streetscape completion along US 40 in           $100,000
                 Bridgeport...............................
 1754      SD   Design and construct new Meridian Bridge      $6,000,000
                 across the Missouri River at Yankton.....
 1755      MD   Upgrade MD 210 from MD 228 to I-495.......    $5,000,000
 1756      IL   For DuPage County to construct certain          $100,000
                 segments of Southern DuPage County
                 Regional Trail...........................
 1757      IA   US 20 relocated, Webster, Sac and Calhoun     $3,000,000
                 Counties, Iowa...........................
 1758      NJ   Construction of new access roads along        $1,000,000
                 Route 42/Blackhorse Pike in Washington
                 Township.................................
 1759        CA Highways 152-156 Intersection                 $1,000,000
                 improvements, CA.........................
 1760      AK   Coffman Cove IFA ferry terminal or IFA        $3,200,000
                 vessel debt repayment for MV Prince of
                 Wales Ferry..............................
 1761      MA   Acquisition, engineering design, and          $2,000,000
                 construction of the Assabet River Rail
                 Trail, Acton, Hudson, Maynard, and Stow..
 1762      MI   Conduct Feasibility Study to Extend I-475       $800,000
                 to US 23 in Genesee County...............
 1763      TX   Construct a reliever route on US 287 South    $3,000,000
                 of Dumas to US 287 North of Dumas........
 1764      TN   construct new exit on I-75 and connect US-    $4,500,000
                 11, US-411, and SR-30....................
 1765      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &        $1,750,000
                 construction of street improvements,
                 parking, safety enhancements & roadway
                 redesign in Pittston.....................
 1766      TX   Dowlen Road Imprvements for Beaumont,         $3,456,000
                 Texas....................................
 1767        CA Construct Hwy 101 bicycle-pedestrian            $500,000
                 project in Marin and Sonoma Counties from
                 north of Atherton Ave to south of
                 Petaluma River bridge....................
 1768      TX   Construct raised median from Loop 224 to      $3,350,000
                 Sradley St. in Nacogdoches, TX...........
 1769      OH   Construction of bicycle trail extension in      $500,000
                 Geauga Park District in Chardon, OH......
 1770        CA Extension of a regional Class I bikeway         $400,000
                 from the West City limits to the East
                 City limits along leased railroad right-
                 of-away..................................
 1771      AR   For rail grade separations identified by     $10,000,000
                 the MPO for the Little Rock/North Little
                 Rock metropolitan area, (which may
                 include: Edison Ave.; Springer Blvd; Hwy
                 89 Extension; McCain/Fairfax; Salem Road;
                 J.P. Wright Loop; South Loop; Geyer
                 Springs Rd)..............................
 1772      NY   Court Street & Smith Street Shopping            $800,000
                 District Enhancements....................
 1773      MA   Hampshire County Bike Paths, Design &         $5,500,000
                 Construction.............................
 1774      NV   Construct I-15 Starr Interchange..........   $10,000,000
 1775        CA Construct full-access interchange at SR       $4,000,000
                 120--McKinley Avenue, with the necessary
                 SR120 auxiliary lanes, Manteca, CA.......
 1776        CA Install emergency vehicle preemption            $500,000
                 equipment along major arterials in the I-
                 880 corridor, Alameda County.............
 1777      OH   Construct a proposed relocation of US 22     $10,000,000
                 and SR 93 from the current IR 70, US 40
                 west of Zanesville.......................
 1778        CA Conduct Study and Construct I 205 Chrisman    $1,000,000
                 Road Interchange Project, Tracy, CA......
 1779      IL   Construction of part of a 230 mile            $1,700,000
                 corridor U.S. 67 near Jerseyville and
                 Carrolton, Illinois......................
 1780        CA Construction of Campus Parkway from State       $500,000
                 Route 99 to Yosemite Ave., Merced County.
 1781      MI   Construction of Superior Road Roundabout,       $750,000
                 Superior Township........................
 1782      OR   Construction and preliminary engineering        $200,000
                 of a railroad crossing at the
                 intersection of Havlik Road and Hwy 30,
                 Scappoose................................
 1783      FL   Clark Road Clover Leaf at I95,                $5,500,000
                 Jacksonville.............................
 1784      PA   Construct and widen PA 94 from the Adams      $1,500,000
                 and York County line north to Appler Road
 1785      IL   For the reconstruction and realignment of     $2,000,000
                 2 miles of Evergreen Ave. located west of
                 the City of Effingham....................
 1786      IN   Improve State Road 332 and Nebo Road          $3,000,000
                 Intersection in Delaware County, Indiana.
 1787      AL   Birmingham Northern Beltline..............   $10,000,000
 1788      WI   Construct Lake Butte des Morts Bridge, US    $25,600,000
                 Highway 41, Winnebago County, Wisconsin..
 1789      MA   North Worcester County Bike Paths, Design     $5,000,000
                 & Construction...........................
 1790      TX   Old Reliance Road Overpass at SH 6 (Earl      $2,500,000
                 Rudder Freeway)--widening project in
                 Brazos Co................................
 1791      IA   Phase III of Main St project, Amana.......    $1,000,000
 1792      MN   Re-align Vadnais Boulevard at interchange     $1,000,000
                 of I-694/Highway 49, Ramsey County.......
 1793        CA Reconfigure intersection at Highways 152     $13,900,000
                 and 156 in Santa Clara County............
 1794      KY   Construct Georgetown Northwest Bypass from    $3,000,000
                 US 460 West to I-75 North, Scott County..
 1795      AZ   Grand Canyon Greenway Trails..............    $3,000,000
 1796      NY   Remediate road runoff in vicinity of          $1,000,000
                 Peconic Estuary watershed................
 1797      MS   Construct I-55 Interchange at Madison-        $5,000,000
                 Ridgeland, Madison County................
 1798      OH   Construction of road improvements from          $150,000
                 Richmond Road to new Cuyahoga Community
                 College in Warrensville Heights, OH......
 1799      MI   Construction of the I-696 and Northwestern    $2,000,000
                 Highway Interchange Freeway Ramps at
                 Franklin Road in Southfield..............
 1800      OH   Construct access improvements to I-680 and    $2,000,000
                 internal roadways for Corridor of
                 Opportunity, Mahoning Co.................
 1801      NY   Mount Vernon Railroad Cut.................    $2,250,000
 1802      TX   Reconstruct and add two lanes to IH 27        $3,000,000
                 from Western Street in Amarillo to Loop
                 335......................................
 1803        CO SH 83-SH 88 Interchange Reconstruction--      $4,000,000
                 Arapahoe County, CO......................
 1804      NY   Town of Pawling Old Rt 55.................      $500,000
 1805      IL   Upgrade Curtis Road in conjunction with       $7,000,000
                 state plan for I-57 interchange; from
                 Duncan Rd to 1st Street in Champaign.....
 1806      MO   Upgrade Rt. 249 [Range Line] from Rt. 171    $10,000,000
                 to I-44..................................
 1807      VA   Bland County Trails and Visitor Center--      $1,000,000
                 establishment of multi-use trail network,
                 associated facilities and begin work on
                 visitors center..........................
 1808      NH   Upgrade Sewalls Falls Road bridge over        $1,000,000
                 Merrimack River in Concord...............
 1809      IL   Perform Old Orchard Road Expansion and        $1,000,000
                 improvement project between harms road
                 and US 41, Cook County...................
 1810      MN   Design engineering and ROW acquisition to     $7,120,745
                 reconstruct TH 95 bridge, North Branch...
 1811      NY   Tappan Zee Bridge to I 287 Transportation     $1,000,000
                 Corridor.................................
 1812        CA Upgrade and reconstruct the I-80/I-680/      $21,850,000
                 SR12 Interchange, Solano County..........
 1813      MD   US 219 Oakland Bypass.....................    $1,000,000
 1814       NC  US 221 widening from US 421 to Jefferson,     $2,000,000
                 NC.......................................
 1815      IL   Complete 80,000 lb truck route between CH     $3,000,000
                 2 (Burma Rd) and IL Rte 130 in Cumberland
                 County...................................
 1816        CA Improvement of intersection at Burbank          $400,000
                 Blvd. and Hayvenhurst Ave................
 1817      OH   Construct pedestrain bridge over I77;         $2,000,000
                 tunnel underneath railroad; bridge over
                 Tuscarawas River along OH and Erie Canal
                 in Tuscarawas County.....................
 1818      MN   Lake Street Access to I-35W, Minneapolis..    $6,000,000
 1819      WI   Upgrade USH 2 in Ashland County...........    $4,000,000
 1820      OR   Construct an urban arterial street between    $4,700,000
                 NE Weidler and NE Washington on NE 102nd,
                 Portland.................................
 1821        CA Construct an Interchange on Highway 70 at     $2,535,000
                 Georgia Pacific Road in Oroville.........
 1822      AZ   Construct or Modify Railroad Grade           $13,300,000
                 Separations on 6th St. and 22nd St. and
                 Reconstruct Speedway Blvd. Underpass in
                 Tucson...................................
 1823      FL   Construct North Ormond Beach Business Park    $1,100,000
                 Interchange at I-95 between U.S. 1 and SR
                 40, Volusia County.......................
 1824      MN   Environmental review for improvement along    $1,300,000
                 the entire US 10 corridor................
 1825      NY   Construct visitor center, access road, and      $750,000
                 parking at Sam's Point Preserve,
                 Ellenville...............................
 1826      OH   Installation of road improvements on Old        $100,000
                 State Road-SR 608 in Middlefield, OH.....
 1827      WA   To replace BNSF trestle, Sammamish River      $2,000,000
                 bridge and reconstruct SR 202/127th Pl NE
                 and SR 202/180th Ave NE intersections....
 1828      PA   Completion of beltway interchanges along      $1,000,000
                 Business Route 60 in Moon Township,
                 Allegheny County.........................
 1829      TX   US 290 Improvements in Austin, TX.........    $3,000,000
 1830        CA City of Madera, CA Improve SR 99--SR 145      $3,000,000
                 Interchange..............................
 1831      AL   Construct a new interchange on I-65 at        $1,000,000
                 Cullman, AL County Road 222..............
 1832      VA   Improve transportation projects for           $4,250,000
                 Jamestown 2007...........................
 1833      MI   Design and construction of West Michigan      $3,000,000
                 Regional Trail Network connector to link
                 two trail systems together and to Grand
                 Rapids...................................
 1834      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and              $9,000,000
                 pedestrian trail including enhancements,
                 Murfreesboro.............................
 1835      AZ   Replacement of Safford Bridge which           $7,000,000
                 crosses the Gila River directly north of
                 Safford, AZ on North 8th Avenue..........
 1836      TX   Design & construct streetscape                $1,000,000
                 improvements to Old Spanish Trail--SH 288
                 to Griggs, Griggs to Mykawa..............
 1837      TN   For each rail-highway crossing: Improve          $57,000
                 circuitry on vehicle protection device
                 installed at crossing in Knoxville, TN...
 1838      OH   Reconstruct Broadway Ave in Lorain........      $750,000
 1839      OH   Road Widening and related improvements to     $3,410,000
                 SR 82 in Macedonia OH....................
 1840      MN   Reconstruct CSAH 4 and CSAH 5 ( Forest        $1,740,000
                 Highway 11) between CSAH 15 and TH 61,
                 Silver Bay...............................
 1841        CA Ramona Avenue Grade Separation, Montclair,    $2,000,000
                 California...............................
 1842      MN   Roadway improvements, City of Federal Dam.    $1,000,000
 1843      VA   Rocky Knob Heritage Center--planning,         $1,500,000
                 design, site acquisition and construction
                 for trail system and visitors center on
                 Blue Ridge Parkway.......................
 1844      FL   Design and construct capacity and safety      $2,000,000
                 improvements for State Road 426-County
                 Road 419 in Oviedo from Pine St to west
                 of Lockwood Blvd.........................
 1845      FL   Coordinated Regional Transportation Study     $1,500,000
                 of US 98 from Pensacola Bay Bridge,
                 Escambia County to Hathaway Bridge, Bay
                 County, Florida..........................
 1846      PA   Paving and reconstruction in the              $2,000,000
                 townships: North and South Eldorado,
                 North Altoona, Fairview, Juniata, East
                 End, Pleasant Valley, South Tracks,
                 Lyswen-Altoona, PA.......................
 1847      AK   Ferry infrastructure at Seward Marine         $3,000,000
                 Center...................................
 1848      AZ   Realign Davis Road from State Route 80 to     $3,300,000
                 State Route 191..........................
 1849      PA   Reesdale Street roadway reconfiguration to    $1,000,000
                 allow HOV access to new parking facility.
 1850      WA   SR 538 (College Way) and North 26th St.         $175,000
                 Signal in Mount Vernon...................
 1851      TX   Acquisition of right of way and              $14,000,000
                 environmental preservation from I-45 to
                 U.S. 59 for Grand Parkway................
 1852      ID   Reconstruct Grangemont Road (Idaho Forest     $2,000,000
                 Highway 67) from Orofino to Milepost 9.3.
 1853      VA   Expansion of South Airport Connector Road     $7,800,000
                 (Clarkson Road to Charles City)..........
 1854      NY   Design and Construction of bicycle and          $480,000
                 pedestrian facilities in the area of the
                 Roosevelt Avenue Bridge..................
 1855       NC  Construct Endor Iron Furnace Greenway         $1,000,000
                 enhancements from Deep River to Sanford..
 1856        CO Improve and widen State Highway 44 from       $4,000,000
                 Colorado Boulevard to State Highway 2....
 1857      FL   Fund improvement of US 301 corridor in        $2,000,000
                 Sumter and Marion Counties...............
 1858      TN   complete construction and landscaping of        $100,000
                 visitor center on Cherohala Skyway in
                 Monroe County, TN........................
 1859      OR   Construction of the East Burnside Street      $5,700,000
                 improvements, Portland...................
 1860      AL   Expand to 4 lanes US Highway 278 from         $1,000,000
                 Sulligent to Guin........................
 1861      IL   Francis Cabrini/W. Green Homes CHA Street       $600,000
                 Construction, City of Chicago............
 1862      NY   Plan and construct greenway, bicycle path,   $10,000,000
                 esplanades and ferry landing along New
                 York Bay in Sunset Park, Brooklyn........
 1863      PA   Construct Dubois Regional Medical Center        $600,000
                 Access Road..............................
 1864      NY   To design and construct safe route to         $2,100,000
                 school projects in Brooklyn, Queens and
                 Manhattan, NY............................
 1865      PA   US 30 corridor improvements from PA 896 to    $3,250,000
                 PA 897. Connects PA 41...................
 1866      MD   US 40 Alternate, Middletown Bypass........    $5,000,000
 1867        CA Construction of a smart crosswalk system         $50,000
                 at the intersection of Topanga Canyon
                 Blvd. and Gault St.......................
 1868      WI   Expand USH 51 & STH 29 in Marathon County.    $8,000,000
 1869      PA   Construct 2 flyover ramps and S Linden St     $7,000,000
                 ext for access to industrial sites in the
                 cities of McKeesport and Duquesne........
 1870      NY   Improvements and upgrades on Main Street,       $200,000
                 Beekman, NY..............................
 1871      NY   Construct pedestrian walkway along Route      $7,000,000
                 9A in Hudson River Park, New York City...
 1872      IN   Design engineering, right-of-way              $2,000,000
                 acquistion, and construction for the
                 Grant County Economic Corridor...........
 1873      MN   City of Marshall TH 23 4-Lane Extension...    $3,288,000
 1874      IL   Henry Horner Homes CHA Street                 $1,000,000
                 Construction, City of Chicago............
 1875      TN   Improve circuitry on vehicle protection         $158,000
                 device installed at highway-RR crossing
                 in Knoxville, TN.........................
 1876      NJ   Construct Intersection at Route 46 and        $1,500,000
                 Little Ferry Circle in Little Ferry......
 1877      AR   Improve State Highway 88 (Higdon Ferry        $4,000,000
                 Road) in Hot Springs.....................
 1878      MD   Improve US 1, Washington Boulevard            $1,000,000
                 Corridor in Howard County................
 1879      NY   Downtown Flushing Traffic and Pedestrian      $1,000,000
                 Improvements.............................
 1880      FL   Arlington Expressway Access Rd.,              $1,500,000
                 Jacksonville.............................
 1881        CO Construct arterial on W side of Montrose      $7,500,000
                 to ease traffic congestion on SH 550
                 between Grand Avenue, N/S of city........
 1882        CO North I-25: Denver to Fort Collins            $8,000,000
                 Colorado.................................
 1883        CA Planning for Orange Line Mag Lev from           $350,000
                 downtown Los Angeles to central Orange
                 County...................................
 1884      NJ   Rahway Streetscape Replacement Project....      $500,000
 1885        CT Reconstruct I-95/I-91 interchange and         $2,000,000
                 construct pedestrian walkway, New Haven..
 1886      VA   Blue Ridge Music Center--install lighting/    $1,500,000
                 steps, upgrade existing trail system and
                 equip interpretative center with visitor
                 information..............................
 1887      VA   Ceres Recreation Trail and Center--design       $150,000
                 and construct pedestrian/bicycle trail in
                 community of Ceres and establish trail
                 center...................................
 1888      ME   Construction of trails within the Eastern     $1,000,000
                 Trail Management District................
 1889      GA   1-75 interchanges from north of Tifton to     $1,000,000
                 Turner County line.......................
 1890      GA   City of Savannah, Construct bike and            $200,000
                 pedestrian paths along Heritage Rail.....
 1891      FL   Implementation of the Advanced Traffic        $2,000,000
                 Managament System, Boca Raton, FL........
 1892      TX   Construct reliever route on US 287 South      $4,000,000
                 of Stratford to US 287 North of Stratford
 1893      WI   Construct USH 151 between CTH D and STH       $3,000,000
                 175, Fond du Lac County, WI..............
 1894      OH   Construct transportation enhancement         $10,500,000
                 projects, Toledo.........................
 1895      TX   Contruct grade separation at US 59 and SH     $5,000,000
                 99. Replace the proposed interim
                 cloverleaf ramps at the intersection.....
 1896      MS   Gateways Transportation Enhancement             $250,000
                 Project, Hancock County..................
 1897      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 including in the vicinity of IS X194.....
 1898      OK   Improvements to SH 412P at 412 Interchange    $4,500,000
 1899      FL   Acquire right-of-way and construct East-      $5,000,000
                 West Connector from SR 37 to SR 563 in
                 Lakeland, FL.............................
 1900      WA   Design Valley Mall Blvd for Main St to I-     $6,400,000
                 82 and two I-82 interchanges at Mileposts
                 36 and 38 in Union Gap, WA...............
 1901      WA   Extension of Waaga Way west to Old              $500,000
                 Frontier Rd and construction of a ramp
                 from SR 3 to SR 303......................
 1902      ME   Plan and construct highway access between     $1,000,000
                 US Route 161 and US Route 1 in Madawaska.
 1903        CA Randolph St improvements between              $1,200,000
                 Wilmington Ave and Fishburn Ave in
                 Huntington Park..........................
 1904        CA Reconstruct Azusa Ave and San Gabriel Ave     $2,500,000
                 for two-way traffic in Azusa.............
 1905      KS   Construction of a 1.5 mile alternate truck      $500,000
                 route in Downs, Kansas...................
 1906      AL   Pedestrian Improvements for Columbiana, AL      $100,000
 1907      MN   Reconstruct CSAH 91 from the D.M. and I.R.    $5,000,000
                 Railroad crossing at 8th Street in Duluth
                 to CSAH 56, St Louis County..............
 1908      NY   Construct Wayne County, NY rails to trails      $345,000
                 initiative...............................
 1909      MA   Design and construct signal crossing and        $750,000
                 other safety improvements to Bicycle/
                 Pedestrian Path..........................
 1910      MI   Construction of Nonmotorized Pathway, City      $300,000
                 of Rockwood..............................
 1911      WA   Purchase of scenic easement at I-90 and         $600,000
                 Highway 18...............................
 1912      PA   Reconstruct the SR 33, 512 interchange in     $2,500,000
                 the Borough of Wind Gap..................
 1913      NY   Access improvements for terminal located      $4,000,000
                 on 12th Ave between W. 44th and W. 54th
                 St in Manhattan..........................
 1914      IL   Completion of the Grand Illinois Trail,       $1,292,500
                 Cook County..............................
 1915        CA Construct and improve medians and drainage    $1,700,000
                 on Imperial Highway from west border to
                 east border of city in La Mirada.........
 1916        CT Construct Pomfret Pedestrian Bridge.......      $120,000
 1917      NV   Construct Laughlin Bullhead City Bridge...    $2,000,000
 1918      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition, &       $1,000,000
                 construction of the widening of
                 Pennsylvania Rt. 443 Corridor in Carbon
                 County...................................
 1919      NY   Palisades Interstate Parkway Mitigation         $600,000
                 Measures for New Square..................
 1920        CA Reconstruct and widen Del Amo Blvd to four    $3,000,000
                 lanes between Normandie Ave and New
                 Hampshire Ave, Los Angeles County........
 1921      MN   Reconstruct Unorganized Township Road 488     $1,025,000
                 from CSAH 138, Koochiching County........
 1922      NY   Reconstruction of Empire Boulevard........    $6,400,000
 1923      PA   Reconstruction of PA 309 from Greenwood       $2,500,000
                 Avenue to Welsh Road.....................
 1924      TN   Construction of I-69 in Obion, Dyer,         $14,125,000
                 Lauderdale & Tipton Counties.............
 1925      IL   Design, land acquistion, and construction     $2,000,000
                 of South Main St (IL 2) Corridor from
                 Beltline Rd to Cedar Street in Rockford,
                 IL.......................................
 1926      OH   Grading, paving, roads for the transfer of   $15,000,000
                 rail to truck for the intermodal facility
                 at Rickenbacker Airport..................
 1927      MA   Reconstruction of Pleasant Street,            $2,000,000
                 Watertown................................
 1928      MN   Lake Wobegon Trail corridor from Sauk           $352,000
                 Centre to the Stearns County line........
 1929      RI   Replace Sakonnet Bridge...................    $2,000,000
 1930        CA Conduct study and construct CA State Route    $5,000,000
                 239 from State Route 4 in Brentwood area
                 to I-205 in Tracy area...................
 1931      MA   Geometric improvements, safety                $1,500,000
                 enhancements and signal upgrades at Rt.
                 28 & Rt.106, intersection West
                 Bridgewater..............................
 1932      WA   Fife--Widen 70th Ave. East and Valley Ave.    $1,000,000
                 East.....................................
 1933        CA Construct two right hand turn for               $400,000
                 Byzantine Latino Quarter transit plazas
                 at Normandie and Pico, and Hoover and
                 Pico, Los Angeles........................
 1934      WA   I-90 Two-Way Transit-HOV Project..........    $4,000,000
 1935      AL   Construct Talladega Mountains Natural         $1,000,000
                 Resource Center -an educaational center
                 and hub for hikers, bicyclists, and
                 automobiles..............................
 1936      MD   Gaithersburg, MD Extension of Teachers Way-   $1,400,000
                 Olde Towne Gaithersburg Revitalization...
 1937      IL   Intersection Reconstruction and Bridge        $2,500,000
                 Rehabilitation at IL 60 and Peterson Road
 1938      AK   Planning, design, and EIS of Bradfield        $7,000,000
                 Canal Road...............................
 1939      TX   Reconstruct Clinton Dr. from Federal Rd.     $14,000,000
                 to N. Wayside Dr.........................
 1940      GA   Pave portions of CR 345, CR 44, and CR 45,      $370,000
                 Hancock County...........................
 1941      NY   Deer Avoidance System, to deter deer from       $250,000
                 milepost marker 494.5, Ripley, PA, to
                 304.2., Weedsport, NY along I-90.........
 1942        CA El Camino Real Grand Blvd Initiative in       $3,500,000
                 San Mateo County.........................
 1943        CA Construct Guadalupe River Trail from I-880    $8,000,000
                 to Highway 237 in Santa Clara County.....
 1944      TN   Cocke County, Tennessee SR-32                 $1,000,000
                 reconstruction...........................
 1945      IL   Construct I-80, Ridgeland Ave.                $1,000,000
                 Improvements, Tinley Park................
 1946      KY   Construct Pedestrian Mall and Streetscape     $3,905,000
                 Improvements on Lexington, College,
                 Walnut and Gilespie Sts, Wilmore.........
 1947      PA   PA 23 corridor improvements from US 30 to     $3,000,000
                 US 322...................................
 1948      NJ   Replacement and realignment of Amwell Road    $1,055,000
                 Bridge over Neshanic River...............
 1949      FL   City of Wilton Manors Powerline Road            $375,000
                 Streetscape Enhancement Project..........
 1950      TX   Construct SH 199 (Henderson St.) through      $8,000,000
                 the Trinity Uptown Project between the
                 West Fork and Clear Fork of the Trinity
                 River in Fort Worth......................
 1951      IN   Construction of multi-use paths, Town of        $250,000
                 Fishers, Indiana.........................
 1952      OH   Construct White Pond Dr. project in Akron.    $1,000,000
 1953      MN   Design and right of way acquisition for I-    $1,000,000
                 35E-CSAH 14 Main Street Interchange, city
                 of Lino Lakes, Minnesota.................
 1954      OR   Expand storage facilities in Eugene to        $2,500,000
                 support transportation enhancement
                 activities throughout the state..........
 1955        CA Improvements to US-101 ramps between            $400,000
                 Winnetka Ave. and Van Nuys Blvd..........
 1956      IN   Acquire right of way for and construct        $3,000,000
                 University Parkway from Upper Mt. Vernon
                 Road to SR 66............................
 1957        CA Pine Avenue extension from Route 71 to        $8,500,000
                 Euclid Avenue in the City of Chino,
                 California...............................
 1958      MO   Confluence Greenway Land Acquisition for        $700,000
                 Riverfront Trail development in St. Louis
 1959      TN   Retrofit noise abatement walls in Davidson    $2,500,000
                 County...................................
 1960      MA   Road Improvements between Museum Road &       $4,000,000
                 Forsyth Way..............................
 1961      MI   Commerce, Haggerty Road from 14 Mile to       $1,500,000
                 Richardson...............................
 1962      WI   Expand STH 23, County Highway OJ to US       $15,000,000
                 Highway 41, WI...........................
 1963      FL   Construct interchange at I-95 and Matanzas    $1,000,000
                 Woods Parkway, Flagler County............
 1964      IL   Miller Road Widening and Improvement,         $7,955,000
                 McHenry..................................
 1965       NC  Construct Neuse River Trail in Johnston       $2,000,000
                 County...................................
 1966      TX   Construct landscaping and other pedestrian    $2,000,000
                 amenities in segments of the Old Spanish
                 Trail and Griggs Road rights-of-way......
 1967      NY   Construction of and improvements to Union     $1,000,000
                 Road and Walden Avenue in Cheektowaga....
 1968      LA   Construction of West Covington Bypass-LA      $4,000,000
                 21 Widening..............................
 1969      MS   Construct Byrd Parkway Extension, Petal...    $1,500,000
 1970      NY   Intermodal transportation improvements in     $4,000,000
                 Coney Island.............................
 1971      MN   Construct one mile of new roadway and a       $3,280,000
                 bridge crossing the DM&IR railroad
                 tracks, and construct connector between
                 CSAH 14 and CSAH 284, Proctor............
 1972      NH   Construct Park and Ride, Exit 5 on I-93--     $2,000,000
                 Londonderry, NH..........................
 1973      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Exeter Borough, Luzerne County........
 1974      PA   Extension of River Road in Reading, PA to     $1,500,000
                 provide access to major industial and
                 brownfields sites........................
 1975      AK   Point MacKenzie in Matanuska-Susitna          $1,000,000
                 Borough plan and design road access......
 1976      TX   Repair 4.35 miles of Lake Ridge Parkway.      $6,000,000
                 Widen roadway along with 2 bridges from 4
                 lanes to 6 across Joe Poole Lake in Grand
                 Prairie, TX..............................
 1977      IL   Robert Taylor Homes CHA Street                  $550,000
                 Construction, City of Chicago............
 1978      OR   Rockwood Town Center for Stark Street from    $3,000,000
                 190th to 197th for pedestrian, bicycle
                 and transit facilities and safety
                 mitigation...............................
 1979      PA   Route 89 Curve Realignment one mile north       $300,000
                 of Titusville on Route 89................
 1980      FL   Sand Lake Road Improvements between           $6,000,000
                 Presidents Drive and I-4.................
 1981      MI   Sault Ste. Marie, Reconstruct East Spruce       $950,000
                 Street with drainage, curb, gutter,
                 pavement, traffic control devices........
 1982      MI   Study and construct I-96/US31-Sternberg       $6,000,000
                 Road area improvements...................
 1983      PA   Provide access to HOV ramp from Reedsdale     $2,000,000
                 Street with traffic signals, pavement
                 markings, lane control and fast acting
                 gates....................................
 1984      IL   The extension of MacArthur Blvd. from         $1,500,000
                 Wabash to Iron Bridge Road. Springfield..
 1985      IL   Construct Cedar Creek Linear Park Trail,        $500,000
                 Quincy...................................
 1986      IN   Conduct study for US 50 Corridor                $300,000
                 Improvements, Dearborn County Indiana....
 1987      IL   Design, land acquistion, and construct        $2,000,000
                 West State St (US Business 20) from
                 Meridan Rd to Rockton Ave in Rockford, IL
 1988        CA The Foothill South Project, construct 16     $10,000,000
                 miles of a six-lane limited access
                 highway system...........................
 1989      MI   Construct Road Improvements to Miller Rd.     $3,000,000
                 from I-75 to Linden Rd. Flint Township...
 1990        CA State Route 99 improvements at Sheldon        $4,000,000
                 Road.....................................
 1991      KY   The Kentucky Multi-Highway Preservation       $1,600,000
                 Project..................................
 1992      NY   Town of Warwick, NY. Bridge replacement on      $175,000
                 Buttermilk Falls Rd......................
 1993      TN   Improve existing two lane highway to a       $10,000,000
                 four lane facility along the US-412
                 Corridor west of Natchez Trace to US-43
                 at Mt. Pleasant..........................
 1994      NY   Town of Warwick,NY East Shore Road              $800,000
                 reconstruction...........................
 1995      FL   Traffic Reconfiguration of SR 934 and US 1    $1,000,000
                 Route, Miami.............................
 1996      PA   For design, engineering, ROW acquisition,       $300,000
                 and construction of the third phase of
                 the Marshalls Creek Bypass Project in
                 Monroe County, Pennsylvania..............
 1997      MI   Construct North Central Muskegon County       $2,300,000
                 Corridor Improvements at US31 and Russell
                 Road.....................................
 1998      OH   Reconstruct I-75/I-475 Interchange, Toledo    $3,000,000
 1999      NY   College Point 20th Avenue Streetscapes          $700,000
                 Improvements Project in Queens...........
 2000      OH   Construct a 4 lane limited access road to       $750,000
                 link Newcomerstown and Cadiz.............
 2001        CO Construct trail to extend the Pequonnock        $500,000
                 Valley rail-trail through Trumbull and
                 into Bridgeport, CT......................
 2002      MS   Plan and Construct Star Landing Corridor      $2,000,000
                 from US 78 to US 61......................
 2003      TX   I Road Between Nolana Loop and FM 495 in      $1,900,000
                 Hidalgo County...........................
 2004       NC  North Carolina. Add passing lanes and         $3,000,000
                 safety improvements to US Hwy. 64 in
                 Transylvania County......................
 2005      TN   improve streetscape and pavement repair,        $300,000
                 Blount County, TN........................
 2006        CT Reconstruction of State Route 111 from        $1,500,000
                 Purdy Hill Road to Fan Hill Road, Monroe,
                 CT.......................................
 2007      IL   Resurface Trumbull Ave. and Homan Ave.,         $400,000
                 Evergreen Park...........................
 2008      GA   HWY 78 Corridor Improvement Gwinnett            $500,000
                 County...................................
 2009      TX   Construct Southwest Bypass in Georgetown,     $4,000,000
                 Texas, between SH 29 and Ranch Road 2243.
 2010      MO   To improve U.S. 54 to a four lane highway     $1,000,000
                 from the Osage River to MO Route KK......
 2011      MS   Upgrade roads in Mayersville (U.S. Hwy 14       $200,000
                 and 1), Issaquena County.................
 2012      MA   Gainsborough St & St. Botolph St.             $1,000,000
                 Improvements.............................
 2013      IN   Construct US 31 Kokomo Corridor Project       $1,000,000
                 for Kokomo Howard County, Indiana........
 2014      OH   Construction of Tri-State Outer Belt in       $2,000,000
                 Lawrence County..........................
 2015      PA   Completion of I-79-Kirwin Heights             $2,000,000
                 Interchange and construction of retaining
                 walls, bridge and new ramps..............
 2016      OH   Construction of the Carroll Area              $4,500,000
                 Interchange in Fairfield County..........
 2017        CA Construct the Silicon Valley                  $8,000,000
                 Transportation Incident Management Center
                 in San Jose..............................
 2018        CA Design and Construction Camino Tassajara      $1,000,000
                 Crown Canyon to East Town Project,
                 Danville, CA.............................
 2019      NY   Traffic mitigation on Bridge Street and         $150,000
                 Maple Avenue, Florida, NY................
 2020      WI   North 28th Street Phase 2 roadway safety      $1,280,000
                 improvements from Weeks Avenue to Hill
                 Avenue in Superior.......................
 2021       NC  Upgrade US 74 in Columbus County..........    $7,000,000
 2022      MS   Upgrade US 78 to Interstated Standards        $6,000,000
                 from the MS-TN state line to the MS-AL
                 state line...............................
 2023      IN   Improve Bailie Street, Kentland...........      $320,000
 2024        CA Realignment of La Brea Avenue to reduce       $3,640,000
                 congestion, City of Inglewood............
 2025      IL   Resurface Elston Avenue from Milwaukee to     $2,000,000
                 Pulaski, Chicago.........................
 2026      TN   Sullivan, Washington Counties, Tennessee      $2,000,000
                 SR-75 widening...........................
 2027      GA   US 17/SR 404 Spur, Back River bridge          $4,000,000
                 replacement, Savannah....................
 2028      MS   US 98 access improvements & new I-59          $5,000,000
                 interchange, Lamar County................
 2029      VA   Construct South Airport Connector,              $500,000
                 Richmond International Airport...........
 2030      NY   City of Peeskill,NY Street Resurfacing          $130,000
                 Program. Riverview Avenue................
 2031      GA   SR 400 at SR 120 Old Milton Parkway           $1,000,000
                 intersection improvement Fulton County
                 Georgia..................................
 2032      MA   East Boston Haul Road Construction........    $6,000,000
 2033      NY   Town of Goshen Orzeck Road reconstruction.      $400,000
 2034      VA   Revitalize Main Street in Dumfries........      $725,000
 2035      FL   Replace Platt Street Bridge...............    $3,000,000
 2036      FL   Access Rd. Streetscaping, Sanford Airport.      $500,000
 2037      NY   Rockland County and City of Yonkers to        $1,000,000
                 Lower-Manhattan Ferry Boat project.......
 2038       SC  Complete construction of Palmetto Parkway     $7,000,000
                 (I-520) Extension (Phase II) to I-20.....
 2039      NM   US 62-180 Reconstruction, Texas State Line    $5,000,000
                 to Carlsbad..............................
 2040      IL   For US Rt 30 intersection signals, turn &     $7,000,000
                 deceleration lanes btwn Williams St & IL
                 Rt 43 incl. 80th Ave, Wolf Rd, Lincoln
                 Way HS & Locust St.......................
 2041      OH   Construct Orchard Lane to Factory Road          $500,000
                 Connector, Greene County.................
 2042      TX   Construct a bridge impact protection            $500,000
                 system for TxDOT.........................
 2043       NC  Design and construction of the Airport        $5,000,000
                 Area Roadway Network, High Point, North
                 Carolina.................................
 2044      VA   Repair Colorado Street bridge in Salem,       $1,750,000
                 Virginia.................................
 2045        CA Project to evaluate air quality and             $100,000
                 congestion mitigation benefits of a
                 Hybrid Utility Vehicle in Santa Barbara
                 County...................................
 2046      PA   Mill Street improvements, Borough of            $900,000
                 Lansdale.................................
 2047      MN   Construction of County State Aid Highway      $3,200,000
                 21, Scott County, MN.....................
 2048      PA   Safety improvement to Chesnuts Turn-SR        $2,600,000
                 475, Fulton County, Pa...................
 2049      TX   Two direct connectors in Houston, Texas       $5,000,000
                 between IH 10 and SH 99, The Grand
                 Parkway..................................
 2050      MO   Upgrade of Rt. 71 from Pineville to          $15,000,000
                 Arkansas State Line......................
 2051        CA Improve interstates and roads part of the    $25,000,000
                 Inland Empire Goods Movement Gateway
                 project in and around the former Norton
                 Air Force Base...........................
 2052      IL   Preconstruction activities for Sangamon         $500,000
                 Valley Bicycle Trail (IL)................
 2053      MI   St. Clair County Parks is working with 13       $500,000
                 local units to develop the 54-mile Bridge-
                 to-Bay trail.............................
 2054      NJ   New Jersey Underground Railroad for             $320,000
                 preservation, enhancement and promotion
                 of sites in New Jersey...................
 2055        CA Construction of an interchange at Lammers     $1,000,000
                 Road and I-205, Tracy, CA................
 2056      MN   Right of way acquisition for St. Cloud        $3,000,000
                 Metro Area Project Development Studies...
 2057      NY   Improve CR 39 from NY 27 to NY 27A,           $3,000,000
                 Suffolk County...........................
 2058      PA   Street improvements, Borough of Ambler....      $650,000
 2059      KY   Reconstruction of KY 61 from Greensburg in    $1,000,000
                 Green County to Columbia in Adair County.
 2060      TX   Construct Loop 12-IH 35E and SH 183 west      $1,000,000
                 extension to MacArthur, Irving, Texas....
 2061       NC  To plan, design, and construct the segment    $1,000,000
                 of Berkeley Blvd. from Royal Avenue to
                 Hew Hope Rd (SR 1003) in Goldsboro, NC...
 2062      OH   Upgrade Manchester Rd. in Akron...........    $4,000,000
 2063      IL   St. Charles Road, The Village of Bellwood.    $1,000,000
 2064      TN   Engineer,design & construction of             $9,000,000
                 connector rd from I-75 interchange across
                 Enterprise South Industrial Park to Hwy
                 58 in Hamilton County....................
 2065      TX   Construct 4 lane divided roadway along SH     $2,000,000
                 71 from the Perdernales River to Bee
                 Creek....................................
 2066        CT I-84 Danbury Exits 1-11 Upgrade               $3,400,000
                 Interchanges.............................
 2067        CA Complete the engineering design and           $5,000,000
                 acquire the right-of-way needed for the
                 Arch-Sperry project in San Joaquin County
 2068      UT   Increase lane capacity on bridge over         $3,000,000
                 Virgin River on Washington Fields Road in
                 Washington...............................
 2069      NY   Installation of Utica Traffic Signal          $3,000,000
                 System...................................
 2070       NC  To construct an interchange at an existing    $4,000,000
                 grade separation at SR 1602 (Old
                 Stantonsburg Rd.) and U.S. 264 Bypass in
                 Wilson County, NC........................
 2071      WA   US12 Burbank to Walla Walla: Construct new    $4,300,000
                 four lane highway for portion of US 12...
 2072      TX   Construct direct connectors on US 59          $4,000,000
                 Intersection of US 59, Business 59 and US
                 77 (previously Loop 463).................
 2073      OH   Structural improvements to two bridges          $500,000
                 over the Zimber Ditch between 38th St.
                 and Whipple Ave. in Canton, Ohio.........
 2074      OK   US-281, Widen US-281 from the new US-281      $1,000,000
                 Spur North to Geary Canadian County, OK..
 2075      MI   City of Negaunee, Croix Street                $1,125,000
                 reconstruction-Streetscape and
                 resurfacing from US 41 to Maas Street....
 2076      KS   Construct I-35 and Lone Elm Road              $5,000,000
                 interchange and widen I-35 from 151st St.
                 to 159th St., Olathe.....................
 2077      MI   Integrated highway realignment and grade        $500,000
                 separations at Port Huron, MI to
                 eliminate road blockages from NAFTA rail
                 traffic..................................
 2078      OK   US-60, Widen US-60 between Bartlesville       $3,000,000
                 and Pawhuska, Osage County, OK...........
 2079      WA   Construct an off-ramp from I-5 to the           $500,000
                 intersection of Alderwood Mall Blvd and
                 Alderwood Mall Pkwy......................
 2080        CA Reduce congestion and boost economies         $7,000,000
                 through safer access to the coast by
                 realigning Hwy 299 between Trinity and
                 Shasta Counties..........................
 2081      IL   Pre-construction and construction             $1,000,000
                 activities on US 45/LaGrange Road from
                 131st Street to 179th Street.............
 2082      AR   Van Buren, Arkansas--Widen and reconstruct    $3,000,000
                 Rena Road................................
 2083      GA   Construction of infrastructure for inter-     $6,000,000
                 parcel access, median upgrades, lighting,
                 and beautification along Highway 78
                 corridor.................................
 2084        CA Construct Alviso Bay Trail from Gold          $1,000,000
                 Street in historic Alviso to San Tomas
                 Aquino Creek in San Jose.................
 2085      MS   Construct bicycle and trolley path,             $850,000
                 Hattiesburg..............................
 2086      WI   Construct a bike and pedestrian bridge          $300,000
                 across STH 100 at the 1800 block of S.
                 108th Street, West Allis.................
 2087      IL   Increasing the height on the IL Rt. 82        $3,000,000
                 Railroad Underpass in Geneseo, IL........
 2088       NC  US-70 Goldsboro Bypass....................    $1,000,000
 2089        CA Vasco Road Safety Improvements, Contra        $1,000,000
                 Costa Transportation Authority and the
                 County of Alameda Public Works,
                 California...............................
 2090      NY   Downtown Flushing Multi-Modal Connection      $1,100,000
                 Project, Queens..........................
 2091      MD   Construct Safety and Operations               $2,500,000
                 Improvements at MLK Jr. Blvd. and W.
                 Baltimore Street in Baltimore............
 2092      NY   Rehabilitate Riis Park Boardwalk..........    $1,300,000
 2093      TX   Construct 25 mile stretch of the 177-mile    $11,500,000
                 loop, between IH-45 south and SH-288.....
 2094      UT   Construction of Midvalley Highway, Tooele     $1,000,000
                 County, Utah.............................
 2095      WA   Improve Willapa Hills bicycle and               $700,000
                 pedestrian trail between Chehalis and
                 Pacific County...........................
 2096      PA   Design and construct interchange and          $6,000,000
                 related improvements at I 83 Exit 18.....
 2097      VA   Northern Virginia Potomac Heritage            $1,000,000
                 National Scenic Trail....................
 2098       NC  Construct new traffic path to receive and     $3,000,000
                 dispatch trucks from US 74, US 76, US
                 421, and US 17S..........................
 2099      OK   Construction of Midwest City Pedestrian       $1,000,000
                 Walkway..................................
 2100      TX   Construct parallel bridge for SH 35 over      $1,000,000
                 Capano Bay...............................
 2101      GA   Construct access roads on Airport Loop        $2,000,000
                 road in Hapeville........................
 2102      TN   Construct 2nd Creek Greenway, Knoxville,        $685,700
                 Tennessee................................
 2103      NE   Design, right-of-way and construction for     $2,500,000
                 the Louisville Bypass, Nebraska..........
 2104      HI   Construct Honoapiilani Highway Realignment    $3,000,000
 2105      TN   Hamblen County, Tennessee US 25E              $1,000,000
                 interchange improvements.................
 2106      IL   Construction of a new bicycle-pedestrian      $1,200,000
                 bridge in Wayne, IL......................
 2107      PA   David Lawrence Convention Center Phase IV-    $1,200,000
                 reconstruction of roadways assoc. with HQ
                 hotel project............................
 2108        CO I-70 and SH 58 Interchange: Reconstruction    $9,000,000
                 of existing ramps, building of missing
                 ramps and ROW acquisition................
 2109      OH   Reconstruct U.S. Route 6 (Lake Road).         $2,000,000
                 Rocky River..............................
 2110      WA   Construct .6 mile span over I-5 in            $5,000,000
                 Thurston County to connect Chehalis
                 Western Trail............................
 2111      IL   Extend Frank Scott Parkway East Road to       $2,800,000
                 Scott AFB, St. Clair County..............
 2112      OH   Reconfigure I-480 and Transportation Blvd.      $750,000
                 Interchange, Garfield Heights............
 2113      NY   Rehabilitation of Route 100 from Virginia     $1,100,000
                 Road to Westchester Community College....
 2114      TN   Restoration of historic L&N Depot, McMinn        $20,000
                 County, Tennessee........................
 2115      SD   Resurface 10 miles of US18 from Okreek to     $2,300,000
                 Carter on the Rosebud Indian Reservation.
 2116        CA Route 198 Expansion, from SR 99 to SR 43..    $3,000,000
 2117      WA   SR 543 Interstate 5 to International          $2,500,000
                 Boundary Enhancement in Blaine...........
 2118      MD   Rockville, MD Construction of Maryland        $4,000,000
                 Avenue and Market Street Intermodal
                 Access Project...........................
 2119      MN   US Highway 212 expansion from Carver Cnty     $1,000,000
                 Rd 147 to Cologne and from Cologne to
                 Norwood Young America....................
 2120      VA   Vienna, VA Maple Avenue improvement           $1,650,000
                 project..................................
 2121      IL   Village of South Jacksonville--West             $952,572
                 Vandalia Road upgrades...................
 2122      AS   Village road improvements for Launiusaelua    $3,000,000
                 and Ituau counties in the Central
                 district.................................
 2123      AS   Village road improvements for Tualauta,       $3,000,000
                 Tualatai, Aitulagi, Fofo, and Alataua
                 counties in the Western district.........
 2124      FL   Destiny Rd Reconstruction, Eatonville.....    $1,000,000
 2125      KY   Construct New Technology Triangle Access      $2,000,000
                 Road, Campbell County, Kentucky..........
 2126      NY   Town of Wawayanda reconstruction of             $500,000
                 McVeigh Road.............................
 2127      VA   Virginia Creeper Trail--Trail needs,            $850,000
                 including construction of restroom
                 facilities at Watauga and Alvarado and
                 parking expansion at Watauga.............
 2128        CA Construct grade separation on State          $16,000,000
                 College Blvd. at the Burlington Northern
                 Santa Fe railroad, Fullerton.............
 2129      MA   Warren Street--Blue Hill Avenue...........    $3,000,000
 2130      FL   Design and construct Dunn Avenue              $2,000,000
                 Extension, Volusia County................
 2131        CA Construct operational and safety              $2,500,000
                 improvements to I-880 N at 29th Ave in
                 Oakland..................................
 2132      WA   U.S. 395, North Spokane Corridor              $5,800,000
                 Improvements.............................
 2133      NY   Route 531 Expansion Spencerport-Brockport,    $7,400,000
                 4-lane Highway is a project to extend Rt.
                 531......................................
 2134      OR   Columbia Intermodal Corridor for rail        $12,000,000
                 congestion relief, improved intersections
                 and access to Interstate-5 for trucks,
                 and grade-separate road from rail,
                 Portland.................................
 2135      OH   Interchange and related road improvements     $2,000,000
                 to SR 44 in Painesville, OH..............
 2136      GA   Greene County, Georgia conversion of I-20     $1,200,000
                 and Carey Station Road overpass to full
                 interchange..............................
 2137      IL   Pioneer Parkway upgrade in Peoria--           $2,000,000
                 Extension from Allen Road to Route 91....
 2138      MS   Construct historic bicycle path,                $150,000
                 Pascagoula...............................
 2139      PA   Crows Run Relocation from SR 65 to Freedom    $3,850,000
                 Crider Road..............................
 2140      OH   Replace the Edward N. Waldvogel Viaduct in   $10,000,000
                 Cincinnati...............................
 2141       NC  Construct I-540 from NC 55 South to NC 55    $11,000,000
                 North....................................
 2142      NY   Roadway, streetscape, pedestrian, and         $4,000,000
                 parking improvements to the Buffalo
                 Niagara Medical Campus, Buffalo..........
 2143      VA   Upgrade DOT crossing #470515H to constant       $150,000
                 warning devices in Halifax...............
 2144      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Avoca Borough, Luzerne County.........
 2145      WA   Bridge Modification and Interstate Highway    $4,000,000
                 Protection Project, Skagit River, in
                 Skagit County............................
 2146      TN   Construct welcome center, Macon County....      $200,000
 2147        CA Construction of new roadway lighting on       $1,000,000
                 major transportation corridors in the
                 Northwest San Fernando Valley............
 2148      MO   Interchange design and construction for       $1,000,000
                 the Main Street Extension at I-55, Cape
                 Girardeau County.........................
 2149        CA Replace SR 22 interchanges, construct HOV     $6,000,000
                 lanes, and lengthen bridges in Garden
                 Gove.....................................
 2150      IL   Construct I 290, The Village of Oak Park..    $1,000,000
 2151      RI   Rehabilitation of Bridge Number 550 In        $5,500,000
                 Pawtucket................................
 2152      WA   Complete analysis, permitting and right of      $600,000
                 way procurement for I-5/SR 501
                 Interchange replacement in Ridgefield....
 2153        CA Design and construct new interchange at       $2,000,000
                 Potrero Blvd and State Route 60 in
                 Beaumont.................................
 2154      TN   construction of a pedestrian bridge in        $1,000,000
                 Alcoa, TN................................
 2155      WV   Construct 4 lane improvements on U.S.        $44,250,000
                 Route 35 in Mason County.................
 2156      OH   Construct Grade Separation at Front             $500,000
                 Street, Berea............................
 2157        CA Crenshaw Blvd. Rehabilitation, 182nd St.        $800,000
                 190th St.; and Crenshaw Blvd. at 182nd
                 St. Fwy on-off Ramp Capacity Enhancement,
                 City of Torrance.........................
 2158        CA Construct Interchange at Intersection of      $5,000,000
                 SR 44 and Stillwater Road................
 2159      MN   CSAH 61 improvements, City of Coleraine...      $490,000
 2160      KY   Expansion to four lanes of Hwy 55 and Hwy    $10,000,000
                 555 Heartland Parkway in Taylor County...
 2161      KS   Interchange improvement at K-7 and 55th       $5,000,000
                 St. in Johnson Co........................
 2162        CA Construct truck lane on Baughman Road from      $550,000
                 State Route 78/86 to Forrester Road,
                 Westmorland..............................
 2163      AZ   Construct bridges at Aspen St., at Birch      $3,000,000
                 St., at Cherry St., at Bonito St., at
                 Thorpe St................................
 2164        CT Construct Putnam curb cuts................       $50,000
 2165      OH   Canton, OH Cleveland Ave. bridge                $400,000
                 replacement over the Nimishilen Creek....
 2166      MN   Design and right of way acquisition for I-    $3,000,000
                 35 and CSAH 2 interchange in Forest Lake,
                 MN.......................................
 2167      PA   Complete the connection of the American      $10,000,000
                 Parkway between the east and west sides
                 of the Lehigh River with bridge and
                 interchanges.............................
 2168      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $250,000
                 construction of street improvements,
                 parking & safety enhancements Main &
                 Parsonage Streets in Pittston............
 2169      TX   Grade separation bridges at Wintergreen       $8,200,000
                 Rd. and Millers Ferry Rd. in Hutchins and
                 Pleasant Run Rd. and Millers Ferry Rd. in
                 Wilmer...................................
 2170      GA   I-20 HOV lanes from Evans Mill Road to        $1,500,000
                 Salem Road, Dekalb and Rockdale Counties.
 2171      NV   Improve Las Vegas Beltway-Airport             $4,000,000
                 Connector Interchange....................
 2172        CA Oregon-Page Mill expressway Improvements      $4,000,000
                 between US 101 and SR 82, Palo Alto......
 2173      MA   Design and construct the Quinebaug River      $1,000,000
                 Rail Trail Bikeway.......................
 2174        CA Park Boulevard-Harbor Drive Rail Grade        $1,000,000
                 Separation, San Diego....................
 2175      MN   Paul Bunyan Trail, Walker to Bemidji            $700,000
                 segment..................................
 2176        CA Construct road surface improvements, and      $1,400,000
                 improve road safety from Brawley Water
                 plant to HWY 86 to 9th Street to 18th
                 Street, Brawley..........................
 2177      TX   Improvements to FM 1017 in Hebbronville...      $500,000
 2178        CA Alameda Corridor East Gateway to America     $15,500,000
                 Trade Corridor Project, Highway-Railgrade
                 separation along 35 mile corridor from
                 Alameda Corridor (Hobart Junction) to Los
                 Angeles/San Bernardino County Line.......
 2179      GA   Phase III Streetscape-Columbus............    $1,000,000
 2180      IL   Pre-construction and construction IL 15       $6,960,000
                 over Wabash River at Mt. Carmel..........
 2181      NY   Queens, Bronx, and Kings, and Richmond        $6,250,000
                 County Graffiti Elimination Program
                 including Kings Highway from Ocean
                 Parkway to McDonald Avenue...............
 2182      IA   Improvements at the IA 146 and I 80           $1,000,000
                 interchange, Grinnell....................
 2183      TX   Construct Grade separation at US 277 in       $5,000,000
                 Eagle Pass...............................
 2184      LA   Plan, design, land acquisition, and           $2,750,000
                 construction for improved access to I-10
                 and US 61/River Road in St. John the
                 Baptist and in Ascension Parish on the LA
                 22 Corridor..............................
 2185      KS   Construction of a two-lane on a four-lane    $12,800,000
                 right of way bypass with controlled
                 access on US-400 at Dodge City...........
 2186      MN   Reconstruct CR 203 between US 10 and CSAH       $336,000
                 1, Morrison County.......................
 2187      NY   Reconstruction of York Street Industrial      $3,500,000
                 Corridor Project, Auburn, NY.............
 2188      NY   Construction of and improvements to Route     $1,000,000
                 62 in the Village of Hamburg.............
 2189      IN   Downtown road improvements, Indianapolis..   $22,500,000
 2190      AL   Construct pedestrian urban-edge riverwalk     $1,500,000
                 in Montgomery, AL........................
 2191      PA   Johnstown, Pennsylvania, West End bypass      $5,000,000
                 safety improvements......................
 2192        CA Construction of traffic and pedestrian        $2,000,000
                 safety improvements in Yucca Valley......
 2193        CA 710 Freeway Study to Evaluate Technical       $3,000,000
                 Feasibility and Impacts of a Tunnel
                 Alternative to Close 710 Freeway Gap.....
 2194        CA Greenleaf Right of Way Community              $4,000,000
                 Enhancement Project-design and construct
                 bikeways, pedestrian walkways and upgrade
                 signalization Compton....................
 2195      KY   Improve Prospect Street Pedestrian Access,    $2,750,000
                 Berea....................................
 2196      OH   Construct Crocker Stearns Connection,           $900,000
                 North Olmsted and Westlake...............
 2197      NY   Construction of and improvements to Seneca      $600,000
                 Street in Buffalo........................
 2198        CA Avalon Boulevard/I-405 Interchange            $6,000,000
                 modification project, Carson.............
 2199      IL   Construct Illinois Route 336 from Macomb      $2,000,000
                 to Peoria................................
 2200       NC  North Carolina. Pack Sqaure Pedestrian and    $4,000,000
                 Roadway Improvements, Asheville..........
 2201      PA   Provide pedestrian and water access to        $1,100,000
                 Convention Center from surrounding
                 neighborhoods............................
 2202      NY   Reconstruction of Times and Duffy Squares     $1,500,000
                 in New York City.........................
 2203      LA   Construction of I-10 Access Road (Crowley)    $1,100,000
 2204      NY   Repaving of I-86 in towns of Coldspring,     $10,000,000
                 Randolph, Allegany, and Olean; City of
                 Olean; Village of Randolph in Cattaraugus
                 County...................................
 2205      PA   Replace Bridge, S.R. 106, Tunkhannock           $800,000
                 Creek Bridge 2, Clifford Township,
                 Susquehanna County.......................
 2206      NJ   Replace Route 7-Wittpen Bridge, Hudson        $1,000,000
                 County...................................
 2207      MN   Right-of-Way acquisition for 8th Street       $4,000,000
                 North & Pinecone Road....................
 2208      IL   For Village of Lemont to modernize and          $350,000
                 improve the intersection of McCarthy
                 Road, Derby Road, and Archer Avenue......
 2209        CA Construct I-80 HOV lanes and interchange      $1,000,000
                 in Vallejo...............................
 2210      PA   Rail Crossing signalization upgrade, East       $206,300
                 Wesner Road, Maidencreek Twp, Berks
                 County...................................
 2211      OH   Construct road projects and transportation    $6,480,000
                 enhancements as part of RiverScape Phase
                 III, Montgomery County, Ohio.............
 2212      TN   Riverside Drive Cobblestone Restoration       $1,000,000
                 and Walkway, Memphis.....................
 2213      TX   Road grade separation at Fairmont Parkway     $5,000,000
                 over Southern Pacific Rail road..........
 2214      PA   Construct additional northbound lane on       $1,650,000
                 Rte 28 between Harmar and Creighton
                 Interchange..............................
 2215      NJ   Roadway and intersection modifications on     $1,000,000
                 New Jersey Route 82......................
 2216      OH   Jackson Township, Ohio. Intersection          $2,000,000
                 improvements at Fulton Dr. and Wales.....
 2217      GA   Rockdale County Veteran's Park-- create         $500,000
                 park trails..............................
 2218      MA   Construct the Blackstone River Bikeway and    $2,000,000
                 Worcester Bikeway Pavilion between
                 Providence, RI and Worcester, MA.........
 2219      OH   Improvements to SR 91 in City of              $1,950,000
                 Twinsburg, OH............................
 2220      TX   Completion of US 77 relief route around       $3,000,000
                 City of Robstown.........................
 2221      NY   Improve Maple Avenue, Smithtown...........    $1,000,000
 2222      HI   Replace and Rehabilitate Kamehameha           $1,000,000
                 Highway Bridges, Island of Oahu..........
 2223      TX   SH71 from W of FM 20 to Loop 150, Bastrop     $2,000,000
                 County...................................
 2224      IN   Construct US 31 Plymouth to South Bend       $11,000,000
                 Freeway Project in Marshall and St.
                 Joseph Counties, Indiana.................
 2225      LA   Plan and develop a four-lane roadway,           $200,000
                 Jeanerette to US 90 connection...........
 2226      LA   Construct I-12 and LA 1088 Interchange....    $3,000,000
 2227        CA 4 lane widening/safety improvements on        $3,660,000
                 State Route 25 from Hollister to Gilroy..
 2228      NY   Comprehensive traffic congestion                $750,000
                 mitigation study of Hauppauge Industrial
                 Park and surrounding area................
 2229      NY   Develop an identity and signage program       $1,000,000
                 for the Erie Canalway National Heritage
                 Corridor.................................
 2230        CO Dillon Drive Overpass at Interstate 25 in     $4,000,000
                 Pueblo...................................
 2231      NY   Improvements at highway-rail crossings        $1,000,000
                 along the Southern Tier Extension
                 Railroad in Allegany, Cattaraugus, and
                 Steuben Counties.........................
 2232      FL   Depot Ave. Enhancements, Gainesville......    $6,000,000
 2233        CA Interstate 15 and Winchester Road             $2,000,000
                 Interchange Project......................
 2234      PA   Construct the Eastern Inner Loop in Centre     $5000,000
                 County around State College, PA..........
 2235      NJ   Streetscape Improvements along Berlin road    $1,000,000
                 between Gibbsboro Road and White Horse
                 Road in Lindenwold Borough...............
 2236      FL   Conduct planning and engineering for SR 70    $2,000,000
                 widening in Hardee, DeSoto and Okeechobee
 2237      GA   Streetscape-Albany........................      $500,000
 2238      GA   Streetscape-Richland......................      $200,000
 2239      MO   Construct four lanes for Route 5 in Camden   $10,000,000
                 County...................................
 2240      IL   Improve Cottage Grove intersection, South     $1,000,000
                 Chicago Avenue and 71st Street...........
 2241      NY   Study, design and reconstruction of           $1,000,000
                 pedestrian walkways, the Bronx...........
 2242      MS   Upgrade roads in Anguilla and Rolling           $750,000
                 Fork, Sharkey County.....................
 2243      TX   For center to center communication link       $1,000,000
                 between highway traffic transportation
                 management centers.......................
 2244      OH   Upgrade the interchange of Interstates 270    $4,000,000
                 and 71 in Franklin County, Ohio..........
 2245        CA US 101 Corridor Improvements--Route 280 to    $5,000,000
                 the Capitol-Yerba Buena Interchange......
 2246        CA Rancho Vista Blvd Widening Project........    $3,500,000
 2247      NJ   Newark Access Variable Message Signage          $500,000
                 System...................................
 2248      IA   Construct SW Connector, West Des Moines...    $2,000,000
 2249      IA   US 30 reconstruction , near Tama..........    $4,000,000
 2250      GA   Construction of interchange on I-985 north    $4,000,000
                 of SR-13, Hall County Georgia............
 2251      MI   Marquette County, Realignment of 3200 feet      $500,000
                 of County Road 492 from US-41 north to
                 County Road HD...........................
 2252      WI   Realign USH 8 near Cameron, Barron County.    $2,000,000
 2253      PA   Restoration of PA422, in Berks County,        $1,000,000
                 including slab repair and diamond
                 grinding.................................
 2254        CA Monte Vista Avenue Grade Separation,          $2,000,000
                 Montclair, California....................
 2255      NY   Deploy intermodal chassis ITS project in      $2,000,000
                 New York.................................
 2256      NY   Reconstruction of Route 590 in the Town of    $6,200,000
                 Irondequoit, NY..........................
 2257      NY   Design and Construction of Downtown           $2,000,000
                 Jamestown Connector Trail................
 2258      LA   Further construction to improve draining      $3,300,000
                 at Clearview Parkway (LA 3152) and
                 Earhart Expressway (LA 3139).............
 2259      MI   Houghton County, Rehabilitate 2 piers and       $270,000
                 remove old bridge caissons for Sturgeon
                 River Bridge.............................
 2260      AK   Make necessary improvements to Indian         $2,000,000
                 River Road in City and Borough of Sitka..
 2261      MN   Reconstruct CSAH 61 from Barnum to TH 210     $1,680,000
                 at Carlton, and improve Munger Trail.....
 2262      TX   Build I-30 Trinity River Bridge, Dallas,      $1,000,000
                 Texas....................................
 2263      AK   Realign rail track to eliminate highway-      $5,000,000
                 rail crossings and improve highway safety
                 and transit times........................
 2264      MS   Relocate SR 44 from SR 198 to Pierce Road,    $4,000,000
                 Columbia.................................
 2265      AL   Interstate 565 west extension towards         $2,000,000
                 Decatur..................................
 2266      MO   Roadway Improvements on Rte. 21 from          $5,000,000
                 Hayden Road to Lake Lorraine.............
 2267      IL   Halsted Bridge over North Branch Canal          $600,000
                 Reconstruction, City of Chicago..........
 2268      VA   Town of Pound Riverwalk--construction of        $100,000
                 pedestrian riverwalk in Town of Pound....
 2269      IL   US 67 west of Jacksonville, IL Bypass to      $2,000,000
                 east of IL 100...........................
 2270      NY   Village of Wappingers Falls North Mesier        $750,000
                 Ave......................................
 2271      AR   War Eagle Bridge Rehabilitation--Benton         $640,000
                 County, Arkansas.........................
 2272      WI   Build additional staircases, landscape,         $800,000
                 and other improvements to the marsupial
                 bridge at the Holton St. Viaduct in
                 Milwaukee................................
 2273      TN   Washington County, Tennessee SR-36            $1,000,000
                 widening.................................
 2274      MI   Westland, Ann Arbor Trail between             $3,150,000
                 Farmington and Merriman..................
 2275      MI   White Lake, pave Cooley Lake Road Between       $500,000
                 Hix and Newburgh Roads...................
 2276      GA   Bridge replacement on County Road 183-FAS       $425,000
                 Route 1509, Peach County.................
 2277       NC  I40 I-77 Interchange in Iredell County, NC    $5,000,000
 2278        CA Construct safe routes to school in            $1,000,000
                 Cherryland and Ashland...................
 2279        CA Install Central Ave Historic Corridor         $2,000,000
                 comprehensive streetscape improvements
                 thus improving traffic, ped safety, and
                 economic development, Los Angeles........
 2280      VA   Whitetop Station--completion of renovation      $100,000
                 of Whitetop Station (which serves as
                 trailhead facility) including
                 construction of trail....................
 2281        CT Make Improvements to Montville-Preston        $3,000,000
                 Mohegan Bridge...........................
 2282      IL   Widen and improve Pulaski Road, Alsip.....      $700,000
 2283      AK   For Completion of the Shotgun Cove Road,      $4,000,000
                 from Whittier, Alaska to the area of
                 Decision Point, Alaska...................
 2284      NY   Study and Implement Intelligent               $1,000,000
                 Transportation System Sensor Technology
                 to Improve Safety at Bridges and Tunnels
                 in Metropolitan New York City............
 2285      NY   Warburton avenue Bridge over Factory Lane,    $1,000,000
                 Hastings-on-Hudson, New York.............
 2286      NY   Improve intersection of Old Dock and            $500,000
                 Church Street, Kings Park................
 2287      TN   Widen and improve State Route 33, Knox        $6,500,000
                 County, Tennessee........................
 2288        CA Reconstruct Paramount Bl. with medians and    $1,350,000
                 improve drainage from north border to
                 south border of city in Lakewood.........
 2289      NY   Upgrade Metro North stations in the Bronx     $3,000,000
                 and construct station at Yankee Stadium..
 2290      OH   Construct the existing industrial park        $4,100,000
                 road from local to state standards near
                 Cadiz....................................
 2291      LA   Upgrade LA 28 to four lanes from LA 121 to    $2,000,000
                 LA 465...................................
 2292      NY   Reconstruction of Historic Eastern Parkway    $2,400,000
 2293        CA Widen and make ITS improvements on            $1,000,000
                 Paramount Blvd between Telegraph Rd and
                 Gardendale St in Downey..................
 2294      VA   Conduct planning and engineering for          $3,000,000
                 Hampton Roads Third Crossing and
                 Interconnected Roadways..................
 2295      IL   Widen Annie Glidden Road to five lanes        $4,000,000
                 with intersection improvements. DeKalb,
                 IL.......................................
 2296        CA Widen California State Route132 from         $18,000,000
                 California State Route 99 west to Dakota
                 Avenue...................................
 2297       NC  Widen Derita Road from Poplar Tent Road in    $2,000,000
                 Concord to the Cabarrus Mecklenburg
                 County line..............................
 2298      TX   Widen from 4 to 6 lanes Interstate 35 East    $7,000,000
                 from Lake Lewisville to Loop 288.........
 2299        CA Widen Haskell Avenue between Chase St. and      $200,000
                 Roscoe Blvd..............................
 2300      TX   Widen Hempstead Highway from 12th Street      $1,000,000
                 to Washington Avenue from four lanes to
                 six lanes................................
 2301      NH   Reconstruction and relocation of the            $500,000
                 intersection of Maple Avenue and
                 Charleston Road in Claremont.............
 2302      OH   Construct highway-rail crossing safety          $300,000
                 upgrades at 3 grade crossings in Madison
                 Village, OH..............................
 2303      WA   Cultural & Interpretive Center (Hanford       $1,600,000
                 Reach National Monument) facility,
                 Richland, WA.............................
 2304      NY   Implement Improvements for Pedestrian         $1,000,000
                 Safety in New York County................
 2305      NY   Construction of and improvements to Main        $400,000
                 Street in the Town of Eden...............
 2306      GA   SR 85 widening from Adams DR to I-75 and      $1,500,000
                 reconstruct the Forest Parkway
                 interchange, Clayton County..............
 2307      GA   Jogging, and Bicycle Trails around CSU,         $500,000
                 Columbus.................................
 2308      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Throop Borough, Lackawanna County.....
 2309      IL   Reconstruct Winter Ave, existing 1 lane RR    $5,400,000
                 subway, and 1 lane bridge to provide
                 access to Winter Park in Danville........
 2310      OR   Construct highway and pedestrian access to    $9,000,000
                 Macadam Ave and street improvements as
                 part of the South Waterfront development,
                 Portland.................................
 2311      TX   Relocation of 10th Street near McAllen-         $750,000
                 Miller International Airport.............
 2312      IL   Construct pedestrian tunnel at railroad       $1,000,000
                 crossing in Winfield, IL.................
 2313      IN   Construct Margaret Avenue Safety and          $3,000,000
                 Capacity Enhancement Project.............
 2314      TX   Construct Loop 574 from BU 77 to I-35 in      $2,000,000
                 McLennan Co..............................
 2315      NY   Construction of a bicycle / pedestrian off    $2,300,000
                 road scenic pathway from the Niagara
                 Falls City Line to the southerly Lewiston
                 Town / Village Line along the Niagara
                 Gorge, Town of Lewiston, Village of
                 Lewiston, Niagara County.................
 2316      FL   Construct new bridge from West-Florida        $5,000,000
                 Turnpike to CR 714 to 36th Street--cross
                 S. Fork of St. Lucie River--Indian Street
                 to US 1on east side......................
 2317      WI   Recondition STH 16 from Columbus to STH 26    $4,000,000
                 (Dodge County, Wisconsin)................
 2318      VI   Christiansted By-Pass Highway, St. Croix..    $8,000,000
 2319      NY   Riverwalk in Irvington development........      $200,000
 2320      OH   Road resurfacing and improvements in the        $700,000
                 Village of Bentleyville, OH..............
 2321      PA   Improvements to Stella Street rail-highway      $750,000
                 crossing in Wormleysburg, PA.............
 2322        CT Construct Entrance Ramp at Route 8 Exit       $1,000,000
                 11, Shelton, CT..........................
 2323      AL   Pedestrian Improvements for Leeds, AL.....      $150,000
 2324      WA   Federal Way Triangle--Conduct final           $2,000,000
                 engineering work for the reconstruction
                 of the I-5--SR 18 interchange............
 2325      MI   Garden City, Reconstruct Maplewood between    $1,225,000
                 Inkster and Merriman.....................
 2326      OR   Lake Road Reconstruction and Safety           $5,000,000
                 Improvements, Milwaukie..................
 2327      NY   Resurface Grade Crossing at Old State Road      $250,000
 2328      MN   Construction of Cedar Avenue Busway, MN...    $6,000,000
 2329      IL   Resurfacing of aprrox 30 miles of roadway     $7,000,000
                 in Village of Oak Lawn...................
 2330      GA   Streetscape-Thomasville...................      $300,000
 2331      PR   To build the missing central segment of PR-   $5,000,000
                 10, to complete one of only two highways
                 crossing Puerto Rico North to South......
 2332      PA   To enhance existing directional markers &       $500,000
                 increase wayfinding signage
                 infrastructure in Monroe County..........
 2333        CA Construct and repair lining in four           $3,000,000
                 tunnels on Kanan, Kanan Dume, and Malibu
                 Canyon Roads between US 1 and US 101.....
 2334      GA   Sidewalk revitalization project in              $500,000
                 downtown Eastman.........................
 2335      TX   Port of Corpus Christi Up River Road for        $500,000
                 upgrade of roadway to and from docks & IH
                 37.......................................
 2336      GA   Construct US 411 Connector from US 41 to I-  $20,000,000
                 75, Bartow County, Georgia...............
 2337      NY   Construction of US Route 219 Expressway:      $8,000,000
                 Sections V and VI........................
 2338      PA   Engineering, design and construction of an    $2,000,000
                 extension of Park Avenue north to
                 Lakemont Park in Altoona.................
 2339      MN   Reconstruct I-35E from I-94 to Maryland       $3,500,000
                 Avenue in St. Paul.......................
 2340        CA Construct truck ramp linking Interstate 5     $3,000,000
                 to the National City Marine Cargo
                 Terminal, National City..................
 2341      GA   Reconstruct the interchange at Interstate     $1,806,000
                 185 and Victory Drive (SR 520), Columbus,
                 GA Victory Drive (SR 520), Columbus, GA..
 2342      OH   Streetscaping, bicycle trails, and related    $3,500,000
                 improvements to the I-90--SR 615
                 Interchange in Mentor, OH................
 2343      IN   Preliminary engineering, right-of-way, and    $5,600,000
                 construction for Perimeter Parkway -West
                 Lafayette/Purdue University, Indiana.....
 2344      TN   Reconstruct Interchange 55 at Mallory         $1,000,000
                 Avenue, Memphis, Shelby County...........
 2345        CA Upgrade first responders signal pre-             $32,000
                 emption hardware, Culver City............
 2346      IN   Construction of Maplecrest Rd Extension--    $11,000,000
                 Allen County, Indiana....................
 2347      MS   Upgrade roads in Arcola, Greenville, and      $1,750,000
                 Hollandale (U.S. Highway 61 and 18),
                 Washington County........................
 2348      MS   Canal Road Intermodal Connector, Gulfport.    $8,000,000
 2349      PR   Construction of community bridge for Los        $500,000
                 Navarros Sector, Quebrada Arenas
                 Community................................
 2350      NY   Construct the Auburn Connector Road           $1,000,000
                 Corridor , Auburn, NY....................
 2351      MA   Engineering and construction of Blackstone    $6,400,000
                 Valley Visitors Center at intersection of
                 State Route 146 and Millbury Street,
                 Worcester................................
 2352        CA Improve I-8 off ramp to the Desert Farming    $1,000,000
                 Institute, Imperial County...............
 2353      KS   Construct bike and pedestrian path along K-     $500,000
                 10 between Douglas and Johnson Counties..
 2354      HI   Construct Bike Lanes on Kalanianaole            $300,000
                 Highway, vicinity of Makapuu to Keolu
                 Drive....................................
 2355      TX   Donna/Rio Bravo International Bridge......    $2,000,000
 2356      IL   Improve Sheridan Road, Evanston...........    $2,000,000
 2357      MD   Intercounty Connector.....................    $4,000,000
 2358      MI   Resurfacing of Ten Mile Road in St. Clair       $896,000
                 Shores...................................
 2359      NY   Conduct studies to consider transportation    $1,500,000
                 planning and community involvement for
                 infrastructure projects that address
                 congestion relief in New York City.......
 2360      MO   Construct an extension of MO 740 from U.S.    $2,500,000
                 63 to the 1-70 Lake of the Woods
                 Interchange..............................
 2361      LA   Improvements for LA 1148 in Iberville         $4,000,000
                 Parish; and LA/I-10 Connector Study; and
                 improvements to LA 10/Zachary Taylor
                 Parkway..................................
 2362      NY   Monroe County ITS project.................      $900,000
 2363      MO   Roadway improvement on I-44 in Phelps         $1,000,000
                 County Missouri..........................
 2364      MA   Rt128/95 ramp Northbound to Kendrick          $2,000,000
                 Street, Needham..........................
 2365      IN   Realign State Road 312, Hammond...........    $4,162,891
 2366      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $250,000
                 construction of surface improvements to
                 the area adjacent to Exit 168 of
                 Interstate 81 at the Wachovia Arena in
                 Wilkes-Barre Township....................
 2367      GA   SR 92 relocation from Durelee Road to SR      $8,000,000
                 92 at Malone, including grade separation,
                 Douglas County, Georgia..................
 2368      IN   Construct I69 Evansville to Indianapolis,    $14,000,000
                 Indiana..................................
 2369        CA Construct fourth bore of Caldecott Tunnel     $2,000,000
                 on SR 24, California.....................
 2370      TN   Construct interchange on I-40 in Wilson       $1,000,000
                 County...................................
 2371      IN   Construct service road parallel to I-69 in    $4,000,000
                 the City of Anderson, Indiana............
 2372      NY   Croton-on-Hudson, NY Restoration of Van       $2,500,000
                 Cortlandt Manor entrance road............
 2373      OH   Construction and repair of pedestrian           $289,000
                 walkways along Lake Shore Blvd. in
                 Lakeline Village, OH.....................
 2374      MD   Reconstruct MD 32 from MD 108 to I-70 in      $3,800,000
                 Howard County............................
 2375      NY   Reconstruct Streets and Sidewalks in          $1,000,000
                 Middle Village...........................
 2376      MI   Reconstruct two bridges over Black Creek        $712,500
                 Drain in Sanilac County..................
 2377      FL   Construction of Little Venice Road,           $1,000,000
                 Marathon, FL.............................
 2378        CA Make traffic and safety improvements to         $500,000
                 Atlantic Blvd in Maywood.................
 2379      MN   Stearns County Bridge no. 73501                 $400,000
                 Improvements.............................
 2380      LA   Construct LA 16 Interchange at I-12 and      $13,000,000
                 improvements, and Cook Road improvements.
 2381      MO   Reconstruct Highway 60 and Highway 65         $2,000,000
                 Interchange..............................
 2382        CO I-70, Havana, Yosemite Street Interchange     $1,500,000
                 Reconstruction Project, Denver...........
 2383        CO Reconstruct C 470-US 85 Interchange.......    $4,000,000
 2384      VA   Reconstruction of the entranceway to          $1,000,000
                 Montpelier on Orange County, Virginia....
 2385      TN   construct and widen underpass at                $494,300
                 intersection of Boydstation, Harvey, and
                 McFee Roads, Knox County, TN.............
 2386      GA   Extend sidewalks, upgrade landscaping in        $500,000
                 downtown Hawkinsville....................
 2387      OH   Conduct Sarah St along SR 18 and 101          $2,600,000
                 enhancement project to calm traffic in
                 the City of Tiffin.......................
 2388      LA   Improvements to Zachary Taylor Parkway....    $2,000,000
 2389        CA Las Tunas Drive Pedestrian Enhancement,         $150,000
                 San Gabriel..............................
 2390      OH   Reconstruction, widening, and bicycle         $3,000,000
                 improvements to Pettibone Road in the
                 City of Solon, OH........................
 2391      NH   Replacement of Ash Street and Pillsbury       $1,900,000
                 Road Bridge..............................
 2392      PA   Swamp Road Corridor Safety and Roadway        $3,000,000
                 Improvements, Bucks County...............
 2393      FL   Construct St. Augustine to Palatka Rail       $2,900,000
                 Trail, Florida...........................
 2394      IL   Construction of a traffic circle to reduce    $2,000,000
                 traffic congestion, Museum Campus Chicago
 2395      AL   Pedestrian Improvements for Gardendale, AL      $500,000
 2396      PA   Extension of Second Street from Race to       $1,100,000
                 the intersection of Lehigh and Poplar
                 Street in the Borough of Catasauqua......
 2397      NE   Cuming Street Transportation Improvement      $4,500,000
                 Project, Omaha, Nebraska.................
 2398      TN   Construct State Route 1 (US-70) to a four    $11,500,000
                 lane divided highway on new alignment
                 from Centertown to McMinnville in Warren
                 County...................................
 2399        CA Improve access to I-80 at Eureka Road         $2,000,000
                 Interchange..............................
 2400      LA   Expand existing South Central Planning and    $1,800,000
                 Development Commission Intelligent
                 Transportation System program in Houma-
                 Thibodaux area by installing signals,
                 sensors and systems......................
 2401      IL   Install traffic control devices on traffic      $240,000
                 signals in Village of Oak Lawn...........
 2402        CA Interstate 15, California Oaks Road           $2,000,000
                 Interchange Project......................
 2403      TX   Choate Road overpass to eliminate at-grade    $9,800,000
                 intersection between Choate Rd and SH146.
 2404      OH   Construction of I-75 Austin Road              $7,500,000
                 Interchange, Montgomery County, Ohio.....
 2405        CA Acquire lands for mitigation adjacent to        $500,000
                 US 101 as part of Southern Santa Clara
                 County Wildlife Corridor Protection and
                 Scenic Enhancement Project...............
 2406      TX   Construct US Business 287 through the         $8,000,000
                 Trinity Uptown Project from 7th St. NE to
                 11th St. NE in Fort Worth................
 2407      KS   Construct K-10 and Lone Elm Road              $5,000,000
                 interchange, Lenexa......................
 2408      OH   Construct connector road between SR 79 and    $5,000,000
                 Thornwood Drive in Licking County........
 2409      NH   Construct Pedestrian, Bicycle bridge in         $800,000
                 Keene....................................
 2410      FL   Coral Way, SR 972 Highway Beautification,     $1,500,000
                 Phase One, Miami, Florida................
 2411      TN   Develop historic preservation                   $135,000
                 transportation enhancement project,
                 Sumner Co. and surrounding counties......
 2412      NY   Develop terminal facilities for water taxi    $5,000,000
                 projects in New York City................
 2413      WI   Expand USH 151 between Dickeyville and        $2,000,000
                 Belmont..................................
 2414      NY   Improve bicycle and pedestrian safety, NY       $300,000
                 25, Jamesport............................
 2415      PA   PA Route 183 widening and ramp                $2,000,000
                 enhancement, Bern Township...............
 2416      IN   Reconstruct Hoosier Heartland Highway,        $1,000,000
                 Wabash, Huntington and Miami County
                 Indiana segments.........................
 2417      GA   Replace sidewalks, upgrade lighting, and        $500,000
                 install landscaping, Soperton............
 2418      LA   Lafayette, LA Implementation of              $11,000,000
                 Intelligent Transportation System........
 2419      NY   Conduct improvements to I87--Exit 18          $2,500,000
                 Interchange..............................
 2420      IL   To construct an extension of US-51 from .9    $2,000,000
                 miles south of Moweaqua to 4.6 miles
                 south of Moweaqua........................
 2421      IL   Upgrade roads, The Village of Hillside....    $1,000,000
 2422      MS   Upgrade safety devices at Front Street           $50,000
                 rail crossing, Ellisville................
 2423        CO US 287--Ports-to-Plains Corridor in           $6,000,000
                 Colorado.................................
 2424      OH   Deconstruct the Bellaire Highway Bridge       $1,700,000
                 which connects Bellaire, Ohio and
                 Benwood, WV..............................
 2425      VA   Construct I-95 Interchange at Temple Ave,     $2,000,000
                 Colonial Heights.........................
 2426      KS   Route designation, environmental              $4,000,000
                 clearance, final design and right-of-way
                 acquisition for Crawford County, KS
                 corridor of U.S. Highway 69..............
 2427        CA US-395 Realignment and Widening Project...      $500,000
 2428      IL   To connect about a two-mile segment           $2,000,000
                 through Collinsville at two or three
                 lanes....................................
 2429      IL   Construct Parking Facility and pedestrian       $200,000
                 walkways at 94th an S. Oak Park Ave, Oak
                 Lawn.....................................
 2430      UT   I-15 Freeway Reconstruction--Springville      $4,500,000
                 200 South Interchange....................
 2431      MA   Washington St. from High St. to Water St.,    $2,000,000
                 Walpole..................................
 2432      VA   White's Mill Trail and Renovation--design       $500,000
                 and construction of recreational trail
                 and preservation of watermill for use as
                 visitors center..........................
 2433        CA Implement San Francisco Street                $8,000,000
                 Improvements Program.....................
 2434      MA   Design, engineering and construction of       $1,000,000
                 Methuen Rotary alternative at I-93 and
                 Routes 110 and 113, Methuen..............
 2435      IL   Improve Mill Street, Rock Island..........      $500,000
 2436      PA   For the Nanticoke City Redevelopment          $7,000,000
                 Authority to design, acquire land, and
                 construct a parking garage, streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting and safety
                 improvements, and roadway redesign in
                 Nanticoke................................
 2437      MI   Widen and reconstruct Walton Boulevard        $5,000,000
                 Bridge in Auburn Hills between Opdyke and
                 Squirrel Road............................
 2438      OR   Widen Delaura Beach Lane and add a bike         $150,000
                 lane both directions, Warrenton..........
 2439      MA   Design and construct the 3  mile long           $700,000
                 Grand Trunk Trail bikeway from Sturbridge
                 to Southbridge...........................
 2440      TN   Develop trails, bike paths and                  $250,000
                 recreational facilities on the Crest of
                 Black Mountain, Cumberland County for
                 Cumberland Trail State Park..............
 2441      NY   Study and Improve Traffic Flow Improvement    $3,000,000
                 at Atlantic Yard/ NETS Arena Development.
 2442      MD   Upgrade and widen MD 237 from Pegg Road to   $15,000,000
                 MD 235...................................
 2443      PA   Main Street improvements from Broad Street      $800,000
                 to Richardson Avenue and Main Street to
                 Madison Avenue, Borough of Lansdale......
 2444        CA Widen Highway 101 in Marin and Sonoma        $15,000,000
                 Counties from Hwy 37 in Novato to Old
                 Redwood Highway in Petaluma..............
 2445      NY   Road and pedestrian safety improvements       $1,400,000
                 Main Street, Village of Patchogue........
 2446      UT   Widen Highway 92 from Lehi to Highland....    $5,500,000
 2447      AZ   Widen I-10 to 3 lanes in each direction       $1,700,000
                 north of Tucson from Marana Interchange
                 to Cortato Interchange...................
 2448        CA Widen I-238 between I-580 & I-880 in          $1,000,000
                 Alameda County...........................
 2449      VA   Widen I-66 westbound inside the Capital       $7,000,000
                 Beltway from the Rosslyn Tunnel to the
                 Dulles Connector Road....................
 2450       NC  Construction of I-74 between I-40 and US      $5,000,000
                 220, High Point, North Carolina..........
 2451      MD   Widen I-695, Baltimore Beltway, Southwest.    $4,400,000
 2452      GA   Replace sidewalks, upgrade lighting in          $500,000
                 downtown Vidalia.........................
 2453      MN   Construct bicycle and pedestrian trails in      $700,000
                 Cuyuna Recreation Area...................
 2454      HI   Construct Kapaa Bypass....................    $3,000,000
 2455      FL   Temple Terrace Highway Modification.......    $2,000,000
 2456      TN   Widen Interstate 240 from Poplar Avenue       $1,000,000
                 (SR-57) to near Walnut Grove Road (SR-23)
                 East of Memphis, Shelby County...........
 2457      IL   For the Village of Woodridge to resurface       $108,000
                 Internationale Parkway...................
 2458      OR   I-5 Trade Corridor, Portland Oregon to        $6,000,000
                 Vancouver, Washington segment............
 2459      GA   Streetscape, Pedestrian Improvements in       $5,000,000
                 City Center, City of Clarkston...........
 2460      KY   Widen KY 1991 from Maysville Road to          $1,250,000
                 Midland Trail Industrial Park, Montgomery
                 County...................................
 2461       NC  Construct new Route from Beach Drive (SR      $4,000,000
                 1104) to NC 211 in Brunswick County......
 2462      NJ   International Trade and Logistics Center      $1,500,000
                 Roadway Improvements at Exit 12 of the
                 New Jersey Turnpike, Carteret............
 2463      IL   Interstate 41 and Route 176 Interchange       $1,010,000
                 replacement..............................
 2464      MA   Northern Avenue Bridge rehabilitation,        $3,000,000
                 Boston...................................
 2465      AK   Planning, design, and construction of Knik  $200,000,000
                 Arm Bridge...............................
 2466      IN   North Calumet Avenue Improvements,            $1,200,000
                 Valparaiso...............................
 2467      OR   I-205-Highway 213 interchange improvements    $1,000,000
 2468      TN   Improving Vehicle Efficiencies at highway        $57,000
                 At-Grade Railroad Crossing in Loudon, TN.
 2469      AZ   Design, right-of-way acquisition, and         $4,000,000
                 construction I 10 Collector Distributor
                 Roadway from 40th Street to Baseline
                 Maricopa County, Arizona.................
 2470      LA   Improvements to LA 42 in Ascension Parish;   $10,000,000
                 and LA 73 improvements in Ascension
                 Parish...................................
 2471      MN   Construct Paul Bunyan trail from                $775,000
                 Mississippi River Bridge Trail to Crow
                 Wing State Park..........................
 2472      MN   Construct Mesabi Trail from Grand Rapids      $2,700,000
                 to City of Ely...........................
 2473      GA   Install sidewalks on Highway 23 from Dykes      $300,000
                 Street to Sarah Street, Cochran..........
 2474      AK   Kodiak, AK Construction of AMHW ferry         $7,500,000
                 terminal and approach....................
 2475      OK   Reconstruction of SH 66 from Craig and        $1,000,000
                 Rogers Counties to SH 66 and US 60
                 intersection.............................
 2476        CA Enhance pedestrian environment and            $2,000,000
                 increase safety along Olympic Blvd
                 between Vermont and Western Avenues, Los
                 Angeles..................................
 2477      NY   Enhancement of the Michigan Avenue            $2,000,000
                 Corridor, Buffalo........................
 2478      NJ   Kapkowski Road Area Improvements in           $5,700,000
                 Elizabeth................................
 2479        CA Construct landscape medians along Skyline     $1,000,000
                 Drive from Sears Avenue to 58th Street,
                 San Diego................................
 2480      NY   Jamaica Air Train Station Area                $5,000,000
                 Infrastructure Improvements..............
 2481      MO   Construct Highway 465 to Highway 376 south    $6,000,000
                 from HWY 76 to HWY 376...................
 2482      WA   New Country Road on Whidbey Island........    $1,200,000
 2483      NM   Chaco Wash Bridge and Road Improvements on    $2,000,000
                 Navajo Route 46..........................
 2484        CA Reconstruct Interstate 880-Route 92           $1,750,000
                 interchange in Hayward...................
 2485      MA   Relocate Rt. 79 in Fall River to create 4-    $5,000,000
                 lane urban boulevard with landscaped
                 median and developable waterfront........
 2486      IL   Road extension for Highway 22 in Macon          $668,000
                 COunty, IL...............................
 2487      NY   Portageville Bridge--purchase existing        $1,500,000
                 bridge to convert to pedestrian bridge...
 2488      PA   Rt. 422 complete preliminary engineering      $3,000,000
                 and four lane expansion from Ebensburg to
                 Kittanning...............................
 2489        CA Upgrade essential road arterials,             $2,000,000
                 connectors, bridges and other road
                 infrastructure improvements in the Town
                 of Desert Hot Springs, CA................
 2490      KY   Construct the Heartland Parkway in Adair      $1,200,000
                 County...................................
 2491      NV   Horse-US-95 Interchange Project...........    $6,000,000
 2492        CT Make Improvements to Plainfield Moosup          $300,000
                 Pond Road................................
 2493      FL   Construction design ROW US 27 from SR 540    $10,000,000
                 to SR 544 & from I-4 to US 192 in Polk
                 County, FL...............................
 2494      IA   Construction of approaches and viaduct on     $1,600,000
                 Edgewood Rd SW over the UP Railroad,
                 Prairie Creek, and the CRANDIC railroad..
 2495      NJ   Construct Hackensack River Walkway in         $2,000,000
                 Bergen County............................
 2496      TX   Hwy 80/123 Overpass at Hwy 181 in Karnes        $300,000
                 County...................................
 2497      NM   Improvements to U.S. Highway 87 from          $2,000,000
                 Clayton, NM to Raton, NM.................
 2498      VA   Route 11 Interchange improvements in          $1,000,000
                 Lexington, Virginia......................
 2499        CA Improvements to Ben Maddox Way Bridge.....    $2,000,000
 2500      WA   SR 18 Widening, Maple Valley to I-90......    $7,500,000
 2501      NY   City of Beacon construction of pedestrian       $315,000
                 & Bicycle trail..........................
 2502      TX   FM 544, widen 2-lane roadway to 6-lane        $2,000,000
                 roadway from SH 121 to Dozier-Parker Road
 2503      TX   Construct an alternate truck route to           $500,000
                 Interstate 35 in Buda....................
 2504      NY   Improvements on the Cross Island Bridge       $4,220,000
                 Overpass / 212th Street and vicinity,
                 Queens...................................
 2505      MI   Novi, Reconstruct Grand River between Novi    $1,000,000
                 and Haggerty.............................
 2506      SD   Resurface US Hwy 18 from Lake Andes to US     $1,200,000
                 Hwy 50 on Yankton Sioux Reservation......
 2507      PR   To revitalize Old San Juan Historic           $3,000,000
                 District streets.........................
 2508      WY   U.S. 85 Passing Lanes.....................    $2,000,000
 2509      MA   Construct Blackstone River Bikeway and        $2,000,000
                 Worcester Bikeway Pavilion between
                 Providence, RI and Worcester.............
 2510      NY   Little Falls Access: Repair and                 $240,000
                 reconstruct High School and Lower School
                 Road.....................................
 2511      FL   Replace Columbus Drive Bridge.............    $4,000,000
 2512      AS   Village road improvements for Sua and         $2,600,000
                 Vaifanua counties in the Eastern district
 2513      MI   Construction of two railroad-highway grade    $2,300,000
                 separations on Farm Lane north of Mount
                 Hope Road................................
 2514        CA Widen Atlantic Bl bridge over the Los         $1,000,000
                 Angeles River in Vernon..................
 2515        CA Widen Bundy Drive between Wilshire and        $4,250,000
                 Santa Monica Boulevards in the City of
                 Los Angeles..............................
 2516      AL   To provide four lanes on US-80, Perry        $14,000,000
                 County, Marengo County, and Sumter County
 2517        CA Widen Maine Avenue in Baldwin Park........      $375,000
 2518      NM   Ease traffic congestion and improve           $2,000,000
                 intersection safety by identifying
                 alternative alignment to US 84/285 and NM
                 68 through Espanola......................
 2519      MS   Widen MS Hwy 19 between Philadelphia and     $10,000,000
                 Collinsville, MS.........................
 2520      NY   Construct the Fire Island ferry terminal      $2,000,000
                 facility, Patchogue......................
 2521      IL   IL 8 from East Peoria to Washington, IL...      $952,570
 2522      NJ   Preliminary engineering for missing           $1,500,000
                 connections of NJ 23 and I-80............
 2523      ME   Penobscot Riverfront Development for          $2,000,000
                 bicycle trails, amenities, and traffic
                 circulation improvements, Bangor and
                 Brewer...................................
 2524      IL   Restoration and reconstruction of the         $1,200,000
                 central business district street.
                 Cambridge, IL............................
 2525       NC  Widen NC 150 from Cherryville to              $1,000,000
                 Lincolnton...............................
 2526      NY   Second phase of the Grand Concourse          $10,000,000
                 improvements from East 166th St. to East
                 171st St.................................
 2527      VT   U.S. Route 7 and U.S. Route 4 road            $3,560,000
                 improvements for the City of Rutland.....
 2528      IL   Improve 63rd Street, Chicago..............    $2,000,000
 2529      MI   Alcona County, Reconstruction of Ritchie        $813,000
                 Road from Village of Lincoln to Hubbard
                 Lake road................................
 2530       SC  Construct roadway btwn I-26 and US 1 in       $2,000,000
                 Lexington County. Intermodal connector
                 from US 1 to I-26 and I-77. SC 302 and SC
                 602 improvements.........................
 2531      OR   Agness Road, Curry County.................    $2,000,000
 2532      NY   Rehabilitation of Sharon Drive in the Town      $325,000
                 of Poughkeepsie..........................
 2533      TX   Conduct study of I-10 and U.S. 190 with a       $200,000
                 focus on congestion relief and the need
                 for a military & emergency relief
                 transportation corridor..................
 2534      MD   MD 85 at I270.............................    $5,000,000
 2535      GA   SR 36 passing lanes north of Jackson to       $3,050,000
                 Newton County line, Butts County, Georgia
 2536      VA   I-66 and Route 29 Gainesville Interchange     $9,000,000
                 Project..................................
 2537      NY   Construct and extend existing pedestrian      $1,000,000
                 streetscape areas in Lynbrook............
 2538        CA Construct traffic intersection island           $200,000
                 improvements on North side of Olympic
                 Blvd where Irolo St. and Normandie Ave.
                 split in Koreatown, Los Angeles..........
 2539      WA   Improvements in the SR 9 corridor in          $1,500,000
                 Snohomish County.........................
 2540      PA   Replace a highway railcrossing in Osborne     $2,150,000
                 Borough, PA..............................
 2541      AL   Pedestrian Improvements for Centerpoint,        $500,000
                 AL.......................................
 2542        CA Replace twin 2 lane bridge with single 4        $500,000
                 lane bridge on SR 138 over Big Rock Wash.
 2543        CA State Route 86S and Ave 50 highway safety     $1,000,000
                 grade separation.........................
 2544      TX   Construct Fredericksburg Road-Medical         $3,800,000
                 Drive grade separation in San Antonio....
 2545      PA   For design, engineering, ROW acquisition,       $500,000
                 & construction of a connector road
                 between the Valmont Industrial Park &
                 Pennsylvania Rt. 924 at Cranberry Creek..
 2546      AR   Interstates 30/440/530 Interchanges--for      $1,500,000
                 interchange improvements, Little Rock....
 2547      NJ   Rehabilitation of Benigno Boulevard from I-     $400,000
                 295 to Route 168 in Bellmawr.............
 2548      PA   Preconstruction studies for improvement to    $1,000,000
                 US 22 from Irving Street to Mickley Road.
 2549      IL   Establish transportation museum on Navy         $540,000
                 Pier, Chicago............................
 2550      WA   Continuing construction of I 90, Spokane      $3,300,000
                 to Idaho State Line......................
 2551      VA   Improve transportation infrastructure for       $531,900
                 visitors to Jamestown 2007...............
 2552      AR   Highway 67: Kiehl Avenue--Vandenberg          $3,700,000
                 Boulevard: rehabilitating and widening
                 Highway 67 from four to six lanes from
                 Kiehl Ave. to Vandenberg Blvd............
 2553      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 including in the vicinity of PS X81......
 2554      GA   Memorial Drive Corridor...................    $2,000,000
 2555      VA   Route 11 improvements in Maurertown,          $1,000,000
                 Virginia.................................
 2556      PA   Street improvements, Whitemarsh Township..    $1,500,000
 2557      VT   Construction of the Lamoille Valley Rail      $7,268,486
                 Trail for the Vermont Association of Snow
                 Travelers................................
 2558        CO I-76: Colorados Northeast Gateway.........    $6,000,000
 2559      VA   Construct Maersk Terminal interchange in      $2,000,000
                 Portsmouth...............................
 2560      GA   I-75 Welcom Project.......................      $250,000
 2561      PA   Improve handicapped accessibility and         $3,000,000
                 provide pedestrian overpass in Villanova.
 2562      NY   Install Two Permanent Variable Message          $500,000
                 Signs (VMS) on Belt Parkway..............
 2563      MI   Re-surfacing Sebewaing Road in Huron            $416,000
                 County...................................
 2564      IN   Complete construction of paths at Hamilton      $375,000
                 County Riverwalk, Noblesville, Indiana...
 2565      NY   Study and Implement Traffic and Pedestrian      $500,000
                 Safety Enhancements to Gerritsen Beach,
                 Brooklyn.................................
 2566      PA   Upgrade circuit for gates and lights at         $275,000
                 Sixth Street in Emmaus, PA USDOT crossing
                 number 592402P to constant warning time
                 devices..................................
 2567      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and                $200,000
                 pedestrian trail, Eagleville.............
 2568      NY   Improvements for pedestrian and vehicular       $600,000
                 access to Baychester Avenue and Bartow
                 Avenue...................................
 2569      GA   SR 400 reconstruction from I 285 to           $1,000,000
                 McFarland Road, Fulton and Forsyth
                 Counties.................................
 2570      MI   Construct pedestrian and bicycle pathway         $80,000
                 at Chippewa Landing River Park in the
                 Village of Caro..........................
 2571      GA   Upgrade sidewalks, replace street lights,       $500,000
                 and landscaping, Metter..................
 2572      AR   Highway 412: Baxter Co. to Ash Flat.......    $2,000,000
 2573      NY   Town of North Salem improvements and            $200,000
                 repaving to Hawley Road..................
 2574      IA   US 20 Mississippi River Bridge and           $25,000,000
                 approaches, Dubuque Co, IA...............
 2575      NY   Construct access road and exit lanes for      $2,500,000
                 Center for Advanced Medicine: North Shore
                 LIJ Health System........................
 2576      NY   Improve key intersections and highway           $750,000
                 segments along Rt. 32 between Route 17-6-
                 NYS Thruway interchange in Harriman and
                 Highland Mills...........................
 2577        CA Widen I-5 to 10 Lanes and Improve Corridor    $5,200,000
                 Arterials, SR 91 to I-710................
 2578      IL   For the construction of the Grand Avenue      $1,160,000
                 Underpass, Village of Franklin Park......
 2579      NY   Rehabilitation of North and South Ridge       $2,160,000
                 Street and Wappanocca Avenue in the
                 Village of Rye Brook and City of Rye.....
 2580      NY   NYSDOT Route 55 construction over Fishkill    $1,500,000
                 Creek and left turn lane construction....
 2581      AL   Alabama Hwy 36 Extension and Widening-        $1,000,000
                 Phase II.................................
 2582      OH   Construct Eagle Avenue Viaduct-Demolition       $500,000
                 bridge, realignment of roadway to replace
                 bridge and reconstruction of two other
                 bridges, Cleveland.......................
 2583      NV   Construct US 93 Corridor -Boulder City....   $10,000,000
 2584      NY   Reconstruction of NYS 5, 8, 12. Viaduct       $1,000,000
                 and Rt 5A and 5S: City of Utica..........
 2585        CT Street and streetscape improvements along     $1,500,000
                 Campbell Ave., West Haven................
 2586      MA   Reconstruct North Washington Street Bridge    $6,000,000
                 to connect Boston and Charlestown........
 2587      MS   Upgrade roads in Fayette (U.S. Hwy 61 and       $400,000
                 33), Jefferson County....................
 2588      MN   Heritage Center at the Grand Portage          $1,400,000
                 National Monument........................
 2589      NY   Redesign and reconstruction of the Putnam       $650,000
                 Rail-Trail, Bronx........................
 2590      OR   Highway 34/Corvallis Bypass Intersection..    $2,100,000
 2591        CA Install traffic signal on Balboa Blvd. at       $120,000
                 Knollwood Shopping Center................
 2592      MA   Chelsea Street Bridge Reconstruction......   $10,000,000
 2593      AL   Pedestrian Improvements for Northport, AL.      $200,000
 2594      NV   Construct widening of US50A from Fernley      $5,000,000
                 to Leeteville Junction...................
 2595      WA   Rebuild & widen Cemetery Road bridge over       $200,000
                 US Bureau of Reclamation canal near
                 Othello, WA..............................
 2596      FL   Roadway construction of SW 62--SW 24          $2,000,000
                 Avenue in Gainesville....................
 2597      WA   SR 2/Kelsey Street Intersection               $1,040,000
                 Improvements in Monroe...................
 2598      NY   Town of Southeast construction and              $300,000
                 repaving of town roads...................
 2599      MI   Reconstruct Third Ave. from Saginaw St. to    $3,000,000
                 Flint River, City of Flint...............
 2600      PA   Upgrade circuit for gates and lights at         $275,000
                 31st Street in Allentown, PA USDOT
                 crossing number 592410G to constant
                 warning time devices.....................
 2601      NV   Construct US 95 Widening from Rainbow Blvd    $8,000,000
                 to Kyle Canyon...........................
 2602      IN   Improve campus streets to increase            $2,000,000
                 pedestrian safety and ease vehicular
                 congestion in the City of Anderson,
                 Indiana..................................
 2603      PA   Schaefferstown Bypass, PA Route 501,          $2,000,000
                 Lebanon..................................
 2604      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Dupont Borough, Luzerne County........
 2605      GA   Intersection improvement at Lake Dow Road       $600,000
                 and SR 81 Harris Dr at SR 42.............
 2606        CA Replace South Access to the Golden Gate      $10,000,000
                 Bridge--Doyle Drive......................
 2607      IL   Resurface Yellow Banks Road, Franklin           $400,000
                 County...................................
 2608      AL   CR 52 from US 31 (Pelham) and continuation   $10,000,000
                 of CR 52 in Jefferson County, known as
                 Morgan Road, to I-459, including proposed
                 Highway 261 bypass around old town Helena
 2609      IL   Intersection Reconstruction at US 12-IL 31-     $900,000
                 Tryon Grove Road.........................
 2610      NY   Streetscape of Herald and Greeley Squares       $500,000
                 in New York City.........................
 2611      NJ   Construct Cape May and Supawna Meadows          $750,000
                 National Wildlife Refuges Roadway and
                 Parking Improvements.....................
 2612      TX   Del Rio-Laughlin Air Force Base Relief       $16,000,000
                 Route....................................
 2613       NC  Study feasibility of widening US 221-NC       $3,500,000
                 226 from Woodlawn to Spruce Pine, start
                 planning and design, and make upgrades to
                 improve safety...........................
 2614      NY   Transportation improvements to the Far        $2,400,000
                 Rockaway Business District, Queens, New
                 York.....................................
 2615      VI   Upgrade West-East Corridor through            $8,000,000
                 Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas.............
 2616      NH   Hampton Bridge Rehabilitation -Hampton, NH    $1,500,000
 2617        CA Gale Avenue widening between Fullerton          $100,000
                 Road and Nogales Street, and Nogales
                 Street widening at Gale Avenue...........
 2618        CA Grade Separation at Cesar Chavez Parkway        $500,000
                 and Harbor Drive, San Diego..............
 2619      MO   Improve access to I-55 at River Des Peres.   $10,000,000
 2620      PA   PA Route 61 enhancements, Schuylkill Haven   $10,000,000
 2621      MO   Kansas City SmartPort ITS for highways....    $5,000,000
 2622      PA   City of Philadelphia in conjunction with      $4,000,000
                 American Cities Foundation for
                 neighborhood transportation enhancement
                 and pedestrian safety projects...........
 2623      DE   Reconstructing I-95/SR-1 interchange,         $5,500,000
                 adding a fifth lane, and replacing toll
                 plaza on Delaware's portion of I-95
                 corridor.................................
 2624      OH   Study possible road upgrades in Tuscarawas      $100,000
                 County due to flood issues based on dams
                 in Muskingum Watershed District..........
 2625      OR   Sunrise Corridor, Clackamas County........    $4,000,000
 2626        CA Construct Cabot-Camino Capistrano Bridge        $838,690
                 Project and related roadway improvements
                 in Cities of Mission Viejo and Laguna
                 Niguel, California.......................
 2627      TX   Construction of mainlanes and interchanges   $16,000,000
                 on SH 121 from Hillcrest to US 75........
 2628      WA   Enumclaw, WA Welcome Center...............    $1,500,000
 2629      PA   Upgrade narrow existing roads, Plank,         $1,000,000
                 Otts, Meyers, Seitz Roads, along 1 mile
                 corridor to 2 lane road with shoulders,
                 improve intersections....................
 2630      GA   Widen Old Petersburg Road-Old Evans Road      $4,000,000
                 from Baston Road to Washington Road,
                 Columbia County, Georgia.................
 2631        CA Widen Peyton Dr. from Grand Ave. to Chino     $7,036,110
                 Hills Pky., construct Eucalyptus Ave.
                 from Peyton Dr. to Galloping Hills,
                 improve English Channel..................
 2632      TX   New construction for the SH 349 Reliever      $2,500,000
                 Route beginning at the SH 191
                 intersection in Midland..................
 2633      PA   Widen Route 22 between Export and Delmont.    $1,450,000
 2634        CA Construction of a traffic signal at the         $125,000
                 intersection of Hamlin St. and Corbin Ave
 2635      NY   Design/Environmental work on the Inner        $2,400,000
                 Loop from Clinton Avenue to East Main
                 Street, Rochester........................
 2636      MO   I-35 access modification planning, city of    $1,500,000
                 Kearney..................................
 2637      PR   Construction of community bridge at Los         $425,000
                 Olvidados Sector, Quebrada Arenas
                 Community................................
 2638      MN   North-South Corridor with Railroad            $1,500,000
                 Overpass, City of Staples................
 2639        CA Port of Hueneme Intermodal Access             $4,700,000
                 Improvement Project, including grade
                 separation at Rice Avenue and State Route
                 34; widen Hueneme Road...................
 2640        CA Reconstruct and deep-lift asphalt on          $6,000,000
                 various roads throughout the district in
                 Ventura County...........................
 2641      GA   Upgrade sidewalks, parking, street              $500,000
                 lighting, and landscaping, Claxton.......
 2642      MS   Upgrade roads in Itta Bena (U.S. Hwy 82       $1,500,000
                 and 7) and in vicinity of Viking Range
                 Corp. (U.S. Hwy 7 and 49) , Leflore
                 County...................................
 2643      VA   Widen Route 262 in Augusta County.........    $1,000,000
 2644        CA Forest Highway 171 Upper Skyway               $7,250,000
                 Improvement..............................
 2645      NV   Rehabilitate Lake Mead Parkway............    $3,000,000
 2646      IL   Construct Bridge Overpass, DuSable Museum-    $1,000,000
                 Chicago..................................
 2647      WA   Expand size and improve safety Lewis and        $146,000
                 Clark Discovery Trailhead and Scenic
                 Overlook.................................
 2648      PA   Construction of access improvement at the       $650,000
                 I79 SR 228 interchange in vicinity of
                 Cranberry Town Center....................
 2649      PA   Development of bicycle and pedestrian        $10,000,000
                 trails and access links along North
                 Delaware Riverfront......................
 2650      OH   Highway--railroad grade separation over         $300,000
                 the Norfolk Southern Rail Line for the
                 Hines Hill Road--Milford Connector
                 project in Hudson, Ohio..................
 2651        CA Construct crosswalk bump-outs and related       $400,000
                 streetscape improvements on Temple St
                 between Hoover St and Glendale Blvd, Los
                 Angeles..................................
 2652       NC  Improve SR 1923 from US 70 Business to US     $5,000,000
                 301 Smithfield...........................
 2653      MA   Improvements to Mass. Ave, Andover Street,    $1,000,000
                 Osgood Street, Salem Street, and Johnson
                 Street in the Old Town Center of North
                 Andover..................................
 2654      KY   Reconstruct US 127 at US 127 South, Mercer      $600,000
                 County...................................
 2655        CA Construct truck lane from Britannia Blvd.     $4,000,000
                 to the Otay Mesa Port of Entry, San Diego
                 County...................................
 2656      PA   Beford, Pa Relocation of Old Route 220 and    $9,750,000
                 Sweet Road. Complete preliminary
                 engineering,purchase right-of-way,
                 construction.............................
 2657      GA   Design and construction of 2.2 miles of         $200,000
                 multi-use trail in the City of Douglas,
                 Georgia..................................
 2658      IL   Entry Road to SIU Research Park...........    $1,636,000
 2659      NY   Kingston, Construct pedestrian waterfront     $1,600,000
                 walkway..................................
 2660      MN   Reconstruct TH 61 north of Split Rock         $5,280,000
                 River to Chapins Curve, bridges number
                 8285 and 8286, Lake County...............
 2661      KS   Replacement of US-169 bridge in Kansas        $8,500,000
                 City.....................................
 2662      PA   Route 313 Turning Lanes and Truck Climbing    $2,000,000
                 Lanes, Bucks County......................
 2663        CA Purchase of Rosemead Blvd ROW, Temple City    $1,000,000
 2664      NJ   Reconfiguration of Bay Avenue and Polaris     $8,000,000
                 Street in Newark, NJ.....................
 2665      MI   Reconstruct highway under a railroad          $1,000,000
                 bridge, Wyoming Ave. from Eagle Pass to
                 Michigan Avenue, Wayne County............
 2666      OK   Construct vehicular bridge over the           $1,000,000
                 Burlington Northern RR at War Bonnet
                 Crossing, Mannford, OK...................
 2667      UT   Construction and Rehabilitation of 13th       $7,000,000
                 East in Sandy City.......................
 2668      VA   Construct 3.6 miles of Interstate 73 near     $2,600,000
                 Martinsville.............................
 2669      WA   Maple Valley SR 169 and SR 516                $1,000,000
                 improvements.............................
 2670      FL   Construct access road to entrances to Opa-    $2,000,000
                 Locka Airport at Opa-Locka Airport at
                 N.W. 135th Street and N.W. 47th Avenue,
                 including improvements to N.W. 47th
                 Avenue with median strip, City of Opa-
                 Locka....................................
 2671      UT   Expand Redhills Parkway from 2 to 5 lanes     $8,000,000
                 and improve alignment within rights-of-
                 way in St. George........................
 2672      OH   Bethlehem Township, Ohio. Riverland Avenue    $1,300,000
                 Bridge Replacement.......................
 2673      MD   MD 295, BWI Access Improvements...........    $4,740,000
 2674      OR   Connect Boeckman Road to Tooze Road,          $1,000,000
                 Wilsonville..............................
 2675      LA   Construct I-20 interchanges at US 167 and     $5,000,000
                 Tarbutton Rd. Construct East West
                 frontage roads along I-20................
 2676      TX   FM 937 from SH 164 to FM 3371, Limestone      $2,000,000
                 Co.......................................
 2677      MO   Construct additional exit ramp access lane    $4,820,000
                 from I-44 to Kingshighway and enhance
                 Shaw Ave. corridor.......................
 2678      IN   Construdtion of I 64 Interchange, Harrison    $5,310,000
                 County, Indiana..........................
 2679      OH   Bridge Replacement at SR 84 and I-90 on         $500,000
                 Bishop Road in Willougby Hills, OH.......
 2680      TN   Continue Shelby Avenue--Demonbreun Street     $6,500,000
                 project in Nashville.....................
 2681      WI   Construct a bicycle/pedestrian path from      $2,000,000
                 Waunakee to Westport.....................
 2682        CT Construct bike and pedestrian paths along       $100,000
                 Salem Greenway -Salem, CT................
 2683      TX   Construct I-635/35E Interchange in Dallas,    $5,500,000
                 TX.......................................
 2684        CA Hwy 199 Narrow Enhancement to reduce          $2,000,000
                 active slides that cause significant road
                 closures on primary connecting route from
                 US 101 to I-5............................
 2685      MD   Construction of New Interchange at MD5,      $15,000,000
                 MD373, and Brandywine Road...............
 2686      GA   I-20 West from SR 5 Bill Arp to SR 6--HOV     $7,250,000
                 Lanes....................................
 2687      PA   Install and construct signals, calming          $450,000
                 devices and signs in Mechanicsburg and
                 surrounding municipalities...............
 2688      FL   44th St. Extension to Golfair Blvd,           $1,500,000
                 Jacksonville.............................
 2689      NJ   Passaic River-Newark Bay Restoration and      $1,000,000
                 Pollution Abatement Project, Route 21,
                 River Road, CR 510.......................
 2690        CA San Gabriel Blvd and Mission Road               $200,000
                 Intersection Improvements, San Gabriel...
 2691      NY   Rehabilitate 125th Street Corridor from       $2,000,000
                 Old Broadway to Marginal Street/
                 Waterfront...............................
 2692      MI   Repair M-10 corridor from I-696 to            $1,000,000
                 downtown Detroit.........................
 2693      FL   Capital Circle Northwest, Tallahassee.....   $10,000,000
 2694      TN   Installation of Intelligent Transportation    $2,000,000
                 System on various major routes in Memphis
 2695      MI   Planning and Engineering for The American     $1,500,000
                 Road, The Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn....
 2696      TX   Reconstruct Ella/Wheatley from Little York    $1,250,000
                 to West Gulf Bank........................
 2697      NY   Implement Improvements for Pedestrian         $1,000,000
                 Safety in Richmond County................
 2698      FL   Palm Bay Parkway from Emerson Drive to US     $1,000,000
                 192, Palm Bay, FL........................
 2699        CA Construct the Los Angeles River bicycle         $575,000
                 and pedestrian path in the San Fernando
                 Valley...................................
 2700      TX   Construct Santa Fe Trail DART LR overpass     $2,400,000
                 from Hill St. to Commerce St. along
                 abandoned Santa Fe Rail right of way in
                 Dallas...................................
 2701        CA Construct Route 101 bicycle/pedestrian        $1,000,000
                 overpass at Millbrae Ave for the San
                 Francisco Bay Trail......................
 2702      GU   Guam Mass Transit Authority Acquisition of      $400,000
                 transit vehicles for disabled persons....
 2703      LA   New Iberia Rail Grade Separation..........    $2,000,000
 2704      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Ashley Borough, Luzerne County........
 2705      MN   Reconstruct Grand Avenue (from Central Ave      $750,000
                 to 59 Ave W), Central Ave (from Grand Ave
