[United States Statutes at Large, Volume 119, 109th Congress, 1st Session]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

119 STAT. 1144

Public Law 109-59
109th Congress

An Act


 
To authorize funds for Federal-aid highways, highway safety programs,
and transit programs, and for other purposes.  NOTE: Aug. 10,
2005 -  [H.R. 3]

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress  NOTE: Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for
Users. Inter- governmental relations. 23 USC 101 note.  assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE; TABLE OF CONTENTS.

(a) Short Title.--This Act may be cited as the ``Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users'' or
``SAFETEA-LU''.
(b) Table of Contents.--The table of contents for this Act is as
follows:

Sec. 1. Short title; table of contents.
Sec. 2. General definitions.

TITLE I--FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAYS

Subtitle A--Authorization of Programs

Sec. 1101. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 1102. Obligation ceiling.
Sec. 1103. Apportionments.
Sec. 1104. Equity bonus program.
Sec. 1105. Revenue aligned budget authority.
Sec. 1106. Future Interstate System routes.
Sec. 1107. Metropolitan planning.
Sec. 1108. Transfer of highway and transit funds.
Sec. 1109. Recreational trails.
Sec. 1110. Temporary traffic control devices.
Sec. 1111. Set-asides for Interstate discretionary projects.
Sec. 1112. Emergency relief.
Sec. 1113. Surface transportation program.
Sec. 1114. Highway bridge program.
Sec. 1115. Highway use tax evasion projects.
Sec. 1116. Appalachian development highway system.
Sec. 1117. Transportation, community, and system preservation program.
Sec. 1118. Territorial highway program.
Sec. 1119. Federal lands highways.
Sec. 1120. Puerto Rico highway program.
Sec. 1121. HOV facilities.
Sec. 1122. Definitions.

Subtitle B--Congestion Relief

Sec. 1201. Real-time system management information program.

Subtitle C--Mobility and Efficiency

Sec. 1301. Projects of national and regional significance.
Sec. 1302. National corridor infrastructure improvement program.
Sec. 1303. Coordinated border infrastructure program.
Sec. 1304. High priority corridors on the National Highway System.
Sec. 1305. Truck parking facilities.
Sec. 1306. Freight intermodal distribution pilot grant program.
Sec. 1307. Deployment of magnetic levitation transportation projects.

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119 STAT. 1145

Sec. 1308. Delta region transportation development program.
Sec. 1309. Extension of public transit vehicle exemption from axle
weight restrictions.
Sec. 1310. Interstate oasis program.

Subtitle D--Highway Safety

Sec. 1401. Highway safety improvement program.
Sec. 1402. Worker injury prevention and free flow of vehicular traffic.
Sec. 1403. Toll facilities workplace safety study.
Sec. 1404. Safe routes to school program.
Sec. 1405. Roadway safety improvements for older drivers and
pedestrians.
Sec. 1406. Safety incentive grants for use of seat belts.
Sec. 1407. Safety incentives to prevent operation of motor vehicles by
intoxicated persons.
Sec. 1408. Improvement or replacement of highway features on National
Highway System.
Sec. 1409. Work zone safety grants.
Sec. 1410. National Work Zone Safety Information Clearinghouse.
Sec. 1411. Roadway safety.
Sec. 1412. Idling reduction facilities in Interstate rights-of-way.

Subtitle E--Construction and Contract Efficiency

Sec. 1501. Program efficiencies.
Sec. 1502. Highways for LIFE pilot program.
Sec. 1503. Design build.

Subtitle F--Finance

Sec. 1601. Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act
amendments.
Sec. 1602. State infrastructure banks.
Sec. 1603. Use of excess funds and funds for inactive projects.
Sec. 1604. Tolling.

Subtitle G--High Priority Projects

Sec. 1701. High Priority Projects program.
Sec. 1702. Project authorizations.
Sec. 1703. Technical amendments to transportation projects.

Subtitle H--Environment

Sec. 1801. Construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities.
Sec. 1802. National Scenic Byways Program.
Sec. 1803. America's Byways Resource Center.
Sec. 1804. National historic covered bridge preservation.
Sec. 1805. Use of debris from demolished bridges and overpasses.
Sec. 1806. Additional authorization of contract authority for States
with Indian reservations.
Sec. 1807. Nonmotorized transportation pilot program.
Sec. 1808. Addition to CMAQ-eligible projects.

Subtitle I--Miscellaneous

Sec. 1901. Inclusion of requirements for signs identifying funding
sources in title 23.
Sec. 1902. Donations and credits.
Sec. 1903. Inclusion of Buy America requirements in title 23.
Sec. 1904. Stewardship and oversight.
Sec. 1905. Transportation development credits.
Sec. 1906. Grant program to prohibit racial profiling.
Sec. 1907. Pavement marking systems demonstration projects.
Sec. 1908. Inclusion of certain route segments on Interstate System and
NHS.
Sec. 1909. Future of surface transportation system.
Sec. 1910. Motorist information concerning full service restaurants.
Sec. 1911. Approval and funding for certain construction projects.
Sec. 1912. Lead agency designation.
Sec. 1913. Bridge construction, North Dakota.
Sec. 1914. Motorcyclist Advisory Council.
Sec. 1915. Loan forgiveness.
Sec. 1916. Treatment of off-ramp.
Sec. 1917. Opening of Interstate ramps.
Sec. 1918. Credit to State of Louisiana for State matching funds.
Sec. 1919. Road user fees.
Sec. 1920. Transportation and local workforce investment.

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119 STAT. 1146

Sec. 1921. Update of obsolete text.
Sec. 1922. Technical amendments to nondiscrimination section.
Sec. 1923. Transportation assets and needs of Delta region.
Sec. 1924. Alaska Way Viaduct study.
Sec. 1925. Community enhancement study.
Sec. 1926. Budget justification.
Sec. 1927. 14th Amendment Highway and 3rd Infantry Division Highway.
Sec. 1928. Sense of Congress regarding Buy America.
Sec. 1929. Designation of Daniel Patrick Moynihan Interstate Highway.
Sec. 1930. Designation of Thomas P. ``Tip'' O'Neill, Jr. Tunnel.
Sec. 1931. Richard Nixon Parkway, California.
Sec. 1932. Amo Houghton Bypass.
Sec. 1933. Billy Tauzin Energy Corridor.
Sec. 1934. Transportation improvements.
Sec. 1935. Project flexibility.
Sec. 1936. Advances.
Sec. 1937. Roads in closed basins.
Sec. 1938. Technology.
Sec. 1939. BIA Indian Road Program.
Sec. 1940. Going-to-the-Sun Road, Glacier National Park, Montana.
Sec. 1941. Beartooth Highway, Montana.
Sec. 1943. Great Lakes ITS implementation.
Sec. 1944. Transportation construction and remediation, Ottawa County,
Oklahoma.
Sec. 1945. Infrastructure awareness program.
Sec. 1946. Gateway rural improvement pilot program.
Sec. 1947. Eligible safety improvements.
Sec. 1948. Emergency service route.
Sec. 1949. Knik Arm Bridge funding clarification.
Sec. 1950. Lincoln Parish, LA/I-20 Transportation Corridor Program.
Sec. 1951. Bonding assistance program.
Sec. 1952. Congestion relief.
Sec. 1953. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 1954. Bicycle transportation and pedestrian walkways.
Sec. 1955. Conveyance to the City of Ely, Nevada.
Sec. 1956. Brownfields grants.
Sec. 1957. Traffic circle construction, Clarendon, Vermont.
Sec. 1958. Limitation on project approval.
Sec. 1959. Cross harbor freight movement project.
Sec. 1960. Denali access system program.
Sec. 1961. I-95/Contee Road interchange study.
Sec. 1962. Multimodal facility improvements.
Sec. 1963. Apollo Theater leases.
Sec. 1964. Project Federal share.

TITLE II--HIGHWAY SAFETY

Sec. 2001. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 2002. Highway safety programs.
Sec. 2003. Highway safety research and outreach programs.
Sec. 2004. Occupant protection incentive grants.
Sec. 2005. Grants for primary safety belt use laws.
Sec. 2006. State traffic safety information system improvements.
Sec. 2007. Alcohol-impaired driving countermeasures.
Sec. 2008. NHTSA accountability.
Sec. 2009. High visibility enforcement program.
Sec. 2010. Motorcyclist safety.
Sec. 2011. Child safety and child booster seat incentive grants.
Sec. 2012. Safety data.
Sec. 2013. Drug-impaired driving enforcement.
Sec. 2014. First responder vehicle safety program.
Sec. 2015. Driver performance study.
Sec. 2016. Rural State emergency medical services optimization pilot
program.
Sec. 2017. Older driver safety; law enforcement training.
Sec. 2018. Safe intersections.
Sec. 2019. National Highway Safety Advisory Committee technical
correction.
Sec. 2020. Presidential Commission on Alcohol-Impaired Driving.
Sec. 2021. Sense of the Congress in support of increased public
awareness of blood alcohol concentration levels and dangers
of alcohol-impaired driving.
Sec. 2022. Effective date.

TITLE III--PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION

Sec. 3001. Short title.

[[Page 1147]]
119 STAT. 1147

Sec. 3002. Amendments to title 49, United States Code; updated
terminology.
Sec. 3003. Policies, findings, and purposes.
Sec. 3004. Definitions.
Sec. 3005. Metropolitan transportation planning.
Sec. 3006. Statewide transportation planning.
Sec. 3007. Planning programs.
Sec. 3008. Private enterprise participation.
Sec. 3009. Urbanized area formula grants.
Sec. 3010. Clean fuels grant program.
Sec. 3011. Capital investment grants.
Sec. 3012. Formula grants for special needs of elderly individuals and
individuals with disabilities.
Sec. 3013. Formula grants for other than urbanized areas.
Sec. 3014. Research, development, demonstration, and deployment
projects.
Sec. 3015. Transit cooperative research program.
Sec. 3016. National research and technology programs.
Sec. 3017. National Transit Institute.
Sec. 3018. Job access and reverse commute formula grants.
Sec. 3019. New Freedom Program.
Sec. 3020. Bus testing facility.
Sec. 3021. Alternative transportation in parks and public lands.
Sec. 3022. Human resources 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. Project review.
Sec. 3028. Investigations of safety hazards and security risks.
Sec. 3029. State safety oversight.
Sec. 3030. Controlled substances and alcohol misuse testing.
Sec. 3031. Employee protective arrangements.
Sec. 3032. Administrative procedures.
Sec. 3033. National transit database.
Sec. 3034. Apportionments of formula grants.
Sec. 3035. Apportionments based on fixed guideway factors.
Sec. 3036. Authorizations.
Sec. 3037. Alternatives analysis program.
Sec. 3038. Apportionments based on growing States formula factors.
Sec. 3039. Over-the-road bus accessibility program.
Sec. 3040. Obligation ceiling.
Sec. 3041. Adjustments for fiscal year 2005.
Sec. 3042. Terrorist attacks and other acts of violence against public
transportation systems.
Sec. 3043. Project authorizations for new fixed guideway capital
projects.
Sec. 3044. Projects for bus and bus-related facilities and clean fuels
grant program.
Sec. 3045. National fuel cell bus technology development program.
Sec. 3046. Allocations for national research and technology programs.
Sec. 3047. Forgiveness of grant agreement.
Sec. 3048. Cooperative procurement.
Sec. 3049. Transportation fringe benefits.
Sec. 3050. Commuter rail.
Sec. 3051. Paratransit service in Illinois.

TITLE IV--MOTOR CARRIER SAFETY

Sec. 4001. Short title.

Subtitle A--Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety

Sec. 4101. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 4102. Increased penalties for out-of-service violations and false
records.
Sec. 4103. Penalty for denial of access to records.
Sec. 4104. Revocation of operating authority.
Sec. 4105. State laws relating to vehicle towing.
Sec. 4106. Motor carrier safety grants.
Sec. 4107. High priority activities and new entrants audits.
Sec. 4108. Data quality improvement.
Sec. 4109. Performance and registration information system management.
Sec. 4110. Border enforcement grants.
Sec. 4111. Motor carrier research and technology program.
Sec. 4112. Nebraska custom harvesters length exemption.
Sec. 4113. Pattern of safety violations by motor carrier management.
Sec. 4114. Intrastate operations of interstate motor carriers.

