[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 20 (Tuesday, February 7, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H518]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1020
STREETCAR SUMMIT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, this week, people from dozens of cities
around America are gathering for the annual Streetcar Summit.
For the last 25 years, I've been working to reintroduce the modern
streetcar to American communities. We started with a project in
Portland, Oregon, over 20 years ago. It was a great pleasure for me to
see this open in 2001 and watch how this streetcar investment anchored
revitalization in the downtown, led to over $3 billion of private and
public investment along the right-of-way, encouraged over 22 million
people to ride the streetcar, and developed into a signature project
for our community.
More recently, when the new administration was sworn into office, I
worked with the White House to implement legislation that I had in the
last reauthorization that we called ``Small Starts,'' which somehow had
stalled. Within 4 months, the new administration was able to help us
figure out how to move it forward. In October of 2009, we were able to
sign an agreement with the Obama administration and start the project.
I'm pleased to report that this project--which has provided over
1,800 jobs, that is extending a 3\1/3\-mile line--will be open. In
fact, we've invited President Obama to ride on the first official trip.
He can ride this year on a project that started in the first year of
his administration, now a completed project. As an added bonus, he
would be able to ride the first American-built streetcar in 58 years.
While it's manufactured in Portland, Oregon--I say with some modest
pride--it makes a difference for people around the country because it's
going to be provided to other communities like Tucson, Arizona, in the
project I worked on with our former colleague, Gabby Giffords. And
subcontracting is occurring throughout the upper Midwest, where smaller
manufacturers are helping construct this product made in America.
As a result of the administration's investment of $419 million since
October of 2009, we're watching projects take place in 10 cities across
America--in Detroit, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Salt Lake--that are moving
forward with this vision. Indeed, the people in the conference that
will be here this week represent operating systems that are now in
Seattle, San Francisco, Galveston, Little Rock, Memphis, New Orleans,
Lowell, Massachusetts, Kenosha, Wisconsin. There are communities all
across America that have seized this vision and are moving forward.
They are coming together to deal with how communities, large and small,
can seize on this proven technology that was, after all, the
cornerstone of urban development long about 1900. This was the
technology that was driving American community development. Well, it
still can drive community development, provide tens of thousands of
jobs, be able to help focus the revitalization of, what in some areas,
are troubled neighborhoods. It's an opportunity to bring people
together on the streetscape, to be able to give a different environment
for shopping, recreating, and, frankly, preventing pollution,
congestion--in many cases a trip not taken.
I strongly urge my colleagues, when the opportunity arises this week,
to meet some of the people in the vanguard of America's new streetcar
renaissance. A simple, commonsense, proven technology that's cost-
effective, that provides an anchor for development, giving people an
opportunity to give another choice to the residents--empowering them,
making their neighborhoods more livable, their families safer,
healthier, and more economically secured.
This is what this Congress should be working on, coming together to
take projects like this, a constructive Federal partnership, stretching
dollars and making a success that we can all be proud of.
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