                 to I-35) and Bristol Street (from Central
                 Ave to Grand Ave), Duluth................
 2706      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and                $100,000
                 pedestrian trail, Cannon County..........
 2707      TX   Develop, deploy and integrate municipal       $3,200,000
                 ITS in San Antonio.......................
 2708      TN   Jefferson, Hamblen Counties, Tennessee SR-    $2,000,000
                 66 relocation............................
 2709      MD   Rehabilitate Pennington Avenue Drawbridge     $1,500,000
                 in Baltimore.............................
 2710      PA   Construction of I-79 to Mon-Fayette           $1,500,000
                 Section of Southern Beltway, Pittsburgh,
                 Pennsylvania.............................
 2711      FL   Springfield Rd. Improvements, Jacksonville    $1,500,000
 2712      LA   Elimination of highway-rail grade             $1,000,000
                 crossings along Louisiana and Delta
                 railroad.................................
 2713        CA Conduct necessary planning and engineering    $1,400,000
                 and implement comprehensive Corridor
                 Management Plan for Arroyo Seco Historic
                 Parkway, Los Angeles.....................
 2714      FL   Plant City Traffic Management System......    $3,000,000
 2715      GA   SR 347 widen-new construction from I-985     $10,000,000
                 to SR 211, Hall County, Georgia..........
 2716      WA   SR 28 and SR285 Sellar Bridge                 $5,000,000
                 Improvements: ramp & roadway network
                 improvements at the west end and a new
                 lane on the Sellar Bridge................
 2717      NY   Stabilize Poughkeepsie Railroad Bridge and    $1,092,500
                 construct a pedestrian walkway linking
                 the two sides of the Hudson River,
                 Poughkeepsie.............................
 2718      WA   International Mobility and Trade Corridor     $1,300,000
                 Project for Whatcom County...............
 2719        CA State Route 76 Road Widening, Melrose         $5,000,000
                 Drive to Interstate 15...................
 2720      NJ   Streetscape Improvements to Clements            $500,000
                 Bridge Road from Newton Avenue to New
                 Jersey Turnpike, Barrington..............
 2721      FL   Construct Eastern Connector from SR 417 to    $1,000,000
                 I-95, Volusia & Seminole Counties Florida
 2722      GA   Construction of the McIntosh Path on SR         $200,000
                 99, 7.15 miles between Darien, Georgia
                 and the Sapelo Island Visitor Center.....
 2723      AL   Construction of Sulphur Springs Road          $5,000,000
                 Bypass in City of Hoover, Alabama........
 2724      AZ   Pliocene Cliffs reconstruction between        $1,000,000
                 Wikieup and the Santa Maria River........
 2725      MN   Construct roadway improvements to CSAH 76,    $1,064,000
                 Little Falls.............................
 2726      IN   Study alternatives along 2 miles of             $150,000
                 railroad to eliminae in-town highway-rail
                 crossings to improve safety and reduce
                 congestion in Delaware County............
 2727      NV   Design and construct separation of rail-      $1,000,000
                 highway crossings in downtown Reno.......
 2728      NJ   Maple Shade Township Streetscape              $1,000,000
                 Improvements of Mill Road, Rudderow Ave.,
                 North & South Coles Ave. and Schoolhouse
                 Lane.....................................
 2729      WA   Conduct study for I-5 and SR503                 $300,000
                 interchange..............................
 2730      WA   Construct Webber Canyon Road realignment      $3,500,000
                 at I-82 Kiona-Benton interchange.........
 2731      TX   Downtown Streetscape Improvements in            $640,000
                 Beaumont, Texas..........................
 2732      NY   Improve Traffic Flow on Lefferts Boulevard      $500,000
                 by Rehabilitating Facilities Surrounding
                 LIRR/Kew Gardens Eastbound Station.......
 2733      FL   Construct reliever road to SR A-1-A in the    $1,000,000
                 City of Deerfield Beach beginning at A-1-
                 A/Hillsboro Blvd and ending at A-1-A/NE
                 2nd Street...............................
 2734      TX   Reconstruct interchange at IH 10 and FM       $1,000,000
                 364, Chambers County, Texas..............
 2735        CA SR 52 East Improvments (San Diego)........    $7,500,000
 2736      OR   Study to evaluate alternatives in support       $250,000
                 of an eventual Astoria bypass, Astoria...
 2737      GA   Commission a study and report regarding         $100,000
                 the construction and designation of a new
                 Interstate linking Savannah, Augusta, &
                 Knoxville................................
 2738      VT   Construction of the St. Albans, Vermont       $1,200,000
                 intermodal connector roadway with I-89
                 for the City of St. Albans...............
 2739      OR   I-5-Highway 214 interchange improvements,     $1,000,000
                 Woodburn.................................
 2740      OR   Construction of transportation facilities       $800,000
                 at the Tualatin River Wildlife Refuge....
 2741      WY   I-80 Rock Springs Marginal................    $1,900,000
 2742      PA   Improvements to Route 11 and access to I-     $1,000,000
                 81.......................................
 2743      IL   Improve safety of a horizontal curve on          $88,000
                 Clarksville St. .25 mile north of 275th
                 Road in Grandview Township, Edgar County,
                 Illinois.................................
 2744      UT   Provo Reservoir Canal Trail, Utah.........    $3,000,000
 2745      MO   South County Riverfront Access and Trails     $4,000,000
                 Project, Lemay...........................
 2746      AK   Road improvements in the City of Fairbanks    $5,000,000
 2747      MD   Construct Ferry Terminal, Somerset County,    $1,000,000
                 Maryland.................................
 2748      MS   Plan and Construct two lanes to SR-6 from     $4,000,000
                 SR 342 to Alabama state line.............
 2749        CA Construct bypass along Hwy 101 around         $7,000,000
                 Willits, CA to reduce congestion, improve
                 air quality and enhance economic lifeline
                 of No. Coast.............................
 2750        CA Engineering support to I-5 Joint Powers         $150,000
                 Authority to widen I-5 freeway and
                 improve corridor arterials from I-710 to
                 Orange County line.......................
 2751      LA   Kerner Ferry Bridge, Jefferson Parish         $2,100,000
                 Bayou Barataria..........................
 2752      WA   Renton, WA SR 167 HOV, Strander Boulevard     $1,000,000
                 Connection...............................
 2753      NJ   Sussex County, NJ Vernon Township,            $3,500,000
                 Mountain Creek Rt. 94 Traffic Calming,
                 Ped. Safety and Traffic Congestion,
                 Circulation Improvement..................
 2754      PA   Linglestown Square, roadway and               $3,000,000
                 intersection improvements, Lower Paxton
                 Township.................................
 2755      MD   Rehabilitate road including bridges over      $3,000,000
                 CSX tracks in Baltimore..................
 2756      WA   Extend 18th Street between 87th Avenue and    $2,000,000
                 NE 192nd Avenue in Vancouver.............
 2757      TX   Implement repairs on Old Pleasanton Road        $403,000
                 Bridge in Atascosa County................
 2758        CA Hazel Avenue Improvements, U.S. Highway 50    $3,000,000
                 to Madison Avenue........................
 2759      MI   Menominee County, County Road 557 Bridge        $280,000
                 Replacement over the Big Cedar River.....
 2760      OH   Massillon, Ohio. Tremont Avenue Bridge          $720,000
                 Rehabilitation...........................
 2761      MI   Montmorency County, Reconstruction of           $800,000
                 County Road 612 from W. County Line to
                 County Road 491..........................
 2762        CA Conduct traffic study of proposed               $500,000
                 realignment of Nutwood Ave in Fullerton..
 2763      NM   Planning, design and construction of          $2,000,000
                 bikeways and walkway at the City of Santa
                 Fe's downtown railyard redevelopment
                 project..................................
 2764      GA   Streetscape-Bainbridge....................      $250,000
 2765      PA   Construct S.R. 706 Corridor, Susquehanna      $2,000,000
                 County, Pennsylvania.....................
 2766      NY   Town of North Salem reconstruction and          $150,000
                 repaving of Keeler Lane..................
 2767      FL   Conduct planning and engineering for U.S.     $4,000,000
                 17 widening and improvements in Hardee
                 County, Florida..........................
 2768      IL   Traffic Signalization, Matteson...........      $907,500
 2769      MS   Upgrade roads in Kilmichael, Montgomery         $400,000
                 County...................................
 2770       NC  Upgrade U.S. 220 to I-73/74 interstate        $2,000,000
                 standards in Montgomery County...........
 2771      WA   US 2/Sultan Basin Road Improvements in          $600,000
                 Sultan...................................
 2772      TX   Add 2 lanes to existing facility from         $1,000,000
                 Victoria County Line to 1.9 Miles West of
                 SH 35 in Port Lavaca.....................
 2773      FL   A1A Transportation Enhancements, Daytona      $1,000,000
                 Beach....................................
 2774      MI   City of Menominee, Resurface Hattie Street      $225,000
                 Bridge deck 250 feet from 9th avenue in
                 Menominee to Riverside Avenue in
                 Marinette, WI............................
 2775      TN   eliminate blockage of two lanes on Gay        $2,000,000
                 Street in Knoxville, TN, to accomodate
                 loading dock.............................
 2776      MI   Emmet County, Ultra thin demonstration           $60,000
                 project resurfacing of Mitchell Road from
                 the City of Petoskey limits east to
                 Division.................................
 2777      NY   Gowanus Expressway Project................      $500,000
 2778      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Moosic Borough, Lackawanna County.....
 2779      AL   Expand to 4 lanes on U.S. 278 from I-65 to    $3,500,000
                 U.S. 231.................................
 2780      IL   Preconstruction and construction McCarthy       $892,000
                 Road, Bell Road to US 45 and 123rd Street
                 US 45 to 86th Avenue in Palos Park.......
 2781      WY   Riverton: Reconstruct HWY 26- Main St.....    $1,100,000
 2782      MA   Somerville Bicycle Path Improvements--        $1,000,000
                 Cedar Street to Central Street...........
 2783      MI   US 31 improvements and relocation between     $9,450,000
                 Holland and Grand Haven..................
 2784      PA   Replace Messinger Street Bridge in the        $1,000,000
                 Borough of Bangor........................
 2785      NY   Owego, Construct pedestrian waterfront        $1,250,000
                 walkway..................................
 2786      KY   Reconstruct US 127 from Hustonville Road      $1,500,000
                 to the Mercer County Line, Boyle County..
 2787      PA   Construction of an intermodal facility in     $1,500,000
                 Altoona, Pa..............................
 2788        CA Design and construct access improvements      $8,000,000
                 in North Central Business District,
                 Sacramento...............................
 2789       NC  Construction of the southbound lane of US     $6,800,000
                 321 bridge replacement over the Catawba
                 River....................................
 2790      FL   Grand Lagoon Bridge Replacement Project.      $6,500,000
                 The replacement of a two lane bridge with
                 a four lane bridge.......................
 2791      FL   Construct SR 9B Extension, St. Johns          $4,400,000
                 County, Florida..........................
 2792      AL   Design and construct a 4-lane highway from    $1,000,000
                 Muscle Shoals, AL to I-10................
 2793      IN   Improve SR 9 Greenfield Corridor, Indiana.      $500,000
 2794      NJ   Interstate 280 Interchange Improvements,     $10,000,000
                 Harrison.................................
 2795      KY   Construct Northern Bypass of Somerset, KY    $35,000,000
                 and I-66 from the Cumberland Parkway west
                 of Somerset, Kentucky to I-75 south of
                 London, Kentucky.........................
 2796      VA   Preliminary Engineer, Design, and               $500,000
                 Construct improvements to Virginia Beach
                 Blvd in Virginia Beach and Norfolk.......
 2797      PA   Fayette County, Pennsylvania, State Road      $2,000,000
                 21 Improvements..........................
 2798      ME   Replacement of Waldo-Hancock Bridge.......   $16,000,000
 2799        CT Reconstruct and widen Homer St and Chase      $2,000,000
                 Ave in Waterbury from Waterville Ave to
                 Nottingham Terrace.......................
 2800      FL   Construct new east-west road from the         $1,000,000
                 intersection of Beeline Highway and PGA
                 Boulevard west to Seminole Pratt Whitney
                 Road.....................................
 2801      WI   Enhance West Silver Spring Ave with             $400,000
                 lighting enhancement, crosswalk
                 improvements, signage, landscaping,
                 Milwaukee................................
 2802      NY   Completion of 1.6 mi trail network in the       $124,000
                 Utica Marsh, NY..........................
 2803      TX   Construct I635-I30 Interchange, Dallas,      $15,000,000
                 Texas....................................
 2804      IL   Establish transportation museum on Navy         $500,000
                 Pier, Chicago............................
 2805        CA Establish I-15 Interchange at Nisqualli       $1,500,000
                 and Mojave River crossing in San
                 Bernardino County........................
 2806      MA   Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority    $1,000,000
                 Secure Station, Boston...................
 2807      FL   Construct bridges on SR 710 in Palm Beach     $2,500,000
                 County...................................
 2808      PA   Reconstruct intersection of SR 51 and         $2,150,000
                 Franklin Ave, Beaver County..............
 2809      NJ   Rehabilitation existing structure at the      $1,000,000
                 Bridge Street bridge over the CSX
                 Railroad Trenton Line in Manville, NJ....
 2810      OR   Repair and recoat logging bridge over           $150,000
                 Highway 99 E, Canby......................
 2811        CA San Gabriel Blvd Rehabilitation Project--       $200,000
                 Broadway to Las Tunas, San Gabriel.......
 2812        CA Signal upgrades on Avenida de las Flores,       $125,200
                 Melinda Road, Avenida de las Banderas,
                 and Alma Aldea, Rancho Santa Margarita,
                 California...............................
 2813        CA Construct State Route 905 to connect the     $15,000,000
                 Otay Mesa Port of Entry to Interstate
                 805, San Diego...........................
 2814      MA   Crosby Drive Improvement Project..........    $1,000,000
 2815      WI   Construct North Shore Extension of              $350,000
                 Friendship State Trail, Calumet and
                 Winnebago Counties, Wisconsin............
 2816      AR   Construct and rehabilitate Fayetteville       $5,000,000
                 Expressway Economic Development Corridor.
 2817      PA   Armstrong County, Pennsylvania,               $2,000,000
                 construction of the Freeport Bridge......
 2818      IL   Road extension for Redco Drive to Skyline     $1,000,000
                 Dr, Williamson County....................
 2819        CA Rosecrans Avenue and Bridge Arterial          $4,000,000
                 Reconstruction Project, Compton..........
 2820      MA   Canalside Rail Trail Construction of the      $1,000,000
                 Canalside Rail Trail, Deerfield &
                 Montague.................................
 2821        CA Conduct study and construct Daggett Road,     $5,000,000
                 Port of Stockton, CA, Access Project.....
 2822      WI   Construct a bicycle/pedestrian path, and      $2,000,000
                 two bridges across Starkweather Creek,
                 Madison..................................
 2823      GA   Construct City of Fayetteville, Ga. School      $625,000
                 Access Bike Ped Project..................
 2824      TN   Sevier County, Tennessee SR 449 extension.    $1,000,000
 2825      GA   SR 133 south bound lane bridge replacement    $1,000,000
                 over the Georgia Florida Railnet line,
                 Dougherty County.........................
 2826        CA Construct grade separation on State Street    $2,000,000
                 and Cajon Boulevard along BNSF tracks in
                 San Bernardino...........................
 2827      WA   Construct SR 9 Pedestrian Overpass in         $1,100,000
                 Arlington................................
 2828        CA Implement streetscape improvements along        $100,000
                 Wilbur Avenue to enhance traffic and
                 pedestrian safety........................
 2829      MD   I95, I495, MD5 Branch Avenue Metro Access.    $4,000,000
 2830      TN   Improving Vehicle Efficiencies at At-Grade       $57,000
                 highway-Railroad Crossing in Loudon, TN..
 2831      MO   I-470, I-435 & Rt 71 Completion of            $3,000,000
                 Interstate realignment...................
 2832      PA   Ridge Avenue Revitalization project in        $1,000,000
                 conjunction with Roxborough Dev. Corp.
                 for scenic enhancements & pedestrian
                 safety improvements along a heavily
                 traveled thoroughfare....................
 2833      PA   Corridor improvements for PA 72 from PA       $1,000,000
                 283 to PA Turnpike.......................
 2834      AR   Construction of I-49, Highway 71: Highway     $5,000,000
                 22 to Highway 71 near Jenny Lind.........
 2835        CA Provide landscape enhancement of an           $1,500,000
                 existing open culvert on Atherton Street,
                 Long Beach...............................
 2836      NY   Rehabilitate Guy Lombardo Avenue and          $1,195,000
                 construct drainage improvements and new
                 sidewalks and curb cuts in Freeport, NY..
 2837      IA   I 35 interchange improvements, Ankeny.....    $5,000,000
 2838      PA   Improve Freemansburg Avenue and its           $2,000,000
                 intersections at Route 33................
 2839      NJ   Pedestrian facilities and street lighting       $400,000
                 on Route 551 from Route 130 to Chestnut
                 Street, Brooklawn........................
 2840      IL   I-57 and I-294 Interchange................    $3,000,000
 2841      FL   New Kings Rd. Pedestrian Overpass &           $1,000,000
                 Enhancements, Jacksonville...............
 2842      TX   Grimes Co., TX Bridge Improvement Project.      $500,000
 2843        CA Crenshaw Blvd. Rehabilitation, Maricopa       $1,000,000
                 St. to Sepulveda Blvd., City of Torrance.
 2844      VA   Engineering and Right of Way for              $1,500,000
                 Interstate 73 in Roanoke County..........
 2845      GA   Johnson Ferry Road Glenridge Drive            $2,500,000
                 Widening, Abernathy Road to Hammond Drive
 2846      GA   Install walkways, bridges, lighting,          $6,020,083
                 landscaping in Water Works Park and south
                 along river through Ocmulgee Monument and
                 Central City Park........................
 2847      OH   Intersection improvements and related road      $612,000
                 improvements in the City of Chardon, OH..
 2848      WV   Construct Coalfields Expressway...........    $7,200,000
 2849        CA Improve pedestrian and biking trails          $1,000,000
                 within East Bay Regional Park District,
                 Contra Costa County......................
 2850      MA   Berkshire County Bike Paths, Design &         $5,000,000
                 Construction.............................
 2851      MI   Ogemaw County, Overlay of Fairview Road to      $369,600
                 improve network of all-season truck
                 routes...................................
 2852      VA   Old Mill Road Extension...................    $1,000,000
 2853      PA   Construct Campbelltown Connector, Lebanon     $2,500,000
                 County...................................
 2854      NJ   Construct Rt 40 Reconstruction from Rt 77     $3,000,000
                 to Elmer Lake, Elmer, Salem County.......
 2855      OH   Design and Construct Riverwalk and            $1,500,000
                 adjacent facilities, Warren, Trumbull Co.
 2856        CA Realign SR 4 within the City of Oakley....    $2,000,000
 2857      IL   Construct recreational trail from Spring        $400,000
                 Creek Forest Preserve to Greene Valley
                 Forest Preserve in DuPage County, IL.....
 2858      MN   Construct trail link between Bruce Vento      $1,500,000
                 Regional Trail and Mississippi River
                 Corridor in St. Paul.....................
 2859      FL   Construct Interstate-4/ Crosstown             $1,000,000
                 Connector................................
 2860      UT   Add lights to road from Halchita to             $200,000
                 Mexican Hat in the Navajo Nation.........
 2861        CA Construct off ramp at Interstate 8/           $3,000,000
                 Imperial Avenue Interchange, El Centro...
 2862      VA   Cranesnest Trail--construction of hiking,       $650,000
                 biking, horse trail from Route 83 to
                 Cranesnest Campground....................
 2863       NC  Durham and Chatham Counties, NC Completion    $2,000,000
                 of American Tobacco Trail................
 2864      TX   Austin to Manor Rail Trail, Texas.........    $2,000,000
 2865      PA   Eliminate existing rail line in Indian, PA    $4,000,000
                 to eliminate 37 at grade crossings and
                 reconstruct the line outside the town
                 from Glenn Lock to Middletown............
 2866      MN   Extend Cuyuna Range and Great River Road        $400,000
                 Trails, Aitkin...........................
 2867      NY   Conduct planning, engineering, and              $500,000
                 eventual construction of Rte. 5 in City
                 of Oneida, from Seneca St. to county line
 2868      NY   Great Neck Road Traffic Calming Project...      $400,000
 2869      NJ   Design and construct new streetscape          $1,000,000
                 through Irvington Center.................
 2870      IL   Construct connector road between              $6,000,000
                 Collinsville Rd to IL 3/North 1st St, St.
                 Clair County.............................
 2871      NJ   Carteret, NJ Ferry Service Terminal.......    $2,100,000
 2872      AL   Construct I 10-US 231 Connector from          $3,000,000
                 Dothan, AL to Florida....................
 2873      OH   Bicycle Paths for the Magic Mile in             $800,000
                 Willougby, OH............................
 2874       NC  Construct Interstate 73 74 in Montgomery     $18,000,000
                 County and Richmond County, North
                 Carolina.................................
 2875      NY   Construct Phase II I-90 Connector ITS         $6,000,000
                 Laboratory in Rensselaer County..........
 2876       NC  Design and construct Airport Area Roadway     $2,800,000
                 Network..................................
 2877      WA   Engineering and Construction of the           $1,000,000
                 Centennial Trail in Snohomish............
 2878      OR   I-5 Beltline Interchange..................   $20,000,000
 2879      IL   Extension North from Rt. 30 to Wheeler        $4,760,000
                 Road and Galena Boulevard extension west
                 of Rt. 47 in Sugar Grove, IL.............
 2880      NY   Newburgh, Improve East End Roads..........    $1,863,500
 2881      ME   Construction of the Kennebec River Rail         $400,000
                 Trail....................................
 2882        CA Construct Bristol Street multi-modal          $3,000,000
                 corridor in Santa Ana....................
 2883        CA Construct pedestrian sidewalk enhancements      $500,000
                 in Bellflower............................
 2884      KS   Improvement and expansion for 2.7 miles of   $14,500,000
                 K-18 in Geary County.....................
 2885        CA I-110/SR 47/Harbor Blvd. Interchange          $5,000,000
                 Improvements, San Pedro..................
 2886      MA   Oxbow National Wildlife Refuge, Design and    $2,000,000
                 construction of a Visitor Contact Station
 2887      AL   Pedestrian Improvements for Pell City, AL.      $250,000
 2888      WI   Rehabilitate Highway 51 between CTH S and     $2,000,000
                 USH 8 in Lincoln County..................
 2889      OH   Rehabilitate tunnel and bridge on National      $700,000
                 Road Bikeway in St. Clairsville..........
 2890      MD   Pennington Ave Drawbridge, Baltimore......    $1,000,000
 2891      MA   Rehabilitation and paving of Parker River       $250,000
                 Road.....................................
 2892      MN   Reconstruct CSAH 7 between Itasca CR 341      $3,200,000
                 and the Scenic State Park entrance to
                 improve safety and structural integrity..
 2893      OH   Grading, paving, roads for the transfer of    $6,500,000
                 rail to truck for the intermodal facility
                 at Rickenbacker Airport..................
 2894      PA   Relocation of PA 52 at Longwood Gardens...    $1,200,000
 2895      TX   Construct Interstate 35 improvements in       $1,000,000
                 Buda.....................................
 2896      TN   improve streetscape and signage, McMinn         $300,000
                 County, TN...............................
 2897      OR   Culvert Replacement, Sweet Home...........      $130,000
 2898      AL   AL 5 Widening in Bibb County..............    $3,000,000
 2899        CO Design and build a multimodal corridor on     $5,000,000
                 US 36....................................
 2900      WA   Development of highway-rail crossings in      $1,000,000
                 Spokane County, WA and Kootenai County,
                 ID.......................................
 2901      OH   Acquire right of way land along US 24,        $1,000,000
                 Lucas County.............................
 2902      IL   Improve Streets, Westchester..............      $150,000
 2903      NY   Enhance road and transportation facilities    $3,000,000
                 in the vicinity of W. 65th St and
                 Broadway, New York City..................
 2904      TN   Construction of Knob Creek Road in              $500,000
                 Washington County, Tennessee.............
 2905      TN   improve streetscape and pavement repair,        $300,000
                 Loudon County, TN........................
 2906        CA Improvement of intersection at Inglewood      $3,600,000
                 Ave and Marine Ave to reduce congestion,
                 City of Lawndale.........................
 2907      HI   Interstate Route H1 rehabilitation,           $7,430,000
                 Kaahumanu Street to Kaimakani Street.....
 2908      ID   Construct Interchange on I-84 at Ten Mile     $2,000,000
                 Rd, Meridian, Idaho......................
 2909      NJ   Pedestrian facilities and street lighting       $347,120
                 on Haddon Avenue from Voorhees Township
                 Line to Bate Avenue, Berlin Township.....
 2910      WA   267th Street NW Pedestrian Path in              $600,000
                 Stanwood.................................
 2911      KY   Replace US 68 and US 150 Bridge over            $750,000
                 Chaplin River, Perryville................
 2912      UT   Geveva Rd-Provo Center Street, Orem 1600      $7,500,000
                 North to I-15 FWY, Provo-widen from 2 to
                 4 lanes..................................
 2913      IL   Construction of a new roadway and grade       $7,000,000
                 separation of the UP West Line east of
                 Elburn...................................
 2914      VA   Haymarket, VA. Washington Street                $500,000
                 improvements.............................
 2915      NJ   Improvements to implement the Readington        $500,000
                 Tewksbury Transportation Improvement
                 District.................................
 2916      IL   Allow IDOT to proceed with engineering and    $2,000,000
                 construction of Airport-Lockport Rd and
                 Illinois Route 126 interchanges on I-55..
 2917      AR   Caraway Bridge Overpass...................    $9,000,000
 2918      OH   Construction of an Intermodal Facility at       $500,000
                 University Circle in the City of
                 Cleveland................................
 2919      PA   Jeannette Truck Route.....................      $500,000
 2920      MD   MD45, Cavan to Ridgley Roads..............    $5,520,000
 2921      MD   MD 30 Hampstead Bypass....................    $1,000,000
 2922      MI   Monroe Area Highway-Railway Crossing          $6,400,000
                 Improvements, City of Monroe.............
 2923      OH   Obtain right-of-way and construct the         $2,000,000
                 161,37 widening project in Franklin and
                 Licking Counties, Ohio...................
 2924        CT Enfield, Connecticut Make improvements to     $1,910,000
                 South Maple Street Bridge................
 2925      NY   Conduct studies, if necessary, and            $4,000,000
                 construct infrastructure projects for
                 Governor's Island........................
 2926      NY   Harlem River Park and Bikeway.............    $1,000,000
 2927        CT Make Improvements to Plainfield Cemetary        $300,000
                 Road.....................................
 2928       SC  Construct grade separation and interchange    $1,000,000
                 improvements at U.S. 521, Lancaster
                 County...................................
 2929      NJ   Replacement of the Magnolia Avenue Bridge     $1,000,000
                 over Route 1 & 9.........................
 2930      IL   Resurfacing and restriping Euclid Ave           $350,000
                 between Walnut Ave and Douglas Ave in
                 Arlington Heights........................
 2931      MI   Resurfacing of Frazho Road in Roseville...    $1,280,000
 2932        CA Construct 213th Street pedestrian bridge      $1,000,000
                 to provide safe passage for pedestrians
                 and wheelchairs, Carson..................
 2933      MO   Conduct impact studies for Missouri River     $5,000,000
                 Bridge siting in Kansas City, MO.........
 2934        CA Construction of Lenwood Road Grade            $1,500,000
                 Separation in Barstow, CA................
 2935      PA   Improvements to Frankford Avenue from         $1,250,000
                 Cottman Avenue to Harbison Avenue........
 2936      IN   Revelop Hazeldell Road, Hamilton County,      $1,000,000
                 Indiana..................................
 2937      AK   Road Improvements and upgrades to service     $5,000,000
                 road areas and miscellaneous projects
                 within Northstar Borough.................
 2938      OH   Rehabilitation or replacement of highway-       $360,000
                 rail grade separations along the West
                 Central Ohio Port Authority route in
                 Champaign and Clark Counties.............
 2939      MI   Otsego County, Resurfacing and widening of      $368,000
                 Parmater Rd..............................
 2940      WA   Realign West Main Street through Kelso....    $2,000,000
 2941      TN   Reconstruct State Route 109 from I-40 in      $1,000,000
                 Wilson County to Portland in Sumner
                 County...................................
 2942      PA   Redesigning the intersection of US 322/       $1,500,000
                 High Street and Rosedale Ave.............
 2943      DE   Replacement of the Indian River Inlet         $6,000,000
                 Bridge, Sussex County Delaware...........
 2944      FL   Construct link from I-95 to I-10 through      $5,000,000
                 Clay County with terminus points SR 23 to
                 CAR 739B.................................
 2945      MN   Construct ramps and new bridge over           $7,020,744
                 Interstate 35 at CSAH 17, and reconstruct
                 CSAH 17 from west County Line to CSAH 30,
                 Chisago County...........................
 2946        CT Conduct multi-modal study of Route 8          $1,000,000
                 corridor between Beacon Falls-Seymour
                 town line and exit 40....................
 2947      AR   Hwy 65 improvements in Van Buren County,      $1,500,000
                 including construction of passing lanes,
                 bridge improvements, intersection
                 improvements and other roadway
                 improvements.............................
 2948      AZ   Construct sidewalks along White Spar Road -   $1,500,000
                 Prescott, AZ.............................
 2949      NY   Construction of Pedestrian and Bike Trail       $500,000
                 campus access & improvements, St.
                 Bonaventure, NY..........................
 2950      NY   Eastern Laurelton Area Improvements,          $8,600,000
                 Queens, New York.........................
 2951      NY   Bicycle and pedestrian safety                 $1,200,000
                 improvements, Main Street, Riverhead.....
 2952      AL   Construct County Road 83 corridor from       $10,000,000
                 Foley Beach Express to I-10..............
 2953      PA   Design and construct improvements to PA       $3,870,500
                 465 from Walnut Bottom Rd. to PA 641 and
                 at I 81 Exit 44..........................
 2954      IL   Reconstruct and Widen Route 60 Bridge over    $9,000,000
                 I-94 in Lake Forest......................
 2955      VA   Improve Downtown Staunton, Virginia,          $1,500,000
                 Streetscape..............................
 2956      PA   Route 322 Halls Run Upgrades from the         $1,700,000
                 intersection of Horsecreek Road to
                 Mapleshade Road -Venango County..........
 2957      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &        $2,500,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Wilkes-Barre..........................
 2958      IN   SR56 Reconstruction, Aurora, Indiana......    $5,120,000
 2959      MI   Study and implement transportation system     $4,000,000
                 alternatives in the vicinity of US 31/M
                 46.......................................
 2960      MA   Longfellow Bridge Rehabilitation..........    $5,000,000
 2961      IL   For Village of Bolingbrook to construct         $500,000
                 Remington Blvd. extension................
 2962      AZ   Design and Construction of Rio Salado         $3,000,000
                 Pedestrian Bridge in Tempe, AZ...........
 2963      MI   Study to determine replacement options for    $4,000,000
                 obsolete and structurally deteriorating
                 bridge (Trenton- Grosse Ile Bridge)
                 including approach roadways, Charter
                 County of Wayne..........................
 2964      PA   Mount Joy Bridge Replacement on Route 230.      $450,000
 2965        CA Modifies 9 traffic signals between Willow       $300,000
                 Road and Middlefield Road and Hamilton
                 Avenue, Menlo Park.......................
 2966      OH   Summit County Engineer Reconstruct Access       $500,000
                 Roads to Cuyahoga Valley National Park...
 2967      OR   To study the feasibility of widening Hwy      $1,000,000
                 26 from the Hwy 217 interchange to the
                 Cornelius Pass exit......................
 2968      GA   Athens-Clarke County Greenway Enhancement     $2,320,000
                 Project..................................
 2969      WA   Improve Wahkiakum County Ferry landing....      $250,000
 2970      IL   Irving Park Bridge over the Chicago River.    $4,000,000
 2971      MI   Design, right-of-way and construction of      $2,200,000
                 passing relief lanes and improvements
                 necessary on M-55, between M-37 and M-115
 2972      NE   Design, right-of-way and construction of      $4,000,000
                 South and West Beltway in Lincoln,
                 Nebraska.................................
 2973      TX   Tower 55 CMAQ Congestion and Preliminary      $2,000,000
                 Engineering Study........................
 2974      NY   Town of Chester, Lake Hill Farms                $150,000
                 subdivision road improvements............
 2975      MN   Improvements on TH 169 east and west of       $2,216,000
                 East Two Rivers Crossing and TH 135 from
                 Enterprise Drive to TH 169...............
 2976      IN   Reconstruct Standard Avenue, Whiting......    $1,300,000
 2977      TX   Barron Rd. Interchange at SH 6 (Earl          $3,000,000
                 Rudder Freeway) College Station..........
 2978        CA Develop conceptual master plan to improve       $215,000
                 the efficiency of transportation
                 facilities, Covina.......................
 2979      PA   Transportation enhancements along the         $3,000,000
                 Delaware Canal between Yardley, PA and
                 Bristol, PA..............................
 2980      VA   Upgrade DOT crossing #467661K to constant       $171,700
                 warning time devices.....................
 2981      UT   Add lighting on Highway 262 on the Navajo       $175,000
                 Nation in Aneth..........................
 2982      VA   Chestnut Mountain Road--feasibility study,      $500,000
                 design and construction start for road
                 improvement on National Forest lands.....
 2983      MI   Construction of roads and trails Humbug       $1,100,000
                 Marsh Unit Linked Greenways System,
                 Detroit International Wildlife Refuge....
 2984      TX   Construct access road connecting Port of      $1,800,000
                 Beaumont property on east bank of Neches
                 River to I-10 access road east of the
                 Neches River.............................
 2985      AR   Develop U.S. Highway 71 (I-49) to             $3,160,000
                 Interstate standards on new location
                 between Mena, AR and LA state line.......
 2986       SC  Lexington County, widen US 1 and SC 6, and    $2,000,000
                 improve US 1, SC 6, and US 378...........
 2987      IL   Midlothian Road Signalization, Lake Zurich      $600,000
 2988      VA   Glen Alton--design and construction of        $1,000,000
                 recreation trails, access and visitor
                 information center.......................
 2989      MI   Expansion of Cass Avenue in Clinton           $9,194,000
                 Township.................................
 2990        CO Bromley Lane and US 85 interchange            $1,000,000
                 feasibility study and construction of
                 needed improvements......................
 2991      MD   Constructing Chestertown Trail,                 $300,000
                 Chestertown, MD..........................
 2992      IL   Eastern Peoria Bypass.....................    $3,000,000
 2993      VA   Conduct planning and engineering for Mayo     $2,000,000
                 Bridge in Richmond.......................
 2994      NY   Elevation of road and construction of           $695,000
                 drainage improvements on Sequams Lane
                 Center and Sequams Lane West in the Town
                 of Islip, NY.............................
 2995      NM   Improvements to San Juan County Road 7950.    $1,000,000
 2996      WA   116th St/Interstate 5 Interchange             $2,000,000
                 Reconstruction in Marysville.............
 2997       SC  Construction of public roads at the           $6,000,000
                 International Center for Automotive
                 Research and reconstruction of Fairforest
                 Way in Greenville, South Carolina........
 2998      PA   Provide 4 through-lanes on PA 100 by          $5,000,000
                 constructing two thru lanes to the east
                 of Ludwigs Corner........................
 2999      PA   Completion of construction of final 2         $2,000,000
                 ramps of I-79 interchange with Parkway
                 West; widening of 1 mile of Parkway West
                 leading to ramps.........................
 3000        CA Diamond Bar, CA Grand Avenue                  $1,600,000
                 Rehabilitation...........................
 3001      NY   Reconfigure intersection of Ridge Street        $750,000
                 and Hallocks Mill Road & install new
                 traffic signal...........................
 3002      WA   Guard Street Reconstruction Project in          $800,000
                 Friday Harbor............................
 3003        CO Roadway widening and interchange              $9,000,000
                 rebuilding on I-225 from I-70 to Parker
                 Road.....................................
 3004      PA   Roosevelt Boulevard improvements by the       $4,000,000
                 Pennsylvania Department of Transportation
 3005      MN   Construct Paul Bunyan Trail Walker to           $700,000
                 Bemidji Segment..........................
 3006      HI   Upgrades to Farrington Highway............    $1,000,000
 3007      KY   US 41A Phase II Design and Right of Way...    $4,000,000
 3008      NM   US 54 Corona, Tularosa, and Vaughn Bridges    $1,000,000
                 Replacement and Rehabilitation...........
 3009      OH   Construction of access road along east        $1,000,000
                 side of SR 8 in Summit County, OH........
 3010      TX   US 281 from Brooks County Line to FM 3066,    $2,000,000
                 Brooks County............................
 3011      FL   Construction of an interchange at             $5,538,959
                 Florida's Turnpike & Stirling Rd. in
                 Broward County...........................
 3012      NY   Construction of the City of Watertown         $3,000,000
                 Streetscape Enhancement Project..........
 3013      IL   Improve Streets, Merrionette Park.........      $500,000
 3014      NY   Install Improvements for Pedestrian Safety      $250,000
                 in the vicinity of St. Roberts Bellarmine
 3015      NY   Rebuild Queens Plaza, a 250-foot wide         $8,000,000
                 roadway on the eastern end of the
                 Queensborough Bridge.....................
 3016      PA   Upgrade circuit for gates and lights at         $275,000
                 Seventh Street in Emmaus, PA USDOT
                 crossing number 592401H to constant
                 warning time devices.....................
 3017      UT   SR-158 Improvements, Pine View Dam, Weber     $2,100,000
                 County, Utah.............................
 3018        CA Valley Boulevard Capacity Improvement         $2,000,000
                 between 710 Freeway and Marguerita
                 Avenue, Alhambra.........................
 3019      IL   Offramp and overpass from I-57 outside of     $5,000,000
                 Marion and necessary connector roads.....
 3020      AK   Construction of and improvements to roads     $3,000,000
                 at Alaska Pacific University.............
 3021       SC  Upgrade of the I-95/SC 327 Interchange        $7,500,000
                 near Florence............................
 3022        CA Valley View/Stage Grade Separation              $900,000
                 Project, La Mirada and Santa Fe Springs,
                 California...............................
 3023      OR   Renewal of Wooden Bridge West of Albany...    $8,000,000
 3024      MI   Northville, Taft Road from 8 Mile North to      $500,000
                 city limits..............................
 3025      NY   Village of Pawling Rehabilitation of            $100,000
                 Grandview Ave from Lakeside to end.......
 3026      SD   Pave and curb Cheyenne River Tribe Route      $1,500,000
                 900, ``Chinatown'' in Eagle Butte........
 3027      FL   Church Street Improvements, Orlando.......   $15,000,000
 3028      MI   Walled Lake, Widen Maple Road, west of          $125,000
                 Decker to Welch..........................
 3029      AR   Washington County, Arkansas--replace and        $800,000
                 rebuild Tilly Willy Bridge...............
 3030      AR   Russellville Intermodal Facility construct    $2,000,000
                 access roads from AR Hwy 247, purchase
                 Right-of-Way.............................
 3031      TX   Construct IH 30 Monty Stratton Parkway        $1,500,000
                 Interchange in Greenville, TX............
 3032      PA   Design and Construction of Portzer Road       $2,000,000
                 Connector, Bucks County..................
 3033      IL   For Plainfield Township Park District to        $100,000
                 construct DuPage River Bike & Pedestrian
                 Trail linking Grand Illinois, Midewin, &
                 I&M Canal Trails.........................
 3034      TX   Pedestrian Path and Sidewalk Improvements       $500,000
                 along US 83 in Rio Grande City...........
 3035      MS   Upgrade roads at Tougaloo College.........      $500,000
 3036      IL   Washington Street Widening, Gurnee........    $3,360,000
 3037      LA   Replacement Bridge for Tunnel, Belle            $500,000
                 Chasse...................................
 3038      FL   Implement Busch Boulevard corridor            $2,500,000
                 improvements to improve safety in Tampa..
 3039      MI   Construction of Pittsfield Greenways            $201,000
                 Bridge--nonmotorized bridge enhancement
                 onto existing Bemis Road Bridge,
                 Pittsfield Charter Township..............
 3040       NC  North Carolina. Repair and improve safety    $18,000,000
                 features on US Hwy 19 from Maggie Valley
                 to Cherokee..............................
 3041       NC  Northern Loop Project, City of Wilson.....    $1,000,000
 3042      OR   Weaver Road Extension and Bridge Project,    $17,500,000
                 Douglas County...........................
 3043      MI   Complete 58 miles of White Pine Trail from    $2,800,000
                 Grand Rapids to Cadillac.................
 3044      NY   Elmira Congestion Mitigation..............    $2,000,000
 3045      IL   Improve Roads and Bridges, Cicero.........    $1,500,000
 3046      MI   John-Daly Road Reconstruction--2.5 miles      $2,500,000
                 from northern city limit to southern city
                 limit, Inkster...........................
 3047      UT   Construct pedestrian safety project on the      $325,000
                 Navajo Nation in Montezuma Creek.........
 3048      MD   Construct MD5, Hughesville Bypass.........   $10,000,000
 3049      OH   Repair & Construct Rock Spring Bridge,          $500,000
                 Portage County...........................
 3050      RI   Replace I-195 Washington Bridge Eastbound.    $2,000,000
 3051      UT   Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge Access       $4,500,000
                 Road Improvements, Box Elder County, UT..
 3052      MA   Reconstruction of Union St. and Rt. 138W,     $1,720,000
                 Holbrook.................................
 3053      MI   Replacement of the interchange at 44th        $9,000,000
                 Street and U.S. 131 in Grand Rapids......
 3054      OH   Construct interchange improvements at SR      $1,000,000
                 46 and 82 in Howland Township, Trumbull
                 Co.......................................
 3055      GA   Widen and construct US 84 Connector Bypass    $3,000,000
                 from west of US 84 SR 119 west of
                 Hinesville to US 84 SR 196 south of
                 Flemington, Liberty County, Georgia......
 3056      IL   Project is a stand-alone roadway              $1,000,000
                 improvement consisting of the complete
                 reconstruction of the roadway, The
                 Village of Forest Park...................
 3057      MI   Jackson Freeway Modernization Project. I-    $16,000,000
                 94 Modernization Project from Michigan
                 State Route 60 [M60] easterly to Sargent
                 Road.....................................
 3058      VA   Smart Travel and Traffic Management             $500,000
                 Systems in Salem and Staunton District,
                 Virginia.................................
 3059      OH   Construct Great Miami River Multi-Use         $1,270,000
                 Trail, Miami County, Ohio................
 3060       DC  Rock Creek Recreational Trail study to        $1,000,000
                 assess feasibility of constructing
                 recreation trail.........................
 3061      MI   Study road runoff in Little Black Creek         $400,000
                 between U.S. 31 and Seaway Drive.........
 3062        CA Conducts environmental review of proposed       $500,000
                 improvements related to the connection of
                 Dumbarton Bridge to Highway 101..........
 3063      NY   Construction of and improvements to Union     $1,000,000
                 Road in West Seneca......................
 3064      WI   Upgrade I 43 between State Highway 140 and    $3,000,000
                 East County Line in Rock County,
                 Wisconsin................................
 3065      NJ   Separation of the intersection of 13th        $1,055,000
                 Street and the Lehigh Rail Line through
                 bridge or tunnel in Manville, NJ.........
 3066        CA Construct parking facility and improve          $377,500
                 access to Imperial Valley Expo...........
 3067        CA Develop bicycle paths and pedestrian            $300,000
                 access to Third Avenue, Chula Vista......
 3068      IL   Upgrade County Highways 18 and 22 in          $2,000,000
                 conjunction with state I-57 interchange
                 plan north of Mattoon....................
 3069        CA Widen & Reconfigure Sepulveda & Culver        $2,740,000
                 Boulevards, Culver City..................
 3070      OH   Construct interchange or other appropriate    $6,935,000
                 access on IR 70 west of existing mall
                 road exit in Belmont County..............
 3071      AZ   Widen and expand the existing roadway and     $5,000,000
                 railroad overpass in the Houghton Road
                 Corridor.................................
 3072      OK   Construction of Duncan Bypass Grade           $3,000,000
                 Separation...............................
 3073       SC  Pine Needles Widening & Bridge Replacement    $3,000,000
 3074        CA Olsen Road widening and roadway               $2,100,000
                 improvments in Simi Valley, California...
 3075      GA   Streetscape project to upgrade sidewalks,       $500,000
                 lighting and streets, Jeffersonville.....
 3076      NY   Implement Diamond Grinding Measures on I-       $700,000
                 95, I-278, Mosholu Parkway, I- 495, Grand
                 Central Parkway, and Richmond Parkway....
 3077      MD   Upgrade Conduit System for Traffic Signal     $1,300,000
                 Systems, Street Lighting, and Traffic-
                 related Video Cameras for Baltimore......
 3078      WA   5th Street/US 2 Signalization Improvements      $100,000
                 in Sultan................................
 3079      WI   Implementation of recommendations               $600,000
                 contained in 2005 Safe Routes to School
                 in Superior plan.........................
 3080      LA   Widen and improve LaPlaco Boulevard from      $4,000,000
                 Bayou Segnette to US 90, Jefferson Parish
 3081      NY   Realign Kirk Lake Drive in Carmel.........      $110,000
 3082      NY   Town of Somers road reconstruction........      $500,000
 3083      OH   Upgrade grade crossing safety devices in        $952,000
                 Elyria and North Ridgeville..............
 3084      MS   Widen and improve Martin Bluff Road,          $3,000,000
                 Gautier..................................
 3085        CA Widen and reconstruct Washington Blvd from    $3,000,000
                 westerly city boundary at Vernon to I-5
                 Fwy at Telegraph Rd in Commerce..........
 3086        CA San Diego, CA Interstate 5, Sorrento          $2,000,000
                 Valley Road and Genesee Avenue
                 Interchange Project......................
 3087      OR   Widen I-5 between Portland, Oregon and        $5,000,000
                 Vancouver, Washington....................
 3088      LA   North-South Corridor from Houma/Thibodaux     $5,000,000
                 to I-10..................................
 3089      GA   Warren County I-20 Frontage Road..........    $3,000,000
 3090      KY   Widen KY 11 from US 460 to the Mt.            $2,500,000
                 Sterling Bypass, Montgomery County.......
 3091      OH   Traffic and safety improvements to county     $1,070,000
                 roadways in Geauga County, OH............
 3092        CA Develop bicycle paths and public park         $5,000,000
                 space adjacent to the New River, Calexico
 3093      TN   Constructiion of the Foothills Parkway in     $7,500,000
                 the Great Smoky Mountains National Park..
 3094      PA   Improvements to Torresdale Avenue from        $1,250,000
                 Harbison Avenue to Cottman Avenue........
 3095      GA   Butner Road and Stonewall Tell Road,          $1,000,000
                 Fulton County............................
 3096      OH   Construction of highway-rail grade            $3,250,000
                 separations at intersections in Lima to
                 improve motorist and pedestrian safety...
 3097      OR   Siuslaw River Bridge, Florence............    $4,250,000
 3098        CA Construct Cypress Avenue over-pass to         $3,000,000
                 separate Interstate 10 and Union Pacific
                 Railroad tracks in Fontana...............
 3099        CA Modify and reconfigure Kanan Road             $5,000,000
                 interchange along US101 in Agoura Hills..
 3100      OH   Upgrade and widen intersection for SR 14      $1,000,000
                 in Washingtonville.......................
 3101      NM   Upgrade NM 434 from Mora north to Black       $1,500,000
                 Lake.....................................
 3102      NJ   Upgrade of Turnpike/Route 440 Interchange     $4,000,000
                 in Bayonne...............................
 3103      LA   Widen LA 18 from Northrup Grumman/Avondale    $2,500,000
                 Shipyards to US 90, Jefferson Parish.....
 3104      PA   Widen PA 896 between Strasburg Borough and    $1,200,000
                 US 30....................................
 3105      MI   Eliminate major roadway on Cleary               $500,000
                 University campus and establish a new
                 roadway..................................
 3106      PA   Reconstruction of 11 mile segment of the        $500,000
                 Lower Trail between Williamsport and Mt
                 Edna, Blair County, Pa...................
 3107      KY   Construction of interchange connecting        $2,000,000
                 US31W to I65 at mile marker 32 in Warren
                 County...................................
 3108      AS   Drainage mitigation for Pago Pago village     $1,000,000
                 roads....................................
 3109       NC  Install Sugar Creek Grade Separation......    $3,000,000
 3110      LA   Improvements to LA 46 in St. Bernard            $400,000
                 Parish...................................
 3111      IN   Construct Hoham Drive Extension in              $500,000
                 Plymouth, Indiana........................
 3112      OR   Construct turn lane on Gateway Boulevard,        $90,000
                 Cottage Grove............................
 3113      TN   Replace Unitia Bridge in Loudon County, TN      $900,000
 3114      VA   Replacement of Robertson Bridge in            $6,150,000
                 Danville.................................
 3115      MA   Public Improvements to Springfield              $300,000
                 Symphony Hall............................
 3116      NY   Realign Union Valley Road in Town of            $550,000
                 Carmel...................................
 3117      NY   Village of Pawling Improvements to              $125,000
                 Reservoir Road from State Rt 22 to
                 Prospect St..............................
 3118      MS   Build connector between SR 609 and State      $3,000,000
                 Highway 15 near I-10, Jackson and
                 Harrison Counties........................
 3119        CO I-70 West Mountain Corridor, Denver to        $4,000,000
                 Garfield County..........................
 3120        CA Completion of Interstate 5 and Interstate     $6,000,000
                 8 Connectors, San Diego..................
 3121      FL   Construct US 1 interchange at CR 210, St.     $6,600,000
                 Johns County, Florida....................
 3122      OH   Construct roadway improvement project           $250,000
                 along State Routes 37 and 78 through
                 Fairfield, Perry, Morgan, Noble, Monroe
                 Counties.................................
 3123      IL   Construct I-57 Bridge Overpass, City of         $600,000
                 Markham..................................
 3124      NJ   Design, plan and build a permanent              $500,000
                 pedestrian/bicycle path along the banks
                 of the Elizabeth River...................
 3125      NJ   Improve the US Interstate 78 Interchange      $1,000,000
                 at exit 15 in Franklin Township, Union
                 Township, and Town of Clinton............
 3126        CA Reconstruct Rosecrans Av. and construct         $400,000
                 bus pads from Garfield Av. to Century Bl.
                 in Paramount.............................
 3127      TN   Bristol, Tennessee highway-RR crossing          $100,000
                 grade improvement--USDOT#731120J.........
 3128        CO Glenwood Springs South Bridge (new, off-      $6,500,000
                 system bridge)...........................
 3129      NJ   Improvements of Newark and First Streets        $300,000
                 in Hoboken...............................
 3130      OH   Construct I-70 interchange at Burnett         $1,250,000
                 Road, Springfield........................
 3131      MN   Construction of Gitchi-Gami State Trail       $1,500,000
                 from Silver Bay to Tettegouche State Park
 3132        CA Improvements/Widening of SR 99 from Goshen    $8,200,000
                 to Kingsburg in Tulare County, California
 3133        CA Design and implement Harbor Boulevard ITS     $1,000,000
                 in Garden Grove..........................
 3134      WI   Complete the Glacial Drumlin Trail, from        $300,000
                 Madison to Waukesha......................
 3135      PA   Design and construct turn lanes, signal         $580,000
                 upgrades and improvements at PA 34 and
                 174 intersection.........................
 3136      PA   Design, engineering, ROW acquisition &          $200,000
                 construction of streetscaping
                 enhancements, paving, lighting, safety
                 improvements, parking & roadway redesign
                 in Wright Township, Luzerne County.......
 3137      PA   I-70-I-79 South Interchange Redesign and      $2,000,000
                 Upgrade..................................
 3138      KS   Elimination of highway-railway crossings      $5,730,000
                 at the city of Pittsburg Port Authority
                 to increase safety and reduce congestion.
 3139        CA Improve Access Road to Beale Air Force        $3,750,000
                 Base (Smartville Road)...................
 3140        CA Interstate 215, Los Alamos Road               $2,000,000
                 Interchange Project......................
 3141      NE   Missouri River Bridges between US-34, I-29    $3,500,000
                 in Iowa and US-75 in Nebraska............
 3142      AL   Huntsville Southern Bypass planning and       $3,000,000
                 engineering..............................
 3143      MO   Redesign and reconstruct I-170 interchange      $400,000
                 at Ladue Rd..............................
 3144      NY   Construct Interstate 87 Exit 3 Airport        $3,000,000
                 Connector in Albany......................
 3145        CA Citywide traffic signal upgrades requiring      $500,000
                 the installation of hardware and software
                 at 9 major intersections, Palo Alto......
 3146      OH   Construct replacement of Morgan Township      $3,300,000
                 Road 209 between SR 60 and SR 78 in
                 Morgan County............................
 3147      GU   Construct Route 3A Extension, Municipality    $3,000,000
                 of Yigo..................................
 3148      NY   Construct the Setauket/Port Jefferson         $5,000,000
                 Greenway Trail Project...................
 3149      AR   Develop a railroad overpass connecting        $2,640,000
                 U.S. Highway 67 and U.S. Highway 371 in
                 Prescott.................................
 3150      FL   Construct SR 312 Extension Bypass, St.        $5,300,000
                 Johns County, Florida....................
 3151      GA   Construct Welcome Center, and pedestrian        $500,000
                 trail, Abbeville.........................
 3152      VA   Improve Erickson Avenue and Stone Spring        $750,000
                 Road connection..........................
 3153      TX   Reconstruct Loop 12 IH 35E and SH 183 west    $5,000,000
                 extension to MacArthur, Irving, Texas....
 3154      OR   Completion of the first of three phases of    $6,000,000
                 trails in the Regional Trails Program....
 3155      MN   Construct bridge for Paul Bunyan Trail        $1,500,000
                 over Excelsior Road, Baxter..............
 3156      KY   Reconstruct US-127 at the US-127 and US-        $600,000
                 127 North Bypass, Mercer County..........
 3157        CA Rehabilitate street surface of Addison St.       $47,000
                 between Kester Ave. and Lemona Ave.......
 3158      IL   City of Springfield, IL for improvements        $952,572
                 to Cockrell Lane.........................
 3159      OH   Repair/Construct Mill Street Bridge, Akron    $1,800,000
 3160      MI   Resurface Caseville Road in Huron County..      $192,000
 3161      PA   River Trail and Esplanade Development at        $750,000
                 the Southside Riverfront Park............
 3162      IL   Construct access roads to National Great      $1,410,000
                 Rivers Research Center...................
 3163      IL   Construct Roadway from Mississippi River      $2,000,000
                 Barge Dock to IL Rt 3-IL Rt 157, Cahokia.
 3164      PA   Context Sensitive Design Elements for the     $1,500,000
                 Market Street Bridge, Lycoming County, PA
 3165      NY   Implement Pedestrian Safety Improvements        $500,000
                 on Queens Boulevard......................
 3166      NV   Design and construct interchange on I-15      $1,000,000
                 in Mesquite..............................
 3167        CA Construct grade separations at Washington       $500,000
                 Ave & UPRR crossing east and Washington
                 Ave & La Cadena Drive in Colton..........
 3168      MD   Intercounty Connector.....................    $6,000,000
 3169      MA   Charlemont Bridge, Route 2, Charlemont....    $4,800,000
 3170      MN   CSAH 47 rehabilitation from 165th Ave to        $440,000
                 TH 25, Morrison County...................
 3171      MS   Improve Old Augusta Road and construct        $3,500,000
                 Kaiser Road, Perry County................
 3172      PA   Reconstruction of US 30 from PA 10 to         $5,000,000
                 Business US 30 including travel lanes,
                 shoulders, etc...........................
 3173      NY   Route 78 (Transit Road), Genesee Street to    $3,000,000
                 Main Street, Towns of Amherst,
                 Cheektowaga and Clarence in Erie County..
 3174      NY   Southtowns Connector--Construct              $10,700,000
                 improvements to NY Route 5 from Coast
                 Guard Base to Ohio Street, including
                 Fuhrmann Boulevard.......................
 3175        CA SR 91 I 605 Needs Assessment Study,              $16,000
                 Whittier, CA.............................
 3176      GA   SR 70/Fulton Industrial Boulevard widening    $1,500,000
                 from Camp Creek Parkway to the SCL RR,
                 Fulton County............................
 3177      MO   Ste. Genevieve Co., Missouri Rt. 61 bridge    $1,500,000
                 replacement over Establishment Creek.....
 3178      MN   Construction of intersection at County        $3,000,000
                 Road 5 and TH 13 in City of Burnsville...
 3179      GA   SR 307 overpass over Georgia Port             $4,000,000
                 Authority rail line, Savannah............
 3180      MO   Study railroad reconfiguration to             $1,000,000
                 eliminate highway crossings in and around
                 Springfield, MO..........................
 3181       NC  Construct relocated NC 16 in Lincoln and      $1,700,000
                 Catawba Counties, NC.....................
 3182      IL   Construction of highway approaches to the     $1,600,000
                 Sullivan Road bridge in Aurora, IL.......
 3183      IL   Engineering and construction of 15.1 mile     $1,000,000
                 Alliance trail between Lock 14 in LaSalle
                 and Lock 2 in Bureau Junction............
 3184        CA Construct parking facility and improve        $1,000,000
                 museum pedestrian access from trolley
                 station, San Diego.......................
 3185      PA   Relocation and upgrade of Beaner Hallow       $1,650,000
                 Rd, Beaver County, PA....................
 3186      MN   TH 36-Stillwater Bridge; Acquisition of       $5,000,000
                 ROW......................................
 3187      IL   To construct Veterans Memorial Drive          $1,000,000
                 Extension. Will link Mt. Vernon on the
                 east side of I-57 with incorporated area
                 lying west...............................
 3188      MN   I-494 US 169 Interchange Reconstruction,      $5,000,000
                 Twin Cities Metropolitan Area, Minnesota.
 3189      AL   Jackson County Industrial Park Access         $1,000,000
                 Road, Hollywood..........................
 3190      FL   4 lane Archer Road from SW 62nd to SW 24th    $3,000,000
                 Ave. , Gainesville.......................
 3191      AK   Construct access road and a bridge            $3,000,000
                 crossing the Naknek River terminus points
                 in South Naknek-King Salmon Highway......
 3192      NY   Route 303 Orangeburg Road and Route 340       $1,000,000
                 and Erie Street intersection.............
 3193      MS   Upgrade roads in Port Gibson (U.S. Hwy          $400,000
                 61), Claiborne County....................
 3194      GA   Construct Horsestamp Road Interchange on I-   $1,000,000
                 95 in Camden County, Georgia.............
 3195      MO   Upgrade Route 94 in St. Charles County       $12,000,000
                 from East of Harvester road to West of
                 Mid-Rivers Drive.........................
 3196      OH   Upgrade Rt. 665 Bridge over I-71 and widen   $14,000,000
                 I-71 between Rt. 665 and I-270 by one
                 lane in each direction in Grove City, OH.
 3197      NY   Village of Highland Falls repaving and           $75,000
                 sidewalk construction of Berry Hill Road.
 3198      PA   Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, four       $2,000,000
                 lane limited access facility connecting
                 State Road 119 to the Pennsylvania
                 Turnpike (Sony Connector)................
 3199      NJ   Edison National Historic Site Traffic           $240,000
                 Improvement Project to improve traffic
                 flow and promote safety..................
 3200      IL   Construction of Eldamain Road over the Fox    $2,500,000
                 River....................................
 3201        CA Construction of a traffic signal at the         $125,000
                 intersection of Oso Ave. and Vanowen St..
 3202      OR   Reroute U.S. 97 at Redmond, OR and improve    $7,000,000
                 the intersection of U.S. 97 and Oregon
                 126......................................
 3203        CA Widen & realign Cherry Avenue from 19th       $4,000,000
                 Street to one block south of Pacific
                 Coast Highway, Signal Hill...............
 3204      AR   Ft. Smith, Arkansas: Improvements to Jenny    $6,000,000
                 Lind Rd. and Ingersoll Rd................
 3205      OH   Widen Pearl Road in Strongsville..........    $1,000,000
 3206        CA Interstate 5 and State Route 78               $5,000,000
                 Interchange Improvements.................
 3207      OK   Improvements to SH3 from Antlers to Broken    $6,250,000
                 Bow......................................
 3208      KY   Construct the Albany Bypass in Clinton        $6,000,000
                 County...................................
 3209        CA Highway 74 and Interstate 215 Interchange     $1,000,000
                 Project..................................
 3210       SC  Improve intersection and corridor on US      $10,000,000
                 278 to improve safety. Poss build
                 frontage roads widen road & change
                 traffic controls.........................
 3211      WA   Port of Bellingham Transportation             $9,500,000
                 Enhancement Projects.....................
 3212      OH   Rehabilitation of SR 53 from Miami St to      $1,000,000
                 North city limits including approaches to
                 the CSX railroad bridge, City of Tiffin..
 3213      OH   Upgrade U.S. Route 30 between State Route    $10,090,000
                 235 and Upper Sandusky in Hancock and
                 Wyandot Counties.........................
 3214      MN   Main Street streetscape reconstruction,       $1,900,000
                 2nd Street from Ash Ave. to State Hwy 2,
                 and Grand Utley Ave from 2nd Street to
                 6th Street N. across State Hwy 2, Cass
                 Lake.....................................
 3215      NJ   Warren County, NJ Route 57 and County         $2,700,000
                 Route 519 Intersection Improvements......
 3216      HI   Widen Queen Kaahumanu Highway.............    $3,000,000
 3217        CT Widen Route 34, Derby.....................    $3,000,000
 3218      IN   Construction of County Road 17--Elkhart,      $5,000,000
                 IN.......................................
 3219      PA   Widen Route 666 in Forest County..........    $1,500,000
 3220        CA Upgrade Jepson Parkway at North and South     $4,000,000
                 Gates of Travis Air Force Base and widen
                 Vanden Road segment, Solano County.......
 3221        CT Widen Route 67, Seymour...................    $1,000,000
 3222      PR   Widen Route 835 to provide ready access to    $6,000,000
                 Guaynado and facilitate housing,
                 industrial, commercial, & recreational
                 development..............................
 3223        CT Widen Canal Street, Shelton, CT...........      $500,000
 3224      NJ   Construct CR 521-Ocean Drive & Middle         $2,000,000
                 Thoroughfare Bridge Replacement, Cape May
                 County...................................
 3225      OR   I-205 widening, Clackamas County..........    $2,000,000
 3226      OK   Construct interchange south of I-40 along       $250,000
                 Indian Nation Turnpike near Henryetta....
 3227      MO   Complete upgrade of U.S. 40-61 to             $2,000,000
                 interstate status on two section, from I
                 70 to Lake St. Louis exit and Highway K
                 to Highway DD............................
 3228      TX   Abilene, TX, Dyess Air Force Base North      $13,900,000
                 Entry Access Project with related
                 improvments..............................
 3229        CA Construction and enhancements of trails in    $1,000,000
                 the Santa Monica Mountains National
                 Recreation Area..........................
 3230      KY   Construct South Airfield Road, Boone          $3,000,000
                 County, Kentucky.........................
 3231      LA   Construction of pedestrian and bike path        $200,000
                 adjacent to Tammany Trace Rails-to-Trails
                 Corridor.................................
 3232      NY   Construction of pedestrian walkways in          $100,000
                 Village of Northport.....................
 3233      NV   Design and Construction of I-80               $2,000,000
                 interchange in Fernley...................
 3234      OH   Eastgate Area Improvements, I-275 & SR 32,    $4,200,000
                 Clermont County..........................
 3235      PA   Pennsylvania Turnpike-Interstate 95          $10,000,000
                 Interchange Project, Bucks County, PA....
 3236      GA   Commission a study & report regarding           $100,000
                 construction & desgnation of a new
                 Interstate linking Augusta, Macon,
                 Columbus, Montgomery, & Natchez..........
 3237        CT Construct Shoreline Greenway Trail,           $1,000,000
                 Madison..................................
 3238      NE   New roads and overpasses to relieve           $9,000,000
                 congestion and improve traffic flow
                 Antelope Valley--Lincoln, NE.............
 3239        CA Reconstruct Atlantic Av. and improve          $3,250,000
                 drainage from Ardmore St. to Imperial
                 Hwy. in South Gate.......................
 3240      SD   Construct Railroad Underpass on Hwy 34 in     $1,100,000
                 Pierre...................................
 3241      AR   I40-Highway 89 Interchange................    $3,000,000
 3242      WA   Kent, WA Willis Street UP Railroad Grade        $500,000
                 Separation Project.......................
 3243      IL   Replace Interstate 74 Bridge, Moline......    $4,000,000
 3244        CA Implement SFgo Van Ness Corridor              $7,000,000
                 Improvements.............................
 3245       NC  Battleground Avenue Rail to Trail Project,    $1,000,000
                 Guilford County, NC......................
 3246      IL   Construction of an Extension of Atkinson      $6,000,000
                 Road to Intersect with IL 120 and IL 137.
 3247      OH   I-70, I-71 Split reconfiguration, Columbus    $8,000,000
 3248      MI   Delta County, CR 186 from M-35 at Brampton      $240,000
                 to US2 and US41-bituminous overlay with
                 super elevation, correction, curb, and
                 gutter...................................
 3249      TN   Niota, TN Improving Vehicle Effiecies at         $99,000
                 At-Grade highway-Railroad Crossings......
 3250      NY   Construct access to the NYS Thruway -         $1,500,000
                 Montezuma National Wildlife Reserve......
 3251      MN   Corridor design work, I-94 and Radio            $500,000
                 Drive, Woodbury, MN......................
 3252      TN   Develop trails, bike paths and                  $250,000
                 recreational facilities on Brady
                 Mountain, Cumberland County for
                 Cumberland Trail State Park..............
 3253      WA   Access Downtown Phase II: I-405 Downtown     $11,500,000
                 Bellevue Circulation Improvements........
 3254      PA   Reconstruct PA Route 274, at PA Route 11/     $1,000,000
                 15, Duncannon............................
 3255      PA   Road and pedestrian improvements and          $1,500,000
                 reallignment, through construction, in
                 York City NW Triangle....................
 3256      NY   Rockland County highway railroad grade        $1,750,000
                 crossing safety improvements.............
 3257      OH   Calm traffic on Greenfield St in City of      $1,700,000
                 Tiffin and improve intersection of
                 Greenfield St with Routes 18 and 101.....
 3258      IA   Construction of NW 26th St interchange on     $1,000,000
                 I 35, Polk Co............................
 3259      NY   To conduct scoping studies along proposed     $6,000,000
                 Northern Tier Expressway.................
 3260      IL   Undertake Traffic Mitigation and              $2,000,000
                 Circulation Enhancements on 57th and Lake
                 Shore Drive, Chicago.....................
 3261      IL   For the the construction of a highway on      $1,750,000
                 new alignment to create a cross town
                 route across Godfrey.....................
 3262      MI   Construct Industrial Park Service Road and      $494,000
                 Caine Road Bridge Replacement. Village of
                 Millington, Tuscola County...............
 3263      TX   Loop 281 Mobility and Safety Improvements,    $3,420,000
                 Longview, TX.............................
 3264      TX   Upgrade Fulghum Road Bridge on I-45 in        $3,100,000
                 Dallas County (TX) to provide safety and
                 access for expanded intermodal traffic...
 3265      MN   Edge of Wilderness Discovery Center,            $471,000
                 Marcell..................................
 3266      IN   Construction of Star Hill Road, Clark         $2,215,000
                 County, Indiana..........................
 3267      TN   Plan and construct a bicycle and                $400,000
                 pedestrian trail, Shelbyville............
 3268      TX   Construct Park Row bypass from Texas State    $2,000,000
                 Highway 6 to the Eldridge Parkway in
                 Houston, TX..............................
 3269        CA Implement Northwest San Fernando Valley       $3,056,000
                 Road and Safety Improvements.............
 3270      KY   Construct two bridges across the Ohio        $35,000,000
                 River from Louisville to southern Indiana
 3271      ME   Construction of the Gorham Village Bypass,   $11,220,000
                 Gorham...................................
 3272      OK   Reconstruction of the I-40 Crosstown         $20,000,000
                 Expressway from I-44 to I-35 in downtown
                 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma..................
 3273      MD   I-695, MD147 to I-695.....................    $4,740,000
 3274       SC  Upgrade Hwy. 21 Bypass Grade Crossings....    $1,000,000
 3275      MD   Upgrade MD 175 in Anne Arundel County         $1,000,000
                 between MD 170 and the Baltimore
                 Washington Parkway.......................
 3276      OK   Construct and widen six lanes on             $11,000,000
                 Interstate 44 from the Arkansas River
                 extending east approximately 3.7 miles to
                 Yale Avenue in Tulsa, OK.................
 3277      OR   North Bend Waterfront District Boardwalk        $992,000
                 Construction.............................
 3278        CT Make Improvements to North Stonington, CT       $500,000
                 Westerly, R.I. Pawcatuck River Bridge....
 3279      VA   Construct improvements at I-264 Witchduck    $11,750,000
                 Road interchange in Virginia Beach.......
 3280        CA Construct Western Placerville Interchanges    $3,000,000
                 on State Route 50........................
 3281        CT Construction of Housatonic River Walk,        $1,000,000
                 Shelton, CT..............................
 3282      NY   NYS Route 5, 8, 12 Interchange                $1,000,000
                 reconstruction: Town of New Hartford.....
 3283      NY   Implement Improvements for Pedestrian         $1,000,000
                 Safety in Bronx County...................
 3284        CA Improve West Adams Blvd Streetscape in          $200,000
                 West Adams Historic District, Los Angeles
 3285        CA Improve access from I-8 and construct         $1,000,000
                 parking lot for the Imperial Sand Dunes
                 Recreation Area Visitor's Center,
                 Imperial Valley..........................
 3286      PA   Construction of low-impact, spine roadway    $10,000,000
                 serving the North Delaware Riverfront
                 corridor, City of Philadelphia...........
 3287      AL   Construct interchange on I-59 between I-59    $3,000,000
                 and 49th Street in Fort Payne, AL........
 3288      FL   Coordinated Regional Transportation Study     $1,500,000
                 of US 98 from Pensacola Bay Bridge,
                 Escambia County, to Hathaway Bridge, Bay
                 County, Florida..........................
 3289      GA   Leesburg North Bypass from US 19 to SR          $500,000
                 195, Lee County..........................
 3290      LA   Peters Road improvements in Plaquemines       $1,000,000
                 Parish...................................
 3291      GA   Upgrade sidewalks, lighting, landscaping        $500,000
                 from Cherry Street to Hampton Street,
                 Industrial Park to Dooly Street,
                 Montezuma................................
 3292      NY   Intermodal transportation facility just       $1,000,000
                 off of the Bronx River Parkway's exit 6..
 3293      GA   US 27 Reconstruction from Colquit to CR       $1,000,000
                 279......................................
 3294      TX   Loop 180 (Project code 1190-01-035) in        $1,000,000
                 Whitney, TX from FM 933/ FM 1713 to FM
                 933S of Whitney..........................
 3295      IA   US 30 widening, reconstruction in Story       $2,300,000
                 and Marshall Counties, Iowa..............
 3296      TX   US 377 interchange construction (at B377      $1,500,000
                 and Hwy 144) Hood Co.....................
 3297      NY   Construct and improve pedestrian                $500,000
                 streetscapes along Sunrise Highway in
                 Freeport.................................
 3298      IA   Construct Principal Riverwalk, Des Moines.    $5,000,000
 3299      NY   Construct access ramps to Rt. 32-6-17-CR      $8,000,000
                 105 in Orange County.....................
 3300      IL   Resurface Shawnee College Road, Pulaski       $1,268,245
                 County...................................
 3301      MI   Canton, Pave Cherry Hill Rd. between          $2,000,000
                 Canton Ctr., and Haggerty................
 3302      AR   Springdale, AR--Improvements to Johnson       $7,000,000
                 Road. From Hwy 412 to I-540 through
                 Springdale and Johnson...................
 3303       NC  Environmental studies and construction of     $6,000,000
                 Garden Parkway...........................
 3304      AZ   US 60 and US 93 connection on the eastern     $2,000,000
                 edge of central Wickenburg...............
 3305      GA   Construction of I-575 HOV Lanes from Sixes    $1,000,000
                 Road to S.R. 20, Cherokee County, Georgia
 3306      WA   I-405-SR 167 interchange--rebuild the         $2,000,000
                 interchange and add additional lanes to
                 relieve congestion.......................
 3307      MN   US10 corridor improvement between Blaine      $2,500,000
                 and St. Cloud: design and ROW acquisition
 3308        CA Walnut Grove at Broadway Intersection           $250,000
                 Capacity Enhancements, San Gabriel.......
 3309      KY   Widen and Reconstruct KY 698 at Mason Gap     $1,200,000
                 Road, Lincoln County.....................
 3310      OR   Medford, OR to construct sidewalks and        $1,000,000
                 improve storm drainage and gutters for
                 the Citys Safe Walk Plan.................
 3311      MN   Construct a pedestrian and bicycle bridge     $1,097,600
                 across TH 169, Onamia....................
 3312      NY   Improve Montauk Highway from CR46 to          $8,000,000
                 Barnes Road, Suffolk County..............
 3313        CA San Diego, CA Construction of North Coast     $1,000,000
                 Interstate 5.............................
 3314      AR   Study and construction of 8th Street, in     $37,000,000
                 Bentonville, AR from Interstate 540,
                 (including direct access to I-540) to SW
                 Elm Tree Road............................
 3315      MN   Cedar Lake Regional Trail, Minneapolis....    $3,000,000
3316       TX   Reconstruct Union Pacific Railroad bridge     $1,000,000
                 over widened Business U.S. 287...........
3317       AK   Anchorage Traffic Congestion Relief.......   $10,000,000
3318       VA   Expansion of Battlefield Parkway from East    $2,000,000
                 Market Street at Route 7 to Sycolin Road,
                 SE.......................................
3319       OR   Construction of the I-84, US 395 Stanfield    $2,000,000
                 Interchange Improvement Project..........
3320       IN   Design and reconstruct residential streets      $930,000
                 in the City of Muncie, Indiana...........
3321         CA Improvement of Main Street--Shenandoah        $1,000,000
                 Road/SR-49 Intersection, Plymouth........
3322       SD   Design and construct new Meridian Bridge      $4,000,000
                 across the Missouri River south of
                 Yankton, South Dakota....................
3323       AK   Earthwork and roadway construction Gravina   $48,000,000
                 Access Project...........................
3324       GA   Improvement and construction of SR 40 from    $1,000,000
                 east of St. Marys cutoff at mile post
                 5.0, Charlton County to County Route 61,
                 Camden County, Georgia...................
3325       NJ   Route 22 Sustainable Corridor Plan........    $3,750,000
3326       OR   Hood River, OR, Frontage Road Crossing          $500,000
                 Project..................................
3327       GA   Construct and Improve Westside Parkway,       $2,000,000
                 Northern Section, in Fulton County.......
3328       MP   Planning design and construction of East     $12,000,000
                 Coast Highway/ Route 36, Saipan..........
3329       GA   Widen SR 133 from Spence Field to SR 35 in    $1,000,000
                 Colquitt County, Georgia.................
3330       FL   West Palm Beach, Florida, Flagler Drive       $1,000,000
                 Reconfiguration..........................
3331       FL   Implement Snake Road (BIA Route 1281)         $1,000,000
                 Widening and Improvements................
3332       NY   Reconstruction of Portland Ave. from          $3,000,000
                 Rochester City line to Titus Ave in
                 Irondequoit, NY..........................
3333       FL   Alleviate congestion at Atlantic Corridor       $500,000
                 Greenway Network, City of Miami Beach, FL
3334       NM   Development of the Paseo del Volcan           $2,000,000
                 corridor equally split between Sandoval
                 County from Iris Road to US Highway 550
                 and the I-40 Paseo del Vulcan Interchange
3335       WA   SR 704 Cross-Base Highway, Spanaway Loop      $5,000,000
                 Road to SR 7.............................
3336         CA Restoration of Victoria Avenue in the City      $500,000
                 of Riverside, CA.........................
3337       MN   I-494 Lane Addition.......................    $2,000,000
3338       GA   Uptown Jogging, Bicycle, Trolley Trail,         $500,000
                 Columbus Georgia.........................
3339         CA Study and construct highway alternatives     $15,750,000
                 between Orange and Riverside Counties,
                 directed by RCTC, working with local
                 transp. authorities, and guided by the
                 current MIS..............................
3340       OH   Rehabilitation or replacement of highway-       $300,000
                 rail grade separations along the West
                 Central Ohio Port Authority route in
                 Champaign and Clark Counties.............
3341       FL   Improvements to I-75 in the City of           $2,250,000
                 Pembroke Pines, Florida..................
3342       LA   Construction of new interchange Causeway      $1,800,000
                 at Earhart-LA 3139.......................
3343       GA   Construction of infrastructure for inter-       $500,000
                 parcel access, median upgrades, lighting,
                 and beautification along Highway 78
                 corridor.................................
3344       MI   Design, Right-of-Way and Construction of      $3,000,000
                 the I-196 Chicago Drive (Baldwin Street)
                 Interchange Modificaiton, Michigan.......
3345       VA   I-66 and Route 29 Gainesville Interchange     $7,000,000
                 Project..................................
3346       FL   SR 688 Ulmerton Road Widening (Lake          $10,000,000
                 Seminole Bypass Canal to El Centro
                 Ranchero)................................
3347       OK   Navajoe Gateway Improvements Project, U.S.    $1,000,000
                 62 in Altus, OK..........................
3348       NV   Construction of Carson City Freeway.......    $1,000,000
3349       TN   Upgrade lights and gates and motion sensor      $200,000
                 controlling circuitry at the highway rail
                 grade crossing located on Wenasoga Road/
                 FAS 8224, Middleton, TN..................
3350       WV   Construct connector road from north end of      $750,000
                 RHL Boulevard to State Route 601
                 (Jefferson Road).........................
3351       NY   Construct Siena College campus perimeter      $1,000,000
                 road, Loudonville, NY....................
3352       AL   Construct additional lanes on SR 77 from      $1,700,000
                 Southside, Alabama to Green Valley Road..
3353       TX   Environmental mitigation related to the SH    $2,000,000
                 195 project and related improvements in
                 Williamson County that had adverse
                 effects on the Karst cave system.........
3354       AL   The City of Calera, Alabama--Northern         $6,800,000
                 Bypass Segment (U.S. Highway 31 to
                 Alabama State Highway 25)................
3355       WA   Construct a single point urban interchange    $1,350,000
                 (SPUI) under I-5 at South 272nd St.......
3356       IN   Reconstruct bridges at County Roads 200E        $500,000
                 and 300E in LaPorte County, Indiana......
3357       MI   Widen and Reconstruct Walton Blvd in          $7,400,000
                 Auburn Hills from Opdyke to Squirrel Rd..
3358       GA   Commission a study and report regarding         $300,000
                 the construction and designation of a new
                 Interstate linking Savannah, Augusta, &
                 Knoxville................................
3359       TX   Construct pedestrian and bicycle amenities    $3,000,000
                 on Seawall Blvd Galveston, Tx............
3360         CA Pedestrian Beach Trail in San Clemente, CA    $1,000,000
3361       TX   US90--Construct 6 mainlanes from east of      $2,000,000
                 Mercury to east of Wallisville...........
3362       PA   Construct highway safety and capacity           $900,000
                 improvements to improve the access to the
                 KidsPeace Broadway Campus................
3363       GA   GA 400 and McGinnis Ferry Road                  $900,000
                 Interchange, Forsyth County, GA..........
3364       GA   Construction of bypass around town of           $500,000
                 Hiram, from SR 92 to US 278, Paulding
                 County, Georgia..........................
3365       GA   Construct US 411 Connector from US 41 to I-   $1,000,000
                 75, Bartow County, Georgia...............
3366       TX   Construct access road connecting Port of      $1,320,000
                 Beaumont property on east bank of Neches
                 River to I-10 access road east of the
                 Neches River.............................
3367       MD   US 220/MD 53 North-South Corridor.........    $1,000,000
3368       FL   Acquire Right-of-Way for Ludlam Trail,          $250,000
                 Miami, Florida...........................
3369       NY   Construct Northern State Parkway and LIE      $1,700,000
                 access at Marcus Ave. and Lakeville Rd.
                 and associated Park and Ride.............
3370       PA   Construct interim U.S. 422 improvements at    $1,000,000
                 Valley Forge river crossing..............
3371       NY   Design and construction of Renaissance        $2,000,000
                 Square in Rochester, NY..................
3372       AL   Alabama Hwy 36 Extension and Widening--         $300,000
                 Phase II.................................
3373       PA   Northfield site roadway extension from Rte      $500,000
                 60 to Industrial Park near the Pittsburgh
                 International Airport....................
3374       OH   Plan and construct pedestrian trail along       $950,000
                 the Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail in
                 downtown Akron, OH.......................
3375       TX   Reconstruct I-30 Trinity River Bridge--      $34,000,000
                 Dallas, TX...............................
3376       TX   Reconstruct I-30 Trinity River Bridge--       $1,000,000
                 Dallas, TX...............................
3377       GA   Construction of interchange on I-985 north    $1,000,000
                 of SR-13, Hall County Georgia............
3378       TX   Construction of circulation roadway at        $1,500,000
                 Galveston cruise ship terminal...........
3379       FL   Temple Terrace Highway Modification.......    $1,000,000
3380       WY   Burma Rd: Extension from I-90 to Lakeway      $2,000,000
                 Rd.......................................
3381       NJ   Construct Western Blvd. extension from        $4,000,000
                 Northern Blvd to S.H. Rt. 9, Ocean
                 County, NJ...............................
3382       FL   Powerline Rearvision motor carrier              $100,000
                 backover motor carrier safety research...
3383       NH   Environmental mitigation at Sybiak Farm in    $1,500,000
                 Londonderry to offset effects of I-93
                 improvements.............................
3384       MI   East Grand River Improvements, Brighton       $2,000,000
                 Township, Michigan.......................
3385       KY   Replace Brent Spence Bridge, Kenton           $2,000,000
                 County, Kentucky.........................
3386       TX   Construction of projects that relieve        $12,000,000
                 congestion in and around the Texas
                 Medical Center complex...................
3387         CA Hazel Avenue ITS Improvements, Folsom           $500,000
                 Blvd. to Placer County...................
3388       FL   SR 688 Ulmerton Road widening (west of       $10,000,000
                 38th street to west of I275).............
3389       NH   Environmental mitigation at Crystal Lake      $1,900,000
                 in Manchester to offset effects of I-93
                 improvements.............................
3390       VA   Widening I-95 between Rte 123 and Fairfax     $1,000,000
                 County Parkway...........................
3391       PA   Armstrong County, PA Slatelick Interchange    $2,400,000
                 for PA 28 at SR 3017.....................
3392       OK   Reconstruct the I-44--Ft. Still Key Gate      $1,000,000
                 Interchange..............................
3393       GA   Greene County, Georgia conversion of I-20     $2,000,000
                 and Carey Station Road overpass to full
                 interchange..............................
3394       OH   Upgrade overpass and interchange at US 24     $1,000,000
                 and SR 66 in the City of Defiance........
3395       NE   I-80 Interchange at Pflug Road, Sarpy         $1,000,000
                 County, Nebraska.........................
3396       FL   Conduct planning and engineering for SR70       $500,000
                 widening in Hardee, DeSoto and Okeechobee
                 Counties.................................
3397       VA   Cathodic Bridge Protection for Veterans         $700,000
                 Memorial Bridge and the Berkely Bridge in
                 the Commonwealth of Virginia.............
3398       IN   Reconstruct McClung Road from State Road        $750,000
                 39 to Park Street in LaPorte, Indiana....
3399       OH   Riversouth Street Network Improvements in     $3,000,000
                 Columbus.................................
3400       GA   National Infantry Museum Transportation       $3,750,000
                 Network, Georgia.........................
3401       AK   Wideband multimedia mobile emergency          $5,000,000
                 communications pilot project Wasilla,
                 Alaska...................................
3402       MD   Widen road and improve interchanges of I-     $1,000,000
                 81 from south of I-70 to north of Halfway
                 Boulevard................................
3403       TX   Expansion of U.S. 385 4-lane divide south     $2,000,000
                 of Crane to McCarney.....................
3404       VA   Old Mill Road Extension...................    $1,000,000
3405       GA   Commission a study & report regarding           $300,000
                 construction & desgnation of a new
                 Interstate linking Augusta, Macon,
                 Columbus, Montgomery, & Natchez..........
3406         CO Improvements on US 36 corridor from I-25      $2,000,000
                 to Boulder. Improvements include
                 interchange and overpass reconstruction..
3407       AZ   Design and construct bridge and roadway       $3,000,000
                 approaches across Tonto Creek at Sheeps
                 Crossing south of Payson, AZ.............
3408       NE   Missouri River Bridges between U.S. 34, I-    $2,500,000
                 29 in Iowa and U.S. 75 in Nebraska.......
3409       NY   Reconstruct--Orangeport Road from NYS Rte       $850,000
                 31 to Slayton Settlement Road--Niagara
                 County, NY...............................
3410       TN   Construct sound-walls between I-65 and          $830,000
                 Harding Place in Davidson County.........
3411       ID   Reconstruct and Realign SH-55 in Idaho        $2,000,000
                 between Mileposts 94 and 102.............
3412       FL   Pinellas Countywide Intelligent              $10,000,000
                 Transportation System--Phase 2...........
3413       OK   Realignment of US 287 around Boise City,      $1,000,000
                 OK.......................................
3414       FL   Replace Heckscher Drive (SR 105) Bridge       $2,000,000
                 across Broward River.....................
3415       TX   FM 156 Road Relocation at Alliance            $1,000,000
                 Airport, Texas...........................
3416       TX   Upgrade Caesar Chavez Boulevard from San      $3,000,000
                 Antonio Street to Brazos Street..........
3417       FL   Coral Way, SR 972 Highway Beautification,       $500,000
                 Phase One, Miami, Florida................
3418       OR   Cascade Locks Marine Park Underpass to          $500,000
                 address necessary improvements...........
3419       NY   Reconstruction of East Genesee Street         $3,500,000
                 connective corridor to Syracuse
                 University in Syracuse, NY...............
3420       IL   For Cook County to reconstruct and widen        $450,000
                 127th Street between Smith Road and State
                 Street in Lemont.........................
3421       TN   Widen I-65 from SR-840 to SR-96, including      $970,000
                 interchange modification at Goose Creek
                 Bypass, Williamson County................
3422         CA Auburn Boulevard Improvements, City of          $500,000
                 Citrus Heights...........................
3423       LA   Bossier Parish Congestion Relief..........    $3,000,000
3424       LA   Fund the 8.28 miles of the El Camino East-    $2,000,000
                 West Corridor along LA 6 from LA 485 near
                 Robeline, LA to I-49.....................
3425       FL   Bryan Dairy Road improvements from Starkey    $4,000,000
                 Road to 72nd Street......................
3426       GA   Buckhead Community Improvements to            $1,000,000
                 rehabilitate State Road 141, including
                 lane straightening, addition of median,
                 installation of left turn bays at two
                 intersections, addition of bicycle lanes,
                 sidewalks, clear zones and landscape
                 buffers..................................
3427       VA   Purchase specialized tunnel fire safety         $800,000
                 equipment, Hampton Roads.................
3428       MI   Holmes Road Reconstruction--From Prospect     $2,000,000
                 Road to Michigan Avenue, Charter Township
                 of Ypsilanti.............................
3429       TN   Construct a system of greenways in            $1,000,000
                 Nashville--Davidson County...............
3430       UT   Improve pedestrian and traffic safety in      $2,000,000
                 Holladay.................................
3431       OH   Construction of road improvements from        $1,350,000
                 Richmond Road to Cuyahoga Community
                 College, Warrensville Heights............
3432       OH   Construct road with access to memorial        $1,000,000
                 Shoreway, Cleveland......................
3433       TX   North Cameron County East-West Railroad         $100,000
                 Relocation Project.......................
3434       OR   Construct Pathway From Multimodal Transit       $520,000
                 Station to Swanson Park, Albany..........
3435       NY   Transportation Initiative to provide for a      $750,000
                 parking facility, in the vicinity of the
                 Manhattan College Community..............
3436       NY   Phase II Corning Preserve Transportation      $6,000,000
                 Enhancement Project......................
3437       NY   Study of Goods movement through I-278 in      $1,500,000
                 New York City and New Jersey.............
3438       NY   Study and Implement Traffic Improvements      $1,000,000
                 to the area surrounding the Stillwell
                 Avenue train station.....................
3439         CA Expand Diesel Emission Reduction Program      $3,100,000
                 of Gateway Cities COG....................
3440       TX   Construct pedestrian walkway on Houston       $1,000,000
                 Texas' Main Street Corridor..............
3441         CA Sacramento County, California--Watt Avenue    $4,000,000
                 Multi-modal Mobility Improvements, Kiefer
                 Boulevard to Fair Oaks Boulevard.........
3442       NJ   Passaic River--Newark Bay Restoration and       $500,000
                 Pollution Abatement Project, Route 21....
3443       NJ   Downtown West Orange streetscape and          $1,500,000
                 traffic improvement program..............
3444       NY   High-Speed EZ pass at the New Rochelle        $1,000,000
                 Toll Plaza, New Rochelle.................
3445       TX   Access to Regional Multi-Modal Center--FM     $2,000,000
                 1016 and SH 115..........................
3446       AR   For acquisition and construction of an          $200,000
                 alternate transportation (pedestrian/
                 bicycle) trail from East Little Rock to
                 Pinnacle Mountain State Park.............
3447       MN   Construct 4th Street overpass grade             $199,794
                 separation crossing a BNSF Rail Road,
                 City of Carlton..........................
3448       TX   North Rail Relocation Project, Harlingen..    $2,000,000
3449       MN   Construct Pfeifer Road, remove 10 foot          $251,717
                 raised crossing, Twin Lakes Township.....
3450       MS   Safety improvements and to widen Hardy          $800,000
                 Street at the intersection of U.S. 49 in
                 Hattiesburg..............................
3451       OH   Reconstruction of U.S. Route 20 and Ohio        $500,000
                 Route 113 (Center Ridge Road), Rocky
                 River....................................
3452       MN   Safety improvements to TH 169 between        $23,400,000
                 Virginia and Winton......................
3453       LA   U.S. 190 (LA 22 to Little Bayou Castine)      $1,000,000
                 Widening.................................
3454        NC  Acquisition of rail corridors for use as      $2,000,000
                 bicycle and pedestrian trails, Durham....
3455       MN   TH 61 Reconstruction from 2.7 miles to 6.2   $10,067,000
                 miles north of Tofte.....................
3456       MN   Phase II/part II--CSAH 15 to East of          $2,840,000
                 Scenic Highway 7 (1.2 miles).............
3457       MN   Reconstruction with some rehabilitation of    $1,000,000
                 roadway with storm water sewer system
                 construction from eastern boundary of the
                 Bois Forte Indian Reservation and ending
                 at ``T'' intersection of roadway (3.5
                 miles)...................................
3458       MS   Widen 4th Street in Hattiesburg...........    $3,200,000
3459       NJ   Study of safe and efficient commercial          $500,000
                 multi-modal transportation systems
                 serving the East Coast Port Complex......
3460       IL   Improve roads and enhance area in the         $1,000,000
                 vicinity of S. Archer Avenue and Midway
                 Airport, Chicago.........................
3461       IL   Construct Leon Pass overpass, Hodgkins....      $800,000
3462       IL   Undertake Streetscaping project on Harlem     $4,000,000
                 Avenue initiating from 71st Street to I-
                 80, Cook County..........................
3463       IL   Construct bike path, parking facility, and    $2,000,000
                 related transportation enhancement
                 projects, North Riverside................
3464       IL   Upgrade Roads, Summit.....................      $800,000
3465       IL   Undertake streetscaping on Ridgeland            $800,000
                 Avenue, Oak Park Avenue, and 26th Street,
                 Berwyn...................................
3466       IL   Construct bike/pedestrian path and related      $600,000
                 facilities in Spring Rock Park, Western
                 Springs..................................
3467       SD   Extend the Sioux Falls Bike Trail to the      $1,200,000
                 Great Bear Recreation Area...............
3468       SD   Redesign T corner on BIA #2 5 miles SW of       $750,000
                 Kyle on the Pine Ridge Reservation.......
3469       SD   Extend bike trail in Pine Ridge to the          $250,000
                 SuAnne Big Crow Boys & Girls Center......
3470       SD   Extend bicycle trail system in Aberdeen...      $800,000
3471       GA   City of Moultrie Streetscape Improvements,      $750,000
                 Phase III................................
3472       GA   Restore and renovate for historic               $500,000
                 preservation and museum the 1906 AB&A
                 Railroad Building, Fitzgerald............
3473       GA   Improve sidewalks, upgrade lighting, and        $500,000
                 add landscaping, Ocilla..................
3474       GA   Improve sidewalks, upgrade lighting, and        $750,000
                 add landscaping, Newton County...........
3475       GA   Improve sidewalks, upgrade lighting, and        $500,000
                 add landscaping, Monticello..............
3476       GA   City of Sylvester Bicycle and Pedestrian        $500,000
                 Project..................................
3477       GA   Improve sidewalks, upgrade lighting, and        $750,000
                 add landscaping, Tifton..................
3478       GA   Improve sidewalks and curbs on Wheeler          $500,000
                 Avenue and Carlos Avenues, Ashburn.......
3479       GA   Improve sidewalks, upgrade lighting, and        $500,000
                 add landscaping, Jackson.................
3480         CA Construct traffic circle in San Ysidro at       $300,000
                 the intersection of Via de San Ysidro and
                 West San Ysidro Boulevard, San Diego.....
3481         CA Construct and resurface unimproved roads      $1,000,000
                 in the Children's Village Ranch and
                 improve access from Children's Village
                 Ranch to Lake Morena Drive, San Diego
                 County...................................
3482         CA Project design and environmental              $2,700,000
                 assessment of widening and improving the
                 interchange at ``H'' Street and I-5,
                 Chula Vista, Chula Vista.................
3483       FL   Jacksonville International Airport Access     $2,000,000
                 Rd. to I-95, Jacksonville................
3484       FL   Mathews Bridge Replacement, Jacksonville..    $1,000,000
3485       FL   Hecksher Bridge Replacement, Jacksonville.    $1,000,000
3486       FL   NE 3 Ave to NE 8th Ave Rd Reconstruction,     $1,000,000
                 Gainesville..............................
3487       FL   University Ave to NE 8 Avenue Rd              $2,000,000
                 Reconstruction, Gainesville..............
3488       KY   Central Kentucky Multi Highway                $2,300,000
                 Preservation Project.....................
3489       WV   Construct East Beckley Bypass, including      $5,000,000
                 $500,000 for preliminary engineering and
                 design of the Shady Spring connector
                 (Route 3/Airport Road)...................
3490       WV   Construct I-73/74 High Priority Corridor,     $5,000,000
                 Wayne Co.................................
3491       KY   Construct Kidville Road (KY 974)              $1,700,000
                 Interchange at the Mountain Parkway,
                 Clark County.............................
3492       NY   Construction and improvements to Ridge          $500,000
                 Road, Lackawanna.........................
3493         CA Construction at I-580 and California SR 84    $2,500,000
                 (Isabel Avenue) Interchange..............
3494       NY   Construction of and improvements to             $200,000
                 Amherst Street, Buffalo..................
3495       NY   Construction of and improvements to Grant       $200,000
                 Street, Buffalo..........................
3496       NY   Construction of and improvements to Hertel      $200,000
                 Avenue, Buffalo..........................
3497       NY   Construction of and improvements to             $200,000
                 Hopkins Street, Buffalo..................
3498       NY   Construction of and improvements to Main        $500,000
                 Street in the Town of Aurora.............
3499       NY   Construction of and improvements to             $500,000
                 McKinley Parkway, Buffalo................
3500       NY   Construction of and improvements to Route       $500,000
                 5 in the Town of Hamburg.................
3501       NY   Construction of and improvements to South       $500,000
                 Park Avenue and Lake Avenue in the
                 Village of Blasdell......................
3502       NY   Construction of and improvements to South       $200,000
                 Park Avenue, Buffalo.....................
3503       NY   Construction of Bicycle Path and                $800,000
                 Pedestrian Trail in City of Buffalo......
3504       NY   Construction, redesign, and improvements      $2,000,000
                 to Fargo Street in Buffalo...............
3505       TN   Improve existing two lane highway to a        $5,500,000
                 five lane facility on State Route 53 from
                 South of I-24 to Near Parks Creek Road,
                 Coffee County............................
3506       ME   Improve portions of Route 116 between         $3,500,000
                 Lincoln and Medway to bring road up to
                 modern standard..........................
3507       ME   Improve portions of Route 26 between          $1,000,000
                 Bethel and Oxford........................
3508       NY   Road improvements and signage in City of        $500,000
                 Lackawanna...............................
3509       NJ   Belmont Ave Gateway Community Enhancement       $500,000
                 Project, Haledon.........................
3510       TX   Conduct feasibility study for an off ramp     $1,000,000
                 on I-30 on to Hall Street for direct
                 access to Baylor University Medical
                 Center in Dallas.........................
3511       NJ   Livingston Pedestrian Streetscape Project       $900,000
                 along Mt. Pleasant and Livingston Avenues
3512       MD   MD4 at Suitland Parkway...................    $5,000,000
3513       NJ   Pompton Lakes Downtown Streetscape........    $1,000,000
3514       PA   Street improvements along North Broad           $125,000
                 Street, Hatfield Borough.................
3515       PA   Street improvements to Old York Road,         $1,000,000
                 Jenkintown Borough.......................
3516       PA   Street improvements to Ridge Pike and           $800,000
                 Joshua Road, Whitemarsh Township.........
3517       PA   Street improvements to Skippack Pike (Rte       $600,000
                 73), Whitpain Township...................
3518       PA   Street Improvements, Upper Dublin Township    $1,500,000
3519       PA   Street Improvements, Upper Gwynedd              $375,000
                 Township.................................
3520       VA   Construct access road and roadway             $1,300,000
                 improvements to Chessie development site,
                 Clifton Forge............................
3521       WA   Fruitdale and McGarigle Arterial                $950,000
                 Improvements Project in Sedro Woolley,
                 Washington...............................
3522       MS   Improve Ridge Road, Pearl River County....    $1,000,000
3523       MS   Port Bienville Intermodal Connector,          $3,000,000
                 Hancock County...........................
3524       WA   Realign Airport Road/Springhetti Ave. /         $400,000
                 Marsh Road in Snohomish County,
                 Washington...............................
3525       LA   Widen I-10 in New Orleans.................    $2,800,000
3526       UT   Widen Redwood Road from Saratoga Springs      $1,000,000
                 to Bangerter Highway in Utah County......
3527       VA   Widen Rolfe Highway from near the               $500,000
                 intersection of Rolfe Highway and Point
                 Pleasant Road to the Surry ferry landing
                 approach bridge..........................
3528       VA   Construct access road and roadway             $1,300,000
                 improvements to Chessie development site,
                 Clifton Forge............................
3529       WA   Fruitdale and McGarigle Arterial                $950,000
                 Improvements Project in Sedro Woolley,
                 Washington...............................
3530       MS   Improve Ridge Road, Pearl River County....    $1,000,000
3531       MS   Port Bienville Intermodal Connector,          $3,000,000
                 Hancock County...........................
3532       WA   Realign Airport Road/Springhetti Ave. /         $400,000
                 Marsh Road in Snohomish County,
                 Washington...............................
3533       LA   Widen I-10 in New Orleans.................    $2,800,000
3534       UT   Widen Redwood Road from Saratoga Springs      $1,000,000
                 to Bangerter Highway in Utah County......
3535       VA   Widen Rolfe Highway from near the               $500,000
                 intersection of Rolfe Highway and Point
                 Pleasant Road to the Surry ferry landing
                 approach bridge..........................
3536       MA   Cambridge Bicycle Path Improvements.......    $1,000,000
3537       OR   Capitalize Oregon Transportation              $3,998,000
                 Infrastructure Bank......................
3538       MA   Chelsea Roadway Improvements..............    $2,000,000
3539       NY   Congestion reduction measures in Richmond     $2,000,000
                 County...................................
3540       NJ   Construct Hudson River Waterfront Walkway     $1,000,000
                 over Long Slip Canal--Hoboken and Jersey
                 City.....................................
3541         CA Construct Illinois Street Bridge/Amador       $4,000,000
                 Street Connection and Improvements, San
                 Francisco................................
3542       NY   Construct multi-modal facility in the        $300,000.00
                 vicinity of Brooklyn Childrens Museum....
3543       NJ   Construct Parking Facility at McGinley        $1,050,000
                 Square in Jersey City....................
3544       OR   Construction of access road including           $814,000
                 sidewalks, bike lanes and railroad
                 crossing from Highway 99W to industrial
                 zoned property, Corvallis................
3545       NY   Continuation of the public awareness         $500,000.00
                 program to the subcontracting entity
                 which was funded under Section 1212(b) of
                 Pub. L. 105-178 about infrastructure in
                 Lower Manhattan..........................
3546       OR   Continue bridge repair project authorized     $8,000,000
                 under Pub. L. 105-178, Coos Bay..........
3547       NJ   Expand TRANSCOM Regional ITS System in NJ,    $1,000,000
                 NY, and CT...............................
3548       OR   Extend Willamette Valley Scenic Bikeway       $1,000,000
                 into Lane and Douglas Counties...........
3549       NY   Graffiti Elimination Program in Riverdale    $500,000.00
                 neighborhood of Bronx County.............
3550       NY   Graffiti Elimination Program on Smith        $500,000.00
                 Street in Kings County...................
3551       OR   Great Street Trail Connection, Eugene.....      $900,000
3552       NJ   Hudson County Fire & Rescue Department,       $1,200,000
                 North Bergen: Transportation Critical
                 Incident Mobile Data Collection Device...
3553       NJ   Hudson County Pedestrian Safety               $1,000,000
                 Improvements.............................
3554       OR   Hwy. 199 Safety Improvements, Josephine       $3,104,000
                 County...................................
3555       OR   Hwy. 99E/Geary Street Safety Improvements,    $1,002,000
                 Albany...................................
3556       NY   Implement Improvements for Pedestrian         $1,000,000
                 Safety in Riverdale neighborhood of Bronx
                 County...................................
3557       WA   Improve Mill Plain Blvd between SE 172nd      $1,250,000
                 and SE 192nd in Vancouver................
3558       WA   Improve signage along scenic highways in        $150,000
                 Clark, Skamania and Pacific counties.....
3559       OR   ITS Improvements to TripCheck, Oregon.....    $1,200,000
3560       NJ   Jersey City 6th Street Viaduct Pedestrian     $2,000,000
                 and Bicycle Pathway Project..............
3561       OR   Middle Fork Willamette River Path,            $3,000,000
                 Springfield..............................
3562       OR   OR 42 Hoover Hill Passing Lane, Winston...    $1,495,000
3563       OR   Pedestrian improvements including               $600,000
                 boardwalk extension and sidewalk
                 construction, Port of Brookings Harbor...
3564       NJ   Port Reading--Improvements to air quality       $800,000
                 through reduction of engine idling behind
                 Rosewood Lane............................
3565       OR   Purchase communications equipment related    $10,000,000
                 to traffic incident management in Linn,
                 Benton, Lane, Douglas, Coos, Curry and
                 Josephine Counties.......................
3566       MA   Reconstruction of the I-95/Rte. 20            $1,300,000
                 Interchange in Waltham...................
3567       NJ   Route 440 Rehabilitation and Boulevard        $1,250,000
                 Creation Project in Jersey City..........
3568       MA   Rutherford Avenue Improvements, Boston....    $1,000,000
3569       GA   SR 10/Peters Street/Olympic Drive             $3,000,000
                 interchange, Athens......................
3570       NY   Study and Improve Traffic Flow Around a       $3,000,000
                 New Stadium in Willets Point, Queens.....
3571       OR   To construct and enhance bikeway between      $1,000,000
                 Hood River and McCord Creek..............
3572       NY   To construct greenway along East River        $1,500,000
                 waterfront between East River Park (ERP)
                 and Brooklyn Bridge, and reconstruct
                 South entrance to ERP, in Manhattan......
3573       OR   Transportation enhancements at Eugene         $1,000,000
                 Depot, Eugene............................
3574       OR   U.S. 101 Slide Repair, Curry County.......    $5,800,000
3575       OR   U.S. Hwy. 20 and Airport Road Intersection      $837,000
                 Improvements, Lebanon....................
3576       IL   Upgrade 31st Street and Golfview Rd           $1,500,000
                 intersection and construct parking
                 facilities, Brookfield...................
3577       NJ   Weehawken Baldwin Avenue Improvements.....    $2,000,000
3578       WA   Widen SR 503 through Woodland.............    $1,000,000
3579       OR   Widen to three lanes and add urban            $3,250,000
                 features to OR 42 from Lookingglass Creek
                 to Glenhart, Winston.....................
3580       NY   Bicycle and pedestrian safety                 $1,200,000
                 improvements, Main Street, Riverhead.....
3581       IL   Construct extension of Queeny Avenue from       $750,000
                 IL Rt 3 to Hog Haven Road, St. Clair
                 County...................................
3582       NY   Construct improvements to NY Route 5 from     $1,000,000
                 Coast Guard Base to Ohio Street,
                 including Fuhrmann Boulevard.............
3583       IL   Extend and Construct Concrete Corridor        $1,000,000
                 between IL Rt 13 to IL Rt 15, Centreville
3584       NY   Implement a roadway evacuation study for      $1,000,000
                 the South Shore of Long Island, Mastic...
3585       NY   Improve Brooksite Dr. from NY 25/25A to         $900,000
                 Rt. 347, Smithtown.......................
3586       NY   Improve Clover Ln. from Bay Ave to Bay Rd,      $270,000
                 hamlet of Brookhaven.....................
3587       NY   Improve CR 80, Montauk Highway, Village of      $600,000
                 Patchogue................................
3588       NY   Improve Dare Rd from Old Town Rd to Rt.         $440,000
                 25, Selden...............................
3589       NY   Improve Hospital Road Bridge between CR99       $690,000
                 and CR101, Patchogue.....................
3590       NY   Improve intersection of Old Dock and            $120,000
                 Church Street, Kings Park................
3591       NY   Improve Maple Avenue in Smithtown.........      $150,000
3592       NY   Improve Old Town Rd from Rt 347 to              $420,000
                 Slattery Rd, Setauket....................
3593       NY   Improve Old Willets Path from NY 454 to       $1,500,000
                 Rabro Dr., Smithtown.....................
3594       NY   Improve Pipe Stave Hollow Rd. to Harbor         $250,000
                 Beach Rd., Miller Place..................
3595       IL   Reconstruction and Improvement of North       $1,970,000
                 Lincoln Ave, O'Fallon....................
3596       IL   Reconstruction of 20th Street, Granite        $1,500,000
                 City.....................................
3597       IL   Road Alignment from Caseyville Road to        $1,125,000
                 Sullivan Drive, Swansea..................
3598       NY   Road Improvements Hamlet of Medford, Town       $500,000
                 of Brookhaven............................
3599       NY   Road improvements, Hamlet of Gordon             $430,000
                 Heights, Town of Brookhaven..............
3600       NY   Road improvements, Village of Patchogue...    $1,500,000
3601       NY   Roadway improvements, hamlet of Mastic          $400,000
                 Beach....................................
3602       IL   Widening Fullerton Road from Metrolink to       $880,000
                 IL Rt 159, Swansea.......................
3603       NY   WLIU Public Radio Emergency and Evacuation    $1,130,000
                 Transportation Information Initiative,
                 Southampton..............................
 3604      UT   Reconstruct 500 West, including pedestrian      $250,000
                 and bicycle access, in Moab..............
 3605      PA   Construct improvements to Chambers Hill       $1,000,000
                 Road and Lindle Road (S.R. 441) at its
                 intersections with Interstate 283 and
                 Eisenhower Boulevard.....................
 3606      PA   Construct Regional Trail, Muhlenberg            $750,000
                 Township.................................
 3607      PA   Rail Crossing signalization upgrade,            $206,300
                 Bowers Road, Lyons Station, Berks County.
 3608      PA   Rail Crossing signalization upgrade at          $206,300
                 Hill Road, Township of Blandon, County of
                 Berks....................................
 3609      PA   Safety improvements at Liberty Street         $1,905,700
                 intersection with PA Route 61 in W.
                 Brunswick and N. Manheim Twp., Schuylkill
                 County...................................
 3610      PA   Replace Stossertown Bridge (Main Street)        $500,000
                 over West Creek in Branch Township,
                 Schuylkill County........................
 3611      PA   Replace bridge over Little Mahantongo           $250,000
                 Creek at intersection of Hepler and
                 Valley Roads in Upper Mahantongo Twp.,
                 Schuylkill County........................
 3612      PA   Replace Union Street Bridge over Middle         $500,000
                 Creek in the borough of Tremont,
                 Schuvlkill County........................
 3613      PA   Replace Burd St. Bridge over Amtrak and         $500,000
                 Norfolk Southern railroad tracks in the
                 Borough of Royalton, Dauphin County......
 3614      PA   Hummelstown Borough, PA for intersection      $2,000,000
                 and pedestrian realignment and drainage..
 3615      MN   City of Moorhead Southeast Main GSI 34th      $2,000,000
                 Street and I-94 interchange..............
 3616      MN   Paynesville Highway 23 Bypass.............    $2,000,000
 3617      AR   Construction of I-530 between Pine Bluff     $40,000,000
                 and Wilmer...............................
 3618      NY   Conduct study to develop regional transit       $100,000
                 strategy in Herkimer and Oneida counties.
 3619      NY   Improve Town weatherization capabilities        $250,000
                 on Tucker Drive, Poughkeepsie, NY........
 3620      NY   Bedell Road improvements, Poughkeepsie, NY      $130,000
 3621      NY   Land acquisition and improvements on Main       $500,000
                 Street, Beacon, NY.......................
 3622      NY   Construction of sidewalks in Sugar Loaf...      $100,000
 3623        CT I-84 Expressway Reconstruction from           $1,500,000
                 Waterbury to Southbury...................
 3624       DC  Road and trail reconstruction and drainage      $600,000
                 improvements (APHCC).....................
 3625      GA   Central Hall Recreation and Multi-Use         $2,000,000
                 Trail, Hall County, GA...................
 3626      OH   Land acquisition for construction of            $700,000
                 pedestrian and bicycle trails at Mentor
                 Marsh in Ohio............................
 3627      OH   Design and construct road enhancements          $300,000
                 Andrews Road and Lakeshore Blvd in Mentor
                 on-the-Lake, OH..........................
 3628      OH   Design and construct road enhancements        $2,500,000
                 Cleveland Port Authority in Cleveland,
                 Ohio.....................................
 3629      LA   Red River National Wildlife Refuge Visitor    $3,000,000
                 Center...................................
 3630      TN   For the advancement of project development    $2,000,000
                 activities for SR-33 from Knox County
                 Line to SR-61 at Maynardville, TN........
 3631        CA To convert a railroad bridge into a           $5,000,000
                 highway bridge spanning over the Feather
                 River between Yuba City and Marysville...
3632         CA Reconstruct SR 1 from Westport to Marshall    $9,000,000
3633       IL   Highway Construction on RT 1 between RT 14    $9,000,000
                 and RT 9.................................
3634       IL   SR 127 from Raymond to Unity..............    $9,000,000
3635         CA Improvements to US 101....................   $11,000,000
3636       IA   Construct Rt 20 from Rockway City to          $5,000,000
                 Epworth..................................
3637         CA I-8 from San Diego to Kama................    $8,000,000
3638         CA I-15 from Escondido to Barstow............   $12,000,000
3639         CA Widening and improvements to RT 14 from RT    $9,525,000
                 126 to RT 178............................
3640       IL   Bicycle and Pedestrian improvements in        $6,000,000
                 Georgetown and Middletown................
3641       AZ   Safety Improvements to I-10 from SR 60 to    $11,000,000
                 Route 83.................................
3642       KS   Northwest Bypass between K96 and 119th        $2,000,000
                 Street West..............................
3643         CA Safety improvements to SR 99..............   $12,000,000
3644       IL   Construct I-70 from Greenville to Marshall    $9,000,000
3645         CA I-40 from Barstow to Needles..............    $9,000,000
3646       AZ   Improvements on I-40 from Kingston to         $8,000,000
                 Navajo...................................
3647       AZ   ITS related improvements on Interstates in    $6,000,000
                 AZ.......................................
3648       IA   Rehabilitate US 680 from SR59 to Des          $5,000,000
                 Moines...................................
3649         CA Resurfacing and Reconstruction of U.S. 395   $12,000,000
                 from RT 18 to RT 168.....................
3650       IL   Improve I-74 from Colona to Mahomet.......    $8,000,000
3651         CA Safety improvements to I-5 from Santa        $11,000,000
                 Clarita to Haron.........................
3652       IL   US 67 highway safety improvements from       $10,000,000
                 Godfey to Viola..........................
3653       OH   Safety improvements to U.S. 35 from           $8,000,000
                 Jamestown to Winchester..................
3654         CA Construct Transportation Enhancements on      $8,000,000
                 SR 1 between RT 246 and RT 192...........
3655       IL   Reconstruct I-57 from Frankfurt to Masoon.    $9,000,000
3656         CA ITS improvements to reduce congestion on I-  $10,575,000
                 405 from RT 118 to RT 36.................
3657       IL   Construction on I-80 from Geneseo to          $9,000,000
                 Joliet...................................
3658       IA   Safety enhancements along Rt 30 from          $4,000,000
                 Carroll to Dewitt........................
3659       IL   Reconstruction on RT 40 from U.S. 52 to RT    $8,000,000
                 90.......................................
3660       IL   Safety related improvements on RT 100 from    $9,000,000
                 U.S. 136 to RT 16........................
3661       IL   Construct I-55 from Bolingbrook to Gardner   $10,000,000
3662       AZ   Construction of Route 77 from Route 277 to    $9,000,000
                 Route 80.................................
3663       OH   Reconstruction of I-71 from Cincinnati to     $8,000,000
                 Columbus.................................
3664       IL   Make safety improvements to I-94 from         $9,000,000
                 Chesterton to Deerfield..................
3665       IL   Acquire land for Environmental Mitigation     $8,000,000
                 to preserver wildlife habitate
                 connectivity along U.S. 51 from RT 161 to
                 RT 10....................................
3666         CA Construct I-80 from Truckee to Fairfield..    $8,000,000
3667        NC  Construct highway widening and safety         $5,000,000
                 improvements on Rt 301 between Rt 125 and
                 Little River.............................
3668        SC  Construction of operational improvements      $6,500,000
                 and purchase of ITS infrastructure on the
                 I-26 corridor............................
3669       MI   Highway beautification of Rt 52 between Tr    $4,000,000
                 46 and Fairfield.........................
3670       TX   Resurfacing and Reconstruction on Rt 19       $5,000,000
                 between Rt 71 and Rt 7...................
3671       IN   Highway-rail crossing safety related          $7,000,000
                 improvements on Rt 37 between U.S. 35 and
                 U.S. 50..................................
3672       AZ   Pave remaining stretch of the Turquoise       $2,000,000
                 Trail, BIA Route 4, which is a north-
                 south road that joins AZ HW 160 in the
                 north to AZ HW 264 in the south portion
                 of BIA Route 4...........................
3673       AK   Improve marine intermodal facilities in      $25,000,000
                 Ketchikan................................
3674        DC  Highway improvements to improve access to     $5,000,000
                 the Kennedy Center.......................
3675       MN   Construction of four lanes on Hwy 53          $7,000,000
                 between Virginia and Cook and
                 construction of two passing lanes between
                 Cook and International Falls.............
3676       OR   McKenzie highway enhancements, Lane and       $3,100,000
                 Linn Counties............................
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                  Subtitle H--Miscellaneous Provisions