[[Page 1148]]
119 STAT. 1148

Sec. 4115. Transfer provision.
Sec. 4116. Medical program.
Sec. 4117. Safety performance history screening.
Sec. 4118. Roadability.
Sec. 4119. International cooperation.
Sec. 4120. Financial responsibility for private motor carriers.
Sec. 4121. Deposit of certain civil penalties into Highway Trust Fund.
Sec. 4122. CDL learner's permit program.
Sec. 4123. Commercial driver's license information system modernization.
Sec. 4124. Commercial driver's license improvements.
Sec. 4125. Hobbs Act.
Sec. 4126. Commercial vehicle information systems and networks
deployment.
Sec. 4127. Outreach and education.
Sec. 4128. Safety data improvement program.
Sec. 4129. Operation of commercial motor vehicles by individuals who use
insulin to treat diabetes mellitus.
Sec. 4130. Operators of vehicles transporting agricultural commodities
and farm supplies.
Sec. 4131. Maximum hours of service for operators of ground water well
drilling rigs.
Sec. 4132. Hours of service for operators of utility service vehicles.
Sec. 4133. Hours of service rules for operators providing transportation
to movie production sites.
Sec. 4134. Grant program for commercial motor vehicle operators.
Sec. 4135. CDL task force.
Sec. 4136. Interstate van operations.
Sec. 4137. Decals.
Sec. 4138. High risk carrier compliance reviews.
Sec. 4139. Foreign commercial motor vehicles.
Sec. 4140. School bus driver qualifications and endorsement knowledge
test.
Sec. 4141. Driveaway saddlemount vehicles.
Sec. 4142. Registration of motor carriers and freight forwarders.
Sec. 4143. Authority to stop commercial motor vehicles.
Sec. 4144. Motor Carrier Safety Advisory Committee.
Sec. 4145. Technical corrections.
Sec. 4146. Exemption during harvest periods.
Sec. 4147. Emergency condition requiring immediate response.
Sec. 4148. Substance abuse professionals.
Sec. 4149. Office of intermodalism.

Subtitle B--Household Goods Transportation

Sec. 4201. Short title.
Sec. 4202. Definitions; application of provisions.
Sec. 4203. Payment of rates.
Sec. 4204. Additional registration requirements for motor carriers of
household goods.
Sec. 4205. Household goods carrier operations.
Sec. 4206. Enforcement of regulations related to transportation of
household goods.
Sec. 4207. Liability of carriers under receipts and bills of lading.
Sec. 4208. Arbitration requirements.
Sec. 4209. Civil penalties relating to household goods brokers and
unauthorized transportation.
Sec. 4210. Penalties for holding household goods hostage.
Sec. 4211. Consumer handbook on DOT web site.
Sec. 4212. Release of household goods broker information.
Sec. 4213. Working group for development of practices and procedures to
enhance Federal-State relations.
Sec. 4214. Consumer complaint information.
Sec. 4215. Review of liability of carriers.
Sec. 4216. Application of State consumer protection laws to certain
household goods carriers.

Subtitle C--Unified Carrier Registration Act of 2005

Sec. 4301. Short title.
Sec. 4302. Relationship to other laws.
Sec. 4303. Inclusion of motor private and exempt carriers.
Sec. 4304. Unified Carrier Registration System.
Sec. 4305. Registration of motor carriers by States.
Sec. 4306. Identification of vehicles.
Sec. 4307. Use of UCR Agreement revenues as matching funds.
Sec. 4308. Regulations.

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119 STAT. 1149

Subtitle D--Miscellaneous Provisions

Sec. 4401. Technical adjustment.
Sec. 4402. Transfer.
Sec. 4403. Extension of assistance.
Sec. 4404. Designations.
Sec. 4405. Limited exception.
Sec. 4406. Airport land amendment.
Sec. 4407. Rights-of-way.
Sec. 4408. Rialto Municipal Airport.
Sec. 4409. Conforming amendments.
Sec. 4410. Ralph M. Bartholomew Veterans' Memorial Bridge.
Sec. 4411. Don Young's Way.
Sec. 4412. Quality bank adjustments.
Sec. 4413. Technical amendment.
Sec. 4414. Airport certification.

TITLE V--RESEARCH

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. Technology deployment.
Sec. 5204. Training and education.
Sec. 5205. State planning and research.
Sec. 5206. International highway transportation outreach program.
Sec. 5207. Surface transportation environment and planning cooperative
research program.
Sec. 5208. Transportation research and development strategic planning.
Sec. 5209. National cooperative freight transportation research program.
Sec. 5210. Future strategic highway research program.
Sec. 5211. Multistate corridor operations and management.

Subtitle C--Intelligent Transportation System Research

Sec. 5301. National ITS program plan.
Sec. 5302. Use of funds.
Sec. 5303. Goals and purposes.
Sec. 5304. Infrastructure development.
Sec. 5305. General authorities and requirements.
Sec. 5306. Research and development.
Sec. 5307. National architecture and standards.
Sec. 5308. Road weather research and development program.
Sec. 5309. Centers for surface transportation excellence.
Sec. 5310. Definitions.

Subtitle D--University Transportation Research; Scholarship
Opportunities

Sec. 5401. National university transportation centers.
Sec. 5402. University transportation research.

Subtitle E--Other Programs

Sec. 5501. Transportation safety information management system project.
Sec. 5502. Surface transportation congestion relief solutions research
initiative.
Sec. 5503. Motor carrier efficiency study.
Sec. 5504. Center for Transportation Advancement and Regional
Development.
Sec. 5505. Transportation scholarship opportunities program.
Sec. 5506. Commercial remote sensing products and spatial information
technologies.
Sec. 5507. Rural interstate corridor communications study.
Sec. 5508. Transportation technology innovation and demonstration
program.
Sec. 5509. Repeal.
Sec. 5510. Notice.
Sec. 5511. Motorcycle crash causation study grants.
Sec. 5512. Advanced travel forecasting procedures program.
Sec. 5513. Research grants.
Sec. 5514. Competition for specification of alternative types of culvert
pipes.

[[Page 1150]]
119 STAT. 1150

Subtitle F--Bureau of Transportation Statistics

Sec. 5601. Bureau of Transportation Statistics.

TITLE VI--TRANSPORTATION PLANNING AND PROJECT DELIVERY

Sec. 6001. Transportation planning.
Sec. 6002. Efficient environmental reviews for project decisionmaking.
Sec. 6003. State assumption of responsibilities for certain programs and
projects.
Sec. 6004. State assumption of responsibility for categorical
exclusions.
Sec. 6005. Surface transportation project delivery pilot program.
Sec. 6006. Environmental restoration and pollution abatement; control of
noxious weeds and aquatic noxious weeds and establishment of
native species.
Sec. 6007. Exemption of Interstate System.
Sec. 6008. Integration of natural resource concerns into transportation
project planning.
Sec. 6009. Parks, recreation areas, wildlife and waterfowl refuges, and
historic sites.
Sec. 6010. Environmental review of activities that support deployment of
intelligent transportation systems.
Sec. 6011. Transportation conformity.
Sec. 6012. Federal Reference Method.
Sec. 6013. Air quality monitoring data influenced by exceptional events.
Sec. 6014. Federal procurement of recycled coolant.
Sec. 6015. Clean school bus program.
Sec. 6016. Special designation.
Sec. 6017. Increased use of recovered mineral component in federally
funded projects involving procurement of cement or concrete.
Sec. 6018. Use of granular mine tailings.

TITLE VII--HAZARDOUS MATERIALS TRANSPORTATION

Sec. 7001. Short title.
Sec. 7002. Amendment of title 49, United States Code.

Subtitle A--General Authorities on Transportation of Hazardous Materials

Sec. 7101. Findings and purpose.
Sec. 7102. Definitions.
Sec. 7103. General regulatory authority.
Sec. 7104. Limitation on issuance of hazmat licenses.
Sec. 7105. Background checks for drivers hauling hazardous materials.
Sec. 7106. Representation and tampering.
Sec. 7107. Technical amendments.
Sec. 7108. Training of certain employees.
Sec. 7109. Registration.
Sec. 7110. Shipping papers and disclosure.
Sec. 7111. Rail tank cars.
Sec. 7112. Unsatisfactory safety ratings.
Sec. 7113. Training curriculum for the public sector.
Sec. 7114. Planning and training grants; Hazardous Materials Emergency
Preparedness Fund.
Sec. 7115. Special permits and exclusions.
Sec. 7116. Uniform forms and procedures.
Sec. 7117. International uniformity of standards and requirements.
Sec. 7118. Administrative authority.
Sec. 7119. Enforcement.
Sec. 7120. Civil penalty.
Sec. 7121. Criminal penalty.
Sec. 7122. Preemption.
Sec. 7123. Judicial review.
Sec. 7124. Relationship to other laws.
Sec. 7125. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 7126. References to the Secretary of Transportation.
Sec. 7127. Criminal matters.
Sec. 7128. Additional civil and criminal penalties.
Sec. 7129. Hazardous material transportation plan requirement.
Sec. 7130. Determining amount of undeclared shipments of hazardous
materials entering the United States.
Sec. 7131. Hazardous materials research projects.
Sec. 7132. National first responder transportation incident response
system.
Sec. 7133. Common carrier pipeline system.

Subtitle B--Sanitary Food Transportation

Sec. 7201. Short title.

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119 STAT. 1151

Sec. 7202. Responsibilities of Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Sec. 7203. Department of Transportation requirements.
Sec. 7204. Effective date.

Subtitle C--Research and Innovative Technology Administration

Sec. 7301. Administrative authority.

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 TRANSPORTATION

Sec. 9001. High-speed rail corridor development.
Sec. 9002. Capital grants for rail line relocation projects.
Sec. 9003. Rehabilitation and improvement financing.
Sec. 9004. Report regarding impact on public safety of train travel in
communities without grade separation.
Sec. 9005. Welded rail and tank car safety improvements.
Sec. 9006. Alaska Railroad.
Sec. 9007. Study of rail transportation and regulation.
Sec. 9008. Hawaii port infrastructure expansion program.

TITLE X--MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

Subtitle A--Sportfishing and Recreational Boating Safety

Sec. 10101. Short title.

Chapter 1--Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act amendments

Sec. 10111. Amendment of Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act.
Sec. 10112. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 10113. Division of annual appropriations.
Sec. 10114. Maintenance of projects.
Sec. 10115. Boating infrastructure.
Sec. 10116. Requirements and restrictions concerning use of amounts for
expenses for Administration.
Sec. 10117. Payments of funds to and cooperation with Puerto Rico, the
District of Columbia, Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth
of the Northern Mariana Islands, and the Virgin Islands.
Sec. 10118. Multistate conservation grant program.
Sec. 10119. Expenditure of remaining balance in Boat Safety Account.

Chapter 2--Clean Vessel Act of 1992 amendments

Sec. 10131. Grant program.

Chapter 3--Recreational boating safety program amendments

Sec. 10141. Technical correction.
Sec. 10142. Availability of allocations.
Sec. 10143. Authorization of appropriations for State recreational
boating safety programs.

Subtitle B--Other Miscellaneous Provisions

Sec. 10201. Notice regarding participation of small business concerns.
Sec. 10202. Emergency medical services.
Sec. 10203. Hubzone program.
Sec. 10204. Catastrophic hurricane evacuation plans.
Sec. 10205. Intermodal transportation facility expansion.
Sec. 10206. Eligibility to participate in western Alaska community
development quota program.
Sec. 10207. Rail rehabilitation and bridge repair.
Sec. 10208. Rented or leased motor vehicles.
Sec. 10209. Midway Island.
Sec. 10210. Demonstration of digital project simulation.
Sec. 10211. Environmental programs.
Sec. 10212. Rescission of unobligated balances.
Sec. 10213. Tribal land.

Subtitle C--Specific Vehicle Safety-related Rulings

Sec. 10301. Vehicle rollover prevention and crash mitigation.

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119 STAT. 1152

Sec. 10302. Side-impact crash protection rulemaking.
Sec. 10303. Tire research.
Sec. 10304. Vehicle backover avoidance technology study.
Sec. 10305. Nontraffic incident data collection.
Sec. 10306. Study of safety belt use technologies.
Sec. 10307. Amendment of Automobile Information Disclosure Act.
Sec. 10308. Power window switches.
Sec. 10309. 15-Passenger van safety.
Sec. 10310. Authorization of appropriations.

TITLE XI--HIGHWAY REAUTHORIZATION AND EXCISE TAX SIMPLIFICATION

Sec. 11100. Amendment of 1986 Code.

