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This report discusses the key priorities identified during the America 2050 National Leadership Meeting held on October 19, 2009, at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. It highlights essential infrastructure developments across various megaregions, focusing on high-speed rail, transportation hubs, energy management, and water resource protection. The discussion emphasizes regional collaboration, funding strategies, and legislative opportunities aimed at creating a cohesive national infrastructure plan that aligns with climate resilience and economic revitalization.
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Report on Megaregions Forums Petra Todorovich Director, America 2050 National Leadership Meeting October 19, 2009 Library of Congress Washington, D.C.
Megaregion Priorities: Building Blocks of a National Plan • High-speed rail • Seaports, airports, and goods movement • Energy transmission and generation • Water infrastructure and protection
Megaregion Forums to Set Priorities Northeast: Feb 2007 and Mar 2008 National Launch in D.C.: May 08 Great Lakes: Nov 2008 Northern California: Dec 08 Piedmont Atlantic: Mar 09 & Aug 09 Central Florida: May 09 Southern California: Jun 09 Texas Triangle: Sep 09 Washington, May 9, 2008 New York, April 17, 2009
Chicago November 17, 2008 • Great Lakes water quality and resources management • Climate change impacts and response • High-speed rail • A economic revitalization strategy for the megaregion
Sacramento Dec. 2 2008 • California fiscal crisis • Goods movement and port development • Bay Delta water management / flooding risk • Revenue options for infrastructure finance • Jobs in the Central Valley
Atlanta March 23, 2009 • Water supply and interstate competition • High-speed rail & goods movement • Six-university research consortium
Charlotte August 11, 2009 • Follow-up Summit among Mayors • Focus on: • HSR • Road infrastructure • Open space conservation • Organizational structure
Florida May 8, 2009 • Link between Tampa and Orlando • Moving on from SunRail defeat • Diversifying the economy • Joint advocacy for HSR
Los Angeles June 19 • Financing infrastructure (bonds must be backed by revenues.) • Water infrastructure and resources management • Implementing the Smart Grid • Sighting infrastructure projects • How to get things done!
Houston, Sept. 24-25 • Building consensus on high-speed rail route • Managing growth in a state with no zoning • Next steps on regional visioning efforts • Best practices approaches in green infrastructure, food security, energy efficiency
Northeast Climate and Competitiveness Summits 2007-2008 • Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor • Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative • State renewable portfolio standards • NE Regional Landscape Conservation
Business Alliance for Northeast Mobility • Coalition of chambers of commerce, civic organizations • Focus on Amtrak authorization and appropriations • Advocacy for NE interests in surface transportation bill Reception in U.S. Capitol Apr 2008 Northeast Summit Mar 2007 Union Station Press Conference Oct 2008
General Principles: High-Speed Rail • Long-term commitment and dedicated revenue source • Will work best if integrated in regional transit • Equity impacts & role in economic development • Legislative opportunities: • Shaping DOT approach; funding in surface transp. bill
General principles: Water Resources • Natural systems approach • Quantify benefits of distributed, multi-benefit solutions • Full cost pricing • Watershed approach to management • Leg: Water Protection and Reinvestment Act (HR 3202) Storm water management in Portland: Flickr/ La Citta Vita
General principles: Energy • National grid & smart grid technology • Demonstration projects • Challenge of sighting transmission & generation • Transportation-land use-climate change connection • Role of cities in efficiency
Livable Communities • California SB 375 • Coordinate land use, transportation, climate • S. 1619 Livable Communities Act • Competitive grants for capacity building to do regional plans and TOD • Entities must work across borders • H.R 2724 National Transportation Objectives • Energy efficiency, safety, climate stability, access, economic competitiveness, public health • Sets specific targets
The Federal Role • Strong national vision • Funding tied to meeting goals and objectives • Reform procurement and regulatory processes • Remove perverse incentives/ break silos
Visualize the Future Left: Futurama at the 1939 World’s Fair; Above: California High-speed Rail visualizations (Image: NC3D)
Megaregion Break Out Discussions • Key infrastructure priorities • Most promising areas for megaregion collaboration • Next steps in each megaregion • Legislative Opportunities U.S./State
www.America2050.org www.rpa.org