SEC. 1801. BUDGET JUSTIFICATION.

    The Department of Transportation and each agency therein shall 
submit to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the 
House of Representatives a budget justification concurrently with the 
President's annual budget submission to Congress under section 1105(a) 
of title 31, United States Code.

SEC. 1802. MOTORIST INFORMATION.

    Section 124 of title I of division F of the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2004 (118 Stat. 296-297) is repealed.

SEC. 1803. MOTORIST INFORMATION CONCERNING FULL-SERVICE RESTAURANTS.

    Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, 
the Secretary shall initiate a rulemaking to determine whether or not--
            (1) full-service restaurants should be given priority on 
        not more than 2 panels of the camping or attractions logo 
        specific service signs in the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control 
        Devices of the Department of Transportation when the food logo 
        specific service sign is fully utilized; and
            (2) full service restaurants should be given priority on 
        not more than two panels of the food logo specific service 
        signs in such Manual when the camping or attractions logo 
        specific service signs are fully utilized.

SEC. 1804. HIGH PRIORITY CORRIDORS ON THE NATIONAL HIGHWAY SYSTEM.

    Section 1105(c) of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency 
Act of 1991 (105 Stat. 2032) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (23) by inserting before the period at the 
        end the following: ``and the connection from Wichita, Kansas, 
        to Sioux City, Iowa, which includes I-135 from Wichita, Kansas 
        to Salina, Kansas, United States Route 81 from Saline, Kansas, 
        to Norfolk, Nebraska, Nebraska State Route 35 from Norfolk, 
        Nebraska, to South Sioux City, Nebraska, and the connection to 
        I-29 in Sioux City, Iowa'';
            (2) by striking paragraph (34) and inserting the following:
            ``(34) The Alameda Corridor-East and Southwest Passage, 
        California. The Alameda Corridor-East is generally described as 
        the corridor from East Los Angeles (terminus of Alameda 
        Corridor) through Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, and 
        Riverside Counties, to termini at Barstow in San Bernardino 
        County and Coachella in Riverside County. The Southwest Passage 
        shall follow I-10 from San Bernardino to the Arizona State 
        line.'';
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(46) Interstate Route 710 between the terminus at Long 
        Beach, California, to California State Route 60.
            ``(47) Interstate Route 87 from the Quebec border to New 
        York City.
            ``(48) The Route 50 High Plains Corridor along the United 
        States Route 50 corridor from Newton, Kansas, to Pueblo, 
        Colorado.
            ``(49) The Atlantic Commerce Corridor on Interstate Route 
        95 from Jacksonville, Florida, to Miami, Florida.
            ``(50) The East-West Corridor commencing in Watertown, New 
        York, continuing northeast through New York, Vermont, New 
        Hampshire, and Maine, and terminating in Calais, Maine.
            ``(51) The SPIRIT Corridor on United States Route 54 from 
        El Paso, Texas, through New Mexico, Texas, and Oklahoma to 
        Wichita, Kansas.
            ``(52) The route in Arkansas running south of and parallel 
        to Arkansas State Highway 226 from the relocation of United 
        States Route 67 to the vicinity of United States Route 49 and 
        United States Route 63.
            ``(53) United States Highway Route 6 from Interstate Route 
        70 to Interstate Route 15, Utah.
            ``(54) The California Farm-to-Market Corridor, California 
        State Route 99 from south of Bakersfield to Sacramento, 
        California.
            ``(55) In Texas, Interstate Route 20 from Interstate Route 
        35E in Dallas County, east to the intersection of Interstate 
        Route 635, north to the intersection of Interstate Route 30, 
        northeast through Texarkana to Little Rock, Arkansas, 
        Interstate Route 40 northeast from Little Rock east to the 
        proposed Interstate Route 69 corridor.
            ``(56) In the State of Texas, the La Entrada al Pacifico 
        Corridor consisting of the following highways and any portion 
        of a highway in a corridor on 2 miles of either side of the 
        center line of the highway:
                    ``(A) State Route 349 from Lamesa to the point on 
                that highway that is closest to 32 degrees, 7 minutes, 
                north latitude, by 102 degrees, 6 minutes, west 
                longitude.
                    ``(B) The segment or any roadway extending from the 
                point described by subparagraph (A) to the point on 
                Farm-to-Market Road 1788 closest to 32 degrees, 0 
                minutes, north latitude, by 102 degrees, 16 minutes, 
                west longitude.
                    ``(C) Farm-to-Market Road 1788 from the point 
                described by subparagraph (B) to its intersection with 
                Interstate Route 20.
                    ``(D) Interstate Route 20 from its intersection 
                with Farm-to-Market Road 1788 to its intersection with 
                United States Route 385.
                    ``(E) United States Route 385 from Odessa to Fort 
                Stockton, including those portions that parallel United 
                States Route 67 and Interstate Route 10.
                    ``(F) United States Route 67 from Fort Stockton to 
                Presidio, including those portions that parallel 
                Interstate Route 10 and United States Route 90.
            ``(57) United States Route 41 corridor between Interstate 
        Route I-94 near Milwaukee and Interstate Route I-43 near Green 
        Bay in the State of Wisconsin.''; and
            (4) by aligning paragraph (45) with paragraph (46).

SEC. 1805. ADDITIONS TO APPALACHIAN REGION.

    (a) Kentucky.--Section 14102(a)(1)(C) of title 40, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``Nicholas,'' after ``Morgan,''; and
            (2) by inserting ``Robertson,'' after ``Pulaski,''.
    (b) Ohio.--Section 14102(a)(1)(H) of such title is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``Ashtabula,'' after ``Adams,'';
            (2) by inserting ``Fayette,'' after ``Coshocton,'';
            (3) by inserting ``Mahoning,'' after ``Lawrence,''; and
            (4) by inserting ``Trumbull,'' after ``Scioto,''.
    (c) Tennessee.--Section 14102(a)(1)(K) of such title is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``Giles,'' after ``Franklin,''; and
            (2) by inserting ``Lawrence, Lewis, Lincoln,'' after 
        ``Knox,''.
    (d) Virginia.--Section 14102(a)(1)(L) of such title is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``Henry,'' after ``Grayson,''; and
            (2) by inserting ``Patrick,'' after ``Montgomery,''.

SEC. 1806. TRANSPORTATION ASSETS AND NEEDS OF DELTA REGION.

    (a) Agreement.--Not later than 6 months after the date of enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary shall enter into an agreement with the Delta 
Regional Authority (referred to in this section as the ``DRA'') to 
conduct a comprehensive study of transportation assets and needs for 
all modes of transportation (including passenger and freight 
transportation) in the 8 States comprising the Delta region (Alabama, 
Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri and 
Tennessee).
    (b) Consultation.--Under the agreement, the DRA, in conducting the 
study, shall consult with the Department of Transportation, State 
transportation departments, local planning and development districts, 
local and regional governments, and metropolitan planning 
organizations.
    (c) Report.--Under the agreement, the DRA, not later than 24 months 
after the date of entry into the agreement, shall submit to the 
Secretary and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the 
House of Representatives and the Committee on Environment and Public 
Works of the Senate a final report on the results of the study, 
together with such recommendation as the DRA considers appropriate.
    (d) Plan.--Under the agreement, the DRA, upon completion of the 
report, shall establish a regional strategic plan to implement the 
recommendations of the report.
    (e) Funding.--
            (1) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized 
        to be appropriated out of the Highway Trust Fund (other than 
        the Mass Transit Account), $500,000 for each of the fiscal 
        years 2005 and 2006 to carry out this section.
            (2) Contract authority.--Funds authorized by this section 
        shall be available for obligation in the same manner and to the 
        same extent as if such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 
        of title 23, United States Code; except that such funds shall 
        remain available until expended and shall not be transferable.

SEC. 1807. TOLL FACILITIES WORKPLACE SAFETY STUDY.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall conduct a study on the safety 
of highway toll collection facilities, including toll booths, to 
determine the safety of the facilities for the toll collectors who work 
in and around the facilities, including consideration of--
            (1) the effect of design or construction of the facilities 
        on the likelihood of vehicle collisions with the facilities;
            (2) the safety of crosswalks used by toll collectors in 
        transit to and from toll booths;
            (3) the extent of the enforcement of speed limits in the 
        vicinity of the facilities;
            (4) the use of warning devices, such as vibration and 
        rumble strips, to alert drivers approaching the facilities;
            (5) the use of cameras to record traffic violations in the 
        vicinity of the facilities;
            (6) the use of traffic control arms in the vicinity of the 
        facilities;
            (7) law enforcement practices and jurisdictional issues 
        that affect safety in the vicinity of the facilities; and
            (8) the incidence of accidents and injuries in the vicinity 
        of toll booths.
    (b) Data Collection.--As part of the study, the Secretary shall 
collect data regarding the incidence of accidents and injuries in the 
vicinity of highway toll collection facilities.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary shall transmit to the Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and 
the Committee on Environment and Public Works of the Senate a report on 
the results of the study, together with recommendations for improving 
toll facilities workplace safety.
    (d) Funding.--
            (1) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized 
        to be appropriated to carry out this section, out of the 
        Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account), 
        $500,000 for fiscal year 2005.
            (2) Contract authority.--Funds authorized to be 
        appropriated by this section shall be available for obligation 
        in the same manner and to the same extent as if such funds were 
        apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code; 
        expect that the Federal share of the cost of the project shall 
        be 100 percent, and such funds shall remain available until 
        expended and shall not be transferable.

SEC. 1808. PAVEMENT MARKING SYSTEMS DEMONSTRATION PROJECTS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall conduct a demonstration 
project in the State of Alaska, and a demonstration project in the 
State of Tennessee, to study the safety impacts, environmental impacts, 
and cost effectiveness of different pavement marking systems and the 
effect of State bidding and procurement processes on the quality of 
pavement marking material employed in highway projects. The 
demonstration projects shall each include an evaluation of the impacts 
and effectiveness of increasing the width of pavement marking edge 
lines from 4 inches to 6 inches and an evaluation of advanced acrylic 
water-borne pavement markings.
    (b) Report.--Not later than June 30, 2009, the Secretary shall 
transmit to Congress a report on the results of the demonstration 
projects, together with findings and recommendations on methods that 
will optimize the cost-benefit ratio of the use of Federal funds on 
pavement marking.
    (c) Funding.--
            (1) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized 
        to be appropriated to carry out this section, out of the 
        Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account), 
        $1,000,000 per fiscal year for each of the fiscal years 2005 
        through 2009.
            (2) Contract authority.--Funds authorized to be 
        appropriated by this section shall be available for obligation 
        in the same manner and to the same extent as if such funds were 
        apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code; 
        expect that the Federal share of the cost of the demonstration 
        projects shall be 100 percent, and such funds shall remain 
        available until expended and shall not be transferable.

SEC. 1809. WORK ZONE SAFETY GRANTS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish and implement a work 
zone safety grant program under which the Secretary may make grants to 
nonprofit organizations to provide training to prevent or reduce 
highway work zone injuries and fatalities.
    (b) Eligible Activities.--Grants may be made under the program for 
the following purposes:
            (1) Training for construction craft workers on the 
        prevention of injuries and fatalities in highway and road 
        construction.
            (2) Development of guidelines for the prevention of highway 
        work zone injuries and fatalities.
            (3) Training for State and local government transportation 
        agencies and other groups implementing guidelines for the 
        prevention of highway work zone injuries and fatalities.
    (c) Funding.--
            (1) In general.--There is authorized to be appropriated 
        from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
        Account) to carry out this section $5,000,000 for each of 
        fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
            (2) Contract authority.--Funds authorized by this 
        subsection shall be available for obligation in the same manner 
        as if the funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, 
        United States Code; except that such funds shall not be 
        transferable.
    (d) Construction Work in Alaska.--Section 114 of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end of the following:
    ``(c) Construction Work in Alaska.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall ensure that a worker 
        who is employed on a remote project for the construction of a 
        highway or portion of a highway located on a Federal-aid system 
        in the State of Alaska and who is not a domiciled resident of 
        the locality shall receive meals and lodging.
            ``(2) Lodging.--The lodging under paragraph (1) shall be in 
        accordance with section 1910.142 of title 29, Code of Federal 
        Regulations (relating to temporary labor camp requirements).
            ``(3) Per diem.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Contractors are encouraged to 
                use commercial facilities and lodges on remote 
                projects, but, if such facilities are not available, 
                per diem in lieu of room and lodging may be paid on 
                remote Federal highway projects at a basic rate of 
                $75.00 per day or part thereof the worker is employed 
                on the project. If the contractor provides or furnishes 
                room and lodging or pays a per diem, the cost of the 
                amount shall not be considered a part of wages, but 
                shall be excluded therefrom.
                    ``(B) Secretary of labor.--Such per diem rate shall 
                be adopted by the Secretary of Labor for all applicable 
                remote Federal highway projects in Alaska.
                    ``(C) Exception.--Per diem shall not be allowed on 
                any of the following remote projects for the 
                construction of a highway or portion of a highway 
                located on a Federal-aid system:
                            ``(i) West of Livengood on the Elliot 
                        Highway.
                            ``(ii) Mile 0 on the Dalton Highway to the 
                        North Slope of Alaska; north of Mile 20 on the 
                        Taylor Highway.
                            ``(iii) East of Chicken on the Top of the 
                        World Highway and south of Tetlin Junction to 
                        the Alaska Canadian border.
            ``(4) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following 
        definitions apply:
                    ``(A) Remote.--The term `remote', as used with 
                respect to a project, means that the project is 65 
                miles or more from the United States Post Office in 
                either Fairbanks or Anchorage, Alaska, or is 
                inaccessible by road in a 2-wheel drive vehicle.
                    ``(B) Resident.--The term `resident', as used with 
                respect to a project, means a person living within 65 
                miles of the midpoint of the project for at least 12 
                consecutive months prior to the award of the 
                project.''.

SEC. 1810. GRANT PROGRAM TO PROHIBIT RACIAL PROFILING.

    (a) Grants.--Subject to the requirements of this section, the 
Secretary shall make grants to a State that--
            (1)(A) has enacted and is enforcing a law that prohibits 
        the use of racial profiling in the enforcement of State laws 
        regulating the use of Federal-aid highways; and
            (B) is maintaining and allows public inspection of 
        statistical information for each motor vehicle stop made by a 
        law enforcement officer on a Federal-aid highway in the State 
        regarding the race and ethnicity of the driver and any 
        passengers; or
            (2) provides assurances satisfactory to the Secretary that 
        the State is undertaking activities to comply with the 
        requirements of paragraph (1).
    (b) Eligible Activities.--A grant received by a State under 
subsection (a) shall be used by the State--
            (1) in the case of a State eligible under subsection 
        (a)(1), for costs of--
                    (A) collecting and maintaining of data on traffic 
                stops;
                    (B) evaluating the results of the data; and
                    (C) developing and implementing programs to reduce 
                the occurrence of racial profiling, including programs 
                to train law enforcement officers; and
            (2) in the case of a State eligible under subsection 
        (a)(2), for costs of--
                    (A) activities to comply with the requirements of 
                subsection (a)(1); and
                    (B) any eligible activity under paragraph (1).
    (c) Racial Profiling.--To meet the requirement of subsection 
(a)(1), a State law shall prohibit, in the enforcement of State laws 
regulating the use of Federal-aid highways, a State or local law 
enforcement officer from using the race or ethnicity of the driver or 
passengers to any degree in making routine or spontaneous law 
enforcement decisions, such as ordinary traffic stops on Federal-aid 
highways. Nothing in this subsection shall alter the manner in which a 
State or local law enforcement officer considers race or ethnicity 
whenever there is trustworthy information, relevant to the locality or 
time frame, that links persons of a particular race or ethnicity to an 
identified criminal incident, scheme, or organization.
    (d) Limitations.--
            (1) Maximum amount of grants.--The total amount of grants 
        received by a State under this section in a fiscal year may not 
        exceed 5 percent of the amount made available to carry out this 
        section in the fiscal year.
            (2) Eligibility.--A State may not receive a grant under 
        subsection (a)(2) in more than 2 fiscal years.
    (e) Authorization of Appropriations.--
            (1) In general.--There is authorized to be appropriated 
        from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
        Account) to carry out this section $10,000,000 for each of 
        fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
            (2) Contract authority.--Funds authorized by this 
        subsection shall be available for obligation in the same manner 
        as if the funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, 
        United States Code, except the Federal share of the cost of 
        activities carried out using such funds shall be 100 percent, 
        and such funds shall remain available until expended and shall 
        not be transferable.

SEC. 1811. AMERICA'S BYWAYS RESOURCE CENTER.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall allocate funds made available 
to carry out this section to the America's Byways Resource Center 
established pursuant to section 1215(b)(1) of the Transportation Equity 
Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 209).
    (b) Technical Support and Education.--
            (1) Use of funds.--The Center shall use funds allocated to 
        the Center under this section to continue to provide technical 
        support and conduct educational activities for the national 
        scenic byways program established under section 162 of title 
        23, United States Code.
            (2) Eligible activities.--Technical support and educational 
        activities carried out under this subsection shall provide 
        local officials and organizations associated with National 
        Scenic Byways and All-American Roads with proactive, technical, 
        and on-site customized assistance, including training, 
        communications (including a public awareness series), 
        publications, conferences, on-site meetings, and other 
        assistance considered appropriate to develop and sustain such 
        byways and roads.
    (c) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be 
appropriated out of the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
Account) to carry out this section $3,500,000 for each of fiscal years 
2004 through 2009.
    (d) Applicability of Title 23.--Funds authorized by this section 
shall be available for obligation in the same manner as if such funds 
were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code; 
except that the Federal share of the cost of any project or activity 
carried out under this section shall be 100 percent and such funds 
shall remain available until expended and shall not be transferable.

SEC. 1812. TECHNICAL ADJUSTMENT.

    (a) In General.--The donee of the vessel with the Unit 
Identification Code number 13862 is deemed to be the owner of that 
vessel free and clear as of September 1, 2000.
    (b) Federal Claims.--All Federal claims arising from the donation 
or use of the vessel described in subsection (a) are permanently 
extinguished.

SEC. 1813. ROAD USER CHARGE EVALUATION PILOT PROJECT.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall carry out a national 
evaluation pilot project to assess how intelligent transportation 
system technology can be applied to assess mileage-based road user 
charges for the purposes of collecting revenues for the Highway Trust 
Fund.
    (b) Matters to Be Evaluated.--The following matters shall be 
evaluated under the pilot project:
            (1) Technical feasibility of imposing mileage-based road 
        user charges, including cost, reliability, and security of on-
        board and intelligent transportation systems.
            (2) Compatibility of technology for imposing such charges 
        with automobile and truck design.
            (3) Design and testing of a collection system for such 
        charges that is secure, low cost, and easy to use.
            (4) Methods of ensuring privacy of road users and assessing 
        public attitudes and views of motorists who participate in 
        field tests of the equipment and system.
    (c) Reports.--The Secretary shall transmit annual reports on the 
status of the pilot project and, not later than June 30, 2009, a final 
report on the results of the pilot project, together with findings and 
recommendations, to the Secretary of the Treasury, the Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure and the Committee on Ways and Means 
of the House of Representatives, and the Committee on Environment and 
Public Works and the Committee on Finance of the Senate.
    (d) Authorization of Appropriation.--
            (1) In general.--There is authorize from the Highway Trust 
        Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) to carry out this 
        section $1,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 and 2006 and 
        $3,500,000 for each of fiscal years 2007, 2008, and 2009.
            (2) Contract authority.--Funds authorized under this 
        subsection shall be available for obligation in the same manner 
        as if the funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, 
        United States Code; except the Federal share of the cost of the 
        pilot project shall be 100 percent, and such funds shall remain 
        available until expended and shall not be transferable.

SEC. 1814. THOMAS P. ``TIP'' O'NEILL, JR. TUNNEL.

    (a) Designation.--In honor of his service to the Commonwealth of 
Massachusetts and the United States of America, and in recognition of 
his contributions toward the construction of Central Artery project in 
Boston, the northbound and southbound tunnel of Interstate Route 93, 
located in the city of Boston, which extends north of the intersection 
of Interstate Route 90 and Interstate Route 93 to the Leonard P. Zakim 
Bunker Hill Bridge, is designated as the ``Thomas P. `Tip' O'Neill, Jr. 
Tunnel''.
    (b) References.--Any reference in law, map, regulation, document, 
paper, or other record of the United States to the tunnel referred to 
in subsection (a) shall be deemed to be a reference to the ``Thomas P. 
`Tip' O'Neill, Jr. Tunnel''.

SEC. 1815. CONFORMING AMENDMENT FOR TRANSPORTATION PLANNING SECTIONS.

    (a) Metropolitan Planning.--Section 134 of title 23, United States 
Code is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 134. Metropolitan planning
    ``Metropolitan transportation planning programs funded under 
section 104(f) shall be carried out in accordance with the metropolitan 
planning provisions of chapter 52, title 49, United States Code.''.
    (b) Statewide Planning.--Section 135 of such title is amended to 
read as follows:
``Sec. 135. Statewide planning
    ``Statewide transportation planning programs funded under section 
104(f) shall be carried out in accordance with the statewide planning 
provisions of chapter 52, title 49, United States Code.''.

SEC. 1816. DISTRIBUTION OF METROPOLITAN PLANNING FUNDS WITHIN STATES.

    Section 104(f)(4) of title 23, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following: ``Such distribution of funds to 
metropolitan planning organizations shall be made within 30 days of the 
date of receipt of such funds from the Secretary.''.

SEC. 1817. TREATMENT OF OFF RAMP.

    The Harbor Boulevard off ramp from Interstate Route 405 in Costa 
Mesa, California, is deemed to satisfy the requirements of title 23, 
United States Code, that govern the approval of the placement of ramps 
off of a Federal-aid highway.

SEC. 1818. LOAN FORGIVENESS.

    Debt outstanding as of the date of enactment of this Act for 
project number Q-DPM-0013(001) carried out under section 108(c) of 
title 23, United States Code, is deemed satisfied.

SEC. 1819. LEAD AGENCY DESIGNATION.

    The public entity established under California law in 1989 to 
acquire rights-of-way in northwestern California to maintain surface 
transportation infrastructure is hereby designated as the lead agency 
for the purpose of accepting Federal funds authorized under item 13 of 
the table contained in section 1108(b) of the Intermodal Surface 
Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (105 Stat. 2061).

SEC. 1820. USE OF DEBRIS FROM DEMOLISHED BRIDGES AND OVERPASSES.

    The project agreement for a Federal-aid highway project shall 
provide that any debris from demolition of a bridge or overpass that is 
on the Federal-aid highway must be made available for beneficial public 
use by Federal, State, and local governments. Any additional cost 
associated with making available the debris shall be borne by the 
recipient of the debris.

SEC. 1821. HUBZONE PROGRAM.

    Section 3(p)(4)(B)(ii) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
632(p)(4)(B)(ii)) is amended--
            (1) in subclause (I) by striking ``or'' at the end;
            (2) in subclause (II) by striking the period at the end and 
        inserting ``; or''; and
            (3) by adding after subclause (II) the following:
                                    ``(III) there is located a 
                                difficult development area, as 
                                designated by the Secretary of Housing 
                                and Urban Development in accordance 
                                with section 42(d)(5)(C)(iii) of the 
                                Internal Revenue Code of 1986, within 
                                Alaska, Hawaii, or any territory or 
                                possession of the United States outside 
                                the 48 contiguous States.''.

SEC. 1822. TECHNICAL AMENDMENTS TO TEA 21 PROJECTS.

    The table contained in section 1602 of the Transportation Equity 
Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 257) is amended--
            (1) in item number 35 by adding ``and for other related 
        purposes'' after ``Yard'';
            (2) in item number 78 by striking ``Third'' and all that 
        follows through ``Bridge'' and inserting ``Bayview 
        Transportation Improvements Project'';
            (3) in item number 312 by inserting ``through 
        construction'' after ``engineering'';
            (4) in item number 566 by striking ``Prunedale Bypass'' and 
        inserting ``improvements to Prunedale'';
            (5) in item number 744 by striking ``Preliminary'' and all 
        that follows through ``Fitchburg'' and inserting ``Design, 
        construction or reconstruction, and right of way acquisition 
        for roadway improvements along the Route 12 corridor in 
        Leominster and Fitchburg to enhance access from Route 2 to 
        North Leominster and downtown Fitchburg'';
            (6) in item number 800 by striking ``Fairview Township'' 
        and inserting ``or other projects selected by the York County, 
        Pennsylvania MPO'';
            (7) in item number 820 by striking ``Conduct'' and all that 
        follows through ``interchange'' and inserting ``Conduct a 
        transportation needs study and make improvements to I-75 
        interchanges in the Grayling area'';
            (8) in item number 897 by striking ``Road upgrade'' and all 
        that follows through ``Hills'' and inserting ``Engineering and 
        construction of a new access road to a development near 
        Interstate 57 and 167th Street in Country Club Hills'';
            (9) in item number 1121 by striking ``Construct'' and all 
        that follows through ``Douglaston Parkway'' and inserting 
        ``Provide landscaping along both sides of the Grand Central 
        Parkway from 188th Street to 172nd Street'';
            (10) in item 1225 by striking ``Construct SR 9 bypass'' and 
        inserting ``Study, design, and construct transportation 
        solutions for SR 9 corridor'';
            (11) in item number 1375 by striking ``Preliminary'' and 
        all that follows through ``Emmet County'' and inserting 
        ``Petoskey area transportation needs study and trunkline 
        preservation and safety in the Petoskey area'';
            (12) in item number 1392 by striking ``Construct'' and all 
        that follows through ``multimodal center'' and inserting 
        ``Improve the ramp configuration at the I-476 PA Turnpike 
        Landsdale Interchange''; and
            (13) in item number 1447 strike ``Extend'' and all that 
        follows through ``Valparaiso'' and insert ``Design and 
        construction of interchange at I-65 and 109th Avenue, Crown 
        Point''.

SEC. 1823. NATIONAL WORK ZONE SAFETY INFORMATION CLEARINGHOUSE.

    (a) Grants.--The Secretary shall make grants for fiscal years 2005 
through 2009 to a national nonprofit foundation for the operation of 
the National Work Zone Safety Information Clearinghouse, authorized by 
section 358(b)(2) of Public Law 104-59, created for the purpose of 
assembling and disseminating, by electronic and other means, 
information relating to improvement of roadway work zone safety.
    (b) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be 
appropriated out of the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
Account) to carry out this section $1,000,000 for each of fiscal years 
2005 through 2009.
    (c) Contract Authority.--Funds authorized by this subsection shall 
be available for obligation in the same manner as if the funds were 
apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code, except the 
Federal share of the cost of activities carried out using such funds 
shall be 100 percent, and such funds shall remain available until 
expended and shall not be transferable.

SEC. 1824. TRANSPORTATION CONFORMITY.

    (a) Conformity Redeterminations.--Section 176(c)(2) of the Clean 
Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)) is amended by adding at the end the 
following:
            ``(E) The appropriate metropolitan planning organization 
        shall redetermine conformity for existing transportation plans 
        and programs not later than 2 years after the date on which the 
        Administrator--
                    ``(i) finds a motor vehicle emissions budget in a 
                submitted implementation plan to be adequate in 
                accordance with section 93.118(e)(4) of title 40, Code 
                of Federal Regulations (as in effect on October 1, 
                2003); or
                    ``(ii) approves an implementation plan under 
                section 110(k) or promulgates an implementation plan 
                under section 110(c) that establishes a motor vehicle 
                emissions budget where there was no prior budget or 
                that establishes a budget that significantly varies 
                from any motor vehicle emissions budget in effect 
                pursuant to an adequacy determination in accordance 
                with section 93.118(e)(4) of title 40, Code of Federal 
                Regulations (as in effect on October 1, 2003) or as 
                part of an implementation plan approved or promulgated 
                under section 110.''.
    (b) Frequency of Conformity Determination Updates.--Section 
176(c)(4) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)(4)) is amended 
follows:
            (1) In subparagraph (A) by striking ``one year after the 
        date of enactment of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990'' and 
        inserting ``one year after the date of enactment of the 
        Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users''.
            (2) In subparagraph (B) by amending clause (ii) to read as 
        follows:
            ``(ii) provide that conformity determinations for 
        transportation plans and programs be determined every 4 years 
        in areas designated as nonattainment or redesignated to 
        attainment (unless a metropolitan planning organization as 
        designated in section 5213(b) of title 49, United States Code, 
        elects to update a transportation plan and program more 
        frequently or is required to determine conformity in accordance 
        with paragraph (2)(E)).''.
    (c) Time Horizon for Conformity Determinations in Nonattainment 
Areas.--Subsection (c) of section 176 of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 
7506(c)) is amended by adding the following new paragraph at the end 
thereof:
            ``(7) Time horizon for determinations.--Each conformity 
        determination required under this section for a transportation 
        plan under section 5213(g) of title 49 of the United States 
        Code shall require a demonstration of conformity during the 
        period ending on either the final year of the transportation 
        plan or, at the election of the metropolitan planning 
        organization and an air pollution control agency, as defined in 
        section 302(b), if such air pollution control agency is 
        responsible for developing plans or controlling air pollution 
        within the area covered by the transportation plan on the later 
        of the following dates (hereinafter in this paragraph referred 
        to as the `final transportation conformity date'):
                    ``(A) The tenth year of the transportation plan.
                    ``(B) The attainment date set forth in the 
                applicable implementation plan for the air pollutant 
                concerned.
                    ``(C) The year after the completion of a regionally 
                significant project, if the project will be programmed 
                in the transportation improvement program or requires 
                approval before the subsequent conformity 
                determination.
        Such conformity determination shall be accompanied by a 
        regional emissions analysis for any years of the transportation 
        plan that extend beyond such final conformity date. In the case 
        in which an area has a revision to an implementation plan under 
        section 175A(b) and the Administrator has found the motor 
        vehicle emissions budgets from that revision to be adequate in 
        accordance with section 93.118(e)(4) of title 40, Code of 
        Federal Regulations (as in effect October 1, 2003), or has 
        approved the revision, the demonstration of conformity (at the 
        election of the metropolitan planning organization and an air 
        pollution control agency, as defined in section 302(b), if such 
        air pollution control agency is responsible for developing 
        plans or controlling pollution within the area covered by the 
        transportation plan) and the metropolitan planning organization 
        shall be required to extend only through the last year of the 
        implementation plan required under section 175A(b).''.
    (d) Substitution of Transportation Control Measures.--Subsection 
176(c) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)) is amended by adding at 
the end the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(8)(A) Transportation control measures that are specified 
        in an implementation plan may be replaced in the implementation 
        plan with substitute transportation control measures if--
                    ``(i) the substitute measures achieve equivalent or 
                greater emission reductions than the control measures 
                to be replaced, as determined by the Administrator;
                    ``(ii) the substitute measures utilize an emissions 
                impact analysis that is consistent with the current 
                methodology used for evaluating replaced control 
                measures in the implementation plan;
                    ``(iii) the substitute control measures are 
                implemented not later than the date on which such 
                emission reductions are necessary to achieve the 
                purpose of the implementation plan;
                    ``(iv) the substitute control measures were 
                developed with reasonable public notice and the 
                opportunity for comments; and
                    ``(v) the metropolitan planning organization finds 
                that adequate funding is included in the transportation 
                improvement program to ensure timely implementation of 
                the substitute control measures.
            ``(B) After the requirements of subparagraph (A) are met, a 
        State may adopt the substitute measures in the applicable 
        implementation plan within a reasonable period of time.
            ``(C) The substitution of a transportation control measure 
        in accordance with this paragraph shall not be contingent on 
        the existence of any provision in the applicable implementation 
        plan that expressly permits such substitution.
            ``(D) The substitution of a transportation control measure 
        in accordance with this paragraph shall not require--
                    ``(i) a new conformity determination for the 
                transportation plan, or
                    ``(ii) a revision of the applicable implementation 
                plan.
            ``(E) A control measure that is being replaced by a 
        substitute control measure under this paragraph shall remain in 
        effect until the substitute control measure is adopted.
            ``(F) Adoption of a substitute control measure shall 
        constitute rescission of the previously applicable control 
        measure.
Transportation control measures may be added to an implementation plan 
subject to subparagraphs (B), (C), and (D), on the same basis as if 
such measures were substitute transportation control measures if such 
measures do not increase emissions for which limitations have been 
established in an implementation plan, and such measures meet the 
requirements of clauses (ii), (iii), (iv), and (v) of subparagraph 
(A).''.
    (e) Lapse of Conformity.--Subsection (c) of section 176 of the 
Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)) is amended by adding the following 
new paragraphs at the end thereof:
            ``(9) Lapse of conformity.--If a conformity determination 
        required under this subsection for a transportation plan under 
        section 5213(g) of title 49 of the United States Code or a 
        transportation improvement program under section 5213(h) of 
        title 49 of the United States Code is not made by the 
        applicable deadline and such failure is not corrected by 
        additional measures to either reduce motor vehicle emissions 
        sufficient to demonstrate compliance with the requirements of 
        this subsection within 12 months after such deadline or other 
        measures sufficient to correct such failures, the 
        transportation plan shall lapse.
            ``(10) Lapse.--The term `lapse' means that the conformity 
        determination for a transportation plan or transportation 
        improvement program has expired, and thus there is no currently 
        conforming transportation plan or transportation improvement 
        program.''.

SEC. 1825. ELIGIBILITY TO PARTICIPATE IN WESTERN ALASKA COMMUNITY 
              DEVELOPMENT QUOTA PROGRAM.

    A community is deemed to be eligible to participate in the western 
Alaska community development quota program established under section 
305(i) of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act 
(16 U.S.C. 1855(i)) if the community--
            (1) is listed in table 7 to part 679 of title 50, Code of 
        Federal Regulations, as in effect on March 8, 2004; or
            (2) was determined to be eligible participate in such 
        program by the National Marine Fisheries Service on April 19, 
        1999.

SEC. 1826. METROPOLITAN REGIONAL FREIGHT AND PASSENGER TRANSPORTATION 
              STUDY.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall enter into an agreement with a 
partnership comprised of 2 institutions of higher learning to study 
metropolitan regional freight and passenger transportation and system-
wide performance utilizing an interdisciplinary technique of supply 
chain management, geographic information systems, and urban/suburban 
planning and management.
    (b) Contents of Study.--The study under this section shall include, 
at a minimum, evaluations of--
            (1) best practices for regional transportation operations 
        and management;
            (2) relationships among truck trip generation and economic 
        activities;
            (3) spatial analysis of the distribution of economic 
        activity and transportation investments;
            (4) congestion mitigation and management of air quality 
        through the concentration of modeling and technology;
            (5) supply chain management and geographic information 
        systems; and
            (6) infrastructure management and renewal.
    (c) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of the study 
under this section shall be 100 percent.
    (d) Funding.--Of the amounts made available to carry out section 
1305 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009, $1,800,000 shall be 
made available to carry out this section.

SEC. 1827. INTERMODAL TRANSPORTATION FACILITY EXPANSION.

    Any Federal and non-Federal share provided for the Port of 
Anchorage for an intermodal transportation marine facility or for 
access to that facility shall be transferred to and administered by the 
Administrator of the Maritime Administration.

SEC. 1828. ADVANCED TRUCK STOP ELECTRIFICATION SYSTEM.

    (a) Definition.--Section 101(a) of title 23, United States Code, as 
amended by section 1202 of this Act, is further amended by adding at 
the end the following:
            ``(40) Advanced truck stop electrification system.--The 
        term `advanced truck stop electrification system' means a 
        stationary system that delivers heat, air conditioning, 
        electricity, and communications, and is capable of providing 
        verifiable evidence of use of those services, to a heavy-duty 
        vehicle and any occupants of the heavy-duty vehicle without 
        relying on components mounted onboard the heavy-duty vehicle 
        for delivery of those services.''.
    (b) Eligibility Under STP.--Section 133(b)(6) of such title is 
amended by inserting ``, including advanced truck stop electrification 
systems'' before the period at the end.

SEC. 1829. TECHNOLOGY.

    States are encouraged to consider using a non-destructive 
technology able to detect cracks including sub-surface flaws as small 
as 0.005 inches in length or depth in steel bridges.

SEC. 1830. EXTENSION OF PUBLIC TRANSIT VEHICLE EXEMPTION FROM AXLE 
              WEIGHT RESTRICTIONS.

    Section 1023(h)(1) of the Intermodal Surface Transportation 
Efficiency Act of 1991 (23 U.S.C. 127 note; 106 Stat. 1552) is amended 
by striking ``2005'' and inserting ``2009''.

SEC. 1831. MOTORCYCLIST ADVISORY COUNCIL.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary, acting through the Administrator of 
the Federal Highway Administration, in consultation with the Committee 
on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives 
and the Committee on Environment and Public Works of the Senate, shall 
appoint a Motorcyclist Advisory Council to coordinate with and advise 
the Administrator on infrastructure issues of concern to motorcyclists, 
including--
            (1) barrier design;
            (2) road design, construction, and maintenance practices; 
        and
            (3) the architecture and implementation of intelligent 
        transportation system technologies.
    (b) Composition.--The Council shall consist of not more than 10 
members of the motorcycling community with professional expertise in 
national motorcyclist safety advocacy, including--
            (1) at least--
                    (A) 1 member recommended by a national motorcyclist 
                association;
                    (B) 1 member recommended by a national motorcycle 
                riders foundation;
                    (C) 1 representative of the National Association of 
                State Motorcycle Safety Administrators;
                    (D) 2 members of State motorcyclists' 
                organizations;
                    (E) 1 member recommended by a national organization 
                that represents the builders of highway infrastructure;
                    (F) 1 member recommended by a national association 
                that represents the traffic safety systems industry; 
                and
                    (G) 1 member of a national safety organization; and
            (2) at least 1, and not more than 2, motorcyclists who are 
        traffic system design engineers or State transportation 
        department officials.

SEC. 1832. SHARING OF MONETARY RECOVERIES.

    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, monetary judgments 
accruing to the Government from judgments in Federal criminal 
prosecutions and civil proceedings pertaining to fraud in Federally 
funded highway and public transportation projects and programs shall be 
treated as follows:
            (1) Any amount less than or equal to the single damages 
        incurred as the result of such fraud shall be credited to the 
        Federal account from which the funds for the project or program 
        that is at issue in the fraud came, except to the extent that 
        such Federal account has been credited as the result of any 
        judgment in favor of a grant recipient.
            (2) Any amount in excess of the amount credited pursuant to 
        paragraph (1) shall be shared with the State or other recipient 
        involved if--
                    (A) the State or other recipient enters into a 
                legally binding agreement with the Secretary to use the 
                funds for a purpose eligible for Federal assistance 
                under title 23 or chapter 53 of title 49, United States 
                Code, as the case may be;
                    (B) the amount to be shared with the State or other 
                recipient is determined by the Attorney General, in 
                consultation with the Secretary; and
                    (C) the Attorney General, in consultation with the 
                Secretary, determines that the fraud did not occur as a 
                result of negligent oversight or actual involvement in 
                the fraud by the State or other recipient or any senior 
                official of the State or other recipient.

SEC. 1833. ELIGIBILITY UNDER CMAQ.

    Section 149(b)(4) of title 23, United States Code is amended by 
inserting ``, including advanced truck stop electrification systems,'' 
after ``facility or program''.

SEC. 1834. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING BUY AMERICA.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the Buy America test required by section 165 of the 
        Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982 (23 U.S.C. 101 
        note) needs to be applied to an entire bridge project and not 
        only to component parts of such project;
            (2) the law clearly states that domestic materials must be 
        used in Federal highway projects unless there is a finding that 
        the inclusion of domestic materials will increase the cost of 
        the overall project by more than 25 percent;
            (3) uncertainty regarding how to apply Buy America laws for 
        major bridge projects threatens the domestic bridge industry;
            (4) the Nation's unemployment rate continues to hover 
        around 5.6 percent, steps are needed to protect American 
        workers and the domestic bridge building industry; and
            (5) the Buy American Act (41 U.S.C. 10a et seq.) was 
        designed to ensure that, when taxpayer money is spent on direct 
        Federal Government procurement and infrastructure projects, 
        these expenditures stimulate United States production and job 
        creation.

SEC. 1835. COMMUNITY ENHANCEMENT STUDY.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall conduct a study on--
            (1) the role of well-designed transportation projects in--
                    (A) promoting economic development;
                    (B) protecting public health, safety and the 
                environment; and
                    (C) enhancing the architectural design and planning 
                of communities; and
            (2) the positive economic, cultural, aesthetic, scenic, 
        architectural, and environmental benefits of such projects for 
        communities.
    (b) Contents.--The study shall address the following:
            (1) The degree to which well-designed transportation 
        projects have positive economic, cultural, aesthetic, scenic, 
        architectural, and environmental benefits for communities.
            (2) The degree to which such projects protect and 
        contribute to improvements in public health and safety.
            (3) The degree to which such projects use inclusive public 
        participation processes to achieve quicker, more certain, and 
        better results.
            (4) The degree to which positive results are achieved by 
        linking transportation, design, and the implementation of 
        community visions for the future.
            (5) Facilitating the use of successful models or best 
        practices in transportation investment or development to 
        accomplish each of the following:
                    (A) Enhancement of community identity.
                    (B) Protection of public health and safety.
                    (C) Provision of a variety of choices in housing, 
                shopping, transportation, employment, and recreation.
                    (D) Preservation and enhancement of existing 
                infrastructure.
                    (E) Creation of a greater sense of community 
                through public involvement.
    (c) Report.--Not later than September 20, 2006, the Secretary shall 
transmit to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the 
House of Representatives and the Committee on Environment and Public 
Works of the Senate a report on the results of the study.
    (d) Administration.--To carry out this section, the Secretary shall 
make a grant to, or enter into a cooperative agreement or contract 
with, a national organization representing architects who have 
expertise in the design of a wide range of transportation and 
infrastructure projects, which include the design of buildings, public 
facilities, and surrounding communities.
    (e) Authorization.--Of the amounts made available to carry out 
section 1221 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (23 
U.S.C. 101 note), $1,000,000 shall be available for each of fiscal year 
2005 and fiscal year 2006 to carry out this section; except that 
notwithstanding section 1221(e)(2) of such Act, the Federal share of 
the cost of the study shall be 100 percent.

SEC. 1836. TRANSPORTATION AND LOCAL WORKFORCE INVESTMENT.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Federal-aid highway programs provide State and local 
        governments and other recipients substantial funds for projects 
        that produce significant employment and job-training 
        opportunities.
            (2) Every $1,000,000,000 in Federal infrastructure 
        investment creates an estimated 47,500 jobs.
            (3) Jobs in transportation construction, including 
        apprenticeship positions, typically pay more than twice the 
        minimum wage, and include health and other benefits.
            (4) Transportation projects provide the impetus for job 
        training and employment opportunities for low income 
        individuals residing in the area in which a transportation 
        project is planned.
            (5) Transportation projects can offer young people, 
        particularly those who are economically disadvantaged, the 
        opportunity to gain productive employment.
            (6) The Alameda Corridor, a $2,400,000,000 transportation 
        project, is an example of a transportation project that 
        included a local hiring provision resulting in a full 30 
        percent of the project jobs being filled by locally hired and 
        trained men and women.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that Federal 
transportation projects should facilitate and encourage the 
collaboration between interested persons, including State, Federal, and 
local governments, community colleges, apprentice programs, local high 
schools, and other community based organizations that have an interest 
in improving the job skills of low-income individuals, to help leverage 
scarce training and community resources and to help ensure local 
participation in the building of transportation projects.

SEC. 1837. SPECIAL RULE FOR FISCAL YEAR 2004.

    In any case in which an amount is authorized to be appropriated, 
made available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or subject to an 
obligation limitation for fiscal year 2004 for a program, project, or 
activity in any provision of this title, including an amendment made by 
this title, that is different than the amount authorized to be 
appropriated, made available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or 
subject to an obligation limitation for fiscal year 2004 for such 
program, project, or activity in any provision of the Surface 
Transportation Extension Act of 2004, Part V (Public Law 108-310), 
including any amendment made by such Act, the amount referred to in 
such Act shall be the amount authorized to be appropriated, made 
available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or subject to an 
obligation limitation.

SEC. 1838. AMO HOUGHTON BYPASS.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Amo Houghton first served his country when he 
        volunteered for military service during World War II and served 
        as a Private First Class in the United States Marine Corps;
            (2) Amo Houghton earned a bachelor's degree from Harvard 
        University and a master's degree from the Harvard School of 
        Business;
            (3) Amo Houghton was Chief Executive Officer of Corning, 
        Incorporated, before running for Congress and is remembered 
        fondly for his tremendous efforts to rebuild the City of 
        Corning, New York, and the Chemung Valley in the aftermath of 
        Hurricane Agnes and the devastating flood of 1972;
            (4) Amo Houghton spent his energy and time at Corning, 
        Incorporated, Congress, and even after Congress working to 
        build up the economy of the Southern Tier, Finger Lakes, and 
        Rochester region of New York;
            (5) Amo Houghton worked tirelessly with others to fund the 
        building projects that brought New York State Route 17 to the 
        necessary standards to be designated as Interstate Route 86;
            (6) one of the major projects required to upgrade New York 
        State Route 17 to Interstate standards and at the same time 
        eliminate a glaring problem and safety hazard was the 
        construction of the bypass route around the City of Corning, 
        New York;
            (7) Amo Houghton was a champion of many economic, trade, 
        and health issues during his service on the Ways and Means 
        Committee of the House of Representatives, including numerous 
        tax simplification measures and successful House and Senate 
        passage of the Clean Diamond Trade Act (Public Law 108-19) 
        which was signed into law by President George W. Bush;
            (8) Amo Houghton was an active player on the world stage as 
        a member of the International Relations Committee of the House 
        of Representatives through his Chairmanships of the Canada-
        United States Interparliamentary Group, the Asia-Pacific 
        Parliamentary Forum, the Oxford Forum, and the United States-
        Japan Economic Agenda Forum and Vice Chairmanship of the Africa 
        Subcommittee of the International Relations Committee;
            (9) Amo Houghton served in many other capacities for the 
        good of Congress, including his work as a founding member of 
        the Bipartisan Retreat Committee of the House of 
        Representatives, the Members and Family Room Committee of the 
        House of Representatives, and as Co-Chairman of the Faith and 
        Politics Institute; and
            (10) among his colleagues in Congress, Amo Houghton will 
        always be remembered as a man of principle, statesmanship, 
        moderation, bipartisanship, and civility.
    (b) Designation.--The Secretary of Transportation shall work with 
the State of New York to ensure that the segment of Interstate Route 86 
between its interchange with New York State Route 15 in the vicinity of 
Painted Post, New York, and its interchange with New York State Route 
352 in the vicinity of Corning, New York, is known and designated as 
the ``Amo Houghton Bypass''.

SEC. 1839. INCLUSION OF CERTAIN ROUTE SEGMENTS ON THE INTERSTATE 
              SYSTEM.

    Section 1105(e)(5) of the Intermodal Surface Transportation 
Efficiency Act of 1991 (105 Stat. 2032; 118 Stat. 293) is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (A) by striking ``and subsection 
        (c)(45)'' and inserting ``subsection (c)(45), and subsection 
        (c)(57)''; and
            (2) by adding the following at the end of subparagraph 
        (B)(i): ``The route referred to in subsection (c)(57) is 
        designated as Interstate Route I-41.''.

SEC. 1840. RESCISSION OF UNOBLIGATED BALANCES.

    (a) In General.--On September 30, 2009, $12,000,000,000 of the 
unobligated balances of funds apportioned before such date to the 
States for the Interstate maintenance, national highway system, bridge, 
congestion mitigation and air quality improvement, surface 
transportation (other than the STP set-aside programs), metropolitan 
planning, minimum guarantee, Appalachian development highway system, 
recreational trails, safe routes to school, freight intermodal 
connectors, coordinated border infrastructure, high risk rural road, 
and highway safety improvement programs, and each of the STP set-aside 
programs, is rescinded.
    (b) Allocation Among States.--The Secretary shall determine each 
State's share of the amount to be rescinded by subsection (a) on 
September 30, 2009, by multiplying $12,000,000,000 by the ratio of the 
aggregate amount apportioned to such State for fiscal years 2004 
through 2009 for all the programs referred to in subsection (a) to the 
aggregate amount apportioned to all States for such fiscal years for 
those programs.
    (c) Calculations.--To determine the allocation of the amount to be 
rescinded for a State under subsection (b) among the programs referred 
to in subsection (a), the Secretary shall make the following 
calculations:
            (1) The Secretary shall multiply such amount to be 
        rescinded by the ratio that the aggregate amount of unobligated 
        funds available to the State on September 30, 2009, for each 
        such program bears to the aggregate amount of unobligated funds 
        available to the State on September 30, 2009, for all such 
        programs.
            (2) The Secretary shall multiply such amount to be 
        rescinded by the ratio that the aggregate of the amount 
        apportioned to the State for each such program for fiscal years 
        2004 through 2009 bears to the aggregate amount apportioned to 
        the State for all such programs for fiscal years 2004 through 
        2009.
    (d) Allocation Among Programs.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation with the 
        State, shall rescind for the State from each program referred 
        to in subsection (a) the amount determined for the program 
        under subsection (c)(1).
            (2) Special rule.--
                    (A) Restoration of funds for covered programs.--If 
                the rescission calculated under subsection (c)(1) for a 
                covered program exceeds the amount calculated for the 
                covered program under subsection (c)(2), the State 
                shall immediately restore to the apportionment account 
                for the covered program from the unobligated balances 
                of programs referred to in subsection (a) (other than 
                covered programs) the amount of funds required so that 
                the net rescission from the covered program does not 
                exceed the amount calculated for the covered program 
                under subsection (c)(2).
                    (B) Treatment of restored funds.--Any funds 
                restored under subparagraph (A) shall be deemed to be 
                the funds that were rescinded for the purposes of 
                obligation.
            (3) Covered program defined.--In paragraph (2), the term 
        ``covered program'' means a program authorized under sections 
        130 and 152 of title 23, United States Code, paragraph (1), 
        (2), or (3) of section 133(d) of that title, section 144 of 
        that title, section 149 of that title, or section 1121(a) of 
        this Act.
    (e) Treatment of Safety Programs.--In making calculations under 
subsections (c)(1), (c)(2), and (d)(2), the Secretary shall treat the 
STP set-aside program for safety programs and the highway safety 
improvement program as a single program.
    (f) STP Set-Aside Program Defined.--In this section, the term ``STP 
set-aside program'' means the amount set aside under section 133(d) of 
title 23, United States Code, for each of the safety programs, 
transportation enhancement activities, and division between urbanized 
areas of over 200,000 population and other areas.

SEC. 1841. TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS.

    Section 120(j)(1) of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``A State'' and inserting the following:
                    ``(A) In general.--A State''; and
            (2) by striking the last sentence and inserting the 
        following:
                    ``(B) Special rule for use of federal funds.--If 
                the public, quasi-public, or private agency has built, 
                improved, or maintained the facility using Federal 
                funds, the credit under this paragraph shall be reduced 
                by a percentage equal to the percentage of the total 
                cost of building, improving, or maintaining the 
                facility that was derived from Federal funds.
                    ``(C) Federal funds defined.--In this paragraph, 
                the term `Federal funds' does not include loans of 
                Federal funds or other financial assistance that must 
                be repaid to the Government.''.

                        TITLE II--HIGHWAY SAFETY

SEC. 2001. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    (a) In General.--The following sums are authorized to be 
appropriated out of the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
Account):
            (1) Highway safety programs.--For carrying out section 402 
        of title 23, United States Code, $164,027,000 for fiscal year 
        2004, $163,680,000 for fiscal year 2005, $229,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2006, $232,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, 
        $238,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $245,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2009.
            (2) Occupant protection incentive grants.--For carrying out 
        section 405 of title 23, United States Code, $19,882,000 for 
        fiscal year 2004, $19,840,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
        $136,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $139,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2007, $143,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $150,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2009.
            (3) Alcohol-impaired driving countermeasures incentive 
        grant program.--For carrying out section 410 of title 23, 
        United States Code, $39,764,000 for fiscal year 2004, 
        $39,680,000 for fiscal year 2005, $129,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2006, $133,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $138,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2008, and $144,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (4) State traffic safety information improvements.--For 
        carrying out section 412 of title 23, United States Code, 
        $30,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $35,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2007, $40,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $40,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2009.
            (5) National driver register.--For carrying out chapter 303 
        of title 49, United States Code, by the National Highway 
        Traffic Safety Administration, $3,976,000 for fiscal year 2004, 
        $3,968,000 for fiscal year 2005, and $4,000,000 for each of 
        fiscal years 2006 through 2009.
            (6) High visibility enforcement program.--For carrying out 
        section 2005 of this title, $15,000,000 for each of fiscal 
        years 2006 through 2009.
    (b) Applicability of Title 23.--Except as otherwise provided in 
chapter 4 of title 23, United States Code, and this title, amounts made 
available under subsection (a) for each of fiscal years 2004 through 
2009 shall be available for obligation in the same manner as if such 
funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code.
    (c) Transfers.--In each fiscal year, the Secretary may transfer any 
amounts remaining available under paragraph (2), (3), or (4) of 
subsection (a) to the amounts made available under any other of such 
paragraphs in order to ensure, to the maximum extent possible, that 
each State receives the maximum incentive funding for which the State 
is eligible under sections 405, 410, and 412 of title 23, United States 
Code.

SEC. 2002. OCCUPANT PROTECTION INCENTIVE GRANTS.

    (a) General Authority.--Section 405(a) of title 23, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2) by striking ``Transportation Equity 
        Act for the 21st Century'' and inserting ``Transportation 
        Equity Act: A Legacy for Users'';
            (2) in paragraph (3) by striking ``1997'' and inserting 
        ``2003''; and
            (3) in paragraphs (4)(A), (4)(B), and (4)(C) by inserting 
        after ``years'' the following: ``beginning after September 30, 
        2003,''.
    (b) Grant Eligibility.--Section 405(b) of title 23, United States 
Code, is amended by striking ``A State shall become eligible'' and 
inserting the following: ``A State shall be eligible for a grant under 
this section if the State has a seat belt usage rate of 85 percent or 
greater as of the date of the grant, as determined by the Secretary. A 
State shall also become eligible''.
    (c) Grant Amounts.--Section 405(c) of title 23, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) by striking ``25 percent'' and inserting ``100 
        percent''; and
            (2) by striking ``1997'' and inserting ``2003''.

SEC. 2003. ALCOHOL-IMPAIRED DRIVING COUNTERMEASURES.

    (a) General Authority.--Section 410(a) of title 23, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2) by striking ``Transportation Equity 
        Act for the 21st Century'' and inserting ``Transportation 
        Equity Act: A Legacy for Users'';
            (2) in paragraph (3) by striking ``1997'' and inserting 
        ``2003''; and
            (3) in paragraphs (4)(A), (4)(B), and (4)(C) by inserting 
        after ``years'' the following: ``beginning after September 30, 
        2003,''.
    (b) Basic Grant a.--Section 410(b)(1) of title 23, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``A State shall become eligible'' and 
        inserting the following: ``A State shall be eligible for a 
        grant under this paragraph if the State has an alcohol-related 
        fatality rate per 100,000,000 vehicle miles traveled of 0.5 or 
        less as of the date of the grant, as determined by the 
        Secretary using the Fatality Analysis Reporting System of the 
        National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. A State shall 
        also become eligible'';
            (2) by striking ``at least 5 of the following'' and 
        inserting ``at least 6 of the following for fiscal year 2005 
        and fiscal year 2006 and at least 7 of the following for each 
        fiscal year thereafter'';
            (3) in subparagraph (A)--
                    (A) by striking ``and'' at the end of clause 
                (i)(II);
                    (B) by striking the period at the end of clause 
                (ii) and inserting a semicolon; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following:
                            ``(iii) the suspension referred to under 
                        clause (i)(I) may allow an individual to 
                        operate a motor vehicle, after the 15-day 
                        period beginning on the date of the suspension, 
                        to and from employment, school, or an alcohol 
                        treatment program if an ignition interlock 
                        device is installed on each of the motor 
                        vehicles owned or operated, or both, by the 
                        individual; and
                            ``(iv) the suspension and revocation 
                        referred to under clause (i)(II) may allow an 
                        individual to operate a motor vehicle, after 
                        the 45-day period beginning on the date of the 
                        suspension or revocation, to and from 
                        employment, school, or an alcohol treatment 
                        program if an ignition interlock device is 
                        installed on each of the motor vehicles owned 
                        or operated, or both, by the individual.'';
            (4) in subparagraph (B)--
                    (A) by striking ``may include the issuance'' and 
                inserting the following:
 ``may include--
                            ``(i) the issuance''; and
                    (B) by striking the period at the end and inserting 
                ``; and'' and the following:
                            ``(ii) a program provided by a nonprofit 
                        organization for training point of sale 
                        personnel concerning, at a minimum, the 
                        following:
                                    ``(I) the clinical effects of 
                                alcohol;
                                    ``(II) methods of preventing second 
                                party sales of alcohol;
                                    ``(III) recognizing signs of 
                                intoxication;
                                    ``(IV) methods to prevent underage 
                                drinking;
                                    ``(V) Federal, State, and local 
                                laws that are relevant to such 
                                personnel.'';
            (5) by striking subparagraph (F) and inserting the 
        following:
                    ``(F) Outreach program.--A judicial and 
                prosecutorial education, training, and outreach program 
                that provides information on the appropriateness and 
                effectiveness of sentencing options.''; and
            (6) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(H) Self-sustaining drunk driving prevention 
                program.--A self-sustaining drunk driving prevention 
                program under which a significant portion of the fines 
                or surcharges collected from individuals apprehended 
                and fined for operating a motor vehicle while under the 
                influence of alcohol are returned to those communities 
                that have comprehensive programs for the prevention of 
                such operations of motor vehicles.
                    ``(I) Programs for effective alcohol 
                rehabilitation.--A program for effective inpatient and 
                outpatient alcohol rehabilitation based on mandatory 
                assessment and appropriate treatment for repeat 
                offenders described in subparagraph (A)(i)(II), 
                including a program of the court system (such as a 
                driving while intoxicated court) for the purpose of 
                changing the behavior of alcohol or drug dependent 
                offenders arrested for driving while impaired.
                    ``(J) Program for the impoundment of vehicles.--A 
                program to impound a vehicle operated by a person who 
                is arrested for operating that vehicle while under the 
                influence of alcohol.''.
    (c) Basic Grant B.--Section 410(b) of title 23, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) by striking paragraph (2) and inserting the following:
            ``(2) Basic grant b.--A State shall become eligible for a 
        grant under this paragraph if the State--
                    ``(A) has an alcohol-related fatality rate per 
                100,000,000 vehicle miles traveled of 0.8 or more as of 
                the date of the grant, as determined by the Secretary 
                using the Fatality Analysis Reporting System of the 
                National Highway Traffic Safety Administration; and
                    ``(B) establishes, subject to such requirements as 
                the Secretary may prescribe, a task force to evaluate 
                and recommend changes to the State's drunk driving 
                programs.''; and
            (2) in paragraph (3)--
                    (A) by striking ``25 percent'' and inserting ``100 
                percent''; and
                    (B) by striking ``1997'' and inserting ``2003''.
    (d) Supplemental Grants.--Section 410(c) of title 23, United States 
Code, is amended to read as follows:
    ``(c) Allocation for Basic Grant B.--Not more than $20,000,000 per 
fiscal year of amounts made available to carry out this section shall 
be available for making grants under subsection (b)(2).''.
    (e) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take 
effect on September 30, 2005.

SEC. 2004. STATE TRAFFIC SAFETY INFORMATION SYSTEM IMPROVEMENTS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 4 of title 23, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 412. State traffic safety information system improvements
    ``(a) General Authority.--
            ``(1) Authority to make grants.--Subject to the 
        requirements of this section, the Secretary shall make grants 
        to States that adopt and implement effective programs to--
                    ``(A) improve the timeliness, accuracy, 
                completeness, uniformity, integration, and 
                accessibility of the safety data of the State that is 
                needed to identify priorities for national, State, and 
                local highway and traffic safety programs;
                    ``(B) evaluate the effectiveness of efforts to make 
                such improvements;
                    ``(C) link these State data systems, including 
                traffic records, with other data systems within the 
                State, such as systems that contain medical, roadway, 
                and economic data; and
                    ``(D) improve the compatibility and 
                interoperability of the data systems of the State with 
                national data systems and data systems of other States 
                and enhance the ability of the Secretary to observe and 
                analyze national trends in crash occurrences, rates, 
                outcomes, and circumstances.
            ``(2) Use of grants.--A State may use a grant received 
        under this section only to implement such programs.
            ``(3) Model data elements.--The Secretary, in consultation 
        with States and other appropriate parties, shall determine the 
        model data elements necessary to observe and analyze State and 
        national trends in crash occurrences, rates, outcomes, and 
        circumstances. In order to become eligible for a grant under 
        this section, a State shall certify to the Secretary the 
        State's adoption and use of such model data elements.
            ``(4) Maintenance of effort.--No grant may be made to a 
        State under this section in any fiscal year unless the State 
        enters into such agreements with the Secretary as the Secretary 
        may require ensuring that the State will maintain its aggregate 
        expenditures from all other sources for highway safety data 
        programs at or above the average level of such expenditures in 
        the 2 fiscal years preceding the date of enactment of this 
        section.
            ``(5) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of 
        implementing in a fiscal year a program of a State pursuant to 
        paragraph (1) shall not exceed 80 percent.
    ``(b) First-Year Grants.--To be eligible for a first-year grant 
under this section, a State shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of 
the Secretary that the State has--
            ``(1) established a highway safety data and traffic records 
        coordinating committee with a multidisciplinary membership that 
        includes, among others, managers, collectors, and users of 
        traffic records and public health and injury control data 
        systems; and
            ``(2) developed a multiyear highway safety data and traffic 
        records system strategic plan that addresses existing 
        deficiencies in the State's highway safety data and traffic 
        records system and is approved by the highway safety data and 
        traffic records coordinating committee and--
                    ``(A) specifies how existing deficiencies in the 
                State's highway safety data and traffic records system 
                were identified;
                    ``(B) prioritizes, based on the identified highway 
                safety data and traffic records system deficiencies, 
                the highway safety data and traffic records system 
                needs and goals of the State, including the activities 
                described in subsection (a)(1);
                    ``(C) identifies performance-based measures by 
                which progress toward those goals will be determined;
                    ``(D) specifies how the grant funds and any other 
                funds of the State will be used to address needs and 
                goals identified in the multiyear plan; and
                    ``(E) includes a current report on the progress in 
                implementing the multiyear plan that documents progress 
                toward the specified goals.
    ``(c) Succeeding-Year Grants.--
            ``(1) Eligibility.--A State shall be eligible for a grant 
        under this section in a fiscal year succeeding the first fiscal 
        year in which the State receives a grant under subsection (b) 
        if the State, to the satisfaction of the Secretary--
                    ``(A) submits an updated multiyear plan that meets 
                the requirements of subsection (b)(2);
                    ``(B) certifies that its highway safety data and 
                traffic records coordinating committee continues to 
                operate and supports the multiyear plan;
                    ``(C) specifies how the grant funds and any other 
                funds of the State will be used to address needs and 
                goals identified in the multiyear plan;
                    ``(D) demonstrates measurable progress toward 
                achieving the goals and objectives identified in the 
                multiyear plan; and
                    ``(E) includes a current report on the progress in 
                implementing the multiyear plan.
    ``(d) Grant Amounts.--
            ``(1) In general.--The amount of a grant made to a State 
        for a fiscal year under this section shall equal an amount 
        determined by multiplying--
                    ``(A) the amount appropriated to carry out this 
                section for such fiscal year; by
                    ``(B) the ratio that the funds apportioned to the 
                State under section 402 for fiscal year 2003 bears to 
                the funds apportioned to all States under section 402 
                for fiscal year 2003.
            ``(2) Minimum amount.--Notwithstanding subparagraph (A)--
                    ``(A) a State eligible for a first-year grant under 
                this section shall not receive less than $300,000; and
                    ``(B) a State eligible for a succeeding-year grant 
                under this section shall not receive less than 
                $500,000.
    ``(e) Administrative Expenses.--Funds authorized to be appropriated 
to carry out this section in a fiscal year shall be subject to a 
deduction not to exceed 5 percent for the necessary costs of 
administering the provisions of this section.
    ``(f) Applicability of Chapter 1.--The provisions contained in 
section 402(d) shall apply to this section.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 4 of title 23, 
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:

``412. State traffic safety information system improvements.''.

SEC. 2005. HIGH VISIBILITY ENFORCEMENT PROGRAM.

    The Secretary shall establish a program to support national 
impaired driving mobilization and enforcement efforts and national 
safety belt mobilization and enforcement, including the purchase of 
national paid advertisement (including production and placement) to 
support such efforts.

SEC. 2006. MOTORCYCLE CRASH CAUSATION STUDY.

    (a) In General.--Using funds made available to carry out section 
403 of title 23, United States Code, the Secretary shall conduct a 
study of the causes of motorcycle crashes.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 3 years after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary shall transmit to Congress a report on the 
results of the study.

SEC. 2007. CHILD SAFETY AND CHILD BOOSTER SEAT INCENTIVE GRANTS.

    (a) General Authority.--Subject to the requirements of this 
section, the Secretary shall make grants to States that enact or have 
enacted and are enforcing a law requiring that children riding in 
passenger motor vehicles who are too large to be secured in a child 
safety seat be secured in a child restraint that meets the requirements 
prescribed by the Secretary under section 3 of Anton's Law (116 Stat. 
2772).
    (b) Maintenance of Effort.--No grant may be made to a State under 
this section in a fiscal year unless the State enters into such 
agreements with the Secretary as the Secretary may require to ensure 
that the State will maintain its aggregate expenditures from all other 
sources for child safety seat and child booster seat programs at or 
above the average level of such expenditures in its 2 fiscal years 
preceding the date of enactment of this Act.
    (c) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of implementing 
and enforcing in a fiscal year a law adopted by a State under 
subsection (a) shall not exceed--
            (1) for the first 3 fiscal years for which a State receives 
        a grant under this section, 75 percent; and
            (2) for the fourth fiscal year for which a State receives a 
        grant under this section, 50 percent.
    (d) Grant Eligibility.--
            (1) In general.--A State is eligible for a grant under this 
        section if the State has in effect and enforces a law described 
        in subsection (a).
            (2) Maximum period of eligibility.--No State may receive 
        grants under this section in more than 4 fiscal years beginning 
        after September 30, 2005.
    (e) Eligible Uses of Funds.--A State may use a grant under this 
section only to carry out child safety seat and child booster seat 
programs, including the following:
            (1) A program to educate the public concerning the proper 
        use and installation of child safety seats and child booster 
        seats.
            (2) A program to train child passenger safety 
        professionals, police officers, fire and emergency medical 
        personnel, and educators concerning all aspects of the use of 
        child safety seats and booster seats.
            (3) A program to purchase and distribute child safety 
        seats, child booster seats, and other appropriate passenger 
        motor vehicle child restraints to families that cannot 
        otherwise afford such seats or restraints.
            (4) A program to support enforcement of child restraint 
        laws.
    (f) Grant Amount.--The amount of a grant to a State for a fiscal 
year under this section may not exceed 25 percent of the amount 
apportioned to the State for fiscal year 2003 under section 402 of 
title 23, United States Code.
    (g) Administrative Expenses.--Funds authorized to be appropriated 
to carry out this section in a fiscal year shall be subject to a 
deduction not to exceed 2.5 percent for the necessary costs of 
administering the provisions of this section.
    (h) Applicability of Chapter 1.--The provisions contained in 
section 402(d) of title 23, United States Code, apply to this section.
    (i) Report.--Each State to which a grant is made under this section 
shall transmit to the Secretary a report documenting the manner in 
which grant amounts were obligated and expended and identifying the 
specific programs carried out with or supported by grant funds. The 
report shall be in a form prescribed by the Secretary and may be 
combined with other State grant reporting requirements under of chapter 
4 of title 23, United States Code.
    (j) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Child restraint.--The term ``child restraint'' means 
        any product designed to provide restraint to a child (including 
        booster seats and other products used with a lap and shoulder 
        belt assembly) that meets applicable Federal motor vehicle 
        safety standards prescribed by the National Highway Traffic 
        Safety Administration.
            (2) Child safety seat.--The term ``child safety seat'' has 
        the meaning such term has in section 405(f) of title 23, United 
        States Code.
            (3) Passenger motor vehicle.--The term ``passenger motor 
        vehicle'' has the meaning such term has in such section 405(f).
            (4) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such term 
        has in section 101(a) of such title.
    (k) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be 
appropriated to carry out this section from the Highway Trust Fund 
(other than the Mass Transit Account) $6,000,000 for each of fiscal 
years 2006 through 2008 and $7,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.

SEC. 2008. MOTORCYCLIST SAFETY.

    (a) Authority to Make Grants.--Subject to the requirements of this 
section, the Secretary shall make grants to States that adopt and 
implement effective programs to reduce the number of single- and multi-
vehicle crashes involving motorcyclists.
    (b) Maintenance of Effort.--No grant may be made to a State under 
this section in a fiscal year unless the State enters into such 
agreements with the Secretary as the Secretary may require to ensure 
that the State will maintain its aggregate expenditures from all the 
other sources for motorcyclist safety training programs and 
motorcyclist awareness programs at or above the average level of such 
expenditures in its 2 fiscal years preceding the date of enactment of 
this Act.
    (c) Maximum Period of Eligibility.--No State may receive grants 
under this section in more than 4 fiscal years beginning after 
September 30, 2005.
    (d) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of implementing 
and enforcing, as appropriate, in a fiscal year a program adopted by a 
State in accordance with subsection (a) shall not exceed--
            (1) for the first 3 years for which a State receives a 
        grant under this section, 75 percent; and
            (2) for the fourth fiscal year for which a State receives a 
        grant under this section, 50 percent.
    (e) Grant Eligibility.--
            (1) In general.--A State becomes eligible for a grant under 
        this section by adopting or demonstrating to the satisfaction 
        of the Secretary--
                    (A) for the first fiscal year for which the State 
                will receive a grant under this section, at least 1 of 
                the 6 criteria listed in paragraph (2);
                    (B) for the second, third, and fourth fiscal years 
                for which the State will receive a grant under this 
                section, at least 2 of the 6 criteria listed in 
                paragraph (2); and
                    (C) for any subsequent fiscal years for which the 
                State will receive a grant under this section, at least 
                3 of the 6 criteria listed in paragraph (2).
            (2) Criteria.--The criteria for eligibility for a grant 
        under this section are the following:
                    (A) Motorcycle rider training courses.--An 
                effective motorcycle rider training course that is 
                offered throughout the State, provides a formal program 
                of instruction in accident avoidance and other safety-
                oriented operational skills to motorcyclists, and may 
                include innovative training opportunities to meet 
                unique regional needs.
                    (B) Motorcyclists awareness program.--An effective 
                statewide program to enhance motorist awareness of the 
                presence of motorcyclists on or near roadways and safe 
                driving practices that avoid injuries to motorcyclists.
                    (C) Reduction of fatalities and crashes involving 
                motorcycles.--A reduction for the preceding calendar 
                year in the number of motorcycle fatalities and the 
                rate of motor vehicle crashes involving motorcycles in 
                the State (expressed as a function of 10,000 motorcycle 
                registrations).
                    (D) Impaired driving program.--Implementation of a 
                statewide program to reduce impaired driving, including 
                specific measures to reduce impaired motorcycle 
                operation.
                    (E) Reduction of fatalities and accidents involving 
                impaired motorcyclists.--A reduction for the preceding 
                calendar year in the number of fatalities and the rate 
                of reported crashes involving alcohol- or drug-impaired 
                motorcycle operators (expressed as a function of 10,000 
                motorcycle registrations).
                    (F) Fees collected from motorcyclists.--All fees 
                collected by the State from motorcyclists for the 
                purposes of funding motorcycle training and safety 
                programs are used for motorcycle training and safety 
                programs.
    (f) Eligible Uses.--
            (1) In general.--A State may use funds from a grant under 
        this section only for motorcyclist safety training and 
        motorcyclist awareness programs, including--
                    (A) improvements to motorcyclist safety training 
                curricula;
                    (B) improvements in program delivery of motorcycle 
                training to both urban and rural areas, including--
                            (i) procurement or repair of practice 
                        motorcycles;
                            (ii) instructional materials;
                            (iii) mobile training units; and
                            (iv) leasing or purchase of facilities for 
                        classroom instruction and closed-course skill 
                        training;
                    (C) measures designed to increase the recruitment 
                or retention of motorcyclist safety training 
                instructors; and
                    (D) public awareness, public service announcements, 
                and other outreach programs to enhance motorcyclist 
                awareness.
            (2) Suballocations of funds.--An agency that receives a 
        grant under this section may suballocate funds from the grant 
        to a nonprofit organization incorporated in that State to carry 
        out under this section.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Motorcyclist safety training.--The term ``motorcyclist 
        safety training'' means a formal program of instruction that--
                    (A) provides accident avoidance and other safety-
                oriented operational skills to motorcyclists; and
                    (B) is approved for use in a State by the 
                designated State authority having jurisdiction over 
                motorcyclist safety issues.
            (2) Motorcyclist awareness.--The term ``motorcyclist 
        awareness'' means individual or collective awareness of--
                    (A) the presence of motorcycles on or near 
                roadways; and
                    (B) safe driving practices that avoid injury to 
                motorcyclists.
            (3) Motorcyclist awareness program.--The term 
        ``motorcyclist awareness program'' means an informational or 
        public awareness program designed to enhance motorcyclist 
        awareness that is developed by or in coordination with the 
        designated State authority having jurisdiction over 
        motorcyclist safety issues.
            (4) State.--The term ``State'' has the same meaning such 
        term has in section 101(a) of title 23, United States Code.
    (h) Maximum Grant Amount.--The amount of a grant made to a State 
for a fiscal year under this section may not exceed 25 percent of the 
amount apportioned to the State for fiscal year 2003 under section 402 
of title 23, United States Code.
    (i) Administrative Expenses.--Funds authorized to be appropriated 
to carry out this section in a fiscal year shall be subject to a 
deduction by the Secretary not to exceed 5 percent for the necessary 
costs of administering the provisions of this section.
    (j) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be 
appropriated to carry out this section from the Highway Trust Fund 
(other than the Mass Transit Account) $6,000,000 for each of fiscal 
years 2006 through 2008 and $7,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
    (k) Applicability of Title 23.--Funds authorized under this section 
shall be available for obligation in the same manner as if the funds 
were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code; 
except that such funds shall not be transferable.

SEC. 2009. DRIVER FATIGUE.

    Section 402(a) of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' before ``(6)''; and
            (2) by inserting before the period the following: ``; and 
        (7) to reduce deaths and injuries resulting from persons 
        driving motor vehicles while fatigued''.

SEC. 2010. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR HIGHWAY SAFETY RESEARCH 
              AND DEVELOPMENT.

    (a) In General.--There is authorized to be appropriated out of the 
Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) for carrying 
out section 403 of title 23, United States Code, $71,575,000 for fiscal 
year 2004, $71,424,000 for fiscal year 2005, and $75,000,000 for each 
of fiscal years 2006 through 2009.
    (b) Applicability of Title 23.--Except as otherwise provided in 
chapter 4 of title 23, United States Code, and this title, amounts made 
available under subsection (a) for each of fiscal years 2004 through 
2009 shall be available for obligation in the same manner as if such 
funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 2011. SAFETY DATA.

    (a) In General.--Using funds made available to carry out section 
403 of title 23, United States Code, for fiscal years 2005 through 
2009, the Secretary shall collect data and compile statistics on 
accidents involving motor vehicles being backed up that result in 
fatalities and injuries and that occur on public and nonpublic roads 
and residential and commercial driveways and parking facilities.
    (b) Report.--Not later than January 1, 2009, the Secretary shall 
transmit to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the 
House of Representatives and the Committee on Commerce, Science, and 
Transportation of the Senate a report on accidents described in 
subsection (a), including the data collected and statistics compiled 
under subsection (a) and any recommendations regarding measures to be 
taken to reduce the number of such accidents and the resulting 
fatalities and injuries.

SEC. 2012. DRIVER PERFORMANCE STUDY.

    (a) In General.--Using funds made available to carry out section 
403 of title 23, United States Code, for fiscal year 2005, the 
Secretary shall make $1,000,000 available to conduct a study on the 
risks associated with glare to oncoming drivers, including increased 
risks to drivers on 2-lane highways, increased risks to drivers over 
the age of 50, and the overall effects of glare on driver performance.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 18 months after the date of enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary shall transmit to the Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and 
the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate a 
report on the results of the study and any recommendations regarding 
measures to reduce the risks associated with glare to oncoming drivers.

SEC. 2013. DRUG IMPAIRED DRIVING ENFORCEMENT.

    (a) Short Title.--This section may be cited as the ``Drug Impaired 
Driving Research and Prevention Act''.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Controlled substance.--The term ``controlled 
        substance'' includes substances listed in schedules I through V 
        of section 112(e) of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 
        812(e)).
            (2) Drug recognition expert.--The term ``drug recognition 
        expert'' means an individual trained in a specific evaluation 
        procedure that enables the person to determine whether an 
        individual is under the influence of drugs and then to 
        determine the type of drug causing the observable impairment.
    (c) Model Statute.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall develop a model 
        statute for States relating to drug impaired driving.
            (2) Contents.--The model statute shall include--
                    (A) threshold levels of impairment for a controlled 
                substance;
                    (B) practicable methods for detecting the presence 
                of controlled substances; and
                    (C) penalties for drug impaired driving.
            (3) Recommendations.--The model statute shall be based on 
        the recommendations contained in the report submitted under 
        subsection (f).
            (4) Date.--The model statute should be provided to States 
        no later than 1 year after submission of the report contained 
        in subsection (f).
    (d) Research and Development.--Section 403(b) of title 23, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) New technology to detect drug use.
            ``(6) Research and development to improve testing 
        technology, including toxicology lab resources and field test 
        mechanisms to enable States to process toxicology evidence in a 
        more timely manner.
            ``(7) Determining per se unlawful impairment levels for 
        controlled substances and the compound effects of alcohol and 
        controlled substances on impairment to facilitate enforcement 
        of per se drug impaired driving laws. Research under this 
        paragraph shall be carried out in collaboration with the 
        National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of 
        Health.''.
    (e) Duties.--The Administrator of the National Highway Traffic 
Safety Administration shall--
            (1) advise and coordinate with other Federal agencies on 
        how to address the problem of driving under the influence of an 
        illegal drug; and
            (2) conduct research on the prevention, detection, and 
        prosecution of driving under the influence of an illegal drug.
    (f) Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 18 months after the date of 
        enactment of this Act, the National Institutes of Health shall 
        submit to the Secretary and to Congress a report on the problem 
        of drug-impaired driving.
            (2) Contents.--The report shall include--
                    (A) a description of the extent of the problem of 
                driving under the influence of an illegal drug in each 
                State and any available information relating thereto, 
                including a description of any laws relating to the 
                problem of driving under the influence of an illegal 
                drug;
                    (B) an assessment of the status of drug impaired 
                driving laws in the United States;
                    (C) a review of the compound effects of alcohol and 
                controlled substances on impairment;
                    (D) the role of drugs as a causal factor in traffic 
                crashes;
                    (E) an assessment of new research and technologies 
                developed in the area of drug detection for drug-
                impaired driving enforcement, including noninvasive 
                methods of detection;
                    (F) recommendations for addressing the problem of 
                driving under the influence of an illegal drug, 
                including recommendations on levels of impairment;
                    (G) a State-by-State review of drug recognition 
                expert programs and recommendations for enhancing those 
                programs through the training and utilization of drug 
                recognition experts; and
                    (H) recommendations for developing a model statute 
                relating to drug-impaired driving.
    (g) Funding.--Out of amounts appropriated to carry out section 403 
of title 23, United States Code, for fiscal years 2006 through 2009, 
the Secretary shall use $1,200,000 per fiscal year to carry out this 
section.

SEC. 2014. TRANSPORTATION OF SCHOOLCHILDREN.

    The third sentence of section 402(a) of title 23, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' before ``(6)''; and
            (2) by inserting before the period at the end the 
        following: ``, and (7) to prevent use of any motor vehicle 
        designed to transport between 9 and 15 passengers (including 
        the driver) for the transportation of children to and from 
        school and events related to school''.

SEC. 2015. RURAL STATE EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES OPTIMIZATION PILOT 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--From funds made available to carry out section 403 
of title 23, United States Code, for fiscal year 2006, the Secretary 
shall make $1,000,000 available to conduct a pilot program for 
optimizing Emergency Medical Services (EMS) in a rural State.
    (b) Collecting Data.--The pilot program shall focus on collecting 
geo-coded data for highway accidents and resulting injuries, analyzing 
data to develop injury patterns and distributions, and improving 
placement and management of EMS resources and personnel.
    (c) Selection.--The Secretary shall enter into an agreement with 
the State of Alaska to conduct the pilot program.
    (d) Report.--Not later than 12 months after the completion of the 
pilot program, the Secretary shall transmit to the Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and 
the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate a 
report on the results of the pilot program and recommendations for 
application to other rural States.

SEC. 2016. STATE APPORTIONMENTS.

    Section 402(c) of the title 23, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``The annual apportionment to each State shall not be less 
than one-half of 1 per centum'' and insert ``The annual apportionment 
to each State shall not be less than three-quarters of 1 percent''.

SEC. 2017. SAFE INTERSECTIONS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 2 of title 18, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 39. Traffic signal preemption transmitters
    ``(a) Offenses.--
            ``(1) Sale.--A person who knowingly sells a traffic signal 
        preemption transmitter in or affecting interstate or foreign 
        commerce to a person who is not acting on behalf of a public 
        agency or private corporation authorized by law to provide fire 
        protection, law enforcement, emergency medical services, 
        transit services, maintenance, or other services for a Federal, 
        State, or local government entity, shall, notwithstanding 
        section 3571(b) of title 18, United States Code, be fined 
        according to this title, imprisoned not more than 1 year, or 
        both.
            ``(2) Use.--A person who makes unauthorized use of a 
        traffic signal preemption transmitter in or affecting 
        interstate or foreign commerce shall be fined according to this 
        title, imprisoned not more than 6 months, or both.
    ``(b) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Traffic signal preemption transmitter.--The term 
        `traffic signal preemption transmitter' means any mechanism 
        that can change or alter a traffic signal's phase time or 
        sequence.
            ``(2) Unauthorized use.--The term `unauthorized use' means 
        use of a traffic signal preemption transmitter by a person who 
        is not acting on behalf of a public agency or private 
        corporation authorized by law to provide fire protection, law 
        enforcement, emergency medical services, transit services, 
        maintenance, or other services for a Federal, State, or local 
        government entity. The term `unauthorized use' does not apply 
        to use of a traffic signal preemption transmitter for classroom 
        or instructional purposes.''.
    (b) Table of Sections.--The table of sections for chapter 2 of 
title 18, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
following:

``39. Traffic signal preemption transmitters.''.