Subtitle A--Trust Fund Reauthorization

Sec. 11101. Extension of highway-related taxes and trust funds.
Sec. 11102. Modification of adjustments of apportionments.

Subtitle B--Excise Tax Reform and Simplification

Part 1--Highway excise taxes

Sec. 11111. Modification of gas guzzler tax.
Sec. 11112. Exclusion for tractors weighing 19,500 pounds or less from
Federal excise tax on heavy trucks and trailers.
Sec. 11113. Volumetric excise tax credit for alternative fuels.

Part 2--Aquatic excise taxes

Sec. 11115. Elimination of Aquatic Resources Trust Fund and
transformation of Sport Fish Restoration Account.
Sec. 11116. Repeal of harbor maintenance tax on exports.
Sec. 11117. Cap on excise tax on certain fishing equipment.

Part 3--Aerial excise taxes

Sec. 11121. Clarification of excise tax exemptions for agricultural
aerial applicators and exemption for Fixed-Wing aircraft
engaged in forestry operations.
Sec. 11122. Modification of rural airport definition.
Sec. 11123. Exemption from taxes on transportation provided by
seaplanes.
Sec. 11124. Certain sightseeing flights exempt from taxes on air
transportation.

Part 4--Taxes relating to alcohol

Sec. 11125. Repeal of special occupational taxes on producers and
marketers of alcoholic beverages.
Sec. 11126. Income tax credit for distilled spirits wholesalers and for
distilled spirits in control State bailment warehouses for
costs of carrying Federal excise taxes on bottled distilled
spirits.
Sec. 11127. Quarterly excise tax filing for small alcohol excise
taxpayers.

Part 5--Sport excise taxes

Sec. 11131. Custom gunsmiths.

Subtitle C--Miscellaneous Provisions

Sec. 11141. Motor Fuel Tax Enforcement Advisory Commission.
Sec. 11142. National Surface Transportation Infrastructure Financing
Commission.
Sec. 11143. Tax-exempt financing of highway projects and rail-truck
transfer facilities.
Sec. 11144. Treasury study of highway fuels used by trucks for non-
transportation purposes.
Sec. 11145. Diesel fuel tax evasion report.
Sec. 11146. Tax treatment of State ownership of railroad real estate
investment trust.
Sec. 11147. Limitation on transfers to the Leaking Underground Storage
Tank Trust Fund.

Subtitle D--Highway-Related Technical Corrections

Sec. 11151. Highway-related technical corrections.

Subtitle E--Preventing Fuel Fraud

Sec. 11161. Treatment of kerosene for use in aviation.
Sec. 11162. Repeal of ultimate vendor refund claims with respect to
farming.

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119 STAT. 1153

Sec. 11163. Refunds of excise taxes on exempt sales of fuel by credit
card.
Sec. 11164. Reregistration in event of change in ownership.
Sec. 11165. Reconciliation of on-loaded cargo to entered cargo.
Sec. 11166. Treatment of deep-draft vessels.
Sec. 11167. Penalty with respect to certain adulterated fuels.

SEC. 2.  NOTE: 23 USC 101 note.  GENERAL DEFINITIONS.

In this Act, the following definitions apply:
(1) Department.--The term ``Department'' means the
Department of Transportation.
(2) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary
of Transportation.

TITLE I--FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAYS

Subtitle A--Authorization of Programs

SEC. 1101. 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) Interstate maintenance program.--For the Interstate
maintenance program under section 119 of title 23, United States
Code--
(A) $4,883,759,623 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $4,960,788,917 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $5,039,058,556 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $5,118,588,513 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $5,199,399,081 for fiscal year 2009.
(2) National highway system.--For the National Highway
System under section 103 of such title--
(A) $5,911,200,104 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $6,005,256,569 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $6,110,827,556 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $6,207,937,450 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $6,306,611,031 for fiscal year 2009.
(3) Bridge program.--For the bridge program under section
144 of such title--
(A) $4,187,708,821 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $4,253,530,131 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $4,320,411,313 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $4,388,369,431 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $4,457,421,829 for fiscal year 2009.
(4) Surface transportation program.--For the surface
transportation program under section 133 of such title--
(A) $6,860,096,662 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $6,269,833,394 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $6,370,469,775 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $6,472,726,628 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $6,576,630,046 for fiscal year 2009.
(5) Congestion mitigation and air quality improvement
program.--For the congestion mitigation and air quality
improvement program under section 149 of such title--
(A) $1,667,255,304 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $1,694,101,866 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $1,721,380,718 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $1,749,098,821 for fiscal year 2008; and

[[Page 1154]]
119 STAT. 1154

(E) $1,777,263,247 for fiscal year 2009.
(6) Highway safety improvement program.--For the highway
safety improvement program under section 148 of such title--
(A) $1,235,810,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(B) $1,255,709,322 for fiscal year 2007;
(C) $1,275,929,067 for fiscal year 2008; and
(D) $1,296,474,396 for fiscal year 2009.
(7) Appalachian development highway system program.--For the
Appalachian development highway system program under subtitle IV
of title 40, United States Code, $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--
(A) $60,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $70,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $75,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $80,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $85,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(9) Federal lands highways program.--
(A) Indian reservation roads.--For Indian
reservation roads under section 204 of such title--
(i) $300,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(ii) $330,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(iii) $370,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(iv) $410,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(v) $450,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(B) Park roads and parkways.--
(i) In general.--For park roads and parkways
under section 204 of such title--
(I) $180,000,000 for fiscal year
2005;
(II) $195,000,000 for fiscal year
2006;
(III) $210,000,000 for fiscal year
2007;
(IV) $225,000,000 for fiscal year
2008; and
(V) $240,000,000 for fiscal year
2009.
(ii) Minimum allocation to certain states.--A
State containing more than 50 percent of the total
acreage of the National Park System shall receive
not less than 3 percent of any funds appropriated
under this subparagraph.
(C) Refuge roads.--For refuge roads under section
204 of such title, $29,000,000 for each of fiscal years
2005 through 2009.
(D) Public lands highways.--For Federal lands
highways under section 204 of such title--
(i) $260,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(ii) $280,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(iii) $280,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(iv) $290,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(v) $300,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(10) National corridor infrastructure improvement program.--
For the national corridor infrastructure improvement program
under section 1302 of this Act--
(A) $194,800,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $389,600,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $487,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;

[[Page 1155]]
119 STAT. 1155

(D) $487,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $389,600,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(11) Coordinated border infrastructure program.--For the
coordinated border infrastructure program under section 1303 of
this Act--
(A) $123,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $145,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $165,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $190,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $210,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(12) National scenic byways program.--For the national
scenic byways program under section 162 of such title--
(A) $26,500,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $30,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $35,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $40,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $43,500,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(13) Construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal
facilities.--For construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal
facilities under section 147 of such title--
(A) $38,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $55,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $60,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $65,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $67,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(14) Puerto rico highway program.--For the Puerto Rico
highway program under section 165 of such title--
(A) $115,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $120,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $135,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $145,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $150,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(15) Projects of national and regional significance
program.--For the projects of national and regional significance
program under section 1301 of this Act--
(A) $177,900,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $355,800,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $444,750,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $444,750,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $355,800,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(16) High priority projects program.--For the high priority
projects program under section 117 of title 23, United States
Code, $2,966,400,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
(17) Safe routes to school program.--For the safe routes to
school program under section 1404 of this Act--
(A) $54,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $100,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $125,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(D) $150,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(E) $183,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(18) Deployment of magnetic levitation transportation
projects.--For the deployment of magnetic levitation projects
under section 1307 of this Act--
(A) $15,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 and
2007; and
(B) $30,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2008 and
2009.

[[Page 1156]]
119 STAT. 1156

(19) National corridor planning and development and
coordinated border infrastructure programs.--For the national
corridor planning and development and coordinated border
infrastructure programs under sections 1118 and 1119 of the
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 161,
163) $140,000,000 for fiscal year 2005.
(20) Highways for life.--For the Highways for LIFE Program
under section 1502 of this Act--
(A) $15,000,000 for fiscal year 2006; and
(B) $20,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2007
through 2009.
(21) Highway use tax evasion projects.--For highway use tax
evasion projects under section 1115 of this Act--
(A) $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(B) $44,800,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(C) $53,300,000 for fiscal year 2007; and
(D) $12,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2008 and
2009.

(b)  NOTE: 23 USC 101 note.  Disadvantaged Business Enterprises.--
(1) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following
definitions apply:
(A) Small business concern.--The term ``small
business concern'' has the meaning that term has under
section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632),
except that the 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 $19,570,000, as
adjusted annually by the Secretary for inflation.
(B) Socially and economically disadvantaged
individuals.--The term ``socially and economically
disadvantaged individuals'' has the meaning that term
has under section 8(d) of the Small Business Act (15
U.S.C. 637(d)) and relevant subcontracting regulations
issued pursuant to that Act, except that women shall be
presumed to be socially and economically disadvantaged
individuals for purposes of this subsection.
(2) 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 through small business concerns owned and controlled
by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals.
(3)  NOTE: Records.  Annual listing of disadvantaged
business enterprises.--Each State shall annually--
(A) survey and compile a list of the small business
concerns referred to in paragraph (1) and the location
of the concerns in the State; and
(B)  NOTE: Notification.  notify the Secretary, in
writing, of the percentage of the concerns that 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)  NOTE: Guidelines.  Uniform certification.--The
Secretary shall establish minimum uniform criteria for State
governments to use in

[[Page 1157]]
119 STAT. 1157

certifying whether a concern qualifies for purposes of this
subsection. The 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.  NOTE: 23 USC 104 note.  OBLIGATION CEILING.

(a) General Limitation.--Subject to subsections (g) and (h), and
notwithstanding any other provision of law, the obligations for Federal-
aid highway and highway safety construction programs shall not exceed--
(1) $34,422,400,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(2) $36,032,343,903 for fiscal year 2006;
(3) $38,244,210,516 for fiscal year 2007;
(4) $39,585,075,404 for fiscal year 2008; and
(5) $41,199,970,178 for fiscal year 2009.

(b) Exceptions.--The limitations under subsection (a) shall not
apply to obligations under or for--
(1) section 125 of title 23, United States Code;
(2) section 147 of the Surface Transportation Assistance Act
of 1978 (23 U.S.C. 144 note; 92 Stat. 2714);
(3) section 9 of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1981 (Public
Law 97-134; 95 Stat. 1701);
(4) subsections (b) and (j) of section 131 of the Surface
Transportation Assistance Act of 1982 (Public Law 97-424; 96
Stat. 2119);
(5) subsections (b) and (c) of section 149 of the Surface
Transportation and Uniform Relocation Assistance Act of 1987
(Public Law 100-17; 101 Stat. 198);
(6) sections 1103 through 1108 of the Intermodal Surface
Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (Public Law 102-240; 105
Stat. 2027);
(7) section 157 of title 23, United States Code (as in
effect on June 8, 1998);
(8) section 105 of title 23, United States Code (as in
effect for fiscal years 1998 through 2004, but only in an amount
equal to $639,000,000 for each of those fiscal years);
(9) Federal-aid highway programs for which obligation
authority was made available under the Transportation Equity Act
for the 21st Century (Public Law 105-178; 112 Stat. 107) or
subsequent public laws for multiple years or to remain available
until used, but only to the extent that the obligation authority
has not lapsed or been used;
(10) section 105 of title 23, United States Code (but, for
each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009, only in an amount equal
to $639,000,000 per fiscal year); and

[[Page 1158]]
119 STAT. 1158

(11) section 1603 of this Act, to the extent that funds
obligated in accordance with that section were not subject to a
limitation on obligations at the time at which the funds were
initially made available for obligation.