           TITLE III--FEDERAL TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION PROGRAMS

SEC. 3001. SHORT TITLE; AMENDMENTS TO TITLE 49, UNITED STATES CODE.

    (a) Short Title.--This title may be cited as the ``Federal Public 
Transportation Act of 2005''.
    (b) Amendments to Title 49, United States Code.--Except as 
otherwise specifically provided, whenever in this title an amendment or 
repeal is expressed in terms of an amendment to, or repeal of, a 
section or other provision of law, the reference shall be considered to 
be made to a section or other provision of title 49, United States 
Code.

SEC. 3002. POLICIES, FINDINGS, AND PURPOSES.

    (a) In General.--Section 5301(a) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(a) Development and Revitalization of Public Transportation 
Systems.--It is in the interest of the United States to foster the 
development and revitalization of public transportation systems that--
            ``(1) maximize the safe, secure, and efficient mobility of 
        individuals;
            ``(2) minimize environmental impacts; and
            ``(3) minimize transportation-related fuel consumption and 
        reliance on foreign oil.''.
    (b) Preserving the Environment.--Section 5301(e) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``an urban'' and inserting ``a''; and
            (2) by striking ``under sections 5309 and 5310 of this 
        title''.
    (c) General Purposes.--Section 5301(f) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``mass'' the first place it appears 
                and inserting ``public''; and
                    (B) by striking ``public and private mass 
                transportation companies'' and inserting ``both public 
                transportation companies and private companies engaged 
                in public transportation'';
            (2) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by striking ``urban mass'' and inserting 
                ``public''; and
                    (B) by striking ``public and private mass 
                transportation companies'' and inserting ``both public 
                transportation companies and private companies engaged 
                in public transportation'';
            (3) in paragraph (3)--
                    (A) by striking ``urban mass'' and inserting 
                ``public''; and
                    (B) by striking ``public or private mass 
                transportation companies'' and inserting ``public 
                transportation companies or private companies engaged 
                in public transportation''; and
            (4) in paragraph (5) by striking ``urban mass'' and 
        inserting ``public''.

SEC. 3003. DEFINITIONS.

    (a) Lead-in.--Section 5302(a) is amended in the matter preceding 
paragraph (1) by striking ``In this chapter'' and inserting ``Except as 
otherwise specifically provided, in this chapter''.
    (b) Capital Project.--Section 5302(a)(1) is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (G) by inserting ``construction, 
        renovation, and improvement of intercity bus stations and 
        terminals,'' before ``and the renovation and improvement of 
        historic transportation facilities,'';
            (2) in subparagraph (G)(ii) by inserting ``(other than an 
        intercity bus station or terminal)'' after ``commercial 
        revenue-producing facility'';
            (3) by striking ``or'' at the end of subparagraph (H);
            (4) by striking the period at the end of subparagraph (I) 
        and inserting a semicolon; and
            (5) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(J) crime prevention and security--
                            ``(i) including--
                                    ``(I) projects to refine and 
                                develop security and emergency response 
                                plans;
                                    ``(II) projects aimed at detecting 
                                chemical and biological agents in 
                                public transportation;
                                    ``(III) the conduct of emergency 
                                response drills with public 
                                transportation agencies and local first 
                                response agencies; and
                                    ``(IV) security training for public 
                                transportation employees; but
                            ``(ii) excluding all expenses related to 
                        operations, other than such expenses incurred 
                        in conducting activities described in 
                        subclauses (III) and (IV);
                    ``(K) establishment of a debt service reserve made 
                up of deposits with a bondholders' trustee in a 
                noninterest bearing account for the purpose of ensuring 
                timely payment of principal and interest on bonds 
                issued by a grant recipient for purposes of financing 
                an eligible project under this chapter; or
                    ``(L) mobility management--
                            ``(i) consisting of short-range planning 
                        and management activities and projects for 
                        improving coordination among public 
                        transportation and other transportation service 
                        providers carried out by a recipient or 
                        subrecipient through an agreement entered into 
                        with a person, including a governmental entity, 
                        under this chapter (other than section 5309); 
                        but
                            ``(ii) excluding operating public 
                        transportation services.''.
    (c) Individual With a Disability.--Section 5302(a)(5) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``Handicapped individual'' in the heading 
        and inserting ``Individual with a disability''; and
            (2) by striking ``handicapped individual'' and inserting 
        ``individual with a disability''.
    (d) Mass Transportation.--Section 5302(a)(7) is amended to read as 
follows:
            ``(7) Mass transportation.--The term `mass transportation' 
        means public transportation.''.
    (e) Public Transportation.--Section 5302(a)(10) is amended to read 
as follows:
            ``(10) Public transportation.--The term `public 
        transportation' means transportation by a conveyance that 
        provides regular and continuing general or special 
        transportation to the public, but does not include schoolbus, 
        charter, or sightseeing transportation.''.
    (f) Urbanized Area.--Section 5302(a)(17) is amended to read as 
follows:
            ``(17) Urbanized area.--The term `urbanized area' means an 
        area encompassing a population of at least 50,000 people that 
        has been defined and designated in the latest decennial census 
        as an urbanized area by the Secretary of Commerce.''.
    (g) Authority to Modify Definition.--Section 5302(b) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``Handicapped Individual'' in the heading 
        and inserting ``Individual With a Disability''; and
            (2) by striking ``handicapped individual'' and inserting 
        ``individual with a disability''.

SEC. 3004. METROPOLITAN PLANNING.

    Section 5303 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5303. Metropolitan planning
    ``(a) In General.--Grants made under sections 5307, 5308, 5309, 
5310, 5311, 5316, and 5317 shall be carried out in accordance with the 
metropolitan planning provisions of chapter 52.
    ``(b) Certification.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall ensure and certify 
        that each metropolitan planning organization in each 
        transportation management area is carrying out its 
        responsibilities under applicable laws of the United States. 
        The Secretary may make the certification only if the 
        organization is complying with chapter 52 and other applicable 
        requirements of laws of the United States and the organization 
        and chief executive officer have approved a transportation 
        improvement program for the area.
            ``(2) Limitation on withholding certification.--The 
        Secretary may not withhold certification based on the policies 
        and criteria a metropolitan planning organization or mass 
        transportation grant recipient establishes under section 
        5306(a) for deciding the feasibility of private enterprise 
        participation.''.

SEC. 3005. STATEWIDE PLANNING.

    (a) In General.--Section 5304 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5304. Statewide planning
    ``Grants made under sections 5307, 5308, 5309, 5310, 5311, 5316, 
and 5317 shall be carried out in accordance with the statewide planning 
provisions of chapter 52.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5304 and inserting the 
following:

``5304. Statewide planning.''.

SEC. 3006. PLANNING PROGRAMS.

    (a) In General.--Section 5305 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5305. Planning programs
    ``(a) State Defined.--In this section the term `State' means a 
State of the United States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.
    ``(b) General Authority.--
            ``(1) Assistance.--Under criteria to be established by the 
        Secretary, the Secretary may provide assistance for--
                    ``(A) the development of transportation plans and 
                programs;
                    ``(B) planning, engineering, designing, and 
                evaluating a public transportation project; and
                    ``(C) for other technical studies.
            ``(2) Grants, agreements, and contracts.--The Secretary may 
        provide assistance under paragraph (1)--
                    ``(A) by making grants to States, authorities of 
                States, metropolitan planning organizations, and local 
                governmental authorities; or
                    ``(B) by making agreements with other departments, 
                agencies, and instrumentalities of the Government.
            ``(3) Eligible activities.--Activities eligible for 
        assistance under paragraph (1) include the following:
                    ``(A) Studies related to management, planning, 
                operations, capital requirements, and economic 
                feasibility.
                    ``(B) Evaluating previously financed projects.
                    ``(C) Peer reviews and exchanges of technical data, 
                information, assistance, and related activities in 
                support of planning and environmental analyses among 
                metropolitan planning organizations and other 
                transportation planners.
                    ``(D) Other similar and related activities 
                preliminary to and in preparation for constructing, 
                acquiring, or improving the operation of facilities and 
                equipment.
    ``(c) Purpose.--To the extent practicable, the Secretary shall 
ensure that amounts appropriated or made available under section 5338 
to carry out this section and sections 5303 and 5304 are used to 
support balanced and comprehensive transportation planning that 
considers the relationships among land use and all transportation 
modes, without regard to the programmatic source of the planning 
amounts.
    ``(d) Metropolitan Planning Program.--
            ``(1) Apportionment to states.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall apportion 80 
                percent of the amounts made available under subsection 
                (g)(1) among the States to carry out sections 5303 and 
                5306 in the ratio that--
                            ``(i) the population of urbanized areas in 
                        each State, as shown by the latest available 
                        decennial census of population; bears to
                            ``(ii) the total population of urbanized 
                        areas in all States, as shown by that census.
                    ``(B) Minimum apportionment.--Notwithstanding 
                subparagraph (A), a State may not receive less than 0.5 
                percent of the amount apportioned under this paragraph.
            ``(2) Allocation to mpo's.--Amounts apportioned to a State 
        under paragraph (1) shall be made available within 30 days 
        after allocation to metropolitan planning organizations in the 
        State designated under this section under a formula that--
                    ``(A) considers population of urbanized areas;
                    ``(B) provides an appropriate distribution for 
                urbanized areas to carry out the cooperative processes 
                described in this section;
                    ``(C) the State develops in cooperation with the 
                metropolitan planning organizations; and
                    ``(D) the Secretary approves.
            ``(3) Supplemental amounts.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall apportion 20 
                percent of the amounts made available under subsection 
                (g)(1) among the States to supplement allocations made 
                under paragraph (1) for metropolitan planning 
                organizations.
                    ``(B) Formula.--The Secretary shall apportion 
                amounts referred to in subparagraph (A) under a formula 
                that reflects the additional cost of carrying out 
                planning, programming, and project selection 
                responsibilities under sections 5303 and 5306 in 
                certain urbanized areas.
    ``(e) State Planning and Research Program.--
            ``(1) Apportionment to states.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall apportion 
                the amounts made available under subsection (g)(2) 
                among the States for grants and contracts to carry out 
                sections 5303 through 5306, 5312, 5315, and 5322 in the 
                ratio that--
                            ``(i) the population of urbanized areas in 
                        each State, as shown by the latest available 
                        decennial census; bears to
                            ``(ii) the population of urbanized areas in 
                        all States, as shown by that census.
                    ``(B) Minimum apportionment.--Notwithstanding 
                subparagraph (A), a State may not receive less than 0.5 
                percent of the amount apportioned under this paragraph.
            ``(2) Supplemental amounts.--A State, as the State 
        considers appropriate, may authorize part of the amount made 
        available under this subsection to be used to supplement 
        amounts made available under subsection (d).
    ``(f) Government's Share of Costs.--The Government's share of the 
cost of an activity funded using amounts made available under this 
section may not exceed 80 percent of the cost of the activity unless 
the Secretary determines that it is in the interests of the Government 
not to require a State or local match.
    ``(g) Allocation of Funds.--Of the funds made available by or 
appropriated to carry out this section under section 5338(c) for fiscal 
years 2004 through 2009--
            ``(1) 82.72 percent shall be available for the metropolitan 
        planning program under subsection (d); and
            ``(2) 17.28 percent shall be available to carry out 
        subsection (e).
    ``(h) Availability of Funds.--Funds apportioned under this section 
in a State shall remain available for obligation in that State for a 
period of 3 years after the last day of the fiscal year for which the 
funds are authorized. Any amounts so apportioned that remain 
unobligated at the end of that period shall be reapportioned among the 
States.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5305 and inserting the 
following:

``5305. Planning programs.''.

SEC. 3007. PRIVATE ENTERPRISE PARTICIPATION.

    (a) Section Heading.--Section 5306 is amended by striking the 
section heading and inserting the following:
``Sec. 5306. Private enterprise participation in planning; relationship 
              to other limitations''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5306 and inserting the 
following:

``5306. Private enterprise participation in planning; relationship to 
                            other limitations.''.

SEC. 3008. URBANIZED AREA FORMULA GRANTS.

    (a) Technical Amendments.--Section 5307 is amended--
            (1) by striking subsections (h) and (k); and
            (2) by redesignating subsections (i), (j), (l), (m), and 
        (n) as subsections (h), (i), (j), (k), and (l), respectively.
    (b) Definitions.--Section 5307(a)(2)(A) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``a person'' and inserting ``an entity''; 
        and
            (2) by striking ``section 5305(a) of this title'' and 
        inserting ``chapter 52''.
    (c) General Authority.--Section 5307(b) is amended--
            (1) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following:
            ``(1) Grants.--The Secretary may make grants under this 
        section for--
                    ``(A) capital projects and associated capital 
                maintenance items;
                    ``(B) planning;
                    ``(C) transit enhancements;
                    ``(D) operating costs of equipment and facilities 
                for use in public transportation in an urbanized area 
                with a population of less than 200,000; and
                    ``(E)(i) in the case of fiscal years 2005 through 
                2007, 50 percent of the operating cost of equipment and 
                facilities for use in mass transportation in an 
                urbanized area with a population of more than 200,000 
                if the transit system with respect to which the grant 
                is being made operates in an urbanized area that 
                exceeded 200,000 in population according to the 2000 
                Census; or
                    ``(ii) in the case of fiscal years 2008 and 2009, 
                25 percent of the operating cost referred to in clause 
                (i).''.
            (2) in the heading to paragraph (2) by striking ``fiscal 
        years 2003 and 2004 and for the period of october 1, 2004, 
        through may 31, 2005'' and inserting ``fiscal years 2003 
        through 2005'';
            (3) in paragraph (2)(A) by striking ``fiscal years 2003'' 
        and all that follows through ``2005'' and inserting ``fiscal 
        years 2003, 2004, and 2005'';
            (4) in paragraph (3) by striking ``section 5305(a) of this 
        title'' and inserting ``chapter 52''; and
            (5) in paragraph (3)(A) by striking ``section 5303 of this 
        title'' and inserting ``chapter 52''.
    (d) Grant Recipient Requirements.--Section 5307(d)(1) is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (A) by inserting ``, including safety 
        and security aspects of the program'' after ``program'';
            (2) in subparagraph (H) by striking ``sections 5301(a) and 
        (d), 5303-5306, and 5310(a)-(d) of this title'' and inserting 
        ``subsections (a) and (d) of section 5301 and sections 5303 
        through 5306'';
            (3) in subparagraph (I) by striking ``and'' at the end; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(K) in the case of a recipient for an urbanized 
                area with a population of at least 200,000--
                            ``(i) will expend one percent of the amount 
                        the recipient receives each fiscal year under 
                        this section for projects for transit 
                        enhancements, as defined in section 5302(a); 
                        and
                            ``(ii) will submit an annual report listing 
                        projects carried out in the preceding fiscal 
                        year with those funds; and''.
    (e) Government's Share of Costs.--Section 5307(e) is amended to 
read as follows:
    ``(e) Government's Share of Costs.--
            ``(1) Capital projects.--A grant for a capital project 
        (including associated capital maintenance items) under this 
        section shall be for 80 percent of the net project cost of the 
        project. The recipient may provide additional local matching 
        amounts.
            ``(2) Operating expenses.--A grant for operating expenses 
        under this section may not exceed 50 percent of the net project 
        cost of the project.
            ``(3) Remainder.--The remainder of the net project cost 
        shall be provided--
                    ``(A) in cash from sources other than amounts of 
                the Government or revenues from providing public 
                transportation (excluding revenues derived from the 
                sale of advertising and concessions);
                    ``(B) from an undistributed cash surplus, a 
                replacement or depreciation cash fund or reserve, or 
                new capital; and
                    ``(C) from amounts received under a service 
                agreement with a State or local social service agency 
                or private social service organization.''.
    (f) Reviews, Audits, and Evaluations.--Section 5307(h)(1)(A) (as 
redesignated by subsection (a) of this section) is amended by striking 
``shall'' and inserting ``may''.
    (g) Relationship to Other Laws.--Section 5307(l) (as redesignated 
by subsection (a) of this section) is amended--
            (1) by striking paragraph (1);
            (2) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph (1);
            (3) by inserting ``This chapter.--'' before ``Sections 
        5302'';
            (4) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(2) Chapter 15 of title 5.--The provision of assistance 
        under this chapter shall not be construed as bringing within 
        the application of chapter 15 of title 5 any nonsupervisory 
        employee of a public transportation system (or any other agency 
        or entity performing related functions) to which such chapter 
        is otherwise inapplicable.''; and
            (5) by aligning the left margin of paragraph (1) (as so 
        redesignated) with paragraph (2) (as added by paragraph (4) of 
        this subsection).
    (h) Treatment.--At the end of section 5307, add the following:
    ``(m) Treatment.--For purposes of this section, the United States 
Virgin Islands shall be treated as an urbanized area, as defined in 
section 5302.''.

SEC. 3009. CLEAN FUELS FORMULA GRANT PROGRAM.

    Section 5308 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5308. Clean fuels formula grant program
    ``(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Clean fuel bus.--The term `clean fuel bus' means a 
        passenger vehicle used to provide public transportation that--
                    ``(A) is powered by--
                            ``(i) compressed natural gas;
                            ``(ii) liquefied natural gas;
                            ``(iii) biodiesel fuels;
                            ``(iv) batteries;
                            ``(v) alcohol-based fuels;
                            ``(vi) hybrid electric;
                            ``(vii) fuel cell;
                            ``(viii) clean diesel, to the extent 
                        allowed under this section; or
                            ``(ix) other low or zero emissions 
                        technology; and
                    ``(B) the Administrator of the Environmental 
                Protection Agency has certified sufficiently reduces 
                harmful emissions.
            ``(2) Eligible project.--The term `eligible project'--
                    ``(A) means a project in a nonattainment or 
                maintenance area described in paragraph (4)(A) for--
                            ``(i) purchasing or leasing clean fuel 
                        buses, including buses that employ a 
                        lightweight composite primary structure;
                            ``(ii) constructing or leasing clean fuel 
                        buses or electrical recharging facilities and 
                        related equipment for such buses; or
                            ``(iii) constructing new or improving 
                        existing public transportation facilities to 
                        accommodate clean fuel buses; and
                    ``(B) at the discretion of the Secretary, may 
                include a project located in a nonattainment or 
                maintenance area described in paragraph (4)(A) relating 
                to clean fuel, biodiesel, hybrid electric, or zero 
                emissions technology buses that exhibit equivalent or 
                superior emissions reductions to existing clean fuel or 
                hybrid electric technologies.
            ``(3) Maintenance area.--The term `maintenance area' has 
        the meaning such term has under section 101 of title 23.
            ``(4) Recipient.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The term `recipient' means a 
                designated recipient (as defined in section 5307(a)(2)) 
                for an area that, and a recipient for an urbanized area 
                with a population of less than 200,000 that--
                            ``(i) is designated as a nonattainment area 
                        for ozone or carbon monoxide under section 
                        107(d) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 
                        7407(d)); or
                            ``(ii) is a maintenance area for ozone or 
                        carbon monoxide.
                    ``(B) Smaller urbanized areas.--In the case of an 
                urbanized area with a population of less than 200,000, 
                the State in which the area is located shall act as the 
                recipient for the area under this section.
    ``(b) Authority.--The Secretary shall make grants in accordance 
with this section to recipients to finance eligible projects.
    ``(c) Apportionment of Funds.--
            ``(1) Formula.--The Secretary shall apportion among 
        recipients amounts made available to carry out this section for 
        a fiscal year. Of such amounts--
                    ``(A) two-thirds shall be apportioned to recipients 
                serving urbanized areas with a population of at least 
                1,000,000, of which--
                            ``(i) 50 percent shall be apportioned so 
                        that each such recipient receives a grant under 
                        this section in an amount equal to the ratio 
                        that--
                                    ``(I) the number of vehicles in the 
                                bus fleet of the recipient, weighted by 
                                severity of nonattainment for the area 
                                served by the recipient; bears to
                                    ``(II) the total number of vehicles 
                                in the bus fleets of all such 
                                recipients, weighted by severity of 
                                nonattainment for all areas served by 
                                such recipients; and
                            ``(ii) 50 percent shall be apportioned so 
                        that each such recipient receives a grant under 
                        this section in an amount equal to the ratio 
                        that--
                                    ``(I) the number of bus passenger 
                                miles (as defined in section 5336(c)) 
                                of the recipient, weighted by severity 
                                of nonattainment of the area served by 
                                the recipient; bears to
                                    ``(II) the total number of bus 
                                passenger miles (as defined in section 
                                5336(c)) of all such recipients, 
                                weighted by severity of nonattainment 
                                of all areas served by such recipients; 
                                and
                    ``(B) one-third shall be apportioned to recipients 
                serving urbanized areas with a population of less than 
                1,000,000, of which--
                            ``(i) 50 percent shall be apportioned so 
                        that each such recipient receives a grant under 
                        this section in an amount equal to the ratio 
                        that--
                                    ``(I) the number of vehicles in the 
                                bus fleet of the recipient, weighted by 
                                severity of nonattainment for the area 
                                served by the recipient; bears to
                                    ``(II) the total number of vehicles 
                                in the bus fleets of all such 
                                recipients, weighted by severity of 
                                nonattainment for all areas served by 
                                such recipients; and
                            ``(ii) 50 percent shall be apportioned so 
                        that each such recipient receives a grant under 
                        this section in an amount equal to the ratio 
                        that--
                                    ``(I) the number of bus passenger 
                                miles (as defined in section 5336(c)) 
                                of the recipient, weighted by severity 
                                of nonattainment of the area served by 
                                the recipient; bears to
                                    ``(II) the total number of bus 
                                passenger miles (as defined in section 
                                5336(c)) of all such recipients, 
                                weighted by severity of nonattainment 
                                of all areas served by such recipients.
            ``(2) Weighting of severity of nonattainment.--
                    ``(A) In general.--For purposes of paragraph (1), 
                subject to subparagraph (B), the number of buses in the 
                bus fleet, or the number of passenger miles, shall be 
                multiplied by a factor of--
                            ``(i) 1.0 if, at the time of the 
                        apportionment, the area is a maintenance area 
                        for ozone or carbon monoxide;
                            ``(ii) 1.1 if, at the time of the 
                        apportionment, the area is classified as a 
                        marginal ozone nonattainment area under subpart 
                        2 of part D of title I of the Clean Air Act (42 
                        U.S.C. 7511 et seq.);
                            ``(iii) 1.2 if, at the time of the 
                        apportionment, the area is classified as a 
                        moderate ozone nonattainment area under subpart 
                        2 of such part;
                            ``(iv) 1.3 if, at the time of the 
                        apportionment, the area is classified as a 
                        serious ozone nonattainment area under subpart 
                        2 of such part;
                            ``(v) 1.4 if, at the time of the 
                        apportionment, the area is classified as a 
                        severe ozone nonattainment area under subpart 2 
                        of such part; or
                            ``(vi) 1.5 if, at the time of the 
                        apportionment, the area is classified as an 
                        extreme ozone nonattainment area under subpart 
                        2 of such part.
                    ``(B) Additional adjustment for carbon monoxide 
                areas.--If, in addition to being classified as a 
                nonattainment or maintenance area for ozone under 
                subpart 2 of such part, the area was also classified 
                under subpart 3 of such part as a nonattainment area 
                for carbon monoxide, the weighted nonattainment or 
                maintenance area fleet and passenger miles for the 
                recipient, as calculated under subparagraph (A), shall 
                be further multiplied by a factor of 1.2.
    ``(d) Clean Diesel Buses.--Not more than 25 percent of the amount 
made available by or appropriated under section 5338 in each fiscal 
year to carry out this section may be made available to fund clean 
diesel buses.
    ``(e) Grant Requirements.--
            ``(1) In general.--A grant under this section shall be 
        subject to the requirements of section 5307.
            ``(2) Government's share of costs for certain projects.--
        Section 5323(i) applies to projects carried out under this 
        section.
    ``(f) Availability of Funds.--Any amount made available or 
appropriated under this section--
            ``(1) shall remain available to a project for 1 year after 
        the fiscal year for which the amount is made available or 
        appropriated; and
            ``(2) that remains unobligated at the end of the period 
        described in paragraph (1) shall be added to the amount made 
        available in the following fiscal year.''.

SEC. 3010. CAPITAL INVESTMENT GRANTS.

    (a) Section Heading.--Section 5309 is amended by striking the 
section heading and inserting the following:
``Sec. 5309. Capital investment grants''.
    (b) Loans for Real Property Interests.--Section 5309 is amended--
            (1) in subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) by striking ``and 
        loans'';
            (2) by striking subsections (b) and (c); and
            (3) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (b).
    (c) Project as Part of Approved Program of Projects.--Section 
5309(b) (as redesignated by subsection (b) of this section) is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``Except as provided in subsections (b)(2) 
        and (e) of the section, the'' and inserting ``The''; and
            (2) by striking ``or loan''.
    (d) Criteria and Funding.--Section 5309 is amended by striking 
subsections (e) through (p) and inserting the following:
    ``(c) Major Capital Investment Grants of $75,000,000 or More.--
            ``(1) Full funding grant agreement.--A major new fixed 
        guideway capital project financed under this subsection shall 
        be carried out through a full funding grant agreement. The 
        Secretary shall enter into a full funding grant agreement based 
        on the evaluations and ratings required under this subsection. 
        The Secretary shall not enter into a full funding grant 
        agreement for a project unless that project is authorized for 
        final design and construction.
            ``(2) Approval of grants.--The Secretary may approve a 
        grant under this section for a major new fixed guideway capital 
        project only if the Secretary, based upon evaluations and 
        considerations set forth in paragraph (3), determines that the 
        proposal is--
                    ``(A) based on the results of an alternatives 
                analysis and preliminary engineering;
                    ``(B) justified based on a comprehensive review of 
                its mobility improvements, environmental benefits, cost 
                effectiveness, operating efficiencies, and transit 
                supportive policies, and existing land use; and
                    ``(C) supported by an acceptable degree of local 
                financial commitment (including evidence of stable and 
                dependable financing sources) to construct, maintain, 
                and operate the system or extension.
            ``(3) Considerations.--
                    ``(A) Results of alternatives analysis and 
                preliminary engineering.--In evaluating a proposed 
                project for purposes of making the finding required by 
                paragraph (2)(A), the Secretary shall analyze and 
                consider the results of the alternatives analysis and 
                preliminary engineering for the project.
                    ``(B) Project justification.--In evaluating a 
                proposed project for purposes of making the finding 
                required by paragraph (2)(B), the Secretary shall--
                            ``(i) consider the direct and indirect 
                        costs of relevant alternatives;
                            ``(ii) consider factors such as congestion 
                        relief, improved mobility, air pollution, noise 
                        pollution, energy consumption, and all 
                        associated ancillary and mitigation costs 
                        necessary to carry out each alternative 
                        analyzed and recognize reductions in local 
                        infrastructure costs achieved through compact 
                        land use development;
                            ``(iii) identify and consider public 
                        transportation supportive existing land use 
                        policies and future patterns and the cost of 
                        suburban sprawl;
                            ``(iv) consider the degree to which the 
                        project increases the mobility of the public 
                        transportation dependent population or promotes 
                        economic development;
                            ``(v) consider population density and 
                        current transit ridership in the corridor;
                            ``(vi) consider the technical capability of 
                        the grant recipient to construct the project;
                            ``(vii) adjust the project justification to 
                        reflect differences in local land, 
                        construction, and operating costs; and
                            ``(viii) consider other factors that the 
                        Secretary determines appropriate to carry out 
                        this chapter.
                    ``(C) Local financial commitment.--In evaluating a 
                proposed project under paragraph (2)(C), the Secretary 
                shall require that--
                            ``(i) the proposed project plan provides 
                        for the availability of contingency amounts 
                        that the Secretary determines to be reasonable 
                        to cover unanticipated cost increases;
                            ``(ii) each proposed local source of 
                        capital and operating financing is stable, 
                        reliable, and available within the proposed 
                        project timetable; and
                            ``(iii) local resources are available to 
                        operate the overall proposed public 
                        transportation system (including essential 
                        feeder bus and other services necessary to 
                        achieve the projected ridership levels) without 
                        requiring a reduction in existing public 
                        transportation services to operate the proposed 
                        project.
                    ``(D) Assessment of local financing.--In assessing 
                the stability, reliability, and availability of 
                proposed sources of local financing under paragraph 
                (2)(C), the Secretary shall consider--
                            ``(i) existing grant commitments;
                            ``(ii) the degree to which financing 
                        sources are dedicated to the purposes proposed;
                            ``(iii) any debt obligation that exists or 
                        is proposed by the recipient for the proposed 
                        project or other public transportation purpose; 
                        and
                            ``(iv) the extent to which the project has 
                        a local financial commitment that exceeds the 
                        required non-Federal share of the cost of the 
                        project.
            ``(4) Evaluation and rating of projects.--A proposed 
        project under this subsection may advance from alternatives 
        analysis to preliminary engineering, and may advance from 
        preliminary engineering to final design and construction, only 
        if the Secretary finds that the project meets the requirements 
        of this section and there is a reasonable likelihood that the 
        project will continue to meet such requirements. In making the 
        findings, the Secretary shall evaluate and rate the project as 
        `highly recommended', `recommended', or `not recommended' based 
        on the results of alternatives analysis, the project 
        justification criteria, and the degree of local financial 
        commitment, as required under this subsection. In rating the 
        projects, the Secretary shall provide, in addition to the 
        overall project rating, individual ratings for each of the 
        criteria established by regulation.
            ``(5) Major defined.--In this section, the term `major', as 
        used with respect to a new fixed guideway capital project, 
        means the Federal assistance provided or to be provided under 
        this section for the project is $75,000,000 or more.
    ``(d) Capital Investment Grants Less Than $75,000,000.--
            ``(1) In general.--Subject to the provisions of this 
        subsection, if the Federal assistance provided or to be 
        provided under this section with respect to a new fixed 
        guideway capital project is less than $75,000,000, and not less 
        than $25,000,000, and the total estimated net capital cost of 
        the project is less than $200,000,000, the project shall be 
        subject to the requirements in this subsection. A new fixed 
        guideway capital project is not subject to the requirements of 
        this subsection if the assistance provided under this section 
        with respect to the project is less than $25,000,000.
            ``(2) Selection criteria.--The Secretary may provide 
        Federal assistance under this subsection with respect to a 
        proposed project only if the Secretary finds that the project 
        is--
                    ``(A) based on the results of planning and 
                alternatives analysis;
                    ``(B) justified based on a review of its public 
                transportation supportive land use policies, cost 
                effectiveness, and effect on local economic 
                development; and
                    ``(C) supported by an acceptable degree of local 
                financial commitment.
            ``(3) Planning and alternatives.--In evaluating a project 
        under paragraph (2)(A), the Secretary shall analyze and 
        consider the results of planning and alternatives analysis for 
        the project.
            ``(4) Project justification.--For purposes of making the 
        finding under paragraph (2)(B), the Secretary shall--
                    ``(A) determine the degree to which the project is 
                consistent with local land use policies and is likely 
                to achieve local developmental goals;
                    ``(B) determine the cost effectiveness of the 
                project at the time of the initiation of revenue 
                service;
                    ``(C) determine the degree to which the project 
                will have a positive effect on local economic 
                development;
                    ``(D) consider the reliability of the forecasts of 
                costs and ridership associated with the project; and
                    ``(E) consider other factors that the Secretary 
                determines appropriate to carry out this subsection.
            ``(5) Local financial commitment.--For purposes of 
        paragraph (2)(C), the Secretary shall require that each 
        proposed local source of capital and operating financing is 
        stable, reliable, and available within the proposed project 
        timetable.
            ``(6) Advancement of project to development and 
        construction.--
                    ``(A) General rule.--A proposed project under this 
                subsection may advance from planning and alternatives 
                analysis to project development and construction only 
                if--
                            ``(i) the Secretary finds that the project 
                        meets the requirements of this subsection and 
                        there is a reasonable likelihood that the 
                        project will continue to meet such 
                        requirements; and
                            ``(ii) the metropolitan planning 
                        organization has adopted the locally preferred 
                        alternative for the project into the long-range 
                        transportation plan.
                    ``(B) Evaluation.--In making the findings under 
                subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall evaluate and rate 
                the project as `recommended' or `not recommended' based 
                on the results of the analysis of the project 
                justification criteria and the degree of local 
                financial commitment, as required by this subsection.
            ``(7) Contents of project construction grant agreement.--A 
        project construction grant agreement under this subsection 
        shall specify the scope of the project to be constructed, the 
        estimated net project cost of the project, the schedule under 
        which the project shall be constructed, the maximum amount of 
        funding to be obtained under this subsection, the proposed 
        schedule for obligation of future Federal grants, and the 
        sources of funding from other than the Government. The 
        agreement may include a commitment on the part of the Secretary 
        to provide funding for the project in future fiscal years.
            ``(8) Limitation on entry into construction grant 
        agreement.--The Secretary may enter into a project construction 
        grant agreement for a project under this subsection only if the 
        project is authorized for construction and has been rated as 
        `recommended' under this subsection.
            ``(9) Regulations.--Not later than 120 days after the date 
        of enactment of the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005, 
        the Secretary shall issue regulations establishing an 
        evaluation and rating process for proposed projects under this 
        subsection that is based on the results of project 
        justification and local financial commitment, as required under 
        this subsection.
            ``(10) Fixed guideway capital project.--In this subsection, 
        the term `fixed guideway capital project' includes a corridor-
        based public transportation bus capital project if the majority 
        of the project's corridor right-of-way is dedicated alignment 
        for exclusive use by public transportation vehicles for all or 
        part of the day.
    ``(e) Previously Issued Letter of Intent or Full Funding Grant 
Agreement.--Subsections (c) and (d) do not apply to projects for which 
the Secretary has issued a letter of intent or entered into a full 
funding grant agreement before the date of enactment of the Federal 
Public Transportation Act of 2005. Subsection (d) also does not apply 
to projects for which the Secretary has received an application for 
final design before such date of enactment.
    ``(f) Letters of Intent, Full Funding Grant Agreements, and Early 
Systems Work Agreements.--
            ``(1) Letters of intent.--
                    ``(A) Amounts intended to be obligated.--The 
                Secretary may issue a letter of intent to an applicant 
                announcing an intention to obligate, for a capital 
                project under this section, an amount from future 
                available budget authority specified in law that is not 
                more than the amount stipulated as the financial 
                participation of the Secretary in the project. When a 
                letter is issued for fixed guideway projects, the 
                amount shall be sufficient to complete at least an 
                operable segment.
                    ``(B) Treatment.--The issuance of a letter under 
                subparagraph (A) is deemed not to be an obligation 
                under sections 1108(c), 1108(d), 1501, and 1502(a) of 
                title 31 or an administrative commitment.
            ``(2) Full funding grant agreements.--
                    ``(A) Terms.--The Secretary may make a full funding 
                grant agreement with an applicant. The agreement 
                shall--
                            ``(i) establish the terms of participation 
                        by the Government in a project under this 
                        section;
                            ``(ii) establish the maximum amount of 
                        Government financial assistance for the 
                        project;
                            ``(iii) cover the period of time for 
                        completing the project, including a period 
                        extending beyond the period of an 
                        authorization; and
                            ``(iv) make timely and efficient management 
                        of the project easier according to the law of 
                        the United States.
                    ``(B) Special financial rules.--
                            ``(i) In general.--An agreement under this 
                        paragraph obligates an amount of available 
                        budget authority specified in law and may 
                        include a commitment, contingent on amounts to 
                        be specified in law in advance for commitments 
                        under this paragraph, to obligate an additional 
                        amount from future available budget authority 
                        specified in law.
                            ``(ii) Statement of contingent 
                        commitment.--The agreement shall state that the 
                        contingent commitment is not an obligation of 
                        the Government.
                            ``(iii) Interest and other financing 
                        costs.--Interest and other financing costs of 
                        efficiently carrying out a part of the project 
                        within a reasonable time are a cost of carrying 
                        out the project under a full funding grant 
                        agreement, except that eligible costs may not 
                        be more than the cost of the most favorable 
                        financing terms reasonably available for the 
                        project at the time of borrowing. The applicant 
                        shall certify, in a way satisfactory to the 
                        Secretary, that the applicant has shown 
                        reasonable diligence in seeking the most 
                        favorable financing terms.
                            ``(iv) Completion of operable segment.--The 
                        amount stipulated in an agreement under this 
                        paragraph for a fixed guideway project shall be 
                        sufficient to complete at least an operable 
                        segment.
            ``(3) Early system work agreements.--
                    ``(A) Conditions.--The Secretary may make an early 
                systems work agreement with an applicant if a record of 
                decision under the National Environmental Policy Act of 
                1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) has been issued on the 
                project and the Secretary finds there is reason to 
                believe--
                            ``(i) a full funding grant agreement for 
                        the project will be made; and
                            ``(ii) the terms of the work agreement will 
                        promote ultimate completion of the project more 
                        rapidly and at less cost.
                    ``(B) Contents.--
                            ``(i) In general.--A work agreement under 
                        this paragraph obligates an amount of available 
                        budget authority specified in law and shall 
                        provide for reimbursement of preliminary costs 
                        of carrying out the project, including land 
                        acquisition, timely procurement of system 
                        elements for which specifications are decided, 
                        and other activities the Secretary decides are 
                        appropriate to make efficient, long-term 
                        project management easier.
                            ``(ii) Period covered.--A work agreement 
                        under this paragraph shall cover the period of 
                        time the Secretary considers appropriate. The 
                        period may extend beyond the period of current 
                        authorization.
                            ``(iii) Interest and other financing 
                        costs.--Interest and other financing costs of 
                        efficiently carrying out the work agreement 
                        within a reasonable time are a cost of carrying 
                        out the agreement, except that eligible costs 
                        may not be more than the cost of the most 
                        favorable financing terms reasonably available 
                        for the project at the time of borrowing. The 
                        applicant shall certify, in a way satisfactory 
                        to the Secretary, that the applicant has shown 
                        reasonable diligence in seeking the most 
                        favorable financing terms.
                            ``(iv) Failure to carry out project.--If an 
                        applicant does not carry out the project for 
                        reasons within the control of the applicant, 
                        the applicant shall repay all Government 
                        payments made under the work agreement plus 
                        reasonable interest and penalty charges the 
                        Secretary establishes in the agreement.
            ``(4) Limitation on amounts.--
                    ``(A) Major capital investment grants contingent 
                commitment authority.--The total estimated amount of 
                future obligations of the Government and contingent 
                commitments to incur obligations covered by all 
                outstanding letters of intent, full funding grant 
                agreements, and early systems work agreements under 
                this subsection for major new fixed guideway capital 
                projects may be not more than the greater of the amount 
                authorized under sections 5338(b) and 5338(h)(1) for 
                such projects or an amount equivalent to the last 3 
                fiscal years of funding allocated under subsections 
                (m)(1)(B) and (m)(2)(B)(ii) for such projects, less an 
                amount the Secretary reasonably estimates is necessary 
                for grants under this section for those of such 
                projects that are not covered by a letter or agreement. 
                The total amount covered by new letters and contingent 
                commitments included in full funding grant agreements 
                and early systems work agreements for such projects may 
                be not more than a limitation specified in law.
                    ``(B) Other contingent commitment authority.--The 
                total estimated amount of future obligations of the 
                Government and contingent commitments to incur 
                obligations covered by all project construction grant 
                agreements and early system work agreements under this 
                subsection for small capital projects described in 
                subsection (d) may be not more than the greater of the 
                amount allocated under subsection (m)(2)(A) for such 
                projects or an amount equivalent to the last fiscal 
                year of funding allocated under subsection (m)(2)(A) 
                for such projects, less an amount the Secretary 
                reasonably estimates is necessary for grants under this 
                section for those of such projects that are not covered 
                by an agreement. The total amount covered by new 
                contingent commitments included in project construction 
                grant agreements and early systems work agreements for 
                such projects may be not more than a limitation 
                specified in law.
                    ``(C) Inclusion of certain commitments.--Future 
                obligations of the Government and contingent 
                commitments made against the contingent commitment 
                authority under section 3032(g)(2) of the Intermodal 
                Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (106 
                Stat. 2125) for the San Francisco BART to the Airport 
                project for fiscal years 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, and 
                2006 shall be charged against section 3032(g)(2) of 
                that Act.
                    ``(D) Appropriation required.--An obligation may be 
                made under this subsection only when amounts are 
                appropriated for the obligation.
            ``(5) Notification of congress.--At least 60 days before 
        issuing a letter of intent or entering into a full funding 
        grant agreement or project construction grant agreement under 
        this section, the Secretary shall notify, in writing, the 
        Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Banking, Housing, and 
        Urban Affairs of the Senate of the proposed letter or 
        agreement. The Secretary shall include with the notification a 
        copy of the proposed letter or agreement as well as the 
        evaluations and ratings for the project.
    ``(g) Government's Share of Net Project Cost.--
            ``(1) Federal share.--Based on engineering studies, studies 
        of economic feasibility, and information on the expected use of 
        equipment or facilities, the Secretary shall estimate the net 
        project cost. A grant for the project shall be for 80 percent 
        of the net capital project cost, unless the grant recipient 
        requests a lower grant percentage.
            ``(2) Remainder of net project cost.--The remainder of net 
        project costs shall be provided from an undistributed cash 
        surplus, a replacement or depreciation cash fund or reserve, or 
        new capital.
            ``(3) Limitation on statutory construction.--Nothing in 
        this section, including paragraph (1) and subsections 
        (c)(3)(D)(iv) and (c)(4), shall be construed as authorizing the 
        Secretary to require a non-Federal financial commitment for a 
        project that is more than 20 percent of the net capital project 
        cost.
            ``(4) Special rule for rolling stock costs.--In addition to 
        amounts allowed pursuant to paragraph (1), a planned extension 
        to a fixed guideway system may include the cost of rolling 
        stock previously purchased if the applicant satisfies the 
        Secretary that only amounts other than amounts of the 
        Government were used and that the purchase was made for use on 
        the extension. A refund or reduction of the remainder may be 
        made only if a refund of a proportional amount of the grant of 
        the Government is made at the same time.
            ``(5) Limitation on applicability.--This subsection does 
        not apply to projects for which the Secretary has entered into 
        a full funding grant agreement before the date of enactment of 
        the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005.
    ``(h) Fiscal Capacity Considerations.--If the Secretary gives 
priority consideration to financing projects that include more than the 
non-Government share required under subsection (g), the Secretary shall 
give equal consideration to differences in the fiscal capacity of State 
and local governments.
    ``(i) Reports on New Starts.--
            ``(1) Annual dot report.--Not later than the first Monday 
        in February of each year, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Banking, Housing, and 
        Urban Affairs of the Senate a report that includes--
                    ``(A) a proposal of allocations of amounts to be 
                available to finance grants for new fixed guideway 
                capital projects among applicants for these amounts;
                    ``(B) evaluations and ratings, as required under 
                subsection (c), for each such project that is 
                authorized by the Federal Public Transportation Act of 
                2005; and
                    ``(C) recommendations of such projects for funding 
                based on the evaluations and ratings and on existing 
                commitments and anticipated funding levels for the next 
                3 fiscal years and for the next 10 fiscal years based 
                on information currently available to the Secretary.
            ``(2) Annual gao review.--The Comptroller General shall--
                    ``(A) conduct an annual review of--
                            ``(i) the processes and procedures for 
                        evaluating, rating, and recommending new fixed 
                        guideway capital projects; and
                            ``(ii) the Secretary's implementation of 
                        such processes and procedures; and
                    ``(B) report to Congress on the results of such 
                review by May 31 of each year.
    ``(j) Undertaking Projects in Advance.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary may pay the Government's 
        share of the net capital project cost to a State or local 
        governmental authority that carries out any part of a project 
        described in this section without the aid of amounts of the 
        Government and according to all applicable procedures and 
        requirements if--
                    ``(A) the State or local governmental authority 
                applies for the payment;
                    ``(B) the Secretary approves the payment; and
                    ``(C) before carrying out the part of the project, 
                the Secretary approves the plans and specifications for 
                the part in the same way as other projects under this 
                section.
            ``(2) Financing costs.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The cost of carrying out part of 
                a project includes the amount of interest earned and 
                payable on bonds issued by the State or local 
                governmental authority to the extent proceeds of the 
                bonds are expended in carrying out the part.
                    ``(B) Limitation on amount of interest.--The amount 
                of interest under this paragraph may not be more than 
                the most favorable interest terms reasonably available 
                for the project at the time of borrowing.
                    ``(C) Certification.--The applicant shall certify, 
                in a manner satisfactory to the Secretary, that the 
                applicant has shown reasonable diligence in seeking the 
                most favorable financial terms.
            ``(3) Capital project cost indices.--The Secretary shall 
        consider changes in capital project cost indices when 
        determining the estimated cost under paragraph (2).
    ``(k) Bus and Bus Facilities Projects.--In making grants under 
subsections (m)(1)(C) and (m)(2)(B)(iii), the Secretary shall consider 
the age of buses, bus fleets, related equipment, and bus-related 
facilities.
    ``(l) Availability of Amounts.--An amount made available or 
appropriated under section 5338(b), 5338(g), or 5338(h) for 
replacement, rehabilitation, and purchase of buses and related 
equipment and construction of bus-related facilities or for new fixed 
guideway capital projects shall remain available for 3 fiscal years, 
including the fiscal year in which the amount is made available or 
appropriated. Any of such amounts that are unobligated at the end of 
the 3-fiscal-year period shall be deobligated and may be used by the 
Secretary for any purpose under this section.
    ``(m) Allocating Amounts.--
            ``(1) Fiscal year 2004.--The total amount of funds made 
        available by or appropriated under section 5338(b) for fiscal 
        year 2004 shall be allocated as follows:
                    ``(A) 40 percent for fixed guideway modernization;
                    ``(B) 40 percent for major new fixed guideway 
                capital projects; and
                    ``(C) 20 percent to replace, rehabilitate, and 
                purchase buses and related equipment and to construct 
                bus-related facilities.
            ``(2) Fiscal years 2005-2009.--The total amount of funds 
        made available by section 5338(g), and appropriated under 
        section 5338(h), for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 
        shall be allocated in the fiscal year as follows:
                    ``(A) Small capital projects.--From funds 
                appropriated under section 5338(h) for new fixed 
                guideway capital projects described in subsection (d)--
                            ``(i) $135,000,000 in fiscal year 2005;
                            ``(ii) $175,000,000 in fiscal year 2006;
                            ``(iii) $200,000,000 in fiscal year 2007;
                            ``(iv) $200,000,000 in fiscal year 2008; 
                        and
                            ``(v) $225,000,000 in fiscal year 2009.
                    ``(B) Remainder.--After the allocation under 
                subparagraph (A), the remainder of such total amount 
                shall be allocated as follows:
                            ``(i) 40 percent for fixed guideway 
                        modernization, to be derived from funds made 
                        available under section 5338(g).
                            ``(ii) 40 percent for major new fixed 
                        capital guideway projects, to be derived from 
                        funds appropriated under section 5338(h).
                            ``(iii) 20 percent to replace, 
                        rehabilitate, and purchase buses and related 
                        equipment and to construct bus-related 
                        facilities, to be derived from funds made 
                        available under section 5338(g).
            ``(3) Funding for ferry boat systems.--Of the amounts made 
        available under paragraphs (1)(B) and (2)(B)(ii), $10,400,000 
        shall be available in each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009 
        for new fixed guideway capital projects in Alaska or Hawaii 
        that are for ferry boats or ferry terminal facilities or that 
        are for approaches to ferry terminal facilities. Of the amounts 
        made available under paragraphs (1)(C) and (2)(B)(iii), 
        $10,000,000 shall be available in each of fiscal years 2005 
        through 2009 for ferry boats or ferry terminal facilities.
            ``(4) Fuel cell bus program.--Of the amounts made available 
        under subsections (m)(1)(C) and (m)(2)(B)(iii) for a fiscal 
        year, the following amounts shall be set aside for the national 
        fuel cell bus technology development program under section 3039 
        of the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005:
                    ``(A) $4,849,950 for fiscal year 2004.
                    ``(B) $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2005.
                    ``(C) $11,000,000 for fiscal year 2006.
                    ``(D) $12,000,000 for fiscal year 2007.
                    ``(E) $13,000,000 for fiscal year 2008.
                    ``(F) $14,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
    ``(n) New Fixed Guideway Capital Project Defined.--In this section, 
the term `new fixed guideway capital project' means a minimum operable 
segment of a capital project for a new fixed guideway system or 
extension to an existing fixed guideway system.''.
    (e) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) Chapter analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53 is 
        amended by striking the item relating to section 5309 and 
        inserting the following:

``5309. Capital investment grants.''.
            (2) Section 5328.--Section 5328(a) is amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (2) by striking ``5309(e)'' and 
                inserting ``5309(c)''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (4) by striking ``under section 
                5309(o)(1)'' and inserting ``under section 
                5309(i)(1)''.

SEC. 3011. FORMULA GRANTS FOR SPECIAL NEEDS OF ELDERLY INDIVIDUALS AND 
              INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES.

    (a) In General.--Section 5310 is amended--
            (1) by striking the section heading and inserting the 
        following:
``Sec. 5310. Formula grants for special needs of elderly individuals 
              and individuals with disabilities'';
            (2) by striking subsections (a) through (g) and inserting 
        the following:
    ``(a) General Authority.--
            ``(1) Grants.--The Secretary may make grants to States and 
        local governmental authorities under this section for public 
        transportation capital projects, and operating costs associated 
        with public transportation capital projects, planned, designed, 
        and carried out to meet the special needs of elderly 
        individuals and individuals with disabilities.
            ``(2) Subrecipients.--A State that receives a grant under 
        this section may allocate the amounts of the grant to--
                    ``(A) a private nonprofit organization if the 
                public transportation service provided under paragraph 
                (1) is unavailable, insufficient, or inappropriate; or
                    ``(B) a governmental authority that--
                            ``(i) is approved by the State to 
                        coordinate services for elderly individuals and 
                        individuals with disabilities; or
                            ``(ii) certifies that there are not any 
                        nonprofit organizations readily available in 
                        the area to provide the services described 
                        under paragraph (1).
            ``(3) Acquiring public transportation services.--A public 
        transportation capital project under this section may include 
        acquisition of public transportation services as an eligible 
        capital expense.
            ``(4) Administrative expenses.--A State or local 
        governmental authority may use not more than 10 percent of the 
        amounts apportioned to the State under this section to 
        administer, plan, and provide technical assistance for a 
        project funded under this section.
    ``(b) Apportionment and Transfers.--
            ``(1) Apportionment.--
                    ``(A) Formula.--The Secretary shall apportion 
                amounts made available to carry out this section under 
                a formula the Secretary administers that considers the 
                number of elderly individuals and individuals with 
                disabilities in each State.
                    ``(B) Low density adjustment.--In administering the 
                apportionment formula under subparagraph (A)--
                            ``(i) in the case of a State with a 
                        population density of 10 or fewer persons per 
                        square mile, the Secretary shall multiply by a 
                        factor of 2 the number of elderly individuals 
                        and individuals with disabilities in the State 
                        (as determined using the most recent decennial 
                        United States Census); and
                            ``(ii) in the case of a State with a 
                        population density of more than 10 but equal to 
                        or fewer than 30 persons per square mile, the 
                        Secretary shall multiply by a factor of 1.25 
                        the number of elderly individuals and 
                        individuals with disabilities in the State (as 
                        determined using the most recent decennial 
                        United States Census).
            ``(2) Transfers.--Any State's apportionment remaining 
        available for obligation at the beginning of the 90-day period 
        before the end of the period of availability of the 
        apportionment is available to the State for transfer to 
        supplement amounts apportioned to the State under section 
        5311(c) or 5336(a)(1), or both. Any funds transferred pursuant 
        to this paragraph shall be made available only for eligible 
        projects as described in this section.
    ``(c) Government's Share of Costs.--
            ``(1) Capital projects.--A grant for a capital project 
        under this section shall be for 80 percent of the net capital 
        costs of the project, as determined by the Secretary; except 
        that in the case of a State described in section 120(b)(1) of 
        title 23, such percentage shall be increased in accordance with 
        such section.
            ``(2) Operating assistance.--A grant made under this 
        section for operating assistance may not exceed 50 percent of 
        the net operating costs of the project, as determined by the 
        Secretary.
            ``(3) Remainder.--The remainder of the net project costs--
                    ``(A) may be provided from an undistributed cash 
                surplus, a replacement or depreciation cash fund or 
                reserve, a service agreement with a State or local 
                social service agency or a private social service 
                organization, or new capital; and
                    ``(B) may be derived from amounts appropriated to 
                or made available to a department or agency of the 
                Government (other than the Department of 
                Transportation) that are eligible to be expended for 
                transportation.
            ``(4) Use of certain funds.--For purposes of paragraph 
        (3)(B), the prohibitions on the use of funds for matching 
        requirements under section 403(a)(5)(C)(vii) of the Social 
        Security Act (42 U.S.C. 603(a)(5)(C)(vii)) shall not apply to 
        Federal or State funds to be used for transportation purposes.
    ``(d) Grant Requirements.--
            ``(1) In general.--A grant under this section shall be 
        subject to all requirements of a grant under section 5307. A 
        grant to a subrecipient under this section shall be subject to 
        such requirements to the extent the Secretary considers 
        appropriate.
            ``(2) Coordination with nonprofit providers.--A recipient 
        that transfers funds to an apportionment under section 
        5336(a)(1) pursuant to subsection (b)(2) shall certify that the 
        project for which the funds are requested under this section 
        has been coordinated with nonprofit providers of services.
            ``(3) Project selection and planning.--Beginning in fiscal 
        year 2007, a recipient of funds under this section shall 
        certify that--
                    ``(A) the projects selected were derived from a 
                locally developed, coordinated public transit-human 
                services transportation plan; and
                    ``(B) the plan was developed through a process that 
                included representatives of public, private, and 
                nonprofit transportation and human services providers 
                and participation by the public.
            ``(4) Fair and equitable distribution.--A recipient of a 
        grant under this section shall certify that allocations of the 
        grant to subrecipients are distributed on a fair and equitable 
        basis.
    ``(e) State Program.--
            ``(1) In general.--Amounts made available to carry out this 
        section may be used for transportation projects to assist in 
        providing transportation services for elderly individuals and 
        individuals with disabilities that are included in a State 
        program of projects.
            ``(2) Submission and approval.--A program shall be 
        submitted annually to the Secretary for approval and shall 
        contain an assurance that the program provides for maximum 
        feasible coordination of transportation services assisted under 
        this section with transportation services assisted by other 
        Government sources.
    ``(f) Leasing Vehicles.--Vehicles acquired under this section may 
be leased to local governmental authorities to improve transportation 
services designed to meet the special needs of elderly individuals and 
individuals with disabilities.''; and
            (3) by redesignating subsections (h) through (j) as 
        subsections (g) through (i), respectively.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5310 and inserting the 
following:

``5310. Formula grants for special needs of elderly individuals and 
                            individuals with disabilities.''.

SEC. 3012. FORMULA GRANTS FOR OTHER THAN URBANIZED AREAS.

    (a) Definitions.--Section 5311(a) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Recipient.--The term `recipient' means a State that 
        receives a Federal transit program grant directly from the 
        Government.
            ``(2) Subrecipient.--The term `subrecipient' means a State 
        or local governmental authority, nonprofit organization, or 
        operator of public transportation services that receives a 
        Federal transit program grant indirectly through a 
        recipient.''.
    (b) General Authority.--Section 5311(b) is amended to read as 
follows:
    ``(b) General Authority.--
            ``(1) Grants.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the 
        Secretary may make grants to other than urbanized areas under 
        this section for the following:
                    ``(A) Public transportation capital projects.
                    ``(B) Operating costs of equipment and facilities 
                for use in public transportation.
                    ``(C) Acquisition of public transportation 
                services, including service agreements with private 
                providers of public transportation services.
            ``(2) State program.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Amounts made available to carry 
                out this section shall be used for projects included in 
                a State program for public transportation projects, 
                including service agreements with private providers of 
                public transportation.
                    ``(B) Submission.--The program shall be submitted 
                annually to the Secretary for approval.
                    ``(C) Approval.--The Secretary may approve the 
                program only if the Secretary finds that the program 
                provides a fair distribution of amounts in the State, 
                including Indian reservations, and the maximum feasible 
                coordination of public transportation service assisted 
                under this section with transportation service assisted 
                by other Federal sources.
            ``(3) Rural transportation assistance program.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall carry out a 
                rural transportation assistance program in other than 
                urbanized areas.
                    ``(B) Grants and contracts.--In carrying out this 
                paragraph, the Secretary may use not more than 2 
                percent of the amount made available to carry out this 
                section to make grants and contracts for transportation 
                research, technical assistance, training, and related 
                support services in other than urbanized areas.
                    ``(C) Projects of a national scope.--Not more than 
                15 percent of the amounts available under subparagraph 
                (B) may be used by the Secretary to carry out projects 
                of a national scope, with the remaining balance 
                provided to the States.''.
    (c) Apportionments.--Section 5311(c) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(c) Apportionments.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall apportion amounts 
        made available to carry out this section among the States in 
        the ratio that--
                    ``(A) the population of other than urbanized areas 
                in each State, as shown by the most recent Government 
                decennial census of population; bears to
                    ``(B) the population of all other than urbanized 
                areas in the United States, as shown by that census.
            ``(2) Low density adjustment.--In administering the 
        apportionment formula under paragraph (1)--
                    ``(A) in the case of a State with a population 
                density of 10 or fewer persons per square mile in other 
                than urbanized areas of the State, the Secretary shall 
                multiply by a factor of 1.5 the population of such 
                other than urbanized areas (as determined using the 
                most recent decennial United States Census); and
                    ``(B) in the case of a State with a population 
                density of more than 10 but equal to or fewer than 12 
                persons per square mile in other than urbanized areas 
                of the State, the Secretary shall multiply by a factor 
                of 1.25 the population of such other than urbanized 
                areas (as determined using the most recent decennial 
                United States Census).
            ``(3) Availability.--The amount apportioned to a State 
        under this subsection may be obligated by the State for 2 
        fiscal years after the fiscal year in which the amount is 
        apportioned. An amount that is not obligated at the end of that 
        period shall be reapportioned among the States for the next 
        fiscal year.''.
    (d) Use for Administration, Planning, and Technical Assistance.--
Section 5311(e) is amended--
            (1) in the subsection heading by inserting ``, planning,'' 
        after ``administration'';
            (2) by striking ``(1) The Secretary'' and inserting ``The 
        Secretary'';
            (3) by striking paragraph (2); and
            (4) by striking ``recipient'' and inserting 
        ``subrecipient''.
    (e) Intercity Bus Transportation.--Section 5311(f) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``after September 30, 
        1993,''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``A State'' and inserting 
        ``After consultation with affected intercity bus service 
        providers, a State''.
    (f) Government's Share of Costs.--Section 5311(g) is amended to 
read as follows:
    ``(g) Government's Share of Costs.--
            ``(1) Capital projects.--A grant for a capital project 
        under this section shall be for 80 percent of the net capital 
        costs of the project, as determined by the Secretary; except 
        that in the case of a State described in section 120(b)(1) of 
        title 23, such percentage shall be increased in accordance with 
        such section.
            ``(2) Operating assistance.--A grant made under this 
        section for operating assistance may not exceed 50 percent of 
        the net operating costs of the project, as determined by the 
        Secretary.
            ``(3) Remainder.--The remainder of net project costs--
                    ``(A) may be provided from an undistributed cash 
                surplus, a replacement or depreciation cash fund or 
                reserve, a service agreement with a State or local 
                social service agency or a private social service 
                organization, or new capital; and
                    ``(B) may be derived from amounts appropriated to 
                or made available to a department or agency of the 
                Government (other than the Department of 
                Transportation) that are eligible to be expended for 
                transportation.
            ``(4) Use of certain funds.--For purposes of paragraph 
        (3)(B), the prohibitions on the use of funds for matching 
        requirements under section 403(a)(5)(C)(vii) of the Social 
        Security Act (42 U.S.C. 603(a)(5)(C)(vii)) shall not apply to 
        Federal or State funds to be used for transportation purposes.
            ``(5) Limitation on operating assistance.--A State carrying 
        out a program of operating assistance under this section may 
        not limit the level or extent of use of the Government grant 
        for the payment of operating expenses.''.
    (g) Relationship to Other Laws.--Section 5311 is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (h); and
            (2) by redesignating subsections (i) and (j) as subsections 
        (h) and (i), respectively.
    (h) Correction to Chapter Analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53 is 
amended by striking the item relating to section 5311 and inserting the 
following:

``5311. Formula grants for other than urbanized areas.''.

SEC. 3013. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, DEMONSTRATION, AND DEPLOYMENT 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) In General.--Section 5312 is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking the first parenthetical phrase;
                    (B) by striking ``or contracts'' and inserting ``, 
                contracts, cooperative agreements, or other 
                transactions'';
                    (C) by striking ``help reduce urban transportation 
                needs, improve mass transportation service,'' and 
                inserting ``improve transportation service'';
                    (D) by striking ``urban'' each place it appears; 
                and
                    (E) by striking ``and demonstration projects'' and 
                inserting ``, demonstration or deployment projects, or 
                evaluation of technology of national significance'';
            (2) by striking subsections (b) and (c);
            (3) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as subsections 
        (b) and (c), respectively;
            (4) in subsection (b)(2) (as so redesignated) by striking 
        ``other agreements'' and inserting ``other transactions''; and
            (5) in subsection (c)(2) (as so redesignated) by striking 
        ``public and'' and inserting ``public or''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) Section heading.--Section 5312 is amended by striking 
        the section heading and inserting the following:
``Sec. 5312. Research, development, demonstration, and deployment 
              projects''.
            (2) Chapter analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53 is 
        amended by striking the item relating to section 5312 and 
        inserting the following:

``5312. Research, development, demonstration, and deployment 
                            projects.''.

SEC. 3014. COOPERATIVE RESEARCH PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Section 5313 is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a) by striking ``(1) The amounts made 
        available under paragraphs (1) and (2)(C)(ii) of section 
        5338(d) of this title'' and inserting ``The amounts made 
        available under paragraphs (1)(C)(iv) and (2)(C) of section 
        5338(d)'';
            (2) by striking subsection (b);
            (3) in subsection (a)(2) by striking ``(2) The'' and 
        inserting ``(b) Federal Assistance.--The''; and
            (4) in subsection (c) by striking ``subsection (a) of''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) In general.--Section 5313 is amended by striking the 
        section heading and inserting the following:
``Sec. 5313. Cooperative research program''.
            (2) Chapter analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53 is 
        amended by striking the item relating to section 5313 and 
        inserting the following:

``5313. Cooperative research program.''.

SEC. 3015. NATIONAL RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY PROGRAMS.

    (a) In General.--Section 5314 is amended--
            (1) by striking the section heading and inserting the 
        following:
``Sec. 5314. National research and technology programs'';
            (2) in subsection (a)(1)--
                    (A) by striking ``subsections (d) and (h)(7) of 
                section 5338 of this title'' and inserting ``section 
                5338(d)'';
                    (B) by striking ``and contracts'' and inserting ``, 
                contracts, cooperative agreements, or other 
                transactions'';
                    (C) by striking ``5303-5306,''; and
                    (D) by striking ``5317,'';
            (3) in subsection (a)(2) by striking ``Of the amounts'' and 
        all that follows through ``$3,000,000 to'' and inserting ``The 
        Secretary shall'';
            (4) by striking subsection (a)(4)(B);
            (5) by redesignating subsection (a)(4)(C) as subsection 
        (a)(4)(B); and
            (6) in subsection (b) by striking ``or contract'' and all 
        that follows through ``section,'' and inserting ``, contract, 
        cooperative agreement, or other transaction under subsection 
        (a) or section 5312,''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5314 and inserting the 
following:

``5314. National research and technology programs.''.

SEC. 3016. NATIONAL TRANSIT INSTITUTE.

    Section 5315 is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a) by striking ``public mass 
        transportation'' and inserting ``public transportation''; and
            (2) in subsection (d) by striking ``mass'' each place it 
        appears.

SEC. 3017. JOB ACCESS AND REVERSE COMMUTE FORMULA GRANTS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 53 is amended by inserting after section 
5315 the following:
``Sec. 5316. Job access and reverse commute formula grants
    ``(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Access to jobs project.--The term `access to jobs 
        project' means a project relating to the development and 
        maintenance of transportation services designed to transport 
        welfare recipients and eligible low-income individuals to and 
        from jobs and activities related to their employment, 
        including--
                    ``(A) transportation projects to finance planning, 
                capital, and operating costs of providing access to 
                jobs under this chapter;
                    ``(B) promoting public transportation by low-income 
                workers, including the use of public transportation by 
                workers with nontraditional work schedules;
                    ``(C) promoting the use of transit vouchers for 
                welfare recipients and eligible low-income individuals; 
                and
                    ``(D) promoting the use of employer-provided 
                transportation, including the transit pass benefit 
                program under section 132 of the Internal Revenue Code 
                of 1986.
            ``(2) Eligible low-income individual.--The term `eligible 
        low-income individual' means an individual whose family income 
        is at or below 150 percent of the poverty line (as that term is 
        defined in section 673(2) of the Community Services Block Grant 
        Act (42 U.S.C. 9902(2)), including any revision required by 
        that section) for a family of the size involved.
            ``(3) Recipient.--The term `recipient' means a designated 
        recipient (as defined in section 5307(a)(2)) and a State that 
        receives a grant under this section directly.
            ``(4) Reverse commute project.--The term `reverse commute 
        project' means a public transportation project designed to 
        transport residents of urbanized areas and other than urbanized 
        areas to suburban employment opportunities, including any 
        projects to--
                    ``(A) subsidize the costs associated with adding 
                reverse commute bus, train, carpool, van routes, or 
                service from urbanized areas and other than urbanized 
                areas to suburban workplaces;
                    ``(B) subsidize the purchase or lease by a 
                nonprofit organization or public agency of a van or bus 
                dedicated to shuttling employees from their residences 
                to a suburban workplace; or
                    ``(C) otherwise facilitate the provision of public 
                transportation services to suburban employment 
                opportunities.
            ``(5) Subrecipient.--The term `subrecipient' means a State 
        or local governmental authority, nonprofit organization, or 
        operator of public transportation services that receives a 
        grant under this section indirectly through a recipient.
            ``(6) Welfare recipient.--The term `welfare recipient' 
        means an individual who has received assistance under a State 
        or tribal program funded under part A of title IV of the Social 
        Security Act at any time during the 3-year period before the 
        date on which the applicant applies for a grant under this 
        section.
    ``(b) General Authority.--
            ``(1) Grants.--The Secretary may make grants under this 
        section to a recipient for access to jobs and reverse commute 
        projects carried out by the recipient or a subrecipient.
            ``(2) Administrative expenses.--A recipient may use not 
        more than 10 percent of the amounts apportioned to the 
        recipient under this section to administer, plan, and provide 
        technical assistance for a project funded under this section.
    ``(c) Apportionments.--
            ``(1) Formula.--The Secretary shall apportion amounts made 
        available to carry out this section as follows:
                    ``(A) 60 percent of the funds shall be apportioned 
                among designated recipients (as defined in section 
                5307(a)(2)) for urbanized areas with a population of 
                200,000 or more in the ratio that--
                            ``(i) the number of eligible low-income 
                        individuals and welfare recipients in each such 
                        urbanized area; bears to
                            ``(ii) the number of eligible low-income 
                        individuals and welfare recipients in all such 
                        urbanized areas.
                    ``(B) 20 percent of the funds shall be apportioned 
                among the States in the ratio that--
                            ``(i) the number of eligible low-income 
                        individuals and welfare recipients in urbanized 
                        areas with a population of less than 200,000 in 
                        each State; bears to
                            ``(ii) the number of eligible low-income 
                        individuals and welfare recipients in urbanized 
                        areas with a population of less than 200,000 in 
                        all States.
                    ``(C) 20 percent of the funds shall be apportioned 
                among the States in the ratio that--
                            ``(i) the number of eligible low-income 
                        individuals and welfare recipients in other 
                        than urbanized areas in each State; bears to
                            ``(ii) the number of eligible low-income 
                        individuals and welfare recipients in other 
                        than urbanized areas in all States.
            ``(2) Use of apportioned funds.--Except as provided in 
        paragraph (3)--
                    ``(A) funds apportioned under paragraph (1)(A) 
                shall be used for projects serving urbanized areas with 
                a population of 200,000 or more;
                    ``(B) funds apportioned under paragraph (1)(B) 
                shall be used for projects serving urbanized areas with 
                a population of less than 200,000; and
                    ``(C) funds apportioned under paragraph (1)(C) 
                shall be used for projects serving other than urbanized 
                areas.
            ``(3) Exceptions.--A State may use funds apportioned under 
        paragraphs (1)(B) and (1)(C)--
                    ``(A) for projects serving areas other than the 
                area specified in paragraph (2)(B) or (2)(C), as the 
                case may be, if the Governor of the State certifies 
                that all of the objectives of this section are being 
                met in the specified area; or
                    ``(B) for projects anywhere in the State if the 
                State has established a statewide program for meeting 
                the objectives of this section.
    ``(d) Competitive Process for Grants to Subrecipients.--
            ``(1) Areawide solicitations.--A recipient of funds 
        apportioned under subsection (c)(1)(A) shall conduct, in 
        cooperation with the appropriate metropolitan planning 
        organization, an areawide solicitation for applications for 
        grants to the recipient and subrecipients under this section.
            ``(2) Statewide solicitation.--A recipient of funds 
        apportioned under subsection (c)(1)(B) or (c)(1)(C) shall 
        conduct a statewide solicitation for applications for grants to 
        the recipient and subrecipients under this section.
            ``(3) Application.--Recipients and subrecipients seeking to 
        receive a grant from funds apportioned under subsection (c) 
        shall submit to the recipient an application in the form and in 
        accordance with such requirements as the recipient shall 
        establish.
            ``(4) Grant awards.--The recipient shall award grants under 
        paragraphs (1) and (2) on a competitive basis.
    ``(e) Transfers.--
            ``(1) In general.--A State may transfer any funds 
        apportioned to it under subsection (c)(1)(B) or (c)(1)(C), or 
        both, to an apportionment under section 5311(c) or 5336, or 
        both.
            ``(2) Limited to eligible projects.--Any apportionment 
        transferred under this subsection shall be made available only 
        for eligible job access and reverse commute projects as 
        described in this section.
            ``(3) Consultation.--A State may make a transfer of an 
        amount under this subsection only after consulting with 
        responsible local officials and publicly owned operators of 
        public transportation in each area for which the amount 
        originally was awarded under subsection (d)(4).
    ``(f) Grant Requirements.--
            ``(1) In general.--A grant under this section shall be 
        subject to the requirements of section 5307.
            ``(2) Fair and equitable distribution.--A recipient of a 
        grant under this section shall certify to the Secretary that 
        allocations of the grant to subrecipients are distributed on a 
        fair and equitable basis.
    ``(g) Coordination.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall coordinate 
        activities under this section with related activities under 
        programs of other Federal departments and agencies.
            ``(2) With nonprofit providers.--A State that transfers 
        funds to an apportionment under section 5336 pursuant to 
        subsection (e) shall certify to the Secretary that any project 
        for which the funds are requested under this section has been 
        coordinated with nonprofit providers of services.
            ``(3) Project selection and planning.--A recipient of funds 
        under this section shall certify to the Secretary that--
                    ``(A) the projects selected were derived from a 
                locally developed, coordinated public transit-human 
                services transportation plan; and
                    ``(B) the plan was developed through a process that 
                included representatives of public, private, and 
                nonprofit transportation and human services providers 
                and participation by the public.
    ``(h) Government's Share of Costs.--
            ``(1) Capital projects.--A grant for a capital project 
        under this section may not exceed 80 percent of the net capital 
        costs of the project, as determined by the Secretary.
            ``(2) Operating assistance.--A grant made under this 
        section for operating assistance may not exceed 50 percent of 
        the net operating costs of the project, as determined by the 
        Secretary.
            ``(3) Remainder.--The remainder of the net project costs--
                    ``(A) may be provided from an undistributed cash 
                surplus, a replacement or depreciation cash fund or 
                reserve, a service agreement with a State or local 
                social service agency or a private social service 
                organization, or new capital; and
                    ``(B) may be derived from amounts appropriated to 
                or made available to a department or agency of the 
                Government (other than the Department of 
                Transportation) that are eligible to be expended for 
                transportation.
            ``(4) Use of certain funds.--For purposes of paragraph 
        (3)(B), the prohibitions on the use of funds for matching 
        requirements under section 403(a)(5)(C)(vii) of the Social 
        Security Act (42 U.S.C. 603(a)(5)(C)(vii)) shall not apply to 
        Federal or State funds to be used for transportation purposes.
            ``(5) Limitation on operating assistance.--A recipient 
        carrying out a program of operating assistance under this 
        section may not limit the level or extent of use of the 
        Government grant for the payment of operating expenses.
    ``(i) Program Evaluation.--
            ``(1) Comptroller general.--Beginning 1 year after the date 
        of enactment of the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005, 
        and every 2 years thereafter, the Comptroller General shall--
                    ``(A) conduct a study to evaluate the grant program 
                authorized by this section; and
                    ``(B) transmit to the Committee on Transportation 
                and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and 
                the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of 
                the Senate a report describing the results of the study 
                under subparagraph (A).
            ``(2) Department of transportation.--Not later than 3 years 
        after the date of enactment of Federal Public Transportation 
        Act of 2005, the Secretary shall--
                    ``(A) conduct a study to evaluate the effectiveness 
                of the grant program authorized by this section and the 
                effectiveness of recipients making grants to 
                subrecipients under this section; and
                    ``(B) transmit to the committees referred to in 
                paragraph (1)(B) a report describing the results of the 
                study under subparagraph (A).''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by inserting after the item relating to section 5315 the following:

``5316. Job access and reverse commute formula grants.''.
    (c) Repeal.--Section 3037 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 
21st Century (49 U.S.C. 5309 note; 112 Stat. 387) is repealed.

SEC. 3018. NEW FREEDOM PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 53 is further amended by inserting after 
section 5316 the following:
``Sec. 5317. New Freedom program
    ``(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Recipient.--The term `recipient' means a designated 
        recipient (as defined in section 5307(a)(2)) and a State that 
        receives a grant under this section directly.
            ``(2) Subrecipient.--The term `subrecipient' means a State 
        or local governmental authority, nonprofit organization, or 
        operator of public transportation services that receives a 
        grant under this section indirectly through a recipient.
    ``(b) General Authority.--
            ``(1) Grants.--The Secretary may make grants under this 
        section to a recipient for new public transportation services 
        and public transportation alternatives beyond those required by 
        the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12101 et 
        seq.) that assist individuals with disabilities with 
        transportation, including transportation to and from jobs and 
        employment support services.
            ``(2) Administrative expenses.--A recipient may use not 
        more than 10 percent of the amounts apportioned to the 
        recipient under this section to administer, plan, and provide 
        technical assistance for a project funded under this section.
    ``(c) Apportionments.--
            ``(1) Formula.--The Secretary shall apportion amounts made 
        available to carry out this section as follows:
                    ``(A) 60 percent of the funds shall be apportioned 
                among designated recipients (as defined in section 
                5307(a)(2)) for urbanized areas with a population of 
                200,000 or more in the ratio that--
                            ``(i) the number of individuals with 
                        disabilities in each such urbanized area; bears 
                        to
                            ``(ii) the number of individuals with 
                        disabilities in all such urbanized areas.
                    ``(B) 20 percent of the funds shall be apportioned 
                among the States in the ratio that--
                            ``(i) the number of individuals with 
                        disabilities in urbanized areas with a 
                        population of less than 200,000 in each State; 
                        bears to
                            ``(ii) the number of individuals with 
                        disabilities in urbanized areas with a 
                        population of less than 200,000 in all States.
                    ``(C) 20 percent of the funds shall be apportioned 
                among the States in the ratio that--
                            ``(i) the number of individuals with 
                        disabilities in other than urbanized areas in 
                        each State; bears to
                            ``(ii) the number of individuals with 
                        disabilities in other than urbanized areas in 
                        all States.
            ``(2) Use of apportioned funds.--Except as provided in 
        paragraph (3)--
                    ``(A) funds apportioned under paragraph (1)(A) 
                shall be used for projects serving urbanized areas with 
                a population of 200,000 or more;
                    ``(B) funds apportioned under paragraph (1)(B) 
                shall be used for projects serving urbanized areas with 
                a population of less than 200,000; and
                    ``(C) funds apportioned under paragraph (1)(C) 
                shall be used for projects serving other than urbanized 
                areas.
            ``(3) Low density adjustment.--
                    ``(A) Smaller urbanized areas.--In administering 
                the apportionment formula under paragraph (1)(B)--
                            ``(i) in the case of a State with a 
                        population density of 10 or fewer persons per 
                        square mile, the Secretary shall multiply by a 
                        factor of 2 the number of individuals with 
                        disabilities in urbanized areas of the State 
                        with a population of less than 200,000 (as 
                        determined using the most recent decennial 
                        United States Census); and
                            ``(ii) in the case of a State with a 
                        population density of more than 10 but equal to 
                        or fewer than 30 persons per square mile, the 
                        Secretary shall multiply by a factor of 1.25 
                        the number of individuals with disabilities in 
                        urbanized areas of the State with a population 
                        of less than 200,000 (as determined using the 
                        most recent decennial United States Census).
                    ``(B) Other than urbanized areas.--In administering 
                the apportionment formula under paragraph (1)(C)--
                            ``(i) in the case of a State with a 
                        population density of 10 or fewer persons per 
                        square mile in other than urbanized areas of 
                        the State, the Secretary shall multiply by a 
                        factor of 1.5 the number of individuals with 
                        disabilities in other than urbanized areas of 
                        the State (as determined using the most recent 
                        decennial United States Census); and
                            ``(ii) in the case of a State with a 
                        population density of more than 10 but equal to 
                        or fewer than 12 persons per square mile in 
                        other than urbanized areas of the State, the 
                        Secretary shall multiply by a factor of 1.25 
                        the number of individuals with disabilities in 
                        other than urbanized areas of the State (as 
                        determined using the most recent decennial 
                        United States Census).
            ``(4) Transfers.--
                    ``(A) In general.--A State may transfer any funds 
                apportioned to it under paragraph (1)(B) or (1)(C), or 
                both, to an apportionment under section 5311(c) or 
                5336, or both.
                    ``(B) Limited to eligible projects.--Any funds 
                transferred pursuant to this paragraph shall be made 
                available only for eligible projects selected under 
                this section.
                    ``(C) Consultation.--A State may make a transfer of 
                an amount under this subsection only after consulting 
                with responsible local officials and publicly owned 
                operators of public transportation in each area for 
                which the amount originally was awarded under 
                subsection (d)(4).
    ``(d) Competitive Process for Grants to Subrecipients.--
            ``(1) Areawide solicitations.--A recipient of funds 
        apportioned under subsection (c)(1)(A) shall conduct, in 
        cooperation with the appropriate metropolitan planning 
        organization, an areawide solicitation for applications for 
        grants to the recipient and subrecipients under this section.
            ``(2) Statewide solicitation.--A recipient of funds 
        apportioned under subsection (c)(1)(B) or (c)(1)(C) shall 
        conduct a statewide solicitation for applications for grants to 
        the recipient and subrecipients under this section.
            ``(3) Application.--Recipients and subrecipients seeking to 
        receive a grant from funds apportioned under subsection (c) 
        shall submit to the recipient an application in the form and in 
        accordance with such requirements as the recipient shall 
        establish.
            ``(4) Grant awards.--The recipient shall award grants under 
        paragraphs (1) and (2) on a competitive basis.
    ``(e) Grant Requirements.--
            ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), a 
        grant under this section shall be subject to all the 
        requirements of section 5307.
            ``(2) Employee protective arrangements.--Section 5333(b) 
        shall apply to grants under this section, except that the 
        Secretary of Labor shall utilize, for urbanized areas with a 
        population of less than 200,000 and for other than urbanized 
        areas, a special warranty described in section 215.7 of title 
        29, Code of Federal Regulations (as in effect on the date of 
        enactment of the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005), 
        that provides a fair and equitable arrangement to protect the 
        interest of employees.
            ``(3) Fair and equitable distribution.--A recipient of a 
        grant under this section shall certify that allocations of the 
        grant to subrecipients are distributed on a fair and equitable 
        basis.
    ``(f) Coordination.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall coordinate 
        activities under this section with related activities under 
        programs of other Federal departments and agencies.
            ``(2) With nonprofit providers.--A recipient that transfers 
        funds to an apportionment under section 5336 pursuant to 
        subsection (c)(2) shall certify that the project for which the 
        funds are requested under this section has been coordinated 
        with nonprofit providers of services.
            ``(3) Project selection and planning.--Beginning in fiscal 
        year 2007, a recipient of funds under this section shall 
        certify that--
                    ``(A) the projects selected were derived from a 
                locally developed, coordinated public transit-human 
                services transportation plan; and
                    ``(B) the plan was developed through a process that 
                included representatives of public, private, and 
                nonprofit transportation and human services providers 
                and participation by the public.
    ``(g) Government's Share of Costs.--
            ``(1) Capital projects.--A grant for a capital project 
        under this section may not exceed 80 percent of the net capital 
        costs of the project, as determined by the Secretary.
            ``(2) Operating assistance.--A grant made under this 
        section for operating assistance may not exceed 50 percent of 
        the net operating costs of the project, as determined by the 
        Secretary.
            ``(3) Remainder.--The remainder of the net project costs--
                    ``(A) may be provided from an undistributed cash 
                surplus, a replacement or depreciation cash fund or 
                reserve, a service agreement with a State or local 
                social service agency or a private social service 
                organization, or new capital; and
                    ``(B) may be derived from amounts appropriated to 
                or made available to a department or agency of the 
                Government (other than the Department of 
                Transportation) that are eligible to be expended for 
                transportation.
            ``(4) Use of certain funds.--For purposes of paragraph 
        (3)(B), the prohibitions on the use of funds for matching 
        requirements under section 403(a)(5)(C)(vii) of the Social 
        Security Act (42 U.S.C. 603(a)(5)(C)(vii)) shall not apply to 
        Federal or State funds to be used for transportation purposes.
            ``(5) Limitation on operating assistance.--A recipient 
        carrying out a program of operating assistance under this 
        section may not limit the level or extent of use of the 
        Government grant for the payment of operating expenses.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by inserting after the item relating to section 5316 the following:

``5317. New freedom program.''.

SEC. 3019. BUS TESTING FACILITY.

    (a) In General.--Section 5318 is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (a) and inserting the following:
    ``(a) Facility.--The Secretary of Transportation shall maintain one 
facility for testing a new bus model for maintainability, reliability, 
safety, performance (including braking performance), structural 
integrity, fuel economy, emissions, and noise.'';
            (2) in subsection (d) by striking ``under section 
        5309(m)(1)(C) of this title'' and inserting ``to carry out this 
        section''; and
            (3) by striking subsection (e) and inserting the following:
    ``(e) Acquiring New Bus Models.--Amounts appropriated or made 
available under this chapter may be obligated or expended to acquire a 
new bus model only if a bus of that model has been tested at the 
facility maintained by the Secretary under subsection (a).''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 5323(c) is repealed.

SEC. 3020. BICYCLE FACILITIES.

    The first sentence of section 5319 is amended--
            (1) by striking ``5309(h),'' and inserting ``5309(g),''; 
        and
            (2) by striking ``and 5311'' and inserting ``5311, and 
        5320''.

SEC. 3021. TRANSIT IN THE PARKS PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Section 5320 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5320. Transit in the parks pilot program
    ``(a) Public Transportation Defined.--In this section, the term 
`public transportation' means general or special transportation to the 
public by a conveyance that is publicly or privately owned. Such term 
does not include schoolbus or charter transportation but does include 
sightseeing transportation.
    ``(b) Establishment.--Not later than 90 days after the date of 
enactment of the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005, the 
Secretary of Transportation and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
enter into a memorandum of understanding to establish a transit in the 
parks pilot program in accordance with the requirements of this 
section.
    ``(c) Purpose.--The purpose of the pilot program shall be to 
encourage and promote the development of transportation systems 
described in section 5301(a) within units of the National Park System 
to improve visitor mobility and enjoyment (including visitors with 
disabilities), reduce pollution and congestion, and enhance resource 
protection through the use of public transportation.
    ``(d) Administration of Program.--The program shall be administered 
by the Secretary of Transportation, in consultation with the Secretary 
of the Interior.
    ``(e) Memorandum of Understanding.--
            ``(1) Planning.--The memorandum of understanding under 
        subsection (b) shall include transportation planning procedures 
        that are consistent with the metropolitan and statewide 
        planning processes required under chapter 52.
            ``(2) Programs.--The memorandum of understanding shall 
        include descriptions of programs and activities eligible for 
        assistance under the pilot program.
            ``(3) Exceptions.--The memorandum of understanding shall 
        limit or modify the applicability of the provisions referred to 
        in subsection (f) to the extent necessary to carry out the 
        objectives of this section and to be compatible with the laws 
        and regulations governing units of the National Park System.
    ``(f) Eligible Use of Funds.--Except as provided under subsection 
(e)(3), the Secretary may provide funds made available to carry out 
this section to the Secretary of the Interior under interagency 
agreements for the following purposes:
            ``(1) Planning, engineering, design, and evaluation.--
        Planning, engineering, design, and evaluation of public 
        transportation projects in units of the National Park System, 
        and for technical studies, in accordance with section 
        5305(b)(2).
            ``(2) Public transportation capital projects.--Public 
        transportation capital projects (as defined in section 
        5302(a)(1)) for such units in accordance with all the terms and 
        conditions to which a grant is made under subsections (a), (b), 
        (c), and (d) of section 5307 and such other terms and 
        conditions as are determined by the Secretary. The Secretary of 
        the Interior shall act as the designated recipient for the 
        purposes of subsection (a)(2) of section 5307.
            ``(3) Operating costs.--Operating costs of equipment and 
        facilities used in public transportation for such units.
    ``(g) Government's Share of Costs.--
            ``(1) Capital projects.--The Government share of the cost 
        of any capital project or activity under this section shall be 
        100 percent of the costs of the project, as determined by the 
        Secretary.
            ``(2) Operating assistance.--A grant made under this 
        section for operating assistance may not exceed 50 percent of 
        the net operating costs of the project, as determined by the 
        Secretary.
    ``(h) Savings Clause.--Nothing in this section shall be construed 
as superseding, amending, modifying, or repealing any provision of law 
applicable to units of the National Park System.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is further 
amended by striking the item relating to section 5320 and inserting the 
following:

``5320. Transit in the parks pilot program.''.

SEC. 3022. HUMAN RESOURCE PROGRAMS.

    Section 5322 is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(a) In General.--'' before ``The 
        Secretary''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(b) Grants to Higher Learning Institutions.--
            ``(1) Authority to make grants.--The Secretary may make 
        grants to nonprofit institutions of higher learning--
                    ``(A) to conduct research and investigations into 
                the theoretical or practical problems of public 
                transportation; and
                    ``(B) to train individuals to conduct further 
                research or obtain employment in an organization that 
                plans, builds, operates, or manages a public 
                transportation system.
            ``(2) Research and investigations.--Research and 
        investigations under this subsection include--
                    ``(A) the design and use of public transportation 
                systems and public roads and highways;
                    ``(B) the interrelationship between various modes 
                of urban, suburban, rural, and intercity 
                transportation;
                    ``(C) the role of transportation planning in 
                overall urban planning;
                    ``(D) public preferences in transportation;
                    ``(E) the economic allocation of transportation 
                resources; and
                    ``(F) the legal, financial, engineering, and 
                esthetic aspects of public transportation.
            ``(3) Preference.--When making a grant under this 
        subsection, the Secretary shall give preference to an 
        institution that brings together knowledge and expertise in the 
        various social science and technical disciplines related to 
        public transportation problems.
    ``(c) Fellowships.--
            ``(1) Authority to make grants.--The Secretary may make 
        grants to States, local governmental authorities, and operators 
        of public transportation systems to provide fellowships to 
        train personnel employed in managerial, technical, and 
        professional positions in the public transportation field.
            ``(2) Terms.--
                    ``(A) Period of training.--A fellowship under this 
                subsection may be for not more than one year of 
                training in an institution that offers a program 
                applicable to the public transportation industry.
                    ``(B) Selection of individuals.--The recipient of 
                the grant shall select an individual on the basis of 
                demonstrated ability and for the contribution the 
                individual reasonably can be expected to make to an 
                efficient public transportation operation.
                    ``(C) Amount.--A grant for a fellowship may not be 
                more than the lesser of $65,000 or 75 percent of--
                            ``(i) tuition and other charges to the 
                        fellowship recipient;
                            ``(ii) additional costs incurred by the 
                        training institution and billed to the grant 
                        recipient; and
                            ``(iii) the regular salary of the 
                        fellowship recipient for the period of the 
                        fellowship to the extent the salary is actually 
                        paid or reimbursed by the grant recipient.''.

SEC. 3023. GENERAL PROVISIONS ON ASSISTANCE.

    (a) Interests in Property.--Section 5323(a)(1) is amended--
            (1) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A)--
                    (A) by striking ``private mass transportation 
                company'' each place it appears and inserting ``private 
                company engaged in public transportation'';
                    (B) by striking ``mass transportation equipment or 
                a mass transportation facility'' and inserting ``a 
                public transportation facility or equipment''; and
                    (C) by striking ``mass transportation company'' and 
                inserting ``public transportation company''; and
            (2) in subparagraph (B) by striking ``private mass 
        transportation companies'' and inserting ``private companies 
        engaged in public transportation''.
    (b) Notice and Public Hearing.--Section 5323(b) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``(1) An application'' and 
                inserting the following:
            ``(1) Applications.--An application'';
                    (B) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A) by 
                striking ``or loan''; and
                    (C) by moving subparagraphs (A) through (D) 2 ems 
                to the right;
            (2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``(2) Notice of'' and 
        inserting the following:
            ``(2) Notice.--Notice of''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) Environmental record.--An applicant shall include in 
        the environmental record for a project under this chapter 
        evidence that the applicant has complied with the requirements 
        of subparagraphs (A) through (D) of paragraph (1).''.
    (c) Condition on Charter Bus Transportation Service.--Section 
5323(d) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``(1) Financial assistance'' and inserting 
        the following:
            ``(1) Agreements.--Financial assistance''; and
            (2) by striking paragraph (2) and inserting the following:
            ``(2) Violations.--
                    ``(A) Investigations.--On receiving a complaint 
                about a violation of the agreement required under 
                paragraph (1), the Secretary shall investigate and 
                decide whether a violation has occurred.
                    ``(B) Enforcement of agreements.--If the Secretary 
                decides that a violation has occurred, the Secretary 
                shall correct the violation under terms of the 
                agreement.
                    ``(C) Additional remedies.--In addition to any 
                remedy specified in the agreement, the Secretary shall 
                bar a recipient or an operator from receiving Federal 
                transit assistance in an amount the Secretary considers 
                appropriate if the Secretary finds a pattern of 
                violations of the agreement.''.
    (d) Bond Proceeds Eligible for Local Share.--Section 5323(e) is 
amended to read as follows:
    ``(e) Bond Proceeds Eligible for Local Share.--
            ``(1) Use as local matching funds.--Notwithstanding any 
        other provision of law, a recipient of assistance under section 
        5307 or 5309 may use the proceeds from the issuance of revenue 
        bonds as part of the local matching funds for a capital 
        project.
            ``(2) Maintenance of effort.--The Secretary shall approve 
        of the use of the proceeds from the issuance of revenue bonds 
        for the remainder of the net project cost only if the Secretary 
        finds that the aggregate amount of financial support for public 
        transportation in the urbanized area provided by the State and 
        affected local governmental authorities during the next 3 
        fiscal years, as programmed in the State transportation 
        improvement program under chapter 52 is not less than the 
        aggregate amount provided by the State and affected local 
        governmental authorities in the urbanized area during the 
        preceding 3 fiscal years.
            ``(3) Debt service reserve.--The Secretary may reimburse an 
        eligible recipient for deposits of bond proceeds in a debt 
        service reserve that recipient established pursuant to section 
        5302(a)(1)(K) from amounts made available to the recipient 
        under section 5307 or 5309, or both; except that such 
        reimbursement in a fiscal year may not exceed 10 percent of the 
        amounts made available to the recipient under section 5307 in 
        such fiscal year.''.
    (e) Schoolbus Transportation.--Section 5323(f) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``(1) Financial assistance'' and inserting 
        the following:
            ``(1) Agreements.--Financial assistance'';
            (2) in paragraph (1) by moving subparagraphs (A), (B), and 
        (C) 2 ems to the right; and
            (3) by striking paragraph (2) and inserting the following:
            ``(2) Violations.--If the Secretary finds that an 
        applicant, governmental authority, or publicly owned operator 
        has violated the agreement required under paragraph (1), the 
        Secretary shall bar a recipient or an operator from receiving 
        Federal transit assistance in an amount the Secretary considers 
        appropriate.''.
    (f) Buying Buses Under Other Laws.--Section 5323(g) is amended by 
striking ``103(e)(4)'' each place it appears and inserting ``133''.
    (g) Buy America.--
            (1) Public interest waiver.--Section 5323(j) is amended--
                    (A) by redesignating paragraphs (3) through (7) as 
                paragraphs (4) through (8), respectively; and
                    (B) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following:
            ``(3) Written justification for public interest waiver.--
        When issuing a waiver based on a public interest determination 
        under paragraph (2)(A), the Secretary shall issue a detailed 
        written justification as to why the waiver is in the public 
        interest. The Secretary shall publish such justification in the 
        Federal Register and provide the public with a reasonable 
        period of time for notice and comment.''.
            (2) Ineligibility for contracts.--Section 5323(j)(6) (as so 
        redesignated) is amended by striking ``Intermodal Surface 
        Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (Public Law 102-240, 105 
        Stat. 1914)'' and inserting ``Federal Public Transportation Act 
        of 2004''.
            (3) Administrative review.--Section 5323(j) is amended by 
        adding at the end the following:
            ``(9) Administrative review.--A party adversely affected by 
        an agency action under this subsection shall have the right to 
        seek review under section 702 of title 5.''.
            (4) Repeal of general waiver.--Subsections (b) and (c) of 
        Appendix A of section 661.7 of title 49, Code of Federal 
        Regulations, shall cease to be in effect beginning on the date 
        of enactment of this Act.
            (5) Rulemaking.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall issue a final rule 
        on implementation of the requirements of section 5323(j) of 
        title 49, United States Code (in this paragraph referred to as 
        the ``Buy America requirements''). The purposes of the 
        regulations shall be as follows:
                    (A) Microprocessor waiver.--To clarify that any 
                waiver from the Buy America requirements issued under 
                section 5323(j)(2) of such title for a microprocessor, 
                computer, or microcomputer applies only to a device 
                used solely for the purpose of processing or storing 
                data and does not extend to a product containing a 
                microprocessor, computer, or microcomputer.
                    (B) Definitions.--To define the terms ``end 
                product'', ``negotiated procurement'', and 
                ``contractor'' for purposes of part 661 of title 49, 
                Code of Federal Regulations. In defining the terms, the 
                Secretary shall develop a list of representative items 
                that are subject to the Buy America requirements, and 
                shall address the procurement of systems under the 
                definition to ensure that major system procurements are 
                not used to circumvent the Buy America requirements.
                    (C) Post-award waivers.--To permit a grantee to 
                request a non-availability waiver from the Buy America 
                requirements under section 661.7c of title 49, Code of 
                Federal Regulations, after contract award in any case 
                in which the contractor has made a certification of 
                compliance with the requirements in good faith.
                    (D) Certification under negotiated procurement 
                process.--In any case in which a negotiated procurement 
                process is used, compliance with the Buy America 
                requirements shall be determined on the basis of the 
                certification submitted with the final offer.
    (h) Grant Requirements.--Section 5323(o) is amended by striking 
``the Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 
1998'' and inserting ``chapter 6 (other than section 609) of title 
23''.
    (i) Government Share of Costs for Certain Projects.--Section 
5323(i) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``(including clean fuel or alternative fuel 
        vehicle-related equipment)''; and
            (1) by inserting ``or facilities'' after ``equipment'' each 
        place it occurs.
    (j) Alternative Fueling Facilities.--Section 5323 is further 
amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(p) Alternative Fueling Facilities.--A recipient of assistance 
under this chapter may allow the incidental use of Federally funded 
alternative fueling facilities and equipment by nontransit public 
entities and private entities if--
            ``(1) the incidental use does not interfere with the 
        recipient's public transportation operations;
            ``(2) all costs related to the incidental use are fully 
        recaptured by the recipient from the nontransit public entity 
        or private entity;
            ``(3) the recipient uses revenues received from the 
        incidental use in excess of costs for eligible projects under 
        this chapter; and
            ``(4) private entities pay all applicable excise taxes on 
        fuel.''.

SEC. 3024. SPECIAL PROVISIONS FOR CAPITAL PROJECTS.

    (a) In General.--Section 5324 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5324. Special provisions for capital projects
    ``(a) Relocation Program Requirements.--Financial assistance may be 
provided under section 5309 only if the Secretary decides that--
            ``(1) an adequate relocation program is being carried out 
        for families displaced by a project; and
            ``(2) an equal number of decent, safe, and sanitary 
        dwellings are being, or will be, provided to those families in 
        the same area or in another area generally not less desirable 
        for public utilities and public and commercial facilities, at 
        rents or prices within the financial means of those families, 
        and with reasonable access to their places of employment.
    ``(b) Consideration of Economic, Social, and Environmental 
Interests.--
            ``(1) Cooperation and consultation.--In carrying out the 
        policy of section 5301(e), the Secretary shall cooperate and 
        consult with the Secretaries of the Interior, Health and Human 
        Services, and Housing and Urban Development and the 
        Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency on each 
        project that may have a substantial impact on the environment.
            ``(2) Public participation in environmental reviews.--In 
        performing environmental reviews, the Secretary shall review 
        each transcript of a hearing submitted under section 5323(b) to 
        establish that an adequate opportunity to present views was 
        given to all parties having a significant economic, social, or 
        environmental interest in the project, and that the project 
        application includes a record of--
                    ``(A) the environmental impact of the proposal;
                    ``(B) adverse environmental effects that cannot be 
                avoided;
                    ``(C) alternatives to the proposal; and
                    ``(D) irreversible and irretrievable impacts on the 
                environment.
            ``(3) Approval of applications for assistance.--
                    ``(A) Findings by the secretary.--The Secretary may 
                approve an application for financial assistance for a 
                capital project in accordance with this chapter only if 
                the Secretary makes written findings, after reviewing 
                the application and the transcript of any hearing held 
                before a State or local governmental authority under 
                section 5323(b), that--
                            ``(i) an adequate opportunity to present 
                        views was given to all parties having a 
                        significant economic, social, or environmental 
                        interest;
                            ``(ii) the preservation and enhancement of 
                        the environment and the interest of the 
                        community in which the project is located were 
                        considered; and
                            ``(iii) no adverse environmental effect is 
                        likely to result from the project, or no 
                        feasible and prudent alternative to the effect 
                        exists and all reasonable steps have been taken 
                        to minimize the effect.
                    ``(B) Hearing.--If a hearing has not been conducted 
                or the Secretary decides that the record of the hearing 
                is inadequate for making the findings required by this 
                subsection, the Secretary shall conduct a hearing on an 
                environmental issue raised by the application after 
                giving adequate notice to interested persons.
                    ``(C) Availability of findings.--The Secretary's 
                findings under subparagraph (A) shall be made a matter 
                of public record.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5324 and inserting the 
following:

``5324. Special provisions for capital projects.''.

SEC. 3025. CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) In General.--Section 5325 is amended--
            (1) by striking subsections (a) and (b) and inserting the 
        following:
    ``(a) Competition.--Recipients of Federal assistance under this 
chapter shall conduct all procurement transactions involving such 
assistance in a manner providing full and open competition, as 
determined by the Secretary.
    ``(b) Architectural, Engineering, and Design Contracts.--
            ``(1) Procedures for awarding contract.--A contract or 
        requirement for program management, architectural engineering, 
        construction management, a feasibility study, and preliminary 
        engineering, design, architectural, engineering, surveying, 
        mapping, or related services for a project for which Federal 
        assistance is provided under this chapter shall be awarded in 
        the same way as a contract for architectural and engineering 
        services is negotiated under chapter 11 of title 40 or an 
        equivalent qualifications-based requirement of a State.
            ``(2) Effect of state laws.--This subsection does not apply 
        to the extent a State has adopted, before the date of enactment 
        of the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005, by law a 
        formal procedure for procuring those services.
            ``(3) Administration of contracts.--When awarding such 
        contracts, recipients of assistance under this chapter shall 
        maximize efficiencies of administration by accepting 
        nondisputed audits conducted by other governmental agencies as 
        follows:
                    ``(A) Performance of audits.--Any contract or 
                subcontract awarded under this chapter shall be 
                performed and audited in compliance with cost 
                principles contained in the Federal Acquisition 
                Regulation (part 31 of title 48, Code of Federal 
                Regulations).
                    ``(B) Indirect cost rates.--Instead of performing 
                its own audits, a recipient of funds under a contract 
                or subcontract awarded under this chapter shall accept 
                indirect cost rates established in accordance with the 
                Federal Acquisition Regulation for one-year applicable 
                accounting periods by a cognizant Federal or State 
                government agency, if such rates are not currently 
                under dispute.
                    ``(C) Application of rates.--Once a firm's indirect 
                cost rates are accepted under this paragraph, the 
                recipient of the funds shall apply such rates for the 
                purposes of contract estimation, negotiation, 
                administration, reporting, and contract payment and 
                shall not be limited by administrative or de facto 
                ceilings.
                    ``(D) Prenotification; confidentiality of data.--A 
                recipient of funds requesting or using the cost and 
                rate data described in paragraph (3) shall notify any 
                affected firm before such request or use. Such data 
                shall be confidential and shall not be accessible or 
                provided, in whole or in part, to another firm or to 
                any government agency that is not part of the group of 
                agencies sharing cost data under this paragraph, except 
                by written permission of the audited firm. If 
                prohibited by law, such cost and rate data shall not be 
                disclosed under any circumstances.''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(d) Design-Build System Projects.--
            ``(1) Definition.--In this section, the term `design-build 
        system project' means a project under which a recipient enters 
        into a contract with a seller, firm, or consortium of firms to 
        design and build a public transportation system or an operable 
        segment thereof that meets specific performance criteria. Such 
        project may also include an option to finance, or operate for a 
        period of time, the system or segment or any combination of 
        designing, building, operating, or maintaining such system or 
        segment.
            ``(2) Financial assistance.--Government financial 
        assistance under this chapter may be made available for the 
        capital costs of a design-build system project after the 
        recipient complies with Government requirements.
    ``(e) Multiyear Rolling Stock.--
            ``(1) Contracts.--A recipient procuring rolling stock with 
        Government financial assistance under this chapter may make a 
        multiyear contract to buy the rolling stock and replacement 
        parts under which the recipient has an option to buy additional 
        rolling stock or replacement parts for not more than 5 years 
        after the date of the original contract.
            ``(2) Cooperation among recipients.--The Secretary shall 
        allow at least 2 recipients to act on a cooperative basis to 
        procure rolling stock in compliance with this subsection and 
        other Government procurement requirements.
    ``(f) Acquiring Rolling Stock.--A recipient of financial assistance 
under this chapter may enter into a contract to expend that assistance 
to acquire rolling stock--
            ``(1) based on--
                    ``(A) initial capital costs; or
                    ``(B) performance, standardization, life cycle 
                costs, and other factors; or
            ``(2) with a party selected through a competitive 
        procurement process.
    ``(g) Examination of the Records.--Upon request, the Secretary, the 
Comptroller General, or a representative of the Secretary or the 
Comptroller General shall have access to and the right to examine and 
inspect all records, documents, papers, including contracts, related to 
a project for which a grant is made under this chapter.
    ``(h) Grant Prohibitions.--A grant may not be used to support a 
procurement that uses an exclusionary or discriminatory specification.
    ``(i) Bus Dealer Requirements.--No State law requiring buses to be 
purchased through in-State dealers shall apply to vehicles purchased 
with a grant under this chapter. ''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 5326, and the item relating to 
section 5326 in the analysis for chapter 53, are repealed.

SEC. 3026. PROJECT MANAGEMENT OVERSIGHT AND REVIEW.

    (a) Project Management Plan Requirements.--Section 5327(a) is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' at the end of paragraph (11);
            (2) by striking the period at the end of paragraph (12) and 
        inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(13) safety and security management.''.
    (b) Limitations.--Section 5327(c) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(c) Limitations.--
            ``(1) Limitations on use of available amounts.--The 
        Secretary may use not more than .5 percent of amounts made 
        available for a fiscal year to carry out section 5311, not more 
        than .75 percent of amounts made available for a fiscal year to 
        carry out section 5307, and not more than 1 percent of amounts 
        made available for a fiscal year to carry out section 5309 to 
        make contracts for the following activities:
                    ``(A) To oversee the construction of a major 
                project.
                    ``(B) To review and audit the safety and security, 
                procurement, management, and financial compliance of a 
                recipient or subrecipient of funds under sections 5307, 
                5309, and 5311.
                    ``(C) To provide technical assistance to correct 
                deficiencies identified in compliance reviews and 
                audits carried out under this section.
            ``(2) Limitations on applicability.--Subsections (a), (b), 
        and (e) do not apply to contracts under this section for 
        activities described in paragraphs (1)(B) and (1)(C).
            ``(3) Government's share of costs.--The Government shall 
        pay the entire cost of carrying out a contract under this 
        subsection.''.

SEC. 3027. INVESTIGATIONS OF SAFETY AND HAZARDS.

    (a) In General.--Section 5329 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5329. Investigation of safety and hazards
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary may investigate safety and 
security risks associated with a condition in equipment, a facility, or 
an operation financed under this chapter that the Secretary believes 
causes a serious hazard of death or injury to establish the nature and 
extent of the condition and how to eliminate, mitigate, or correct it.
    ``(b) Plans for Eliminating, Mitigating, or Correcting Hazards.--If 
the Secretary establishes that a condition causes a hazard, the 
Secretary shall require the local governmental authority receiving 
amounts under this chapter to submit a plan for eliminating, 
mitigating, or correcting it.
    ``(c) Withholding Financial Assistance.--Financial assistance under 
this chapter, in an amount to be determined by the Secretary, may be 
withheld until a plan is approved and carried out.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5329 and inserting the 
following:

``5329. Investigation of safety and hazards.''.

SEC. 3028. STATE SAFETY OVERSIGHT.

    (a) In General.--Section 5330 is amended--
            (1) by striking the section heading and all that follows 
        through subsection (a) and inserting the following:
``Sec. 5330. State safety oversight
    ``(a) Application.--This section applies only to--
            ``(1) States that have rail fixed guideway public 
        transportation systems not subject to regulation by the Federal 
        Railroad Administration; and
            ``(2) States that are designing rail fixed guideway public 
        transportation systems that will not be subject to regulation 
        by the Federal Railroad Administration.'';
            (2) in subsection (d) by inserting ``shall ensure uniform 
        safety standards and enforcement and'' after ``affected 
        States''; and
            (3) by striking subsection (f).
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5330 and inserting the 
following:

``5330. State safety oversight.''.

SEC. 3029. CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES AND ALCOHOL MISUSE TESTING.

    (a) Definitions.--Section 5331(a)(3) is amended by striking the 
period at the end and inserting the following: ``or section 2303a, 
7101(i), or 7302(e) of title 46. The Secretary may also decide that a 
form of public transportation is covered adequately, for employee 
alcohol and controlled substances testing purposes, under the alcohol 
and controlled substance statutes or regulations of an agency within 
the Department of Transportation or the Coast Guard.''.
    (b) Technical Corrections.--Subsections (b)(1) and (g) of section 
5331 are each amended by striking ``or section 103(e)(4) of title 23''.
    (c) Regulations.--Section 5331(f) is amended by striking paragraph 
(3).

SEC. 3030. EMPLOYEE PROTECTIVE ARRANGEMENTS.

    Section 5333(b)(1) is amended by striking ``5318(d), 5323(a)(1), 
(b), (d), and (e), 5328, 5337, and 5338(b)'' each place it appears and 
inserting ``5316, 5317, 5318, 5320, 5323(a)(1), 5323(b), 5323(d), 5328, 
5337, 5338(b), 5338(g), and 5338(h)''.

SEC. 3031. ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES.

    Section 5334 is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking ``and'' at the end of paragraph 
                (9);
                    (B) by striking the period at the end of paragraph 
                (10) and inserting ``; and''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(11) issue regulations as necessary to carry out the 
        purposes of this chapter.'';
            (2) by striking subsection (i);
            (3) by redesignating subsections (b) through (h) as 
        subsections (c) through (i), respectively;
            (4) by inserting after subsection (a) the following:
    ``(b) Prohibitions Against Regulating Operations and Charges.--
            ``(1) In general.--Except for purposes of national defense 
        or in the event of a national or regional emergency, the 
        Secretary may not regulate the operation, routes, or schedules 
        of a public transportation system for which a grant is made 
        under this chapter, nor may the Secretary regulate the rates, 
        fares, tolls, rentals, or other charges prescribed by any 
        provider of public transportation.
            ``(2) Limitation on statutory construction.--Nothing in 
        this subsection shall be construed to prevent the Secretary 
        from requiring a recipient of funds under this chapter to 
        comply with the terms and conditions of its Federal assistance 
        agreement.'';
            (5) in subsection (c)(4) (as redesignated by paragraph (3) 
        of this section)--
                    (A) by striking ``subsections (h) and (i)'' and 
                inserting ``subsection (i)''; and
                    (B) by striking ``5323(c), 5323(e), 5324(c),''; and
            (6) by adding at the end of subsection (c) (as redesignated 
        by paragraph (3) of this section) the following:
            ``(5) Nonregulatory substantive policy statements.--The 
        Secretary shall provide notice and an opportunity for public 
        comment at least 60 days before issuing any nonregulatory 
        substantive policy statements (regardless of the form of 
        issuance), including guidance, policy statements, and 
        regulatory interpretations.''.

SEC. 3032. NATIONAL TRANSIT DATABASE.

    (a) In General.--Section 5335 is amended--
            (1) by striking the section heading and inserting the 
        following:
``Sec. 5335. National transit database'';
            (2) by striking subsection (b); and
            (3) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking ``(1) To help'' and inserting ``To 
                help''; and
                    (B) by striking ``(2) The Secretary'' and inserting 
                ``(b) Reporting and Uniform Systems.--The Secretary''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5335 and inserting the 
following:

``5335. National transit database.''.

SEC. 3033. APPORTIONMENTS BASED ON FIXED GUIDEWAY FACTORS.

    (a) Distribution.--Section 5337 is amended--
            (1) by striking the section designation and all that 
        follows before paragraph (1) of subsection (a) and inserting 
        the following:
``Sec. 5337. Apportionment based on fixed guideway factors
    ``(a) Distribution.--The Secretary shall apportion amounts made 
available for fixed guideway modernization under sections 5338(b) and 
5338(g) as follows:'';
            (2) in subsection (a) by striking ``(e)(1)'' each place it 
        appears and inserting ``(e)''; and
            (3) in subsection (a) by striking ``(e)(2)'' each place it 
        appears and inserting ``(e)''.
    (b) Route Segments to Be Included in Apportionment Formulas.--
Section 5337(e) is amended by striking paragraph (1) and all that 
follows through ``(2) Other Standards.--''.
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--The item relating to section 5337 in the 
table of sections for chapter 53 is amended to read as follows:

``5337. Apportionment based on fixed guideway factors.''.

SEC. 3034. AUTHORIZATIONS.

    Section 5338 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5338. Authorizations
    ``(a) Formula Grants.--
            ``(1) Fiscal year 2004.--
                    ``(A) From trust fund.--There shall be available 
                from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund 
                to carry out sections 5307, 5308, 5310, 5311, 5316, 
                5317, and 5318 of this chapter, 1118(b) of the 
                Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (relating 
                to the nonmotorized transportation pilot program), and 
                section 3038 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 
                21st Century (49 U.S.C. 5310 note; 112 Stat. 392-393) 
                $3,132,304,000 for fiscal year 2004.
                    ``(B) From general fund.--In addition to amounts 
                made available under subparagraph (A), there are 
                authorized to be appropriated to carry out sections 
                5307, 5308, 5310, 5311, 5316, and 5318 of this chapter, 
                1118(b) of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for 
                Users (relating to the nonmotorized transportation 
                pilot program), and section 3038 of the Transportation 
                Equity Act for the 21st Century (49 U.S.C. 5310 note; 
                112 Stat. 392-393) $783,076,000 for fiscal year 2004.
                    ``(C) Allocation of funds.--Of the aggregate of 
                amounts made available by and appropriated under this 
                paragraph for a fiscal year--
                            ``(i) $4,849,950 shall be available to the 
                        Alaska Railroad for improvements to its 
                        passenger operations under section 5307;
                            ``(ii) $125,000,000 shall be available to 
                        provide job access and reverse commute formula 
                        grants under section 5316;
                            ``(iii) $50,000,000 shall be available to 
                        provide clean fuels formula grants under 
                        section 5308;
                            ``(iv) $8,000,000 shall be available to 
                        provide over-the-road bus accessibility grants 
                        under section 3038 of the Transportation Equity 
                        Act for the 21st Century (49 U.S.C. 5310 note);
                            ``(v) $3,100,000 shall be available to 
                        carry out bus testing under section 5318;
                            ``(vi) $93,110,751 shall be available to 
                        provide transportation services to elderly 
                        individuals and individuals with disabilities 
                        under section 5310;
                            ``(vii) $297,954,404 shall be available to 
                        provide financial assistance for other than 
                        urbanized areas under section 5311; and
                            ``(viii) $3,333,364,895 shall be available 
                        to provide financial assistance for urbanized 
                        areas under section 5307, subject to section 
                        3041(h) of the Federal Public Transportation 
                        Act of 2005.
            ``(2) Fiscal years 2005 through 2009.--
                    ``(A) From trust fund.--There shall be available 
                from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund 
                to carry out sections 5307, 5308, 5310, 5311, 5316, 
                5317, 5318, and 5320 of this chapter, section 3038 of 
                the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (49 
                U.S.C. 5310 note; 112 Stat. 392-393), and section 
                1118(b) of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for 
                Users (relating to the nonmotorized transportation 
                pilot program)--
                            ``(i) $4,133,500,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                            ``(ii) $4,592,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                            ``(iii) $4,898,000,000 for fiscal year 
                        2007;
                            ``(iv) $5,223,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; 
                        and
                            ``(v) $5,570,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
                    ``(B) Allocation of funds for bus testing and over-
                the-road bus accessibility.--Of the aggregate of 
                amounts made available by this paragraph for a fiscal 
                year--
                            ``(i) $3,100,000 shall be available to 
                        carry out section 5318; and
                            ``(ii) $8,000,000 shall be available to 
                        carry out section 3038 of the Transportation 
                        Equity Act for the 21st Century (49 U.S.C. 5310 
                        note).
                    ``(C) Allocation of funds for clean fuels formula 
                grant program.--Of the aggregate of amounts made 
                available by this paragraph, $75,000,000 for fiscal 
                year 2005 and $100,000,000 for each of fiscal years 
                2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009 shall be available to carry 
                out section 5308.
                    ``(D) Allocation of funds for job access and 
                reverse commute formula grant program.--Of the 
                aggregate of amounts made available by this paragraph, 
                $150,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $175,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2006, $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, 
                $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $200,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2009 shall be available to carry out 
                section 5316.
                    ``(E) Allocation of funds for new freedom 
                program.--Of the aggregate of amounts made available by 
                this paragraph, $95,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
                $100,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $105,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2007, $115,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, 
                and $125,000,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be 
                available to carry out section 5317.
                    ``(F) Allocation of funds for transit in the parks 
                pilot program.--Of the aggregate of amounts made 
                available by this paragraph, $8,000,000 for fiscal year 
                2005, $16,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $16,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2007, $16,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and 
                $16,000,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be available to 
                carry out section 5320.
                    ``(G) Allocation of funds for nonmotorized 
                transportation pilot program.--Of the aggregate of 
                amounts made available by this paragraph, $4,000,000 
                for fiscal year 2005, $4,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, 
                $4,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $8,000,000 for fiscal 
                year 2008, and $8,000,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be 
                available to carry out section 1118(b) of the 
                Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (relating 
                to the nonmotorized transportation pilot program).
                    ``(H) Allocation of funds for the alaska 
                railroad.--Of the aggregate of amounts made available 
                by this paragraph, $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
                $11,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $12,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2007, $13,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and 
                $14,000,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be available to 
                the Alaska Railroad for improvements to its passenger 
                operations under section 5307.
                    ``(I) Remainder.--Of the remainder of the aggregate 
                amounts made available by this paragraph for a fiscal 
                year after the allocations under subparagraphs (B) 
                through (H) for such fiscal year--
                            ``(i) 2.5 percent shall be available to 
                        provide transportation services to elderly 
                        individuals and individuals with disabilities 
                        under section 5310;
                            ``(ii) 8.0 percent shall be available to 
                        provide financial assistance for other than 
                        urbanized areas under section 5311; and
                            ``(iii) 89.5 percent shall be available to 
                        provide financial assistance for urbanized 
                        areas under section 5307, subject to section 
                        3041(h) of the Federal Public Transportation 
                        Act of 2005.
    ``(b) Capital Program Grants in Fiscal Year 2004.--
            ``(1) From trust fund.--There shall be available from the 
        Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund to carry out 
        section 5309, $2,499,504,000 for fiscal year 2004.
            ``(2) From general fund.--In addition to amounts made 
        available by paragraph (1), there is authorized to be 
        appropriated to carry out section 5309, $624,876,200 for fiscal 
        year 2004.
    ``(c) Planning.--
            ``(1) Fiscal year 2004.--
                    ``(A) From trust fund.--There shall be available 
                from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund 
                to carry out sections 5303, 5304, and 5305, $72,660,000 
                for fiscal year 2004.
                    ``(B) From general fund.--In addition to amounts 
                made available by subparagraph (A), there is authorized 
                to be appropriated to carry out sections 5303, 5304, 
                and 5305, $18,165,000 for fiscal year 2004.
            ``(2) Fiscal years 2005 through 2009.--
                    ``(A) From the trust fund.--There shall be 
                available from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway 
                Trust Fund to carry out sections 5303, 5304, and 5305--
                            ``(i) $96,875,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                            ``(ii) $103,325,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                            ``(iii) $110,200,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                            ``(iv) $117,537,500 for fiscal year 2008; 
                        and
                            ``(v) $125,362,500 for fiscal year 2009.
                    ``(B) Allocation of funds.--Of the funds made 
                available by this paragraph for a fiscal year--
                            ``(i) 82.72 percent shall be available for 
                        metropolitan planning under sections 5303, 
                        5304, and 5305 (other than 5305(e)); and
                            ``(ii) 17.28 percent shall be available for 
                        State planning under section 5305(e).
    ``(d) Research.--
            ``(1) Fiscal year 2004.--
                    ``(A) From trust fund.--There shall be available 
                from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund 
                to carry out sections 5311(b), 5312, 5313, 5314, 5315, 
                5322, and 5335, $41,888,000 for fiscal year 2004.
                    ``(B) From general fund.--In addition to amounts 
                made available by subparagraph (A), there is authorized 
                to be appropriated to carry out sections 5311(b), 5312, 
                5313, 5314, 5315, 5322, and 5335, $10,472,000 for 
                fiscal year 2004.
                    ``(C) Allocation of funds.--Of the funds made 
                available by or appropriated pursuant to this paragraph 
                for fiscal year 2004--
                            ``(i) not less than $4,500,000 shall be 
                        available to carry out programs under the 
                        National Transit Institute under section 5315;
                            ``(ii) not less than $3,500,000 shall be 
                        available to carry out section 5335;
                            ``(iii) not less than $3,500,000 shall be 
                        available to carry out section 5314(a)(2); and
                            ``(iv) not less than $8,860,000 shall be 
                        available to carry out section 5313(a).
            ``(2) Fiscal years 2005 through 2009.--
                    ``(A) From the general fund.--There is authorized 
                to be appropriated to carry out sections 5312, 5313, 
                5314, 5315, 5322, and 5335--
                            ``(i) $54,500,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                            ``(ii) $57,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                            ``(iii) $59,500,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                            ``(iv) $62,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; 
                        and
                            ``(v) $64,500,000 for fiscal year 2009.
                    ``(B) Allocation of funds.--Of the funds 
                appropriated pursuant to this paragraph for a fiscal 
                year--
                            ``(i) not less than $4,500,000 shall be 
                        available to carry out programs under the 
                        National Transit Institute under section 5315;
                            ``(ii) not less than $3,500,000 shall be 
                        available to carry out section 5335; and
                            ``(iii) not less than $3,500,000 shall be 
                        available to carry out section 5314(a)(2).
                    ``(C) Transit cooperative research program.--Of the 
                funds appropriated pursuant to this paragraph, 
                $9,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $9,500,000 for fiscal 
                year 2006, $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, 
                $10,500,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $11,000,000 for 
                fiscal year 2009 shall be available to carry out 
                section 5313(a).
                    ``(D) Remainder.--The remainder of the funds 
                appropriated pursuant to this paragraph for a fiscal 
                year after the allocations under subparagraphs (A) and 
                (B) for such fiscal year shall be available to carry 
                out national research and technology programs under 
                sections 5312, 5314, and 5322.
    ``(e) University Transportation Research.--
            ``(1) Fiscal year 2004.--
                    ``(A) From trust fund.--There shall be available 
                from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund 
                to carry out sections 5505 and 5506, $6,400,000 for 
                fiscal year 2004.
                    ``(B) From general fund.--In addition to amounts 
                made available by subparagraph (A), there is authorized 
                to be appropriated to carry out sections 5505 and 5506, 
                $1,600,000 for fiscal year 2004.
            ``(2) Fiscal years 2005 through 2009.--Subject to paragraph 
        (3), there is authorized to be appropriated to carry out 
        sections 5505 and 5506, $8,000,000 for each of fiscal years 
        2005 through 2009.
            ``(3) Funding of university transportation centers.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Of the amounts made available by 
                and appropriated under paragraphs (1) and (2) 
                $2,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2004, 2005, and 
                2006 shall be available for the institution identified 
                in section 5505(j)(3)(E), as so in effect.
                    ``(B) Use of funds.--Funds made available for the 
                institution identified in subparagraph (A)(iii) shall 
                be used to make grants under 5506(f)(5) for that 
                institution
                    ``(C) Special rule.--Nothing in this subsection 
                shall be construed to limit the transportation research 
                conducted by the centers funded by this section.
    ``(f) Administration.--
            ``(1) Fiscal year 2004.--
                    ``(A) From trust fund.--There shall be available 
                from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund 
                to carry out section 5334, $60,044,000 for fiscal year 
                2004.
                    ``(B) From general fund.--In addition to amounts 
                made available under subparagraph (A), there are 
                authorized to be appropriated to carry out section 
                5334, $15,011,000 for fiscal year 2004.
            ``(2) Fiscal years 2005 through 2009.--There are authorized 
        to be appropriated to carry out section 5334--
                    ``(A) $78,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                    ``(B) $80,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                    ``(C) $82,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                    ``(D) $84,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                    ``(E) $86,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
    ``(g) Trust Fund Capital Program Grants.--There shall be available 
from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund to carry out 
sections 5309(m)(2)(B)(i) and 5309(m)(2)(B)(iii)--
            ``(1) $1,884,255,000 for fiscal year 2005;
            ``(2) $2,080,005,000 for fiscal year 2006;
            ``(3) $2,210,580,000 for fiscal year 2007;
            ``(4) $2,366,677,500 for fiscal year 2008; and
            ``(5) $2,518,882,500 for fiscal year 2009.
    ``(h) General Fund Capital Program Grants.--There are authorized to 
be appropriated to carry out sections 5309(m)(2)(A) and 
5309(m)(2)(B)(ii)--
            ``(1) $1,391,170,000 for fiscal year 2005;
            ``(2) $1,561,670,000 for fiscal year 2006;
            ``(3) $1,673,720,000 for fiscal year 2007;
            ``(4) $1,777,785,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
            ``(5) $1,904,255,000 for fiscal year 2009.
    ``(i) Grants as Contractual Obligations.--
            ``(1) Grants financed from highway trust fund.--A grant or 
        contract approved by the Secretary, that is financed with 
        amounts made available under subsection (a)(l)(A), (a)(2), 
        (b)(1), (c)(2), (d)(1)(A), (e)(1)(A), (f)(1)(A), or (g) is a 
        contractual obligation of the Government to pay the 
        Government's share of the cost of the project.
            ``(2) Grants financed from general fund.--A grant or 
        contract, approved by the Secretary, that is financed with 
        amounts made available under subsection (a)(l)(B), (b)(2), 
        (c)(1)(B), (d)(1)(B), (d)(2), (e)(1)(B), (e)(2), (f)(1)(B), 
        (f)(2), or (h) is a contractual obligation of the Government to 
        pay the Government's share of the cost of the project only to 
        the extent that amounts are provided in advance in an 
        appropriations Act.
    ``(j) Availability of Amounts.--Amounts made available by or 
appropriated under subsections (a) through (h) shall remain available 
until expended.''.

SEC. 3035. OVER-THE-ROAD BUS ACCESSIBILITY PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Section 3038 of the Transportation Equity Act for 
the 21st Century (49 U.S.C. 5310 note; 112 Stat. 392) is amended--
            (1) by striking the section heading and inserting the 
        following:

``SEC. 3038. OVER-THE-ROAD BUS ACCESSIBILITY PROGRAM.'';

            (2) by striking subsection (e) and inserting the following:
    ``(e) Federal Share of Costs.--The Federal share of costs under 
this section shall be provided from funds made available to carry out 
this section. The Federal share of the costs for a project shall not 
exceed 80 percent of the project cost.''; and
            (3) by striking subsection (g) and inserting the following:
    ``(g) Funding.--
            ``(1) Intercity, fixed route over-the-road bus service.--Of 
        the amounts made available to carry out this section in each 
        fiscal year, 75 percent shall be available for operators of 
        over-the-road buses used substantially or exclusively in 
        intercity, fixed-route over-the-road bus service to finance the 
        incremental capital and training costs of the Department of 
        Transportation's final rule regarding accessibility of over-
        the-road buses. Such amounts shall remain available until 
        expended.
            ``(2) Other over-the-road bus service.--Of the amounts made 
        available to carry out this section in each fiscal year, 25 
        percent shall be available for operators of other over-the-road 
        bus service to finance the incremental capital and training 
        costs of the Department of Transportation's final rule 
        regarding accessibility of over-the-road buses. Such amounts 
        shall remain available until expended.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--The table of contents contained in 
section 1(b) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 
Stat. 107) is amended by striking the item relating to section 3038 and 
inserting the following:

``3038. Over-the-road bus accessibility program.''.

SEC. 3036. UPDATED TERMINOLOGY.

    (a) Amendments to Chapter 53.--Chapter 53 is amended--
            (1) in the chapter heading by striking ``mass'' and 
        inserting ``public'';
            (2) in section 5310(h) by striking ``Mass'' and inserting 
        ``Public'';
            (3) in the subsection heading for section 5331(b) by 
        striking ``Mass'' and inserting ``Public''; and
            (4) by striking ``mass'' each place it appears in such 
        chapter before ``transportation'' and inserting ``public'', 
        except in sections 5301(f), 5302(a)(7), 5315, 5323(a)(1), and 
        5323(a)(1)(B).
    (b) Table of Chapters.--The table of chapters for subtitle III is 
amended in the item relating to chapter 53 by striking ``MASS'' and 
inserting ``PUBLIC''.

SEC. 3037. PROJECT AUTHORIZATIONS FOR NEW FIXED GUIDEWAY CAPITAL 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Existing Full Funding Grant Agreements.--The following projects 
are authorized for final design and construction for existing full 
funding grant agreements in not less than the amount specified for each 
fiscal year:
            (1) Baltimore--Central LRT Double Tracking $39,367,154 for 
        fiscal year 2004, $28,777,920 for fiscal year 2005, and 
        $12,655,664 for fiscal year 2006.
            (2) Chicago--Chicago Transit Authority Douglas Branch 
        Reconstruction $83,655,202 for fiscal year 2004, $84,320,000 
        for fiscal year 2005, and $45,825,190 for fiscal year 2006.
            (3) Chicago--Chicago Transit Authority Ravenswood Expansion 
        Project $9,841,789 for fiscal year 2004, $39,680,000 for fiscal 
        year 2005, $40,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $40,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2007, $40,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and 
        $65,152,615 for fiscal year 2009.
            (4) Cleveland--Euclid Corridor Transportation Project 
        $10,825,967 for fiscal year 2004, $24,800,000 for fiscal year 
        2005, and $24,974,513 for fiscal year 2006.
            (5) Dallas--North Central LRT Extension $29,684,097 for 
        fiscal year 2004.
            (6) Denver Southeast Corridor LRT $78,734,308 for fiscal 
        year 2004, $79,360,000 for fiscal year 2005, $80,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2006, $80,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, and 
        $77,192,758 for fiscal year 2008.
            (7) Fort Lauderdale--Tri-Rail Commuter Rail Upgrade 
        $18,118,733 for fiscal year 2004 and $11,318,230 for fiscal 
        year 2005.
            (8) Los Angeles--Metro Gold Line Eastside Extension 
        $59,520,000 for fiscal year 2005, $80,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2006, $100,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $80,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2008, and $80,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (9) Memphis--Medical Center Extension $9,101,281 for fiscal 
        year 2004.
            (10) Metra North Central Corridor Commuter Rail $19,177,300 
        for fiscal year 2004, $24,084,000 for fiscal year 2005, and 
        $18,476,237 for fiscal year 2006.
            (11) Metra South West Corridor Commuter Rail $15,000,000 
        for fiscal year 2004, $15,500,000 for fiscal year 2005, and 
        $11,781,395 for fiscal year 2006.
            (12) Metra Union Pacific West Line Extension $17,000,000 
        for fiscal year 2004, $12,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, and 
        $14,285,749 for fiscal year 2006.
            (13) Minneapolis--Hiawatha Corridor LRT $73,793,730 for 
        fiscal year 2004 and $33,428,865 for fiscal year 2005.
            (14) New Jersey Urban Core--Hudson-Bergen LRT MOS-2 
        $98,417,885 for fiscal year 2004, $99,200,000 for fiscal year 
        2005, $100,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $100,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2007, and $53,202,995 for fiscal year 2008.
            (15) New Jersey Urban Core--Newark-Elizabeth Rail Link MOS-
        1 $22,209,000 for fiscal year 2004, $316,907 for fiscal year 
        2005, and $1,025,169 for fiscal year 2006.
            (16) New Orleans MOS-1 Canal Street $22,922,877 for fiscal 
        year 2004 and $16,613,047 for fiscal year 2005.
            (17) Phoenix--Central Phoenix/East Valley LRT $12,794,325 
        for fiscal year 2004, $74,400,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
        $90,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $90,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2007, $90,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $90,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2009.
            (18) Pittsburgh--Stage II LRT Reconstruction $31,733,314 
        for fiscal year 2004 and $1,131,666 for fiscal year 2005.
            (19) Portland--Interstate MAX LRT Extension $76,273,861 for 
        fiscal year 2004, $23,292,160 fiscal year 2005, and $18,292,550 
        for fiscal year 2006.
            (20) Salt Lake City--Medical Center $30,178,231 for fiscal 
        year 2004 and $8,765,421 for fiscal year 2005.
            (21) San Diego--Mission Valley East LRT Extension 
        $63,971,625 for fiscal year 2004, $80,986,880 for fiscal year 
        2005, and $8,353,424 for fiscal year 2006.
            (22) San Diego--Oceanside Escondido Rail Corridor 
        $47,240,585 for fiscal year 2004, $54,560,000 fiscal year 2005, 
        and $12,651,061 for fiscal year 2006.
            (23) San Francisco--BART Extension to San Francisco Airport 
        $98,417,890 for fiscal year 2004, $99,200,000 fiscal year 2005, 
        and $82,655,680 for fiscal year 2006.
            (24) San Juan--Tren Urbano $19,683,577 for fiscal year 
        2004, $44,263,040 fiscal year 2005, and $10,555,900 for fiscal 
        year 2006.
            (25) Seattle--Central Link Initial Segment LRT $73,813,414 
        for fiscal year 2004, $79,360,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
        $80,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $80,000,000 for fiscal year 
        2007, $70,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $24,028,149 for 
        fiscal year 2009.
            (26) Washington DC/MD--Largo Metrorail Extension 
        $63,971,625 for fiscal year 2004 and $76,156,450 for fiscal 
        year 2005.
    (b) Final Design and Construction.--The following projects are 
authorized for final design and construction for fiscal years 2004 
through 2009 under paragraphs (1)(B), (2)(A), and (2)(B)(ii) of section 
5309(m) of title 49, United States Code:
            (1) Baltimore--MARC Commuter Rail Improvements.
            (2) Boston--Silver Line BRT Phase III.
            (3) Charlotte--South Corridor LRT.
            (4) Dallas Area Rapid Transit--Northwest-Southeast LRT 
        Extension.
            (5) Delaware--Wilmington-Newark Commuter Rail Improvements.
            (6) Denver--West Corridor LRT.
            (7) El Paso--Rapid Transit (SMART) Starter Line.
            (8) Harrisburg--Corridor One Commuter Rail (MOS-1).
            (9) Kansas City, Missouri--Southtown BRT.
            (10) Las Vegas--Resort Corridor Downtown Extension Project.
            (11) Los Angeles MTA--Exposition LRT.
            (12) Miami-Dade Transit--North Corridor.
            (13) Minneapolis--North Star Corridor.
            (14) Nashua--Commuter Rail.
            (15) Nashville, Tennessee Commuter Rail.
            (16) New Britain-Hartford Busway Project.
            (17) New Orleans--Desire Corridor Streetcar.
            (18) New York--Long Island Railroad East Side Access 
        Project.
            (19) New York--Second Avenue Subway.
            (20) Norfolk Light Rail.
            (21) Northern Virginia--Dulles Corridor Extension to Wiehle 
        Avenue (Phase 1).
            (22) Orange County, California--Rapid Transit Project.
            (23) Philadelphia--Schuylkill Valley MetroRail.
            (24) Pittsburgh--North Shore Connector.
            (25) Portland, Oregon--South Corridor I-205/Portland Mall 
        LRT.
            (26) Providence--South County Commuter Rail.
            (27) Sacramento--South Corridor LRT Extension (Phase 2), 
        Meadowview to Consumnes River College.
            (28) Salt Lake City--Weber County to Salt Lake City 
        Commuter Rail.
            (29) San Diego--Mid-Coast Extension.
            (30) San Francisco Muni--Third Street LRT-Phase I/II.
            (31) Santa Clara Valley Transit Authority--Silicon Valley 
        Rapid Transit Corridor.
            (32) Tampa Bay--Regional Rail.
            (33) Triangle Transit Authority, North Carolina--Regional 
        Rail Project.
            (34) Washington County, Oregon--Wilsonville to Beaverton 
        Commuter Rail.
            (35) Wasilla-Girdwood, Alaska--Commuter Rail.
    (c) Alternatives Analysis and Preliminary Engineering.--The 
following projects are authorized for alternatives analysis and 
preliminary engineering for fiscal years 2004 through 2009 under 
paragraphs (1)(B), (2)(A), and (2)(B)(ii) of section 5309(m) of title 
49, United States Code:
            (1) Alameda, California--Fixed Guideway Corridor Project.
            (2) Albuquerque--High Capacity Corridor.
            (3) Ann Arbor/Detroit--Commuter Rail.
            (4) Atlanta--MARTA Memorial Drive Bus Rapid Transit.
            (5) Atlanta--GRTA I-75 Corridor, Downtown Atlanta--Cherokee 
        County.
            (6) Atlanta--Georgia 400 North Line Corridor Project.
            (7) Atlanta--Belt Line C-Loop.
            (8) Atlanta--West Line I-20 Corridor Project.
            (9) Austin--San Antonio I-35 Commuter Rail.
            (10) Austin--Rapid Bus Project.
            (11) Austin--Urban Commuter Rail.
            (12) Baltimore Red Line Transit Project.
            (13) Baltimore--Green Line Transit Project.
            (14) Baton Rouge--Bus Rapid Transit.
            (15) Bernillo-Santa Fe--New Mexico Commuter Rail.
            (16) Birmingham, Alabama--Transit Corridor.
            (17) Boise--Downtown Circulator.
            (18) Boston--Lechmere Transit Improvement to Somerville and 
        Medford.
            (19) Boston--North Shore Corridor and Blue Line Extension.
            (20) Boston--North/South Rail Link.
            (21) Boston--Urban Ring BRT.
            (22) Bridgeport, Connecticut--Bridgeport Intermodal 
        Facility.
            (23) Broward County, Florida--Bus Rapid Transit.
            (24) Central Florida Commuter Rail System.
            (25) Central Phoenix--East Valley Corridor LRT Extensions.
            (26) Charlotte--North Corridor Project.
            (27) Charlotte--Northeast Corridor Project.
            (28) Charlotte--South Corridor LRT extension to Rock Hill, 
        South Carolina.
            (29) Charlotte--Southeast Corridor Project.
            (30) Charlotte--West Corridor Project.
            (31) Charlotte--Center City Streetcar Project.
            (32) Chicago--Cermack Road BRT.
            (33) Chicago CTA--Red Line Extension.
            (34) Chicago CTA--Chicago Transit Hub (Circle Line-Ogden 
        Streetcar).
            (35) Chicago CTA--Orange Line Extension (Midway Airport to 
        Ford City).
            (36) Chicago CTA--Southeast Service-La Salle Street Station 
        to Baltimore Race Track.
            (37) Chicago CTA--Yellow Line Extension (Dempster-Old 
        Orchard).
            (38) Chula Vista, California--Bus Rapid Transit.
            (39) Clark County, Washington--MAX Extension.
            (40) Cleveland-Akron-Canton (Northeast Ohio) Commuter Rail.
            (41) Columbia, South Carolina--Light Rail.
            (42) Contra-Costa--BART Extension.
            (43) Corpus Christi--Downtown Rail Trolley.
            (44) Dallas Area Rapid Transit--Dallas Central Business 
        District.
            (45) Dallas Area Rapid Transit--Rowlett LRT Extension.
            (46) Dallas Area Rapid Transit--Beltline to DFW Airport.
            (47) Dayton--Aviation Heritage Corridor Streetcar Project.
            (48) Denton County Transportation Authority, Texas--Fixed 
        Guideway Project.
            (49) Denver--Gold Line Extension to Arvada.
            (50) Denver--United States Route 36 Transit Corridor.
            (51) Denver--North Metro Corridor to Thornton.
            (52) Denver--East Corridor to DIA Airport.
            (53) Denver--I-225 Transit Corridor.
            (54) Denver--Southeast Corridor Extension to Lone-Tree/
        Ridgegate.
            (55) Denver--Southwest Corridor Extension to C470/Lucent 
        Boulevard.
            (56) Detroit--Center City Loop.
            (57) District of Columbia--Light Rail Starter Line.
            (58) Fitchburg, Massachusetts--Commuter Rail Extensions and 
        Improvements.
            (59) Florence-Myrtle Beach-Charleston, South Carolina--High 
        Speed Rail Corridor.
            (60) Fort Lauderdale--Downtown Rail Link.
            (61) Fort Lauderdale--Transit Project from NW 215th and 
        79th Streets.
            (62) Fort Worth--Cottonbelt Commuter Rail to DFW.
            (63) Fort Worth--Trinity Railway Express Commuter Rail 
        Extensions.
            (64) Galveston--Rail Trolley Extension.
            (65) Glendale, California--Downtown Streetcar.
            (66) Grand Rapids--Fixed Guideway Corridor Project.
            (67) Guam--Tumon Bay-Airport Light Rail.
            (68) Harrisburg, Pennsylvania--Corridor One MOS-2 (East 
        Mechanicsburg to Carlisle).
            (69) Henderson-Las Vegas-North Las Vegas--Regional Fixed 
        Guideway Project.
            (70) Honolulu--Rapid Transit Project.
            (71) Houston Advanced Transit Program Light Rail.
            (72) Indianapolis--System of Metropolitan Area Rapid 
        Transit.
            (73) Jacksonville--East-Southwest BRT.
            (74) Jacksonville--North-Southeast BRT.
            (75) Kansas City, Missouri-Lawrence, Kansas--Commuter Rail.
            (76) Kenosha-Racine-Milwaukee Metra Commuter Rail Extension 
        (Wisconsin).
            (77) Kenosha, Wisconsin Streetcar Expansion Project.
            (78) King County, Washington--I-405 Corridor Bus Rapid 
        Transit.
            (79) Lakeville, Minnesota--Cedar Avenue Corridor Bus Rapid 
        Transit.
            (80) Lane County, Oregon--Bus Rapid Transit, Phase 2.
            (81) Little Rock--River Rail Streetcar Extensions.
            (82) Little Rock--West Little Rock Commuter Rail.
            (83) Long Island Railroad--Nassau Hub.
            (84) Lorain-Cleveland Commuter Rail.
            (85) LOSSAN Del Mar-San Diego--Rail Corridor Improvements.
            (86) Lovejoy to Griffin, Georgia Commuter Rail.
            (87) Madison and Dane Counties, Wisconsin--Transport 2020 
        Commuter Rail.
            (88) Maryland--I-270 Corridor Cities Transitway.
            (89) Maryland--Route 5 Corridor to Waldorf.
            (90) Maryland--Silver Spring Capacity Improvements.
            (91) Memphis--Downtown Airport Corridor.
            (92) Memphis Regional Rail Plan.
            (93) Memphis, Medical Center Rail Extension to Airport.
            (94) Metra BNSF Naperville to Aurora Corridor Extension and 
        Improvements.
            (95) Metra South Suburban Airport Commuter Rail Extension.
            (96) Metra SouthEast Service Line Commuter Rail.
            (97) Metra STAR Line Inter-Suburban Commuter Rail.
            (98) Metra UP Northwest Line Core Capacity Upgrades.
            (99) Metra UP West Line Core Capacity Upgrades.
            (100) Metra-West Line Extension, Elgin to Rockford.
            (101) Miami-Dade Transit--Douglas Road Extension.
            (102) Miami-Dade Transit--East-West Corridor.
            (103) Miami-Dade Transit--Kendall Corridor.
            (104) Miami-Dade Transit--Northeast Corridor.
            (105) Miami-Dade Transit--South Dade Corridor.
            (106) Miami-Dade Transit--Miami Intermodal Center to 
        Earlington Heights.
            (107) Miami--Downtown Streetcar Project.
            (108) Middletown-South Fallsburg, New York, Passenger Rail.
            (109) Minneapolis-St. Paul--Central Corridor Transit 
        Project.
            (110) Minneapolis-St. Paul-Hinckley, Minnesota--Rush Line 
        Corridor.
            (111) Missouri/Kansas--Interstate 35 Transit Corridor.
            (112) Monterey County, California--Commuter Rail.
            (113) Montgomery and Prince George's Counties, Maryland--
        Bi-County Transitway (Purple Line).
            (114) Nashua-Manchester--Commuter Rail Extension.
            (115) Nashville--Area Transit Corridors.
            (116) Nashville--Southeast Rail Corridor.
            (117) Nashville Tennessee Commuter Rail.
            (118) Nassau and Queens Counties, New York--LIRR Main Line 
        Third Track Project.
            (119) New Bedford-Fall River, Massachusetts--Commuter Rail 
        Extension.
            (120) New Haven, Connecticut-Hartford, Connecticut-
        Springfield, Massachusetts Commuter Line.
            (121) New Jersey Trans-Hudson Midtown Corridor.
            (122) New Jersey Transit--Northeast Corridor Trans-Hudson 
        Commuter Rail Improvements.
            (123) New Jersey Transit--Morris/Essex/Boonton Trans-Hudson 
        Commuter Rail Improvements.
            (124) New Jersey Transit--New York Susquehanna and Western 
        RR Commuter Extension.
            (125) New Jersey Transit--West Trenton Line Commuter Line 
        Service Extension.
            (126) New Jersey Urban Core.
            (127) New Orleans--Airport-CBD Commuter Rail.
            (128) New York--Rockaway-Brooklyn Army Terminal-Manhattan 
        Ferry Service.
            (129) New York--Staten Island to Manhattan High-Speed Ferry 
        Service Extension.
            (130) New York--Stewart Airport Rail Access.
            (131) Newburg, New York--LRT System.
            (132) North Carolina Piedmont Authority Regional Rail--
        Greensboro to Winston-Salem.
            (133) Northern Indiana--Commuter District Line.
            (134) Northern Indiana--West Lake Commuter Rail Link (South 
        Shore Commuter Rail).
            (135) Norfolk--Naval Station Corridor.
            (136) Norfolk-Petersburg--United States Route 460 Commuter 
        Rail Project.
            (137) Northern Virginia--Crystal City Potomac Yards 
        Transit.
            (138) Northern Virginia--Columbia Pike Rapid Transit 
        Project.
            (139) Northern Virginia--Dulles Corridor Extension, Phase 
        2.
            (140) Northern Virginia--Richmond Highway (Route 1) Rapid 
        Transit Project.
            (141) Orlando-Orange County, Florida--Light Rail Project.
            (142) Philadelphia--Navy Yard Transit Extension.
            (143) Philadelphia--52nd Street City Connector Project.
            (144) Philadelphia--Route 100 Rapid Trolley Extension.
            (145) Philadelphia--Broad Street Subway Line Extension.
            (146) Pinellas Mobility Initiative Bus Rapid Transit.
            (147) Pittsburgh--Allegheny and Armstrong Counties, 
        Commuter Rail.
            (148) Pittsburgh--East-West Corridor Rapid Transit.
            (149) Pittsburgh--Martin Luther King, Jr. Busway Extension.
            (150) Portland Streetcar Extensions.
            (151) Provo-Orem Utah--Bus Rapid Transit.
            (152) Quakertown-Stoney Creek, Pennsylvania--Rail 
        Restoration.
            (153) Raritan Valley, New Jersey--Commuter Rail.
            (154) Reno, Nevada--Virginia Street Bus Rapid Transit 
        Project.
            (155) Riverside County, California--Perris Valley Line 
        Metrolink Extension.
            (156) Roaring Fork Valley, Colorado--Bus Rapid Transit.
            (157) Rock Island, Illinois--Quad Cities Rapid Transit 
        System.
            (158) Sacramento--Downtown Streetcar Project.
            (159) Sacramento--Regional Rail, Auburn to Oakland.
            (160) Sacramento--Downtown/Natomas Airport Transit 
        Corridor.
            (161) St. Paul-Hastings--Red Rock Corridor Commuter Rail 
        Project.
            (162) Salt Lake City--Airport to University LRT.
            (163) Salt Lake City--Delta Center to Gateway Intermodal 
        Center LRT Extension.
            (164) Salt Lake City--Draper to Sandy LRT Extension.
            (165) Salt Lake-Provo--Commuter Rail Extension.
            (166) Salt Lake City--TRAX Capacity Improvements.
            (167) Salt Lake City--West Valley City LRT Extension.
            (168) Salt Lake City--West Jordan LRT extension.
            (169) San Antonio--Bus Rapid Transit.
            (170) San Diego--San Diego Imperial County Mag-Lev Rail 
        Airport Corridor Project.
            (171) San Diego--Sprinter Rail Line Extension Project.
            (172) San Francisco--BART Extension to Livermore.
            (173) San Francisco--BART Extension to Oakland 
        International Airport.
            (174) San Francisco--MUNI Geary Boulevard Bus Rapid 
        Transit.
            (175) San Gabriel Valley--Gold Line Foothill Extension, 
        Pasadena to Montclair.
            (176) San Joaquin Regional Rail Commission Commuter Rail 
        (Altamont Commuter Express).
            (177) San Juan Tren Urbano--Extension from Rio Piedras to 
        Carolina.
            (178) San Juan--Tren Urbano Minillas Extension.
            (179) Santa Fe--El Dorado Rail Link.
            (180) Seattle--Monorail Project.
            (181) Seattle--Link LRT Extensions.
            (182) Seattle--Sound Transit Commuter Rail.
            (183) Seattle--Sound Transit Regional Express Bus.
            (184) Sevierville to Pigeon Ford, Tennessee--Bus Rapid 
        Transit.
            (185) Sonoma/Marin (SMART) Commuter Rail, California.
            (186) Southern California High Speed Regional Transit.
            (187) St. Louis Metro Link--Scott AFB to Mid America 
        Airport.
            (188) St. Louis--East/West Gateway.
            (189) St. Louis--Metro Link Northside Daniel Boone Project.
            (190) St. Louis--Metro South Corridor.
            (191) St. Louis--University Downtown Trolley.
            (192) Stamford, Connecticut--Boston Post Road Intermodal 
        Center and Capacity Expansion Project.
            (193) Stamford, Connecticut--Urban Transitway Phase II.
            (194) Tampa--Bus Rapid Transit Improvements.
            (195) Toledo, Ohio--CBD to Zoo.
            (196) Toledo, Ohio--University Corridor.
            (197) Trenton Trolley.
            (198) Tri-Rail Dolphin Extension.
            (199) Tri-Rail Florida East Coast Commuter Rail Extension.
            (200) Tri-Rail Jupiter Extension.
            (201) Tri-Rail Scripps Corridor Extension Project.
            (202) Tucson--Old Pueblo Trolley Expansion.
            (203) Vancouver--Interstate MAX Extension to Clark County, 
        Washington.
            (204) Virginia Beach--Bus Rapid Transit.
            (205) Virginia Railway Express Capacity Improvements.
            (206) Washington State Ferries and Ferry Facilities.
            (207) Washington State--Issaquah Valley Trolley Project.
            (208) Williamsburg-Newport News--Peninsula Rail Transit.
    (d) Rules Relating to Funding.--
            (1) Subsection (a) projects.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
                expend funds made available under section 5309(m) of 
                title 49, United States Code, for final design and 
                construction of projects authorized by subsection (a) 
                as existing full funding grant agreements.
                    (B) Minimum funding levels.--The Secretary shall 
                make available not less than the following amounts for 
                projects authorized by subsection (a): $1,065,927,770 
                for fiscal year 2004, $1,071,034,586 for fiscal year 
                2005, $731,532,532 for fiscal year 2006, $490,000,000 
                for fiscal year 2007, $410,395,753 for fiscal year 
                2008, and $259,180,764 for fiscal year 2009.
            (2) Subsection (b) projects.--
                    (A) In general.--Projects authorized by subsection 
                (b) for final design and construction are also 
                authorized for alternatives analysis and preliminary 
                engineering.
                    (B) Minimum funding levels.--The Secretary shall 
                make available not less than the following amounts for 
                projects authorized by subsection (b): $30,579,750 for 
                fiscal year 2004, $186,475,050 for fiscal year 2005, 
                $681,268,504 for fiscal year 2006, $1,024,856,176 for 
                fiscal year 2007, $1,199,242,825 for fiscal year 2008, 
                and $1,465,646,690 for fiscal year 2009.
                    (C) Priority.--In making funds available under 
                subparagraph (B), the Secretary shall first make such 
                funds available for any full funding grant agreement 
                executed by the Secretary in fiscal year 2005 after the 
                date of enactment of this Act and for any full funding 
                grant agreement executed by the Secretary in the amount 
                indicated in fiscal years 2005 through 2009 in the 
                amount indicated in the ``Schedule of Federal Funds for 
                the Project'' included in such agreement.
            (3) Subsection (c) projects.--
                    (A) In general.--Effective October 1, 2007, 
                projects authorized by subsection (c) for alternatives 
                analysis and preliminary engineering are also 
                authorized for final design and construction.
                    (B) Maximum funding levels.--The Secretary shall 
                make available not more than the following amounts for 
                projects authorized by subsection (c): $95,348,480 for 
                fiscal year 2004, $109,348,664 for fiscal year 2005, 
                $122,852,264 for fiscal year 2006, and $131,726,624 in 
                fiscal year 2007.
                    (C) Maximum funding levels for alternatives 
                analysis and preliminary engineering.--In fiscal years 
                2008 and 2009, the Secretary shall make available not 
                more than the following amounts for projects authorized 
                by subsection (b), and projects authorized by 
                subsection (c), to conduct alternatives analysis and 
                preliminary engineering activities: $139,968,572 in 
                fiscal year 2008 and $149,984,996 in fiscal year 2009.
    (e) New Jersey Urban Core Project.--Section 3031(d) of the 
Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (112 Stat. 
380; 105 Stat. 2122) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``associated components to and at the 
        contiguous New Jersey Meadowlands Sports Complex),'' and 
        inserting ``to and at the contiguous New Jersey Meadowlands 
        Sports Complex), including a connection to the Hudson River 
        Waterfront Transportation System, the Lackawanna Cutoff,''; and
            (2) by striking ``in Lakewood to Freehold to Matawan or 
        Jamesburg, New Jersey, as described in section 3035(p) of the 
        Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (105 
        Stat. 2131)'' and inserting ``from Lakehurst to the Northeast 
        Corridor or the New Jersey Coast Line''.
    (f) New Jersey Trans-Hudson Midtown Corridor.--Project elements of 
the New Jersey Trans-Hudson Midtown Corridor advanced with 100 percent 
non-Federal funds shall be given consideration by the Federal Transit 
Administration when evaluating the local share of the project in the 
new starts rating process, including the purchase of bilevel rail 
equipment.

SEC. 3038. PROJECTS FOR BUS AND BUS-RELATED FACILITIES.

    Of the amounts made available to carry out section 
5309(m)(2)(B)(iii) of title 49, United States Code, for each of fiscal 
years 2006 through 2008, the Secretary shall make funds available for 
the following projects in not less than the amounts specified for the 
fiscal year:

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            Projects                                   FY 06           FY 07           FY 08
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Glendale, CA Purchase of CNG Buses for Glendale Beeline              $147,840        $152,460        $161,700
 Transit System.................................................
2. Detroit Fare Collection System...............................      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
3. Flint, MI Construct Intermodal Hub at Bishop International           $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Airport........................................................
4. Des Plaines, Wauconda, Cook and Lake Counties, IL Rand Road          $256,000        $264,000        $280,000
 Transit Signal Priority........................................
5. Indianapolis, IN Downtown transit center.....................      $4,480,000      $4,620,000      $4,900,000
6. Los Angeles, CA, Construction of Intermodal Transit Center at        $252,800        $260,700        $276,500
 California State University Los Angeles........................
7. Columbus, OH--Central Ohio Transity Authority Paratransit          $1,920,000      $1,980,000      $2,100,000
 Facility.......................................................
8. Silver Spring, MD Construct Silver Spring Transit Center in        $1,168,000      $1,204,500      $1,277,500
 downtown Silver Spring.........................................
9. Detroit, MI Enclosed heavy-duty maintenance facility with          $1,440,000      $1,485,000      $1,575,000
 full operational functions for up to 300 buses.................
10. Bronx, NY Wildlife Conservation Society intermodal                  $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 transportation facility at the Bronx Zoo.......................
11. Development of Gold Country Stage Transit Transfer Center,          $297,702        $307,006        $325,612
 Nevada County, CA..............................................
12. Hoboken, NJ Rehabilitation of Hoboken Intermodal Terminal...        $576,000        $594,000        $630,000
13. Newark, NJ Penn Station Intermodal Improvements including           $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 the rehabilitation of boarding areas...........................
14. Orlando, Florida--LYNX Bus Fleet Expansion Program..........        $288,000        $297,000        $315,000
15. Fairfax County, VA Richmond Highway (U.S. Route 1) Public           $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Transportation Improvements....................................
16. Portland, OR Renovation of Union Station, including                  $32,000         $33,000         $35,000
 structural reinforcement and public safety upgrades............
17. Davis, CA Davis Multi-Modal Station to improve entrance to          $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Amtrak Depot and parking lot, provide additional parking and
 improve service................................................
18. Reno-Sparks, Nevada--Intermodal Transportation Terminals and      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 Related Development............................................
19. Bar Harbor, ME Purchase new buses to enhance commuting near          $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
 the Jackson Labs...............................................
20. Bronx, NY Establish an intermodal transportation facility at        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 the Wildlife Conservation Society Bronx Zoo....................
21. Hingham, MA Hingham Marine Intermodal Center Improvements:        $2,880,000      $2,970,000      $3,150,000
 Enhance public transportation infrastructure/parking...........
22. Philadelphia, PA Philadelphia Zoo Intermodal Transportation       $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 project w/parking consolidation, pedestrian walkways, public
 transportation complements & landscape improvements to surface
 parking lots...................................................
23. Construct intermodal transportation & parking facility, City        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 of Winter Park.................................................
24. Roma, TX Bus Facility.......................................        $168,000        $173,250        $183,750
25. New York City, NY First Phase Implementation of Bus Rapid           $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Transit System.................................................
26. Scottsdale, Arizona--Plan, design, and construct intermodal         $800,000        $825,000        $875,000
 center.........................................................
27. Sonoma County, CA Purchase of CNG buses.....................        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
28. Camden, NJ Construction of the Camden County Intermodal             $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Facility in Cramer Hill........................................
29. Sandy Hook, NJ National Park Service - Construct year-round         $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 ferry dock at Sandy Hook Unit of Gateway National Recreation
 Area...........................................................
30. Sevier County, Tennessee--U.S. 441. bus rapid transit.......         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
31. St. Augustine, Florida--Intermodal Transportation and               $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Parking Facility...............................................
32. Torrington, CT Construct bus-related facility (Northwestern         $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Connecticut Central Transit District)..........................
33. Warren, PA--Construct Intermodal Transportation Center and          $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 related pedestrian and landscape imporovements.................
34. Toledo, OH TARTA/TARPS Passenger Intermodal Facility              $2,400,000      $2,475,000      $2,625,000
 construction...................................................
35. Union City, CA Intermodal Station, Phase 1: Modify BART           $1,360,000      $1,402,500      $1,487,500
 station........................................................
36. Los Angeles, CA Wilshire-Vermont subway station                     $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 reconstruction.................................................
37. Lancaster, PA--bus replacement..............................        $304,000        $313,500        $332,500
38. Monmouth County, NJ Construction of main bus facility for           $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Freehold Township, including a terminal and repair shop........
39. Monrovia, California--Transit Village Project...............        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
40. Duluth, MN Downtown Duluth Area Transit facility                    $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 improvements...................................................
41. Brooklyn, NY New Urban Center--Broadway Junction Intermodal         $307,200        $316,800        $336,000
 Center.........................................................
42. Medford, MA Downtown revitalization featuring construction          $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 of a 200 space Park and Ride Facility..........................
43. Needles, California--El Garces Intermodal Facility..........        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
44. Bridgeport, Connecticut--Greater Bridgeport Transit                 $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 Authority Bus Facility.........................................
45. Palm Springs, California--Sunline Transit bus purchase......        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
46. National Park Service - Design and construct 2.1-mile               $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 segment to complete Sandy Hook multi-use pathway in Sandy Hook,
 NJ.............................................................
47. Phoenix, AZ Construct City of Phoenix paratransit facility          $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 (Dial-a-Ride)..................................................
48. Project provides for the engineering and construction of a          $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 transportation center in Paoli, Chester County.................
49. Columbus, Georgia--Buses & Bus Facilities...................        $310,080        $319,770        $339,150
50. Cleveland, Ohio--University Circle intermodal facility......      $2,720,000      $2,805,000      $2,975,000
51. Cleveland, OH acquisition of buses Greater Cleveland                $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Regional Transit Authority.....................................
52. Greensboro, North Carolina--Replacement buses...............      $1,849,600      $1,907,400      $2,023,000
53. Johnson Co., KS Bus and bus related facilities [I-35.               $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 corridor], Johnson Co. Transit.................................
54. City of Alameda, CA Plan, design, and construct intermodal          $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 facility.......................................................
55. New Orleans, LA Intermodal Riverfront Center................        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
56. Brooklyn, NY--Rehabilition of Bay Ridge 86th Street Subway        $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 Station........................................................
57. Wilmington, NC Build Intermodal Center......................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
58. Yabucoa, Puerto Rico--Trolley buses.........................         $56,000         $57,750         $61,250
59. Beverly, MA Design and Construct Beverly Depot Intermodal           $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Transportation Center..........................................
60. Georgia Statewide Bus Program...............................         $64,000         $66,000         $70,000
61. Trenton, New Jersey--Trenton Train Station Rehabilitation...        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
62. Trenton, NJ Reconstruction and rehabilitation of the Trenton      $2,240,000      $2,310,000      $2,450,000
 Train Station..................................................
63. Zapata, Texas Purchase Bus vehicles.........................         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
64. Zanesville, OH--bus system signage and shelters.............         $20,800         $21,450         $22,750
65. York, Pennsylvania--Rabbit Transit facilities and                   $886,560       $914,265.        $969,675
 communications equipment.......................................
66. Canby, OR bus and bus facilities............................         $48,000         $49,500         $52,500
67. New Orleans, LA Plan and construct New Orleans Union                $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Passenger Terminal intermodal facilities.......................
68. Northern Neck and Middle Peninsula, Virginia--Bay Transit         $1,040,000      $1,072,500      $1,137,500
 Multimodal Facilities..........................................
69. Broward County, FL Busses & Bus Facilities..................      $2,320,000      $2,392,500      $2,537,500
70. Palm Springs, California--Sunline Transit: CalStart-                $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Weststart fuel cell bus program................................
71. San Juan, Puerto Rico--Buses................................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
72. Hammond, Louisiana--Passenger Intermodal facility at                 $64,000         $66,000         $70,000
 Southeastern University........................................
73. West Virginia Construct Beckley Intermodal Gateway pursuant       $7,680,000      $7,920,000      $8,400,000
 to the eligibility provisions for projects listed under section
 3030(d)(3) of P.L. 105-178.....................................
74. Albany-Schenectady, NY Bus Rapid Transit Improvements in NY         $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Route 5. Corridor..............................................
75. Alameda County, CA AC Transit Bus Rapid Transit Corridor            $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 Project........................................................
76. Baldwin Park, CA Construct vehicle and bicycle parking lot          $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 and pedestrian rest area at transit center.....................
77. Niagara Falls, NY Relocation, Development, and Enhancement        $1,792,000      $1,848,000      $1,960,000
 of Niagara Falls International Railway Station/Intermodal
 Transportation Center..........................................
78. Utica, New York--Union Station Boehlert Center siding track          $32,000         $33,000         $35,000
 improvements...................................................
79. Ionia County, MI--Purchase and implementation of                    $188,800        $194,700        $206,500
 communication equipment improvements...........................
80. Flagler County, Florida--bus facility.......................        $192,000        $198,000        $210,000
81. Easton, Pennsylvania--Design and construct Intermodal               $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Transportation Center..........................................
82. Yamhill County, OR For the construction of bus shelters,             $35,200         $36,300         $38,500
 park and ride facilities, and a signage strategy to increase
 ridership......................................................
83. Woodland, CA Yolobus operations, maintenance, administration        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 facility expansion and improvements to increase bus service
 with alternative fuel buses....................................
84. Sacramento, CA Construct intermodal station and related           $2,240,000      $2,310,000      $2,450,000
 improvements...................................................
85. Torrance Transit System, CA Acquisition of EPA and CARB-            $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 certified low emission replacement buses.......................
86. Burlington County, NJ--BurLink and Burlington County              $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 Transportation System vehicles and equipment...................
87. Niles, OH Acquisition of bus operational and service                 $64,000         $66,000         $70,000
 equipment for Niles Trumbull Transit...........................
88. Rockport, MA Rockport Commuter Rail Station Improvements....        $880,000        $907,500        $962,500
89. Cincinnati, Ohio--Metro Regional Transit Hub Network Eastern        $296,000        $305,250        $323,750
 Neighborhoods..................................................
90. Buses and bus related facilities throughout the State of          $1,920,000      $1,980,000      $2,100,000
 Connecticut....................................................
91. Columbus, GA Bus replacement................................         $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
92. Norwalk, CA Transit System Bus Procurement and Los Angeles          $256,000        $264,000        $280,000
 World Airport Remote Fly-Away Facility Project.................
93. Salem, OR bus and bus facilities............................        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
94. Ilwaco, WA Procure shuttles for Lewis and Clark National             $32,000         $33,000         $35,000
 Historical Park................................................
95. Gainesville, FL Bus Replacement.............................      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
96. SEPTA Montgomery County Intermodal Improvements at Glenside       $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 and Jenkintown Station Parking Garages.........................
97. Fredericksburg, Virginia--Improve and repair Fredericksburg         $800,000        $825,000        $875,000
 Station........................................................
98. Birmingham, AL Expansion of Downtown Intermodal Facility,           $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Phase II.......................................................
99. Gresham, Oregon Construct a new light rail station and              $448,000        $462,000        $490,000
 transit plaza on Portland MAX system and serve Gresham Civic
 neighborhood...................................................
100. State of Wisconsin buses and bus facilities................      $5,120,000      $5,280,000      $5,600,000
101. Emeryville, CA Expand & Improve Intermodal Transit Center          $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 at Amtrak Station..............................................
102. Jersey City, NJ Construct West Entrance to Pavonia-Newport         $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 PATH Station...................................................
103. Longwood, Florida--Construct Intermodal Transportation             $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 Facility.......................................................
104. Marietta, Ohio Construction of transportation hub to               $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 accommodate regional bus traffic...............................
105. Akron, Ohio--West Market Street transit center and related         $208,000        $214,500        $227,500
 pedestrian improvements........................................
106. Sandy, Oregon Transit Bus Facility.........................        $224,000        $231,000        $245,000
107. Jacksonville, FL Paratransit Vehicles......................      $1,440,000      $1,485,000      $1,575,000
108. Carson, CA Purchase two tripper buses......................        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
109. Bloomington, IN--Bus and transfer facility.................      $1,539,200      $1,587,300      $1,683,500
110. Cobb County, GA Cobb County Smart Card Technology/ Bus             $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Facility Improvements..........................................
111. Construct West Houston and Fort Bend County, Texas--bus            $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 transit corridor...............................................
112. Mariposa, CA--Yosemite National Park CNG-Hydrogen transit          $800,000        $825,000        $875,000
 buses and facilities...........................................
113. Snohomish County, WA Community Transit bus purchases and           $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 facility enhancement...........................................
114. Geneva, Illinois--Construct commuter parking deck for Metra      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 Service........................................................
115. Rhode Island Statewide Bus Fleet...........................      $1,920,000      $1,980,000      $2,100,000
116. Pleasant Hill, CA Construct Diablo Valley College Bus              $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 Transit Center.................................................
117. Broward, FL Purchase new articulated buses and bus stop            $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 improvements on State Road 7. (SR 7) between Golden Glades
 Interchange and Glades Road....................................
118. Attleboro, MA Construction, engineering and site                   $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 improvements at the Attleboro Intermodal Center................
119. Burbank, CA CNG Transit Vehicles Purchase for Local Transit        $144,000        $148,500        $157,500
 Network Expansion..............................................
120. Dayton Airport Intermodal Rail Feasibility Study...........        $240,000        $247,500        $262,500
121. Los Angeles, CA Improve transit shelters, sidewalks                $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 lighting and landscaping around Cedar's-Sinai Medical Center...
122. Baltimore, MD Construct Intercity Bus Intermodal Terminal..      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
123. Cheltenham, PA Glenside Rail Station Parking Garage project        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 involving the construction of a 300-400 space parking lot at
 Easton Road and Glenside Avenue................................
124. Haverhill, MA Design and Construct Intermodal Transit            $1,792,000      $1,848,000      $1,960,000
 Parking Improvements...........................................
125. Palm Beach County, FL Plan and Construct Belle Glade             $1,120,000      $1,155,000      $1,225,000
 Combined Passenger Transit Facility............................
126. Pittsburgh, PA Clean Fuel Bus Procurement..................        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
127. San Fernando, CA Purchase CNG buses and related equipment          $972,800      $1,003,200      $1,064,000
 and construct facilities.......................................
128. Bayamon, Puerto Rico--bus terminal.........................        $192,000        $198,000        $210,000
129. Bozeman, Montana--Intermodal and Parking Facility..........      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
130. New Brunswick, NJ Construct parking facility at the Robert         $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Wood Johnson University Hospital and UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson
 Medical School.................................................
131. Stonington and Mystic, Connecticut--Intermodal Center            $1,100,800      $1,135,200      $1,204,000
 parking facility and Streetscape...............................
132. Carson, CA Purchase one bus................................         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
133. Miami-Dade County, Florida--Transit Security System........      $1,290,000        $825,000        $875,000
134. Town of Chapel Hill, NC Park and Ride Lot..................        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
135. Wheaton, IL Pace Suburban Bus--Purchase buses..............        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
136. Ocala and Marion County, Florida--replacement buses........        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
137. Philadelphia, PA Improvements to the existing Penn's             $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 Landing Ferry Terminal.........................................
138. Long Branch, NJ Design and construct facilities for ferry        $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 service from Long Branch, NJ to New York City and other
 destinations...................................................
139. Quincy, MA MBTA Purchase high speed catamaran ferry for            $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Quincy Harbor Express Service..................................
140. Los Angeles, CA Crenshaw Bus Rapid Transit.................      $2,728,960      $2,814,240      $2,984,800
141. South Bend, Indiana--Construct South Bend Bus Operations           $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Center.........................................................
142. Arlington County, VA Crystal City--Potomac Yard Busway,            $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 including construction of bus shelters.........................
143. Raleigh, NC Purchase eighteen replacement buses to replace         $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 buses that have reached their useful life according to Federal
 Transit Administration regulations.............................
144. Augusta, GA Buses and Bus Facilities.......................        $128,000        $132,000        $140,000
145. Santa Ana, CA Improve Santa Ana transit terminal...........        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
146. Cooperstown, New York--Intermodal Facility Project.........      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
147. Santa Barbara, CA--Expansion of Regional Intermodal Transit         $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
 Center.........................................................
148. Tampa, FL Purchase buses and construct bus facilities......        $720,000        $742,500        $787,500
149. Yonkers, NY Trolley Bus Acquisition........................         $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
150. Phoenix, AZ Construct regional heavy bus maintenance               $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 facility.......................................................
151. Thurston County, WA Replace Thurston County Buses..........        $288,000        $297,000        $315,000
152. San Juan, Puerto Rico--bus security equipment..............        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
153. Bryan, TX The District--Bryan Intermodel Transit Terminal          $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 and Parking Facility...........................................
154. City of Greenville, NC Expansion Buses and Greenville            $1,140,480      $1,176,120      $1,247,400
 Intermodal Center..............................................
155. City of Livermore, CA Construct Bus Facility for Livermore         $720,000        $742,500        $787,500
 Amador Valley Transit Authority................................
156. Detroit Replacement Buses..................................      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
157. Bealeton, Virginia--Intermodal Station Depot Refurbishment.         $88,000         $90,750         $96,250
158. Covina, El Monte, Baldwin Park, Upland, CA Parking and             $560,000        $577,500        $612,500
 Electronic Signage Improvements................................
159. Eugene, OR Lane Transit District, Vehicle Replacement......        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
160. Kearney, Nebraska--RYDE Transit Bus Maintenance and Storage        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Facility.......................................................
161. Revere, MA Intermodal transit improvements in the                  $576,000        $594,000        $630,000
 Wonderland station (MBTA) area.................................
162. Brownsville, TX Brownsville Urban System City-Wide Transit         $800,000        $825,000        $875,000
 Improvement Project............................................
163. Normal, Illinois--Multimodal Transportation Center,              $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 including facilities for adjacent public and nonprofit uses....
164. Puerto Rico--Caribbean National Forest buses and bus               $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 facilities.....................................................
165. Albany, OR Rehabilitate Building At Multimodal Transit             $409,600        $422,400        $448,000
 Station........................................................
166. Bronx, NY Hebrew Home for the Aged elderly and disabled             $48,000         $49,500         $52,500
 transportation support.........................................
167. Denver, CO Denver Union Station Intermodal Center..........      $1,760,000      $1,815,000      $1,925,000
168. Eugene, OR Lane Transit District, Bus Rapid Transit                $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 Progressive Corridor Enhancements..............................
169. Delaware--University of Delaware Fuel Cell Bus Deployment..        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
170. Lousiana--Construct pedestrian walkways between Caddo St.          $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 and Milam St. along Edwards St. in Shreveport, LA..............
171. Riverside, California--RTA Advanced Traveler Information           $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 System.........................................................
172. Santa Monica, CA Purchase and service LNG buses for Santa        $1,200,000      $1,237,500      $1,312,500
 Monica's Big Blue Bus to meet increased ridership needs and
 reduce emissions...............................................
173. Ontario, CA Construct Omnitrans Transcenter................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
174. Brockton, MA Bus replacement for the Brockton Area Transit         $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 Authority......................................................
175. Molalla, OR South Clackamas Transportation District, bus            $32,000         $33,000         $35,000
 purchase.......................................................
176. Boise, ID--Multi-modal facility............................      $1,440,000      $1,485,000      $1,575,000
177. Fond du Lac Reservation, MN Purchase busses................         $48,000         $49,500         $52,500
178. Sandy City, UT Construct transit hub station and TRAX              $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 station at 9400 South..........................................
179. Cleveland, OH Construct passenger intermodal center near           $275,200        $283,800        $301,000
 Dock 32........................................................
180. Tillamook, OR construction of a transit facility...........         $32,000         $33,000         $35,000
181. Trenton, NJ Development of Trenton Trolley System..........        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
182. Utica, New York--Union Station rehabilitation and related          $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 infrastructure improvements....................................
183. San Fernando Valley, CA Reseda Blvd. Bus Rapid Transit             $192,000        $198,000        $210,000
 Route..........................................................
184. Richmond, VA Renovation and construction for Main Street           $352,000        $363,000        $385,000
 Station........................................................
185. St. Paul to Hinckley, MN Construct bus amenities along Rush        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 Line Corridor..................................................
186. Mattoon, Illinois--historic railroad depot restoration/            $512,000        $528,000        $560,000
 intermodal center..............................................
187. Columbia County, OR To purchase buses......................         $44,800         $46,200         $49,000
188. Westchester County, NY Bee-Line Bus Replacement program....         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
189. Sacramento, CA Bus enhancement and improvements-construct          $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 maintenance facility and purchase clean-fuel buses to improve
 transit service................................................
190. Calexico, CA Purchase new buses for the Calexico Transit            $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
 System.........................................................
191. Monterey Park, CA Safety improvements at a bus stop                $512,000        $528,000        $560,000
 including creation of bus loading areas and street improvements
192. Buffalo, NY Intermodal Center Parking Facility.............        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
193. Mukilteo, WA Multi-Modal Terminal..........................      $1,856,000      $1,914,000      $2,030,000
194. Orange County Transit Authority, California--Security            $1,692,800      $1,745,700      $1,851,500
 surveillance and monitoring equipment..........................
195. Woodland Hills, CA Los Angeles Pierce College Bus Rapid            $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Transit Station Extension......................................
196. Design Downtown Carrollton Regional Multi-Modal Transit Hub        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Station........................................................
197. Brooklyn, NY Construct a multi-modal transportation                $448,000        $462,000        $490,000
 facility.......................................................
198. Cleveland, Ohio--Euclid Avenue University Hospital               $1,440,000      $1,485,000      $1,575,000
 intermodal facility............................................
199. Las Vegas, NV Construct Central City Intermodal                  $1,920,000      $1,980,000      $2,100,000
 Transportation Terminal........................................
200. Montebello, CA Bus Lines Bus Fleet Replacement Project.....        $224,000        $231,000        $245,000
201. Philadelphia, PA Cruise Terminal Transportation Ctr. Phila.      $1,120,000      $1,155,000      $1,225,000
 Naval Shipyard.................................................
202. Cleveland, OH Construct Fare Collection System Project,            $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 Cuyahoga County................................................
203. Tempe, Arizona--Construct East Valley Metro Bus Facility...      $2,080,000      $2,145,000      $2,275,000
204. Boysville of Michigan Transportation System................      $1,075,200      $1,108,800      $1,176,000
205. Woburn, MA Construction of an 89. space park and ride              $576,000        $594,000        $630,000
 facility to be located on Magazine Hill, in the Heart of Woburn
 Square.........................................................
206. Sylvester, GA Intermodal Facility..........................         $64,000         $66,000         $70,000
207. Culver City, CA Purchase compressed natural gas buses and        $1,184,000      $1,221,000      $1,295,000
 expand natural gas fueling facility............................
208. Eastern Upper Peninsula, MI Ferry Dock and Facility                 $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
 upgrades for Drummond Island Ferry Services....................
209. Morristown, New Jersey--Intermodal Historic Station........        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
210. San Antonio, TX Improve VIA bus facility and purchase new        $2,240,000      $2,310,000      $2,450,000
 buses..........................................................
211. Miami-Dade County, Florida--buses and bus facilities.......      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
212. Glendale, CA Construction of Downtown Streetcar Project....        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
213. Gainesville, FL Bus Rapid Transit Study....................        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
214. Mount Rainier, MD Intermodal and Pedestrian Project........        $144,000        $148,500        $157,500
215. Allentown, Pennsylvania--Da Vinci Center hydrogen fuel-            $512,000        $528,000        $560,000
 celled transit vehicles........................................
216. Wilsonville, OR South Metro Area Rapid Transit, bus and bus         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
 facilities.....................................................
217. Charlotte, NC Construct Charlotte Multimodal Station.......      $2,496,000      $2,574,000      $2,730,000
218. Enfield, Connecticut--intermodal station...................        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
219. Chicago, IL Feasibility Study for intermodal station on the         $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
 Metra Rock Island near Kennedy-King College....................
220. Indianapolis, IN IndySMART program to relieve congestion,          $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 improve safety and air quality.................................
221. Chicago, IL Construct intermodel facility at 35th Street at      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 Metra Red Line (Northside).....................................
222. Escondido, CA--Construct Bus Maintenance Facility..........        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
223. Los Angeles, CA Design and construct improved transit and          $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 pedestrian linkages between Los Angeles Community College and
 nearby MTA rail stop and bus lines.............................
224. Montgomery County, MD Wheaton CBD Intermodal Access Program        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
225. Allentown, Pennsylvania--Design and construct Intermodal           $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Transportation Center..........................................
226. Champaign, IL--Construct park and ride lot with attached           $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 daycare facility...............................................
227. Berkeley, CA Construct Ed Roberts Campus Intermodal Transit        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 Disability Center..............................................
228. Charlotte, North Carolina--Multimodal Station..............      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
229. Coconino County bus and bus facilities for the Sedona              $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Transit System.................................................
230. Construction of Third Bus Depot on Staten Island...........      $3,840,000      $3,960,000      $4,200,000
231. Harrison, Arkansas--Trolley Barn...........................         $12,800         $13,200         $14,000
232. Alexandria, VA Royal Street Bus Garage Replacement.........        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
233. Intermodal Facilities in Bucks County (Croydon and                 $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 Levittown Stations)............................................
234. Bronx, NY Jacobi Intermodal Center to North Central Bronx          $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 Hospital bus system............................................
235. Indianapolis, IN Construct the Ivy Tech State College Multi-     $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 Modal Facility.................................................
236. Juneau, Alaska--transit bus acquisition and transit center.        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
237. Knoxville, Tennessee--Central Station Transit Center.......      $3,264,000      $3,366,000      $3,570,000
238. Levy County, Florida--Purchase 2. wheel chair equipped              $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
 passenger buses and related equipment..........................
239. Lafayette, Louisiana--Lafayette Transit System bus                 $288,000        $297,000        $315,000
 replacement program............................................
240. Nebraska--statewide transit vehicles, facilities, and            $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 related equipment..............................................
241. Cincinnati, Ohio--Costruct Uptown Crossings Joint                  $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 Development Transit Project....................................
242. Des Moines, IA Purchase 40 foot buses......................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
243. New Orleans, LA Regional Planning Commission, bus and bus          $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 facilities.....................................................
244. Orange County, CA Purchase buses for rapid transit.........        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
245. Bus to provide Yorktown internal circulator to provide              $59,200         $61,050         $64,750
 transportaion throughout the Town..............................
246. Providence, RI Expansion of Elmwood Paratransit Maintenance      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 Facility.......................................................
247. Atlanta, GA Intermodal Passenger Facility Improvements.....        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
248. Palm Beach, FL Palm Tran AVL-APC system with smart card             $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
 fareboxes......................................................
249. Grand Rapids, MI--Purchase replacement and expansion buses.      $4,688,000      $4,834,500      $5,127,500
250. Maywood, IL Purchase buses.................................         $16,000         $16,500         $17,500
251. Redondo Beach, CA Capital Equipment procurement of 12.             $256,000        $264,000        $280,000
 Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) Transit vehicles for Coastal
 Shuttle Services by Beach Cities Transit.......................
252. Rochester, New York--Renaissance Square transit center.....      $1,440,000      $1,485,000      $1,575,000
253. San Bernardino, CA Implement Santa Fe Depot improvements in        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 San Bernardino.................................................
254. San Joaquin, California Regional Rail--Altamont Commuter         $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 Express Corridor intermodal centers............................
255. Albany, GA Multimodal Facility.............................        $256,000        $264,000        $280,000
256. Savannah, GA Bus and Bus Facilities--Chatham Area Transit..      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
257. Newburyport, MA Design and Construct Intermodal Facility...        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
258. Cleveland, Ohio--Euclid Avenue and East 93rd Street              $2,720,000      $2,805,000      $2,975,000
 intermodal facility............................................
259. St. Charles, IL--Intermodal Parking Structures.............      $1,440,000      $1,485,000      $1,575,000
260. Gardena, CA Purchase of alternative fuel buses for service       $1,569,280      $1,618,320      $1,716,400
 expansion, on-board security system and bus facility training
 equipment......................................................
261. Thendra-Webb and Utica, New York--Install hadicap lifts in          $32,000         $33,000         $35,000
 intermodal centers.............................................
262. Union City, NJ Construct Union City Intermodal Facility....        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
263. Wilmar, AR Develop the Southeast Arkansas Intermodal               $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Facility.......................................................
264. Westchester County, NY Bus replacement program.............      $1,200,000      $1,237,500      $1,312,500
265. Village of Tinley Park, Illinois, 80th Avenue Commuter Rail        $256,000        $264,000        $280,000
 Station reconstruction and site enhancements...................
266. Martinez, CA Intermodal Facility Restoration...............        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
267. Middletown, CT Construct intermodal center.................        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
268. Nashville, TN Construct a parking garage on the campus of          $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Lipscomb University, Nashville.................................
269. New London, Connecticut--Intermodal Transportation Center          $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 and Streetscapes...............................................
270. Vernon, Connecticut--Intermodal Center, Parking and              $2,112,000      $2,178,000      $2,310,000
 Streetscapes...................................................
271. Huntington, NY Replacement of three full sized transit             $192,000        $198,000        $210,000
 buses with hybrid electric buses...............................
272. Bend, Oregon--replacement vans.............................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
273. Boston, MA Harbor Park Pavilion & Intermodal Station.......        $400,000        $412,500        $437,500
274. Philadelphia, PA SEPTA's Market St. Elevated Rail project          $448,000        $462,000        $490,000
 in conjunction with Philadelphia Commercial Development
 Corporation for improvements and assistance to entities along
 rail corridor..................................................
275. Jesup, Georgia--Train Depot intermodal center..............        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
276. Long Beach, CA Museum of Latin American Art, Long Beach, to        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 build intermodal park and ride facility........................
277. Shreveport, LA--Intermodal Transit Facility................      $1,072,000      $1,105,500      $1,172,500
278. Arlington County, VA Columbia Pike Bus Improvements........      $1,120,000      $1,155,000      $1,225,000
279. Los Angeles, CA Purchase of clean fuel buses to improve bus        $273,920        $282,480        $299,600
 service in South Los Angeles...................................
280. Lowell, MA Implementation of LRTA bus replacement plan.....        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
281. Falls Church, VA Falls Church Intermodal Transportation            $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Center.........................................................
282. San Diego, CA Completion of San Diego Joint Transportation         $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Operations Center (JTOC).......................................
283. St. Bernard Parish, LA Intermodal facility improvements....        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
284. Cornwall, NY--Purchase Bus.................................         $27,840         $28,710         $30,450
285. Metro Gold Line Foothill Extension Light Rail Transit            $4,800,000      $4,950,000      $5,250,000
 Project from Pasadena, CA to Montclair, CA.....................
286. Richmond, CA BART Parking Structure........................      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
287. San Francisco, CA Implement ITS on Muni Transit System.....        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
288. Alameda County, CA AC Transit Bus Rapid Transit Corridor           $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Project........................................................
289. Town of Warwick, NY Bus Facility Warwick Transit System....        $176,000        $181,500        $192,500
290. Galveston, Texas--Intermodal center and parking facility,        $1,440,000      $1,485,000      $1,575,000
 The Strand.....................................................
291. Joliet, Illinois--Union Station commuter parking facility..        $920,000        $948,750      $1,006,250
292. Lake County, Ohio--Ohio Department of Transportation                $48,000         $49,500         $52,500
 transit improvements...........................................
293. Muskegon, Michigan--Muskegon Area Transit Terminal and             $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 related improvements...........................................
294. Orlando, FL Bus Replacement................................      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
295. Long Beach, CA Purchase one larger (75. passengers) and two        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 smaller (40 passengers) ferryboats and construct related dock
 work to facilitate the use and accessibility of the ferryboats.
296. Elgin to Rockford, Illinois--Intermodal stations along             $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 planned Metra Union Pacific West Line extension alignment,
 including necessary alternatives analysis......................
297. Pilot Shuttle Train Project from the Ports of Los Angeles        $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 and Long Beach to the Inland Empire............................
298. Thomasville, GA Bus Replacement............................         $64,000         $66,000         $70,000
299. Corvallis, OR Bus Replacement..............................        $396,800        $409,200        $434,000
300. Geneva, New York--Multimodal facility--Construct passenger         $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 rail center....................................................
301. Barry County, MI--Barry County Transit equipment and                $48,000         $49,500         $52,500
 dispatching software...........................................
302. Greensboro, North Carolina--Piedmont Authority for Regional      $4,006,400      $4,131,600      $4,382,000
 Transportation Multimodal Transportation Center................
303. Howard County, MD Construct Central Maryland Transit             $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 Operations and Maintenance Facility............................
304. Coconino county buses and bus facilities for Flagstaff, AZ.        $800,000        $825,000        $875,000
305. Roanoke, Virginia-- Intermodal Facility....................         $64,000         $66,000         $70,000
306. Jacksonville, FL Bus Replacement...........................      $2,240,000      $2,310,000      $2,450,000
307. Los Angeles, CA Improve safety, mobility and access between        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 LATTC, Metro line and nearby bus stops on Grand Ave between
 Washington and 23rd............................................
308. Miami Dade, FL N.W. 7th Avenue Transit Hub.................        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
309. Elyria, OH Construct the New York Central Train Station            $655,360        $675,840        $716,800
 into an intermodal transportation hub..........................
310. River Parishes, LA South Central Planning and Development          $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Commission, bus and bus facilities.............................
311. Mammoth Lakes, California--Regional Transit Maintenance            $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 Facility.......................................................
312. Roanoke, Virginia--Improve Virginian Railway Station.......         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
313. Solana Beach, CA--Construct Intermodal Facility............        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
314. San Diego, CA Widen sidewalks and bus stop entrance, and            $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
 provide diagonal parking, in the Skyline Paradise Hills
 neighborhood (Reo Drive).......................................
315. Temecula, California--Intermodal Transit Facility..........        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
316. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania--SEPTA Market Street Elevated         $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 Line parking facility..........................................
317. Jamestown, NY Rehabilitation of Intermodal Facility and            $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 associated property............................................
318. Akron, Ohio Construct Downtown Multi-modal Transportation        $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 Center.........................................................
319. Detroit Bus Maintenance Facility...........................      $2,880,000      $2,970,000      $3,150,000
320. Detroit, MI Bus Replacement................................      $2,400,000      $2,475,000      $2,625,000
321. Monterey Park, CA Catch Basins at Transit Stop Installation        $102,400        $105,600        $112,000
322. Oneonta, New York-bus replacement..........................         $48,000         $49,500         $52,500
323. Lincoln County, OR bus purchase............................         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
324. Elon, North Carolina--Piedmont Authority for Regional              $384,000        $396,000        $420,000
 Transportation buses and bus facilities........................
325. Grants Pass, OR Purchase Vehicles For Use By Josephine              $54,720         $56,430         $59,850
 Community Transit..............................................
326. Los Angeles, CA Install permanent irrigation system and            $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 enhanced landscaping on San Fernando Valley rapid bus
 transitway.....................................................
327. Cleveland, OH Construct East Side Transit Center...........        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
328. New Jersey Transit Community Shuttle Buses.................        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
329. Quitman, Clay, Randolph, Stewart Co., GA Bus project.......         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
330. Framingham, MA Local Intra-Framingham Transit System               $576,000        $594,000        $630,000
 enhancements...................................................
331. Gettysburg, Pennsylvania--transit transfer center..........        $287,680        $296,670        $314,650
332. Long Beach, CA Park and Ride facility......................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
333. Oak Harbor, WA Multimodal Facility.........................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
334. North Bend, Washington--Park and Ride......................        $256,000        $264,000        $280,000
335. High Point, North Carolina--Bus Terminal...................      $1,920,000      $1,980,000      $2,100,000
336. Dallas, TX Bus Passenger Facilities........................      $4,096,000      $4,224,000      $4,480,000
337. Island Transit, WA Operations Base Facilities Project......        $768,000        $792,000        $840,000
338. Bronx, NY Intermodal facility near Exit 6. of the Bronx             $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
 River Parkway..................................................
339. East San Diego County, California--Bus Maintence Facility          $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Expansion......................................................
340. New Jersey Intermodal Facilities and Bus Rolling Stock.....        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
341. San Gabriel Valley, CA--Foothill Transit Park and Rides....      $3,040,000      $3,135,000      $3,325,000
342. St. Paul, MN Union Depot Multi Modal Transit Facility......        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
343. Kings County, NY Construct a multi-modal transportation            $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 facility.......................................................
344. Gainesville, FL Bus Facility Expansion.....................      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
345. Kansas City, MO Bus Transit Infrastructure.................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
346. Phoenix, AZ Construct metro bus facility in Phoenix?s West       $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 Valley.........................................................
347. Eastlake, Ohio--Eastlake Stadium transit intermodal              $1,360,000      $1,402,500      $1,487,500
 facility.......................................................
348. Savannah, Georgia--Water Ferry Riverwalk intermodal                $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 facilities.....................................................
349. Kent, OH Construct Kent State University Intermodal                $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Facility serving students and the general public...............
350. Milwaukee, WI Rehabilitate Intermodal transportation             $1,440,000      $1,485,000      $1,575,000
 facility at downtown Milwaukee's Amtrak Station, increase
 parking for bus passengers.....................................
351. Charlotte North Carolina--Eastland Community Transit Center        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
352. Oakland, CA Construct streetscape & intermodal improvements        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 at BART Station Transit Villages...............................
353. Suffolk County, NY Purchase four handicapped accessible             $89,600         $92,400         $98,000
 vans to transport veterans to and from the VA facility in
 Northport......................................................
354. Norfolk, Virginia--Final Design and Construction Southside         $560,000        $577,500        $612,500
 Bus Facility...................................................
355. Albany, GA Bus replacement.................................         $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
356. Lafayette Multimodal center, Final Phase...................        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
357. Athens, GA Buses and Bus Facilities........................        $454,400        $468,600        $497,000
358. Cicero, Chicago Establish Transit Signal Priority, Cicero          $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Ave., Pace Suburban Bus........................................
359. Arlington County, VA Pentagon City Multimodal Improvements.        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
360. Richmond, VA Design and construction for a bus operations          $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 and maintenance facility for Greater Richmond Transit Company..
361. Roanoke, Virginia--Roanoke Railway and Link Passenger              $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 facility.......................................................
362. Akron, OH Construct City of Akron Commuter Bus Transit             $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 Facility.......................................................
363. Corning, New York--Transportation Center...................      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
364. Santa Monica, CA Construct intermodal park-and-ride                $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 facility at Santa Monica College campus on South Bundy Drive
 near Airport Avenue............................................
365. Pace Suburban Bus, IL South Suburban BRT Mobility Network..        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
366. Orange County, CA Transportation Projects to Encourage Use         $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 of Transit to Reduce Congestion................................
367. Palm Beach, FL 20 New Buses for Palm Tran..................        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
368. Nassau County, NY Conduct planning and engineering for           $2,240,000      $2,310,000      $2,450,000
 transportation system (HUB)....................................
369. Norwalk, Connecticut--Pulse Point Joint Development                $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 intermodal facility............................................
370. Salem, MA Design and Construct Salem Intermodal                    $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Transportation Center..........................................
371. Las Vegas, NV Construct Las Vegas WestCare Intermodal               $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
 Facility.......................................................
372. Richmond, KY Purchase buses, bus equipment, and facilities.        $230,400        $237,600        $252,000
373. Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority, NY Replacement          $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Buses..........................................................
374. Metro-Atlanta, GA MARTA Automated Smart-Card Fare                  $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Collection system..............................................
375. Monterey, CA Purchase bus equipment........................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
376. New York City, NY Purchase Handicapped-Accessible Livery           $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 Vehicles.......................................................
377. San Francisco, CA Construct San Francisco Muni Islais Creek      $1,920,000      $1,980,000      $2,100,000
 Maintenance Facility...........................................
378. Indianapolis, IN Relocate and improve intermodal                 $4,480,000      $4,620,000      $4,900,000
 transportation for pedestrian to Children's Museum of
 Indianapolis...................................................
379. Ramapo, NY Transportation Safety Field Bus.................         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
380. Columbiana County, OH Construct Intermodal Facility........      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
381. San Francisco, CA Redesign and renovate intermodal facility      $1,056,000      $1,089,000      $1,155,000
 at Glen Park Community.........................................
382. San Luis Rey, California--Transit Center Project...........        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
383. South San Francisco,CA Construction of Ferry Terminal at         $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 Oyster Point in South San Francisco to the San Francisco Bay
 Area Water Transit Authority...................................
384. Atlanta, GA MARTA Clean Fuel Bus Acquisition...............      $1,920,000      $1,980,000      $2,100,000
385. Norristown, PA-Construct a 400 space parking structure at          $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 the northwest corner of Main and Cherry Streets................
386. Suffolk County, NY Design and construction of intermodal         $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 transit facility in Wyandanch..................................
387. Fresno, CA--Develop program of low-emission transit                $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 vehicles.......................................................
388. Sylmar, CA Los Angeles Mission College Transit Center               $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
 construction...................................................
389. Lakewood, NJ--Ocean County Bus service and parking                 $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 facilities.....................................................
390. St. Lucie County, FL Purchase Buses........................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
391. Hampton Roads, VA Final design and construction for a              $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Hampton Roads Transit Southside Bus Facility...................
392. Oakland, CA Construct Bay Trail between Coliseum BART              $288,000        $297,000        $315,000
 station and Martin Luther King, Jr. Regional Shoreline.........
393. South Amboy, NJ Construction of improvements to facilities       $2,560,000      $2,640,000      $2,800,000
 at South Amboy Station under S Amboy, NJ Regional Intermodal
 Initiative.....................................................
394. Hartford, CT Buses and bus-related facilities..............      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
395. Ilwaco, WA Construct park and ride.........................         $32,000         $33,000         $35,000
396. Burbank, CA Construction of Empire Area Transit Center near         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
 Burbank Airport................................................
397. Pottsville, PA Union Street Trade and Transfer Center              $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Intermodal Facility............................................
398. Amador County, California--Regional Transit Center.........        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
399. Pasadena, CA ITS Improvements..............................        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
400. South FL Region, FL Regional Universal Automated Fare              $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Collection System (UAFC) (for bus system)......................
401. South Pasadena, CA Silent Night Grade Crossing Project.....        $288,000        $297,000        $315,000
402. Tampa, FL Establish Transit Emphasis Corridor and                  $240,000        $247,500        $262,500
 Improvements...................................................
403. San Francisco, CA Implement Transbay Terminal-Caltrain           $4,480,000      $4,620,000      $4,900,000
 Downtown Extension Project.....................................
404. Rock Island, IL Improve Rock Island Mass Transit District          $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
 Bus Facility...................................................
405. Las Vegas, NV Construct Boulder Highway BRT system and             $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 purchase vehicles and related equipment........................
406. Moultrie, GA Intermodal facility...........................         $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
407. Carson, CA Purchase one trolley-bus vehicle................         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
408. Brooklyn, NY Construct a multi-modal transportation                $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 facility in the vicinity of Downstate Medical Center...........
409. Alexandria, VA Eisenhower Avenue Intermodal Station                $800,000        $825,000        $875,000
 Improvements, including purchase of buses and construction of
 bus shelters...................................................
410. Long Beach, CA Purchase ten clean fuel busses..............        $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
411. Cleveland, OH Construction of an intermodal facility and           $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
 related improvements at University Hospitals facility on Euclid
 Avenue.........................................................
412. Nashville, TN Construct Downtown Nashville Transit Transfer        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 Facility.......................................................
413. Philadelphia, PA Penn's Landing water shuttle parking lot          $352,000        $363,000        $385,000
 expansion and water shuttle ramp infrastructure construction...
414. Hercules, CA Intermodal Rail Station Improvements..........        $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
415. Purchase Buses and construct bus facilities in Broward             $480,000        $495,000        $525,000
 County, FL.....................................................
416. Improve marine intermodal facilities in Ketchikan..........      $8,000,000      $8,250,000      $8,750,000
417. Indianapolis, Indiana--Childrens Museum Intermodal Center..        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
418. Windham, New Hampshire--Construction of Park and Ride Bus        $1,184,000      $1,221,000      $1,295,000
 facility at Exit 3.............................................
419. Brooklyn, NY--Rehabilition of Bay Ridge 86th Street Subway       $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
 Station........................................................
420. Purchase Buses and construct bus facilities in Broward             $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 County, FL.....................................................
421. Bayamon, Puerto Rico--Purchase of Trolley Cars.............        $272,000        $280,500        $297,500
422. C Street Expanded bus facility and intermodal parking            $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
 garage, Anchorage, AK..........................................
423. Morris Thompson Cultural and Visitors Center intermodal            $800,000        $825,000        $875,000
 parking facility, Fairbanks, AK................................
424. Sharon, PA--Bus Facility Construction......................        $160,000        $165,000        $175,000
425. CITC Non-profit Services Center intermodal parking                 $960,000        $990,000      $1,050,000
 facility, Anchorage, AK........................................
426. Abilene, TX Vehicle replacement and facility improvements          $128,000        $132,000        $140,000
 for transit system.............................................
427. Alaska Native Medical Center intermodal parking facility...      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
428. Butler, PA--Multimodal Transit Center Construction.........        $320,000        $330,000        $350,000
429. Normal, Illinois--Multimodal Transportation Center.........        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
430. Rochester, New York--Renaissance Square transit center.....        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
431. Erie, PA--EMTA Vehicle Acquisition.........................        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
432. Miami-Dade County, Florida--Buses and bus facilities.......      $1,280,000      $1,320,000      $1,400,000
433. Centralia, Illinois--South Central Mass Transit District           $128,000        $132,000        $140,000
 Improvements...................................................
434. Roanoke, VA--Bus restoration in the City of Roanoke........         $80,000         $82,500         $87,500
435. Denver, Colorado--Regional Transportation District Bus             $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
 Replacement....................................................
436. Intermodal facility improvements at the Port of Anchorage..      $8,000,000      $8,250,000      $8,750,000
437. American Village/Montevallo construction of closed loop             $96,000         $99,000        $105,000
 Access Road, bus lanes and parking facility....................
438. Corpus Christi, TX Corpus Regional Transit Authority for           $800,000        $825,000        $875,000
 maintenance facility improvements..............................
439. Central Florida Commuter Rail intermodal facilities........      $1,600,000      $1,650,000      $1,750,000
440. Ames, Iowa--Expansion of CyRide Bus Maintenance Facility...        $640,000        $660,000        $700,000
441. St. Paul, MN Intermodal Center.............................      $1,440,000      $1,485,000      $1,575,000
442. Albany, OR North Albany park and ride......................        $256,000        $264,000        $280,000
443. Portland, OR Tri Met bus replacement.......................        $384,000        $396,000        $420,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 3039. NATIONAL FUEL CELL BUS TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a national fuel 
cell bus technology development program (in this section referred to as 
the ``program'') to facilitate the development of commercially viable 
fuel cell bus technology and related infrastructure.
    (b) General Authority.--The Secretary may enter into grants, 
contracts, and cooperative agreements with no more than 3 
geographically diverse nonprofit organizations and recipients under 
chapter 53 of title 49, United States Code, to conduct fuel cell bus 
technology and infrastructure projects under the program.
    (c) Grant Criteria.--In selecting applicants for grants under the 
program, the Secretary shall consider the applicant's--
            (1) ability to contribute significantly to furthering fuel 
        cell technology as it relates to transit bus operations, 
        including hydrogen production, energy storage, fuel cell 
        technologies, vehicle systems integration, and power 
        electronics technologies;
            (2) financing plan and cost share potential;
            (3) fuel cell technology to ensure that the program 
        advances different fuel cell technologies, including hydrogen-
        fueled and methanol-powered liquid-fueled fuel cell 
        technologies, that may be viable for public transportation 
        systems; and
            (4) other criteria that the Secretary determines are 
        necessary to carry out the program.
    (d) Competitive Grant Selection.--The Secretary shall conduct a 
national solicitation for applications for grants under the program. 
Grant recipients shall be selected on a competitive basis. The 
Secretary shall give priority consideration to applicants that have 
successfully managed advanced transportation technology projects, 
including projects related to hydrogen and fuel cell public 
transportation operations for a period of not less than 10 years.
    (e) Federal Share.--The Federal share of costs of the program shall 
be provided from funds made available to carry out this section. The 
Federal share of the cost of a project carried out under the program 
shall not exceed 50 percent of such cost.
    (f) Grant Requirements.--A grant under this section shall be 
subject to--
            (1) all terms and conditions applicable to a grant made 
        under section 5309 of title 49, United States Code; and
            (2) such other terms and conditions as are determined by 
        the Secretary.

SEC. 3040. HIGH-INTENSITY SMALL-URBANIZED AREA FORMULA GRANT PROGRAM.

    (a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Eligible area.--The term ``eligible area'' means an 
        urbanized area with a population of less than 200,000 that 
        meets or exceeds in one or more performance categories the 
        industry average for all urbanized areas with a population of 
        at least 200,000 but not more than 999,999, as determined by 
        the Secretary in accordance with subsection (c)(2).
            (2) Performance category.--The term ``performance 
        category'' means each of the following:
                    (A) Passenger miles traveled per vehicle revenue 
                mile.
                    (B) Passenger miles traveled per vehicle revenue 
                hour.
                    (C) Vehicle revenue miles per capita.
                    (D) Vehicle revenue hours per capita.
                    (E) Passenger miles traveled per capita.
                    (F) Passengers per capita.
    (b) General Authority.--In order to address the needs of small 
urbanized areas with unusually high levels of public transportation 
service, the Secretary shall make capital and operating grants under 
this section to eligible recipients described in subsection (d) for use 
in eligible areas.
    (c) Apportionment.--
            (1) Apportionment formula.--Funds made available for grants 
        under this section in a fiscal year shall be apportioned among 
        eligible areas in the ratio that--
                    (A) the number of performance categories for which 
                each eligible area meets or exceeds the industry 
                average in urbanized areas with a population of at 
                least 200,000 but not more than 999,999; bears to
                    (B) the aggregate number of performance categories 
                for which all eligible areas meet or exceed the 
                industry average in urbanized areas with a population 
                of at least 200,000 but not more than 999,999.
            (2) Data used in formula.--The Secretary shall calculate 
        apportionments under this subsection for a fiscal year using 
        data from the national transit database used to calculate 
        apportionments for that fiscal year under section 5336 of title 
        49, United States Code.
    (d) Eligible Recipient.--Grant amounts apportioned to an eligible 
area under this section shall be made available to a public 
transportation agency or other governmental entity in the eligible area 
for obligation in the eligible area.
    (e) Government's Share of Costs.--
            (1) Capital grants.--A grant for a capital project under 
        this section (including associated capital maintenance items) 
        shall be for 80 percent of the net capital costs of the 
        project, as determined by the Secretary. The recipient may 
        provide additional local matching amounts for such projects.
            (2) Operating grants.--A grant under this section for 
        operating assistance may not exceed 50 percent of the net 
        operating costs of the project, as determined by the Secretary.
            (3) Remainder.--The remainder of the net project costs may 
        be provided from an undistributed cash surplus, a replacement 
        or depreciation cash fund or reserve, or new capital.
    (f) Period of Availability.--Funds apportioned under this section 
to an eligible area shall remain available for obligation in that 
eligible area for a period of 3 years after the last day of the fiscal 
year for which the funds are apportioned. Any amounts so apportioned 
that remain unobligated at the end of that period shall be added to the 
amount that may be apportioned under this section in the next fiscal 
year.
    (g) Application of Other Sections.--Sections 5302, 5318, 5323, 
5332, 5333, and 5336(e) of title 49, United States Code, apply to this 
section and to a grant made under this section.
    (h) Funding.--Of the amounts made available to carry out section 
5307 of title 49, United States Code, $38,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, 
$41,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $44,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, 
$47,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $50,000,000 for fiscal year 2009 
shall be available to carry out this section.
    (i) Technical Amendments.--Section 5336 is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking ``of this title'' and inserting 
                ``to carry out section 5307''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2) by inserting before the period 
                at the end the following: ``, except that the amount 
                apportioned to the Anchorage urbanized area under 
                subsection (b) shall be available to the Alaska 
                Railroad for any costs related to its passenger 
                operations'';
            (2) in subsection (b)(1) by inserting ``and the Alaska 
        Railroad passenger operations'' after ``recipient'';
            (3) in subsection (j) by striking ``a grant made under'' 
        each place it appears and inserting ``a grant made with funds 
        apportioned under''; and
            (4) in subsection (k)(1) by striking ``section 5302(a)(13) 
        of this title'' and inserting ``section 5302(a)''.

SEC. 3041. ALLOCATIONS FOR NATIONAL RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY PROGRAMS.