(c) Distribution of Obligation Authority.--For each of fiscal years
2005 through 2009, the Secretary--
(1) shall not distribute obligation authority provided by
subsection (a) for the fiscal year for--
(A) amounts authorized for administrative expenses
and programs by section 104(a) of title 23, United
States Code;
(B) programs funded from the administrative takedown
authorized by section 104(a)(1) of title 23, United
States Code (as in effect on the date before the date of
enactment of this Act); and
(C) amounts authorized for the highway use tax
evasion program and the Bureau of Transportation
Statistics;
(2) shall 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) shall determine the ratio that--
(A) the obligation authority provided by subsection
(a) for the 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 the Federal-aid highway and highway
safety construction programs (other than sums authorized
to be appropriated for provisions of law described in
paragraphs (1) through (9) 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)(10) for the fiscal year), less the
aggregate of the amounts not distributed under
paragraphs (1) and (2);
(4)(A) shall distribute the obligation authority provided by
subsection (a) less the aggregate amounts not distributed under
paragraphs (1) and (2), for sections 1301, 1302, and 1934 of
this Act, sections 117 but individually for each of project
numbered 1 through 3676 listed in the table contained in section
1702 of this Act and 144(g) of title 23, United States Code, and
section 14501 of title 40, United States Code, and, during
fiscal year 2005, amounts for programs, projects, and activities
authorized by section 117 of title I of division H of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2005 (Public Law 108-447; 118
Stat. 3212), so that the amount of obligation authority
available for each of such sections is equal to the amount
determined by multiplying--
(i) the ratio determined under paragraph (3); by
(ii) the sums authorized to be appropriated for that
section for the fiscal year; and
(B) shall distribute $2,000,000,000 for section 105 of title
23, United States Code;
(5) shall distribute among the States the obligation
authority provided by subsection (a), less the aggregate amounts
not distributed under paragraphs (1) and (2), for each

[[Page 1159]]
119 STAT. 1159

of the programs that are allocated by the Secretary under this
Act and title 23, United States Code (other than to programs to
which paragraph (1) applies), by multiplying--
(A) the ratio determined under paragraph (3); by
(B) the amounts authorized to be appropriated for
each such program for the fiscal year; and
(6) shall distribute the obligation authority provided by
subsection (a), less the aggregate amounts not distributed under
paragraphs (1) and (2) and the amounts distributed under
paragraphs (4) and (5), for Federal-aid highway and highway
safety construction programs (other than the amounts apportioned
for the equity bonus program, but only to the extent that the
amounts apportioned for the equity bonus program for the fiscal
year are greater than $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) amounts authorized to be appropriated for the
programs that are apportioned to each State for the
fiscal year; bear to
(B) the total of the amounts authorized to be
appropriated for the programs that are apportioned to
all States for the fiscal year.

(d) Redistribution of Unused Obligation Authority.--Notwithstanding
subsection (c), the Secretary shall, after August 1 of each of fiscal
years 2005 through 2009--
(1) revise a distribution of the obligation authority made
available under subsection (c) if an amount distributed cannot
be obligated during that fiscal year; and
(2) redistribute sufficient amounts to those States able to
obligate amounts in addition to those previously distributed
during that fiscal year, giving 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.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2),
obligation limitations imposed by subsection (a) shall apply to
contract authority for transportation research programs carried
out under--
(A) chapter 5 of title 23, United States Code; and
(B) title V (research title) of this Act.
(2) Exception.--Obligation authority made available under
paragraph (1) shall--
(A) remain available for a period of 3 fiscal years;
and
(B) 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.

(f) Redistribution of Certain Authorized Funds.--
(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Not later than 30 days
after the date of distribution of obligation authority under
subsection (c) for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009, the
Secretary shall distribute to the States any funds that--
(A) are authorized to be appropriated for the fiscal
year for Federal-aid highway programs; and

[[Page 1160]]
119 STAT. 1160

(B) the Secretary determines will not be allocated
to the States, and will not be available for obligation,
in the fiscal year due to the imposition of any
obligation limitation for the fiscal year.
(2) Ratio.--Funds shall be distributed under paragraph (1)
in the same ratio as the distribution of obligation authority
under subsection (c)(6).
(3) Availability.--Funds distributed under paragraph (1)
shall be available for any purpose described in section 133(b)
of title 23, United States Code.

(g) Special Limitation Characteristics.--Obligation authority
distributed for a fiscal year under subsection (c)(4) for the provision
specified in subsection (c)(4) shall--
(1) remain available until used for obligation of funds for
that provision; and
(2) 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) Adjustment in Obligation Limit.--
(1) In general.--Subject to the last sentence of section
110(a)(2) of title 23, United States Code, a limitation on
obligations imposed by subsection (a) for a fiscal year shall be
adjusted by an amount equal to the amount determined in
accordance with section 251(b)(1)(B) of the Balanced Budget and
Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (2 U.S.C. 901(b)(1)(B))
for the fiscal year.
(2) Distribution.--An adjustment under paragraph (1) shall
be distributed in accordance with this section.

(i) Special Rule for Fiscal Year 2005.--
(1) In general.--Obligation authority distributed under
subsection (c)(4) for fiscal year 2005 for sections 1301, 1302,
and 1934 of this Act and sections 117 and 144(g) of title 23,
United States Code, may be used in fiscal year 2005 for purposes
of obligation authority distributed under subsection (c)(6).
(2) Restoration.--Obligation authority used as described in
paragraph (1) shall be restored to the original purpose on the
date on which obligation authority is distributed under this
section for fiscal year 2006.

(j) High Priority Project Flexibility.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), obligation
authority distributed for a fiscal year under subsection (c)(4)
for each project numbered 1 through 3676 listed in the table
contained in section 1702 of this Act may be obligated for any
other project in such section in the same State.
(2) Restoration.--Obligation authority used as described in
paragraph (1) shall be restored to the original purpose on the
date on which obligation authority is distributed under this
section for the next fiscal year following obligation under
paragraph (1).

(k) Limitation on Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this section
shall be construed to limit the distribution of obligation authority
under subsection (c)(4)(A) for each of the individual projects numbered
greater than 3676 listed in the table contained in section 1702 of this
Act.

[[Page 1161]]
119 STAT. 1161

SEC. 1103. APPORTIONMENTS.

(a) Administrative Expenses.--
(1) In general.--Section 104(a) of title 23, United States
Code, is amended to read as follows:

``(a) Administrative Expenses.--
``(1) In general.--There are authorized to be appropriated
from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) to be made available to the Secretary for
administrative expenses of the Federal Highway Administration--
``(A) $353,024,000 for fiscal year 2005;
``(B) $370,613,540 for fiscal year 2006;
``(C) $389,079,500 for fiscal year 2007;
``(D) $408,465,500 for fiscal year 2008; and
``(E) $423,717,460 for fiscal year 2009.
``(2) Purposes.--The funds authorized by this subsection
shall be used--
``(A) to administer the provisions of law to be
financed from appropriations for the Federal-aid highway
program and programs authorized under chapter 2; and
``(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.
``(3) Availability.--The funds made available under
paragraph (1) shall remain available until expended.''.
(2) Conforming amendments.--Section 104 of such title is
amended--
(A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1) of
subsection (b), by striking ``the deduction authorized
by subsection (a) and the set-aside authorized by
subsection (f)'' and inserting ``the set-asides
authorized by subsections (d) and (f) and section
130(e)'';
(B) in the first sentence of subsection (e)(1), by
striking ``, and also'' and all that follows through
``this section''; and
(C) in subsection (i), by striking ``deducted'' and
inserting ``made available''.

(b) Alaska Highway.--Section 104(b)(1)(A) of such title is amended
by striking ``$18,800,000 for each of fiscal years 1998 through 2002''
and inserting ``$30,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through
2009''.
(c) National Highway System Component.--Section 104(b)(1)(A) of such
title is amended by striking ``$36,400,000 for each fiscal year'' and
inserting ``$40,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 and 2006 and
$50,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2007 through 2009''.
(d)  CMAQ Apportionment.--Section 104(b)(2) of such title is
amended--
(1) in subparagraph (B)--
(A) by striking clause (i) and inserting the
following:
``(i) 1.0 if, at the time of apportionment,
the area is a maintenance area;'';
(B) by striking ``or'' at the end of clause (vi);
(C) by striking the period at the end of clause
(vii) and inserting ``; or''; and
(D) by adding at the end the following:

[[Page 1162]]
119 STAT. 1162

``(viii) 1.0 if, at the time of apportionment,
an area is designated as nonattainment for ozone
under subpart 1 of part D of title I of such Act
(42 U.S.C. 7512 et seq.).''; and
(2) by striking subparagraph (C) and inserting the
following:
``(C) Additional adjustment for carbon monoxide
areas.--If, in addition to being designated as a
nonattainment or maintenance area for ozone as described
in section 149(b), any county within the area was also
classified under subpart 3 of part D of title I of the
Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7512 et seq.) as a
nonattainment or maintenance area described in section
149(b) for carbon monoxide, the weighted nonattainment
or maintenance area population of the county, as
determined under clauses (i) through (vi) or clause
(viii) of subparagraph (B), shall be further multiplied
by a factor of 1.2.''.

(e) Report.--Section 104(j)  NOTE: 23 USC 104.  of such title is
amended by striking ``submit to Congress a report'' and inserting
``submit to Congress a report, and also make such report available to
the public in a user-friendly format via the Internet,''.

(f) Operation Lifesaver.--Section 104(d) of such title is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (1) and all that follows through
the period at the end of paragraph (2)(A) and inserting the
following:
``(1) Operation lifesaver.--To carry out a public
information and education program to help prevent and reduce
motor vehicle accidents, injuries, and fatalities and to improve
driver performance at railway-highway crossings--
``(A) before making an apportionment under
subsection (b)(3) for fiscal year 2005, the Secretary
shall set aside $560,000 for such fiscal year; and
``(B) there is authorized to be appropriated from
the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) $560,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through
2009.
``(2) Railway-highway crossing hazard elimination in high
speed rail corridors.--
``(A) Funding.--To carry out the elimination of
hazards at railway-highway crossings--
``(i) before making an apportionment under
subsection (b)(3) for fiscal year 2005, the
Secretary shall set aside $5,250,000 for such
fiscal year; and
``(ii) there is authorized to be appropriated
from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass
Transit Account) $7,250,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$10,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $12,500,000 for
fiscal year 2008, and $15,000,000 for fiscal year
2009.''; and
(2) in paragraph (2)(E)--
(A) by striking ``Not less than $250,000 of such
set-aside'' and inserting ``Of such set-aside, not less
than $250,000 for fiscal year 2005, $1,000,000 for
fiscal year 2006, $1,750,000 for fiscal year 2007,
$2,250,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $3,000,000 for
fiscal year 2009''; and
(B) by striking ``per fiscal year''.

[[Page 1163]]
119 STAT. 1163

SEC. 1104. EQUITY BONUS PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Section 105 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 105. Equity bonus program

``(a) Program.--
``(1) In general.--Subject to subsections (c) and (d), for
each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009, the Secretary shall
allocate among the States amounts sufficient to ensure that no
State receives a percentage of the total apportionments for the
fiscal year for the programs specified in paragraph (2) that is
less than the percentage calculated under subsection (b).
``(2) Specific programs.--The programs referred to in
subsection (a) are--
``(A) the Interstate maintenance program under
section 119;
``(B) the national highway system program under
section 103;
``(C) the highway bridge replacement and
rehabilitation program under section 144;
``(D) the surface transportation program under
section 133;
``(E) the highway safety improvement program under
section 148;
``(F) the congestion mitigation and air quality
improvement program under section 149;
``(G) metropolitan planning programs under section
104(f);
``(H) the high priority projects program under
section 117;
``(I) the equity bonus program under this section;
``(J) the Appalachian development highway system
program under subtitle IV of title 40;
``(K) the recreational trails program under section
206;
``(L) the safe routes to school program under
section 1404 of the SAFETEA-LU;
``(M) the rail-highway grade crossing program under
section 130; and
``(N) the coordinated border infrastructure program
under section 1303 of the SAFETEA-LU.