    (a) In General.--Amounts appropriated pursuant to section 5338(d) 
of title 49, United States Code, for national research and technology 
programs under sections 5312, 5314, and 5322 of such title shall be 
allocated by the Secretary as follows:
            (1) Safety and emergency preparedness.--
                    (A) In general.--For carrying out safety and 
                emergency preparedness research activities consisting 
                of technical assistance, training, and data analysis 
                and reporting to improve public transportation system 
                safety and security and emergency preparedness--
                            (i) $7,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                            (ii) $7,400,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                            (iii) $7,800,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                            (iv) $8,200,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                            (v) $8,700,000 for fiscal year 2009.
                    (B) Public transportation national security 
                study.--
                            (i) In general.--Not later than 6 months 
                        after the date of enactment of this Act, the 
                        Secretary shall enter into an agreement with 
                        the National Academy of Sciences to conduct a 
                        study and evaluation of the value major public 
                        transportation systems in the United States 
                        serving the 38 urbanized areas that have a 
                        population of more than 1,000,000 individuals 
                        provide to the Nation's security and the 
                        ability of such systems to accommodate the 
                        evacuation, egress or ingress of people to or 
                        from critical locations in times of emergency.
                            (ii) Alternative routes.--For each system 
                        described in clause (i) the study shall 
                        identify--
                                    (I) potential alternative routes 
                                for evacuation using other 
                                transportation modes such as highway, 
                                air, marine, and pedestrian activities; 
                                and
                                    (II) transit routes that, if 
                                disrupted, do not have sufficient 
                                transit alternatives available.
                            (iii) Report.--Not later than 24 months 
                        after the date of entry into the agreement, the 
                        Academy shall submit to the Secretary and the 
                        Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure 
                        of the House of Representatives and the 
                        Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs 
                        of the Senate a final report on the results of 
                        the study and evaluation, together with such 
                        recommendations as the Academy considers 
                        appropriate.
                            (iv) Funding.--Of the amounts made 
                        available under section 5338(d) of title 49, 
                        United States Code, $250,000 shall be available 
                        for each of fiscal years 2005 and 2006 to carry 
                        out this subparagraph.
            (2) Equipment and infrastructure.--For carrying out 
        equipment and infrastructure research activities on public 
        transportation and infrastructure technologies and methods and 
        voluntary industry standards development--
                    (A) $5,700,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                    (B) $6,200,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                    (C) $6,550,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                    (D) $6,900,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                    (E) $7,200,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (3) Public transportation operations efficiency.--For 
        carrying out public transportation operations efficiency 
        research activities on high-performance public transportation 
        services and other innovations in fleet operations and 
        maintenance--
                    (A) $4,700,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                    (B) $4,900,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                    (C) $5,200,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                    (D) $5,500,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                    (E) $5,800,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (4) Energy independence and environmental protection.--
                    (A) In general.--For carrying out energy 
                independence and environmental protection research 
                activities on improved public transportation energy use 
                and propulsion systems and public transportation 
                oriented development--
                            (i) $3,700,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                            (ii) $3,900,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                            (iii) $4,150,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                            (iv) $4,300,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                            (v) $4,300,000 for fiscal year 2009.
                    (B) Transit-oriented development center.--Of the 
                funds allocated for each of fiscal years 2005 through 
                2009 under subparagraph (A), not less than $1,000,000 
                shall be made available by the Secretary for 
                establishment and operation of a national center for 
                transit-oriented development--
                            (i) to develop standards and definitions 
                        for transit-oriented development adjacent to 
                        public transportation facilities;
                            (ii) to develop system planning guidance, 
                        performance criteria, and modeling techniques 
                        for metropolitan planning agencies and public 
                        transportation agencies to maximize ridership 
                        through land use planning and adjacent 
                        development; and
                            (iii) to provide research support and 
                        technical assistance to public transportation 
                        agencies, metropolitan planning agencies, and 
                        other persons regarding transit-oriented 
                        development.
            (5) Mobility management.--
                    (A) In general.--For carrying out research 
                activities on mobility management, as described in 
                section 5302(a)(1) of title 49, United States Code--
                            (i) $7,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                            (ii) $7,400,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                            (iii) $7,800,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                            (iv) $8,200,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                            (v) $8,700,000 for fiscal year 2009.
                    (B) Transportation equity research program.--Of the 
                funds allocated for each of fiscal years 2005 through 
                2009 under subparagraph (A), not less than $1,000,000 
                shall be made available by the Secretary for research 
                and demonstration activities that focus on the impacts 
                that transportation planning, investment, and 
                operations have on low-income and minority populations 
                that are transit dependent. Such activities shall 
                include the development of strategies to advance 
                economic and community development in low-income and 
                minority communities and the development of training 
                programs that promote the employment of low-income and 
                minority community residents on Federal-aid 
                transportation projects constructed in their 
                communities.
                    (C) Cognitive impairment study.--Of the funds 
                allocated for fiscal year 2005 under subparagraph (A), 
                $1,000,000 shall be made available by the Secretary for 
                research and demonstration activities that focus on the 
                capacity and resources of Oregon public transportation 
                systems to address the needs, barriers, and desires for 
                travel of people with cognitive impairments.
            (6) Public transportation capacity building.--
                    (A) In general.--For carrying out public 
                transportation capacity building activities consisting 
                of workforce and industry development, the 
                International Mass Transportation Program, and 
                technology transfer and industry adoption activities--
                            (i) $2,400,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                            (ii) $2,500,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                            (iii) $2,600,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                            (iv) $2,700,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                            (v) $3,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
                    (B) Transit career ladder training program.--Of the 
                funds allocated for each fiscal year under subparagraph 
                (A), not less than $1,000,000 shall be available for a 
                nationwide career ladder job training partnership 
                program for public transportation employees to respond 
                to technological changes in the public transportation 
                industry, especially in the area of maintenance. Such 
                program shall be carried out by the Secretary through a 
                contract with a national nonprofit organization with a 
                demonstrated capacity to develop and provide such 
                programs.
            (7) Strategic planning and performance measures.--For 
        carrying out strategic planning and performance measures 
        consisting of policy and program development, research program 
        planning and performance, evaluation, and industry outreach--
                    (A) $3,500,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                    (B) $3,700,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                    (C) $4,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                    (D) $4,200,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                    (E) $4,300,000 for fiscal year 2009.
    (b) Remainder.--After making allocations under subsection (a) of 
this section and section 5338(d)(2) of title 49, United States Code, 
the remainder of funds made available by section 5338(d)(2) of such 
title for national research and technology programs under sections 
5312, 5314, and 5322 for a fiscal year shall be allocated at the 
discretion of the Secretary to other transit research, development, 
demonstration and deployment projects authorized by sections 5312, 
5314, and 5322 of such title.

SEC. 3042. RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER LAWS.

    Section 5323(l) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(l) Relationship to Other Laws.--Section 1001 of title 18 applies 
to a certificate, submission, or statement provided under this chapter. 
The Secretary may terminate financial assistance under this chapter and 
seek reimbursement directly, or by offsetting amounts, available under 
this chapter, when a false or fraudulent statement or related act 
within the meaning of such section 1001 is made in connection with a 
Federal transit program.''.

SEC. 3043. FORGIVENESS OF GRANT AGREEMENT.

    Notwithstanding any other provision of law (including any 
regulation), any outstanding balances on the following grant agreements 
made to the Lane County Transit District, Oregon, do not have to be 
repaid:
            (1) Federal Contract Number OR-03-0087.
            (2) Federal Contract Number OR-90-X094.

SEC. 3044. COOPERATIVE PROCUREMENT.

    (a) Review of Cooperative Procurement; Authority to Increase 
Federal Share.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 6 months after the date of 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall undertake a 30-day 
        review of efforts to use cooperative procurement to determine 
        whether benefits are sufficient to formally incorporate 
        cooperative procurement into the mass transit program. In 
        particular the Secretary shall review the progress made under 
        the pilot program authorized under section 166 of division F of 
        the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2004 (49 U.S.C. 5397 note; 
        118 Stat. 309), based on experience to date in the pilot 
        program and any available reports to Congress submitted under 
        such section 166. The Secretary shall also consider information 
        gathered from grantees about cooperative procurement, whether 
        or not related to the pilot program.
            (2) Notification of congress.--The Secretary shall notify 
        the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House 
        of Representatives and the Committee on Banking, Housing, and 
        Urban Affairs of the Senate of the results of the review 
        required under paragraph (1), including a finding of sufficient 
        benefit or insufficient benefit and the reasons for that 
        finding.

SEC. 3045. OBLIGATION CEILING.

    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the total of all 
obligations from amounts made available from the Mass Transit Account 
of the Highway Trust Fund by, and amounts appropriated under, 
subsections (a) through (f) of section 5338 of title 49, United States 
Code, shall not exceed--
            (1) $7,266,000,000 for fiscal year 2004;
            (2) $7,646,300,000 for fiscal year 2005;
            (3) $8,482,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
            (4) $9,042,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
            (5) $9,639,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
            (6) $10,277,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.

SEC. 3046. ADJUSTMENTS FOR THE SURFACE TRANSPORTATION EXTENSION ACT OF 
              2004, PART V.

    (a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
Secretary shall ensure that the total apportionments and allocations 
made to a designated grant recipient under section 5338 of title 49, 
United States Code, for fiscal year 2005 shall be reduced by the amount 
apportioned to such designated recipient pursuant to section 8 of the 
Surface Transportation Extension Act of 2004, Part V.
    (b) Fixed Guideway Modernization Adjustment.--In making the 
apportionments described in subsection (a), the Secretary shall adjust 
the amount apportioned to each urbanized area for fixed guideway 
modernization for fiscal year 2005 to reflect the method for 
apportioning funds in section 5337(a) of title 49, United States Code.

SEC. 3047. SPECIAL RULE FOR FISCAL YEAR 2004.

    In any case in which an amount is authorized to be appropriated, 
made available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or subject to an 
obligation limitation for fiscal year 2004 for a program, project, or 
activity in any provision of this title, including an amendment made by 
this title, that is different than the amount authorized to be 
appropriated, made available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or 
subject to an obligation limitation for fiscal year 2004 for such 
program, project, or activity in any provision of the Surface 
Transportation Extension Act of 2004, Part IV (Public Law 108-280), 
including any amendment made by such Act, the amount referred to in 
such Act shall be the amount authorized to be appropriated, made 
available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or subject to an 
obligation limitation.

           TITLE IV--MOTOR CARRIER TRANSPORTATION AND SAFETY

              Subtitle A--Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety

SEC. 4101. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    (a) Administrative Expenses.--Section 31104 of title 49, United 
States Code, is amended by adding the following at the end:
    ``(i) Administrative Expenses.--
            ``(1) Authorization of appropriations.--There are 
        authorized to be appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund 
        (other than the Mass Transit Account) for the Secretary of 
        Transportation to pay administrative expenses of the Federal 
        Motor Carrier Safety Administration--
                    ``(A) $173,450,000 for fiscal year 2004;
                    ``(B) $254,849,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                    ``(C) $215,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                    ``(D) $230,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                    ``(E) $234,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                    ``(F) $240,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            ``(2) Use of funds.--The funds authorized by this 
        subsection shall be used for personnel costs; administrative 
        infrastructure; rent; information technology; programs for 
        research and technology, information management, regulatory 
        development (including a medical review board), the 
        administration of the performance and registration information 
        system management, and outreach and education; other operating 
        expenses; and such other expenses as may from time to time 
        become necessary to implement statutory mandates of the 
        Administration not funded from other sources.
            ``(3) Period of availability.--The amounts made available 
        under this section shall remain available until expended.
            ``(4) Initial date of availability.--Authorizations from 
        the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) to 
        carry out subtitle IV, part B, and subtitle VI, part B, of this 
        title, or the provisions of title IV of the Transportation 
        Equity Act: A Legacy for Users, shall be available for 
        obligation on the date of their apportionment or allocation or 
        on October 1 of the fiscal year for which they are authorized, 
        whichever occurs first.
            ``(5) Contract authority.--Approval by the Secretary of a 
        grant with funds made available under paragraph (4) imposes 
        upon the United States a contractual obligation for payment of 
        the Government's share of costs incurred in carrying out the 
        objectives of the grant.''.
    (b) Grant Programs.--There are authorized to be appropriated from 
the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) the 
following sums for the following Federal Motor Carrier Safety 
Administration programs:
            (1) For commercial driver's license program improvement 
        grants under section 31313 of title 49, United States Code 
        $26,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009.
            (2) For border enforcement grants under section 31107 of 
        such title--
                    (A) $32,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                    (B) $32,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                    (C) $32,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                    (D) $32,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (3) For the performance and registration information system 
        management grant program under section 31109 of such title--
                    (A) $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                    (B) $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                    (C) $6,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                    (D) $6,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (4) Commercial vehicle information systems and networks 
        deployment.--For carrying out the commercial vehicle 
        information systems and networks deployment program under 
        section 4009 of this Act, $25,000,000 for each of fiscal years 
        2006 through 2009.
    (c) Period of Availability.--The amounts made available under 
subsection (b) of this section shall remain available until expended.
    (d) Initial Date of Availability.--Amounts authorized to be 
appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
Account) by subsection (b) shall be available for obligation on the 
date of their apportionment or allocation or on October 1 of the fiscal 
year for which they are authorized, whichever occurs first.
    (e) Contract Authority.--Approval by the Secretary of a grant with 
funds made available under subsection (b) imposes upon the United 
States a contractual obligation for payment of the Government's share 
of costs incurred in carrying out the objectives of the grant.

SEC. 4102. MOTOR CARRIER SAFETY GRANTS.

    (a) State Plan Contents.--Section 31102(b)(1) of title 49, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking subparagraph (A) and inserting the 
        following:
            ``(A) implements performance-based activities, including 
        deployment of technology to enhance the efficiency and 
        effectiveness of commercial motor vehicle safety programs;'';
            (2) by striking subparagraph (Q) and inserting the 
        following:
            ``(Q) provides that the State has established a program to 
        ensure accurate, complete, and timely motor carrier safety data 
        is collected and reported to the Secretary and that the State 
        will participate in a national motor carrier safety data 
        correction system prescribed by the Secretary;'';
            (3) by aligning subparagraph (R) with subparagraph (S);
            (4) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph (S);
            (5) by striking the period at the end of subparagraph (T) 
        and inserting a semicolon; and
            (6) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(U) provides that the State will include in the training 
        manual for the licensing examination to drive a noncommercial 
        motor vehicle and a commercial motor vehicle, information on 
        best practices for driving safely in the vicinity of commercial 
        motor vehicles and in the vicinity of noncommercial motor 
        vehicles, respectively;
            ``(V) provides that the State will enforce the registration 
        requirements of section 13902 by prohibiting the operation of 
        any vehicle discovered to be operated by a motor carrier 
        without a registration issued under such section or to be 
        operating beyond the scope of such registration; and
            ``(W) provides that the State will conduct comprehensive 
        and highly visible traffic enforcement and commercial motor 
        vehicle safety inspection programs in high-risk locations and 
        corridors.''.
    (b) Use of Grants to Enforce Other Laws.--Section 31102 of such 
title is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (c) and inserting the following:
    ``(c) Use of Grants to Enforce Other Laws.--A State may use amounts 
received under a grant under subsection (a)--
            ``(1) for the following activities if the activities are 
        carried out in conjunction with an appropriate inspection of 
        the commercial motor vehicle to enforce Government or State 
        commercial motor vehicle safety regulations:
                    ``(A) enforcement of commercial motor vehicle size 
                and weight limitations at locations other than fixed 
                weight facilities, at specific locations such as steep 
                grades or mountainous terrains where the weight of a 
                commercial motor vehicle can significantly affect the 
                safe operation of the vehicle, or at ports where 
                intermodal shipping containers enter and leave the 
                United States; and
                    ``(B) detection of the unlawful presence of a 
                controlled substance (as defined under section 102 of 
                the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act 
                of 1970 (21 U.S.C. 802)) in a commercial motor vehicle 
                or on the person of any occupant (including the 
                operator) of the vehicle; and
            ``(2) for documented enforcement of State traffic laws and 
        regulations designed to promote the safe operation of 
        commercial motor vehicles, including documented enforcement of 
        such laws and regulations relating to noncommercial motor 
        vehicles when necessary to promote the safe operation of 
        commercial motor vehicles if the number of roadside safety 
        inspections conducted in the State is maintained at a level at 
        least equal to the average number conducted in the State in 
        fiscal years 2001, 2002, and 2003; except that the State may 
        not use more than 5 percent of the aggregate amount the State 
        receives under the grant under subsection (a) for enforcement 
        activities relating to noncommercial motor vehicles described 
        in this paragraph.''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(e) Annual Report.--The Secretary shall submit to the Committee 
on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives 
and the Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation of the Senate 
an annual report that describes the effect of activities carried out 
with funds from grants made under this section on commercial motor 
vehicle safety.''.
    (c) Authorization of Appropriations.--Section 31104(a) of such 
title is amended to read as follows:
    ``(a) In General.--Subject to subsection (f), there are authorized 
to be appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass 
Transit Account) to carry out section 31102--
            ``(1) $188,852,000 for fiscal year 2004;
            ``(2) $188,480,000 for fiscal year 2005;
            ``(3) $188,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
            ``(4) $197,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
            ``(5) $202,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
            ``(6) $209,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.''.
    (d) New Entrant Audits.--Section 31104(f) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``deduction under 
        subsection (e)'' and inserting ``deductions under subsection 
        (e) and paragraphs (2) and (3)'';
            (2) the first sentence of paragraph (2)(A)--
                    (A) by striking ``or''; and
                    (B) by inserting after ``technologies'' the 
                following: ``, or improve the quality and accuracy of 
                data provided by the State'';
            (3) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by striking ``and border activities.--'' and 
                all that follows through ``5 percent'' and inserting 
                ``activities.--The Secretary may designate up to 10 
                percent''; and
                    (B) by striking subparagraph (B); and
            (4) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) New entrant audits.--The Secretary may deduct up to 
        $15,000,000 of the amounts available under subsection (a) for a 
        fiscal year for audits of new entrant motor carriers under 
        section 31144(g).''.
    (e) Technical Amendments.--Sections 31102(b)(3) and 31103(a) of 
such title are amended by striking ``(1)(D)'' and inserting ``(1)(E)''.

SEC. 4103. BORDER ENFORCEMENT GRANTS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 311 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by striking the heading for subchapter I and inserting 
        the following:

       ``SUBCHAPTER I--GENERAL AUTHORITY AND STATE GRANTS''; and

            (2) by striking section 31107 and inserting the following:
``Sec. 31107. Border enforcement grants
    ``(a) General Authority.--The Secretary of Transportation may make 
a grant in a fiscal year to a State that shares a land border with 
another country for carrying out border commercial motor vehicle safety 
programs and related enforcement activities and projects.
    ``(b) Maintenance of Expenditures.--The Secretary may make a grant 
to a State under this section only if the State agrees that the total 
expenditure of amounts of the State and political subdivisions of the 
State, exclusive of amounts from the United States, for carrying out 
border commercial motor vehicle safety programs and related enforcement 
activities and projects will be maintained at a level at least equal to 
the average level of that expenditure by the State and political 
subdivisions of the State for the last 2 fiscal years of the State 
ending before the date of enactment of the Transportation Equity Act: A 
Legacy for Users.
    ``(c) Governments Share of Costs.--The Secretary shall reimburse a 
State under a grant made under this section an amount that is not more 
than 100 percent of the costs incurred by the State in a fiscal year 
for carrying out border commercial motor vehicle safety programs and 
related enforcement activities and projects.
    ``(d) Availability and Reallocation of Amounts.--Allocations to a 
State remain available for expenditure in the State for the fiscal year 
in which they are allocated and for the next fiscal year. Amounts not 
expended by a State during those 2 fiscal years are available to the 
Secretary for reallocation under this section.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) Item relating to subchapter i.--The analysis for such 
        chapter is amended by striking the item relating to subchapter 
        I and inserting the following:

         ``subchapter i--general authority and state grants''.
            (2) Item relating to section 31107.--The analysis for such 
        chapter is amended by striking the item relating to section 
        31107 and inserting the following:

``31107. Border enforcement grants.''.

SEC. 4104. COMMERCIAL DRIVER'S LICENSE IMPROVEMENTS.

    (a) State Grants.--Chapter 313 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 31312 the following:
``Sec. 31313. Grants for commercial driver's license program 
              improvements
    ``(a) Grants for Commercial Driver's License Program 
Improvements.--
            ``(1) General authority.--The Secretary of Transportation 
        may make a grant to a State in a fiscal year--
                    ``(A) to comply with the requirements of section 
                31311; and
                    ``(B) in the case of a State that is in substantial 
                compliance with the requirements of section 31311 and 
                this section, to improve its implementation of its 
                commercial driver's license program.
            ``(2) Purposes for which grants may be used.--A State may 
        use grants under paragraphs (1)(A) and (1)(B) only for expenses 
        directly related to its compliance with section 31311; except 
        that a grant under paragraph (1)(B) may be used for improving 
        implementation of the State's commercial driver's license 
        program, including expenses for computer hardware and software, 
        publications, testing, personnel, training, and quality 
        control. The grant may not be used to rent, lease, or buy land 
        or buildings.
            ``(3) Application.--In order to receive a grant under this 
        section, a State must submit an application for such grant that 
        is in such form, and contains such information, as the 
        Secretary may require. The application shall include the 
        State's assessment of its commercial drivers license program.
            ``(4) Maintenance of expenditures.--The Secretary may make 
        a grant to a State under this subsection only if the State 
        agrees that the total expenditure of amounts of the State and 
        political subdivisions of the State, exclusive of amounts from 
        the United States, for the State's commercial driver's license 
        program will be maintained at a level at least equal to the 
        average level of that expenditure by the State and political 
        subdivisions of the State for the last 2 fiscal years of the 
        State ending before the date of enactment of the Transportation 
        Equity Act: A Legacy for Users.
            ``(5) Government share.--The Secretary shall reimburse a 
        State under a grant made under this subsection an amount that 
        is not more than 80 percent of the costs incurred by the State 
        in a fiscal year in complying with section 31311 and improving 
        its implementation of its commercial driver's license program. 
        In determining such costs, the Secretary shall include in-kind 
        contributions by the State. Amounts required to be expended by 
        the State under paragraph (4) may not be included as part of 
        the non-Federal share of such costs.
    ``(b) High-Priority Activities.--
            ``(1) Grants for national concerns.--The Secretary may make 
        a grant to a State agency, local government, or other person 
        for 100 percent of the costs of research, development, 
        demonstration projects, public education, and other special 
        activities and projects relating to commercial driver licensing 
        and motor vehicle safety that are of benefit to all 
        jurisdictions of the United States or are designed to address 
        national safety concerns and circumstances.
            ``(2) Funding.--The Secretary may deduct up to 10 percent 
        of the amounts made available to carry out this section for a 
        fiscal year to make grants under this subsection.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended 
by inserting after the item relating to section 31312 the following:

``31313. Grants for commercial driver's license program 
                            improvements.''.
    (c) Amounts Withheld.--Subsections (a) and (b) of section 31314 of 
such title are each amended by inserting ``up to'' after ``withhold''.

SEC. 4105. HOBBS ACT.

    (a) Jurisdiction of Court of Appeals Over Commercial Motor Vehicle 
Safety Regulation and Operators and Motor Carrier Safety.--Section 
2342(3)(A) of title 28, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
before ``of title 49'' the following: ``, subchapter III of chapter 
311, chapter 313, or chapter 315''.
    (b) Judicial Review.--Section 351(a) of title 49, United States 
Code, is amended by striking ``Federal Highway Administration'' and 
inserting ``Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration''.
    (c) Authority to Carry Out Certain Transferred Duties and Powers.--
Section 352 of title 49, United States Code, is amended by striking 
``Federal Highway Administration'' and inserting ``Federal Motor 
Carrier Safety Administration''.

SEC. 4106. PENALTY FOR DENIAL OF ACCESS TO RECORDS.

    Section 521(b) of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``(b)(1)(A) If the Secretary'' and 
        inserting the following:
    ``(b) Violations Relating to Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety 
Regulation and Operators.--
            ``(1) Notice.--
                    ``(A) In general.--If the Secretary''; and
            (2) by adding at the end of paragraph (2) the following:
                    ``(E) Copying of records and access to equipment, 
                lands, and buildings.--A person subject to chapter 51 
                or part B of subtitle VI who fails to allow the 
                Secretary, or an employee designated by the Secretary, 
                promptly upon demand to inspect and copy any record or 
                inspect and examine equipment, lands, buildings, and 
                other property in accordance with section 504(c), 
                5121(c), or 14122(b) shall be liable to the United 
                States for a civil penalty not to exceed $1,000 for 
                each offense. Each day the Secretary is denied the 
                right to inspect and copy any record or inspect and 
                examine equipment, lands, buildings, and other property 
                shall constitute a separate offense; except that the 
                total of all civil penalties against any violator for 
                all offenses related to a single violation shall not 
                exceed $10,000. It shall be a defense to such penalty 
                that the records did not exist at the time of the 
                Secretary's request or could not be timely produced 
                without unreasonable expense or effort. Nothing in this 
                subparagraph shall be construed as amending or 
                superseding any remedy available to the Secretary under 
                section 502(d), section 507(c), or any other provision 
                of this title.''.

SEC. 4107. MEDICAL REVIEW BOARD.

    Section 113 of title 49, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following:
    ``(j) Medical Review Board.--
            ``(1) Establishment and function.--The Administrator shall 
        establish a Medical Review Board as an advisory committee to 
        provide the Administration with medical advice and 
        recommendations on driver qualification medical standards and 
        guidelines, medical examiner education, and medical research.
            ``(2) Composition.--The Medical Review Board shall consist 
        of 5 members appointed for a term not to exceed 3 years by the 
        Secretary from medical institutions and private medical 
        practice. The membership shall reflect expertise in a variety 
        of medical specialties relevant to the functions of the 
        Administration.''.

SEC. 4108. INCREASED PENALTIES FOR OUT-OF-SERVICE VIOLATIONS AND FALSE 
              RECORDS.

    (a) Recordkeeping and Reporting Violations.--Section 521(b)(2)(B) 
of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in clause (i) by striking ``$500'' and inserting 
        ``$1,000''; and
            (2) by striking ``$5,000'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``$10,000''.
    (b) Violations of Out-of-Service Orders.--Section 31310(i)(2) of 
title 49, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``Not later than December 18, 1992, the'' 
        and inserting ``The'';
            (2) in subparagraph (A)--
                    (A) by striking ``90 days'' and inserting ``180 
                days''; and
                    (B) by striking ``$1,000'' and inserting 
                ``$2,500'';
            (3) in subparagraph (B)--
                    (A) by striking ``one year'' and inserting ``2 
                years''; and
                    (B) by striking ``$1,000; and'' and inserting 
                ``$5,000;''; and
            (4) in subparagraph (C) by striking ``$10,000.'' and 
        inserting ``$25,000; and''.

SEC. 4109. COMMERCIAL VEHICLE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND NETWORKS 
              DEPLOYMENT.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall carry out a commercial vehicle 
information systems and networks program to--
            (1) improve the safety and productivity of commercial 
        vehicles and drivers; and
            (2) reduce costs associated with commercial vehicle 
        operations and Federal and State commercial vehicle regulatory 
        requirements.
    (b) Purpose.--The program shall advance the technological 
capability and promote the deployment of intelligent transportation 
system applications for commercial motor vehicle operations, commercial 
driver, and carrier-specific information systems and networks.
    (c) Core Deployment Grants.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall make grants to 
        eligible States for the core deployment of commercial vehicle 
        information systems and networks.
            (2) Amount of grants.--The maximum aggregate amount the 
        Secretary may grant to a State for the core deployment of 
        commercial vehicle information systems and networks under this 
        subsection and sections 5001(a)(5) and 5001(a)(6) of the 
        Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 420) 
        may not exceed $2,500,000.
            (3) Use of funds.--Funds from a grant under this subsection 
        may only be used for the core deployment of commercial vehicle 
        information systems and networks. An eligible State that has 
        either completed the core deployment of commercial vehicle 
        information systems and networks or completed such deployment 
        before grant funds are expended under this subsection may use 
        the grant funds for the expanded deployment of commercial 
        vehicle information systems and networks in the State.
    (d) Expanded Deployment Grants.--
            (1) In general.--For each fiscal year, from the funds 
        remaining after the Secretary has made grants under subsection 
        (c), the Secretary may make grants to each eligible State, upon 
        request, for the expanded deployment of commercial vehicle 
        information systems and networks.
            (2) Eligibility.--Each State that has completed the core 
        deployment of commercial vehicle information systems and 
        networks in such State is eligible for an expanded deployment 
        grant under this subsection.
            (3) Amount of grants.--Each fiscal year, the Secretary may 
        distribute funds available for expanded deployment grants 
        equally among the eligible States, but not to exceed $1,000,000 
        per State.
            (4) Use of funds.--A State may use funds from a grant under 
        this subsection only for the expanded deployment of commercial 
        vehicle information systems and networks.
    (e) Eligibility.--To be eligible for a grant under this section, a 
State--
            (1) shall have a commercial vehicle information systems and 
        networks program plan approved by the Secretary that describes 
        the various systems and networks at the State level that need 
        to be refined, revised, upgraded, or built to accomplish 
        deployment of core capabilities;
            (2) shall certify to the Secretary that its commercial 
        vehicle information systems and networks deployment activities, 
        including hardware procurement, software and system 
        development, and infrastructure modifications--
                    (A) are consistent with the national intelligent 
                transportation systems and commercial vehicle 
                information systems and networks architectures and 
                available standards; and
                    (B) promote interoperability and efficiency to the 
                extent practicable; and
            (3) shall agree to execute interoperability tests developed 
        by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration to verify 
        that its systems conform with the national intelligent 
        transportation systems architecture, applicable standards, and 
        protocols for commercial vehicle information systems and 
        networks.
    (f) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of a project 
payable from funds made available to carry out this section shall not 
exceed 50 percent. The total Federal share of the cost of a project 
payable from all eligible sources shall not exceed 80 percent.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Commercial vehicle information systems and networks.--
        The term ``commercial vehicle information systems and 
        networks'' means the information systems and communications 
        networks that provide the capability to--
                    (A) improve the safety of commercial motor vehicle 
                operations;
                    (B) increase the efficiency of regulatory 
                inspection processes to reduce administrative burdens 
                by advancing technology to facilitate inspections and 
                increase the effectiveness of enforcement efforts;
                    (C) advance electronic processing of registration 
                information, driver licensing information, fuel tax 
                information, inspection and crash data, and other 
                safety information;
                    (D) enhance the safe passage of commercial motor 
                vehicles across the United States and across 
                international borders; and
                    (E) promote the communication of information among 
                the States and encourage multistate cooperation and 
                corridor development.
            (2) Commercial motor vehicle operations.--The term 
        ``commercial motor vehicle operations''--
                    (A) means motor carrier operations and motor 
                vehicle regulatory activities associated with the 
                commercial motor vehicle movement of goods, including 
                hazardous materials, and passengers; and
                    (B) with respect to the public sector, includes the 
                issuance of operating credentials, the administration 
                of motor vehicle and fuel taxes, and roadside safety 
                and border crossing inspection and regulatory 
                compliance operations.
            (3) Core deployment.--The term ``core deployment'' means 
        the deployment of systems in a State necessary to provide the 
        State with the following capabilities:
                    (A) Safety information exchange to--
                            (i) electronically collect and transmit 
                        commercial motor vehicle and driver inspection 
                        data at a majority of inspection sites in the 
                        State;
                            (ii) connect to the safety and fitness 
                        electronic records system for access to 
                        interstate carrier and commercial motor vehicle 
                        data, summaries of past safety performance, and 
                        commercial motor vehicle credentials 
                        information; and
                            (iii) exchange carrier data and commercial 
                        motor vehicle safety and credentials 
                        information within the State and connect to 
                        such system for access to interstate carrier 
                        and commercial motor vehicle data.
                    (B) Interstate credentials administration to--
                            (i) perform end-to-end processing, 
                        including carrier application, jurisdiction 
                        application processing, and credential 
                        issuance, of at least the international 
                        registration plan and international fuel tax 
                        agreement credentials and extend this 
                        processing to other credentials, including 
                        intrastate registration, vehicle titling, 
                        oversize vehicle permits, overweight vehicle 
                        permits, carrier registration, and hazardous 
                        materials permits;
                            (ii) connect to such plan and agreement 
                        clearinghouses; and
                            (iii) have at least 10 percent of the 
                        credentialing transaction volume in the State 
                        handled electronically and have the capability 
                        to add more carriers and to extend to branch 
                        offices where applicable.
                    (C) Roadside electronic screening to electronically 
                screen transponder-equipped commercial vehicles at a 
                minimum of one fixed or mobile inspection site in the 
                State and to replicate this screening at other sites in 
                the State.
            (4) Expanded deployment.--The term ``expanded deployment'' 
        means the deployment of systems in a State that exceed the 
        requirements of a core deployment of commercial vehicle 
        information systems and networks, improve safety and the 
        productivity of commercial motor vehicle operations, and 
        enhance transportation security.
    (h) Repeal.--Section 5209 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 
21st Century (23 U.S.C. 502 note; 112 Stat. 460-461) is repealed.

SEC. 4110. SAFETY FITNESS.

    (a) In General.--Section 31144(a) of title 49, United States Code, 
is amended to read as follows:
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall--
            ``(1) determine whether an owner or operator is fit to 
        operate safely commercial motor vehicles, utilizing among other 
        things the accident and safety inspection record of an owner or 
        operator during operations--
                    ``(A) in interstate commerce in the United States;
                    ``(B) in a State that affects interstate commerce 
                in the United States; and
                    ``(C) in Canada or Mexico if the owner or operator 
                also conducts operations in the United States;
            ``(2) periodically update such safety fitness 
        determinations;
            ``(3) make such final safety fitness determinations readily 
        available to the public; and
            ``(4) prescribe by regulation penalties for violations of 
        this section consistent with section 521.''.
    (b) Prohibited Transportation.--The first subsection (c) of such 
section 31144 is amended by adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) Transportation affecting interstate commerce.--Owners 
        or operators of commercial motor vehicles prohibited from 
        operating in interstate commerce pursuant to paragraphs (1) 
        through (3) may not operate any commercial motor vehicle that 
        affects interstate commerce until the Secretary determines that 
        such owner or operator is fit.''.
    (c) Determination of Unfitness by a State.--Such section 31144 is 
further amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (d), (e), and the second 
        subsection (c) as subsections (e), (f), and (g), respectively;
            (2) by inserting after the first subsection (c) the 
        following:
    ``(d) Determination of Unfitness by a State.--If a State that 
receives a grant under section 31102 determines, by applying the 
standards prescribed by the Secretary under subsection (b), that an 
owner or operator of commercial motor vehicles that has its principal 
place of business in that State and operates in intrastate commerce is 
unfit under such standards and prohibits the owner or operator from 
operating such vehicles in the State, the Secretary shall prohibit the 
owner or operator from operating such vehicles in interstate commerce 
until the State determines that the owner or operator is fit.''; and
            (3) in subsection (g) (as redesignated by paragraph (1) of 
        this subsection) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) Grants for audits.--From amounts deducted under 
        section 31104(f)(3), the Secretary may make grants to States 
        and local governments for new entrant motor carrier audits 
        under this subsection without requiring a matching contribution 
        from such States or local governments.
            ``(6) DOT audits.--If the Secretary determines that a State 
        or local government is unable to use government employees to 
        conduct new entrant motor carrier audits, the Secretary may 
        utilize the funds deducted under section 31104(f)(3) to conduct 
        such audits in areas under the jurisdiction of such State or 
        local government.''.

SEC. 4111. PATTERN OF SAFETY VIOLATIONS BY MOTOR CARRIER MANAGEMENT.

    (a) Duties of Employers and Employees.--Section 31135 of title 49, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(a) In General.--'' before ``Each''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(b) Pattern of Noncompliance.--If the Secretary finds that an 
officer of a motor carrier engages or has engaged in a pattern or 
practice of avoiding compliance, or masking or otherwise concealing 
noncompliance, with regulations on commercial motor vehicle safety 
prescribed under this subchapter, while serving as an officer of any 
motor carrier, the Secretary may suspend, amend, or revoke any part of 
the motor carrier's registration under section 13905.
    ``(c) Regulations.--The Secretary shall by regulation establish 
standards to implement subsection (b).
    ``(d) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Motor carrier.--The term `motor carrier' has the 
        meaning such term has under section 13102.
            ``(2) Officer.--The term `officer' means an owner, 
        director, chief executive officer, chief operating officer, 
        chief financial officer, safety director, vehicle maintenance 
        supervisor, and driver supervisor of a motor carrier, 
        regardless of the title attached to those functions, and any 
        person, however designated, exercising controlling influence 
        over the operations of a motor carrier.''.
    (b) Cross Reference.--Section 13902(a)(1)(B) of title 49, United 
States Code, is amended to read as follows:
                    ``(B)(i) any safety regulations imposed by the 
                Secretary;
                    ``(ii) the duties of employers and employees 
                established by the Secretary under section 31135; and
                    ``(iii) the safety fitness requirements established 
                by the Secretary under section 31144; and''.

SEC. 4112. MOTOR CARRIER RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Section 31108 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 31108. Motor carrier research and technology program
    ``(a) Research, Technology, and Technology Transfer Activities.--
            ``(1) Establishment.--The Secretary of Transportation shall 
        establish and carry out a motor carrier research and technology 
        program.
            ``(2) Multiyear plan.--The program must include a multi-
        year research plan that focuses on nonredundant innovative 
        research.
            ``(3) Research, development, and technology transfer 
        activities.--The Secretary may carry out under the program 
        research, development, technology, and technology transfer 
        activities with respect to--
                    ``(A) the causes of accidents, injuries, and 
                fatalities involving commercial motor vehicles;
                    ``(B) means of reducing the number and severity of 
                accidents, injuries, and fatalities involving 
                commercial motor vehicles;
                    ``(C) improving commercial motor vehicle and motor 
                carrier safety, and industry efficiency, through 
                technological improvement;
                    ``(D) improving technology used by enforcement 
                officers when conducting roadside inspections and 
                compliance reviews to increase efficiency and 
                information transfers; and
                    ``(E) increasing the safety and security of 
                hazardous materials transportation.
            ``(4) Tests and development.--The Secretary may test, 
        develop, or assist in testing and developing any material, 
        invention, patented article, or process related to the research 
        and technology program.
            ``(5) Training.--The Secretary may use the funds made 
        available to carry out this section for training or education 
        of commercial motor vehicle safety personnel, including 
        training in accident reconstruction and detection of controlled 
        substances or other contraband and stolen cargo or vehicles.
            ``(6) Procedures.--The Secretary may carry out this 
        section--
                    ``(A) independently;
                    ``(B) in cooperation with other Federal 
                departments, agencies, and instrumentalities and 
                Federal laboratories; or
                    ``(C) by making grants to, or entering into 
                contracts, cooperative agreements, and other 
                transactions with, any Federal laboratory, State 
                agency, authority, association, institution, for-profit 
                or nonprofit corporation, organization, foreign 
                country, or person.
            ``(7) Development and promotion of use of products.--The 
        Secretary shall use funds made available to carry out this 
        section to develop, administer, communicate, and promote the 
        use of products of research, technology, and technology 
        transfer programs under this section.
    ``(b) Collaborative Research and Development.--
            ``(1) In general.--To advance innovative solutions to 
        problems involving commercial motor vehicle and motor carrier 
        safety, security, and efficiency, and to stimulate the 
        deployment of emerging technology, the Secretary may carry out, 
        on a cost-shared basis, collaborative research and development 
        with--
                    ``(A) non-Federal entities, including State and 
                local governments, foreign governments, colleges and 
                universities, corporations, institutions, partnerships, 
                and sole proprietorships that are incorporated or 
                established under the laws of any State; and
                    ``(B) Federal laboratories.
            ``(2) Cooperative agreements.--In carrying out this 
        subsection, the Secretary may enter into cooperative research 
        and development agreements (as defined in section 12 of the 
        Stevenson-Wydler Technology Innovation Act of 1980 (15 U.S.C. 
        3710a)).
            ``(3) Cost sharing.--
                    ``(A) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost 
                of activities carried out under a cooperative research 
                and development agreement entered into under this 
                subsection shall not exceed 50 percent; except that, if 
                there is substantial public interest or benefit 
                associated with any such activity, the Secretary may 
                approve a greater Federal share.
                    ``(B) Treatment of directly incurred non-federal 
                costs.--All costs directly incurred by the non-Federal 
                partners, including personnel, travel, and hardware or 
                software development costs, shall be credited toward 
                the non-Federal share of the cost of the activities 
                described in subparagraph (A).
            ``(4) Use of technology.--The research, development, or use 
        of a technology under a cooperative research and development 
        agreement entered into under this subsection, including the 
        terms under which the technology may be licensed and the 
        resulting royalties may be distributed, shall be subject to the 
        Stevenson-Wydler Technology Innovation Act of 1980 (15 U.S.C. 
        3701 et seq.).''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 311 of such 
title is amended by striking the item relating to section 31108 and 
inserting the following:

``31108. Motor carrier research and technology program.''.

SEC. 4113. INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 311 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following:

                     ``SUBCHAPTER IV--MISCELLANEOUS

``Sec. 31161. International cooperation
    ``The Secretary of Transportation is authorized to use funds made 
available by section 31104(i) to participate and cooperate in 
international activities to enhance motor carrier, driver, and highway 
safety by such means as exchanging information, conducting research, 
and examining needs, best practices, and new technology.
``Sec. 31162. Operators registered in Mexico and Canada
    ``No operator of a commercial motor vehicle (as defined in section 
31101) licensed in Mexico or Canada may operate in the United States a 
commercial motor vehicle transporting hazardous material until the 
operator has undergone a background records check similar to the 
background records check required of operators of commercial motor 
vehicles licensed in the United States to transport hazardous 
materials.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended 
by adding at the end the following:

                     ``subchapter iv--miscellaneous
``31161. International cooperation.
``31162. Operators registered in Mexico and Canada.''.

SEC. 4114. PERFORMANCE AND REGISTRATION INFORMATION SYSTEM MANAGEMENT.

    (a) Design and Conditions for Participation.--Section 31106(b) of 
title 49, United States Code, is amended by striking paragraphs (2), 
(3), and (4) and inserting the following:
            ``(2) Design.--The program shall link Federal motor carrier 
        safety information systems with State commercial vehicle 
        registration and licensing systems and shall be designed to 
        enable a State to--
                    ``(A) determine the safety fitness of a motor 
                carrier or registrant when licensing or registering the 
                registrant or motor carrier or while the license or 
                registration is in effect; and
                    ``(B) deny, suspend, or revoke the commercial motor 
                vehicle registrations of a motor carrier or registrant 
                that has been issued an operations out-of-service order 
                by the Secretary.
            ``(3) Conditions for participation.--The Secretary shall 
        require States, as a condition of participation in the program, 
        to--
                    ``(A) comply with the uniform policies, procedures, 
                and technical and operational standards prescribed by 
                the Secretary under subsection (a)(4); and
                    ``(B) possess or seek the authority to deny, 
                suspend, or revoke commercial motor vehicle 
                registrations based on the issuance of an operations 
                out-of-service order by the Secretary.''.
    (b) Performance and Registration Information System Management 
Grants.--
            (1) In general.--Subchapter I of chapter 311 of title 49, 
        United States Code, is further amended by adding at the end the 
        following:
``Sec. 31109. Performance and registration information system 
              management
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Transportation may make a grant 
to a State to implement the performance and registration information 
system management requirements of section 31106(b).
    ``(b) Availability of Amounts.--Amounts made available to a State 
under this section shall remain available until expended.''.
            (2) Conforming amendment.--The analysis for such subchapter 
        is amended by adding at the end the following:

``31109. Performance and registration information system management.''.

SEC. 4115. DATA QUALITY IMPROVEMENT.

    Section 31106(a)(3) of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph (D);
            (2) by striking the period at the end of subparagraph (E) 
        and inserting a semicolon; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(F) ensure, to the maximum extent practical, all 
                the data is complete, timely, and accurate across all 
                information systems and initiatives; and
                    ``(G) establish and implement a national motor 
                carrier safety data correction system.''.

SEC. 4116. DRIVEAWAY SADDLEMOUNT VEHICLES.

    (a) Definition.--Section 31111(a) of tile 49, United States Code, 
is amended by adding at the end of the following:
            ``(4) Drive-away saddlemount with fullmount vehicle 
        transporter combination.--The term `drive-away saddlemount with 
        fullmount vehicle transporter combination' means a vehicle 
        combination designed and specifically used to tow up to 3 
        trucks or truck tractors, each connected by a saddle to the 
        frame or fifth-wheel of the forward vehicle of the truck or 
        truck tractor in front of it.''.
    (b) General Limitations.--Section 31111(b)(1) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating subparagraphs (D) and (E) as 
        subparagraphs (E) and (F), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subparagraph (C) the following:
            ``(D) imposes a vehicle length limitation of not less than 
        or more than 97 feet on a driveaway saddlemount with fullmount 
        vehicle transporter combinations;''.

SEC. 4117. COMPLETION OF UNIFORM CARRIER REGISTRATION.

    (a) In General.--Section 14504 of title 49, United States Code, and 
the item relating to such section in analysis for chapter 145 of such 
title, are repealed.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 13908 of such title is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (a) by striking ``the single State 
        registration system under section 14504,'';
            (2) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) by striking paragraphs (2) and (3); and
                    (B) by redesignating paragraphs (4), (5), and (6) 
                as paragraphs (2), (3), and (4), respectively;
            (3) by striking subsection (d); and
            (4) by striking ``(e) Deadline for Conclusion; 
        Modification.--'' and all that follows through ``1996,'' and 
        inserting the following:
    ``(d) Deadline for Completion.--Not later than 1 year after the 
date of enactment of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for 
Users,''.

SEC. 4118. REGISTRATION OF MOTOR CARRIERS AND FREIGHT FORWARDERS.

    (a) Definitions Relating to Motor Carriers.--Paragraphs (6), (7), 
(12), and (13) of section 13102 of title 49, United States Code, are 
each amended by striking ``motor vehicle'' and inserting ``commercial 
motor vehicle (as defined in section 31132)''.
    (b) Freight Forwarders.--Section 13903(a) of title 49, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``The Secretary'' and inserting the 
        following:
            ``(1) Household goods.--The Secretary'';
            (2) by inserting ``of household goods'' after ``freight 
        forwarder''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(2) Others.--The Secretary may register a person to 
        provide service subject to jurisdiction under subchapter III of 
        chapter 135 as a freight forwarder (other than a freight 
        forwarder of household goods) if the Secretary finds that such 
        registration is needed for the protection of shippers and that 
        the person is fit, willing, and able to provide the service and 
        to comply with this part and applicable regulations of the 
        Secretary and Board.''.

SEC. 4119. DEPOSIT OF CERTAIN CIVIL PENALTIES INTO HIGHWAY TRUST FUND.

    Sections 31138(d)(5) and 31139(f)(5) of title 49, United States 
Code, are each amended by striking ``Treasury as miscellaneous 
receipts'' and inserting ``Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass 
Transit Account)''.

SEC. 4120. OUTREACH AND EDUCATION.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall conduct, through any 
combination of grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements, an 
outreach and education program to be administered by the Federal Motor 
Carrier Safety Administration and the National Highway Traffic Safety 
Administration.
    (b) Program Elements.--The program shall include, at a minimum, the 
following:
            (1) A program to promote a more comprehensive and national 
        effort to educate commercial motor vehicle drivers and 
        passenger vehicle drivers about how commercial motor vehicle 
        drivers and passenger vehicle drivers can more safely share the 
        road with each other.
            (2) A program to promote enhanced traffic enforcement 
        efforts aimed at reducing the incidence of the most common 
        unsafe driving behaviors that cause or contribute to crashes 
        involving commercial motor vehicles and passenger vehicles.
            (3) A program to establish a public-private partnership to 
        provide resources and expertise for the development and 
        dissemination of information relating to sharing the road 
        referred to in paragraphs (1) and (2) to each partner's 
        constituents and to the general public through the use of 
        brochures, videos, paid and public advertisements, the 
        Internet, and other media.
    (c) Federal Share.--The Federal share of a program or activity for 
which a grant is made under this section shall be 100 percent of the 
cost of such program or activity.
    (d) Annual Report.--The Secretary shall prepare and transmit to 
Congress an annual report on the programs and activities carried out 
under this section.
    (e) Funding.--From amounts made available under section 31104(i) of 
title 49, United States Code, the Secretary shall make available 
$1,000,000 to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, and 
$3,000,000 to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, for 
each of fiscal years 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009 to carry out this 
section.

SEC. 4121. INSULIN TREATED DIABETES MELLITUS.

    (a) No Period of Commercial Driving While Using Insulin Required 
for Qualification.--The Secretary may not require individuals with 
insulin-treated diabetes mellitus who are applying for an exemption 
from the physical qualification standards to have experience operating 
commercial motor vehicles while using insulin in order to be exempted 
from the physical qualification standards to operate a commercial motor 
vehicle in interstate commerce.
    (b) Minimum Period of Insulin Use.--Subject to subsection (a), the 
Secretary shall require individuals with insulin-treated diabetes 
mellitus to have a minimum period of insulin use to demonstrate stable 
control of diabetes before operating a commercial motor vehicle in 
interstate commerce. For individuals who have been newly diagnosed with 
type 1 diabetes, the minimum period of insulin use may not exceed 2 
months, unless directed by the treating physician. For individuals who 
have type 2 diabetes and are converting to insulin use, the minimum 
period of insulin use may not exceed 1 month, unless directed by the 
treating physician.
    (c) Limitations.--Insulin-treated individuals may not be held by 
the Secretary to a higher standard of physical qualification in order 
to operate a commercial motor vehicle in interstate commerce than other 
individuals applying to operate, or operating, a commercial motor 
vehicle in interstate commerce; except to the extent that limited 
operating, monitoring, and medical requirements are deemed medically 
necessary under regulations issued by the Secretary.

SEC. 4122. GRANT PROGRAM FOR COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLE OPERATORS.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a grant program 
for training operators of commercial motor vehicles (as defined in 
section 31301 of title 49, United States Code). The purpose of the 
program shall be to train operators and future operators in the safe 
use of such vehicle.
    (b) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost for which a grant 
is made under this section shall be 80 percent.
    (c) Funding.--From amounts made available under section 31104(i) of 
title 49, United States Code, the Secretary shall make available 
$1,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009 to 
carry out this section.

SEC. 4123. COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLE SAFETY ADVISORY COMMITTEE.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a commercial 
motor vehicle safety advisory committee to provide advice and 
recommendations to the Secretary on commercial motor vehicle safety 
regulations and other matters relating to activities and functions of 
the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.
    (b) Composition.--The members of the advisory committee shall be 
appointed by the Secretary and shall include representatives of the 
motor carrier industry, drivers, safety advocates, manufacturers, 
safety enforcement officials, law enforcement agencies of border 
States, and other individuals affected by rulemakings under 
consideration by the Department of Transportation. Representatives of a 
single interest group may not constitute a majority of the members of 
the advisory committee.
    (c) Termination Date.--The advisory committee shall remain in 
effect until September 30, 2009.

SEC. 4124. SAFETY DATA IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall make grants to States for 
projects and activities to improve the accuracy, timeliness, and 
completeness of commercial motor vehicle safety data reported to the 
Secretary.
    (b) Eligibility.--A State shall be eligible for a grant under this 
section in a fiscal year if the Secretary determines that the State 
has--
            (1) conducted a comprehensive audit of its commercial motor 
        vehicle safety data system within the preceding 2 years;
            (2) developed a plan that identifies and prioritizes its 
        commercial motor vehicle safety data needs and goals; and
            (3) identified performance-based measures to determine 
        progress toward those goals.
    (c) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be 
appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
Account) to carry out this section $3,000,000 for each of fiscal years 
2006 through 2009.
    (d) Applicability of Title 23, United States Code.--Funds 
authorized to be appropriated by this section shall be available for 
obligation in the same manner as if such funds were apportioned under 
chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code, except that the Federal 
share of the cost of a project or activity carried out using such funds 
shall be 80 percent and such funds shall remain available until 
expended.
    (e) Biennial Report.--Not later 2 years after the date of enactment 
of this Act, and biennially thereafter, the Secretary shall transmit to 
Congress a report on the activities and results of the program carried 
out under this section, together with any recommendations the Secretary 
determines appropriate.

SEC. 4125. COMMERCIAL DRIVER'S LICENSE INFORMATION SYSTEM 
              MODERNIZATION.

    (a) General Authority.--The Secretary may make a grant to a State 
or organization representing agencies and officials of a State in a 
fiscal year to modernize its commercial driver's license information 
system in accordance with subsection (c) if the State is in substantial 
compliance with the requirements of section 31311 of title 49, United 
States Code, and this section, as determined by the Secretary. The 
Secretary shall establish criteria for the distribution of grants and 
notify each State annually of such criteria.
    (b) Modernization Plan.--No later than 120 days after the date of 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall publish a comprehensive 
national plan to modernize the commercial driver's license information 
system. The plan shall be developed in consultation with 
representatives of the motor carrier industry, State safety enforcement 
agencies, and State licensing agencies designated by the Secretary.
    (c) Use of Grant.--A State may use a grant under this section only 
to implement improvements that are consistent with the modernization 
plan developed by the Secretary.
    (d) Pilot Program.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary may conduct with grants 
        under this section a 3-year pilot program in no more than 3 
        States to evaluate a system for sharing driver's license 
        information on all commercial and noncommercial driver's 
        licenses issued in each participating State.
            (2) Funding.--The Secretary may use no more than 50 percent 
        of the funds available to carry out this section for the pilot 
        program in any fiscal year.
            (3) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the last day of 
        the pilot program, the Secretary shall transmit to Congress a 
        report on the results of the pilot program.
    (e) Government Share.--A grant under this section to a State or 
organization may not be for more than 80 percent of the costs incurred 
by the State or organization in a fiscal year in implementing the 
modernization program developed by the Secretary. In determining these 
costs, the Secretary shall include in-kind contributions of the State.
    (f) Funding.--There are authorized to be appropriated from the 
Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) to carry out 
this section--
            (1) $7,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
            (2) $7,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
            (3) $8,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
            (4) $8,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
    (g) Contract Authority and Availability.--
            (1) Period of availability.--The amounts made available 
        under subsection (f) shall remain available until expended.
            (2) Initial date of availability.--Amounts authorized to be 
        appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass 
        Transit Account) by subsection (f) shall be available for 
        obligation on the date of their apportionment or allocation or 
        on October 1 of the fiscal year for which they are authorized, 
        whichever occurs first.
            (3) Contract authority.--Approval by the Secretary of a 
        grant with funds made available under subsection (f) imposes 
        upon the United States a contractual obligation for payment of 
        the Government's share of costs incurred in carrying out the 
        objectives of the grant.

SEC. 4126. MAXIMUM HOURS OF SERVICE FOR OPERATORS OF GROUND WATER WELL 
              DRILLING RIGS.

    Section 345(a)(2) of the National Highway System Designation Act of 
1995 (49 U.S.C. 31136 note; 109 Stat 613) is amended by adding at the 
end the following: ``Except as required in section 395.3 of title 49, 
Code of Federal Regulations, as in effect on the date of enactment of 
this sentence, no additional off-duty time shall be required in order 
to operate such vehicle.''.

SEC. 4127. SAFETY PERFORMANCE HISTORY SCREENING.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall provide persons conducting 
preemployment screening services for the motor carrier industry 
electronic access to the following reports contained in the Motor 
Carrier Management Information System:
            (1) Commercial motor vehicle accident reports.
            (2) Inspection reports that contain no driver-related 
        safety violations.
            (3) Serious driver-related safety violation inspection 
        reports.
    (b) Conditions on Providing Access.--Before providing a person 
access to the Motor Carrier Management Information System under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall--
            (1) ensure that any information that is released to such 
        person will be in accordance with the Fair Credit Reporting Act 
        (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.) and all other applicable Federal law;
            (2) ensure that such person will not conduct a screening 
        without the operator-applicant's written consent;
            (3) ensure that any information that is released to such 
        person will not be released to any person or entity, other than 
        the motor carrier requesting the screening services or the 
        operator-applicant, unless expressly authorized or required by 
        law; and
            (4) provide a procedure for the operator-applicant to 
        correct inaccurate information in the System in a timely 
        manner.
    (c) Design.--The process for providing access to the Motor Carrier 
Management Information System under subsection (a) shall be designed to 
assist the motor carrier industry in assessing an individual operator's 
crash and serious safety violation inspection history as a 
preemployment condition. Use of the process shall not be mandatory and 
may only be used during the preemployment assessment of an operator-
applicant.
    (d) Serious Operator-Related Safety Violation Defined.--In this 
section, the term ``serious operator-related violation'' means a 
violation by an operator of a commercial motor vehicle (as defined in 
section 31102 of title 49, United States Code) that the Secretary 
determines will result in the operator being prohibited from continuing 
to operate a commercial motor vehicle until the violation is corrected.

SEC. 4128. INTERMODAL CHASSIS ROADABILITY RULE-MAKING.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary, after providing notice and opportunity for 
comment, shall issue regulations establishing a program to ensure that 
intermodal equipment used to transport intermodal containers are safe.
    (b) Motor Carrier Safety Regulations.--The regulations under this 
section shall be issued as part of the Federal motor carrier safety 
regulations of the Department of Transportation.
    (c) Contents.--The regulations issued under this section shall 
include, at a minimum--
            (1) a requirement to identify providers of intermodal 
        equipment that is interchanged or intended for interchange to 
        motor carriers in intermodal transportation;
            (2) a requirement to match such intermodal equipment 
        readily to the intermodal equipment provider through a unique 
        identifying number;
            (3) a requirement to ensure that each intermodal equipment 
        provider maintains a system of maintenance and repair records 
        for such equipment;
            (4) a requirement to evaluate the compliance of intermodal 
        equipment providers with the applicable Federal motor carrier 
        safety regulations;
            (5) a provision that--
                    (A) establishes a civil penalty structure 
                consistent with section 521(b) of title 49, United 
                States Code, for intermodal equipment providers that 
                fail to attain satisfactory compliance with applicable 
                Federal motor carrier safety regulations; and
                    (B) prohibits intermodal equipment providers from 
                placing intermodal equipment on the public highways if 
                such providers are found to pose an imminent hazard;
            (6) a process by which motor carriers and agents of motor 
        carriers may petition the Federal Motor Carrier Safety 
        Administration to undertake an investigation of a noncompliant 
        intermodal equipment provider; and
            (7) an inspection and audit program of intermodal equipment 
        providers.
    (d) Deadline for Rulemaking Proceeding.--The regulations under this 
section shall be issued pursuant to a rulemaking proceeding initiated 
not later than 90 days after the date of enactment of this Act.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Intermodal equipment.--The term ``intermodal 
        equipment'' means equipment that is commonly used in the 
        intermodal transportation of freight over public highways in 
        interstate commerce (as defined in section 31132 of title 49, 
        United States Code), including trailers, chassis, and any 
        associated devices.
            (2) Intermodal equipment provider.--The term ``intermodal 
        equipment provider'' means any person with any legal right, 
        title, or interest in intermodal equipment that interchanges 
        such equipment to a motor carrier.
            (3) Interchange.--The term ``interchange'' means the act of 
        providing intermodal equipment to a motor carrier for the 
        purpose of transporting the equipment for loading or unloading 
        by any person or repositioning the equipment for the benefit of 
        the equipment provider. Such term does not include the leasing 
        of equipment to a motor carrier for use in the motor carrier's 
        over-the-road freight hauling operations.
    (f) Inspection, Repair, and Maintenance of Intermodal Equipment.--
Section 31136 of title 49, United States Code, is amended by adding at 
the end the following:
    ``(g) Inspection, Repair, and Maintenance of Intermodal 
Equipment.--The Secretary, or an employee of the Department of 
Transportation designated by the Secretary, may inspect intermodal 
equipment, and copy related maintenance and repair records for such 
equipment, on demand and display of proper credentials to inspect 
intermodal equipment.''.
    (g) Jurisdiction Over Equipment Providers.--Section 31132(1) of 
such title is amended by inserting after ``towed vehicle'' the 
following: ``(including intermodal equipment, including trailers, 
chassis and associated devices, commonly used for the transportation of 
intermodal freight via highway)''.

SEC. 4129. SUBSTANCE ABUSE PROFESSIONALS.

    The Secretary shall conduct a rulemaking to permit State licensed 
or certified Mental Health counselors, State licensed or certified 
marriage and family therapists, or addiction specialists certified by 
the American Academy of Health Care Providers in the Addictive 
Disorders to act as substance abuse professionals under subpart O of 
part 40 of title 49, Code of Federal Regulations.

SEC. 4130. INTERSTATE VAN OPERATIONS.

    The Federal motor carrier safety regulations that apply to 
Interstate operations of commercial motor vehicles designed to 
transport between 9 and 15 passengers (including the driver) shall 
apply to all Interstate operations of such carriers regardless of the 
distance traveled.

SEC. 4131. HOURS OF SERVICE FOR OPERATORS OF UTILITY SERVICE VEHICLES.

    Section 345 of the National Highway System Designation Act of 1995 
(49 U.S.C. 31136 note; 109 Stat. 613) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a) by striking paragraph (4) and 
        inserting the following:
            ``(4) Operators of utility service vehicles.--
                    ``(A) Inapplicability of federal regulations.--Such 
                regulations shall not apply to a driver of a utility 
                service vehicle.
                    ``(B) Prohibition on state regulations.--A State, a 
                political subdivision of a State, an interstate agency, 
                or other entity consisting of 2 or more States, shall 
                not enact or enforce any law, rule, regulation, or 
                standard that imposes requirements on a driver of a 
                utility service vehicle that are similar to the 
                requirements contained in such regulations.''.
            (2) in subsection (b) by striking ``Nothing'' and inserting 
        ``Except as provided in subsection (a)(4), nothing''; and
            (3) in the first sentence of subsection (c) by striking 
        ``paragraph (2)'' and inserting ``an exemption under paragraph 
        (2) or (4)''.

SEC. 4132. TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS.

    (a) Intermodal Transportation Advisory Board.--Section 5502(b) of 
title 49, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' at the end of paragraph (4);
            (2) by striking the period at the end of paragraph (5) and 
        inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(6) the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.''.
    (b) Reference to Agency.--Section 31502(e) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2) by striking ``Regional Director of the 
        Federal Highway Administration'' and inserting ``Field 
        Administrator of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety 
        Administration''; and
            (2) in paragraph (3) by striking ``Regional Director'' and 
        inserting ``Field Administrator''.

SEC. 4133. INTRASTATE AND FOREIGN OPERATIONS OF INTERSTATE MOTOR 
              CARRIERS.

    Section 31144(a) of title 49, United States Code, is amended to 
read as follows:
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall--
            ``(1) determine whether an owner or operator is fit to 
        operate safely commercial motor vehicles, utilizing among other 
        things the accident and safety inspection record of an owner or 
        operator during operations--
                    ``(A) in interstate commerce in the United States;
                    ``(B) in a State that affects interstate commerce 
                in the United States; and
                    ``(C) in Canada or Mexico if the owner or operator 
                also conducts operations in the United States;
            ``(2) periodically update such safety fitness 
        determinations;
            ``(3) make such final safety fitness determinations readily 
        available to the public; and
            ``(4) prescribe by regulation penalties for violations of 
        this section consistent with section 521.''.

SEC. 4134. OPERATORS OF VEHICLES TRANSPORTING AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES 
              AND FARM SUPPLIES.

    (a) Agricultural Exemption.--Section 345(a)(1) of the National 
Highway System Designation Act of 1995 (49 U.S.C. 31136 note; 109 Stat. 
613) is amended to read as follows:
            ``(1) Transportation of agricultural commodities and farm 
        supplies.--Regulations prescribed by the Secretary under 
        sections 31136 and 31502 of title 49, United States Code, 
        regarding maximum driving and on-duty time for drivers used by 
        motor carriers shall not apply during planting and harvest 
        periods, as determined by each State to drivers transporting 
        agricultural commodities or farm supplies for agricultural 
        purposes in a State if such transportation is limited to an 
        area within a 100 air mile radius from the source of the 
        commodities or the distribution point for the farm supplies.''.
    (b) Review by the Secretary.--Section 345(c) of such Act (109 Stat. 
613) is amended by striking ``other than paragraph (2)'' and inserting 
``other than paragraph (1) or (2) of such subsection''.
    (c) Definitions.--Section 345(e) of such Act (109 Stat. 614) is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
            ``(7) Agricultural commodity.--The term `agricultural 
        commodity' means any agricultural commodity, food, feed, fiber, 
        or livestock (including livestock as defined in section 602 of 
        the Emergency Livestock Feed Assistance Act of 1988 (7 U.S.C. 
        1471) and insects).
            ``(8) Farm supplies for agricultural purposes.--The term 
        `farm supplies for agricultural purposes' means products 
        directly related to the growing or harvesting of agricultural 
        commodities during the planting and harvesting seasons within 
        each State, as determined by the State, and livestock feed at 
        any time of the year.''.

SEC. 4135. HOURS OF SERVICE RULES FOR OPERATORS PROVIDING 
              TRANSPORTATION TO MOVIE PRODUCTION SITES.

    Notwithstanding sections 31136 and 31502 of title 49, United States 
Code, and any other provision of law, the maximum daily hours of 
service for an operator of a commercial motor vehicle providing 
transportation of property or passengers to or from a theatrical or 
television motion picture production site located within a 100 air mile 
radius of the work reporting location of such operator shall be those 
in effect under the regulations in effect under such sections on April 
27, 2003.

SEC. 4136. STATE LAWS RELATING TO VEHICLE TOWING.

    Nothing in section 14501(c) of title 49, United States Code, shall 
be construed to prevent a State from requiring that, in the case of 
vehicles towed from private property without the consent of the owner 
or operator of the vehicle, towing companies have prior written 
authorization from the property owner or lessee (or an employee or 
agent thereof), or that such owner or lessee (or an employee or agent 
thereof) be present at the time the vehicle is towed from the property, 
or both.

SEC. 4137. SPECIAL RULE FOR FISCAL YEAR 2004.

    In any case in which an amount is authorized to be appropriated, 
made available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or subject to an 
obligation limitation for fiscal year 2004 for a program, project, or 
activity in any provision of this title, including an amendment made by 
this title, that is different than the amount authorized to be 
appropriated, made available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or 
subject to an obligation limitation for fiscal year 2004 for such 
program, project, or activity in any provision of the Surface 
Transportation Extension Act of 2004, Part IV (Public Law 108-280), 
including any amendment made by such Act, the amount referred to in 
such Act shall be the amount authorized to be appropriated, made 
available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or subject to an 
obligation limitation.

SEC. 4138. NEBRASKA CUSTOM HARVESTERS LENGTH EXEMPTION.

    Section 31112(c) of title 49, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) Nebraska may allow the operation of commercial 
        vehicle combinations of not to exceed 81 feet, 6 inches that 
        are used only for harvesting wheat, soybeans, and milo on a 
        contract basis for agricultural producers during the harvest 
        months for such crops as defined by the State of Nebraska.''.

SEC. 4139. TRUCKLOAD FUEL SURCHARGE.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 137 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 13714. Fuel surcharge
    ``(a) Requirement for Fuel Surcharge.--Any contract or agreement, 
providing for truckload transportation or service involving a motor 
carrier, broker, or freight forwarder subject to jurisdiction under 
chapter 135 of this title that regularly provides such transportation 
or service, shall include a requirement that the payer of 
transportation charges pay a fuel surcharge that is no less than the 
amount of the Increased Cost of Fuel as determined under subsection 
(c).
    ``(b) Implementation.--The surcharge required by subsection (a)--
            ``(1) shall apply during any period in which the Current 
        Diesel Fuel Price surpasses, by $0.05 per gallon of diesel 
        fuel, the Benchmark Price determined under subsection (c);
            ``(2) shall expire when the Current Diesel Fuel Price 
        equals or is less than $0.05 above the Benchmark Price set 
        forth in subsection (c);
            ``(3) shall be calculated on the date the applicable 
        shipment is physically tendered to the motor carrier, broker, 
        or freight forwarder;
            ``(4) shall be itemized separately on the invoices of the 
        motor carrier, broker, or freight forwarder;
            ``(5) shall be paid to the motor carrier, broker, or 
        freight forwarder by the payer of transportation charges;
            ``(6) shall not apply to any transportation contract or 
        agreement, in effect on the date of enactment of this section, 
        that provides for a fuel cost adjustment or surcharge; and
            ``(7) may be expressed on a mileage basis, as a percentage 
        of the freight charge, or in any other manner the motor 
        carrier, broker, or freight forwarder elects.
    ``(c) Calculation of Increased Cost of Fuel.--
            ``(1) Increased cost of fuel.--For purposes of this 
        section, the Increased Cost of Fuel shall be the amount 
        determined by subtracting the Benchmark Price from the Current 
        Diesel Fuel Price and then multiplying the difference by the 
        number of gallons of diesel fuel used in the transportation or 
        service provided.
            ``(2) Benchmark price.--For purposes of this section, the 
        following apply:
                    ``(A) Initial price.--For the period beginning on 
                the date of enactment of this section and ending 
                immediately before the effective date of the first 
                adjusted Benchmark Price under subparagraph (B), the 
                Benchmark Price shall be $1.10 per gallon of diesel 
                fuel.
                    ``(B) Subsequent adjustments.--During each calendar 
                year subsequent to the calendar year of enactment of 
                this section, the Secretary of Transportation shall 
                adjust the Benchmark Price by the percentage change in 
                the previous calendar year's Annual Truckload Producer 
                Price Index as determined by the Department of Labor 
                and shall publish that adjusted Benchmark Price in the 
                Federal Register. The effective date of each adjusted 
                Benchmark Price shall be the first day of the month 
                following the date of such publication.
            ``(3) Current diesel fuel price.--For purposes of this 
        section, the Current Diesel Fuel Price shall--
                    ``(A) be the latest weekly average price for retail 
                on-highway diesel fuel published by the Energy 
                Information Administration for the Petroleum 
                Administration for Defense district or subdistrict 
                where a shipment is physically tendered to the motor 
                carrier, broker, or freight forwarder; and
                    ``(B) take effect the midnight after the weekly 
                average price is published.
            ``(4) Amount of fuel used.--In calculating the number of 
        gallons of diesel fuel used in providing transportation or 
        service under paragraph (1)--
                    ``(A) it shall be assumed that a gallon of diesel 
                fuel is used for each 5 miles of transportation; and
                    ``(B) the mileage of the transportation or service 
                provided shall be the number of miles as determined 
                under the `Defense Table of Official Distances' issued 
                by the Surface Deployment and Distribution Command, 
                Department of Defense or under any applicable mileage 
                guide established under section 13703(a)(1)(D).
    ``(d) Limitation on Authority.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
of this part, any action to enforce this section may only be brought by 
the motor carrier, broker, or freight forwarder that provided the 
transportation services against the payor of the transportation charges 
or by the payor of the transportation charges against the motor 
carrier, broker, of freight forwarder that provided the transportation 
services. In such action, a court shall have the authority to determine 
whether a fuel surcharge required under this section has been assessed 
or paid. A court shall not have the authority in such action to review 
any other charges imposed by the provider of the transportation 
services. Notwithstanding the publication of the Benchmark Price under 
subsection (c)(2), neither the Secretary of Transportation nor the 
Surface Transportation Board shall have regulatory or enforcement 
authority relating to provisions of this section.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Payer of transportation charges.--The term `payer of 
        transportation charges' means any person who pays for the 
        transportation or service involved.
            ``(2) Person responsible for paying for fuel.--The term 
        `person responsible for paying for fuel' means any person who 
        bears the cost of fuel used for the transportation or service 
        involved.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended 
by adding at the end the following:

``13714. Fuel surcharge.''.
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--Section 14102 of title 49, United States 
Code is amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(c) Mandatory Pass-Through to Cost Bearer.--
            ``(1) In general.--A motor carrier, broker, or freight 
        forwarder providing transportation or service using fuel not 
        paid for by it--
                    ``(A) shall pass through to the person responsible 
                for paying for fuel any fuel surcharge or adjustment 
                required pursuant to section 13714 or provided for in a 
                transportation contract or agreement at the same time 
                payment for the transportation or service is made to 
                the person responsible for paying for fuel;
                    ``(B) shall disclose in writing to the person 
                responsible for paying for fuel the amount of all 
                freight rates, charges, and fuel surcharges applicable 
                to that transportation or service; and
                    ``(C) may not reduce, for the purpose of adjusting 
                for or avoiding the pass-through of a fuel surcharge, 
                nonfuel related compensatory transportation payments to 
                the person responsible for paying for fuel.
            ``(2) Limitation on authority.--Notwithstanding any other 
        provision of this part, the person responsible for paying for 
        fuel may bring an action to enforce this subsection under 
        section 14704 against the motor carrier, freight forwarder, or 
        broker providing the transportation services with vehicles not 
        owned by it or with fuel not paid for by it. Neither the 
        Secretary of Transportation nor the Surface Transportation 
        Board shall have regulatory or enforcement authority relating 
        to provisions of this subsection.''.

               Subtitle B--Household Goods Transportation

SEC. 4201. FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION OF 
              HOUSEHOLD GOODS.

    (a) Nonpreemption of Intrastate Transportation of Household 
Goods.--Section 14501(c)(2)(B) of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting ``intrastate'' before ``transportation''.
    (b) Enforcement of Consumer Protection With Respect to Interstate 
Household Goods Carriers.--Chapter 145 of such title is amended by 
adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 14506. Enforcement of Federal regulations by State attorneys 
              general
    ``(a) In General.--A State, as parens patriae, may bring a civil 
action on behalf of a resident of the State in an appropriate district 
court of the United States to enforce a regulation or order of the 
Secretary or Board--
            ``(1) to protect an individual shipper of household goods 
        if such regulation or order governs the delivery of the 
        shipper's household goods; or
            ``(2) to impose a civil penalty under section 14915 
        whenever the attorney general of the State has reason to 
        believe that the interests of the residents of the State have 
        been or are being threatened or adversely affected by--
                    ``(A) a carrier or broker providing transportation 
                of household goods subject to jurisdiction under 
                subchapter I or III of chapter 135 who is committing 
                repeat violations of section 14915; or
                    ``(B) a foreign motor carrier providing 
                transportation of household goods who is registered 
                under section 13902 and who is committing repeat 
                violations of section 14915.
    ``(b) Limitation on Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this 
section shall be construed--
            ``(1) as preventing an attorney general from exercising the 
        powers conferred on the attorney general by the laws of such 
        State to conduct investigations or to administer oaths or 
        affirmations or to compel the attendance of witnesses or the 
        production of documentary and other evidence;
            ``(2) as prohibiting a State official from proceeding in 
        State court to enforce a criminal statute of the State;
            ``(3) as authorizing a State or political subdivision of a 
        State to bring an enforcement action under a consumer 
        protection law, regulation, or other provision of the State 
        relating to interstate transportation of household goods (as 
        defined in section 13102(10)(A)) with respect to an activity 
        that is inconsistent with Federal laws and regulations relating 
        to interstate transportation of household goods; or
            ``(4) as authorizing a State, as parens patriae, to bring a 
        class civil action on behalf of its residents to enforce a 
        regulation or order of the Secretary or Board.
    ``(c) Actions by the Secretary or Board.--Whenever a civil action 
has been instituted by or on behalf of the Secretary or Board for 
violation of section 14915, no State may, during the pendency of such 
action, institute a civil action under subsection (a) against any 
defendant named in the complaint relating to such violation.
    ``(d) Venue; Service of Process.--Any civil action to be brought 
under subsection (a) in a district court of the United States may be 
brought in the district in which the defendant is found, is an 
inhabitant, or transacts business or wherever venue is proper under 
section 1391 of title 28. Process in such an action may be served in 
any district in which the defendant is an inhabitant or in which the 
defendant may be found.''.
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended 
by adding at the end the following:

``14506. Enforcement of Federal regulations by State attorneys 
                            general.''.

SEC. 4202. ARBITRATION REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) Offering Shippers Arbitration.--Section 14708(a) of title 49, 
United States Code, is amended by inserting before the period at the 
end the following: ``and to determine whether carrier charges, in 
addition to those collected at delivery, must be paid by the shipper 
for transportation and services related to the transportation of 
household goods''.
    (b) Threshold for Binding Arbitration.--Section 14708(b)(6) of such 
title is amended by striking ``$5,000'' each place it appears and 
inserting ``$10,000''.
    (c) Deadline for Decision.--Section 14708(b)(8) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``and''; and
            (2) by inserting after ``for damages'' the following: ``, 
        and an order requiring the payment of additional carrier 
        charges''.
    (d) Attorney's Fees to Shippers.--Section 14708(d)(3) of such title 
is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as 
        subparagraphs (B) and (C), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting before subparagraph (B) (as so 
        redesignated) the following:
            ``(A) the shipper was not advised by the carrier during the 
        claim settlement process that a dispute settlement program was 
        available to resolve the dispute;''.

SEC. 4203. CIVIL PENALTIES RELATING TO HOUSEHOLD GOODS BROKERS AND 
              UNAUTHORIZED TRANSPORTATION.

    Section 14901(d) of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``If a carrier'' and inserting the 
        following:
            ``(1) In general.--If a carrier''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(2) Estimate of broker without carrier agreement.--If a 
        broker for transportation of household goods subject to 
        jurisdiction under subchapter I of chapter 135 makes an 
        estimate of the cost of transporting any such goods before 
        entering into an agreement with a carrier to provide 
        transportation of household goods subject to such jurisdiction, 
        the broker is liable to the United States for a civil penalty 
        of not less than $10,000 for each violation.
            ``(3) Unauthorized transportation.--If a person provides 
        transportation of household goods subject to jurisdiction under 
        subchapter I of chapter 135 or provides broker services for 
        such transportation without being registered under chapter 139 
        to provide such transportation or services as a motor carrier 
        or broker, as the case may be, such person is liable to the 
        United States for a civil penalty of not less than $25,000 for 
        each violation.''.

SEC. 4204. CIVIL PENALTY FOR HOLDING HOUSEHOLD GOODS HOSTAGE.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 149 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 14915. Holding household goods hostage
    ``(a) Holding Household Goods Hostage Defined.--For purposes of 
this section, the term `holding household goods hostage' means the 
knowing and willful refusal to relinquish possession of a shipment of 
household goods described in section 13102(10)(A) upon payment of not 
more than 100 percent of a binding estimate (or, in the case of a 
nonbinding estimate, not more than 110 percent of the estimated charges 
for such shipment).
    ``(b) Civil Penalty.--Whoever is found holding a household goods 
shipment hostage is liable to the United States for a civil penalty of 
not less than $10,000 for each violation. If such person is a carrier 
or broker, the Secretary may suspend for a period of not less than 6 
months the registration of such carrier or broker under chapter 139.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended 
by adding at the end the following:

``14915. Holding household goods hostage.''.

SEC. 4205. WORKING GROUP FOR DEVELOPMENT OF PRACTICES AND PROCEDURES TO 
              ENHANCE FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary shall establish a working group of State 
attorneys general, State consumer protection administrators, and 
Federal and local law enforcement officials for the purpose of 
developing practices and procedures to enhance the Federal-State 
partnership in enforcement efforts, exchange of information, and 
coordination of enforcement efforts with respect to interstate 
transportation of household goods and of making legislative and 
regulatory recommendations to the Secretary concerning such enforcement 
efforts.
    (b) Consultation.--In carrying out subsection (a), the working 
group shall consult with industries involved in the transportation of 
household goods.
    (c) Federal Advisory Committee Act Exemption.--The Federal Advisory 
Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) shall not apply to the working group 
established under subsection (a).
    (d) Termination Date.--The working group shall remain in effect 
until September 30, 2009.

SEC. 4206. CONSUMER HANDBOOK ON DOT WEB SITE.

    Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the 
Secretary shall take such action as may be necessary to ensure that 
publication ESA 03005 of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety 
Administration entitled ``Your Rights and Responsibilities When You 
Move'', is prominently displayed, and available in language that is 
readily understandable by the general public, on the Web site of the 
Department of Transportation.

SEC. 4207. RELEASE OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS BROKER INFORMATION.

    Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the 
Secretary shall modify the regulations contained in part 375 of title 
49, Code of Federal Regulations, to require a broker that is subject to 
such regulations to provide shippers with the following information 
whenever they have contact with a shipper or potential shipper:
            (1) The Department of Transportation number of the broker.
            (2) The ESA 03005 publication referred to in section 4206 
        of this Act.
            (3) A list of all motor carriers providing transportation 
        of household goods used by the broker and a statement that the 
        broker is not a motor carrier providing transportation of 
        household goods.

SEC. 4208. CONSUMER COMPLAINT INFORMATION.

    (a) Establishment of System.--Not later than 1 year after the date 
of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall--
            (1) establish a system for filing and logging consumer 
        complaints relating to motor carriers providing transportation 
        of household goods and for compiling complaint information 
        gathered by the Department of Transportation and the States 
        with regard to such carriers, a database of the complaints, and 
        a procedure for the public to have access to aggregated 
        information and for carriers to challenge duplicate or 
        fraudulent information in the database; and
            (2) issue regulations requiring each motor carrier of 
        household goods to submit on a quarterly basis a report 
        summarizing--
                    (A) the number of shipments that originate and are 
                delivered for individual shippers during the reporting 
                period by the carrier;
                    (B) the number and general category of complaints 
                lodged by consumers with the carrier;
                    (C) the number of claims filed with the carrier for 
                loss and damage in excess of $500;
                    (D) the number of such claims resolved during the 
                reporting period;
                    (E) the number of such claims declined in the 
                reporting period; and
                    (F) the number of such claims that are pending at 
                the close of the reporting period.
    (b) Use of Information.--The Secretary shall consider information 
in the data base established under subsection (a) in its household 
goods compliance and enforcement program.

SEC. 4209. INSURANCE REGULATIONS.

    (a) Review.--Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary shall undertake a review of the current Federal 
regulations regarding insurance coverage provided by motor carriers 
providing transportation of household goods and revise such regulations 
in order to provide enhanced protection for shippers in the case of 
loss or damage as determined necessary.
    (b) Determinations.--The review shall include, but not be limited 
to, a determination of--
            (1) whether the current regulations provide adequate 
        protection for shippers;
            (2) whether an individual shipper should purchase insurance 
        as opposed to the carrier; and
            (3) whether there are abuses of the current regulations 
        that leave the shipper unprotected in loss and damage claims.

SEC. 4210. ESTIMATING REQUIREMENTS.

    Section 14104(b)(1) of title 49, United States Code, is amended to 
read as follows:
            ``(1) Required to be in writing.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in 
                this subsection, every motor carrier providing 
                transportation of household goods described in section 
                13102(10)(A) subject to jurisdiction under subchapter I 
                of chapter 135 shall conduct a physical survey of the 
                household goods to be transported on behalf of a 
                prospective individual shipper and shall provide the 
                shipper with a written estimate of charges for the 
                transportation and all related services.
                    ``(B) Waiver.--A shipper may elect to waive a 
                physical survey under this paragraph by written 
                agreement signed by the shipper before the shipment is 
                loaded. A copy of the waiver agreement must be retained 
                as an addendum to the bill of lading and shall be 
                subject to the same record inspection and preservation 
                requirements of the Secretary as are applicable to 
                bills of lading.
                    ``(C) Estimate.--
                            ``(i) In general.--Notwithstanding a waiver 
                        under subparagraph (B), a carrier's statement 
                        of charges for transportation must be submitted 
                        to the shipper in writing and must indicate 
                        whether it is binding or nonbinding.
                            ``(ii) Binding.--A binding estimate under 
                        this paragraph must indicate that the carrier 
                        and shipper are bound by such charges. The 
                        carrier may impose a charge for providing a 
                        written binding estimate.
                            ``(iii) Nonbinding.--A nonbinding estimate 
                        under this paragraph must indicate that the 
                        actual charges will be based upon the actual 
                        weight of the individual shipper's shipment and 
                        the carrier's lawful tariff charges. The 
                        carrier may not impose a charge for providing a 
                        nonbinding estimate.''.

SEC. 4211. APPLICATION OF STATE CONSUMER PROTECTION LAWS TO CERTAIN 
              HOUSEHOLD GOODS CARRIERS.

    (a) Study.--The Comptroller General shall conduct a study on the 
current consumer protection authorities and actions of the Department 
of Transportation and the impact on shippers and carriers of household 
goods involved in interstate transportation of allowing State attorneys 
general to apply State consumer protection laws to such transportation.
    (b) Matters to Be Considered.--In conducting the study, the 
Comptroller General shall consider, at a minimum--
            (1) the level of consumer protection being provided to 
        consumers through Federal household goods regulations and how 
        household goods regulations relating to consumer protection 
        compare to regulations relating to consumer protection for 
        other modes of transportation regulated by the Department of 
        Transportation;
            (2) the history and background of State enforcement of 
        State consumer protection laws on household goods carriers 
        providing intrastate transportation and what effects such laws 
        have on the ability of intrastate household goods carriers to 
        operate;
            (3) what operational impacts, if any, would result on 
        household goods carriers engaged in interstate commerce being 
        subject to the State consumer protection laws; and
            (4) the potential for States to regulate rates or other 
        business operations if State consumer protection laws applied 
        to interstate household goods movements.
    (c) Consultation.--In conducting the study, the Comptroller General 
shall consult with the Secretary, State attorneys general, consumer 
protection agencies, and the household goods industry.
    (d) Report.--Not later than 18 months after the date of enactment 
of this Act, the Comptroller General shall transmit to the Committee of 
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and 
the Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation of the Senate a 
report on the results of the study.

SEC. 4212. APPLICABILITY TO HOUSEHOLD GOODS MOTOR CARRIERS.

    (a) In General.--The provisions of title 49, United States Code, 
and this Act (including any amendments made by this Act) relating to 
the transportation of household goods shall only apply to household 
goods motor carriers.
    (b) Household Goods Motor Carrier Defined.--In this section, the 
term ``household goods motor carrier'' means a motor carrier as defined 
in section 13102(12) of title 49, United States Code, which, in the 
ordinary course of its business of providing transportation of 
household goods, offers some or all of the following additional 
services: binding and nonbinding estimates, inventorying, protective 
packing and unpacking of individual items, and loading and unloading at 
personal residences.

SEC. 4213. VIOLATIONS OF OUT-OF-SERVICE ORDERS.

    Section 31310(i)(2) of title 49, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following:
            ``(D) an employer that knowingly and willfully allows or 
        requires an employee to operate a commercial motor vehicle in 
        violation of an out-of-service order shall, upon conviction, be 
        subject for each offense to imprisonment for a term not to 
        exceed one year or a fine under title 18, or both.''.

SEC. 4214. CRIMINAL PENALTY FOR HOLDING GOODS HOSTAGE .

    Section 14915 of title 49, United States Code, as added by section 
4204 of this Act is amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(c) Criminal Penalty.--A motor carrier that has been convicted of 
knowingly and willfully holding household goods hostage by falsifying 
documents or demanding the payment of charges for services that were 
not performed or were not necessary in the safe and adequate movement 
of a shipment of household goods shall be fined under title 18, or 
imprisoned not more than 2 years, or both.''.

             TITLE V--TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH AND EDUCATION

                          Subtitle A--Funding

SEC. 5101. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    (a) In General.--The following sums are authorized to be 
appropriated out of the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
Account):
            (1) Surface transportation research, development, and 
        deployment program.--To carry out sections 502, 503, 506, 507, 
        509, and 510 of title 23, United States Code, and sections 
        5207, 5210, 5211, and 5402 of this title--
                    (A) $169,000,000 for fiscal year 2004;
                    (B) $239,500,000 for fiscal year 2005;
                    (C) $239,500,000 for fiscal year 2006;
                    (D) $239,500,000 for fiscal year 2007;
                    (E) $239,500,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
                    (F) $239,500,000 for fiscal year 2009.
            (2) Training and education.--To carry out section 504 of 
        title 23, United States Code, and section 5211 of this Act, 
        $24,500,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $33,500,000 for each of 
        fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
            (3) Bureau of transportation statistics.--For the Bureau of 
        Transportation Statistics to carry out section 111 of title 49, 
        United States Code, $31,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and 
        $33,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
            (4) University transportation research.--To carry out 
        sections 5505 and 5506 of title 49, United States Code, 
        $54,500,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $71,000,000 for each of 
        fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
            (5) Intelligent transportation systems (its) research.--To 
        carry out subtitle F of this title, $115,000,000 for each of 
        fiscal years 2004 through 2009.
            (6) ITS deployment.--To carry out sections 5208 and 5209 of 
        the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 
        458; 112 Stat. 460), $100,000,000 for fiscal years 2004 and 
        2005.
    (b) Applicability of Title 23, United States Code.--Funds 
authorized to be appropriated by subsection (a) shall be available for 
obligation in the same manner as if such funds were apportioned under 
chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code; except that the Federal 
share of the cost of a project or activity carried out using such funds 
shall be 50 percent, unless otherwise expressly provided by this Act 
(including the amendments made by this Act) or otherwise determined by 
the Secretary, and such funds shall remain available until expended and 
shall not be transferable.

SEC. 5102. OBLIGATION CEILING.

    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the total of all 
obligations from amounts made available from the Highway Trust Fund 
(other than the Mass Transit Account) by sections 5101(a) and 5401 of 
this Act shall not exceed $483,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, 
$484,000,000 for fiscal year 2005, $485,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, 
$485,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $486,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, 
and $487,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.

SEC. 5103. FINDINGS.

    Congress finds the following:
            (1) Research and development are critical to developing and 
        maintaining a transportation system that meets the goals of 
        safety, mobility, economic vitality, efficiency, equity, and 
        environmental protection.
            (2) Federally sponsored surface transportation research and 
        development has produced many successes. The development of 
        rumble strips has increased safety; research on materials has 
        increased the lifespan of pavements, saving money and reducing 
        the disruption caused by construction; and Geographic 
        Information Systems have improved the management and efficiency 
        of transit fleets.
            (3) Despite these important successes, the Federal surface 
        transportation research and development investment represents 
        less than one percent of overall government spending on surface 
        transportation.
            (4) While Congress increased funding for overall 
        transportation programs by about 40 percent in the 
        Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century, funding for 
        transportation research and development remained relatively 
        flat.
            (5) The Federal investment in research and development 
        should be balanced between short-term applied and long-term 
        fundamental research and development. The investment should 
        also cover a wide range of research areas, including research 
        on materials and construction, research on operations, research 
        on transportation trends and human factors, and research 
        addressing the institutional barriers to deployment of new 
        technologies.
            (6) Therefore, Congress finds that it is in the United 
        States interest to increase the Federal investment in 
        transportation research and development, and to conduct 
        research in critical research gaps, in order to ensure that the 
        transportation system meets the goals of safety, mobility, 
        economic vitality, efficiency, equity, and environmental 
        protection.

            Subtitle B--Research, Technology, and Education

SEC. 5201. RESEARCH, TECHNOLOGY, AND EDUCATION.

    (a) Research, Technology, and Education.--Title 23, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) in the table of chapters by striking the item relating 
        to chapter 5 and inserting the following:

``5. RESEARCH, TECHNOLOGY, AND EDUCATION....................     501''.
            (2) by striking the heading for chapter 5 and inserting the 
        following:

          ``CHAPTER 5--RESEARCH, TECHNOLOGY, AND EDUCATION''.

    (b) Statement of Principles Governing Research and Technology 
Investments.--Section 502 of such title is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (a) through (g) as 
        subsections (b) through (h), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting before subsection (b) (as so redesignated) 
        the following:
    ``(a) Basic Principles Governing Research and Technology 
Investments.--
            ``(1) Coverage.--Surface transportation research and 
        technology development shall include all activities leading to 
        technology development and transfer, as well as the 
        introduction of new and innovative ideas, practices, and 
        approaches, through such mechanisms as field applications, 
        education and training, and technical support.
            ``(2) Federal responsibility.--Funding and conducting 
        surface transportation research and technology transfer 
        activities shall be considered a basic responsibility of the 
        Federal Government when the work--
                    ``(A) is of national significance;
                    ``(B) supports research in which there is a clear 
                public benefit and private sector investment is less 
                than optimal;
                    ``(C) supports a Federal stewardship role in 
                assuring that State and local governments use national 
                resources efficiently; or
                    ``(D) presents the best means to support Federal 
                policy goals compared to other policy alternatives.
            ``(3) Role.--Consistent with these Federal 
        responsibilities, the Secretary shall--
                    ``(A) conduct research;
                    ``(B) support and facilitate research and 
                technology transfer activities by State highway 
                agencies;
                    ``(C) share results of completed research; and
                    ``(D) support and facilitate technology and 
                innovation deployment.
            ``(4) Program content.--A surface transportation research 
        program shall include--
                    ``(A) fundamental, long-term highway research;
                    ``(B) research aimed at significant highway 
                research gaps and emerging issues with national 
                implications; and
                    ``(C) research related to policy and planning.
            ``(5) Stakeholder input.--Federal surface transportation 
        research and development activities shall address the needs of 
        stakeholders. Stakeholders include States, metropolitan 
        planning organizations, local governments, the private sector, 
        researchers, research sponsors, and other affected parties, 
        including public interest groups.
            ``(6) Competition and peer review.--Except as otherwise 
        provided in this Act, the Secretary shall award all grants, 
        contracts, and cooperative agreements for research and 
        development under this Act based on open competition and peer 
        review of proposals.
            ``(7) Performance review and evaluation.--To the maximum 
        extent practicable, all surface transportation research and 
        development projects shall include a component of performance 
        measurement and evaluation. Performance measures shall be 
        established during the proposal stage of a research and 
        development project and shall, to the maximum extent possible, 
        be outcome-based. All evaluations shall be made readily 
        available to the public.''.
    (c) Procurement for Research, Development, and Technology Transfer 
Activities.--Section 502(b)(3) of such title (as redesignated by 
subsection (b) of this section) is amended to read as follows:
            ``(3) Cooperation, grants, and contracts.--The Secretary 
        may carry out research, development, and technology transfer 
        activities related to transportation--
                    ``(A) independently;
                    ``(B) in cooperation with other Federal 
                departments, agencies, and instrumentalities and 
                Federal laboratories; or
                    ``(C) by making grants to, or entering into 
                contracts, cooperative agreements, and other 
                transactions with one or more of the following: the 
                National Academy of Sciences, the American Association 
                of State Highway and Transportation Officials, any 
                Federal laboratory, Federal agency, State agency, 
                authority, association, institution, for-profit or 
                nonprofit corporation, organization, foreign country, 
                any other person.''.
    (d) Transportation Pooled Fund Program.--Section 502(b) of such 
title (as redesignated by subsection (b) of this section), is amended 
by adding at the end the following:
            ``(6) Pooled funding.--
                    ``(A) Cooperation.--To promote effective 
                utilization of available resources, the Secretary may 
                cooperate with a State and an appropriate agency in 
                funding research, development, and technology transfer 
                activities of mutual interest on a pooled funds basis.
                    ``(B) Secretary as agent.--The Secretary may enter 
                into contracts, cooperative agreements, grants, and 
                other transactions as agent for all participating 
                parties in carrying out such research, development, or 
                technology transfer.''.
    (e) Operations Elements in Research Activities.--Section 502 of 
such title is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)(1)(B) (as redesignated by subsection 
        (b) of this section) by inserting ``transportation system 
        management and operations,'' after ``operation,''.
            (2) in subsection (d)(5)(C) (as redesignated by subsection 
        (b) of this section) by inserting ``system management and'' 
        after ``transportation''; and
            (3) by inserting at the end of subsection (d) (as 
        redesignated by subsection (b) of this section) the following:
            ``(12) Investigation and development of various operational 
        methodologies to reduce the occurrence and impact of recurrent 
        congestion and nonrecurrent congestion and increase 
        transportation system reliability.
            ``(13) Investigation of processes, procedures, and 
        technologies to secure container and hazardous material 
        transport, including the evaluation of regulations and the 
        impact of good security practices on commerce and productivity.
            ``(14) Research, development, and technology transfer 
        related to asset management.''.
    (f) Facilitating Transportation Research and Technology Deployment 
Partnerships.--Section 502(c)(2) of such title (as redesignated by 
subsection (b) of this section) is amended to read as follows:
            ``(2) Cooperation, grants, contracts, and agreements.--
        Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Secretary may 
        directly initiate contracts, cooperative research and 
        development agreements (as defined in section 12 of the 
        Stevenson-Wydler Technology Innovation Act of 1980 (15 U.S.C. 
        3710a)), and other transactions to fund, and accept funds from, 
        the Transportation Research Board of the National Research 
        Council of the National Academy of Sciences, State departments 
        of transportation, cities, counties, and their agents to 
        conduct joint transportation research and technology 
        efforts.''.
    (g) Exploratory Advanced Research Program.--Section 502(e) of such 
title (as redesignated by subsection (b) of this section) is amended to 
read as follows:
    ``(e) Exploratory Advanced Research.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish an 
        exploratory advanced research program, consistent with the 
        surface transportation research and technology development 
        strategic plan developed under section 508 that involves and 
        draws upon basic research results to provide a better 
        understanding of problems and develop innovative solutions. In 
        carrying out the program, the Secretary shall strive to develop 
        partnerships with public and private sector entities.
            ``(2) Research areas.--In carrying out the program, the 
        Secretary may make grants and enter into cooperative agreements 
        and contracts in such areas of surface transportation research 
        and technology as the Secretary determines appropriate, 
        including the following:
                    ``(A) Characterization of materials used in highway 
                infrastructure, including analytical techniques, 
                microstructure modeling, and the deterioration 
                processes.
                    ``(B) Assessment of the effects of transportation 
                decisions on human health.
                    ``(C) Development of surrogate measures of safety.
                    ``(D) Environmental research.
                    ``(E) Data acquisition techniques for system 
                condition and performance monitoring.
                    ``(F) System performance data and information 
                processing needed to assess the day-to-day operational 
                performance of the system in support of hour-to-hour 
                operational decisionmaking.''.
    (h) Long-Term Pavement Performance Program.--
            (1) In general.--Section 502(f) of such title (as 
        redesignated by subsection (b) of this section) is amended to 
        read as follows:
    ``(f) Long-Term Pavement Performance Program.--
            ``(1) Authority.--The Secretary shall complete the 20-year 
        long-term pavement performance program tests initiated under 
        the strategic highway research program established under 
        section 307(d) (as in effect on June 8, 1998).
            ``(2) Grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts.--Under 
        the program, the Secretary shall make grants and enter into 
        cooperative agreements and contracts to--
                    ``(A) monitor, material-test, and evaluate highway 
                test sections in existence as of the date of the grant, 
                agreement, or contract;
                    ``(B) analyze the data obtained under subparagraph 
                (A); and
                    ``(C) prepare products to fulfill program 
                objectives and meet future pavement technology 
                needs.''.
            (2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 
        5101(a)(1) of this Act, $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and 
        $21,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be 
        available to carry out section 502(f) of title 23, United 
        States Code.
    (i) Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center.--Section 502 of title 
23, United States Code, is further amended by adding at the end the 
following:
    ``(i) Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall operate in the 
        Federal Highway Administration a Turner-Fairbank Highway 
        Research Center.
            ``(2) Uses of the center.--The Turner-Fairbank Highway 
        Research Center shall support--
                    ``(A) the conduct of highway research and 
                development related to new highway technology;
                    ``(B) the development of understandings, tools, and 
                techniques that provide solutions to complex technical 
                problems through the development of economical and 
                environmentally sensitive designs, efficient and 
                quality-controlled construction practices, and durable 
                materials; and
                    ``(C) the development of innovative highway 
                products and practices.''.
    (j) University Funding.--Except as otherwise provided in this title 
and any amendments made by this title, the Secretary may not provide 
financial assistance to a university under section 5101 unless the 
university is selected to receive such funds through a competitive 
process that incorporates merit-based peer review and the selection is 
based on a proposal submitted to the Secretary by the university in 
response to a request for proposals issued by the Secretary.

SEC. 5202. LONG-TERM BRIDGE PERFORMANCE PROGRAM; INNOVATIVE BRIDGE 
              RESEARCH AND DEPLOYMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) Long-Term Bridge Performance Program.--
            (1) In general.--Section 502 of title 23, United States 
        Code, is further amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(j) Long-Term Bridge Performance Program.--
            ``(1) Authority.--The Secretary shall establish a 20-year 
        long-term bridge performance program.
            ``(2) Grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts.--Under 
        the program, the Secretary shall make grants and enter into 
        cooperative agreements and contracts to--
                    ``(A) monitor, material-test, and evaluate test 
                bridges;
                    ``(B) analyze the data obtained under subparagraph 
                (A); and
                    ``(C) prepare products to fulfill program 
                objectives and meet future bridge technology needs.''.
            (2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 
        5101(a)(1) of this Act, $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and 
        $15,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be 
        available to carry out section 502(j) of title 23, United 
        States Code.
    (b) Innovative Bridge Research and Deployment Program.--
            (1) In general.--Section 503(b)(1) of such title is amended 
        to read as follows:
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish and carry 
        out a program to promote, demonstrate, evaluate, and document 
        the application of innovative designs, materials, and 
        construction methods in the construction, repair, and 
        rehabilitation of bridges and other highway structures.''.
            (2) Goals.--Section 503(b)(2) of such title is amended to 
        read as follows:
            ``(2) Goals.--The goals of the program shall include--
                    ``(A) the development of new, cost-effective, 
                innovative highway bridge applications;
                    ``(B) the development of construction techniques to 
                increase safety and reduce construction time and 
                traffic congestion;
                    ``(C) the development of engineering design 
                criteria for innovative products, materials, and 
                structural systems for use in highway bridges and 
                structures;
                    ``(D) the reduction of maintenance costs and life-
                cycle costs of bridges, including the costs of new 
                construction, replacement, or rehabilitation of 
                deficient bridges;
                    ``(E) the development of highway bridges and 
                structures that will withstand natural disasters;
                    ``(F) the documentation and wide dissemination of 
                objective evaluations of the performance and benefits 
                of these innovative designs, materials, and 
                construction methods;
                    ``(G) the effective transfer of resulting 
                information and technology; and
                    ``(H) the development of improved methods to detect 
                bridge scour and economical bridge foundation designs 
                that will withstand bridge scour.''.
            (3) Funding.--
                    (A) In general.--Of the amounts made available by 
                section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $20,000,000 for each of 
                fiscal years 2004 through 2009 shall be available to 
                carry out section 503(b) of title 23, United States 
                Code; and
                    (B) High performance concrete bridge technology 
                research and deployment.--The Secretary shall obligate 
                $2,000,000 of the amount described in subparagraph (A) 
                for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009 to conduct 
                research and deploy technology related to high-
                performance concrete bridges.

SEC. 5203. SURFACE TRANSPORTATION ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING COOPERATIVE 
              RESEARCH PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Section 507 of title 23, United States Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 507. Surface Transportation environment and planning cooperative 
              research program
    ``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish and carry out a 
collaborative, public-private surface transportation environment and 
planning cooperative research program.
    ``(b) Agreement.--The Secretary shall enter into an agreement with 
the National Academy of Sciences to carry out administrative and 
management activities relating to the governance of the surface 
transportation environment and planning cooperative research program.
    ``(c) Advisory Committee.--
            ``(1) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a 
        committee that will be responsible for program oversight and 
        project selection.
            ``(2) Membership.--The members of the committee shall be 
        appointed by the Secretary and shall be composed of--
                    ``(A) representatives of State, regional, and local 
                transportation agencies, including transit agencies;
                    ``(B) representatives of State environmental 
                agencies and other environmental organizations;
                    ``(C) representatives of the transportation private 
                sector;
                    ``(D) transportation and environmental scientists 
                and engineers; and
                    ``(E) representatives of the Federal Highway 
                Administration, Federal Transit Administration, 
                Environmental Protection Agency, United States Fish and 
                Wildlife Service, Corps of Engineers, American 
                Association of State Highway and Transportation 
                Officials, and American Public Transportation 
                Association, who shall serve in an ex officio capacity.
            ``(3) Balance.--The majority of the committee's voting 
        members shall be representatives of government transportation 
        agencies.
            ``(4) Meetings.--The National Academy of Sciences shall 
        convene meetings of the committee.
    ``(d) Governance.--The program established under this section shall 
include the following administrative and management elements:
            ``(1) National research agenda.--The advisory committee, in 
        consultation with interested parties, shall carry out and 
        periodically update research and development called for in the 
        Transportation Research Board Special Report 268, entitled 
        `Surface Transportation Environmental Research: A Long-Term 
        Strategy' and published in 2002, as described in subsection 
        (e). The national research agenda shall include a multiyear 
        strategic plan.
            ``(2) Involvement.--Interested parties may--
                    ``(A) submit research proposals;
                    ``(B) participate in merit reviews of research 
                proposals and peer reviews of research products; and
                    ``(C) receive research results.
            ``(3) Open competition and peer review of research 
        proposals.--The National Academy of Sciences may award under 
        the program research contracts and grants through open 
        competition and merit review conducted on a regular basis.
            ``(4) Evaluation of research.--
                    ``(A) Peer review.--Research contracts and grants 
                may allow peer review of the research results.
                    ``(B) Programmatic evaluations.--The National 
                Academy of Sciences may conduct periodic programmatic 
                evaluations on a regular basis.
            ``(5) Dissemination of research findings.--The National 
        Academy of Sciences shall disseminate research findings to 
        researchers, practitioners, and decisionmakers, through 
        conferences and seminars, field demonstrations, workshops, 
        training programs, presentations, testimony to government 
        officials, World Wide Web, and publications for the general 
        public.
    ``(e) Contents.--The national research agenda for the program 
required under subsection (d)(1) shall include research in the 
following areas for the purposes described:
            ``(1) Human health.--Human health to establish the links 
        between transportation activities and human health; 
        substantiate the linkages between exposure to concentration 
        levels, emissions, and health impacts; examine the potential 
        health impacts from the implementation and operation of 
        transportation infrastructure and services; develop strategies 
        for avoidance and reduction of these impacts; and develop 
        strategies to understand the economic value of health 
        improvements and for incorporating health considerations into 
        valuation methods.
            ``(2) Ecology and natural systems.--Ecology and natural 
        systems to measure transportation's short- and long-term impact 
        on natural systems; develop ecologically based performance 
        measures; develop insight into both the spatial and temporal 
        issues associated with transportation and natural systems; 
        study the relationship between highway density and ecosystem 
        integrity, including the impacts of highway density on habitat 
        integrity and overall ecosystem health; develop a rapid 
        assessment methodology for use by transportation and regulatory 
        agencies in determining the relationship between highway 
        density and ecosystem integrity; develop ecologically based 
        performance techniques to evaluate the success of highway 
        project mitigation and enhancement measures; expand research 
        and thinking on the uses for and vegetation of transportation 
        corridors in the United States; expand research efforts aimed 
        at understanding wildlife movement near corridors, roadkill 
        rates, and road-barrier effects and at developing efficient 
        mitigation designs for road crossing by animals; catalyze 
        research on the effects of corridors and traffic on adjoining 
        land, including traffic disturbance and the spread of invasive 
        species; conduct further research on means of restoring natural 
        hydrologic and sediment flows and distributions in the vicinity 
        of roads; expand research on transportation's effects on water 
        quality, aquatic ecosystems, and fish in various bodies of 
        water and on ecologically effective solutions; support, expand, 
        and initiate research on the ecological effects of air 
        pollutants from roads and vehicles at the roadside, 
        neighborhood, regional, and global levels; develop road-network 
        models and approaches for reducing habitat fragmentation, 
        population extinction, wildlife-corridor, and remote-area 
        impacts; foster collaborative landscape-wide environmental 
        analyses by engineers, ecologists, and planners, with an 
        emphasis on combining ecological solutions with other societal 
        objectives; and stimulate research on understanding public 
        preferences for improvements in natural systems of both short- 
        and long-term significance to society.
            ``(3) Environmental and socioeconomic relationships.--
        Environmental and socioeconomic relationships to understand 
        differences in mobility, access, travel behavior, and travel 
        preferences across socioeconomic groups; develop improved 
        planning approaches that better reflect and respond to 
        community needs; improve evaluation methods for examining the 
        incidence of benefits and costs; examine the differential 
        impacts of current methods of finance and explore alternatives; 
        understand the socioeconomic implications of emerging land 
        development patterns and new transportation technologies; 
        develop cost-effective applications of technology that improve 
        the equity of the transport system; develop improved methods 
        for community involvement, collaborative planning, and conflict 
        resolution; develop operational definitions and indicators for 
        environmental justice and social equity as the concepts pertain 
        to transportation; develop and demonstrate methods that can be 
        used to display the incidence of transportation project and 
        program effects, both beneficial and adverse, and develop 
        improved methods for evaluating costs and benefits when they 
        are not evenly distributed, including environmental and social 
        justice impact criteria in system performance measures used in 
        transportation planning and investment decisions; continue and 
        expand studies on the comparative costs of transportation and 
        the effects of different development patterns, particularly for 
        economically disadvantaged communities; and develop and test 
        new methods for integrating public involvement into 
        transportation analysis and decisionmaking, and examine the 
        implications of emerging citizen coalitions for environmental 
        and social justice.
            ``(4) Emerging technologies.--Emerging technologies to 
        assist in the transition to environmentally benign fuels and 
        vehicles for passengers and freight; develop responses to and 
        demand for new technologies that could offer improved 
        environmental performance; identify possible applications of 
        intelligent transportation systems technologies for 
        environmental benefit; develop policy instruments that would 
        encourage the development of beneficial new technologies in a 
        cost-effective manner; respond to the impact of new 
        technologies; and analyze user response to and future demand 
        for environmentally beneficial vehicles, fuels, and mobility 
        services, such as the demand for and use of new environmentally 
        beneficial vehicles and fuels.
            ``(5) Land use.--Land use to assess land consumption trends 
        and contributing factors of transportation investment, housing 
        policies, school quality, and consumer preferences; incorporate 
        impacts of transportation investments on location decision and 
        land use; identify the costs and benefits of current 
        development patterns and their transportation implications; 
        determine the effect of the built environment on people's 
        willingness to walk, drive, or take public transportation; 
        determine the roles of public policy and institutional 
        arrangements in current and prospective land use and 
        transportation choices; develop improved data, methods, and 
        processes for considering land use, transportation, and the 
        environment in an integrated, systematic fashion; continue and 
        expand research on the impacts of transportation facilities; 
        and assess and compare alternative transportation and land use 
        strategies, such as models for regional cooperation.
            ``(6) Planning and performance measures.--Planning and 
        performance measures to improve understanding of travel needs 
        and preferences; improve planning methods for system analysis, 
        forecasting, and decisionmaking; expand information on consumer 
        choice processes and travel and activity patterns for both 
        local and long-distance trips and both passenger and freight 
        transportation analysis of social, environmental, and economic 
        benefits and cost of various transport options; develop tools 
        for measuring and forecasting complex transportation decisions 
        for all modes and users; develop performance measures and 
        policy analysis approaches that can be used to determine 
        effectiveness; develop a more effective understanding of the 
        perceptions and priorities of the transportation system's 
        customers (users and taxpayers); develop a more effective 
        understanding of the nature of personal travel, as well as 
        associated trends and decision processes; develop a more 
        effective understanding of the nature of commercial travel and 
        the freight industry, as well as associated trends and decision 
        processes, including key trends such as e-commerce and e-
        freight; develop a more effective understanding of the role of 
        transportation services and facilities in the economy; develop 
        techniques for identifying community aspirations and crafting 
        community and regional visions related to transportation 
        planning; develop tools that incorporate the complex dynamics 
        of travel behavior, and develop the reliable data sets needed 
        for these models; and develop methods and institutional 
        structures for integrating transportation planning, 
        programming, design, and operation.
            ``(7) Other research areas.--Other research areas to 
        identify and address the emerging and future surface 
        transportation research needs related to planning and 
        environment.
    ``(f) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of an activity 
carried out under this section shall be up to 100 percent, and such 
funds shall remain available until expended.
    ``(g) Use of Non-Federal Funds.--In addition to using funds 
authorized to be appropriated to carry out this section, the National 
Academy of Sciences may seek and accept additional funding sources to 
carry out this section from public and private entities capable of 
attracting and accepting funding from the Department of Transportation, 
Environmental Protection Agency, Department of Energy, United States 
Fish and Wildlife Service, and other Federal environmental agencies, 
States, local governments, nonprofit foundations, and the private 
sector.
    ``(h) Sound and Objective Scientific Practices.--
            ``(1) In general.--Assessments of risks to human health or 
        the environment and research conducted under this section shall 
        use sound and objective scientific practices. Assessments of 
        risks to human health or the environment conducted under this 
        section, where such an assessment concerns the evaluation of 
        multiple studies, shall consider the best available science, 
        and shall include a description of the weight of the scientific 
        evidence.
            ``(2) Federal agencies.--Federal agencies using studies 
        funded under this section to conduct an assessment of risks to 
        human health or the environment shall use sound and objective 
        scientific practices in assessing risks, shall consider the 
        best available science, and shall include a description of the 
        weight of the scientific evidence.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 5 of such title 
is amended by striking the item relating to section 507 and inserting 
the following:

``507. Surface transportation environment and planning cooperative 
                            research program.''.
    (c) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) 
of this Act, $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $15,000,000 for each 
of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out 
section 507 of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 5204. TECHNOLOGY DEPLOYMENT.

    (a) Technology Deployment Program.--Section 503(a) of title 23, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the subsection heading by striking ``Initiatives and 
        Partnerships'';
            (2) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following:
            ``(1) Establishment.--The Secretary shall develop and 
        administer a national technology deployment program.'';
            (3) by striking paragraph (7) and inserting the following:
            ``(7) Grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Under the program, the Secretary 
                shall make grants to, and enter into cooperative 
                agreements and contracts with, States, other Federal 
                agencies, universities and colleges, private sector 
                entities, and nonprofit organizations to pay the 
                Federal share of the cost of research, development, and 
                technology transfer activities concerning innovative 
                materials.
                    ``(B) Applications.--To receive a grant under this 
                subsection, an entity described in subparagraph (A) 
                shall submit an application to the Secretary. The 
                application shall be in such form and contain such 
                information as the Secretary may require. The Secretary 
                shall select and approve an application based on 
                whether the project that is the subject of the grant 
                meets the purpose of the program described in paragraph 
                (2).''; and
            (4) by striking paragraph (8) and inserting the following:
            ``(8) Technology and information transfer.--The Secretary 
        shall ensure that the information and technology resulting from 
        research conducted under paragraph (7) is made available to 
        State and local transportation departments and other interested 
        parties as specified by the Secretary.''.
    (b) Innovative Pavement Research and Deployment Program.--
            (1) In general.--Section 503 of such title is further 
        amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(c) Innovative Pavement Research and Deployment Program.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish and 
        implement a program to promote, demonstrate, support, and 
        document the application of innovative pavement technologies, 
        practices, performance, and benefits.
            ``(2) Goals.--The goals of the innovative pavement research 
        and deployment program shall include--
                    ``(A) the deployment of new, cost-effective, 
                innovative designs, materials, recycled materials 
                (including taconite tailings and foundry sand), and 
                practices to extend pavement life and performance and 
                to improve customer satisfaction;
                    ``(B) the reduction of initial costs and life-cycle 
                costs of pavements, including the costs of new 
                construction, replacement, maintenance, and 
                rehabilitation;
                    ``(C) the deployment of accelerated construction 
                techniques to increase safety and reduce construction 
                time and traffic disruption and congestion;
                    ``(D) the deployment of engineering design criteria 
                and specifications for innovative practices, products, 
                and materials for use in highway pavements;
                    ``(E) the deployment of new nondestructive and 
                real-time pavement evaluation technologies and 
                techniques;
                    ``(F) the evaluation, refinement, and documentation 
                of the performance and benefits of innovative 
                technologies deployed to improve life, performance, 
                cost effectiveness, safety, and customer satisfaction;
                    ``(G) effective technology transfer and information 
                dissemination to accelerate implementation of 
                innovative technologies and to improve life, 
                performance, cost effectiveness, safety, and customer 
                satisfaction; and
                    ``(H) the development of designs and materials to 
                reduce storm water runoff.
            ``(3) Research to improve nhs pavement.--The Secretary 
        shall obligate not less than $2,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 
        and $6,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 from 
        funds made available to carry out this subsection to conduct 
        research to improve asphalt pavement, concrete pavement, and 
        aggregates used in highways on the National Highway System.''.
            (2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 
        5101(a)(1) of this Act, $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and 
        $15,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be 
        available to carry out section 503(c) of title 23, United 
        States Code.
    (c) Safety Innovation Deployment Program.--
            (1) In general.--Section 503 of such title is further 
        amended by adding the following:
    ``(d) Safety Innovation Deployment Program.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish and 
        implement a program to demonstrate the application of 
        innovative technologies in highway safety.
            ``(2) Goals.--The goals of the program shall include--
                    ``(A) the deployment and evaluation of safety 
                technologies and innovations at State and local levels; 
                and
                    ``(B) the deployment of best practices in training, 
                management, design, and planning.
            ``(3) Grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Under the program, the Secretary 
                shall make grants to, and enter into cooperative 
                agreements and contracts with, States, other Federal 
                agencies, universities and colleges, private sector 
                entities, and nonprofit organizations for research, 
                development, and technology transfer for innovative 
                safety technologies.
                    ``(B) Applications.--To receive a grant under this 
                subsection, an entity described in subparagraph (A) 
                shall submit an application to the Secretary. The 
                application shall be in such form and contain such 
                information as the Secretary may require. The Secretary 
                shall select and approve the applications based on 
                whether the project that is the subject of the 
                application meets the goals of the program described in 
                paragraph (2).
            ``(4) Technology and information transfer.--The Secretary 
        shall take such action as is necessary to ensure that the 
        information and technology resulting from research conducted 
        under paragraph (3) is made available to State and local 
        transportation departments and other interested parties as 
        specified by the Secretary.''.
            (2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 
        5101(a)(1) of this Act, $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and 
        $15,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be 
        available to carry out section 503(d) of title 23, United 
        States Code.
    (d) Authority to Purchase Promotional Items.--Section 503 of such 
title is further amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(e) Promotional Authority.--Funds authorized to be appropriated 
for necessary expenses for administration and operation of the Federal 
Highway Administration shall be available to purchase promotional items 
of nominal value for use in the recruitment of individuals and to 
promote the programs of the Federal Highway Administration.''.
    (e) Wood Composite Materials Demonstration Project.--
            (1) Funding.--Of the funds made available to carry out 
        section 5101(a)(1), $1,000,000 shall be made available by the 
        Secretary for each of fiscal years 2005 and 2006 for conducting 
        a demonstration of the durability and potential effectiveness 
        of wood composite materials in multimodal transportation 
        facilities.
            (2) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of the 
        demonstration under paragraph (1) shall be 100 percent.
    (f) Turner-Fairbank Facility.--Of the funds made available to carry 
out section 5101(a)(1), $1,000,000 shall be made available by the 
Secretary for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2008 to provide for 
physical demonstrations of the ongoing work at the Turner-Fairbanks 
facility with respect to ultra-high performance concrete with 
ductility.

SEC. 5205. TRAINING AND EDUCATION.

    (a) National Highway Institute.--
            (1) In general.--Section 504(a)(3) of title 23, United 
        States Code, is amended to read as follows:
            ``(3) Courses.--The Institute may develop and administer 
        courses in modern developments, techniques, methods, 
        regulations, management, and procedures in areas, including 
        surface transportation, environmental mitigation, compliance, 
        stewardship, and streamlining, acquisition of rights-of-way, 
        relocation assistance, engineering, safety, transportation 
        system management and operations, construction, maintenance, 
        contract administration, inspection, and highway finance.''.
            (2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 
        5101(a)(2) of this Act, $8,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and 
        $8,500,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be 
        available to carry out section 504(a) of title 23, United 
        States Code.
    (b) Local Technical Assistance Program.--
            (1) In general.--Section 504(b) of such title is amended by 
        adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) Federal share.--
                    ``(A) Grants.--A grant under this subsection may be 
                used to pay up to 50 percent of local technical 
                assistance program costs. Funds available for 
                technology transfer and training purposes under this 
                title and title 49 may be used to cover the remaining 
                50 percent of the program costs.
                    ``(B) Tribal technical assistance centers.--The 
                Federal share of the cost of activities carried out by 
                the tribal technical assistance centers under paragraph 
                (2)(D)(ii) shall be 100 percent.''.
            (2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 
        5101(a)(2) of this Act, $12,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and 
        $14,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be 
        available to carry out section 504(b) of title 23, United 
        States Code.
    (c) Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship Program.--Of the amounts 
made available by section 5101(a)(2) of this Act, $2,000,000 for fiscal 
year 2004 and $2,500,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 
shall be available to carry out section 504(c)(2) of title 23, United 
States Code.
    (d) Garrett a. Morgan Technology and Transportation Education 
Program.--
            (1) In general.--Section 504 of title 23, United States 
        Code, is further amended by adding at the end the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(d) Garrett a. Morgan Technology and Transportation Education 
Program.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish the 
        Garrett A. Morgan Technology and Transportation Education 
        Program to improve the preparation of students, particularly 
        women and minorities, in science, technology, engineering, and 
        mathematics through curriculum development and other activities 
        related to transportation.
            ``(2) Authorized activities.--The Secretary shall award 
        grants under this subsection on the basis of competitive, peer 
        review. Grants awarded under this subsection may be used for 
        enhancing science, technology, engineering, and mathematics at 
        the elementary and secondary school level through such means 
        as--
                    ``(A) internships that offer students experience in 
                the transportation field;
                    ``(B) programs that allow students to spend time 
                observing scientists and engineers in the 
                transportation field; and
                    ``(C) developing relevant curriculum that uses 
                examples and problems related to transportation.
            ``(3) Application and review procedures.--
                    ``(A) In general.--An entity described in 
                subparagraph (C) seeking funding under this subsection 
                shall submit an application to the Secretary at such 
                time, in such manner, and containing such information 
                as the Secretary may require. Such application, at a 
                minimum, shall include a description of how the funds 
                will be used and a description of how the funds will be 
                used to serve the purposes described in paragraph (2).
                    ``(B) Priority.--In making awards under this 
                subsection, the Secretary shall give priority to 
                applicants that will encourage the participation of 
                women and minorities.
                    ``(C) Eligibility.--Local education agencies and 
                State education agencies, which may partner with 
                institutions of higher education, businesses, or other 
                entities, shall be eligible to apply for grants under 
                this subsection.
            ``(4) Definitions.--For purposes of this subsection--
                    ``(A) the term `institution of higher education' 
                has the meaning given that term in section 101 of the 
                Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1001);
                    ``(B) the term `local educational agency' has the 
                meaning given that term in section 9101 of the 
                Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 
                U.S.C. 7801); and
                    ``(C) the term `State educational agency' has the 
                meaning given that term in section 9101 of the 
                Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 
                U.S.C. 7801).''.
            (2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 
        5101(a)(2) of this Act, $500,000 for 2004 and $1,000,000 for 
        each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to 
        carry out section 504(d) of title 23, United States Code.
    (e) Surface Transportation Workforce Development, Training, and 
Education.--Section 504 of such title is further amended by adding at 
the end the following:
    ``(e) Surface Transportation Workforce Development, Training, and 
Education.--
            ``(1) Funding.--Subject to project approval by the 
        Secretary, a State may obligate funds apportioned to the State 
        under sections 104(b)(1), 104(b)(2), 104(b)(3), 104(b)(4), and 
        144(e) for surface transportation workforce development, 
        training and education, including--
                    ``(A) tuition and direct educational expenses, 
                excluding salaries, in connection with the education 
                and training of employees of State and local 
                transportation agencies;
                    ``(B) employee professional development;
                    ``(C) student internships;
                    ``(D) university or community college support; and
                    ``(E) education activities, including outreach, to 
                develop interest and promote participation in surface 
                transportation careers.
            ``(2) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of 
        activities carried out in accordance with this subsection shall 
        be 100 percent.
            ``(3) Surface transportation workforce development, 
        training, and education defined.--In this subsection, the term 
        `surface transportation workforce development, training, and 
        education' means activities associated with surface 
        transportation career awareness, student transportation career 
        preparation, and training and professional development for 
        surface transportation workers, including activities for women 
        and minorities.''.
    (f) Transportation Education Development Pilot Program.--Section 
504 of such title is further amended by inserting after subsection (e) 
the following:
    ``(f) Transportation Education Development Pilot Program.--
            ``(1) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a 
        program to make grants to institutions of higher education that 
        in partnership with industry or State Departments of 
        Transportation will develop, test, and revise new curricula and 
        education programs to train individuals at all levels of the 
        transportation workforce.
            ``(2) Selection of grant recipients.--In selecting 
        applications for awards under this subsection, the Secretary 
        shall consider--
                    ``(A) the degree to which the new curricula or 
                education program meets the specific needs of a segment 
                of the transportation industry, States, or regions;
                    ``(B) providing for practical experience and on-
                the-job training;
                    ``(C) proposals oriented toward practitioners in 
                the field rather than the support and growth of the 
                research community;
                    ``(D) the degree to which the new curricula or 
                program will provide training in areas other than 
                engineering, such as business administration, 
                economics, information technology, environmental 
                science, and law;
                    ``(E) programs or curricula in nontraditional 
                departments which train professionals for work in the 
                transportation field, such as materials, information 
                technology, environmental science, urban planning, and 
                industrial technology; and
                    ``(F) industry or a State's Department of 
                Transportation commitment to the program.
            ``(3) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 
        5101(a)(2) of this Act, $1,500,000 for each of fiscal years 
        2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out this 
        subsection.
            ``(4) Limitations.--The amount of a grant under this 
        subsection shall not exceed $250,000 per year. After a 
        recipient has received 3 years of Federal funding under this 
        subsection, Federal funding may equal no more than 75 percent 
        of a grantee's program costs.''.
    (g) Definitions and Declaration of Policy.--Section 101(a)(3) of 
such title is amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph (G);
            (2) by striking the period at the end of subparagraph (H) 
        and inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(I) surface transportation workforce development, 
                training, and education.''.
    (h) Transportation Technology Innovations.--
            (1) Fundamental properties of asphalts and modified 
        asphalts.--The Secretary shall continue to carry out section 
        5117(b)(5) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st 
        Century (112 Stat. 450).
            (2) Transportation, economic, and land use system.--The 
        Secretary shall continue to carry out section 5117(b)(7) of the 
        Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 450).
            (3) Funding.--Of the amounts made available for each of 
        fiscal years 2004 through 2009 by section 5101(a)(1) of this 
        Act, $3,500,000 shall be available to carry out paragraph (1) 
        and $1,000,000 shall be available to carry out paragraph (2).
            (4) Use of rights-of-way.--Section 5117(b)(3) of the 
        Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 449; 
        112 Stat. 864; 115 Stat. 2330) is amended--
                    (A) by redesignating subparagraphs (E) through (G) 
                as subparagraphs (F) through (H), respectively; and
                    (B) by inserting after subparagraph (D) the 
                following:
                    ``(E) Use of rights-of-way.--
                            ``(i) In general.--An intelligent 
                        transportation system project described in 
                        paragraph (3), and an intelligent 
                        transportation system project described in 
                        paragraph (6), that involves privately owned 
                        intelligent transportation system components 
                        and is carried out using funds made available 
                        from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the 
                        Mass Transit Account) shall not be subject to 
                        any law or regulation of a State or political 
                        subdivision of a State prohibiting or 
                        regulating commercial activities in the rights-
                        of-way of a highway for which funds from the 
                        Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
                        Account) have been used for planning, design, 
                        construction, or maintenance if the Secretary 
                        determines that such use is in the public 
                        interest.
                            ``(ii) Limitation on statutory 
                        construction.--Nothing in this subparagraph 
                        shall be construed to affect the authority of a 
                        State, or political subdivision of a State, to 
                        regulate highway safety.''.

SEC. 5206. FREIGHT PLANNING CAPACITY BUILDING.

    (a) In General.--Section 504 of title 23, United States Code, is 
further amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(g) Freight Capacity Building Program.--
            ``(1) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a 
        freight planning capacity building initiative to support 
        enhancements in freight transportation planning in order to--
                    ``(A) better target investments in freight 
                transportation systems to maintain efficiency and 
                productivity; and
                    ``(B) strengthen the decisionmaking capacity of 
                State transportation departments and local 
                transportation agencies with respect to freight 
                transportation planning and systems.
            ``(2) Agreements.--The Secretary shall enter into 
        agreements to support and carry out administrative and 
        management activities relating to the governance of the freight 
        planning capacity initiative.
            ``(3) Stakeholder involvement.--In carrying out this 
        section, the Secretary shall consult with the Association of 
        Metropolitan Planning Organizations, the American Association 
        of State Highway and Transportation Officials, and other 
        freight planning stakeholders, including the other Federal 
        agencies, State transportation departments, local governments, 
        nonprofit entities, academia, and the private sector.
            ``(4) Eligible activities.--The freight planning capacity 
        building initiative shall include research, training, and 
        education in the following areas:
                    ``(A) The identification and dissemination of best 
                practices in freight transportation.
                    ``(B) Providing opportunities for freight 
                transportation staff to engage in peer exchange.
                    ``(C) Refinement of data and analysis tools used in 
                conjunction with assessing freight transportation 
                needs.
                    ``(D) Technical assistance to State transportation 
                departments and local transportation agencies 
                reorganizing to address freight transportation issues.
                    ``(E) Facilitating relationship building between 
                governmental and private entities involved in freight 
                transportation.
                    ``(F) Identifying ways to target the capacity of 
                State transportation departments and local 
                transportation agencies to address freight 
                considerations in operations, security, asset 
                management, and environmental excellence in connection 
                with long-range multimodal transportation planning and 
                project implementation.
            ``(5) Funding.--
                    ``(A) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost 
                of an activity carried out under this section shall be 
                up to 100 percent, and such funds shall remain 
                available until expended.
                    ``(B) Use of non-federal funds.--Funds made 
                available for the program established under this 
                subsection may be used for research, program 
                development, information collection and dissemination, 
                and technical assistance. The Secretary may use such 
                funds independently or make grants to, or enter into 
                contracts, cooperative agreements, and other 
                transactions with, a Federal agency, State agency, 
                local agency, Federally recognized Indian tribal 
                government or tribal consortium, authority, 
                association, nonprofit or for-profit corporation, or 
                institution of higher education, to carry out the 
                purposes of this subsection.''.
    (b) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(2) 
of this Act, $1,500,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $5,000,000 for each of 
fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 
504(f) of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 5207. ADVANCED TRAVEL FORECASTING PROCEDURES PROGRAM.

    (a) Continuation and Acceleration of TRANSIMS Deployment.--The 
Secretary shall accelerate the deployment of the advanced 
transportation model known as the ``Transportation Analysis Simulation 
System'' (in this section referred to as ``TRANSIMS''), developed by 
the Los Alamos National Laboratory. The program shall assist State 
departments of transportation and metropolitan planning organizations 
in the implementation of TRANSIMS, develop methods for TRANSIMS 
applications to transportation planning and air quality analysis, and 
provide training and technical assistance for the implementation of 
TRANSIMS. The program may support the development of methods to plan 
for the transportation response to chemical and biological terrorism 
and other security concerns.
    (b) Eligible Activities.--The Secretary shall use funds made 
available by section 5101(a)(1) to--
            (1) provide funding to State departments of transportation 
        and metropolitan planning organizations serving transportation 
        management areas designated under chapter 52 of title 49, 
        United States Code, representing a diversity of populations, 
        geographic regions, and analytic needs to implement TRANSIMS;
            (2) develop methods to demonstrate a wide spectrum of 
        TRANSIMS applications to support metropolitan and statewide 
        transportation planning, including integrating highway and 
        transit operational considerations into the transportation 
        Planning process; and
            (3) provide training and technical assistance with respect 
        to the implementation and application of TRANSIMS to States, 
        local governments, and metropolitan planning organizations with 
        responsibility for travel modeling.
    (c) Allocation of Funds.--Not more than 75 percent of the funds 
made available to carry out this section may be allocated to activities 
described in subsection (b)(1).
    (d) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) 
of this Act, $1,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $3,000,000 for each of 
fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out this 
section.

SEC. 5208. NATIONAL COOPERATIVE FREIGHT TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 5 of title 23, United States Code, is 
further amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 509. National cooperative freight Transportation research 
              program
    ``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish and support a 
national cooperative freight transportation research program.
    ``(b) Agreement.--The Secretary shall enter into an agreement with 
the National Academy of Sciences to support and carry out 
administrative and management activities relating to the governance of 
the national cooperative freight transportation research program.
    ``(c) Advisory Committee.--The National Academy of Sciences shall 
select an advisory committee consisting of a representative cross-
section of freight stakeholders, including the Department of 
Transportation, other Federal agencies, State transportation 
departments, local governments, nonprofit entities, academia, and the 
private sector.
    ``(d) Governance.--The national cooperative freight transportation 
research program established under this section shall include the 
following administrative and management elements:
            ``(1) National research agenda.--The advisory committee, in 
        consultation with interested parties, shall recommend a 
        national research agenda for the program. The agenda shall 
        include a multiyear strategic plan.
            ``(2) Involvement.--Interested parties may--
                    ``(A) submit research proposals to the advisory 
                committee;
                    ``(B) participate in merit reviews of research 
                proposals and peer reviews of research products; and
                    ``(C) receive research results.
            ``(3) Open competition and peer review of research 
        proposals.--The National Academy of Sciences may award research 
        contracts and grants under the program through open competition 
        and merit review conducted on a regular basis.
            ``(4) Evaluation of research.--
                    ``(A) Peer review.--Research contracts and grants 
                under the program may allow peer review of the research 
                results.
                    ``(B) Programmatic evaluations.--The National 
                Academy of Sciences may conduct periodic programmatic 
                evaluations on a regular basis of research contracts 
                and grants.
            ``(5) Dissemination of research findings.--The National 
        Academy of Sciences shall disseminate research findings to 
        researchers, practitioners, and decisionmakers, through 
        conferences and seminars, field demonstrations, workshops, 
        training programs, presentations, testimony to government 
        officials, World Wide Web, publications for the general public, 
        and other appropriate means.
    ``(e) Contents.--The national research agenda required under 
subsection (d)(1) shall include research in the following areas:
            ``(1) Techniques for estimating and quantifying public 
        benefits derived from freight transportation projects.
            ``(2) Alternative approaches to calculating the 
        contribution of truck and rail traffic to congestion on 
        specific highway segments.
            ``(3) The feasibility of consolidating origins and 
        destinations for freight movement.
            ``(4) Methods for incorporating estimates of international 
        trade into landside transportation planning.
            ``(5) The use of technology applications to increase 
        capacity of highway lanes dedicated to truck-only traffic.
            ``(6) Development of physical and policy alternatives for 
        separating car and truck traffic.
            ``(7) Ways to synchronize infrastructure improvements with 
        freight transportation demand.
            ``(8) The effect of changing patterns of freight movement 
        on transportation planning decisions relating to rest areas.
            ``(9) Other research areas to identify and address the 
        emerging and future research needs related to freight 
        transportation by all modes.
    ``(f) Funding.--
            ``(1) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of an 
        activity carried out under this section shall be up to 100 
        percent, and such funds shall remain available until expended.
            ``(2) Use of non-federal funds.--In addition to using funds 
        authorized for this section, the National Academy of Sciences 
        may seek and accept additional funding sources from public and 
        private entities capable of accepting funding from the 
        Department of Transportation, States, local governments, 
        nonprofit foundations, and the private sector.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is further 
amended by adding at the end the following:

``509. National cooperative freight transportation research program.''.
    (c) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) 
of this Act, $1,500,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $4,000,000 for each of 
fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 
509 of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 5209. FUTURE STRATEGIC HIGHWAY RESEARCH PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 5 of title 23, United States Code, is 
further amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 510. Future strategic highway research program
    ``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary, in consultation with the 
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, 
shall establish and carry out, acting through the National Research 
Council of the National Academy of Sciences, the future strategic 
highway research program.
    ``(b) Cooperative Agreements.--The Secretary may make grants to, 
and enter into cooperative agreements with, the American Association of 
State Highway and Transportation Officials and the National Academy of 
Sciences to carry out such activities under this subsection as the 
Secretary determines are appropriate.
    ``(c) Period of Availability.--Funds made available to carry out 
this section shall remain available for the fiscal year in which such 
funds are made available and the 3 succeeding fiscal years.
    ``(d) Program Priorities.--
            ``(1) Program elements.--The program established under this 
        section shall be based on the National Research Council Special 
        Report 260, entitled `Strategic Highway Research: Saving Lives, 
        Reducing Congestion, Improving Quality of Life' and the results 
        of the detailed planning work subsequently carried out in 2002 
        and 2003 to identify the research areas through National 
        Cooperative Research Program Project 20-58. The research 
        program shall include an analysis of the following:
                    ``(A) Renewal of aging highway infrastructure with 
                minimal impact to users of the facilities.
                    ``(B) Driving behavior and likely crash causal 
                factors to support improved countermeasures.
                    ``(C) Reducing highway congestion due to 
                nonrecurring congestion.
                    ``(D) Planning and designing new road capacity to 
                meet mobility, economic, environmental, and community 
                needs.
            ``(2) Dissemination of results.--The research results of 
        the program, expressed in terms of technologies, methodologies, 
        and other appropriate categorizations, shall be disseminated to 
        practicing engineers for their use, as soon as practicable.
    ``(e) Program Administration.--In carrying out the program under 
this section, the National Research Council shall ensure, to the 
maximum extent practicable, that--
            ``(1) projects and researchers are selected to conduct 
        research for the program on the basis of merit and open 
        solicitation of proposals and review by panels of appropriate 
        experts;
            ``(2) State department of transportation officials and 
        other stakeholders, as appropriate, are involved in the 
        governance of the program at the overall program level and 
        technical level through the use of expert panels and 
        committees;
            ``(3) the Council acquires a qualified, permanent core 
        staff with the ability and expertise to manage the program and 
        multiyear budget; and
            ``(4) there is no duplication of research effort between 
        the program and any other research effort of the Department.
    ``(f) Report on Implementation of Results.--
            ``(1) Report.--The Transportation Research Board of the 
        National Research Council shall complete a report on the 
        strategies and administrative structure to be used for 
        implementation of the results of the future strategic highway 
        research program.
            ``(2) Components.--The report under paragraph (1) shall 
        include with respect to the program--
                    ``(A) an identification of the most promising 
                results of research under the program (including the 
                persons most likely to use the results);
                    ``(B) a discussion of potential incentives for, 
                impediments to, and methods of, implementing those 
                results;
                    ``(C) an estimate of costs of implementation of 
                those results; and
                    ``(D) recommendations on methods by which 
                implementation of those results should be conducted, 
                coordinated, and supported in future years, including a 
                discussion of the administrative structure and 
                organization best suited to carry out those 
                recommendations.
            ``(3) Consultation.--In developing the report, the 
        Transportation Research Board shall consult with a wide variety 
        of stakeholders, including--
                    ``(A) the Federal Highway Administration;
                    ``(B) the National Highway Traffic Safety 
                Administration; and
                    ``(C) the American Association of State Highway and 
                Transportation Officials.
            ``(4) Submission.--Not later than February 1, 2009, the 
        report shall be submitted to the Committee on Environment and 
        Public Works of the Senate and the Committee on Transportation 
        and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives.
    ``(h) Funding.--
            ``(1) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of an 
        activity carried out using amounts made available under a grant 
        or cooperative agreement under this section shall be 100 
        percent, and such funds shall remain available until expended.
            ``(2) Advance payments.--The Secretary may make advance 
        payments as necessary to carry out the program under this 
        section.''.
    (b) Programmatic Evaluations.--Within 3 years after the first 
research and development project grants, cooperative agreements, or 
contracts are awarded under section 510 of title 23, United States 
Code, the Comptroller General shall review the program under such 
section, and recommend improvements. The review shall assess the degree 
to which projects funded under such section have addressed the research 
and development topics identified in the Transportation Research Board 
Special Report 260, including identifying those topics which have not 
yet been addressed.
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 5 of such title 
is further amended by adding at the end the following:

``510. Future strategic highway research program.''.
    (d) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) 
of this Act, $17,000,000 for fiscal year 2004, $60,000,000 for fiscal 
year 2005, and $63,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009, 
shall be available to carry out section 510 of title 23, United States 
Code.

SEC. 5210. TRANSPORTATION SAFETY INFORMATION MANAGEMENT SYSTEM PROJECT.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall fund and carry out a project 
to further the development of a comprehensive transportation safety 
information management system (in this section referred to as 
``TSIMS'').
    (b) Purposes.--The purpose of the TSIMS project is to further the 
development of a software application to provide for the collection, 
integration, management, and dissemination of safety data from and for 
use among State and local safety and transportation agencies, including 
driver licensing, vehicle registration, emergency management system, 
injury surveillance, roadway inventory, and motor carrier databases.
    (c) Funding.--
            (1) Federal contribution.--Of the amounts made available by 
        section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $1,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 
        and $3,000,000 for fiscal year 2005 shall be available to carry 
        out the TSIMS project under this section.
            (2) State contribution.--The sums authorized in paragraph 
        (1) are intended to supplement voluntary contributions to be 
        made by State departments of transportation and other State 
        safety and transportation agencies.

SEC. 5211. SURFACE TRANSPORTATION CONGESTION RELIEF SOLUTIONS RESEARCH 
              INITIATIVE.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary, acting through the Federal 
Highway Administration, shall establish a surface transportation 
congestion solutions research initiative consisting of 2 independent 
research programs described in subsections (b)(1) and (b)(2) and 
designed to develop information to assist State transportation 
departments and metropolitan planning organizations measure and address 
surface transportation congestion problems.
    (b) Surface Transportation Congestion Solutions Research Program.--
            (1) Improved surface transportation congestion management 
        system measures.--The purposes of the first research program 
        established under this section shall be--
                    (A) to examine the effectiveness of surface 
                transportation congestion management systems since 
                enactment of the Intermodal Surface Transportation 
                Assistance Act of 1991 (Public Law 102-240);
                    (B) to identify best case examples of locally 
                designed reporting methods and incorporate such methods 
                in research on national models for developing and 
                recommending improved surface transportation congestion 
                measurement and reporting; and
                    (C) to incorporate such methods in the development 
                of national models and methods to monitor, measure, and 
                report surface transportation congestion information.
            (2) Analytical techniques for action on surface 
        transportation congestion.--The purposes of the second research 
        program established under this section shall be--
                    (A) to analyze the effectiveness of procedures used 
                by State transportation departments and metropolitan 
                planning organizations to assess surface transportation 
                congestion problems and communicate those problems to 
                decisionmakers; and
                    (B) to identify methods to ensure that the results 
                of surface transportation congestion analyses will lead 
                to the targeting of funding for programs, projects, or 
                services with demonstrated effectiveness in reducing 
                travel delay, congestion, and system unreliability.
    (c) Technical Assistance and Training.--In fiscal year 2006, the 
Secretary, acting through the Federal Highway Administration, shall 
develop a technical assistance and training program to disseminate the 
results of the surface transportation congestion solutions research 
initiative for the purpose of assisting State transportation 
departments and local transportation agencies with improving their 
approaches to surface transportation congestion measurement, analysis, 
and project programming.
    (d) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by sections 5101(a)(1) 
of this Act, $4,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $11,000,000 for each 
of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out 
subsections (a) and (b). Of the amounts made available by section 
5101(a)(2), $500,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $1,000,000 for each of 
fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out 
subsection (c).

SEC. 5212. MOTOR CARRIER EFFICIENCY STUDY.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary, in coordination with the motor 
carrier and wireless technology industry, shall conduct a study to--
            (1) identify inefficiencies in the transportation of 
        freight;
            (2) evaluate the safety, productivity, and reduced cost 
        improvements that may be achieved through the use of wireless 
        technologies to address the inefficiencies identified in 
        paragraph (1); and
            (3) conduct, as appropriate, field tests demonstrating the 
        technologies identified in paragraph (2).
    (b) Program Elements.--The program shall include, at a minimum, the 
following:
            (1) Fuel monitoring and management systems.
            (2) Radio frequency identification technology.
            (3) Electronic manifest systems.
            (4) Cargo theft prevention.
    (c) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of the study 
under this section shall be 100 percent.
    (d) Annual Report.--The Secretary shall prepare and transmit to 
Congress an annual report on the programs and activities carried out 
under this section.
    (e) Funding.--From funds made available under section 5101(a)(1), 
the Secretary shall make available $1,000,000 to the Federal Motor 
Carrier Safety Administration for each of fiscal years 2005 through 
2009 to carry out this section.

SEC. 5213. TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIC PLANNING.

    (a) Amendment.--Section 508 of title 23, United States Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 508. Transportation research and development strategic planning
    ``(a) In General.--
            ``(1) Development.--Not later than 1 year after the date of 
        enactment of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users, 
        the Secretary shall develop a 5-year transportation research 
        and development strategic plan to guide Federal transportation 
        research and development activities. This plan shall be 
        consistent with section 306 of title 5, sections 1115 and 1116 
        of title 31, and any other research and development plan within 
        the Department of Transportation.
            ``(2) Contents.--The strategic plan developed under 
        paragraph (1) shall--
                    ``(A) describe the primary purposes of the 
                transportation research and development program, which 
                shall include, at a minimum--
                            ``(i) reducing congestion and improving 
                        mobility;
                            ``(ii) promoting safety;
                            ``(iii) promoting security;
                            ``(iv) protecting and enhancing the 
                        environment;
                            ``(v) preserving the existing 
                        transportation system; and
                            ``(vi) improving the durability and 
                        extending the life of transportation 
                        infrastructure;
                    ``(B) for each purpose, list the primary research 
                and development topics that the Department intends to 
                pursue to accomplish that purpose, which may include 
                the fundamental research in the physical and natural 
                sciences, applied research, technology development, and 
                social science research intended for each topic; and
                    ``(C) for each research and development topic, 
                describe--
                            ``(i) the anticipated annual funding levels 
                        for the period covered by the strategic plan; 
                        and
                            ``(ii) the additional information the 
                        Department expects to gain at the end of the 
                        period covered by the strategic plan as a 
                        result of the research and development in that 
                        topic area.
            ``(3) Considerations.--In developing the strategic plan, 
        the Secretary shall ensure that the plan--
                    ``(A) reflects input from a wide range of 
                stakeholders;
                    ``(B) includes and integrates the research and 
                development programs of all the Department's operating 
                administrations, including aviation, transit, rail, and 
                maritime; and
                    ``(C) takes into account how research and 
                development by other Federal, State, private sector, 
                and not-for-profit institutions contributes to the 
                achievement of the purposes identified under paragraph 
                (2)(A), and avoids unnecessary duplication with these 
                efforts.
            ``(4) Performance plans and reports.--In reports submitted 
        under sections 1115 and 1116 of title 31, the Secretary shall 
        include--
                    ``(A) a summary of the Federal transportation 
                research and development activities for the previous 
                fiscal year in each topic area;
                    ``(B) the amount of funding spent in each topic 
                area;
                    ``(C) a description of the extent to which the 
                research and development is meeting the expectations 
                set forth in paragraph (2)(C)(ii); and
                    ``(D) any amendments to the strategic plan.
    ``(b) The Secretary shall submit to Congress an annual report, 
along with the President's annual budget request, describing the amount 
spent in the last completed fiscal year on transportation research and 
development and the amount proposed in the current budget for 
transportation research and development.
    ``(c) National Research Council Review.--The Secretary shall enter 
into an agreement for the review by the National Research Council of 
the details of each--
            ``(1) strategic plan under section 508;
            ``(2) performance plan required under section 1115 of title 
        31; and
            ``(3) program performance report required under section 
        1116 of title 31,
with respect to transportation research and development.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 5 of such title 
is amended by striking the item related to section 508 and inserting 
the following:

``508. Transportation research and development strategic planning.''.

SEC. 5214. LIMITATION ON REMEDIES FOR FUTURE STRATEGIC HIGHWAY RESEARCH 
              PROGRAM.

    Section 510 of title 23, United States Code, as added by section 
5209 of this Act, is amended by inserting after subsection (f) the 
following:
    ``(g) Limitation of Remedies.--
            ``(1) Same remedy as if united states.--The remedy against 
        the United States provided by sections 1346(b) and 2672 of 
        title 28 for injury, loss of property, personal injury, or 
        death shall apply to any claim against the National Academy of 
        Sciences for money damages for injury, loss of property, 
        personal injury, or death caused by any negligent or wrongful 
        act or omission by employees and individuals described in 
        paragraph (3) arising from activities conducted under or in 
        connection with this section. Any such claim shall be subject 
        to the limitations and exceptions which would be applicable to 
        such claim if such claim were against the United States. With 
        respect to any such claim, the Secretary shall be treated as 
        the head of the appropriate Federal agency for purposes of 
        sections 2672 and 2675 of title 28.
            ``(2) Exclusiveness of remedy.--The remedy referred to in 
        paragraph (1) shall be exclusive of any other civil action or 
        proceeding for the purpose of determining liability arising 
        from any such act or omission without regard to when the act or 
        omission occurred.
            ``(3) Treatment.--Employees of the National Academy of 
        Sciences and other individuals appointed by the president of 
        the National Academy of Sciences and acting on its behalf in 
        connection with activities carried out under this section shall 
        be treated as if they are employees of the Federal Government 
        under section 2671 of title 28 for purposes of a civil action 
        or proceeding with respect to a claim described in paragraph 
        (1). The civil action or proceeding shall proceed in the same 
        manner as any proceeding under chapter 171 of title 28 or 
        action against the United States filed pursuant to section 
        1346(b) of title 28 and shall be subject to the limitations and 
        exceptions applicable to such a proceeding or action.
            ``(4) Sources of payments.--Payment of any award, 
        compromise, or settlement of a civil action or proceeding with 
        respect to a claim described in paragraph (1) shall be paid 
        first out of insurance maintained by the National Academy of 
        Sciences, second from funds made available to carry out this 
        section, and then from sums made available under section 1304 
        of title 31. For purposes of such section, such an award, 
        compromise, or settlement shall be deemed to be a judgment, 
        award, or settlement payable under section 2414 or 2672 of 
        title 28. The Secretary may establish a reserve of funds made 
        available to carry out this section for making payments under 
        this paragraph.''.

SEC. 5215. CENTER FOR TRANSPORTATION ADVANCEMENT AND REGIONAL 
              DEVELOPMENT.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a Center for 
Transportation Advancement and Regional Development to assist, through 
training, education and research, in the comprehensive development of 
small metropolitan and rural regional transportation systems that are 
responsive to the needs of businesses and local communities.
    (b) Activities.--In carrying out this section, the Center shall--
            (1) provide training, information and professional 
        resources for small metropolitan and rural regions to pursue 
        innovative strategies to expand the capabilities, capacity and 
        effectiveness of a region's transportation network, including 
        activities related to freight projects, transit system 
        upgrades, roadways and bridges, and intermodal transfer 
        facilities and operations;
            (2) assist local officials, rural transportation and 
        economic development planners, officials from State departments 
        of transportation and economic development, business leaders 
        and other stakeholders in developing public-private 
        partnerships to enhance their transportation systems; and
            (3) promote the leveraging of regional transportation 
        planning with regional economic and business development 
        planning to assure that appropriate transportation systems are 
        created.
    (c) Program Administration.--To carry out this section, the 
Secretary shall make a grant to, or enter into a cooperative agreement 
or contract with, a national association of regional economic 
development and transportation professionals with a focus on small 
metropolitan and rural regions.
    (d) Authorization.--From the amounts made available in section 
5101(a)(1), $500,000 shall be available for each of fiscal years 2005 
through 2009 to carry out this section.

SEC. 5216. HAZARDOUS MATERIALS RESEARCH PROJECTS.

    (a) In General.--The Administrator of the Pipeline and Hazardous 
Materials Safety Administration shall enter into a contract with the 
National Academy of Sciences to carry out the 9 research projects 
called for in the 2005 Special Report 283 of the Transportation 
Research Board entitled ``Cooperative Research for Hazardous Materials 
Transportation: Defining the Need, Converging on Solutions''. In 
carrying out the research projects, the National Academy of Sciences 
shall consult with the Administrator.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 6 months after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary shall transmit a report to the Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and 
the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate on 
the need to establish a cooperative research program on hazardous 
materials transportation.
    (c) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) 
of this Act, $1,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 
shall be available to carry out this section.

      Subtitle C--University Transportation Research; Scholarship 
                             Opportunities

SEC. 5301. NATIONAL UNIVERSITY TRANSPORTATION CENTERS.

    (a) In General.--Section 5505 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5505. National university transportation centers
    ``(a) In General.--
            ``(1) Establishment and operation.--The Secretary of 
        Transportation shall make grants under this section to eligible 
        nonprofit institutions of higher learning to establish and 
        operate national university transportation centers.
            ``(2) Role of centers.--The role of each center shall be to 
        advance significantly transportation research on critical 
        national transportation issues and to expand the workforce of 
        transportation professionals.
    ``(b) Applicability of Requirements.--A grant received by an 
eligible nonprofit institution of higher learning under this section 
shall be available for the same purposes, and shall be subject to the 
same terms and conditions, as a grant made to a nonprofit institution 
of higher learning under section 5506.
    ``(c) Eligible Nonprofit Institution of Higher Learning Defined.--
In this section, the term `eligible nonprofit institution of higher 
learning' means each of the lead institutions identified in subsections 
(j)(4)(A), (j)(4)(B), and (j)(4)(F) of section 5505 as in effect on the 
day before the date of enactment of the Transportation Equity Act: A 
Legacy for Users, the university referred to in section 704 of Public 
Law 103-206 (107 Stat. 2447), and the university that, as of the day 
before such date of enactment, is the lead institution for the regional 
university transportation center for region 5 of the Standard Federal 
Regional Boundary System.
    ``(d) Grants.--In each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009, the 
Secretary shall make a grant under this section to each eligible 
nonprofit institution of higher learning in an amount not to exceed 
$3,500,000.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for subchapter I of chapter 
55 of such title is amended by striking the item relating to section 
5505 and inserting the following:

``5505. National university transportation centers.''.

SEC. 5302. UNIVERSITY TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH.

    (a) In General.--Section 5506 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5506. University transportation research
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Transportation shall make 
grants under this section to nonprofit institutions of higher learning 
to establish and operate university transportation centers.
    ``(b) Objectives.--Grants received under this section shall be used 
by nonprofit institutions of higher learning to advance significantly 
the state-of-the-art in transportation research and expand the 
workforce of transportation professionals through the following 
programs and activities:
            ``(1) Research.--Basic and applied research, the products 
        of which are judged by peers or other experts in the field of 
        transportation to advance the body of knowledge in 
        transportation.
            ``(2) Education.--An education program relating to 
        transportation that includes multidisciplinary course work and 
        participation in research.
            ``(3) Technology transfer.--An ongoing program of 
        technology transfer that makes transportation research results 
        available to potential users in a form that can be implemented, 
        utilized, or otherwise applied.
    ``(c) Regional, Tier I, and Tier II Centers.--
            ``(1) In general.--For each of fiscal years 2004 through 
        2009, the Secretary shall make grants under subsection (a) to 
        nonprofit institutions of higher learning to establish and 
        operate--
                    ``(A) 10 regional university transportation 
                centers; and
                    ``(B) 10 Tier I university transportation centers.
            ``(2) Tier ii centers.--For each of fiscal years 2005 
        through 2009, the Secretary shall make grants under subsection 
        (a) to nonprofit institutions of higher learning to establish 
        and operate 10 Tier II university transportation centers.
            ``(3) Location of regional centers.--One regional 
        university transportation center shall be located in each of 
        the 10 United States Government regions that comprise the 
        Standard Federal Regional Boundary System.
            ``(4) Limitation.--A nonprofit institution of higher 
        learning may not directly receive a grant under this section 
        for a fiscal year for more than one university transportation 
        center.
    ``(d) Competitive Selection Process.--
            ``(1) Applications.--In order to be eligible to receive a 
        grant under this section, a nonprofit institution of higher 
        learning shall submit to the Secretary an application that is 
        in such form and contains such information as the Secretary may 
        require.
            ``(2) General selection criteria.--Except as otherwise 
        provided by this section, the Secretary shall select each 
        recipient of a grant under this section through a competitive 
        process on the basis of the following:
                    ``(A) The demonstrated research and extension 
                resources available to the recipient to carry out this 
                section.
                    ``(B) The capability of the recipient to provide 
                leadership in making national and regional 
                contributions to the solution of immediate and long-
                range transportation problems.
                    ``(C) The recipient's demonstrated commitment of at 
                least $400,000 each year in regularly budgeted 
                institutional amounts to support ongoing transportation 
                research and education programs.
                    ``(D) The recipient's demonstrated ability to 
                disseminate results of transportation research and 
                education programs through a statewide or regionwide 
                continuing education program.
                    ``(E) The strategic plan the recipient proposes to 
                carry out under the grant.
    ``(e) Regional University Transportation Centers.--
            ``(1) Competition.--Not later than August 31, 2005, and not 
        later than March 31st of every 4th year thereafter, the 
        Secretary shall complete a competition among nonprofit 
        institutions of higher learning for grants to establish and 
        operate the 10 regional university transportation centers 
        referred to in subsection (c)(1)(A).
            ``(2) Selection criteria.--In conducting a competition 
        under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall select a nonprofit 
        institution of higher learning on the basis of--
                    ``(A) the criteria described in subsection (d)(2);
                    ``(B) the location of the center within the Federal 
                region to be served; and
                    ``(C) whether or not the institution (or, in the 
                case of a consortium of institutions, the lead 
                institution) can demonstrate that it has a well-
                established, nationally recognized program in 
                transportation research and education, as evidenced 
                by--
                            ``(i) not less than $2,000,000 in highway 
                        or public transportation research expenditures 
                        each year for each of the preceding 5 years;
                            ``(ii) not less than 10 graduate degrees 
                        awarded in professional fields closely related 
                        to highways and public transportation for year 
                        for each of the preceding 5 years; and
                            ``(iii) not less than 5 tenured or tenure-
                        track faculty members who specialize on a full-
                        time basis in professional fields closely 
                        related to highways and public transportation 
                        who, as a group, have published a total at 
                        least 50 refereed journal publications on 
                        highway or public transportation research 
                        during the preceding 5 years.
            ``(3) Grant recipients.--After selecting a nonprofit 
        institution of higher learning as a grant recipient on the 
        basis of a competition conducted under this subsection, the 
        Secretary shall make a grant to the recipient to establish and 
        operate a regional university transportation center in each of 
        the first 4 fiscal years beginning after the date of the 
        competition.
            ``(4) Special rule for fiscal years 2004 and 2005.--For 
        each of fiscal years 2004 and 2005, the Secretary shall make a 
        grant under this section to each of the 10 nonprofit 
        institutions of higher learning that were competitively 
        selected for grants by the Secretary under this section in July 
        1999 to operate regional university transportation centers.
            ``(5) Amount of grants.--For each of fiscal years 2004 
        through 2009, a grant made by the Secretary to a nonprofit 
        institution of higher learning for a fiscal year to establish 
        and operate a regional university transportation center shall 
        not exceed $3,500,000.
    ``(f) Tier I University Transportation Centers.--
            ``(1) Competition.--Not later than March 31, 2006, and not 
        later than March 31st of every 4th year thereafter, the 
        Secretary shall complete a competition among nonprofit 
        institutions of higher learning for grants to establish and 
        operate the 10 Tier I university transportation centers 
        referred to in subsection (c)(1)(B).
            ``(2) Selection criteria.--In conducting a competition 
        under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall select a nonprofit 
        institution of higher learning on the basis of--
                    ``(A) the criteria described in subsection (d)(2); 
                and
                    ``(B) whether or not the institution (or, in the 
                case of a consortium of institutions, the lead 
                institution) can demonstrate that it has an 
                established, recognized program in transportation 
                research and education, as evidenced by--
                            ``(i) not less than $1,000,000 in highway 
                        or public transportation research expenditures 
                        each year for each of the preceding 5 years or 
                        not less than $6,000,000 in such expenditures 
                        during the 5 preceding years;
                            ``(ii) not less than 5 graduate degrees 
                        awarded in professional fields closely related 
                        to highways and public transportation each year 
                        for each of the preceding 5 years; and
                            ``(iii) not less than 3 tenured or tenure-
                        track faculty members who specialize on a full-
                        time basis in professional fields closely 
                        related to highways and public transportation 
                        who, as a group, have published a total at 
                        least 20 refereed journal publications on 
                        highway or public transportation research 
                        during the preceding 5 years.
            ``(3) Grant recipients.--After selecting a nonprofit 
        institution of higher learning as a grant recipient on the 
        basis of a competition conducted under this subsection, the 
        Secretary shall make a grant to the recipient to establish and 
        operate a Tier I university transportation center in each of 
        the first 4 fiscal years beginning after the date of the 
        competition.
            ``(4) Special rule for fiscal years 2004, 2005, and 2006.--
        For each of fiscal years 2004, 2005, and 2006, the Secretary 
        shall make a grant under this section to each of the 10 
        nonprofit institutions of higher learning that were 
        competitively selected for grant awards by the Secretary under 
        this section in May 2002 to operate university transportation 
        centers (other than regional centers).
            ``(5) Amount of grants.--A grant made by the Secretary to a 
        nonprofit institution of higher learning for a fiscal year to 
        establish and operate a Tier I university transportation center 
        shall not exceed $1,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $1,500,000 
        for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
    ``(g) Tier II University Transportation Centers.--
            ``(1) Competition.--Not later than 60 days after the date 
        of enactment of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for 
        Users, not later than March 31, 2008, and not later than March 
        31st of every 4th year thereafter, the Secretary shall complete 
        a competition among nonprofit institutions of higher learning 
        for grants to establish and operate the 10 Tier II university 
        transportation centers referred to in subsection (c)(2).
            ``(2) Selection criteria.--In conducting a competition 
        under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall select a nonprofit 
        institution of higher learning on the basis of the criteria 
        described in subsection (f)(2).
            ``(3) Grant recipients.--After selecting a nonprofit 
        institution of higher learning as a grant recipient on the 
        basis of a competition conducted under this subsection, the 
        Secretary shall--
                    ``(A) in the case of the competition to be 
                completed not later than 60 days after the date of 
                enactment of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy 
                for Users, make a grant to the recipient to establish 
                and operate a Tier II university transportation center 
                in each of fiscal years 2005 through 2008; and
                    ``(B) in the case of each subsequent competition, 
                make a grant to the recipient to establish and operate 
                a Tier II university transportation center in each of 
                the first 4 fiscal years beginning after the date of 
                the competition.
            ``(4) Amount of grants.--For each of fiscal years 2005 
        through 2009, a grant made by the Secretary to a nonprofit 
        institution of higher learning for a fiscal year to establish 
        and operate a Tier II university transportation center shall 
        not exceed $1,000,000.
    ``(h) Support of National Strategy for Surface Transportation 
Research.--In order to be eligible to receive a grant under this 
section, a nonprofit institution of higher learning shall provide 
assurances satisfactory to the Secretary that the research and 
education activities of its university transportation center will 
support the national strategy for surface transportation research, as 
identified by--
            ``(1) the report of the National Highway Research and 
        Technology Partnership entitled `Highway Research and 
        Technology: The Need for Greater Investment', dated April 2002; 
        and
            ``(2) the programs of the National Research and Technology 
        Program of the Federal Transit Administration.
    ``(i) Maintenance of Effort.--In order to be eligible to receive a 
grant under this section, a nonprofit institution of higher learning 
shall enter into an agreement with the Secretary to ensure that the 
institution will maintain total expenditures from all other sources to 
establish and operate a university transportation center and related 
research activities at a level at least equal to the average level of 
such expenditures in its 2 fiscal years prior to award of a grant under 
this section.
    ``(j) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the costs of activities 
carried out using a grant made under this section shall be 50 percent 
of such costs. The non-Federal share may include funds provided to a 
recipient under section 503, 504(b), or 505 of title 23.
    ``(k) Program Coordination.--
            ``(1) Coordination.--The Secretary shall coordinate the 
        research, education, and technology transfer activities that 
        grant recipients carry out under this section, disseminate the 
        results of the research, and establish and operate a 
        clearinghouse to disseminate the results of the research.
            ``(2) Annual review and evaluation.--At least annually, and 
        consistent with the plan developed under section 508 of title 
        23, the Secretary shall review and evaluate programs of grant 
        recipients.
            ``(3) Management and oversight.--The Secretary shall expend 
        $1,500,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 from 
        amounts made available to carry out this section to carry out 
        management and oversight of the centers receiving assistance 
        under this section.
    ``(l) Program Administration.--The Secretary shall carry out this 
section acting through the Administrator of the Research and Innovative 
Technology Administration.
    ``(m) Limitation on Availability of Funds.--Funds made available to 
carry out this section shall remain available for obligation by the 
Secretary for a period of 2 years after the last day of the fiscal year 
for which such funds are authorized.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for subchapter I of chapter 
55 of such title is amended by striking the item relating to section 
5506 and inserting the following:

``5506. University transportation research.''.

SEC. 5303. TRANSPORTATION SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--
            (1) Establishment of program.--The Secretary may establish 
        and implement a scholarship program for the purpose of 
        attracting qualified students for transportation-related 
        critical jobs.
            (2) Partnership.--The Secretary may establish the program 
        in partnership with appropriate nongovernmental institutions.
    (b) Participation and Funding.--An operating administration of the 
Department of Transportation and the Office of Inspector General may 
participate in the scholarship program. Notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, the Secretary may use funds available to an operating 
administration or from the Office of Inspector General of the 
Department of Transportation for the purpose of carrying out this 
section.

                   Subtitle D--Advanced Technologies

SEC. 5401. ADVANCED HEAVY-DUTY VEHICLE TECHNOLOGIES RESEARCH PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 55 of title 49, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 5507. Advanced heavy-duty vehicle technologies research program
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Transportation shall conduct 
research, development, demonstration, and testing to integrate emerging 
advanced heavy-duty vehicle technologies in order to provide seamless, 
safe, secure, and efficient transportation and to benefit the 
environment.
    ``(b) Consultation.--To ensure the activities performed pursuant to 
this section achieve the maximum benefit, the Secretary of 
Transportation shall consult with the Secretary of Energy, the 
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, and other 
relevant Federal agencies on research, development, and demonstration 
activities authorized under this section related to advanced heavy-duty 
vehicle technologies.
    ``(c) Grants, Cooperative Agreements, and Other Transactions.--The 
Secretary may make grants to, and enter into cooperative agreements and 
other transactions with, Federal and other public agencies (including 
State and local governments) and persons to carry out subsection (a).
    ``(d) Cost Sharing.--At least 50 percent of the funding for 
projects carried out under this section must be provided by non-Federal 
sources.
    ``(e) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be 
appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit 
Account) to carry out subsection (a) $1,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 
and $3,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
    ``(f) Contract Authority.--The funds authorized to be appropriated 
by subsection (e) shall be available for obligation in the same manner 
as if such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23 and shall 
be subject to any limitation on obligations imposed on funds made 
available to carry out title V of the Transportation Equity Act: A 
Legacy for Users.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for subchapter I of chapter 
55 of such title is amended by adding at the end the following:

``5507. Advanced heavy-duty vehicle technologies research program.''.

SEC. 5402. COMMERCIAL REMOTE SENSING PRODUCTS AND SPATIAL INFORMATION 
              TECHNOLOGIES.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish and carry out a 
program to validate commercial remote sensing products and spatial 
information technologies for application to national transportation 
infrastructure development and construction.
    (b) Program.--
            (1) National policy.--The Secretary shall establish and 
        maintain a national policy for the use of commercial remote 
        sensing products and spatial information technologies in 
        national transportation infrastructure development and 
        construction.
            (2) Policy implementation.--The Secretary shall develop new 
        applications of commercial remote sensing products and spatial 
        information technologies for the implementation of the national 
        policy established and maintained under paragraph (1).
    (c) Cooperation.--The Secretary shall carry out this section in 
cooperation with the commercial remote sensing program of the National 
Aeronautics and Space Administration and a consortium of university 
research centers.
    (d) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) 
of this Act, $3,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and $9,000,000 for each of 
fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out this 
section.

SEC. 5403. TRANSPORTATION TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION AND DEMONSTRATION 
              PROGRAM.

    Section 5117(b)(3) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st 
Century (23 U.S.C. 502 note) is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (B)(i)--
                    (A) by striking ``Build an'' and inserting ``Build 
                or integrate an'';
                    (B) by striking ``$2,000,000'' and inserting 
                ``$2,500,000'';
                    (C) by striking ``300,000 and that'' and inserting 
                ``300,000,''; and
                    (D) by inserting before the period at the end the 
                following: ``, and includes major transportation 
                corridors serving that metropolitan area'';
            (2) in subparagraph (C)(ii) by striking ``by July 1, 2002'' 
        and inserting ``by 6 months after the date of enactment of the 
        Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users''; and
            (3) in subparagraph (E) by striking clause (ii) and 
        inserting the following:
                            ``(ii) The term `follow-on deployment 
                        areas' means the metropolitan areas of Albany, 
                        Atlanta, Austin, Baltimore, Birmingham, Boston, 
                        Burlington, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland, 
                        Columbus, Dallas/Ft. Worth, Denver, Detroit, 
                        Greensboro, Hartford, Houston, Indianapolis, 
                        Jacksonville, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Los 
                        Angeles, Louisville, Miami, Milwaukee, 
                        Minneapolis- St. Paul, Nashville, New Orleans, 
                        New York/Northern New Jersey, Norfolk, Northern 
                        Kentucky/Cincinnati, Oklahoma City, Orlando, 
                        Philadelphia, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Portland, 
                        Providence, Raleigh, Richmond, Sacramento, Salt 
                        Lake, San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose, St. 
                        Louis, Seattle, Tampa, Tucson, Tulsa, and 
                        Washington, District of Columbia.''.

              Subtitle E--Transportation Data and Analysis

SEC. 5501. BUREAU OF TRANSPORTATION STATISTICS.

    Section 111 of title 49, United States Code, is amended to read as 
follows:
``Sec. 111. Bureau of Transportation Statistics
    ``(a) Establishment.--There is established in the Research and 
Innovative Technology Administration a Bureau of Transportation 
Statistics.
    ``(b) Director.--
            ``(1) Appointment.--The Bureau shall be headed by a 
        Director who shall be appointed in the competitive service by 
        the Secretary.
            ``(2) Qualifications.--The Director shall be appointed from 
        among individuals who are qualified to serve as the Director by 
        virtue of their training and experience in the collection, 
        analysis, and use of transportation statistics.
    ``(c) Responsibilities.--The Director of the Bureau shall serve as 
the Secretary's senior advisor on data and statistics, and shall be 
responsible for carrying out the following duties:
            ``(1) Providing data, statistics, and analysis to 
        transportation decisionmakers.--Ensuring that the statistics 
        compiled under paragraph (5) are designed to support 
        transportation decisionmaking by the Federal Government, State 
        and local governments, metropolitan planning organizations, 
        transportation-related associations, the private sector 
        (including the freight community), and the public.
            ``(2) Coordinating collection of information.--Working with 
        the operating administrations of the Department to establish 
        and implement the Bureau's data programs and to improve the 
        coordination of information collection efforts with other 
        Federal agencies.
            ``(3) Data modernization.--Continually improving surveys 
        and data collection methods to improve the accuracy and utility 
        of transportation statistics.
            ``(4) Encouraging data standardization.--Encouraging the 
        standardization of data, data collection methods, and data 
        management and storage technologies for data collected by the 
        Bureau, the operating administrations of the Department of 
        Transportation, States, local governments, metropolitan 
        planning organizations, and private sector entities.
            ``(5) Compiling transportation statistics.--Compiling, 
        analyzing, and publishing a comprehensive set of transportation 
        statistics on the performance and impacts of the national 
        transportation system, including statistics on--
                    ``(A) productivity in various parts of the 
                transportation sector;
                    ``(B) traffic flows for all modes of 
                transportation;
                    ``(C) other elements of the Intermodal 
                Transportation Database established under subsection 
                (g);
                    ``(D) travel times and measures of congestion;
                    ``(E) vehicle weights and other vehicle 
                characteristics;
                    ``(F) demographic, economic, and other variables 
                influencing traveling behavior, including choice of 
                transportation mode, and goods movement;
                    ``(G) transportation costs for passenger travel and 
                goods movement;
                    ``(H) availability and use of mass transit 
                (including the number of passengers served by each mass 
                transit authority) and other forms of for-hire 
                passenger travel;
                    ``(I) frequency of vehicle and transportation 
                facility repairs and other interruptions of 
                transportation service;
                    ``(J) safety and security for travelers, vehicles, 
                and transportation systems;
                    ``(K) consequences of transportation for the human 
                and natural environment;
                    ``(L) the extent, connectivity, and condition of 
                the transportation system, building on the National 
                Transportation Atlas Database developed under 
                subsection (g); and
                    ``(M) transportation-related variables that 
                influence the domestic economy and global 
                competitiveness.
            ``(6) National spatial data infrastructure.--Building and 
        disseminating the transportation layer of the National Spatial 
        Data Infrastructure, including coordinating the development of 
        transportation geospatial data standards, compiling intermodal 
        geospatial data, and collecting geospatial data that is not 
        being collected by others.
            ``(7) Issuing guidelines.--Issuing guidelines for the 
        collection of information by the Department of Transportation 
        required for statistics to be compiled under paragraph (5) in 
        order to ensure that such information is accurate, reliable, 
        relevant, and in a form that permits systematic analysis. The 
        Bureau shall review and report to the Secretary of 
        Transportation on the sources and reliability of the statistics 
        proposed by the heads of the operating administrations of the 
        Department to measure outputs and outcomes as required by the 
        Government Performance and Results Act of 1993, and the 
        amendments made by such Act, and shall carry out such other 
        reviews of the sources and reliability of other data collected 
        or statistical information published by the heads of the 
        operating administrations of the Department as shall be 
        requested by the Secretary.
            ``(8) Making statistics accessible.--Making the statistics 
        published under this subsection readily accessible.
    ``(d) Information Needs Assessment.--
            ``(1) In general.--Within 60 days after the date of the 
        enactment of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users, 
        the Secretary shall enter into an arrangement with the National 
        Research Council to develop and publish a National 
        Transportation Information Needs Assessment (referred to in 
        this subsection as the `Assessment'). The Assessment shall be 
        transmitted to the Secretary and the Congress not later than 24 
        months after such arrangement is entered into.
            ``(2) Content.--The Assessment shall--
                    ``(A) identify, in priority order, transportation 
                data that is not being collected by the Bureau, 
                Department of Transportation operating administrations, 
                or other Federal, State, or local entities, but is 
                needed to improve transportation decisionmaking at the 
                Federal, State, and local level and to fulfill the 
                requirements of subsection (c)(5);
                    ``(B) recommend whether the data identified in 
                subparagraph (A) should be collected by the Bureau, 
                other parts of the Department, or by other Federal, 
                State, or local entities, and whether any data is a 
                higher priority than data currently being collected;
                    ``(C) identify any data the Bureau or other 
                Federal, State, and local entities is collecting that 
                is not needed;
                    ``(D) describe new data collection methods 
                (including changes in surveys) and other changes the 
                Bureau or other Federal, State, and local entities 
                should implement to improve the standardization, 
                accuracy, and utility of transportation data and 
                statistics; and
                    ``(E) estimate the cost of implementing any 
                recommendations.
            ``(3) Consultation.--In developing the Assessment, the 
        National Research Council shall consult with the Department's 
        Advisory Council on Transportation Statistics and a 
        representative cross-section of transportation community 
        stakeholders as well as other Federal agencies, including the 
        Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Energy, and 
        the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
            ``(4) Report to congress.--Not later than 6 months after 
        the National Research Council transmits the Assessment under 
        paragraph (1), the Secretary shall transmit a report to 
        Congress that describes--
                    ``(A) how the Department plans to fill the data 
                gaps identified under paragraph (2)(A);
                    ``(B) how the Department plans to stop collecting 
                data identified under paragraph (2)(C);
                    ``(C) how the Department plans to implement 
                improved data collection methods and other changes 
                identified under paragraph (2)(D);
                    ``(D) the expected costs of implementing 
                subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of this paragraph;
                    ``(E) any findings of the Assessment under 
                paragraph (1) with which the Secretary disagrees, and 
                why; and
                    ``(F) any proposed statutory changes needed to 
                implement the findings of the Assessment under 
                paragraph (1).
    ``(e) Intermodal Transportation Data Base.--
            ``(1) In general.--In consultation with the Under Secretary 
        for Policy, the Assistant Secretaries, and the heads of the 
        operating administrations of the Department of Transportation, 
        the Director shall establish and maintain a transportation data 
        base for all modes of transportation.
            ``(2) Use.--The data base shall be suitable for analyses 
        carried out by the Federal Government, the States, and 
        metropolitan planning organizations.
            ``(3) Contents.--The data base shall include--
                    ``(A) information on the volumes and patterns of 
                movement of goods, including local, interregional, and 
                international movement, by all modes of transportation 
                and intermodal combinations, and by relevant 
                classification;
                    ``(B) information on the volumes and patterns of 
                movement of people, including local, interregional, and 
                international movements, by all modes of transportation 
                (including bicycle and pedestrian modes) and intermodal 
                combinations, and by relevant classification;
                    ``(C) information on the location and connectivity 
                of transportation facilities and services; and
                    ``(D) a national accounting of expenditures and 
                capital stocks on each mode of transportation and 
                intermodal combination.
    ``(f) National Transportation Library.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Director shall establish and 
        maintain a National Transportation Library, which shall contain 
        a collection of statistical and other information needed for 
        transportation decisionmaking at the Federal, State, and local 
        levels.
            ``(2) Access.--The Director shall facilitate and promote 
        access to the Library, with the goal of improving the ability 
        of the transportation community to share information and the 
        ability of the Director to make statistics readily accessible 
        under subsection (c)(8).
            ``(3) Coordination.--The Director shall work with other 
        transportation libraries and other transportation information 
        providers, both public and private, to achieve the goal 
        specified in paragraph (2).
    ``(g) National Transportation Atlas Data Base.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Director shall develop and maintain 
        geospatial data bases that depict--
                    ``(A) transportation networks;
                    ``(B) flows of people, goods, vehicles, and craft 
                over the networks; and
                    ``(C) social, economic, and environmental 
                conditions that affect or are affected by the networks.
            ``(2) Intermodal network analysis.--The data bases shall be 
        able to support intermodal network analysis.
    ``(h) Mandatory Response Authority for Freight Data Collection.--
Whoever, being the owner, official, agent, person in charge, or 
assistant to the person in charge of any corporation, company, 
business, institution, establishment, or organization of any nature 
whatsoever, neglects or refuses, when requested by the Director or 
other authorized officer, employee, or contractor of the Bureau, to 
answer completely and correctly to the best of his or her knowledge all 
questions relating to the corporation, company, business, institution, 
establishment, or other organization, or to make available records or 
statistics in his or her official custody, contained in a data 
collection request prepared and submitted under the authority of 
subsection (c)(1), shall be fined not more than $500; but if he or she 
willfully gives a false answer to such a question, he or she shall be 
fined not more than $10,000.
    ``(i) Research and Development Grants.--The Secretary may make 
grants to, or enter into cooperative agreements or contracts with, 
public and nonprofit private entities (including State transportation 
departments, metropolitan planning organizations, and institutions of 
higher education) for--
            ``(1) investigation of the subjects specified in subsection 
        (c)(5) and research and development of new methods of data 
        collection, standardization, management, integration, 
        dissemination, interpretation, and analysis;
            ``(2) demonstration programs by States, local governments, 
        and metropolitan planning organizations to harmonize data 
        collection, reporting, management, storage, and archiving to 
        simplify data comparisons across jurisdictions;
            ``(3) development of electronic clearinghouses of 
        transportation data and related information, as part of the 
        National Transportation Library under subsection (f); and
            ``(4) development and improvement of methods for sharing 
        geographic data, in support of the national transportation 
        atlas data base under subsection (g) and the National Spatial 
        Data Infrastructure developed under Executive Order No. 12906.
    ``(j) Limitations on Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this 
section shall be construed--
            ``(1) to authorize the Bureau to require any other 
        department or agency to collect data; or
            ``(2) to reduce the authority of any other officer of the 
        Department of Transportation to collect and disseminate data 
        independently.
    ``(k) Prohibition on Certain Disclosures.--
            ``(1) In general.--An officer, employee or contractor of 
        the Bureau may not--
                    ``(A) make any disclosure in which the data 
                provided by an individual or organization under 
                subsection (c) can be identified;
                    ``(B) use the information provided under subsection 
                (c) for a nonstatistical purpose; or
                    ``(C) permit anyone other than an individual 
                authorized by the Director to examine any individual 
                report provided under subsection (c).
            ``(3) Informing respondent of use of data.--In a case in 
        which the Bureau is authorized by statute to collect data or 
        information for a nonstatistical purpose, the Director shall 
        clearly distinguish the collection of the data or information, 
        by rule and on the collection instrument, so as to inform a 
        respondent that is requested or required to supply the data or 
        information of the nonstatistical purpose.
    ``(l) Transportation Statistics Annual Report.--The Director shall 
transmit to the President and Congress a Transportation Statistics 
Annual Report which shall include information on items referred to in 
subsection (c)(5), documentation of methods used to obtain and ensure 
the quality of the statistics presented in the report, and 
recommendations for improving transportation statistical information.
    ``(m) Data Access.--The Director shall have access to 
transportation and transportation-related information in the possession 
of any Federal agency except information--
            ``(1) the disclosure of which to another Federal agency is 
        expressly prohibited by law; or
            ``(2) the disclosure of which the agency so requested 
        determines would significantly impair the discharge of 
        authorities and responsibilities which have been delegated to, 
        or vested by law, in such agency.
    ``(n) Proceeds of Data Product Sales.--Notwithstanding section 3302 
of title 31, funds received by the Bureau from the sale of data 
products, for necessary expenses incurred, may be credited to the 
Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) for the 
purpose of reimbursing the Bureau for the expenses.
    ``(o) Advisory Council on Transportation Statistics.--
            ``(1) Establishment.--The Director of the Bureau of 
        Transportation Statistics shall establish an Advisory Council 
        on Transportation Statistics.
            ``(2) Function.--It shall be the function of the Advisory 
        Council established under this subsection to--
                    ``(A) advise the Director of the Bureau of 
                Transportation Statistics on the quality, reliability, 
                consistency, objectivity, and relevance of 
                transportation statistics and analyses collected, 
                supported, or disseminated by the Bureau of 
                Transportation Statistics and the Department of 
                Transportation;
                    ``(B) provide input to and review the report to 
                Congress under subsection (d)(4); and
                    ``(C) advise the Director on methods to encourage 
                harmonization and interoperability of transportation 
                data collected by the Bureau, the operating 
                administrations of the Department of Transportation, 
                States, local governments, metropolitan planning 
                organizations, and private sector entities.
            ``(3) Membership.--The Advisory Council established under 
        this subsection shall be composed of not fewer than 9 and not 
        more than 11 members appointed by the Director, who are not 
        officers or employees of the United States. Each member shall 
        have expertise in transportation data collection or analysis or 
        application; except that 1 member shall have expertise in 
        economics, 1 member shall have expertise in statistics, and 1 
        member shall have experience in transportation safety. At least 
        1 member shall be a senior official of a State department of 
        transportation. Members shall include representation of a 
        cross-section of transportation community stakeholders.
            ``(4) Terms of appointment.--(A) Except as provided in 
        subparagraph (B), members shall be appointed to staggered terms 
        not to exceed 3 years. A member may be renominated for one 
        additional 3-year term.
            ``(B) Members serving on the Advisory Council on 
        Transportation Statistics as of the date of enactment of the 
        Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users shall serve until 
        the end of their appointed terms.
            ``(5) Applicability of federal advisory committee act.--The 
        Federal Advisory Committee Act shall apply to the Advisory 
        Council established under this subsection, except that section 
        14 of such Act shall not apply to such Advisory Council.''.

SEC. 5502. REPORTS OF BUREAU OF TRANSPORTATION STATISTICS.

    Section 111(k) of title 49, United States Code, as amended by 
section 5501 of this Act, is amended by inserting after paragraph (1) 
the following:
            ``(2) Copies of reports.--
                    ``(A) In general.--No department, bureau, agency, 
                officer, or employee of the United States (except the 
                Director in carrying out this section) may require, for 
                any reason, a copy of any report that has been filed 
                under subsection (c) with the Bureau or retained by an 
                individual respondent.
                    ``(B) Limitation on judicial proceedings.--A copy 
                of a report described in subparagraph (A) that has been 
                retained by an individual respondent or filed with the 
                Bureau or any of its employees, contractors, or 
                agents--
                            ``(i) shall be immune from legal process; 
                        and
                            ``(ii) shall not, without the consent of 
                        the individual concerned, be admitted as 
                        evidence or used for any purpose in any action, 
                        suit, or other judicial or administrative 
                        proceedings.
                    ``(C) Applicability.--This paragraph shall apply 
                only to reports that permit information concerning an 
                individual or organization to be reasonably determined 
                by direct or indirect means.''.

        Subtitle F--Intelligent Transportation Systems Research

SEC. 5601. SHORT TITLE.

    This subtitle may be cited as the ``Intelligent Transportation 
Systems Act of 2005''.

SEC. 5602. GOALS AND PURPOSES.

    (a) Goals.--The goals of the intelligent transportation system 
program include--
            (1) enhancement of surface transportation efficiency and 
        facilitation of intermodalism and international trade to enable 
        existing facilities to meet a significant portion of future 
        transportation needs, including public access to employment, 
        goods, and services and to reduce regulatory, financial, and 
        other transaction costs to public agencies and system users;
            (2) achievement of national transportation safety goals, 
        including the enhancement of safe operation of motor vehicles 
        and nonmotorized vehicles as well as improved emergency 
        response to a crash, with particular emphasis on decreasing the 
        number and severity of collisions;
            (3) protection and enhancement of the natural environment 
        and communities affected by surface transportation, with 
        particular emphasis on assisting State and local governments to 
        achieve national environmental goals;
            (4) accommodation of the needs of all users of surface 
        transportation systems, including operators of commercial motor 
        vehicles, passenger motor vehicles, motorcycles, and bicycles 
        and pedestrians, including individuals with disabilities; and
            (5) improvement of the Nation's ability to respond to 
        security-related or other manmade emergencies and natural 
        disasters and enhancement of national defense mobility.
    (b) Purposes.--The Secretary shall implement activities under the 
intelligent system transportation program to, at a minimum--
            (1) expedite, in both metropolitan and rural areas, 
        deployment and integration of intelligent transportation 
        systems for consumers of passenger and freight transportation;
            (2) ensure that Federal, State, and local transportation 
        officials have adequate knowledge of intelligent transportation 
        systems for full consideration in the transportation planning 
        process;
            (3) improve regional cooperation and operations planning 
        for effective intelligent transportation system deployment;
            (4) promote the innovative use of private resources;
            (5) facilitate, in cooperation with the motor vehicle 
        industry, the introduction of a vehicle-based safety enhancing 
        systems;
            (6) support the application of intelligent transportation 
        systems that increase the safety and efficiency of commercial 
        motor vehicle operations;
            (7) develop a workforce capable of developing, operating, 
        and maintaining intelligent transportation systems; and
            (8) provide continuing support for operations and 
        maintenance of intelligent transportation systems.

SEC. 5603. GENERAL AUTHORITIES AND REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) Scope.--Subject to the provisions of this subtitle, the 
Secretary shall conduct an ongoing intelligent transportation system 
program to research, develop, and operationally test intelligent 
transportation systems and advance nationwide deployment of such 
systems as a component of the surface transportation systems of the 
United States.
    (b) Policy.--Intelligent transportation system research projects 
and operational tests funded pursuant to this subtitle shall encourage 
and not displace public-private partnerships or private sector 
investment in such tests and projects.
    (c) Cooperation With Governmental, Private, and Educational 
Entities.--The Secretary shall carry out the intelligent transportation 
system program in cooperation with State and local governments and 
other public entities, the private sector of the United States, the 
Federal laboratories, and colleges and universities, including 
historically Black colleges and universities and other minority 
institutions of higher education.
    (d) Consultation With Federal Officials.--In carrying out the 
intelligent transportation system program, the Secretary shall consult 
with the heads of other Federal departments and agencies, as 
appropriate.
    (e) Technical Assistance, Training, and Information.--The Secretary 
may provide technical assistance, training, and information to State 
and local governments seeking to implement, operate, maintain, or 
evaluate intelligent transportation system technologies and services.
    (f) Transportation Planning.--The Secretary may provide funding to 
support adequate consideration of transportation systems management and 
operations, including intelligent transportation systems, within 
metropolitan and statewide transportation planning processes.
    (g) Information Clearinghouse.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall--
                    (A) maintain a repository for technical and safety 
                data collected as a result of federally sponsored 
                projects carried out under this subtitle (including the 
                amendments made by this subtitle); and
                    (B) make, on request, that information (except for 
                proprietary information and data) readily available to 
                all users of the repository at an appropriate cost.
            (2) Agreement.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary may enter into an 
                agreement with a third party for the maintenance of the 
                repository for technical and safety data under 
                paragraph (1)(A).
                    (B) Federal financial assistance.--If the Secretary 
                enters into an agreement with an entity for the 
                maintenance of the repository, the entity shall be 
                eligible for Federal financial assistance under this 
                section.
            (3) Availability of information.--Information in the 
        repository shall not be subject to section 555 of title 5, 
        United States Code.
    (h) Advisory Committee.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish an Advisory 
        Committee to advise the Secretary on carrying out this 
        subtitle.
            (2) Membership.--The Advisory Committee shall have no more 
        than 20 members, be balanced between metropolitan and rural 
        interests, and include, at a minimum--
                    (A) a representative from a State highway 
                department;
                    (B) a representative from a local highway 
                department who is not from a metropolitan planning 
                organization;
                    (C) a representative from a State, local, or 
                regional transit agency;
                    (D) a representative from a metropolitan planning 
                organization;
                    (E) a private sector user of intelligent 
                transportation system technologies;
                    (F) an academic researcher with expertise in 
                computer science or another information science field 
                related to intelligent transportation systems, and who 
                is not an expert on transportation issues;
                    (G) an academic researcher who is a civil engineer;
                    (H) an academic researcher who is a social 
                scientist with expertise in transportation issues;
                    (I) a representative from a not-for-profit group 
                representing the intelligent transportation system 
                industry;
                    (J) a representative from a public interest group 
                concerned with safety;
                    (K) a representative from a public interest group 
                concerned with the impact of the transportation system 
                on land use and residential patterns; and
                    (L) members with expertise in planning, safety, and 
                operations.
            (3) Duties.--The Advisory Committee shall, at a minimum, 
        perform the following duties:
                    (A) Provide input into the development of the 
                Intelligent Transportation System aspects of the 
                strategic plan under section 508 of title 23, United 
                States Code.
                    (B) Review, at least annually, areas of intelligent 
                transportation systems research being considered for 
                funding by the Department, to determine--
                            (i) whether these activities are likely to 
                        advance either the state-of-the-practice or 
                        state-of-the-art in intelligent transportation 
                        systems;
                            (ii) whether the intelligent transportation 
                        system technologies are likely to be deployed 
                        by users, and, if not, to determine the 
                        barriers to deployment; and
                            (iii) the appropriate roles for government 
                        and the private sector in investing in the 
                        research and technologies being considered.
            (4) Report.--Not later than February 1 of each year after 
        the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall transmit 
        to the Congress, a report including--
                    (A) all recommendations made by the Advisory 
                Committee during the preceding calendar year;
                    (B) an explanation of how the Secretary has 
                implemented those recommendations; and
                    (C) for recommendations not implemented, the 
                reasons for rejecting the recommendations.
            (5) Applicability of federal advisory committee act.--The 
        Advisory Committee shall be subject to the Federal Advisory 
        Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.).
    (i) Reporting.--
            (1) Guidelines and requirements.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary shall issue 
                guidelines and requirements for the reporting and 
                evaluation of operational tests and deployment projects 
                carried out under this subtitle.
                    (B) Objectivity and independence.--The guidelines 
                and requirements issued under subparagraph (A) shall 
                include provisions to ensure the objectivity and 
                independence of the reporting entity so as to avoid any 
                real or apparent conflict of interest or potential 
                influence on the outcome by parties to any such test or 
                deployment project or by any other formal evaluation 
                carried out under this subtitle.
                    (C) Funding.--The guidelines and requirements 
                issued under subparagraph (A) shall establish reporting 
                funding levels based on the size and scope of each test 
                or project that ensure adequate reporting of the 
                results of the test or project.
            (2) Special rule.--Any survey, questionnaire, or interview 
        that the Secretary considers necessary to carry out the 
        reporting of any test, deployment project, or program 
        assessment activity under this subtitle shall not be subject to 
        chapter 35 of title 44.

SEC. 5604. NATIONAL ARCHITECTURE AND STANDARDS.

    (a) In General.--
            (1) Development, implementation, and maintenance.--
        Consistent with section 12(d) of the National Technology 
        Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note; 110 
        Stat. 783), the Secretary shall develop, implement, and 
        maintain a national architecture and supporting standards and 
        protocols to promote the widespread use and evaluation of 
        intelligent transportation system technology as a component of 
        the surface transportation systems of the United States.
            (2) Interoperability and efficiency.--To the maximum extent 
        practicable, the national architecture shall promote 
        interoperability among, and efficiency of, intelligent 
        transportation system technologies implemented throughout the 
        United States.
            (3) Use of standards development organizations.--In 
        carrying out this section, the Secretary shall use the services 
        of such standards development organizations as the Secretary 
        determines to be appropriate.
            (4) Use of expert panel.--
                    (A) Designation.--The Secretary shall designate a 
                panel of experts to recommend ways to expedite and 
                streamline the process for developing the standards and 
                protocols to be developed pursuant to paragraph (1).
                    (B) Nonapplicability of advisory committee act.--
                The expert panel shall not be subject to the Federal 
                Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.).
                    (C) Deadline for recommendation.--No later than 
                September 30, 2006, the expert panel shall provide the 
                Secretary with a recommendation relating to such 
                standards development.
    (b) Provisional Standards.--
            (1) In general.--If the Secretary finds that the 
        development or balloting of an intelligent transportation 
        system standard jeopardizes the timely achievement of the 
        objectives identified in subsection (a), the Secretary may 
        establish a provisional standard, after consultation with 
        affected parties, using, to the extent practicable, the work 
        product of appropriate standards development organizations.
            (2) Period of effectiveness.--A provisional standard 
        established under paragraph (1) shall be published in the 
        Federal Register and remain in effect until the appropriate 
        standards development organization adopts and publishes a 
        standard.
    (c) Conformity With National Architecture.--
            (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and 
        (3), the Secretary shall ensure that intelligent transportation 
        system projects carried out using funds made available from the 
        Highway Trust Fund, including funds made available under this 
        subtitle to deploy intelligent transportation system 
        technologies, conform to the national architecture, applicable 
        standards or provisional standards, and protocols developed 
        under subsection (a).
            (2) Secretary's discretion.--The Secretary may authorize 
        exceptions to paragraph (1) for--
                    (A) projects designed to achieve specific research 
                objectives outlined in the national intelligent 
                transportation system program plan or the surface 
                transportation research and development strategic plan 
                developed under section 508 of title 23, United States 
                Code; or
                    (B) the upgrade or expansion of an intelligent 
                transportation system in existence on the date of 
                enactment of this Act if the Secretary determines that 
                the upgrade or expansion--
                            (i) would not adversely affect the goals or 
                        purposes of this subtitle;
                            (ii) is carried out before the end of the 
                        useful life of such system; and
                            (iii) is cost-effective as compared to 
                        alternatives that would meet the conformity 
                        requirement of paragraph (1).
            (3) Exceptions.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to funds 
        used for operation or maintenance of an intelligent 
        transportation system in existence on the date of enactment of 
        this Act.

SEC. 5605. RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall carry out a comprehensive 
program of intelligent transportation system research, development, and 
operational tests of intelligent vehicles and intelligent 
infrastructure systems and other similar activities that are necessary 
to carry out this subtitle.
    (b) Priority Areas.--Under the program, the Secretary shall give 
higher priority to funding projects that--
            (1) enhance mobility and productivity through improved 
        traffic management, incident management, transit management, 
        freight management, road weather management, toll collection, 
        traveler information, or highway operations systems and remote 
        sensing products;
            (2) utilize interdisciplinary approaches to develop traffic 
        management strategies and tools to address multiple impacts of 
        congestion concurrently;
            (3) enhance safety through improved crash avoidance and 
        protection, crash and other notification, commercial motor 
        vehicle operations, and infrastructure-based or cooperative 
        safety systems; and
            (4) facilitate the integration of intelligent 
        infrastructure, vehicle, and control technologies.
    (c) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of operational 
tests and demonstrations under subsection (a) shall not exceed 80 
percent.

SEC. 5606. INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT.

    Funds made available to carry out this subtitle for operational 
tests--
            (1) shall be used primarily for the development of 
        intelligent transportation system infrastructure; and
            (2) to the maximum extent practicable, shall not be used 
        for the construction of physical highway and public 
        transportation infrastructure unless the construction is 
        incidental and critically necessary to the implementation of an 
        intelligent transportation system project.

SEC. 5607. ROAD WEATHER RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a road weather 
research and development program to--
            (1) maximize use of available road weather information and 
        technologies;
            (2) expand road weather research and development efforts to 
        enhance roadway safety, capacity, and efficiency while 
        minimizing environmental impacts; and
            (3) promote technology transfer of effective road weather 
        scientific and technological advances.
    (b) Stakeholder Input.--In carrying out this section, the Secretary 
shall consult with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 
the National Science Foundation, the American Association of State 
Highway and Transportation Officials, nonprofit organizations, and the 
private sector.
    (c) Contents.--The program established under this section shall 
solely carry out research and development called for in the National 
Research Council's report entitled ``A Research Agenda for Improving 
Road Weather Services''. Such research and development includes--
            (1) integrating existing observational networks and data 
        management systems for road weather applications;
            (2) improving weather modeling capabilities and forecast 
        tools, such as the road surface and atmospheric interface;
            (3) enhancing mechanisms for communicating road weather 
        information to users, such as transportation officials and the 
        public; and
            (4) integrating road weather technologies into an 
        information infrastructure.
    (d) Activities.--In carrying out this section, the Secretary 
shall--
            (1) enable efficient technology transfer;
            (2) improve education and training of road weather 
        information users, such as State and local transportation 
        officials and private sector transportation contractors; and
            (3) coordinate with transportation weather research 
        programs in other modes, such as aviation.
    (e) Funding.--
            (1) In general.--In awarding funds under this section, the 
        Secretary shall give preference to applications with 
        significant matching funds from non-Federal sources.
            (2) Funds for road weather research and development.--Of 
        the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(5), $4,000,000 
        shall be available to carry out this section for each of fiscal 
        years 2004 through 2009.

SEC. 5608. DEFINITIONS.

    In this subtitle, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Incident.--The term ``incident'' means a crash, a 
        natural disaster, workzone activity, special event, or other 
        emergency road user occurrence that adversely affects or 
        impedes the normal flow of traffic.
            (2) Intelligent transportation infrastructure.--The term 
        ``intelligent transportation infrastructure'' means fully 
        integrated public sector intelligent transportation system 
        components, as defined by the Secretary.
            (3) Intelligent transportation system.--The term 
        ``intelligent transportation system'' means electronics, 
        communications, or information processing used singly or in 
        combination to improve the efficiency or safety of a surface 
        transportation system.
            (4) National architecture.--The term ``national 
        architecture'' means the common framework for interoperability 
        that defines--
                    (A) the functions associated with intelligent 
                transportation system user services;
                    (B) the physical entities or subsystems within 
                which the functions reside;
                    (C) the data interfaces and information flows 
                between physical subsystems; and
                    (D) the communications requirements associated with 
                the information flows.
            (5) Project.--The term ``project'' means a undertaking to 
        research, develop, or operationally test intelligent 
        transportation systems or any other undertaking eligible for 
        assistance under this subtitle.
            (6) Standard.--The term ``standard'' means a document 
        that--
                    (A) contains technical specifications or other 
                precise criteria for intelligent transportation systems 
                that are to be used consistently as rules, guidelines, 
                or definitions of characteristics so as to ensure that 
                materials, products, processes, and services are fit 
                for their purposes; and
                    (B) may support the national architecture and 
                promote--
                            (i) the widespread use and adoption of 
                        intelligent transportation system technology as 
                        a component of the surface transportation 
                        systems of the United States; and
                            (ii) interoperability among intelligent 
                        transportation system technologies implemented 
                        throughout the States.
            (7) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning given the 
        term under section 101 of title 23, United States Code.
            (8) Transportation systems management and operations.--The 
        term ``transportation systems management and operations'' has 
        the meaning given the term under section 101(a) of such title.

SEC. 5609. RURAL INTERSTATE CORRIDOR COMMUNICATIONS STUDY.

    (a) Study.--The Secretary, in cooperation with the Secretary of 
Commerce, State departments of transportation, and other appropriate 
State, regional, and local officials, shall conduct a study on 
feasibility of installing fiber optic cabling and wireless 
communication infrastructure along multistate Interstate System route 
corridors for improved communications services to rural communities 
along such corridors.
    (b) Contents of Study.--In conducting the study, the Secretary 
shall identify--
            (1) impediments to installation of the infrastructure 
        described in subsection (a) along multistate Interstate System 
        route corridors and to connecting such infrastructure to the 
        rural communities along such corridors;
            (2) the effective geographic range of such infrastructure;
            (3) potential opportunities for the private sector to fund, 
        wholly or partially, the installation of such infrastructure;
            (4) potential benefits fiber optic cabling and wireless 
        communication infrastructure may provide to rural communities 
        along such corridors, including the effects of the installation 
        of such infrastructure on economic development, deployment of 
        intelligent transportation systems technologies and 
        applications, homeland security precaution and response, and 
        education and health systems in those communities;
            (5) rural broadband access points for such infrastructure;
            (6) areas of environmental conflict with such installation;
            (7) real estate ownership issues relating to such 
        installation;
            (8) preliminary design for placement of fiber optic cable 
        and wireless towers;
            (9) monetary value of the rights-of-way necessary for such 
        installation;
            (10) applicability and transferability of the benefits of 
        such installation to other rural corridors; and
            (11) safety and other operational issues associated with 
        the installation and maintenance of fiber optic cabling and 
        wire infrastructure within Interstate System rights-of-way and 
        other publicly owned rights-of-way.
    (c) Corridor Locations.--The study required under subsection (a) 
shall be conducted for corridors along--
            (1) Interstate Route I-90 through rural Wisconsin, southern 
        Minnesota, northern Iowa, and South Dakota;
            (2) Interstate Route I-20 through Alabama, Mississippi, and 
        northern Louisiana;
            (3) Interstate Route I-91 through Vermont, New Hampshire, 
        and Massachusetts; and
            (4) any other rural corridor the Secretary considers 
        appropriate.
    (d) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of the study 
shall be 100 percent.
    (e) Report to Congress.--Not later than September 30, 2006, the 
Secretary shall transmit to Congress a report on the results of the 
study, including any recommendations of the Secretary.
    (f) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section 
5101(a)(5), $1,000,000 shall be available for fiscal year 2005, and 
$2,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, to carry out this section.

SEC. 5610. CENTERS FOR SURFACE TRANSPORTATION EXCELLENCE.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish 3 centers for 
surface transportation excellence.
    (b) Goals.--The goals of the centers for surface transportation 
excellence are to promote and support strategic national surface 
transportation programs and activities relating to the work of State 
departments of transportation in the areas of environment, rural 
safety, and project finance.
    (c) Role of Centers.--To achieve the goals set forth in subsection 
(b), the Secretary shall establish the 3 centers as follows:
            (1) Environmental excellence.--To provide technical 
        assistance, information sharing of best practices, and training 
        in the use of tools and decision-making processes that can 
        assist States in planning and delivering environmentally sound 
        surface transportation projects.
            (2) Rural safety.--To provide research, training, and 
        outreach on innovative uses of technology to enhance rural 
        safety and economic development, assess local community needs 
        to improve access to mobile emergency treatment, and develop 
        online and seminar training needs of rural transportation 
        practitioners and policy-makers.
            (3) Project finance.--To provide support to State 
        transportation departments in the development of finance plans 
        and project oversight tools and to develop and offer training 
        in state of the art financing methods to advance projects and 
        leverage funds.
    (d) Authorization of Appropriations.--
            (1) In general.--Of the amounts made available under 
        section 5101(a)(1), the Secretary shall make available 
        $2,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2009 to carry 
        out this section.
            (2) Allocation of funds.--Of the funds made available under 
        paragraph (1) the Secretary shall use such amounts as follows:
                    (A) 40 percent to establish the Center for 
                Environmental Excellence.
                    (B) 30 percent to establish the Center for 
                Excellence in Rural Safety.
                    (C) 30 percent to establish the Center for 
                Excellence in Project Finance.
            (3) Applicability of title 23.--Funds authorized by this 
        section shall be available for obligation in the same manner as 
        if such funds were apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23, 
        United States Code, except that the Federal share shall be 100 
        percent.
    (e) Program Administration.--
            (1) Competition.--A party entering into a contract, 
        cooperative agreement, or other transaction with the Secretary, 
        or receiving a grant to perform research or provide technical 
        assistance under this section shall be selected on a 
        competitive basis, to the maximum extent practicable.
            (2) Strategic plan.--The Secretary shall require each 
        center to develop a multiyear strategic plan that describes--
                    (A) the activities to be undertaken; and
                    (B) how the work of the center is coordinated with 
                the activities of the Federal Highway Administration 
                and the various other research, development, and 
                technology transfer activities authorized by this 
                title. Such plans shall be submitted to the Secretary 
                by January 1, 2006, and each year thereafter.

SEC. 5611. REPEAL.

    Subtitle C of title V of The Transportation Equity Act for the 21st 
Century (23 U.S.C. 502 note; 112 Stat. 452-463) is repealed.

SEC. 5612. SPECIAL RULE FOR FISCAL YEAR 2004.

    In any case in which an amount is authorized to be appropriated, 
made available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or subject to an 
obligation limitation for fiscal year 2004 for a program, project, or 
activity in any provision of this title, including an amendment made by 
this title, that is different than the amount authorized to be 
appropriated, made available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or 
subject to an obligation limitation for fiscal year 2004 for such 
program, project, or activity in any provision of the Surface 
Transportation Extension Act of 2004, Part V (Public Law 108-310), 
including any amendment made by such Act, the amount referred to in 
such Act shall be the amount authorized to be appropriated, made 
available, allocated, set aside, taken down, or subject to an 
obligation limitation.

         TITLE VI--TRANSPORTATION PLANNING AND PROJECT DELIVERY

SEC. 6001. TRANSPORTATION PLANNING.

    (a) In General.--Subtitle III of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after chapter 51 the following:

       ``CHAPTER 52--TRANSPORTATION PLANNING AND PROJECT DELIVERY

                   ``subchapter a--general provisions
``Sec.
``5201``subchapter b--transportation planning and project delivery
``5211. Policy.
``5212. Definitions.
``5213. Metropolitan transportation planning.
``5214``subchapter c--efficient environmental reviews for project 
                             decisionmaking
``5251. Definitions and applicability.
``5252. Project development procedures.