``(b) State Percentage.--
``(1) In general.--The percentage referred to in subsection
(a) for each State shall be--
``(A) for each of fiscal years 2005 and 2006, 90.5
percent, for fiscal year 2007, 91.5 percent, and for
each of fiscal years 2008 and 2009, 92 percent, of the
quotient obtained by dividing--
``(i) the estimated tax payments attributable
to highway users in the State paid into the
Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) in the most recent fiscal year for which
data are available; by
``(ii) the estimated tax payments attributable
to highway users in all States paid into the
Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) for the fiscal year; or

[[Page 1164]]
119 STAT. 1164

``(B) for a State with a total population density of
less than 40 persons per square mile (as reported in the
decennial census conducted by the Federal Government in
2000) and of which at least 1.25 percent of the total
acreage is under Federal jurisdiction, based on the
report of the General Services Administration entitled
`Federal Real Property Profile' and dated September 30,
2004, a State with a total population of less than
1,000,000 (as reported in that decennial census), a
State with a median household income of less than
$35,000 (as reported in that decennial census), a State
with a fatality rate during 2002 on Interstate highways
that is greater than one fatality for each 100,000,000
vehicle miles traveled on Interstate highways, or a
State with an indexed, State motor fuels excise tax rate
higher than 150 percent of the Federal motor fuels
excise tax rate as of the date of enactment of the
SAFETEA-LU, the greater of--
``(i) the applicable percentage under
subparagraph (A); or
``(ii) the average percentage of the State's
share of total apportionments for the period of
fiscal years 1998 through 2003 for the programs
specified in paragraph (2).
``(2) Specific programs.--The programs referred to in
paragraph (1)(B)(ii) are (as in effect on the day before the
date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU)--
``(A) the Interstate maintenance program under
section 119;
``(B) the national highway system program under
section 103;
``(C) the highway bridge replacement and
rehabilitation program under section 144;
``(D) the surface transportation program under
section 133;
``(E) the recreational trails program under section
206;
``(F) the high priority projects program under
section 117;
``(G) the minimum guarantee provided under this
section;
``(H) revenue aligned budget authority amounts
provided under section 110;
``(I) the congestion mitigation and air quality
improvement program under section 149;
``(J) the Appalachian development highway system
program under subtitle IV of title 40; and
``(K) metropolitan planning programs under section
104(f).

``(c) Special Rules.--
``(1) Minimum combined allocation.--For each fiscal year,
before making the allocations under subsection (a)(1), the
Secretary shall allocate among the States amounts sufficient to
ensure that no State receives a combined total of amounts
allocated under subsection (a)(1), apportionments for the
programs specified in subsection (a)(2), and amounts allocated
under this subsection, that is less than the following
percentages of the average for fiscal years 1998 through 2003 of

[[Page 1165]]
119 STAT. 1165

the annual apportionments for the State for all programs
specified in subsection (b)(2):
``(A) For fiscal year 2005, 117 percent.
``(B) For fiscal year 2006, 118 percent.
``(C) For fiscal year 2007, 119 percent.
``(D) For fiscal year 2008, 120 percent.
``(E) For fiscal year 2009, 121 percent.
``(2) No negative adjustment.--No negative adjustment shall
be made under subsection (a)(1) to the apportionment of any
State.

``(d) Treatment of Funds.--
``(1) Programmatic distribution.--The Secretary shall
apportion the amounts made available under this section that
exceed $2,639,000,000 so that the amount apportioned to each
State under this paragraph for each program referred to in
subparagraphs (A) through (F) of subsection (a)(2) is equal to
the amount determined by multiplying the amount to be
apportioned under this paragraph by the ratio that--
``(A) the amount of funds apportioned to each State
for each program referred to in subparagraphs (A)
through (F) of subsection (a)(2) for a fiscal year;
bears to
``(B) the total amount of funds apportioned to such
State for all such programs for such fiscal year.
``(2) Remaining distribution.--The Secretary shall
administer the remainder of funds made available under this
section to the States in accordance with section 104(b)(3),
except that paragraphs (1) through (3) of section 133(d) shall
not apply to amounts administered pursuant to this paragraph.

``(e) Metro Planning Set Aside.--Notwithstanding section 104(f), no
set aside provided for under that section shall apply to funds allocated
under this section.
``(f) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) such sums as are necessary to carry out this section for each
of fiscal years 2005 through 2009.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for subchapter I of chapter 1
of such title is amended by striking the item relating to section 105
and inserting the following:

``105. Equity bonus program.''.

SEC. 1105. REVENUE ALIGNED BUDGET AUTHORITY.

(a) Allocation.--Section 110(a)(1) of title 23, United States Code,
is amended--
(1) by striking ``2000'' and inserting ``2007'';
(2) by inserting after ``such fiscal year'' the first place
it appears: ``and the succeeding fiscal year''.

(b) Reduction.--Section 110(a)(2) of such title is amended--
(1) by striking ``2000'' and inserting ``2007'';
(2) by striking ``October 1 of the succeeding'' and
inserting ``October 15 of such'';
(3) by inserting after ``Account)'' the following: ``for
such fiscal year and the succeeding fiscal year''; and
(4) by adding at the end the following: ``No reduction under
this paragraph and no reduction under section 1102(h), and no
reduction under title VIII or any amendment made by title VIII,
of the SAFETEA-LU shall be made for a fiscal year if, as of
October 1 of such fiscal year the balance in

[[Page 1166]]
119 STAT. 1166

the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account)
exceeds $6,000,000,000.''.

(c) General Distribution.--Section 110(b)(1)(A)  NOTE: 23 USC
110.  of such title is amended--
(1) by striking ``minimum guarantee'' and inserting ``equity
bonus''; and
(2) by striking ``Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century'' and inserting ``SAFETEA-LU''.

(d) Addition of Highway Safety Improvement Program.--Section 110(c)
of such title is amended by inserting ``the highway safety improvement
program,'' after ``the surface transportation program,''.
(e) Technical Amendment.--Section 110(b)(1)(A) of such title is
amended by striking ``for'' the second place it appears.
(f)  NOTE: 23 USC 110 note.  Special Rule.--If the amount
available pursuant to section 110 of title 23, United States Code, for
fiscal year 2007 is greater than zero, the Secretary shall--
(1) determine the total amount necessary to increase each
State's rate of return (as determined under section 105(b)(1)(A)
of title 23, United States Code) to 92 percent, excluding
amounts provided under this paragraph;
(2) allocate to each State the lesser of--
(A) the amount computed for that State under
paragraph (1); or
(B) an amount determined by multiplying the total
amount calculated under section 110 of title 23, United
States Code, for fiscal year 2007 by the ratio that--
(i) the amount determined for such State under
paragraph (1); bears to
(ii) the total amount computed for all States
in paragraph (1); and
(3) allocate amounts remaining in excess of the amounts
allocated in paragraph (2) to all States in accordance with
section 110 of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 1106. FUTURE INTERSTATE SYSTEM ROUTES.

(a) Extension of Date.--Section 103(c)(4)(B)(ii) of title 23, United
States Code, is amended by striking ``12'' and inserting ``25''.
(b) Removal of Designation.--Section 103(c)(4)(B)(iii) of such title
is amended--
(1) in subclause (I) by striking ``in the agreement between
the Secretary and the State or States''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:
``(III) Existing agreements.--An
agreement described in clause (ii) that
is entered into before the date of
enactment of this subclause shall be
deemed to include the 25-year time
limitation described in that clause,
regardless of any earlier construction
completion date in the agreement.''.

SEC. 1107. METROPOLITAN PLANNING.

Section 104(f) of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following:
``(1) Set-aside.--On October 1 of each fiscal year, the
Secretary shall set aside 1.25 percent of the funds authorized
to be appropriated for the Interstate maintenance, national
highway system, surface transportation, congestion mitigation

[[Page 1167]]
119 STAT. 1167

and air quality improvement, and highway bridge replacement and
rehabilitation programs authorized under this title to carry out
the requirements of section 134.'';
(2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``per centum'' and
inserting ``percent'';
(3) in paragraph (3)--
(A) by striking ``The funds'' and inserting the
following:
``(A) In general.--The funds''; and
(B) by striking ``These funds'' and all that follows
and inserting the following:
``(B) Unused funds.--Any funds that are not used to
carry out section 134 may be made available by a
metropolitan planning organization to the State to fund
activities under section 135.''; and
(4) in paragraph (4)--
(A) by striking ``The distribution'' and inserting
the following:
``(A) In general.--The distribution''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following:
``(B)  NOTE: Deadline.  Reimbursement.--Not later
than 30 days after the date of receipt by a State of a
request for reimbursement of expenditures made by a
metropolitan planning organization for carrying out
section 134, the State shall reimburse, from funds
distributed under this paragraph to the metropolitan
planning organization by the State, the metropolitan
planning organization for those expenditures.''.

SEC. 1108. TRANSFER OF HIGHWAY AND TRANSIT FUNDS.

Section 104(k) of title 23, United States Code, is amended to read
as follows:
``(k) Transfer of Highway and Transit Funds.--
``(1) Transfer of highway funds for transit projects.--
``(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B),
funds made available for transit projects or
transportation planning under this title may be
transferred to and administered by the Secretary in
accordance with chapter 53 of title 49.
``(B) Non-federal share.--The provisions of this
title relating to the non-Federal share shall apply to
the funds transferred under subparagraph (A).
``(2) Transfer of transit funds for highway projects.--
``(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B),
funds made available for highway projects or
transportation planning under chapter 53 of title 49 may
be transferred to and administered by the Secretary in
accordance with this title.
``(B)  NOTE: Applicability.  Non-federal share.--
The provisions of chapter 53 of title 49 relating to the
non-Federal share shall apply to funds transferred under
subparagraph (A).
``(3) Transfer of funds among states or to federal highway
administration.--
``(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraphs (B) and
(C), the Secretary may, at the request of a State,
transfer funds apportioned or allocated under this title
to the State to another State, or to the Federal Highway
Administration, for the purpose of funding one or more
projects that

[[Page 1168]]
119 STAT. 1168

are eligible for assistance with funds so apportioned or
allocated.
``(B) Apportionment.--The transfer shall have no
effect on any apportionment of funds to a State under
this section or section 105 or 144.
``(C) Surface transportation program.--Funds that
are apportioned or allocated to a State under subsection
(b)(3) and attributed to an urbanized area of a State
with a population of over 200,000 individuals under
section 133(d)(3) may be transferred under this
paragraph only if the metropolitan planning organization
designated for the area concurs, in writing, with the
transfer request.
``(4) Transfer of obligation authority.--Obligation
authority for funds transferred under this subsection shall be
transferred in the same manner and amount as the funds for the
projects that are transferred under this subsection.''.

SEC. 1109. RECREATIONAL TRAILS.

(a) Recreational Trails Program Formula.--Section 104(h) of title
23, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by striking the first sentence and
inserting the following: ``Before apportioning sums authorized
to be appropriated to carry out the recreational trails program
under section 206, the Secretary shall deduct for
administrative, research, technical assistance, and training
expenses for such program $840,000 for each of fiscal years 2005
through 2009.''; and
(2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``After'' and all that
follows through ``remainder of the sums'' and inserting ``The
Secretary shall apportion the sums''.

(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

[[Page 1169]]
119 STAT. 1169

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) development and dissemination of publications
and operation of educational programs to promote safety
and environmental protection, (as those objectives
relate to one or more of the use of recreational trails,
supporting non-law enforcement trail safety and trail
use monitoring patrol programs, and providing trail-
related training), 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.''.

(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.''.

[[Page 1170]]
119 STAT. 1170

(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 preapproval planning and environmental compliance
costs to be credited toward the non-Federal share of the
cost of a project described in subsection (d)(2) (other
than subparagraph (H)) in accordance with subsection
(f), limited to costs incurred less than 18 months prior
to project approval.''.

(f)  NOTE: Contracts. 23 USC 206 note.  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. 1110. 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, 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

[[Page 1171]]
119 STAT. 1171

``(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 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.''.

(c) Clarification of Date.--Section 109(g) of such title is amended
in the first sentence by striking ``The Secretary'' and all that follows
through ``of 1970'' and inserting ``Not later than January 30, 1971, the
Secretary shall issue''.

SEC. 1111. SET-ASIDES FOR INTERSTATE DISCRETIONARY PROJECTS.

(a) In General.--Section 118(c)(1) of title 23, United States Code,
is amended by striking ``$50,000,000'' and all that follows through
``2003'' and inserting ``$100,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005
through 2009''.
(b) Technical Amendments.--
(1) Section 116.--Section 116(b) of such title is amended by
striking ``highway department'' and inserting ``transportation
department''.
(2) Section 120.--Section 120(e) of such title is amended in
the first sentence by striking ``such system'' and inserting
``such highway''.
(3) Section 127.--Section 127(a) of such title is amended by
striking ``118(b)(1)'' and inserting ``118(b)(2)''.
(4) Bicycle and pedestrian safety grants.--Section 1212(i)
of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat.
196-197)  NOTE: 23 USC 402 note.  is amended by redesignating
subparagraphs (D) and (E) as paragraphs (2) and (3),
respectively, and moving such paragraphs 2 ems to the left.

SEC. 1112. EMERGENCY RELIEF.

There are authorized to be appropriated for each fiscal year such
sums as may be necessary for allocations by the Secretary described in
subsections (a) and (b) of section 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. 1113. SURFACE TRANSPORTATION PROGRAM.

(a) Program Eligibility.--Section 133(b) of title 23, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (6) by inserting ``, including advanced
truck stop electrification systems'' before the period at the
end; and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (11) the following:
``(12) Projects relating to intersections that--
``(A) have disproportionately high accident rates;
``(B) have high levels of congestion, as evidenced
by--
``(i) interrupted traffic flow at the
intersection; and

[[Page 1172]]
119 STAT. 1172

``(ii) a level of service rating that is not
better than `F' during peak travel hours,
calculated in accordance with the Highway Capacity
Manual issued by the Transportation Research
Board; and
``(C) are located on a Federal-aid highway.''.

(b) Repeal of Safety Programs Set-aside.--
(1) Repeal.--Section 133(d)(1) of such title is repealed.
(2) Technical amendments.--Section 133(d) of such title is
amended--
(A) in the first sentence of paragraph (3)(A)--
(i) by striking ``subparagraphs (C) and (D)''
and inserting ``subparagraph (C)''; and
(ii) by striking ``80 percent'' and inserting
``90 percent'';
(B) in paragraph (3)(B) by striking ``tobe'' and
inserting ``to be''; and
(C) in paragraph (3)--
(i) by striking subparagraph (C);
(ii) by redesignating subparagraphs (D) and
(E) as subparagraphs (C) and (D), respectively;
and
(iii) in subparagraph (C) (as redesignated by
clause (ii)) by adding a period at the end.
(3)  NOTE: 23 USC 133 note.  Effective date.--Paragraph
(1) and paragraph (2)(A)(ii) of this subsection shall take
effect October 1, 2005.

(c) Transportation Enhancement Activities.--Effective October 1,
2005, section 133(d)(2) of such title is amended by striking ``10
percent'' and all that follows through ``section 104(b)(3) for a fiscal
year'' and inserting the following: ``In a fiscal year, the greater of
10 percent of the funds apportioned to a State under section 104(b)(3)
for such fiscal year, or the amount set aside under this paragraph with
respect to the State for fiscal year 2005,''.
(d) Obligation Authority.--Section 133(f)(1) of such title 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''.

(e)  NOTE: Effective date.  Technical Correction.--Effective June
9, 1998, section 1108(e) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century (112 Stat. 140)  NOTE: 23 USC 133.  is amended by striking
``Section 133'' and inserting ``Section 133(f)''.

SEC. 1114. HIGHWAY BRIDGE PROGRAM.

(a) Finding and Declaration.--Section 144(a) of title 23, United
States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(a) Finding and Declaration.--Congress finds and declares that it
is in the vital interest of the United States that a highway bridge
program be carried out to enable States to improve the condition of
their highway bridges over waterways, other topographical barriers,
other highways, and railroads through replacement and rehabilitation of
bridges that the States and the Secretary determine are structurally
deficient or functionally obsolete and through systematic preventive
maintenance of bridges.''.
(b) Participation.--Section 144(d) of such title is amended to read
as follows:
``(d) Participation.--

[[Page 1173]]
119 STAT. 1173

``(1) Bridge replacement and rehabilitation.--On application
by a State or States to the Secretary for assistance for a
highway bridge that has been determined to be eligible for
replacement or rehabilitation under subsection (b) or (c), the
Secretary may approve Federal participation in--
``(A) replacing the bridge with a comparable
facility; or
``(B) rehabilitating the bridge.
``(2) Types of assistance.--On application by a State or
States to the Secretary, the Secretary may approve Federal
assistance for any of the following activities for a highway
bridge that has been determined to be eligible for replacement
or rehabilitation under subsection (b) or (c):
``(A) Painting.
``(B) Seismic retrofit.
``(C) Systematic preventive maintenance.
``(D) Installation of scour countermeasures.
``(E) Application of calcium magnesium acetate,
sodium acetate/formate, or other environmentally
acceptable, minimally corrosive anti-icing and de-icing
compositions.
``(3) Basis for determination.--The Secretary shall
determine the eligibility of highway bridges for replacement or
rehabilitation for each State based on structurally deficient
and functionally obsolete highway bridges in the State.
``(4) Special rule for preventive maintenance.--
Notwithstanding any other provision of this subsection, a State
may carry out a project under paragraph (2)(B), (2)(C), or
(2)(D) for a highway bridge without regard to whether the bridge
is eligible for replacement or rehabilitation under this
section.''.

(c) Apportionment of Funds.--Section 144(e) of such title is
amended--
(1) in the third sentence by striking ``square footage'' and
inserting ``deck area'';
(2) in the fourth sentence by striking ``the total cost of
deficient bridges in a State and in all States shall be reduced
by the total cost of any highway bridges constructed under
subsection (m) in such State, relating to replacement of
destroyed bridges and ferryboat services, and,''; and
(3) in the seventh sentence by striking ``for the same
period as funds apportioned for projects on the Federal-aid
primary system under this title'' and inserting ``for the period
specified in section 118(b)(2)''.

(d) Off-System Bridges.--Section 144(g)(3) of such title is amended
to read as follows:
``(3) Off-system bridges.--
``(A) In general.--Not less than 15 percent of the
amount apportioned to each State in each of fiscal years
2005 through 2009 shall be expended for projects to
replace, rehabilitate, paint, perform systematic
preventive maintenance or seismic retrofit of, or apply
calcium magnesium acetate, sodium acetate/formate, or
other environmentally acceptable, minimally corrosive
anti-icing and de-icing compositions to, or install
scour countermeasures to, highway bridges located on
public roads, other than those on a

[[Page 1174]]
119 STAT. 1174

Federal-aid highway, or to complete the Warwick
Intermodal Station (including the construction of a
people mover between the Station and the T.F. Green
Airport).
``(B) Reduction of expenditures.--The Secretary,
after consultation with State and local officials, may
reduce the requirement for expenditure for bridges not
on a Federal-aid highway under subparagraph (A) with
respect to the State if the Secretary determines that
the State has inadequate needs to justify the
expenditure.''.

(e) Bridge Set-aside.--
(1) Fiscal year 2005.--Section 144(g)(1)(C)  NOTE: 23 USC
144.  of such title is amended--
(A) in the subsection heading by striking ``2003''
and inserting ``2005''; and
(B) in the first sentence by striking ``2003'' and
inserting ``2005''.
(2)  NOTE: Effective date.  Fiscal years 2006 through
2009.--Effective October 1, 2005, section 144(g) of such title
(as amended by subsection (d) of this section) is amended--
(A) by striking the subsection designation and all
that follows through the period at the end of paragraph
(2) and inserting the following:

``(g) Bridge Set-asides.--
``(1) Designated projects.--
``(A) In general.--Of the amounts authorized to be
appropriated to carry out the bridge program under this
section for each of the fiscal years 2006 through 2009,
all but $100,000,000 shall be apportioned as provided in
subsection (e). Such $100,000,000 shall be available as
follows:
``(i) $12,500,000 per fiscal year for the
Golden Gate Bridge.
``(ii) $18,750,000 per fiscal year for the
construction of a bridge joining the Island of
Gravina to the community of Ketchikan in Alaska.
``(iii) $12,500,000 per fiscal year to the
State of Nevada for construction of a replacement
of the federally owned bridge over the Hoover Dam
in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area.
``(iv) $12,500,000 per fiscal year to the
State of Missouri for construction of a structure
over the Mississippi River to connect the City of
St. Louis, Missouri, to the State of Illinois.
``(v) $12,500,000 per fiscal year for
replacement and reconstruction of State maintained
bridges in the State of Oklahoma.
``(vi) $4,500,000 per fiscal year for
replacement of the Missisquoi Bay Bridge, Vermont.
``(vii) $8,000,000 per fiscal year for
replacement and reconstruction of State-maintained
bridges in the State of Vermont.
``(viii) $8,750,000 per fiscal year for
design, planning, and right-of-way acquisition for
the Interstate Route 74 bridge from Bettendorf,
Iowa, to Moline, Illinois.

[[Page 1175]]
119 STAT. 1175

``(ix) $10,000,000 per fiscal year for
replacement and reconstruction of State-maintained
bridges in the State of Oregon.
``(B) Gravina access scoring.--The project described
in subparagraph (A)(ii) shall not be counted for
purposes of the reduction set forth in the fourth
sentence of subsection (e).
``(C) Period of availability.--Amounts made
available to a State under this paragraph shall remain
available until expended.'';
(B) by striking paragraph (2); and
(C) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (2).

(f) Continuation of Report; Federal Share.--Section 144 of such
title is amended by adding at the end the following:
``(r)  NOTE: Federal Register, publication.  Annual Materials
Report on New Bridge Construction and Bridge Rehabilitation.--Not later
than 1 year after the date of enactment of this subsection, and annually
thereafter, the Secretary shall publish in the Federal Register a report
describing construction materials used in new Federal-aid bridge
construction and bridge rehabilitation projects.

``(s) Federal Share.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided under paragraph (2),
the Federal share of the cost of a project payable from funds
made available to carry out this section shall be determined
under section 120(b).
``(2) Interstate system.--The Federal share of the cost of a
project on the Interstate System payable from funds made
available to carry out this section shall be determined under
section 120(a).''.

(g) Technical Amendment.--Section 144(i) of such title is amended by
striking ``at the same time'' and all that follows through ``Congress''.

SEC. 1115. 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 2005 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 relating 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:

[[Page 1176]]
119 STAT. 1176

``(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 estimated annual yield from such
projects, examinations, and criminal investigations.''.

(b) Excise Fuel Reporting System.--Section 143(c) of such title is
amended to read as follows:
``(c) Excise Tax Fuel Reporting.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline. Memorandum.  In general.--Not later
than 90 days after the date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, the
Secretary shall enter into a memorandum of understanding with
the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service for the
purposes of--
``(A) the additional development of capabilities
needed to support new reporting requirements and
databases established under such Act and the American
Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (Public Law 108-357), and such
other reporting requirements and database development as
may be determined by the Secretary, in consultation with
the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, to be
useful in the enforcement of fuel excise taxes,
including provisions recommended by the Fuel Tax
Enforcement Advisory Committee,
``(B) the completion of requirements needed for the
electronic reporting of fuel transactions from carriers
and terminal operators,
``(C) the operation and maintenance of an excise
summary terminal activity reporting system and other
systems used to provide strategic analyses of domestic
and foreign motor fuel distribution trends and patterns,
``(D) the collection, analysis, and sharing of
information on fuel distribution and compliance or
noncompliance with fuel taxes, and
``(E) the development, completion, operation, and
maintenance of an electronic claims filing system and
database and an electronic database of heavy vehicle
highway use payments.
``(2) Elements of memorandum of understanding.--The
memorandum of understanding shall provide that--
``(A) the Internal Revenue Service shall develop and
maintain any system under paragraph (1) through
contracts,
``(B) any system under paragraph (1) shall be under
the control of the Internal Revenue Service, and
``(C) any system under paragraph (1) 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 2005 through 2009, the
Secretary shall make available to the Internal Revenue Service
such funds as may be necessary to complete, operate, and
maintain the systems under paragraph (1) in accordance with this
subsection.
``(4) Reports.--Not later than September 30 of each year,
the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service shall provide

[[Page 1177]]
119 STAT. 1177

reports to the Secretary on the status of the Internal Revenue
Service projects funded under this subsection.''.

(c) Allocations.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated under
section 1101(a)(21) of this Act for highway use tax evasion projects for
each of the fiscal years 2005 through 2009, the following amounts shall
be allocated to the Internal Revenue Service to carry out section 143 of
title 23, United States Code:
(1) $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2005.
(2) $44,800,000 for fiscal year 2006.
(3) $53,300,000 for fiscal year 2007.
(4) $12,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2008 and 2009.

SEC. 1116. APPALACHIAN DEVELOPMENT HIGHWAY SYSTEM.

(a) Apportionment.--The Secretary shall apportion funds made
available by section 1101(a)(7) of this Act for fiscal years 2005
through 2009 among the States based on the latest available cost to
complete estimate for the Appalachian development highway system under
section 14501 of 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 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. 1117. TRANSPORTATION, COMMUNITY, AND SYSTEM PRESERVATION PROGRAM.

(a)  NOTE: 23 USC 101 note.  Establishment.--In cooperation with
appropriate State, tribal, regional, and local governments, the
Secretary shall establish a comprehensive program to address the
relationships among transportation, community, and system preservation
plans and practices and identify private sector-based initiatives to
improve such relationships.