                   ``SUBCHAPTER A--GENERAL PROVISIONS

``Sec. 5201. Definitions
    ``In this chapter, the following definitions apply:
            ``(1) Secretary.--The term `Secretary' means the Secretary 
        of Transportation.
            ``(2) State.--The term `State' means a State of the United 
        States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

      ``SUBCHAPTER B--TRANSPORTATION PLANNING AND PROJECT DELIVERY

``Sec. 5211. Policy
    ``(a) In General.--It is in the national interest to--
            ``(1) encourage and promote the safe and efficient 
        management, operation, and development of surface 
        transportation systems that will serve the mobility needs of 
        people and freight and foster economic growth and development 
        within and between States and urbanized areas, while minimizing 
        transportation-related fuel consumption and air pollution 
        through metropolitan and statewide transportation planning 
        processes identified in this chapter; and
            ``(2) encourage the continued improvement and evolution of 
        the metropolitan and statewide transportation planning 
        processes by metropolitan planning organizations, State 
        departments of transportation, and public transit operators as 
        guided by the planning factors identified in sections 5213(f) 
        and 5214(d).
    ``(b) Common Transportation Planning Program.--This subchapter 
provides a common transportation planning program to be administered by 
the Federal Highway Administration and the Federal Transit 
Administration.
``Sec. 5212. Definitions
    ``(a) Applicability by Reference.--Unless otherwise specified in 
subsection (b), the definitions in section 101(a) of title 23 and 
section 5302 are applicable to this subchapter.
    ``(b) Additional Definitions.--In this subchapter, the following 
definitions apply:
            ``(1) Metropolitan planning area.--The term `metropolitan 
        planning area' means the geographic area determined by 
        agreement between the metropolitan planning organization for 
        the area and the Governor under section 5213(c).
            ``(2) Metropolitan planning organization.--The term 
        `metropolitan planning organization' means the policy board of 
        an organization created as a result of the designation process 
        in section 5213(b).
            ``(3) Nonmetropolitan area.--The term `nonmetropolitan 
        area' means a geographic area outside designated metropolitan 
        planning areas.
            ``(4) Nonmetropolitan local official.--The term 
        `nonmetropolitan local official' means elected and appointed 
        officials of general purpose local government in a 
        nonmetropolitan area with responsibility for transportation.
            ``(5) TIP.--The term `TIP' means a transportation 
        improvement program developed by a metropolitan planning 
        organization under section 5213.
            ``(6) Urbanized area.--The term `urbanized area' means a 
        geographic area with a population of 50,000 or more, as 
        designated by the Bureau of the Census.
``Sec. 5213. Metropolitan transportation planning
    ``(a) General Requirements.--
            ``(1) Development of long-range plans and tips.--To 
        accomplish the objectives in section 5211, metropolitan 
        planning organizations designated under subsection (b), in 
        cooperation with the State and public transportation operators, 
        shall develop long-range transportation plans and 
        transportation improvement programs for metropolitan planning 
        areas of the State.
            ``(2) Contents.--The plans and TIPs for each metropolitan 
        area shall provide for the development and integrated 
        management and operation of transportation systems and 
        facilities (including accessible pedestrian walkways and 
        bicycle transportation facilities) that will function as an 
        intermodal transportation system for the metropolitan planning 
        area and as an integral part of an intermodal transportation 
        system for the State and the United States.
            ``(3) Process of development.--The process for developing 
        the plans and TIPs shall provide for consideration of all modes 
        of transportation and shall be continuing, cooperative, and 
        comprehensive to the degree appropriate, based on the 
        complexity of the transportation problems to be addressed.
    ``(b) Designation of Metropolitan Planning Organizations.--
            ``(1) In general.--To carry out the transportation planning 
        process required by this section, a metropolitan planning 
        organization shall be designated for each urbanized area with a 
        population of more than 50,000 individuals--
                    ``(A) by agreement between the Governor and units 
                of general purpose local government that together 
                represent at least 75 percent of the affected 
                population (including the largest incorporated city 
                (based on population) as named by the Bureau of the 
                Census); or
                    ``(B) in accordance with procedures established by 
                applicable State or local law.
            ``(2) Structure.--Each metropolitan planning organization 
        that serves an area designated as a transportation management 
        area, when designated or redesignated under this subsection, 
        shall consist of--
                    ``(A) local elected officials;
                    ``(B) officials of public agencies that administer 
                or operate major modes of transportation in the 
                metropolitan area; and
                    ``(C) appropriate State officials.
            ``(3) Limitation on statutory construction.--Nothing in 
        this subsection shall be construed to interfere with the 
        authority, under any State law in effect on December 18, 1991, 
        of a public agency with multimodal transportation 
        responsibilities to--
                    ``(A) develop the plans and TIPs for adoption by a 
                metropolitan planning organization; and
                    ``(B) develop long-range capital plans, coordinate 
                transit services and projects, and carry out other 
                activities pursuant to State law.
            ``(4) Continuing designation.--A designation of a 
        metropolitan planning organization under this subsection or any 
        other provision of law shall remain in effect until the 
        metropolitan planning organization is redesignated under 
        paragraph (5).
            ``(5) Redesignation procedures.--A metropolitan planning 
        organization may be redesignated by agreement between the 
        Governor and units of general purpose local government that 
        together represent at least 75 percent of the existing planning 
        area population (including the largest incorporated city (based 
        on population) as named by the Bureau of the Census) as 
        appropriate to carry out this section.
            ``(6) Designation of more than 1 metropolitan planning 
        organization.--More than 1 metropolitan planning organization 
        may be designated within an existing metropolitan planning area 
        only if the Governor and the existing metropolitan planning 
        organization determine that the size and complexity of the 
        existing metropolitan planning area make designation of more 
        than 1 metropolitan planning organization for the area 
        appropriate.
    ``(c) Metropolitan Planning Area Boundaries.--
            ``(1) In general.--For the purposes of this section, the 
        boundaries of a metropolitan planning area shall be determined 
        by agreement between the metropolitan planning organization and 
        the Governor.
            ``(2) Included area.--Each metropolitan planning area--
                    ``(A) shall encompass at least the existing 
                urbanized area and the contiguous area expected to 
                become urbanized within a 20-year forecast period for 
                the transportation plan; and
                    ``(B) may encompass the entire metropolitan 
                statistical area or consolidated metropolitan 
                statistical area, as defined by the Bureau of the 
                Census.
            ``(3) Identification of new urbanized areas within existing 
        planning area boundaries.--The designation by the Bureau of the 
        Census of new urbanized areas within an existing metropolitan 
        planning area shall not require the redesignation of the 
        existing metropolitan planning organization.
            ``(4) Existing metropolitan planning areas in 
        nonattainment.--Notwithstanding paragraph (2), in the case of 
        an urbanized area designated as a nonattainment area for ozone 
        or carbon monoxide under the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et 
        seq.) as of the date of enactment of this paragraph, the 
        boundaries of the metropolitan planning area in existence as of 
        such date of enactment shall be retained; except that the 
        boundaries may be adjusted by agreement of the Governor and 
        affected metropolitan planning organizations in the manner 
        described in subsection (b)(5).
            ``(5) New metropolitan planning areas in nonattainment.--In 
        the case of an urbanized area designated after the date of 
        enactment of this paragraph as a nonattainment area for ozone 
        or carbon monoxide, the boundaries of the metropolitan planning 
        area--
                    ``(A) shall be established in the manner described 
                in subsection (b)(1);
                    ``(B) shall encompass the areas described in 
                paragraph (2)(A);
                    ``(C) may encompass the areas described in 
                paragraph (2)(B); and
                    ``(D) may address any nonattainment area identified 
                under the Clean Air Act for ozone or carbon monoxide.
    ``(d) Coordination in Multistate Areas.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall encourage each 
        Governor with responsibility for a portion of a multistate 
        metropolitan area and the appropriate metropolitan planning 
        organizations to provide coordinated transportation planning 
        for the entire metropolitan area.
    ``(e) MPO Consultation in Plan and TIP Coordination.--
            ``(1) Nonattainment areas.--If more than 1 metropolitan 
        planning organization has authority within a metropolitan area 
        or an area which is designated as a nonattainment area for 
        ozone or carbon monoxide under the Clean Air Act, each 
        metropolitan planning organization shall consult with the other 
        metropolitan planning organizations designated for such area 
        and the State in the coordination of plans and TIPs required by 
        this section.
            ``(2) Transportation improvements located in multiple 
        mpos.--If a transportation improvement funded from the Highway 
        Trust Fund or authorized under chapter 53 is located within the 
        boundaries of more than 1 metropolitan planning area, the 
        metropolitan planning organizations shall coordinate plans and 
        TIPs regarding the transportation improvement.
            ``(3) Relationship with other planning officials.--The 
        Secretary shall encourage each metropolitan planning 
        organization to consult with those officials responsible for 
        other types of planning activities that are affected by 
        transportation in the area (including State and local planned 
        growth, economic development, environmental protection, airport 
        operations, and freight movements) or to coordinate its 
        planning process, to the maximum extent practicable, with such 
        planning activities. Under the metropolitan planning process, 
        transportation plans and TIPs shall be developed with due 
        consideration of other related planning activities within the 
        metropolitan area, and the process shall provide for the design 
        and delivery of transportation services within the metropolitan 
        area that are provided by--
                    ``(A) recipients of assistance under chapter 53;
                    ``(B) governmental agencies and nonprofit 
                organizations (including representatives of the 
                agencies and organizations) that receive Federal 
                assistance from a source other than the Department of 
                Transportation to provide nonemergency transportation 
                services; and
                    ``(C) recipients of assistance under section 204 of 
                title 23.
    ``(f) Scope of Planning Process.--
            ``(1) In general.--The goals and objectives developed 
        through the metropolitan planning process for a metropolitan 
        planning area under this section shall address the following 
        factors as they relate to the performance of the metropolitan 
        area transportation systems:
                    ``(A) Support of the economic vitality of the 
                metropolitan area, especially by enabling global 
                competitiveness, productivity, and efficiency.
                    ``(B) Increases in the safety and security of the 
                transportation system for motorized and nonmotorized 
                users.
                    ``(C) Increases in the accessibility and mobility 
                of people and for freight.
                    ``(D) Protection and enhancement of the 
                environment, promotion of energy conservation, 
                improvement of the quality of life, and promotion of 
                consistency between transportation improvements and 
                State and local planned growth and economic development 
                patterns.
                    ``(E) Enhancement of the integration and 
                connectivity of the transportation system, across and 
                between modes, for people and freight.
                    ``(F) Promotion of efficient system management and 
                operation.
                    ``(G) Emphasis on the preservation of the existing 
                transportation system.
            ``(2) Failure to consider factors.--The failure to consider 
        any factor specified in paragraph (1) shall not be reviewable 
        by any court under title 23 or this title, subchapter II of 
        chapter 5 of title 5, or chapter 7 of title 5 in any matter 
        affecting a transportation plan, a TIP, a project or strategy, 
        or the certification of a planning process.
    ``(g) Development of Transportation Plan.--
            ``(2) Transportation plan.--A transportation plan under 
        this section shall be in a form that the Secretary determines 
        to be appropriate and shall contain, at a minimum, the 
        following:
                    ``(A) An identification of transportation 
                facilities (including major roadways, transit, 
                multimodal and intermodal facilities, and intermodal 
                connectors) that should function as an integrated 
                metropolitan transportation system, giving emphasis to 
                those facilities that serve important national and 
                regional transportation functions. In formulating the 
                transportation plan, the metropolitan planning 
                organization shall consider factors described in 
                subsection (f) as such factors relate to a 20-year 
                forecast period.
                    ``(B) A financial plan that demonstrates how the 
                adopted transportation plan can be implemented, 
                indicates resources from public and private sources 
                that are reasonably expected to be made available to 
                carry out the plan, and recommends any additional 
                financing strategies for needed projects and programs. 
                The financial plan may include, for illustrative 
                purposes, additional projects that would be included in 
                the adopted transportation plan if reasonable 
                additional resources beyond those identified in the 
                financial plan were available. For the purpose of 
                developing the transportation plan, the metropolitan 
                planning organization, transit operator, and State 
                shall cooperatively develop estimates of funds that 
                will be available to support plan implementation.
                    ``(C) Operational and management strategies to 
                improve the performance of existing transportation 
                facilities to relieve vehicular congestion and maximize 
                the safety and mobility of people and goods.
                    ``(D) Capital investment and other strategies to 
                preserve the existing and projected future metropolitan 
                transportation infrastructure and provide for 
                multimodal capacity increases based on regional 
                priorities and needs.
                    ``(E) Proposed transportation and transit 
                enhancement activities.
            ``(3) Coordination with clean air act agencies.--In 
        metropolitan areas which are in nonattainment for ozone or 
        carbon monoxide under the Clean Air Act, the metropolitan 
        planning organization shall coordinate the development of a 
        transportation plan with the process for development of the 
        transportation control measures of the State implementation 
        plan required by the Clean Air Act.
            ``(4) Participation by interested parties.--Before 
        approving a transportation plan, each metropolitan planning 
        organization shall provide citizens, affected public agencies, 
        representatives of public transportation employees, freight 
        shippers, providers of freight transportation services, private 
        providers of transportation, representatives of users of public 
        transportation, representatives of users of pedestrian walkways 
        and bicycle transportation facilities, representatives of the 
        disabled, and other interested parties with a reasonable 
        opportunity to comment on the transportation plan, in a manner 
        that the Secretary deems appropriate.
            ``(5) Publication.--A transportation plan involving Federal 
        participation shall be published or otherwise made readily 
        available by the metropolitan planning organization for public 
        review and submitted for information purposes to the Governor 
        at such times and in such manner as the Secretary shall 
        establish.
            ``(6) Selection of projects from illustrative list.--
        Notwithstanding paragraph (2)(B), a State or metropolitan 
        planning organization shall not be required to select any 
        project from the illustrative list of additional projects 
        included in the financial plan under paragraph (2)(B).
    ``(h) Metropolitan TIP.--
            ``(1) Development.--
                    ``(A) In general.--In cooperation with the State 
                and any affected public transportation operator, the 
                metropolitan planning organization designated for a 
                metropolitan area shall develop a TIP for the area for 
                which the organization is designated.
                    ``(B) Opportunity for comment.--In developing the 
                TIP, the metropolitan planning organization, in 
                cooperation with the State and any affected public 
                transportation operator, shall provide citizens, 
                affected public agencies, representatives of public 
                transportation employees, freight shippers, providers 
                of freight transportation services, private providers 
                of transportation, representatives of users of public 
                transportation, representatives of the disabled, 
                representatives of users of pedestrian walkways and 
                bicycle facilities, and other interested parties with a 
                reasonable opportunity to comment on the proposed TIP.
                    ``(C) Funding estimates.--For the purpose of 
                developing the TIP, the metropolitan planning 
                organization, public transportation agency, and State 
                shall cooperatively develop estimates of funds that are 
                reasonably expected to be available to support program 
                implementation.
                    ``(D) Updating and approval.--The TIP shall be 
                updated at least once every 4 years and shall be 
                approved by the metropolitan planning organization and 
                the Governor.
            ``(2) Contents.--
                    ``(A) Priority list.--The TIP shall include a 
                priority list of proposed federally supported projects 
                and strategies to be carried out within each 4-year 
                period after the initial adoption of the TIP.
                    ``(B) Financial plan.--The TIP shall include a 
                financial plan that--
                            ``(i) demonstrates how the TIP can be 
                        implemented;
                            ``(ii) indicates resources from public and 
                        private sources that are reasonably expected to 
                        be available to carry out the program;
                            ``(iii) identifies innovative financing 
                        techniques to finance projects, programs, and 
                        strategies; and
                            ``(iv) may include, for illustrative 
                        purposes, additional projects that would be 
                        included in the approved TIP if reasonable 
                        additional resources beyond those identified in 
                        the financial plan were available.
                    ``(C) Descriptions.--Each project in the TIP shall 
                include sufficient descriptive material (such as type 
                of work, termini, length, and other similar factors) to 
                identify the project or phase of the project.
                    ``(D) Congestion relief activities.--The TIP shall 
                include a listing of congestion relief activities to be 
                carried out to meet the requirements of section 139 of 
                title 23, categorized as either under one or under 
                three congestion relief activities.
            ``(3) Included projects.--
                    ``(A) Projects under title 23 and chapter 53.--A 
                TIP developed under this subsection for a metropolitan 
                area shall include the projects within the area that 
                are proposed for funding under chapter 1 of title 23 
                and chapter 53.
                    ``(B) Projects under chapter 2 of title 23.--All 
                projects proposed for funding under chapter 2 of title 
                23 shall be identified individually in the TIP.
                    ``(C) Consistency with long-range transportation 
                plan.--Each project shall be consistent with the long-
                range transportation plan developed under subsection 
                (g) for the area.
                    ``(D) Requirement of anticipated full funding.--The 
                program shall include a project, or an identified phase 
                of a project, only if full funding can reasonably be 
                anticipated to be available for the project within the 
                time period contemplated for completion of the project.
            ``(4) Notice and comment.--Before approving a TIP, a 
        metropolitan planning organization, in cooperation with the 
        State and any affected public transportation operator, shall 
        provide citizens, affected public agencies, representatives of 
        public transportation employees, freight shippers, providers of 
        freight transportation services, private providers of 
        transportation, representatives of users of public 
        transportation, representatives of the disabled, 
        representatives of users of pedestrian walkways and bicycle 
        facilities, and other interested parties with reasonable notice 
        of and an opportunity to comment on the proposed program.
            ``(5) Selection of projects.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in 
                subsection (i)(4) and in addition to the TIP 
                development required under paragraph (1), the selection 
                of federally funded projects in metropolitan areas 
                shall be carried out, from the approved TIP--
                            ``(i) by--
                                    ``(I) in the case of projects under 
                                title 23, the State; and
                                    ``(II) in the case of projects 
                                under chapter 53, the designated 
                                recipients of public transportation 
                                funding; and
                            ``(ii) in cooperation with the metropolitan 
                        planning organization.
                    ``(B) Modifications to project priority.--
                Notwithstanding any other provision of law, action by 
                the Secretary shall not be required to advance a 
                project included in the approved TIP in place of 
                another project in the program.
            ``(6) Selection of projects from illustrative list.--
                    ``(A) No required selection.--Notwithstanding 
                paragraph (2)(B)(iv), a State or metropolitan planning 
                organization shall not be required to select any 
                project from the illustrative list of additional 
                projects included in the financial plan under paragraph 
                (2)(B)(iv).
                    ``(B) Required action by the secretary.--Action by 
                the Secretary shall be required for a State or 
                metropolitan planning organization to select any 
                project from the illustrative list of additional 
                projects included in the financial plan under paragraph 
                (2)(B)(iv) for inclusion in an approved TIP.
            ``(7) Publication.--
                    ``(A) Publication of tips.--A TIP involving Federal 
                participation shall be published or otherwise made 
                readily available by the metropolitan planning 
                organization for public review.
                    ``(B) Publication of annual listings of projects.--
                An annual listing of projects for which Federal funds 
                have been obligated in the preceding year shall be 
                published or otherwise made available by the 
                metropolitan planning organization for public review. 
                The listing shall be consistent with the categories 
                identified in the TIP.
    ``(i) Transportation Management Areas.--
            ``(1) Identification and designation.--
                    ``(A) Required identification.--The Secretary shall 
                identify as a transportation management area each 
                urbanized area (as defined by the Bureau of the Census) 
                with a population of over 200,000 individuals.
                    ``(B) Designations on request.--The Secretary shall 
                designate any additional area as a transportation 
                management area on the request of the Governor and the 
                metropolitan planning organization designated for the 
                area.
            ``(2) Transportation plans.--In a metropolitan planning 
        area serving a transportation management area, transportation 
        plans shall be based on a continuing and comprehensive 
        transportation planning process carried out by the metropolitan 
        planning organization in cooperation with the State and public 
        transportation operators.
            ``(3) Congestion management process.--Within a metropolitan 
        planning area serving a transportation management area, the 
        transportation planning process under this section shall 
        address congestion management through a process that provides 
        for effective management and operation, based on a 
        cooperatively developed and implemented metropolitan-wide 
        strategy, of new and existing transportation facilities 
        eligible for funding under title 23 and chapter 53 through the 
        use of travel demand reduction and operational management 
        strategies and shall identify a sufficient number of congestion 
        relief activities under section 139 of title 23 to meet the 
        requirements of such section. The Secretary shall establish an 
        appropriate phase-in schedule for compliance with the 
        requirements of this section but no sooner than one year after 
        the identification of a transportation management area.
            ``(4) Selection of projects.--
                    ``(A) In general.--All federally funded projects 
                carried out within the boundaries of a metropolitan 
                planning area serving a transportation management area 
                under title 23 (excluding projects carried out on the 
                National Highway System and projects carried out under 
                the bridge program or the Interstate maintenance 
                program) or under chapter 53 shall be selected for 
                implementation from the approved TIP by the 
                metropolitan planning organization designated for the 
                area in consultation with the State and any affected 
                public transportation operator.
                    ``(B) National highway system projects.--Projects, 
                carried out within the boundaries of a metropolitan 
                planning area serving a transportation management area, 
                on the National Highway System and projects carried out 
                within such boundaries under the bridge program or the 
                Interstate maintenance program under title 23 shall be 
                selected for implementation from the approved TIP by 
                the State in cooperation with the metropolitan planning 
                organization designated for the area.
            ``(5) Certification.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall--
                            ``(i) ensure that the metropolitan planning 
                        process of a metropolitan planning organization 
                        serving a transportation management area is 
                        being carried out in accordance with applicable 
                        provisions of Federal law; and
                            ``(ii) subject to subparagraph (B), 
                        certify, not less often than once every 4 
                        years, that the requirements of this paragraph 
                        are met with respect to the metropolitan 
                        planning process.
                    ``(B) Requirements for certification.--The 
                Secretary may make the certification under subparagraph 
                (A) if--
                            ``(i) the transportation planning process 
                        complies with the requirements of this section 
                        and other applicable requirements of Federal 
                        law; and
                            ``(ii) there is a TIP for the metropolitan 
                        planning area that has been approved by the 
                        metropolitan planning organization and the 
                        Governor.
                    ``(C) Effect of failure to certify.--
                            ``(i) Withholding of project funds.--If a 
                        metropolitan planning process of a metropolitan 
                        planning organization serving a transportation 
                        management area is not certified, the Secretary 
                        may withhold up to 20 percent of the funds 
                        attributable to the metropolitan planning area 
                        of the metropolitan planning organization for 
                        projects funded under title 23 and chapter 53.
                            ``(ii) Restoration of withheld funds.--The 
                        withheld funds shall be restored to the 
                        metropolitan planning area at such time as the 
                        metropolitan planning process is certified by 
                        the Secretary.
                    ``(D) Review of certification.--In making 
                certification determinations under this paragraph, the 
                Secretary shall provide for public involvement 
                appropriate to the metropolitan area under review.
    ``(j) Abbreviated Plans for Certain Areas.--
            ``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), in the case of 
        a metropolitan area not designated as a transportation 
        management area under this section, the Secretary may provide 
        for the development of an abbreviated transportation plan and 
        TIP for the metropolitan planning area that the Secretary 
        determines is appropriate to achieve the purposes of this 
        section, taking into account the complexity of transportation 
        problems in the area.
            ``(2) Nonattainment areas.--The Secretary may not permit 
        abbreviated plans or TIPs for a metropolitan area that is in 
        nonattainment for ozone or carbon monoxide under the Clean Air 
        Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.).
    ``(k) Additional Requirements for Certain Nonattainment Areas.--
            ``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provisions of 
        title 23 or chapter 53, for transportation management areas 
        classified as nonattainment for ozone or carbon monoxide 
        pursuant to the Clean Air Act, Federal funds may not be 
        advanced in such area for any highway project that will result 
        in a significant increase in the carrying capacity for single-
        occupant vehicles unless the project is addressed through a 
        congestion management process.
            ``(2) Applicability.--This subsection applies to a 
        nonattainment area within the metropolitan planning area 
        boundaries determined under subsection (c).
    ``(l) Limitation on Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this 
section shall be construed to confer on a metropolitan planning 
organization the authority to impose legal requirements on any 
transportation facility, provider, or project not eligible under title 
23 or chapter 53.
    ``(m) Funding.--
            ``(1) Set-asides.--Funds set aside under section 104(f) of 
        title 23 or section 5305(h) shall be available to carry out 
        this section.
            ``(2) Other funding.--Funds made available under section 
        5338(c) shall be available to carry out this section.
    ``(n) Continuation of Current Review Practice.--Since plans and 
TIPs described in this section are subject to a reasonable opportunity 
for public comment, individual projects included in plans and TIPs are 
subject to review under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 
(42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), and decisions by the Secretary concerning 
plans and TIPs described in this section have not been reviewed under 
such Act as of January 1, 1997, any decision by the Secretary 
concerning a plan or TIP described in this section shall not be 
considered to be a Federal action subject to review under such Act.
``Sec. 5214. Statewide transportation planning
    ``(a) General Requirements.--
            ``(1) Development of plans and programs.--To accomplish the 
        objectives stated in section 5211, each State shall develop a 
        statewide transportation plan and a statewide transportation 
        improvement program for all areas of the State subject to 
        section 5213. Such program shall cover a period of 4 years and 
        be updated every 4 years or more frequently if the Governor 
        elects to update more frequently.
            ``(2) Contents.--The statewide transportation plan and the 
        transportation improvement program developed for each State 
        shall provide for the development and integrated management and 
        operation of transportation systems and facilities (including 
        accessible pedestrian walkways and bicycle transportation 
        facilities) that will function as an intermodal transportation 
        system for the State and an integral part of an intermodal 
        transportation system for the United States.
            ``(3) Process of development.--The process for developing 
        the statewide plan and the transportation improvement program 
        shall provide for consideration of all modes of transportation 
        and the policies stated in section 5211, and shall be 
        continuing, cooperative, and comprehensive to the degree 
        appropriate, based on the complexity of the transportation 
        problems to be addressed.
    ``(b) Coordination With Metropolitan Planning; State Implementation 
Plan.--A State shall--
            ``(1) coordinate planning carried out under this section 
        with the transportation planning activities carried out under 
        section 5213 for metropolitan areas of the State and with 
        statewide trade and economic development planning activities 
        and related multistate planning efforts; and
            ``(2) develop the transportation portion of the State 
        implementation plan as required by the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 
        7401 et seq.).
    ``(d) Scope of Planning Process.--
            ``(1) In general.--Each State shall carry out a statewide 
        transportation planning process that provides for consideration 
        and implementation of projects, strategies, and services that 
        will--
                    ``(A) support the economic vitality of the United 
                States, the States, nonmetropolitan areas, and 
                metropolitan areas, especially by enabling global 
                competitiveness, productivity, and efficiency;
                    ``(B) increase the safety and security of the 
                transportation system for motorized and nonmotorized 
                users;
                    ``(C) increase the accessibility and mobility of 
                people and freight;
                    ``(D) protect and enhance the environment, promote 
                energy conservation, improve the quality of life, and 
                promote consistency between transportation improvements 
                and State and local planned growth and economic 
                development patterns;
                    ``(E) enhance the integration and connectivity of 
                the transportation system, across and between modes 
                throughout the State, for people and freight;
                    ``(F) promote efficient system management and 
                operation; and
                    ``(G) emphasize the preservation of the existing 
                transportation system.
            ``(2) Failure to consider factors.--The failure to consider 
        any factor specified in paragraph (1) shall not be reviewable 
        by any court under title 23 or this title, subchapter II of 
        chapter 5 of title 5, or chapter 7 of title 5 in any matter 
        affecting a statewide transportation plan, the transportation 
        improvement program, a project or strategy, or the 
        certification of a planning process.
    ``(e) Additional Requirements.--In carrying out planning under this 
section, each State shall consider, at a minimum--
            ``(1) with respect to nonmetropolitan areas, the concerns 
        of affected local officials with responsibility for 
        transportation;
            ``(2) the concerns of Indian tribal governments and Federal 
        land management agencies that have jurisdiction over land 
        within the boundaries of the State; and
            ``(3) coordination of transportation plans, the 
        transportation improvement program, and planning activities 
        with related planning activities being carried out outside of 
        metropolitan planning areas and between States.
    ``(f) Long-Range Statewide Transportation Plan.--
            ``(1) Development.--Each State shall develop a long-range 
        statewide transportation plan, with a minimum 20-year forecast 
        period for all areas of the State, that provides for the 
        development and implementation of the intermodal transportation 
        system of the State.
            ``(2) Consultation with governments.--
                    ``(A) Metropolitan areas.--The statewide 
                transportation plan shall be developed for each 
                metropolitan area in the State in cooperation with the 
                metropolitan planning organization designated for the 
                metropolitan area under section 5213.
                    ``(B) Nonmetropolitan areas.--With respect to 
                nonmetropolitan areas, the statewide transportation 
                plan shall be developed in consultation with affected 
                nonmetropolitan officials with responsibility for 
                transportation. The Secretary shall not review or 
                approve the consultation process in each State.
                    ``(C) Indian tribal areas.--With respect to each 
                area of the State under the jurisdiction of an Indian 
                tribal government, the statewide transportation plan 
                shall be developed in consultation with the tribal 
                government and the Secretary of the Interior.
            ``(3) Participation by interested parties.--In developing 
        the statewide transportation plan, the State shall--
                    ``(A) provide citizens, affected public agencies, 
                representatives of public transportation employees, 
                freight shippers, private providers of transportation, 
                representatives of users of public transportation, 
                representatives of users of pedestrian walkways and 
                bicycle transportation facilities, representatives of 
                the disabled, providers of freight transportation 
                services, and other interested parties with a 
                reasonable opportunity to comment on the proposed plan; 
                and
                    ``(B) identify transportation strategies necessary 
                to efficiently serve the mobility needs of people.
            ``(4) Financial plan.--The statewide transportation plan 
        may include a financial plan that demonstrates how the adopted 
        statewide transportation plan can be implemented, indicates 
        resources from public and private sources that are reasonably 
        expected to be made available to carry out the plan, and 
        recommends any additional financing strategies for needed 
        projects and programs. The financial plan may include, for 
        illustrative purposes, additional projects that would be 
        included in the adopted statewide transportation plan if 
        reasonable additional resources beyond those identified in the 
        financial plan were available.
            ``(5) Selection of projects from illustrative list.--A 
        State shall not be required to select any project from the 
        illustrative list of additional projects included in the 
        financial plan described in paragraph (4).
            ``(6) Existing system.--The statewide transportation plan 
        should include capital, operations and management strategies, 
        investments, procedures, and other measures to ensure the 
        preservation and most efficient use of the existing 
        transportation system.
    ``(g) Statewide Transportation Improvement Program.--
            ``(1) Development.--Each State shall develop a statewide 
        transportation improvement program for all areas of the State.
            ``(2) Consultation with governments.--
                    ``(A) Metropolitan areas.--With respect to each 
                metropolitan area in the State, the program shall be 
                developed in cooperation with the metropolitan planning 
                organization designated for the metropolitan area under 
                section 5213.
                    ``(B) Nonmetropolitan areas.--With respect to each 
                nonmetropolitan area in the State, the program shall be 
                developed in consultation with affected nonmetropolitan 
                local officials with responsibility for transportation. 
                The Secretary shall not review or approve the specific 
                consultation process in the State.
                    ``(C) Indian tribal areas.--With respect to each 
                area of the State under the jurisdiction of an Indian 
                tribal government, the program shall be developed in 
                consultation with the tribal government and the 
                Secretary of the Interior.
            ``(3) Participation by interested parties.--In developing 
        the program, the State shall provide citizens, affected public 
        agencies, representatives of public transportation employees, 
        freight shippers, private providers of transportation, 
        providers of freight transportation services, representatives 
        of users of public transportation, representatives of users of 
        pedestrian walkways and bicycle transportation facilities, 
        representatives of the disabled, and other interested parties 
        with a reasonable opportunity to comment on the proposed 
        program.
            ``(4) Included projects.--
                    ``(A) In general.--A transportation improvement 
                program developed under this subsection for a State 
                shall include federally supported surface 
                transportation expenditures within the boundaries of 
                the State.
                    ``(B) Projects under chapter 2 of title 23.--All 
                projects proposed for funding under chapter 2 of title 
                23 shall be identified individually in the 
                transportation improvement program.
                    ``(C) Consistency with statewide transportation 
                plan.--Each project shall be--
                            ``(i) consistent with the statewide 
                        transportation plan developed under this 
                        section for the State;
                            ``(ii) identical to the project or phase of 
                        the project as described in an approved 
                        metropolitan transportation plan; and
                            ``(iii) in conformance with the applicable 
                        State air quality implementation plan developed 
                        under the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et 
                        seq.), if the project is carried out in an area 
                        designated as nonattainment for ozone or carbon 
                        monoxide under that Act.
                    ``(D) Requirement of anticipated full funding.--The 
                transportation improvement program shall include a 
                project, or an identified phase of a project, only if 
                full funding can reasonably be anticipated to be 
                available for the project within the time period 
                contemplated for completion of the project.
                    ``(E) Financial plan.--The transportation 
                improvement program may include a financial plan that 
                demonstrates how the approved transportation 
                improvement program can be implemented, indicates 
                resources from public and private sources that are 
                reasonably expected to be made available to carry out 
                the transportation improvement program, and recommends 
                any additional financing strategies for needed projects 
                and programs. The financial plan may include, for 
                illustrative purposes, additional projects that would 
                be included in the adopted transportation plan if 
                reasonable additional resources beyond those identified 
                in the financial plan were available.
                    ``(F) Selection of projects from illustrative 
                list.--
                            ``(i) No required selection.--
                        Notwithstanding subparagraph (E), a State shall 
                        not be required to select any project from the 
                        illustrative list of additional projects 
                        included in the financial plan under 
                        subparagraph (E).
                            ``(ii) Required action by the secretary.--
                        Action by the Secretary shall be required for a 
                        State to select any project from the 
                        illustrative list of additional projects 
                        included in the financial plan under 
                        subparagraph (E) for inclusion in an approved 
                        transportation improvement program.
                    ``(G) Priorities.--The transportation improvement 
                program shall reflect the priorities for programming 
                and expenditures of funds, including transportation 
                enhancement activities, required by title 23 and 
                chapter 53.
                    ``(H) Prioritization of congestion relief 
                activities.--The transportation improvement program 
                shall reflect the priorities for congestion relief 
                activities included in the metropolitan transportation 
                plan to meet the requirements of section 139 of title 
                23.
            ``(5) Project selection for areas of less than 50,000 
        population.--Projects carried out in areas with populations of 
        less than 50,000 individuals shall be selected, from the 
        approved transportation improvement program (excluding projects 
        carried out on the National Highway System and projects carried 
        out under the bridge program or the Interstate maintenance 
        program under title 23 or sections 5310, 5311, 5316, and 5317), 
        by the State in cooperation with the affected nonmetropolitan 
        local officials with responsibility for transportation. 
        Projects carried out in areas with populations of less than 
        50,000 individuals on the National Highway System or under the 
        bridge program or the Interstate maintenance program under 
        title 23 or under sections 5310, 5311, 5316, and 5317 shall be 
        selected, from the approved statewide transportation 
        improvement program, by the State in consultation with the 
        affected nonmetropolitan local officials with responsibility 
        for transportation.
            ``(6) Transportation improvement program approval.--Every 4 
        years, a transportation improvement program developed under 
        this subsection shall be reviewed and approved by the Secretary 
        if based on a current planning finding.
            ``(7) Planning finding.--A finding shall be made by the 
        Secretary at least every 4 years that the transportation 
        planning process through which statewide transportation plans 
        and programs are developed is consistent with this section and 
        section 5213.
            ``(8) Modifications to project priority.--Notwithstanding 
        any other provision of law, action by the Secretary shall not 
        be required to advance a project included in the approved 
        transportation improvement program in place of another project 
        in the program.
    ``(h) Funding.--
            ``(1) Set-aside.--Funds set aside pursuant to section 
        104(i) of title 23 shall be available to carry out this 
        section.
            ``(2) Other funding.--Funds made available under section 
        5338(c) shall be available to carry out this section.
    ``(i) Treatment of Certain State Laws as Congestion Management 
Processes.--For purposes of this section and section 5213, State laws, 
rules, or regulations pertaining to congestion management systems or 
programs may constitute the congestion management process under section 
5213(i)(3) if the Secretary finds that the State laws, rules, or 
regulations are consistent with, and fulfill the intent of, the 
purposes of section 5213, as appropriate.
    ``(j) Continuation of Current Review Practice.--Since the statewide 
transportation plan and the transportation improvement program 
described in this section are subject to a reasonable opportunity for 
public comment, since individual projects included in the statewide 
transportation plans and the transportation improvement program are 
subject to review under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 
(42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), and since decisions by the Secretary 
concerning statewide transportation plans or the transportation 
improvement program described in this section have not been reviewed 
under such Act as of January 1, 1997, any decision by the Secretary 
concerning a metropolitan or statewide transportation plan or the 
transportation improvement program described in this section shall not 
be considered to be a Federal action subject to review under such 
Act.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such subtitle is 
amended by inserting the following after the item relating to chapter 
51:

``52. Transportation planning and project delivery..........    5201''.

SEC. 6002. EFFICIENT ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEWS FOR PROJECT DECISIONMAKING.

    (a) Policy and Purpose.--
            (1) Policy.--The Enlibra principles, as initially developed 
        by the Western Governors Association and adopted by the 
        National Governors Association, represent a sound basis for 
        interaction among the Federal, State, local governments, and 
        Indian tribes on environmental matters and should be followed 
        in the development of highway construction and public transit 
        improvements. These principles are as follows:
                    (A) Assign responsibilities at the right level.
                    (B) Use collaborative processes to break down 
                barriers and find solutions.
                    (C) Move to a performance-based system.
                    (D) Separate subjective choices from objective data 
                gathering.
                    (E) Pursue economic incentives whenever 
                appropriate.
                    (F) Ensure environmental understanding.
                    (G) Make sure environmental decisions are fully 
                informed.
                    (H) Use appropriate geographic boundaries for 
                environmental problems.
            (2) Purpose.--The purpose of this section is to reduce 
        delays in the delivery of highway construction and public 
        transportation capital projects arising from the environmental 
        review process, while continuing to ensure the protection of 
        the human and natural environment.
    (b) Project Development Procedures.--Chapter 52 of title 49, United 
States Code, as added by section 6001(a) of this Act, is amended by 
adding at the end the following:

      ``SUBCHAPTER C--EFFICIENT ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEWS FOR PROJECT 
                             DECISIONMAKING

``Sec. 5251. Definitions and applicability
    ``(a) Definitions.--In this subchapter, the following definitions 
apply:
            ``(1) Agency.--The term `agency' means any agency, 
        department, or other unit of Federal, State, local, or Indian 
        tribal government.
            ``(2) Environmental impact statement.--The term 
        `environmental impact statement' means the detailed statement 
        of environmental impacts required to be prepared under the 
        National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et 
        seq.).
            ``(3) Environmental review process.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The term `environmental review 
                process' means the process for preparing for a project 
                an environmental impact statement, environmental 
                assessment, categorical exclusion, or other document 
                prepared under the National Environmental Policy Act of 
                1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
                    ``(B) Inclusions.--The term includes the process 
                for and completion of any environmental permit, 
                approval, review, or study required for a project under 
                any Federal law other than the National Environmental 
                Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
            ``(4) Lead agency.--The term `lead agency' means the 
        Department of Transportation and, if applicable, any State or 
        local governmental entity serving as a joint lead agency 
        pursuant to this section.
            ``(5) Multimodal project.--The term `multimodal project' 
        means a project funded, in whole or in part, under title 23 or 
        chapter 53 and involving the participation of more than one 
        Department of Transportation administration or agency.
            ``(6) Project.--The term `project' means any highway 
        project, public transportation capital project, or multimodal 
        project that requires the approval of the Secretary.
            ``(7) Project sponsor.--The term `project sponsor' means 
        the agency or other entity, including any private or public-
        private entity, that seeks approval of the Secretary for a 
        project.
            ``(8) State transportation department.--The term `State 
        transportation department' means any statewide agency of a 
        State with responsibility for one or more modes of 
        transportation.
    ``(b) Applicability.--This subchapter is applicable to all projects 
for which an environmental impact statement is prepared under the 
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). 
This subchapter may be applied, to the extent determined appropriate by 
the Secretary, to other projects for which an environmental document is 
prepared pursuant to such Act. Any authorities granted in this 
subchapter may be exercised for a project, class of projects, or 
program of projects.
``Sec. 5252. Project development procedures
    ``(a) Lead Agencies.--
            ``(1) Federal lead agency.--The Department of 
        Transportation shall be the Federal lead agency in the 
        environmental review process for a project.
            ``(2) Project sponsor as joint lead agency.--Any project 
        sponsor that is a State or local governmental entity receiving 
        funds under title 23 or chapter 53 for the project shall serve 
        as a joint lead agency with the Department for purposes of 
        preparing any environmental document under the National 
        Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and 
        may prepare any such environmental document required in support 
        of any action or approval by the Secretary if the Federal lead 
        agency furnishes guidance in such preparation and independently 
        evaluates such document and the document is approved and 
        adopted by the Secretary prior to the Secretary taking any 
        subsequent action or making any approval based on such 
        document, whether or not the Secretary's action or approval 
        results in Federal funding.
            ``(3) Ensuring compliance.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
        the project sponsor complies with all design and mitigation 
        commitments made jointly by the Secretary and the project 
        sponsor in any environmental document prepared by the project 
        sponsor in accordance with this subsection and that such 
        document is appropriately supplemented if project changes 
        become necessary.
            ``(4) Adoption and use of documents.--Any environmental 
        document prepared in accordance with this subsection may be 
        adopted or used by any Federal agency making any approval to 
        the same extent that such Federal agency could adopt or use a 
        document prepared by another Federal agency.
    ``(b) Participating Agencies.--
            ``(1) In general.--The lead agency shall be responsible for 
        inviting and designating participating agencies in accordance 
        with this subsection.
            ``(2) Invitation.--The lead agency shall identify, as early 
        as practicable in the environmental review process for a 
        project, any other Federal and non-Federal agencies that may 
        have an interest in the project, and shall invite such agencies 
        to become participating agencies in the environmental review 
        process for the project. The invitation shall set a deadline 
        for responses to be submitted. The deadline may be extended by 
        the lead agency for good cause.
            ``(3) Federal participating agencies.--Any Federal agency 
        that is invited by the lead agency to participate in the 
        environmental review process for a project shall be designated 
        as a participating agency by the lead agency unless the invited 
        agency informs the lead agency, in writing, by the deadline 
        specified in the invitation that the invited agency--
                    ``(A) has no jurisdiction or authority with respect 
                to the project;
                    ``(B) has no expertise or information relevant to 
                the project; and
                    ``(C) does not intend to submit comments on the 
                project.
            ``(4) Effect of designation.--Designation as a 
        participating agency under this subsection shall not imply that 
        the participating agency--
                    ``(A) supports a proposed project; or
                    ``(B) has any jurisdiction over, or special 
                expertise with respect to evaluation of, the project.
            ``(5) Cooperating agency.--A participating agency may also 
        be designated by a lead agency as a `cooperating agency' under 
        the regulations contained in part 1500 of title 40, Code of 
        Federal Regulations.
            ``(6) Designations for categories of projects.--The 
        Secretary may exercise the authorities granted under this 
        subsection for a project, class of projects, or program of 
        projects.
    ``(c) Project Initiation.--
            ``(1) In general.--The project sponsor shall initiate the 
        environmental review process for a project by submitting an 
        initiation notice to the Secretary.
            ``(2) Contents of notice.--The initiation notice shall 
        include, at a minimum, a brief description of the type of work, 
        termini, length, and general location of the proposed project, 
        together with a statement of any Federal approvals anticipated 
        to be needed for the project.
    ``(d) Purpose and Need.--
            ``(1) Participation.--As early as practicable during the 
        environmental review process, the lead agency shall provide an 
        opportunity for involvement by participating agencies and the 
        public in defining the purpose and need for a project.
            ``(2) Definition.--Following participation under paragraph 
        (1), the lead agency shall define the project's purpose and 
        need for purposes of any document which the lead agency is 
        responsible for preparing for the project.
            ``(3) Objectives.--The statement of purpose and need shall 
        include a clear statement of the objectives that the proposed 
        action is intended to achieve, which may include--
                    ``(A) achieving a transportation objective 
                identified in an applicable statewide or metropolitan 
                transportation plan;
                    ``(B) supporting land use, economic development, or 
                growth objectives established in applicable Federal, 
                State, local, or tribal plans; and
                    ``(C) serving national defense, national security, 
                or other national objectives, as established in Federal 
                laws, plans, or policies.
    ``(e) Alternatives Analysis.--
            ``(1) Participation.--As early as practicable during the 
        environmental review process, the lead agency shall provide an 
        opportunity for involvement by participating agencies and the 
        public in determining the range of alternatives to be 
        considered for a project.
            ``(2) Range of alternatives.--Following participation under 
        paragraph (1), the lead agency shall determine the range of 
        alternatives for consideration in any document which the lead 
        agency is responsible for preparing for the project.
            ``(3) Methodologies.--The lead agency also shall determine, 
        in collaboration with participating agencies at appropriate 
        times during the study process, the methodologies to be used 
        and the level of detail required in the analysis of each 
        alternative for a project.
            ``(4) Preferred alternative.--At the discretion of the lead 
        agency, the preferred alternative for a project, after being 
        identified, may be developed to a higher level of detail than 
        other alternatives in order to facilitate the development of 
        mitigation measures or concurrent compliance with other 
        applicable laws if the lead agency determines that the 
        development of such higher level of detail will not prevent the 
        lead agency from making an impartial decision as to whether to 
        accept another alternative which is being considered in the 
        environmental review process.
    ``(f) Comment Deadlines.--The lead agency shall establish the 
following deadlines for comment during the environmental review process 
for a project:
            ``(1) For comments by agencies and the public on a draft 
        environmental impact statement, a period of no more than 60 
        days from the date of public availability of such document, 
        unless--
                    ``(A) a different deadline is established by 
                agreement of the lead agency, the project sponsor, and 
                all participating agencies; or
                    ``(B) the deadline is extended by the lead agency 
                for good cause.
            ``(2) For all other comment periods established by the lead 
        agency for agency or public comments in the environmental 
        review process, a period of no more than 30 days from 
        availability of the materials on which comment is requested, 
        unless--
                    ``(A) a different deadline is established by 
                agreement of the lead agency, the project sponsor, and 
                all participating agencies; or
                    ``(B) the deadline is extended by the lead agency 
                for good cause.
    ``(g) Issue Identification and Resolution.--
            ``(1) Cooperation.--The lead agency and the participating 
        agencies shall work cooperatively in accordance with this 
        section to identify and resolve issues that could delay 
        completion of the environmental review process or could result 
        in denial of any approvals required for the project under 
        applicable laws.
            ``(2) Lead agency responsibilities.--The lead agency shall 
        make information available to the participating agencies as 
        early as practicable in the environmental review process 
        regarding the environmental and socioeconomic resources located 
        within the project area and the general locations of the 
        alternatives under consideration. Such information may be based 
        on existing data sources, including geographic information 
        systems mapping.
            ``(3) Participating agency responsibilities.--Based on 
        information received from the lead agency, participating 
        agencies shall identify, as early as practicable, any issues of 
        concern regarding the project's potential environmental or 
        socioeconomic impacts. In this paragraph, issues of concern 
        include any issues that could substantially delay or prevent an 
        agency from granting a permit or other approval that is needed 
        for the project.
            ``(4) Issue resolution.--Whenever issues of concern are 
        identified or at any time upon request of a project sponsor, 
        the lead agency shall promptly convene a meeting with the 
        relevant participating agencies. If a resolution cannot be 
        achieved within 30 days following such a meeting and a 
        determination by the lead agency that all information necessary 
        to resolve the issue has been obtained, the lead agency shall 
        notify the heads of all Federal agencies involved in the 
        meeting and the Committee on Environment and Public Works of 
        the Senate and the Committee on Transportation and 
        Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and shall 
        publish such notification in the Federal Register.
    ``(h) Participation of State Agencies.--For any project eligible 
for assistance under title 23 or chapter 53, a State may require, under 
procedures established by State law, that all State agencies that have 
jurisdiction by State or Federal law over environmental-related issues 
that may be affected by the project, or that are required to issue any 
environmental-related reviews, analyses, opinions, or determinations on 
issuing any permits, licenses, or approvals for the project, be subject 
to the coordinated environmental review process established under this 
section unless the Secretary determines that a State agency's 
participation would not be in the public interest. A State 
participating in the review process must require all State agencies 
with jurisdiction to be subject to and comply with the review process 
to the same extent as a Federal agency.
    ``(i) Assistance to Affected State and Federal Agencies.--
            ``(1) In general.--For a project that is subject to the 
        environmental review process established under this section and 
        for which funds are made available to a State under title 23 or 
        chapter 53, the Secretary may approve a request by the State to 
        provide funds so made available to affected Federal agencies 
        (including the Department of Transportation), State agencies, 
        and Indian tribes participating in the environmental review 
        process for the project. Such funds may be provided only to 
        support activities that directly and meaningfully contribute to 
        expediting and improving transportation project planning and 
        delivery. Such activities may include dedicated staffing, 
        training of agency personnel, information gathering and 
        mapping, and development of programmatic agreements. The 
        Secretary may also use funds made available under section 204 
        of title 23 for a project for the purposes specified in this 
        subsection with respect to the environmental review process for 
        the project.
            ``(2) Amounts.--Requests under paragraph (1) may be 
        approved only for the additional amounts that the Secretary 
        determines are necessary for the Federal agencies, State 
        agencies, or Indian tribes participating in the environmental 
        review process to meet the time limits for environmental 
        review.
            ``(3) Condition.--A request under paragraph (1) to expedite 
        time limits for environmental review may be approved only if 
        such time limits are less than the customary time necessary for 
        such review.''.
    (c) Existing Environmental Review Processes.--Nothing in this 
section shall be deemed to affect any existing environmental review 
process approved by the Secretary.

SEC. 6003. POLICY ON HISTORIC SITES.

    (a) Title 49.--Section 303 of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(d) Special Rules for Historic Sites.--
            ``(1) In general.--The requirements of this section are 
        deemed to be satisfied in any case in which the treatment of a 
        historic site has been agreed upon in accordance with section 
        106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470f) 
        and the agreement includes a determination that the program or 
        project will not have an adverse effect on the historic site.
            ``(2) Limitation on applicability.--This subsection does 
        not apply in any case in which the Advisory Council on Historic 
        Preservation determines, concurrent with or prior to the 
        conclusion of section 106 consultation, that allowing section 
        106 compliance to satisfy the requirements of this section 
        would be inconsistent with the objectives of the National 
        Historic Preservation Act. The Council shall make such a 
        determination if petitioned to do so by a section 106 
        consulting party, unless the Council affirmatively finds that 
        the views of the requesting party have been adequately 
        considered and that section 106 compliance will adequately 
        protect historic properties.
            ``(3) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following 
        definitions apply:
                    ``(A) Section 106 consultation.--The term `section 
                106 consultation' means the consultation process 
                required under section 106 of the National Historic 
                Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470f).
                    ``(B) Adverse effect.--The term `adverse effect' 
                means altering, directly or indirectly, any of the 
                characteristics of a historic property that qualify the 
                property for inclusion in the National Register in a 
                manner that would diminish the integrity of the 
                property's location, design, setting, materials, 
                workmanship, feeling, or association.''.
    (b) Title 23.--Section 138 of title 23, United States Code is 
amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(a) Policy.--'' before ``It is''; and
            (2) by striking ``In carrying'' and inserting the 
        following:
    ``(c) Studies.--In carrying''; and
            (3) by inserting after subsection (a) (as designated by 
        paragraph (1)) the following:
    ``(b) Special Rules for Historic Sites.--
            ``(1) In general.--The requirements of this section are 
        deemed to be satisfied in any case in which the treatment of a 
        historic site has been agreed upon in accordance with section 
        106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470f) 
        and the agreement includes a determination that the program or 
        project will not have an adverse effect on the historic site.
            ``(2) Limitation on applicability.--This subsection does 
        not apply in any case in which the Advisory Council on Historic 
        Preservation determines, concurrent with or prior to the 
        conclusion of section 106 consultation, that allowing section 
        106 compliance to satisfy the requirements of this section 
        would be inconsistent with the objectives of the National 
        Historic Preservation Act. The Council shall make such a 
        determination if petitioned to do so by a section 106 
        consulting party, unless the Council affirmatively finds that 
        the views of the requesting party have been adequately 
        considered and that section 106 compliance will adequately 
        protect historic properties.
            ``(3) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following 
        definitions apply:
                    ``(A) Section 106 consultation.--The term `section 
                106 consultation' means the consultation process 
                required under section 106 of the National Historic 
                Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470f).
                    ``(B) Adverse effect.--The term `adverse effect' 
                means altering, directly or indirectly, any of the 
                characteristics of a historic property that qualify the 
                property for inclusion in the National Register in a 
                manner that would diminish the integrity of the 
                property's location, design, setting, materials, 
                workmanship, feeling, or association.''.

SEC. 6004. EXEMPTION OF INTERSTATE SYSTEM.

    Section 103(c) of title 23, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) Exemption of interstate system.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), the Interstate System shall not be 
                considered to be a historic site under section 303 of 
                title 49 or section 138 of this title, regardless of 
                whether the Interstate System or portions of the 
                Interstate System are listed on, or eligible for 
                listing on, the National Register of Historic Places.
                    ``(B) Individual elements.--Subject to subparagraph 
                (C), a portion of the Interstate System that possesses 
                an independent feature of historic significance (such 
                as a historic bridge or a highly significant 
                engineering feature) that is listed on, or eligible for 
                listing on, the National Register of Historic Places, 
                shall be considered to be a historic site under section 
                303 of title 49 or section 138 of this title, as 
                applicable.
                    ``(C) Construction, maintenance, restoration, and 
                rehabilitation activities.--Subparagraph (B) does not 
                prohibit a State from carrying out construction, 
                maintenance, restoration, or rehabilitation activities 
                for a portion of the Interstate System referred to in 
                subparagraph (B) upon compliance with section 303 of 
                title 49 or section 138 of this title, as applicable, 
                and section 106 of the National Historic Preservation 
                Act of 1966 (16 U.S.C. 470f).''.

SEC. 6005. INTERSTATE COMPACTS.

    Section 5213(d), as inserted by section 6001(a) of this Act, is 
amended by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
            ``(2) Interstate compacts.--The consent of Congress is 
        granted to any 2 or more States--
                    ``(A) to enter into agreements or compacts, not in 
                conflict with any law of the United States, for 
                cooperative efforts and mutual assistance in support of 
                activities authorized under this section as the 
                activities pertain to interstate areas and localities 
                within the States; and
                    ``(B) to establish such agencies, joint or 
                otherwise, as the States may determine desirable for 
                making the agreements and compacts effective.
            ``(3) Lake tahoe region.--
                    ``(A) Definition.--In this paragraph, the term 
                `Lake Tahoe region' has the meaning given the term 
                `region' in subdivision (a) of article II of the Tahoe 
                Regional Planning Compact, as set forth in the first 
                section of Public Law 96-551 (94 Stat. 3234).
                    ``(B) Transportation planning process.--The 
                Secretary shall--
                            ``(i) establish with the Federal land 
                        management agencies that have jurisdiction over 
                        land in the Lake Tahoe region a transportation 
                        planning process for the region; and
                            ``(ii) coordinate the transportation 
                        planning process with the planning process 
                        required of State and local governments under 
                        this section and section 5214.
                    ``(C) Interstate compact.--
                            ``(i) In general.--Subject to clause (ii), 
                        notwithstanding subsection (b), to carry out 
                        the transportation planning process required by 
                        this section, the consent of Congress is 
                        granted to the States of California and Nevada 
                        to designate a metropolitan planning 
                        organization for the Lake Tahoe region, by 
                        agreement between the Governors of the States 
                        of California and Nevada and units of general 
                        purpose local government that together 
                        represent at least 75 percent of the affected 
                        population (including the central city or 
                        cities (as defined by the Bureau of the 
                        Census)), or in accordance with procedures 
                        established by applicable State or local law.
                            ``(ii) Involvement of federal land 
                        management agencies.--
                                    ``(I) Representation.--The policy 
                                board of a metropolitan planning 
                                organization designated under clause 
                                (i) shall include a representative of 
                                each Federal land management agency 
                                that has jurisdiction over land in the 
                                Lake Tahoe region.
                                    ``(II) Funding.--In addition to 
                                funds made available to the 
                                metropolitan planning organization 
                                under other provisions of title 23 and 
                                under chapter 53, not more than 1 
                                percent of the funds allocated under 
                                section 202 of title 23 may be used to 
                                carry out the transportation planning 
                                process for the Lake Tahoe region under 
                                this subparagraph.
                    ``(D) Activities.--Highway projects included in 
                transportation plans developed under this paragraph--
                            ``(i) shall be selected for funding in a 
                        manner that facilitates the participation of 
                        the Federal land management agencies that have 
                        jurisdiction over land in the Lake Tahoe 
                        region; and
                            ``(ii) may, in accordance with chapter 2 of 
                        title 23, be funded using funds allocated under 
                        section 202 of title 23.
            ``(4) Reservation of rights.--The right to alter, amend or 
        repeal interstate compacts entered into under this subsection 
        is expressly reserved.''.

SEC. 6006. DEVELOPMENT OF TRANSPORTATION PLAN.

    Section 5213(g), as inserted by section 6001(a) of this Act, is 
amended by inserting before paragraph (2) the following:
            ``(1) In general.--Each metropolitan planning organization 
        shall prepare, and update periodically, according to a schedule 
        that the Secretary determines to be appropriate, a 
        transportation plan for its metropolitan planning area in 
        accordance with the requirements of this subsection. The 
        metropolitan planning organization shall prepare and update 
        such plan every 4 years (or more frequently, if the 
        metropolitan planning organization elects to update more 
        frequently) in the case of each of the following:
                    ``(A) Any area designated as nonattainment, as 
                defined in section 107(d) of the Clean Air Act (42 
                U.S.C. 7407(d)).
                    ``(B) Any area that was nonattainment and 
                subsequently designated to attainment in accordance 
                with section 107(d)(3) of that Act (42 U.S.C. 
                7407(d)(3)) and that is subject to a maintenance plan 
                under section 175A of that Act (42 U.S.C. 7505a).
        In the case of any other area required to have a transportation 
        plan in accordance with the requirements of this subsection, 
        the metropolitan planning organization shall prepare and update 
        such plan every 4 years unless the metropolitan planning 
        organization elects to update more frequently.''.

SEC. 6007. INTERSTATE AGREEMENTS.

    Section 5214, as inserted by section 6001(a) of this Act, is 
amended by inserting after subsection (b) the following:
    ``(c) Interstate Agreements.--
            ``(1) In general.--The consent of Congress is granted to 2 
        or more States entering into agreements or compacts, not in 
        conflict with any law of the United States, for cooperative 
        efforts and mutual assistance in support of activities 
        authorized under this section related to interstate areas and 
        localities in the States and establishing authorities the 
        States consider desirable for making the agreements and 
        compacts effective.
            ``(2) Reservation of rights.--The right to alter, amend or 
        repeal interstate compacts entered into under this subsection 
        is expressly reserved.''.

SEC. 6008. REGULATIONS RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION PLANNING.

    Not later than 18 months after the date of enactment of this Act, 
the Secretary shall issue regulations that are consistent with the 
provisions of subchapter B of chapter 52 of title 49, United States 
Code, that relate to the Clean Air Act.

SEC. 6009. SPECIAL RULES RELATING TO PROJECT DEVELOPMENT PROCEDURES.

    Section 5252 of title 49, United States Code, as inserted by 
section 6001(a) of this Act, is amended by adding at the end the 
following:
    ``(j) Judicial Review and Savings Clause.--
            ``(1) Judicial review.--Except as set forth under 
        subsection (k), nothing in this section shall affect the 
        reviewability of any final Federal agency action in a court of 
        the United States.
            ``(2) Savings clause.--Nothing in this section shall be 
        construed as superseding, amending, or modifying the National 
        Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) or 
        any other Federal environmental statute or affect the 
        responsibility of any Federal officer to comply with or enforce 
        any such statute.
            ``(3) Limitations.--Nothing in this section shall preempt 
        or interfere with--
                    ``(A) any practice of seeking, considering, or 
                responding to public comment; or
                    ``(B) any power, jurisdiction, responsibility, or 
                authority that a Federal, State, or local government 
                agency, metropolitan planning organization, Indian 
                tribe, or project sponsor has with respect to carrying 
                out a project or any other provisions of law applicable 
                to projects, plans, or programs.
    ``(k) Limitations on Claims.--
            ``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
        law, a claim arising under Federal law seeking judicial review 
        of a permit, license, or approval issued by a Federal agency 
        for a highway or public transportation capital project shall be 
        barred unless it is filed within 90 days after the permit, 
        license, or approval is final pursuant to the law under which 
        the agency action is taken, unless a shorter time is specified 
        in the Federal law pursuant to which judicial review is 
        allowed. Nothing in this subsection shall create a right to 
        judicial review or place any limit on filing a claim that a 
        person has violated the terms of a permit, license, or 
        approval.
            ``(2) New information.--The Secretary shall consider new 
        information received after the close of a comment period if the 
        information satisfies the requirements for a supplemental 
        environmental impact statement under section 771.130 of title 
        23, Code of Federal Regulations. The preparation of a 
        supplemental environmental impact statement when required shall 
        be considered a separate final agency action and the deadline 
        for filing a claim for judicial review of such action shall be 
        90 days after the date of such action.''.

             TITLE VII--HAZARDOUS MATERIALS TRANSPORTATION

SEC. 7001. AMENDMENT OF TITLE 49, UNITED STATES CODE.

    Except as otherwise expressly provided, whenever in this title an 
amendment or repeal is expressed in terms of an amendment to, or a 
repeal of, a section or other provision, the reference shall be 
considered to be made to a section or other provision of title 49, 
United States Code.

SEC. 7002. FINDINGS AND PURPOSE.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds with respect to hazardous materials 
transportation that--
            (1) approximately 4,000,000,000 tons of regulated hazardous 
        materials are transported each year and approximately 1,200,000 
        movements of hazardous materials occur each day, according to 
        Department of Transportation estimates;
            (2) the movement of hazardous materials in commerce is 
        necessary to maintain economic vitality and meet consumer 
        demands and must be conducted in a safe and efficient manner;
            (3) accidents involving, or unauthorized access to, 
        hazardous materials in transportation may result in a release 
        of such materials and pose a serious threat to public health 
        and safety;
            (4) many States and localities have enacted laws and 
        regulations that vary from Federal laws and regulations 
        pertaining to the transportation of hazardous materials, 
        thereby creating the potential for unreasonable hazards in 
        other jurisdictions and confounding shippers and carriers that 
        attempt to comply with multiple regulatory requirements;
            (5) because of the potential risks to life, property, and 
        the environment posed by unintentional releases of hazardous 
        materials, consistency in laws and regulations governing the 
        transportation of hazardous materials is necessary and 
        desirable;
            (6) in order to achieve greater uniformity and to promote 
        the public health, welfare, and safety at all levels, Federal 
        standards for regulating the transportation of hazardous 
        materials in intrastate, interstate, and foreign commerce are 
        necessary and desirable; and
            (7) in order to provide reasonable, adequate, and cost-
        effective protection from the risks posed by the transportation 
        of hazardous materials, a network of well-trained State and 
        local emergency response personnel and hazmat employees is 
        essential.
    (b) Purpose.--The text of section 5101 is amended to read as 
follows: ``The purpose of this chapter is to protect against the risks 
to life, property, and the environment that are inherent in the 
transportation of hazardous material in intrastate, interstate, and 
foreign commerce.''.

SEC. 7003. DEFINITIONS.

    Section 5102 is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``or'' at the end of subparagraph 
                (A);
                    (B) by striking the period at the end of 
                subparagraph (B) and inserting ``; or''; and
                    (C) by inserting at the end the following:
                    ``(C) on a United States registered aircraft.'';
            (2) in paragraph (8) by striking ``national response team'' 
        each place it appears and inserting ``National Response Team'';
            (3) by redesignating paragraphs (11), (12), and (13) as 
        paragraphs (12), (13), and (14), respectively; and
            (4) by inserting after paragraph (10) the following:
            ``(11) `Secretary' means the Secretary of 
        Transportation.''.

SEC. 7004. GENERAL REGULATORY AUTHORITY.

    (a) Technical Amendments.--Section 5103(a) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``etiologic agent,'' and inserting 
        ``infectious substance,''; and
            (2) by striking ``poison,'' and inserting ``toxic,''.
    (b) Regulations for Safe Transportation.--Section 5103(b)(1)(A) is 
amended--
            (1) in clause (i) by striking ``transporting'' and 
        inserting ``that transports'';
            (2) in clause (ii)--
                    (A) by striking ``causing'' and inserting ``that 
                causes''; and
                    (B) by striking ``or'' at the end; and
            (3) by striking clause (iii) and inserting the following:
                    ``(iii) that designs, manufactures, fabricates, 
                inspects, marks, maintains, reconditions, repairs, or 
                tests a package or container that is represented, 
                marked, certified, or sold by that person as qualified 
                for use in transporting hazardous material in commerce;
                    ``(iv) that prepares or accepts hazardous material 
                for transportation in commerce;
                    ``(v) that is responsible for the safety of 
                transporting hazardous material in commerce;
                    ``(vi) that certifies compliance with any 
                requirement of this chapter; or
                    ``(vii) that misrepresents whether the person is 
                engaged in any of the activities described in this 
                subparagraph; and''.
    (c) Technical Amendment.--Section 5103(b) is amended--
            (1) by moving subparagraph (C) from the end of paragraph 
        (1) and inserting it after paragraph (2);
            (2) by redesignating such subparagraph as paragraph (3); 
        and
            (3) by moving such paragraph (3) 2 ems to the left.

SEC. 7005. REPRESENTATION AND TAMPERING.

    (a) Representation.--Section 5104(a) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``A person'' and inserting ``No person'';
            (2) in paragraph (1) by striking ``only if'' and all that 
        follows through ``meets'' and inserting ``if it does not 
        conform to''; and
            (3) in paragraph (2) by striking ``only if'' and inserting 
        ``unless''.
    (b) Tampering.--Section 5104(b) is amended by striking ``A person 
may not'' and inserting ``No person may''.

SEC. 7006. TECHNICAL AMENDMENTS.

    (a) Elimination of Completed Study.--Section 5105 is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (d); and
            (2) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (d).
    (b) Classification of Explosives.--Section 5108(a)(1)(B) is amended 
by striking ``class A or B'' and inserting ``Division 1.1, 1.2, or 
1.3''.

SEC. 7007. TRAINING OF CERTAIN EMPLOYEES.

    Section 5107 is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections 
        (g) and (h), respectively;
            (2) in subsection (g)(2) (as so redesignated) by striking 
        ``sections 5106, 5108(a)-(g)(1) and (h), and 5109 of this 
        title'' and inserting ``section 5106''; and
            (3) by inserting after subsection (e) the following:
    ``(f) Training of Certain Employees.--The Secretary shall ensure 
that maintenance-of-way employees and railroad signalmen receive 
general awareness/familiarization training and safety training pursuant 
to section 172.704 of title 49, Code of Federal Regulations.''.

SEC. 7008. REGISTRATION.

    (a) Persons Required to File.--Section 5108(a) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2)(B) by striking ``manufacturing, 
        fabricating, marking, maintaining, reconditioning, repairing, 
        or testing'' and inserting ``designing, manufacturing, 
        fabricating, inspecting, marking, maintaining, reconditioning, 
        repairing, or testing''; and
            (2) by aligning the left margin of paragraph (4) with the 
        left margin of paragraph (3).
    (b) Filing Schedule.--Section 5108(c) is amended--
            (1) by striking the subsection heading and 
        inserting``Filing Schedule''; and
            (2) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``must file the first'' and 
                inserting ``shall file that'';
                    (B) by striking ``not later than March 31, 1992'' 
                and inserting ``in accordance with regulations issued 
                by the Secretary''; and
                    (C) by striking the second sentence.
    (c) Fees.--Section 5108(g) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``may'' and inserting 
        ``shall'';
            (2) in paragraph (2)(A) by striking ``$5,000'' and 
        inserting ``$3,000''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) Fees on exempt persons.--Notwithstanding subsection 
        (a)(4), the Secretary shall impose and collect a fee of $25 
        from a person who is required to register under this section 
        but who is otherwise exempted by the Secretary from paying any 
        fee under this section. The fee shall be used to pay the cost 
        of the Secretary in processing registration statements filed by 
        such persons.''.
    (d) Relationship to Other Laws.--Section 5108(i)(2)(B) is amended 
by inserting ``, Indian tribe,'' after ``State'' the first place it 
appears.
    (e) Hazmat Registration Notification.--As soon as practicable, the 
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administrator of the Department 
of Transportation shall transmit to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety 
Administration hazardous material registrant information obtained 
before, on, or after the date of enactment of this Act under section 
5108 of title 49, United States Code, together with any Department of 
Transportation identification number for each registrant.

SEC. 7009. PROVIDING SHIPPING PAPERS.

    Section 5110 is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a) by striking ``under subsection (b) of 
        this section'' and inserting ``by regulation''; and
            (2) in subsection (e) by striking ``1 year'' and inserting 
        ``2 years after the date of preparation of the shipping 
        paper''.

SEC. 7010. RAIL TANK CARS.

    Section 5111, and the item relating to such section in the analysis 
for chapter 51, are repealed.

SEC. 7011. UNSATISFACTORY SAFETY RATING.

    The text of section 5113 is amended to read as follows: ``A person 
who violates section 31144(c)(3) shall be subject to the penalties in 
sections 5123 and 5124.''.

SEC. 7012. TRAINING CURRICULUM FOR THE PUBLIC SECTOR.

    (a) Requirements.--Section 5115(b)(1)(C) is amended by striking 
``under other United States Government grant programs, including 
those'' and inserting ``with Federal financial assistance, including 
programs''.
    (b) Training on Complying With Legal Requirements.--Section 
5115(c)(3) is amended by inserting before the period at the end the 
following: ``and such other voluntary consensus standard-setting 
organizations as the Secretary determines appropriate''.
    (c) Distribution and Publication.--Section 5115(d) is amended--
            (1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1) by striking 
        ``national response team'' and inserting ``National Response 
        Team'';
            (2) in paragraph (1) by striking ``Director of the Federal 
        Emergency Management Agency'' and inserting ``Secretary''; and
            (3) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by inserting ``and distribute'' after 
                ``publish''; and
                    (B) by striking ``programs that uses'' and all that 
                follows before the period at the end and inserting 
                ``programs and courses developed under this section''.

SEC. 7013. PLANNING AND TRAINING GRANTS, MONITORING, AND REVIEW.

    (a) Factors to Consider in Determining Needs.--Section 5116(b)(4) 
is amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph (D);
            (2) by redesignating subparagraph (E) as subparagraph (F); 
        and
            (3) by inserting after subparagraph (D) the following:
            ``(E) the report submitted by the State to the Secretary 
        under section 5125(f)(2); and''.
    (b) Compliance With Certain Law.--Section 5116(c) is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``or Indian tribe'' after ``a State'';
            (2) by inserting ``or Indian tribe'' after ``the State'' 
        the first place it appears; and
            (3) by inserting ``(1) the State or Indian tribe is 
        complying with all applicable requirements of this chapter 
        (including section 5125(f)), and (2) in the case of a State,'' 
        after ``certifies that''.
    (c) Government's Share of Costs.--Section 5116(e) is amended by 
striking the second sentence and inserting the following: ``Amounts 
received by the State or tribe under subsections (a)(1) and (b)(1) are 
not part of the non-Government share under this subsection.''.
    (d) Monitoring and Technical Assistance.--Section 5116(f) is 
amended--
            (1) in the first sentence--
                    (A) by striking ``Secretaries of Transportation and 
                Energy,'' and inserting ``Secretary of Energy, Director 
                of the Federal Emergency Management Agency,''; and
                    (B) by striking ``Director of the Federal Emergency 
                Management Agency shall'' and inserting ``Secretary of 
                Transportation shall''; and
            (2) in the second sentence--
                    (A) by striking ``the Secretaries, Administrator, 
                and Directors each shall'' and inserting ``the 
                Secretary shall''; and
                    (B) by striking ``national response team'' and 
                inserting ``National Response Team''.
    (e) Delegation of Authority.--Section 5116(g) is amended by 
striking ``Government grant programs'' and inserting ``Federal 
financial assistance''.
    (f) Hazardous Materials Emergency Preparedness Fund.--Section 
5116(i) is amended--
            (1) by striking the subsection heading and inserting 
        ``Hazardous Materials Emergency Preparedness Fund.--'';
            (2) in the matter preceding paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by inserting ``, to be known as the `Hazardous 
                Materials Emergency Preparedness Fund','' after 
                ``account in the Treasury''; and
                    (B) by striking ``section 5108(g)(2)(A) of this 
                title'' and all that follows before the period at the 
                end of the first sentence and inserting ``this 
                chapter'';
            (3) by striking ``and'' at the end of paragraph (2);
            (4) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (4); and
            (5) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following:
            ``(3) to publish and distribute the Emergency Response 
        Guidebook; and''.
    (g) Reports.--In section 5116(k)--
            (1) by striking the first sentence and inserting the 
        following: ``The Secretary shall submit to Congress and make 
        available to the public annually a report on the allocation and 
        uses of planning grants under subsection (a), training grants 
        under subsection (b), and grants under subsection (j) and under 
        section 5107.''; and
            (2) in the second sentence by striking ``Such report'' and 
        inserting ``The report''.

SEC. 7014. SPECIAL PERMITS AND EXCLUSIONS.

    (a) Section Heading.--
            (1) In general.--Section 5117 is amended by striking the 
        section number and heading and inserting the following:
``Sec. 5117. Special permits and exclusions''.
            (2) Conforming amendment.--The item relating to section 
        5117 in the analysis for chapter 51 is amended to read as 
        follows:

``5117. Special permits and exclusions.''.
    (b) Subsection Heading.--The heading for subsection (a) of section 
5117 is amended by striking ``Exempt'' and inserting ``Issue Special 
Permits''.
    (c) Authority to Issue Special Permits.--Section 5117(a)(1) is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``an exemption'' and inserting ``, modify, 
        or terminate a special permit authorizing a variance''; and
            (2) by striking ``transporting, or causing to be 
        transported, hazardous material'' and inserting ``performing a 
        function regulated by the Secretary under section 5103(b)(1)''.
    (d) Period of Special Permit.--Section 5117(a)(2) is amended to 
read as follows:
    ``(2) A special permit issued under this section shall be effective 
for an initial period of not more than 2 years and may be renewed by 
the Secretary upon application for an additional period of not more 
than 4 years or, in the case of a special permit relating to section 
5112, for an additional period of not more than 2 years.''.
    (e) Applications.--Sections 5117(b) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``an exemption'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``a special permit''; and
            (2) by striking ``the exemption'' and inserting ``the 
        special permit''.
    (f) Dealing With Applications Promptly.--Section 5117(c) is amended 
by striking ``the exemption'' each place it appears and inserting ``the 
special permit''.
    (g) Limitation on Authority.--Section 5117(e) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``an exemption'' and inserting ``a special 
        permit''; and
            (2) by striking ``be exempt'' and inserting ``be granted a 
        variance''.

SEC. 7015. UNIFORM FORMS AND PROCEDURES.

    Section 5119 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5119. Uniform forms and procedures
    ``(a) Establishment of Working Group.--The Secretary shall 
establish a working group of State and local government officials, 
including representatives of the National Governors' Association, the 
National Association of Counties, the National League of Cities, the 
United States Conference of Mayors, the National Conference of State 
Legislatures, and the Alliance for Uniform Hazmat Transportation 
Procedures.
    ``(b) Purpose of Working Group.--The purpose of the working group 
shall be to establish uniform forms and procedures for a State to 
register, and to issue permits to, persons that transport, or cause to 
be transported, hazardous material by motor vehicle in the State.
    ``(c) Limitation on Working Group.--The working group may not 
propose to define or limit the amount of a fee a State may impose or 
collect.
    ``(d) Procedure.--The Secretary shall develop a procedure by which 
the working group shall harmonize existing State registration and 
permit laws and regulations relating to the transportation of hazardous 
materials, with special attention paid to each State's unique safety 
concerns and interest in maintaining strong hazmat safety standards.
    ``(e) Report of Working Group.--Not later than 18 months after the 
date of enactment of this subsection, the working group shall transmit 
to the Secretary a report containing recommendations for establishing 
uniform forms and procedures described in subsection (b).
    ``(f) Regulations.--Not later than 2 years after the date of 
enactment of this subsection, the Secretary shall issue regulations to 
carry out such recommendations of the working group as the Secretary 
considers appropriate.
    ``(g) Limitation on Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this 
section shall be construed as prohibiting a State from voluntarily 
participating in a program of uniform forms and procedures until such 
time as the Secretary issues regulations under subsection (f).''.

SEC. 7016. INTERNATIONAL UNIFORMITY OF STANDARDS AND REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) Consultation.--Section 5120(b) is amended by inserting ``and 
requirements'' after ``standards''.
    (b) Differences With International Standards and Requirements.--
Section 5120(c) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1) by inserting ``or requirement'' after 
        ``standard'' each place it appears; and
            (2) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by inserting ``standard or'' before 
                ``requirement'' each place it appears; and
                    (B) by striking ``included in a standard''.

SEC. 7017. ADMINISTRATIVE.

    (a) General Authority.--Section 5121(a) is amended--
            (1) in the first sentence by inserting ``conduct tests,'' 
        after ``investigate,'';
            (2) in the second sentence by striking ``After'' and 
        inserting ``Except as provided in subsections (c) and (d), 
        after''; and
            (3) by striking ``regulation prescribed'' and inserting 
        ``regulation, order, special permit, or approval issued''.
    (b) Records, Reports, and Information.--Section 5121(b) is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1) by inserting ``and property'' after 
        ``records''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by inserting ``property,'' after ``records,'';
                    (B) by inserting ``for inspection'' after 
                ``available''; and
                    (C) by striking ``requests'' and inserting 
                ``undertakes an investigation or makes a request''.
    (c) Enhanced Authority to Discover Hidden Shipments of Hazardous 
Material.--Section 5121(c) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(c) Inspections and Investigations.--
            ``(1) In general.--A designated officer, employee, or agent 
        of the Secretary--
                    ``(A) may inspect and investigate, at a reasonable 
                time and in a reasonable manner, records and property 
                relating to a function described in section 5103(b)(1);
                    ``(B) except in the case of packaging immediately 
                adjacent to its hazardous material contents, may gain 
                access to, open, and examine a package offered for, or 
                in, transportation when the officer, employee, or agent 
                has an objectively reasonable and articulable belief 
                that the package may contain a hazardous material;
                    ``(C) may remove from transportation a package or 
                related packages in a shipment offered for or in 
                transportation for which--
                            ``(i) such officer, employee, or agent has 
                        an objectively reasonable and articulable 
                        belief that the package may pose an imminent 
                        hazard; and
                            ``(ii) such officer, employee, or agent 
                        contemporaneously documents such belief in 
                        accordance with procedures set forth in 
                        guidance or regulations prescribed under 
                        subsection (e);
                    ``(D) may gather information from the offeror, 
                carrier, packaging manufacturer or retester, or other 
                person responsible for the package, to ascertain the 
                nature and hazards of the contents of the package;
                    ``(E) as necessary, under terms and conditions 
                specified by the Secretary, may order the offeror, 
                carrier, packaging manufacturer or retester, or other 
                person responsible for the package to have the package 
                transported to, opened, and the contents examined and 
                analyzed, at a facility appropriate for the conduct of 
                such examination and analysis; and
                    ``(F) when safety might otherwise be compromised, 
                may authorize properly qualified personnel to assist in 
                the activities conducted under this subsection.
            ``(2) Display of credentials.--An officer, employee, or 
        agent acting under this subsection shall display proper 
        credentials when requested.
            ``(3) Safe resumption of transportation.--In instances 
        when, as a result of an inspection or investigation under this 
        subsection, an imminent hazard is not found to exist, the 
        Secretary, in accordance with procedures set forth in 
        regulations prescribed under subsection (e), shall assist--
                    ``(A) in the safe resumption of transportation of 
                the package concerned; or
                    ``(B) in any case in which the hazardous material 
                being transported is perishable, in the safe and 
                expeditious resumption of transportation of the 
                perishable hazardous material.''.
    (d) Emergency Authority for Hazardous Material Transportation.--
Section 5121 is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as subsections 
        (f) and (g), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following:
    ``(d) Emergency Orders.--
            ``(1) In general.--If, upon inspection, investigation, 
        testing, or research, the Secretary determines that either a 
        violation of a provision of this chapter or a regulation issued 
        under this chapter, or an unsafe condition or practice, 
        constitutes or is causing an imminent hazard, the Secretary may 
        issue an emergency order, without notice or the opportunity for 
        a hearing, but only to the extent necessary to abate the 
        imminent hazard.
            ``(2) Written orders.--An emergency order issued under 
        paragraph (1) shall be in writing, describe the violation, 
        condition, or practice that is causing the imminent hazard, and 
        state the restrictions, prohibitions, recalls, or out-of-
        service orders issued. The emergency order also shall describe 
        the standards and procedures for obtaining relief from the 
        order.
            ``(3) Opportunity for review.--After issuing an emergency 
        order under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall provide an 
        opportunity for review of the order under section 554 of title 
        5 if a petition for review is filed within 20 calendar days 
        after the date of issuance of the order.
            ``(4) Expiration of effectiveness of emergency order.--If a 
        petition for review is filed for an order and the review is not 
        completed by the end of the 30-day period beginning on the date 
        the petition was filed, the order shall cease to be effective 
        at the end of that period unless the Secretary determines in 
        writing that the emergency situation still exists.
    ``(e) Regulations.--
            ``(1) Temporary regulations.--Not later than 60 days after 
        the date of enactment of the Transportation Equity Act: A 
        Legacy for Users, the Secretary shall issue temporary 
        regulations to carry out subsections (c) and (d). The temporary 
        regulations shall expire on the date of issuance of the 
        regulations under paragraph (2).
            ``(2) Final regulations.--Not later than 1 year after such 
        date of enactment, the Secretary shall issue regulations to 
        carry out subsections (c) and (d) in accordance with subchapter 
        II of chapter 5 of title 5.''.
    (e) Report.--Section 5121(g) (as redesignated by subsection (d)(1) 
of this section) is amended--
            (1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1) by striking 
        ``submit to the President for transmittal to the Congress'' and 
        inserting ``transmit to the Committee on Transportation and 
        Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and the 
        Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the 
        Senate''; and
            (2) in paragraph (4) by inserting ``relating to a function 
        regulated by the Secretary under section 5103(b)(1)'' after 
        ``activities''.
    (f) Repeal of Obsolete Provision.--Section 5118, and the item 
relating to such section in the analysis for chapter 51, are repealed.

SEC. 7018. ENFORCEMENT.

    (a) General.--Section 5122(a) is amended by striking the second 
sentence and inserting ``The court may award appropriate relief, 
including a temporary or permanent injunction, punitive damages, and 
assessment of civil penalties considering the same penalty amounts and 
factors as prescribed for the Secretary in an administrative case under 
section 5123.''.
    (b) Imminent Hazards.--Section 5122(b)(1)(B) is amended by striking 
``or ameliorate the'' and inserting ``or mitigate the''.

SEC. 7019. CIVIL PENALTY.

    (a) Penalty.--Section 5123(a) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``regulation prescribed or order 
                issued'' and inserting ``regulation, order, special 
                permit, or approval issued''; and
                    (B) by striking ``$25,000'' and inserting 
                ``$50,000'';
            (2) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph (3); and
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
    ``(2) If the Secretary finds that a violation under paragraph (1) 
results in death, serious illness, or severe injury to any person or 
substantial destruction of property, the Secretary may increase the 
amount of the civil penalty for such violation to not more than 
$100,000.''.
    (b) Hearing Requirement.--Section 5123(b) is amended by striking 
``regulation prescribed'' and inserting ``regulation, order, special 
permit, or approval issued''.
    (c) Civil Actions to Collect.--Section 5123(d) is amended by adding 
at the end the following: ``In such action, the validity, amount, and 
appropriateness of the civil penalty shall not be subject to review.''.
    (d) Compromise.--Section 5123(e) is amended by striking ``before 
referral to the Attorney General''.

SEC. 7020. CRIMINAL PENALTY.

    Section 5124 is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 5124. Criminal penalty
    ``(a) In General.--A person knowingly violating section 5104(b) or 
willfully or recklessly violating this chapter or a regulation, order, 
special permit, or approval issued under this chapter shall be fined 
under title 18, imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or both; except 
that the maximum amount of imprisonment shall be 10 years in any case 
in which the violation involves the release of a hazardous material 
that results in death or bodily injury to any person.
    ``(b) Knowing Violations.--For purposes of this section--
            ``(1) a person acts knowingly when--
                    ``(A) the person has actual knowledge of the facts 
                giving rise to the violation; or
                    ``(B) a reasonable person acting in the 
                circumstances and exercising reasonable care would have 
                that knowledge; and
            ``(2) knowledge of the existence of a statutory provision, 
        or a regulation or a requirement required by the Secretary, is 
        not an element of an offense under this section.
    ``(c) Willful Violations.--For purposes of this section, a person 
acts willfully when--
            ``(1) the person has knowledge of the facts giving rise to 
        the violation; and
            ``(2) the person has knowledge that the conduct was 
        unlawful.
    ``(d) Reckless Violations.--For purposes of this section, a person 
acts recklessly when the person displays a deliberate indifference or 
conscious disregard to the consequences of that person's conduct.''.

SEC. 7021. PREEMPTION.

    (a) Dual Compliance and Obstacle Tests.--Section 5125(a) is amended 
by striking the subsection heading and inserting ``Dual Compliance and 
Obstacle Tests.--''.
    (b) Substantive Differences.--The second sentence of section 
5125(b)(2) is amended by striking ``after November 16, 1990''.
    (c) Decisions on Preemption.--The third sentence of section 
5125(d)(1) is amended by inserting ``and publish in the Federal 
Register'' after ``issue''.
    (d) Independent Application of Each Standard.--Section 5125 is 
amended by inserting after subsection (f), as redesignated by section 
7023(a)(2) of this Act, the following:
    ``(g) Independent Application of Each Standard.--Subsections (b), 
(c)(1), (d), and (g) are independent in their application to a 
requirement of any State, political subdivision of a State, or Indian 
tribe and shall be reviewed independently.''.

SEC. 7022. RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER LAWS.

    Section 5126(a) is amended by striking ``must comply'' and 
inserting ``shall comply''.

SEC. 7023. JUDICIAL REVIEW.

    (a) Repeal.--Section 5125 is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (f);
            (2) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection (f); and
            (3) in subsection (f) (as so redesignated) by moving 
        paragraph (2) (including subparagraphs (A) through (D)) 2 ems 
        to the left.
    (b) Judicial Review.--Chapter 51 is amended by redesignating 
section 5127 as section 5128 and by inserting after section 5126 the 
following:
``Sec. 5127. Judicial review
    ``(a) Filing and Venue.--Except as provided in section 20114(c), a 
person adversely affected or aggrieved by a final action of the 
Secretary under this chapter may petition for review of the final 
action in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of 
Columbia or in the court of appeals for the United States for the 
circuit in which the person resides or has its principal place of 
business. The petition must be filed not more than 60 days after the 
Secretary's action becomes final.
    ``(b) Judicial Procedures.--When a petition is filed under 
subsection (a), the clerk of the court immediately shall send a copy of 
the petition to the Secretary. The Secretary shall file with the court 
a record of any proceeding in which the final action was issued, as 
provided in section 2112 of title 28.
    ``(c) Authority of Court.--The court has exclusive jurisdiction, as 
provided in subchapter II of chapter 5 of title 5, to affirm or set 
aside any part of the Secretary's final action and may order the 
Secretary to conduct further proceedings. Findings of fact by the 
Secretary, if supported by substantial evidence, are conclusive.
    ``(d) Requirement for Prior Objection.--In reviewing a final action 
under this section, the court may consider an objection to a final 
action of the Secretary only if the objection was made in the course of 
a proceeding or review conducted by the Secretary or if there was a 
reasonable ground for not making the objection in the proceeding.''.
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 51 is amended 
by striking the item relating to section 5127 and inserting the 
following:

``5127. Judicial review.
``5128. Authorization of appropriations.''.

SEC. 7024. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    Section 5128 (as redesignated by section 7024) is amended to read 
as follows:
``Sec. 5128. Authorizations of appropriations
    ``(a) In General.--In order to carry out this chapter (except 
sections 5107(e), 5108(g)(2), 5113, 5115, 5116, and 5119), the 
following amounts are authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary:
            ``(1) For fiscal year 2005, $27,000,000.
            ``(2) For fiscal year 2006, $29,000,000.
            ``(3) For fiscal year 2007, $30,000,000.
    ``(b) Emergency Preparedness Fund.--There shall be available to the 
Secretary, from the account established pursuant to section 5116(i), 
for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2007 the following:
            ``(1) To carry out section 5115, $200,000.
            ``(2) To carry out section 5116(a), $8,000,000.
            ``(3) To carry out section 5116(b), $13,800,000.
            ``(4) To carry out section 5116(f), $150,000.
            ``(5) To publish and distribute the Emergency Response 
        Guidebook under section 5116(i)(3), $500,000.
            ``(6) To pay administrative expenses in accordance with 
        section 5116(i)(4), $150,000.
            ``(7) To carry out section 5116(j), $1,000,000.
    ``(c) Training of Hazmat Employee Instructors.--There shall be 
available to the Secretary, from the account established pursuant to 
section 5116(i), to carry out section 5107(e) $4,000,000 for each of 
fiscal years 2005 through 2007.
    ``(d) Uniform Forms and Procedures.--There is authorized to be 
appropriated to the Secretary for making grants to States participating 
in the working group established under section 5119 $1,000,000 for each 
of the fiscal years 2005 and 2006.
    ``(e) Issuance of Hazmat Licenses.--There are authorized to be 
appropriated for the Department of Transportation such amounts as may 
be necessary to carry out section 5103a.
    ``(f) Credits to Appropriations.--The Secretary may credit to any 
appropriation to carry out this chapter an amount received from a 
State, Indian tribe, or other public authority or private entity for 
expenses the Secretary incurs in providing training to the State, 
authority, or entity.
    ``(g) Availability of Amounts.--Amounts made available by or under 
this section remain available until expended.''.

SEC. 7025. DETERMINING AMOUNT OF UNDECLARED SHIPMENTS OF HAZARDOUS 
              MATERIALS ENTERING THE UNITED STATES.

    (a) Study.--The Comptroller General shall conduct a study to 
propose methods of determining the amount of undeclared shipments of 
hazardous materials (as defined in section 5101 of title 49, United 
States Code) entering the United States.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Comptroller General shall transmit to the Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and 
the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate a 
report on the results of the study.

SEC. 7026. CONFORMING AMENDMENTS.

    Chapter 51 is amended by striking ``Secretary of Transportation'' 
each place it appears (other than the second place it appears in 
section 5108(g)(2)(C), the first place it appears in section 5115(a), 
and in sections 5116(g), 5116(i), and 5120(a)) and inserting 
``Secretary''.

SEC. 7027. NATIONAL FIRST RESPONDER TRANSPORTATION INCIDENT RESPONSE 
              SYSTEM.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary shall provide funding to the 
Operation Respond Institute to design, build, and operate a seamless 
first responder hazardous materials incident detection, preparedness, 
and response system.
    (b) Expansion.--This system shall include an expansion of the 
Operation Respond Emergency Information System (OREIS).
    (c) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be 
appropriated to the Secretary to carry out this section $2,500,000 for 
each of fiscal years 2005 through 2007.

SEC. 7028. COMMON CARRIER PIPELINE SYSTEM.

    (a) Study.--The Secretary shall conduct a study of the economic, 
environmental, and homeland security advantages and disadvantages of 
operating a common carrier pipeline system in the States of Texas, 
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama for the transportation of aromatic 
chemicals.
    (b) Evaluation.--In conducting the study, the Secretary shall 
evaluate the appropriateness of different Federal incentives for the 
construction and operation of such a pipeline system, including loan 
guarantees, other types of financial assistance, and various types of 
tax incentives.
    (c) Report.--Not later than December 31, 2005, the Secretary shall 
transmit to Congress a report on the results of the study, including 
recommendations, if any, for legislation.

      TITLE VIII--TRANSPORTATION DISCRETIONARY SPENDING GUARANTEE

SEC. 8001. DISCRETIONARY SPENDING LIMITS FOR THE HIGHWAY AND MASS 
              TRANSIT CATEGORIES.

    (a) Limits.--(1) Redesignate paragraphs (2) through (9) of section 
251(c) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 
as paragraphs (7) through (14), respectively, and strike paragraph (1) 
of such section 251(c) and insert the following new paragraphs:
            ``(1) with respect to fiscal year 2004--
                    ``(A) for the highway category: $28,052,000,000 in 
                outlays;
                    ``(B) for the mass transit category: $1,436,000,000 
                in new budget authority and $6,271,000,000 in outlays;
            ``(2) with respect to fiscal year 2005--
                    ``(A) for the highway category: $34,215,000,000 in 
                outlays;
                    ``(B) for the mass transit category: $1,531,670,000 
                in new budget authority and $6,844,000,000 in outlays;
            ``(3) with respect to fiscal year 2006--
                    ``(A) for the highway category: $36,814,000,000 in 
                outlays;
                    ``(B) for the mass transit category: $1,706,670,000 
                in new budget authority and $5,978,000,000 in outlays;
            ``(4) with respect to fiscal year 2007--
                    ``(A) for the highway category: $38,428,000,000 in 
                outlays;
                    ``(B) for the mass transit category: $1,823,220,000 
                in new budget authority and $7,456,000,000 in outlays;
            ``(5) with respect to fiscal year 2008--
                    ``(A) for the highway category: $39,815,000,000 in 
                outlays;
                    ``(B) for the mass transit category: $1,931,785,000 
                in new budget authority and $8,263,000,000 in outlays;
            ``(6) with respect to fiscal year 2009--
                    ``(A) for the highway category: $40,880,000,000 in 
                outlays;
                    ``(B) for the mass transit category: $2,062,755,000 
                in new budget authority and $8,817,000,000 in outlays;
    ``(b) Definitions.--Section 250(c)(4) of the Balanced Budget and 
Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 is amended--
            ``(1) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``the Transportation 
        Equity Act for the 21st Century and all that follows through 
        the colon and inserting: ``the Transportation Equity Act: A 
        Legacy for Users:''; and
            ``(2) in subparagraph (C), by--
                    ``(A) inserting `(and successor accounts)' after 
                `budget accounts'; and
                    ``(B) striking `the Transportation Equity Act for 
                the 21st Century' and all that follows thereafter 
                through the colon and inserting `the Transportation 
                Equity Act: A Legacy for Users or for which 
                appropriations are provided pursuant to authorizations 
                contained in that Act:'; and''

SEC. 8002. ADJUSTMENTS TO ALIGN HIGHWAY SPENDING WITH REVENUES.

    Subparagraphs (B) through (E) of section 251(b)(1) of the Balanced 
Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 are amended to read as 
follows:
                    ``(B) Adjustment to align highway spending with 
                revenues.--(i) When the President submits the budget 
                under section 1105 of title 31, United States Code, OMB 
                shall calculate and the budget shall make adjustments 
                to the highway category for the budget year and each 
                outyear as provided in clause (ii)(I)(cc).
                    ``(ii)(I)(aa) OMB shall take the actual level of 
                highway receipts for the year before the current year 
                and subtract the sum of the estimated level of highway 
                receipts in subclause (II) plus any amount previously 
                calculated under item (bb) for that year.
                    ``(bb) OMB shall take the current estimate of 
                highway receipts for the current year and subtract the 
                estimated level of receipts for that year.
                    ``(cc) OMB shall add one-half of the sum of the 
                amount calculated under items (aa) and (bb) to the 
                obligation limitations set forth in the section 8103 of 
                the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users and, 
                using current estimates, calculate the outlay change 
                resulting from the change in obligations for the budget 
                year and the first outyear and the outlays flowing 
                therefrom through subsequent fiscal years. After making 
                the calculations under the preceding sentence, OMB 
                shall adjust the amount of obligations set forth in 
                that section for the budget year and the first outyear 
                by adding one-half of the sum of the amount calculated 
                under items (aa) and (bb) to each such year.
                    ``(II) The estimated level of highway receipts for 
                the purposes of this clause are--
                            ``(aa) for fiscal year 2004, 
                        $29,172,000,000;
                            ``(bb) for fiscal year 2005, 
                        $33,898,000,000;
                            ``(cc) for fiscal year 2006, 
                        $35,393,000,000;
                            ``(dd) for fiscal year 2007, 
                        $36,615,000,000;
                            ``(ee) for fiscal year 2008, 
                        $37,770,000,000; and
                            ``(ff) for fiscal year 2009, 
                        $38,857,000,000.
                    ``(III) In this clause, the term `highway receipts' 
                means the governmental receipts credited to the highway 
                account of the Highway Trust Fund.
            ``(C) In addition to the adjustment required by 
        subparagraph (B), when the President submits the budget under 
        section 1105 of title 31, United States Code, for fiscal year 
        2007, 2008, or 2009, OMB shall calculate and the budget shall 
        include for the budget year and each outyear an adjustment to 
        the limits on outlays for the highway category and the mass 
        transit category equal to--
                    ``(i) the outlays for the applicable category 
                calculated assuming obligation levels consistent with 
                the estimates prepared pursuant to subparagraph (D), as 
                adjusted, using current technical assumptions; minus
                    ``(ii) the outlays for the applicable category set 
                forth in the subparagraph (D) estimates, as adjusted.
            ``(D)(i) When OMB and CBO submit their final sequester 
        report for fiscal year 2006, that report shall include an 
        estimate of the outlays for each of the categories that would 
        result in fiscal years 2007 through 2010 from obligations at 
        the levels specified in section 8103 of the Transportation 
        Equity Act: A Legacy for Users using current assumptions.
            ``(ii) When the President submits the budget under section 
        1105 of title 31, United States Code, for fiscal year 2008, 
        2009, or 2010, OMB shall adjust the estimates made in clause 
        (i) by the adjustments by subparagraphs (B) and (C).
            ``(E) OMB shall consult with the Committees on the Budget 
        and include a report on adjustments under subparagraphs (B) and 
        (C) in the preview report.''.

SEC. 8003. LEVEL OF OBLIGATION LIMITATIONS.

    (a) Highway Category.--For the purposes of section 251(b) of the 
Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, the level of 
obligation limitations for the highway category is--
            (1) for fiscal year 2004, $34,309,000,000;
            (2) for fiscal year 2005, $35,160,000,000;
            (3) for fiscal year 2006, $37,417,000,000;
            (4) for fiscal year 2007, $38,787,000,000;
            (5) for fiscal year 2008, $40,077,000,000; and
            (6) for fiscal year 2009, $41,467,000,000.
    (b) Mass Transit Category.--For the purposes of section 251(b) of 
the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, the 
level of obligation limitations for the mass transit category is--
            (1) for fiscal year 2004, $7,265,900,000;
            (2) for fiscal year 2005, $7,646,300,000;
            (3) for fiscal year 2006, $8,482,000,000;
            (4) for fiscal year 2007, $9,042,000,000;
            (5) for fiscal year 2008, $9,639,000,000; and
            (6) for fiscal year 2009, $10,277,000,000.
For purposes of this subsection, the term ``obligation limitations'' 
means the sum of budget authority and obligation limitations.

SEC. 8004. ENFORCEMENT OF GUARANTEE.

    Clause 3 of rule XXI of the Rules of the House of Representatives 
is amended--
            (1) by striking ``Transportation Equity Act for the 21st 
        Century'' and inserting ``Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy 
        for Users''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following: ``For purposes of 
        this clause, any obligation limitation relating to surface 
        transportation projects under section 1602 of the 
        Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century and section 1702 
        of the Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users shall be 
        assumed to be administered on the basis of sound program 
        management practices that are consistent with past practices of 
        the administering agency permitting States to decide High 
        Priority Project funding priorities within State program 
        allocations.''.

SEC. 8005. TRANSFER OF FEDERAL TRANSIT ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES.

    For purposes of clauses 2 and 3 of rule XXI of the House of 
Representatives, it shall be in order to transfer funds, in amounts 
specified in annual appropriation Acts to carry out the Transportation 
Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (including the amendments made by that 
Act), from the Federal Transit Administration's administrative expenses 
account to other mass transit budget accounts under section 
250(c)(4)(C) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act 
of 1985.

                       TITLE IX--RAIL PROVISIONS

SEC. 9001. HIGH-SPEED RAIL CORRIDOR DEVELOPMENT.

    (a) Corridor Development.--
            (1) Amendments.--Section 26101 of title 49, United States 
        Code, is amended--
                    (A) in the section heading, by striking 
                ``planning'' and inserting ``development'';
                    (B) in the heading of subsection (a), by striking 
                ``Planning'' and inserting ``Development'';
                    (C) by striking ``corridor planning'' each place it 
                appears and inserting ``corridor development'';
                    (D) in subsection (b)(1)--
                            (i) by inserting ``, or if it is an 
                        activity described in subparagraph (M)'' after 
                        ``high-speed rail improvements'';
                            (ii) by striking ``and'' at the end of 
                        subparagraph (K);
                            (iii) by striking the period at the end of 
                        subparagraph (L) and inserting ``; and''; and
                            (iv) by adding at the end the following new 
                        subparagraph:
            ``(M) the acquisition of locomotives, rolling stock, track, 
        and signal equipment.''; and
                    (E) in subsection (c)(2), by striking ``planning'' 
                and inserting ``development''.
            (2) Conforming amendment.--The item relating to section 
        26101 in the table of sections of chapter 261 of title 49, 
        United States Code, is amended by striking ``planning'' and 
        inserting ``development''.
    (b) Authorization of Appropriations.--Section 26104 of title 49, 
United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 26104. Authorization of appropriations
    ``(a) Fiscal Years 2006 Through 2013.--There are authorized to be 
appropriated to the Secretary--
            ``(1) $70,000,000 for carrying out section 26101; and
            ``(2) $30,000,000 for carrying out section 26102,
for each of the fiscal years 2006 through 2013.
    ``(b) Funds to Remain Available.--Funds made available under this 
section shall remain available until expended.''.

                        TITLE X--TAX PROVISIONS

SEC. 10001. SHORT TITLE.

    This title may be cited as the ``Highway Reauthorization Tax Act of 
2005''.

SEC. 10002. EXTENSION OF HIGHWAY-RELATED TAXES AND TRUST FUNDS.

    (a) Extension of Taxes.--
            (1) In general.--The following provisions of the Internal 
        Revenue Code of 1986 are each amended by striking ``2005'' each 
        place it appears and inserting ``2011'':
                    (A) Section 4041(a)(1)(C)(iii)(I) (relating to rate 
                of tax on certain buses).
                    (B) Section 4041(a)(2)(B) (relating to rate of tax 
                on special motor fuels).
                    (C) Section 4041(m)(1) (relating to certain alcohol 
                fuels).
                    (D) Section 4051(c) (relating to termination of tax 
                on heavy trucks and trailers).
                    (E) Section 4071(d) (relating to termination of tax 
                on tires).
                    (F) Section 4081(d)(1) (relating to termination of 
                tax on gasoline, diesel fuel, and kerosene).
                    (G) Section 4481(f) (relating to period tax in 
                effect).
                    (H) Section 4482(c)(4) (relating to taxable 
                period).
                    (I) Section 4482(d) (relating to special rule for 
                taxable period in which termination date occurs).
            (2) Floor stocks refunds.--Section 6412(a)(1) of such Code 
        (relating to floor stocks refunds) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``2005'' each place it appears and 
                inserting ``2011'', and
                    (B) by striking ``2006'' each place it appears and 
                inserting ``2012''.
    (b) Extension of Certain Exemptions.--The following provisions of 
such Code are each amended by striking ``2005'' and inserting ``2011'':
            (1) Section 4221(a) (relating to certain tax-free sales).
            (2) Section 4483(h) (relating to termination of exemptions 
        for highway use tax).
    (c) Extension of Deposits Into Trust Funds.--
            (1) In general.--Paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (b), 
        and paragraphs (2) and (3) of subsection (c), of section 9503 
        of such Code (relating to the Highway Trust Fund) are each 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking ``2005'' each place it appears and 
                inserting ``2011'', and
                    (B) by striking ``2006'' each place it appears and 
                inserting ``2012''.
            (2) Motorboat and small-engine fuel tax transfers.--
                    (A) In general.--Paragraphs (4)(A)(i) and (5)(A) of 
                section 9503(c) of such Code are each amended by 
                striking ``2005'' and inserting ``2011''.
                    (B) Conforming amendments to land and water 
                conservation fund.--Section 201(b) of the Land and 
                Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965 (16 U.S.C. 460l-
                11(b)) is amended--
                            (i) by striking ``2003'' and inserting 
                        ``2009'', and
                            (ii) by striking ``2004'' each place it 
                        appears and inserting ``2010''.
    (d) Extension and Expansion of Expenditures From Trust Funds.--
            (1) Highway trust fund.--
                    (A) Highway account.--Paragraph (1) of section 
                9503(c) of such Code is amended--
                            (i) in the matter before subparagraph (A), 
                        by striking ``June 1, 2005'' and inserting 
                        ``October 1, 2009'',
                            (ii) by striking ``or'' at the end of 
                        subparagraph (J),
                            (iii) by striking the period at the end of 
                        subparagraph (K) and inserting ``, or'',
                            (iv) by inserting after subparagraph (K) 
                        the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(L) authorized to be paid out of the Highway 
                Trust Fund under the Transportation Equity Act: A 
                Legacy for Users.'', and
                            (v) in the matter after subparagraph (L), 
                        as added by clause (iv), by striking ``Surface 
                        Transportation Extension Act of 2004, Part V'' 
                        and inserting ``Transportation Equity Act: A 
                        Legacy for Users''.
                    (B) Mass transit account.--Paragraph (3) of section 
                9503(e) of such Code is amended--
                            (i) in the matter before subparagraph (A), 
                        by striking ``June 1, 2005'' and inserting 
                        ``October 1, 2009'',
                            (ii) by striking ``or'' at the end of 
                        subparagraph (H),
                            (iii) by inserting ``or'' at the end of 
                        subparagraph (I),
                            (iv) by inserting after subparagraph (I) 
                        the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(J) Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for 
                Users,'', and
                            (v) in the matter after subparagraph (J), 
                        as added by clause (iv), by striking ``Surface 
                        Transportation Extension Act of 2004, Part V'' 
                        and inserting ``Transportation Equity Act: A 
                        Legacy for Users''.
                    (C) Exception to limitation on transfers.--
                Subparagraph (B) of section 9503(b)(6) of such Code is 
                amended by striking ``June 1, 2005'' and inserting 
                ``October 1, 2009''.
            (2) Aquatic resources trust fund.--
                    (A) Sport fish restoration account.--Paragraph (2) 
                of section 9504(b) of such Code is amended by striking 
                ``Surface Transportation Extension Act of 2004, Part 
                V'' each place it appears and inserting 
                ``Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users''.
                    (B) Boat safety account.--Subsection (c) of section 
                9504 of such Code is amended--
                            (i) by striking ``June 1, 2005'' and 
                        inserting ``October 1, 2009'', and
                            (ii) by striking ``Surface Transportation 
                        Extension Act of 2004, Part V'' and inserting 
                        ``Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for 
                        Users'' .
                    (C) Exception to limitation on transfers.--
                Paragraph (2) of section 9504(d) of such Code is 
                amended by striking ``June 1, 2005'' and inserting 
                ``October 1, 2009''.
    (e) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take 
effect on the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 10003. TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS REGARDING HIGHWAY-RELATED TAXES.

    (a) Amendments Related to Section 301 of the American Jobs Creation 
Act of 2004.--Section 6427 of such Code is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (f), and
            (2) by striking subsection (o) and redesignating subsection 
        (p) as subsection (o).
    (b) Amendments Related to Section 853 of the American Jobs Creation 
Act of 2004.--
            (1) Subparagraph (C) of section 4081(a)(2) of the Internal 
        Revenue Code of 1986 is amended by striking ``for use in 
        commercial aviation'' and inserting ``for use in commercial 
        aviation by a person registered for such use under section 
        4101''.
            (2) So much of paragraph (2) of section 4081(d) of such 
        Code as precedes subparagraph (A) is amended to read as 
        follows:
            ``(2) Aviation fuels.--The rates of tax specified in 
        clauses (ii) and (iv) of subsection (a)(2)(A) shall be 4.3 
        cents per gallon--''.
    (c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take 
effect as if included in the provisions of the American Jobs Creation 
Act of 2004 to which they relate.

            Passed the House of Representatives March 10, 2005.

            Attest:

                                                 JEFF TRANDAHL,

                                                                 Clerk.
                                                        Calendar No. 69

109th CONGRESS

  1st Session

                                H. R. 3

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 AN ACT

 To authorize funds for Federal-aid highways, highway safety programs, 
             and transit programs, and for other purposes.

_______________________________________________________________________

                             April 6, 2005

                 Read twice and placed on the calendar