(b) Purpose.--Through the program under this section, the Secretary
shall facilitate the planning, development, and implementation of
strategies to integrate transportation, community, and system
preservation plans and practices that address one or more of the
following:
(1) Improve the efficiency of the transportation system of
the United States.
(2) Reduce the impacts of transportation on the environment.
(3) Reduce the need for costly future investments in public
infrastructure.
(4) Provide efficient access to jobs, services, and centers
of trade.
(5) Examine community development patterns and identify
strategies to encourage private sector development that achieves
the purposes identified in paragraphs (1) through (4).

(c) General Authority.--The Secretary shall allocate funds made
available to carry out this section to States, metropolitan

[[Page 1178]]
119 STAT. 1178

planning organizations, local governments, and tribal governments to
carry out eligible projects to integrate transportation, community, and
system preservation plans and practices.
(d) Eligibility.--A project described in subsection (c) is an
eligible project under this section if the project--
(1) is eligible for assistance under title 23 or chapter 53
of title 49, United States Code; or
(2) is to conduct any other activity relating to
transportation, community, and system preservation that the
Secretary determines to be appropriate, including corridor
preservation activities that are necessary to implement one or
more of the following:
(A) Transit-oriented development plans.
(B) Traffic calming measures.
(C) Other coordinated transportation, community, and
system preservation practices.

(e) Criteria.--In allocating funds made available to carry out this
section, the Secretary shall give priority consideration to applicants
that--
(1) have instituted preservation or development plans and
programs that--
(A) are coordinated with State and local
preservation or development plans, including transit-
oriented development plans;
(B) promote cost-effective and strategic investments
in transportation infrastructure that minimize adverse
impacts on the environment; or
(C) promote innovative private sector strategies;
(2) have instituted other policies to integrate
transportation, community, and system preservation practices,
such as--
(A) spending policies that direct funds to high-
growth areas;
(B) urban growth boundaries to guide metropolitan
expansion;
(C) ``green corridors'' programs that provide access
to major highway corridors for areas targeted for
efficient and compact development; or
(D) other similar programs or policies as determined
by the Secretary;
(3) have preservation or development policies that include a
mechanism for reducing potential impacts of transportation
activities on the environment;
(4) demonstrate a commitment to public and private
involvement, including the involvement of nontraditional
partners in the project team; and
(5) examine ways to encourage private sector investments
that address the purposes of this section.

(f) Equitable Distribution.--In allocating funds to carry out this
section, the Secretary shall ensure the equitable distribution of funds
to a diversity of populations and geographic regions.
(g) 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 $25,000,000 for fiscal year 2005 and
$61,250,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009.

[[Page 1179]]
119 STAT. 1179

(2) Contract authority.--Funds made available 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; 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.

(h) Conforming Amendment.--Section 1221 of the Transportation Equity
Act for the 21st Century (23 U.S.C. 101 note; 112 Stat. 221) is
repealed.

SEC. 1118. TERRITORIAL HIGHWAY PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Chapter 2 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended by striking section 215 and inserting the following:

``Sec. 215. Territorial highway program

``(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions
apply:
``(1) Program.--The term `program' means the territorial
highway program established under subsection (b).
``(2) Territory.--The term `territory' means any of the
following territories of the United States:
``(A) American Samoa.
``(B) The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands.
``(C) Guam.
``(D) The United States Virgin Islands.

``(b) Program.--
``(1) In general.--Recognizing the mutual benefits that will
accrue to the territories and the United States from the
improvement of highways in the territories, the Secretary may
carry out a program to assist each government of a territory in
the construction and improvement of a system of arterial and
collector highways, and necessary inter-island connectors, that
is--
``(A) designated by the Governor or chief executive
officer of each territory; and
``(B) approved by the Secretary.
``(2) Federal share.--The Federal share of Federal financial
assistance provided to territories under this section shall be
in accordance with section 120(h).

``(c) Technical Assistance.--
``(1) In general.--To continue a long-range highway
development program, the Secretary may provide technical
assistance to the governments of the territories to enable the
territories to, on a continuing basis--
``(A) engage in highway planning;
``(B) conduct environmental evaluations;
``(C) administer right-of-way acquisition and
relocation assistance programs; and
``(D) design, construct, operate, and maintain a
system of arterial and collector highways, including
necessary inter-island connectors.
``(2) Form and terms of assistance.--Technical assistance
provided under paragraph (1), and the terms for the sharing

[[Page 1180]]
119 STAT. 1180

of information among territories receiving the technical
assistance, shall be included in the agreement required by
subsection (e).

``(d) Nonapplicability of Certain Provisions.--
``(1) In general.--Except to the extent that provisions of
chapter 1 are determined by the Secretary to be inconsistent
with the needs of the territories and the intent of the program,
chapter 1 (other than provisions of chapter 1 relating to the
apportionment and allocation of funds) shall apply to funds
authorized to be appropriated for the program.
``(2) Applicable provisions.--The agreement required by
subsection (e) for each territory shall identify the sections of
chapter 1 that are applicable to that territory and the extent
of the applicability of those sections.

``(e) Agreement.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Except as provided in
paragraph (4), none of the funds made available for the program
shall be available for obligation or expenditure with respect to
any territory until the chief executive officer of the territory
enters into an agreement with the Secretary (not later than 1
year after the date of enactment of SAFETEA-LU), providing that
the government of the territory shall--
``(A) implement the program in accordance with
applicable provisions of chapter 1 and subsection (d);
``(B) design and construct a system of arterial and
collector highways, including necessary inter-island
connectors, in accordance with standards that are--
``(i) appropriate for each territory; and
``(ii) approved by the Secretary;
``(C) provide for the maintenance of facilities
constructed or operated under this section in a
condition to adequately serve the needs of present and
future traffic; and
``(D) implement standards for traffic operations and
uniform traffic control devices that are approved by the
Secretary.
``(2) Technical assistance.--The agreement required by
paragraph (1) shall--
``(A) specify the kind of technical assistance to be
provided under the program;
``(B) include appropriate provisions regarding
information sharing among the territories; and
``(C) delineate the oversight role and
responsibilities of the territories and the Secretary.
``(3) Review and revision of agreement.--The agreement
entered into under paragraph (1) shall be reevaluated and, as
necessary, revised, at least every 2 years.
``(4) Existing agreements.--With respect to an agreement
under the section between the Secretary and the chief executive
officer of a territory that is in effect as of the date of
enactment of the SAFETEA-LU--
``(A) the agreement shall continue in force until
replaced by an agreement entered into in accordance with
paragraph (1); and
``(B) amounts made available for the program under
the existing agreement shall be available for obligation

[[Page 1181]]
119 STAT. 1181

or expenditure so long as the agreement, or the existing
agreement entered into under paragraph (1), is in
effect.

``(f) Permissible Uses of Funds.--
``(1) In general.--Funds made available for the program may
be used only for the following projects and activities carried
out in a territory:
``(A) Eligible surface transportation program
projects described in section 133(b).
``(B) Cost-effective, preventive maintenance
consistent with section 116(d).
``(C) Ferry boats, terminal facilities, and
approaches, in accordance with subsections (b) and (c)
of section 129.
``(D) Engineering and economic surveys and
investigations for the planning, and the financing, of
future highway programs.
``(E) Studies of the economy, safety, and
convenience of highway use.
``(F) The regulation and equitable taxation of
highway use.
``(G) Such research and development as are necessary
in connection with the planning, design, and maintenance
of the highway system.
``(2) Prohibition on use of funds for routine maintenance.--
None of the funds made available for the program shall be
obligated or expended for routine maintenance.

``(g) Location of Projects.--Territorial highway projects (other
than those described in paragraphs (1), (3), and (4) of section 133(b))
may not be undertaken on roads functionally classified as local.''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Eligible projects.--Section 103(b) of such title is
amended--
(A) in the heading for paragraph (6) by striking
``Eligible'' and inserting ``State eligible'';
(B) in paragraph (6) by striking subparagraph (P);
and
(C) by adding at the end the following:
``(7) Territory eligible projects.--Subject to approval by
the Secretary, funds set aside for this program under section
104(b)(1) for the National Highway System may be obligated for
projects eligible for assistance under the territorial highway
program under section 215.''.
(2) Funding.--Section 104(b)(1)(A) of such title is amended
by striking ``to the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and
the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands'' and inserting
``for the territorial highway program under section 215''.
(3) Clerical amendment.--The analysis for chapter 2 of such
title is amended by striking the item relating to section 215
and inserting the following:

``215. Territorial highway program.''.

SEC. 1119. FEDERAL LANDS HIGHWAYS.

(a) Federal Share Payable.--
(1) In general.--Section 120(k) of title 23, United States
Code, is amended--
(A) by striking ``Federal-aid highway''; and

[[Page 1182]]
119 STAT. 1182

(B) by striking ``section 104'' and inserting ``this
title or chapter 53 of title 49''.
(2) Technical references.--Section 120(l) of such title is
amended by striking ``section 104'' and inserting ``this title
or chapter 53 of title 49''.

(b) Payments to Federal Agencies for Federal-Aid Projects.--Section
132 of such title is amended--
(1) by striking the first two sentences and inserting the
following:

``(a) In General.--In a case in which a proposed Federal-aid project
is to be undertaken by a Federal agency in accordance with an agreement
between a State and the Federal agency, the State may--
``(1) direct the Secretary to transfer the funds for the
Federal share of the project directly to the Federal agency; or
``(2) make such deposit with, or payment to, the Federal
agency as is required to meet the obligation of the State under
the agreement for the work undertaken or to be undertaken by the
Federal agency.

``(b) Reimbursement.--On execution with a State of a project
agreement described in subsection (a), the Secretary may reimburse the
State, using any available funds, for the estimated Federal share under
this title of the obligation of the State deposited or paid under
subsection (a)(2).''; and
(2) in the last sentence by striking ``Any sums'' and
inserting the following:

``(c) Recovery and Crediting of Funds.--Any sums''.
(c)  Allocations.--Section 202 of such title is amended--
(1) in subsection (a) by striking ``(a) On October 1'' and
all that follows through ``Such allocation'' and inserting the
following:

``(a) Allocation Based on Need.--
``(1)  NOTE: Effective date.  In general.--On October 1 of
each fiscal year, the Secretary shall allocate sums authorized
to be appropriated for the fiscal year for forest development
roads and trails according to the relative needs of the various
national forests and grasslands.
``(2) Planning.--The allocation under paragraph (1)'';
(2) in subsection (d)(2)--
(A) by adding at the end the following:
``(E) Transferred funds.--
``(i)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Not
later than 30 days after the date on which funds
are made available to the Secretary of the
Interior under this paragraph, the funds shall be
distributed to, and available for immediate use
by, the eligible Indian tribes, in accordance with
the formula for distribution of funds under the
Indian reservation roads program.
``(ii) Use of funds.--Notwithstanding any
other provision of this section, funds available
to Indian tribes for Indian reservation roads
shall be expended on projects identified in a
transportation improvement program approved by the
Secretary.''; and
(B) in subsection (d)(3)(A) by striking ``under this
title'' and inserting ``under this chapter and section
125(e)''.

[[Page 1183]]
119 STAT. 1183

(d) Federal Lands Highways Program.--Section 202 of such title is
amended by striking subsection (b) and inserting the following:
``(b) Allocation for Public Lands Highways.--
``(1) Public lands highways.--
``(A)  NOTE: Effective date.  In general.--On
October 1 of each fiscal year, the Secretary shall
allocate 34 percent of the sums authorized to be
appropriated for that fiscal year for public lands
highways among those States having unappropriated or
unreserved public lands, nontaxable Indian lands, or
other Federal reservations, on the basis of need in the
States, respectively, as determined by the Secretary, on
application of the State transportation departments of
the respective States.
``(B) Preference.--In making the allocation under
subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall give preference to
those projects that are significantly impacted by
Federal land and resource management activities that are
proposed by a State that contains at least 3 percent of
the total public land in the United States.
``(2) Forest highways.--
``(A)  NOTE: Effective date.  In general.--On
October 1 of each fiscal year, the Secretary shall
allocate 66 percent of the funds authorized to be
appropriated for public lands highways for forest
highways in accordance with section 134 of the Federal-
Aid Highway Act of 1987 (23 U.S.C. 202 note; 101 Stat.
173).
``(B) Public access to and within national forest
system.--In making the allocation under subparagraph
(A), the Secretary shall give equal consideration to
projects that provide access to and within the National
Forest System, as identified by the Secretary of
Agriculture through--
``(i) renewable resource and land use
planning; and
``(ii) assessments of the impact of that
planning on transportation facilities.''.

(e) BIA Administrative Expenses.--Section 202(d)(2) of such title
(as amended by subsection (c)(2) of this section) is amended by adding
at the end the following:
``(F) Administrative expenses.--
``(i) In general.--Of the funds authorized to
be appropriated for Indian reservation roads,
$20,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $22,000,000 for
fiscal year 2007, $24,500,000 for fiscal year
2008, and $27,000,000 for fiscal year 2009 may be
used by the Secretary of the Interior for program
management and oversight and project-related
administrative expenses.
``(ii) Health and safety assurances.--
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an
Indian tribal government may approve plans,
specifications, and estimates and commence road
and bridge construction with funds made available
for Indian reservation roads under the
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century
(Public Law 105-178) and SAFETEA-LU through a
contract or agreement under the Indian Self-
Determination and Education Assistance Act (25
U.S.C. 450b et seq.) if the Indian tribal
government--

[[Page 1184]]
119 STAT. 1184

``(I) provides assurances in the
contract or agreement that the
construction will meet or exceed
applicable health and safety standards;
``(II) obtains the advance review of
the plans and specifications from a
State-licensed civil engineer that has
certified that the plans and
specifications meet or exceed the
applicable health and safety standards;
and
``(III) provides a copy of the
certification under subclause (I) to the
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Tribal
Government Affairs or the Assistant
Secretary for Indian Affairs, as
appropriate.''.

(f) National Tribal Transportation Facility Inventory.--Section
202(d)(2) of such title (as amended by subsection (e)) is amended by
adding at the end the following:
``(G) National tribal transportation facility
inventory.--
``(i)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Not
later than 2 years after the date of enactment of
the SAFETEA-LU, the Secretary, in cooperation with
the Secretary of the Interior, shall complete a
comprehensive national inventory of transportation
facilities that are eligible for assistance under
the Indian reservation roads program.
``(ii) Transportation facilities included in
the inventory.--For purposes of identifying the
tribal transportation system and determining the
relative transportation needs among Indian tribes,
the Secretary shall include, at a minimum,
transportation facilities that are eligible for
assistance under the Indian reservation roads
program that a tribe has requested, including
facilities that--
``(I) were included in the Bureau of
Indian Affairs system inventory for
funding formula purposes in 1992 or any
subsequent fiscal year;
``(II) were constructed or
reconstructed with funds from the
Highway Trust Funds (other than the Mass
Transit Account) under the Indian
reservation roads program since 1983;
``(III) are owned by an Indian
tribal government; or
``(IV) are community streets or
bridges within the exterior boundary of
Indian reservations, Alaska Native
villages, and other recognized Indian
communities (including communities in
former Indian reservations in Oklahoma)
in which the majority of residents are
American Indians or Alaska Natives; or
``(V) are primary access routes
proposed by tribal governments,
including roads between villages, roads
to landfills, roads to drinking water
sources, roads to natural resources
identified for economic development, and
roads that provide access to intermodal
termini, such as airports, harbors, or
boat landings.
``(iii) Limitation on primary access routes.--
For purposes of this subparagraph, a proposed
primary

[[Page 1185]]
119 STAT. 1185

access route is the shortest practicable route
connecting 2 points of the proposed route.
``(iv) Additional facilities.--Nothing in this
subparagraph shall preclude the Secretary from
including additional transportation facilities
that are eligible for funding under the Indian
reservation roads program in the inventory used
for the national funding allocation if such
additional facilities are included in the
inventory in a uniform and consistent manner
nationally.
``(v) Report to congress.--Not later than 90
days after the date of completion of the inventory
under this subparagraph, the Secretary shall
prepare and submit a report to Congress that
includes the data gathered and the results of the
inventory.''.

(g) Indian Reservation Road Bridges.--Section 202(d)(4) of such
title is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (B)--
(A) by striking ``(B) Reservation.--Of the amounts''
and all that follows through ``to replace,'' and
inserting the following:
``(B) Funding.--
``(i) Authorization of appropriations.--In
addition to any other funds made available for
Indian reservation roads for each fiscal year,
there is authorized to be appropriated from the
Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) $14,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005
through 2009 to carry out planning, design,
engineering, preconstruction, construction, and
inspection of projects to replace,''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following:
``(ii) Availability.--Funds made available to
carry out this subparagraph shall be available for
obligation in the same manner as if such funds
were apportioned under chapter 1.'';
(2) in subparagraph (C) by striking clause (iii) and
inserting the following:
``(iii) be structurally deficient or
functionally obsolete; and''; and
(3) by striking subparagraph (D) and inserting the
following:
``(D) Approval requirement.--
``(i) In general.--Subject to clause (ii), on
request by an Indian tribe or the Secretary of the
Interior, the Secretary may make funds available
under this subsection for preliminary engineering
for Indian reservation road bridge projects.
``(ii) Construction and construction
engineering.--The Secretary may make funds
available under clause (i) for construction and
construction engineering after approval of
applicable plans, specifications, and estimates in
accordance with this title.''.
(4) Contracts and agreements with indian tribes.--Section
202(d) of such title is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``(5) Contracts and agreements with indian tribes.--

[[Page 1186]]
119 STAT. 1186

``(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
chapter for a highway, road, bridge, parkway, or transit
facility program or 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,
design, engineering, construction, and maintenance
relating to the program or project.
``(B) Exclusion of agency participation.--In
accordance with subparagraph (A), all funds for a
program or 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 program or
project to which this chapter 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 tribal
government to carry out a highway, road, bridge,
parkway, or transit program or 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 program or project under
subparagraph (A) shall equal the sum of the funding that
the Indian tribal government would otherwise receive for
the program or project in accordance with the funding
formula established under this subsection and such
additional amounts 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
program or project.
``(F) Eligibility.--
``(i) In general.--Subject to clause (ii),
funds may be made available under subparagraph (A)
to an Indian tribal government for a program or
project in a fiscal year only if the Indian tribal
government requesting such funds demonstrates to
the satisfaction of the Secretary financial
stability and financial management capability
during the 3 fiscal years immediately preceding
the fiscal year for which the request is being
made.
``(ii) Criteria for determining financial
stability and financial management capability.--An
Indian tribal government that had no uncorrected

[[Page 1187]]
119 STAT. 1187

significant and material audit exceptions in the
required annual audit of the Indian tribal
government self-determination contracts or self-
governance funding agreements with any Federal
agency during the 3-fiscal year period referred in
clause (i) shall be conclusive evidence of the
financial stability and financial management
capability for purposes of clause (i).
``(G) Assumption of functions and duties.--An Indian
tribal government receiving funding under subparagraph
(A) for a program or project shall assume all functions
and duties that the Secretary of the Interior would have
performed with respect to a program or project 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 program or 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
program or project under this section if the 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 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.
``(J) Termination of contract or agreement.--On the
date of the termination of a contract or agreement under
this section by an Indian tribal government, the
Secretary shall transfer all funds that would have been
allocated to the Indian tribal government under the
contract or agreement to the Secretary of the Interior
to provide continued transportation services in
accordance with applicable law.''.

(h) Planning and Agency Coordination.--Section 204 of such title is
amended--
(1) in subsection (a)(1) by inserting ``refuge roads,''
after ``parkways,''; and
(2) by striking subsection (b) and inserting the following:

``(b) Use of Funds.--
``(1) In general.--Funds made available for public lands
highways, park roads and parkways, and Indian reservation roads
shall be used by the Secretary and the Secretary of the
appropriate Federal land management agency to pay the cost of--
``(A) transportation planning, research, and
engineering and construction of, highways, roads,
parkways, and transit

[[Page 1188]]
119 STAT. 1188

facilities located on public lands, national parks, and
Indian reservations; and
``(B) operation and maintenance of transit
facilities located on public lands, national parks, and
Indian reservations.
``(2) Contract.--In connection with an activity described in
paragraph (1), the Secretary and the Secretary of the
appropriate Federal land management agency may enter into a
contract or other appropriate agreement with respect to such
activity with--
``(A) a State (including a political subdivision of
a State); or
``(B) an Indian tribe.
``(3) Indian reservation roads.--In the case of an Indian
reservation road--
``(A) Indian labor may be employed, in accordance
with such rules and regulations as may be promulgated by
the Secretary of the Interior, to carry out any
construction or other activity described in paragraph
(1); and
``(B) funds made available to carry out this section
may be used to pay bridge preconstruction costs
(including planning, design, and engineering).
``(4) Federal employment.--No maximum limitation on Federal
employment shall be applicable to construction or improvement of
Indian reservation roads.
``(5) Availability of funds.--Funds made available under
this section for each class of Federal lands highways shall be
available for any transportation project eligible for assistance
under this title that is within or adjacent to, or that provides
access to, the areas served by the particular class of Federal
lands highways.
``(6) Reservation of funds.--The Secretary of the Interior
may reserve funds from administrative funds of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs that are associated with the Indian reservation
roads program to finance Indian technical centers under section
504(b).''.

(i) Maintenance of Indian Reservation Roads.--Section 204(c) of such
title is amended by striking the second and third sentences and
inserting the following: ``Notwithstanding any other provision of this
title, of the amount of funds allocated for Indian reservation roads
from the Highway Trust Fund, not more than 25 percent of the funds
allocated to an Indian tribe may be expended for the purpose of
maintenance, excluding road sealing which shall not be subject to any
limitation. The Bureau of Indian Affairs shall continue to retain
primary responsibility, including annual funding request responsibility,
for road maintenance programs on Indian reservations. The Secretary
shall ensure that funding made available under this subsection for
maintenance of Indian reservation roads for each fiscal year is
supplementary to and not in lieu of any obligation of funds by the
Bureau of Indian Affairs for road maintenance programs on Indian
reservations.''.
(j) Refuge Roads.--Section 204(k)(1) of such title is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (B)--
(A) by striking ``(2), (5),'' and inserting ``(2),
(3), (5),''; and
(B) by striking ``and'' after the semicolon;

[[Page 1189]]
119 STAT. 1189

(2) in subparagraph (C) by striking the period at the end
and inserting a semicolon; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(D) the non-Federal share of the cost of any
project funded under this title or chapter 53 of title
49 that provides access to or within a wildlife refuge;
and
``(E) maintenance and improvement of recreational
trails; except that expenditures on trails under this
subparagraph shall not exceed 5 percent of available
funds for each fiscal year.''.

(k) Tribal-State Road Maintenance Agreements.--Section 204 of such
title is amended by adding at the end the following:
``(l) Tribal-State Road Maintenance Agreements.--
``(1) In general.--An Indian tribe and a State may enter
into a road maintenance agreement under which an Indian tribe
assumes the responsibilities of the State for--
``(A) Indian reservation roads; and
``(B) roads providing access to Indian reservation
roads.
``(2) Tribal-state agreements.--Agreements entered into
under paragraph (1)--
``(A) shall be negotiated between the State and the
Indian tribe; and
``(B) shall not require the approval of the
Secretary.
``(3)  NOTE: Effective date.  Annual report.--Effective
beginning with fiscal year 2005, the Secretary shall prepare and
submit to Congress an annual report that identifies--
``(A) the Indian tribes and States that have entered
into agreements under paragraph (1);
``(B) the number of miles of roads for which Indian
tribes have assumed maintenance responsibilities; and
``(C) the amount of funding transferred to Indian
tribes for the fiscal year under agreements entered into
under paragraph (1).''.

(l) 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.--
``(1)  NOTE: President.  Establishment.--In accordance
with Federal policies promoting Indian self determination, 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
relating to, or having an impact on, projects, programs, or
funding associated with the tribal transportation program.
``(2) Reservation of trust obligations.--
``(A) Responsibility of secretary.--In carrying out
this title, the Secretary shall be responsible to
exercise the trust obligations of the United States to
Indians and

[[Page 1190]]
119 STAT. 1190

Indian tribes to ensure that the rights of a tribe or
individual Indian are protected.
``(B) Preservation of united states
responsibility.--Nothing in this title shall absolve the
United States from any responsibility to Indians and
Indian tribes, including responsibilities derived from
the trust relationship and any treaty, executive order,
or agreement between the United States and an Indian
tribe.''.

(m) 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 $1,000,000 per fiscal year may be used for
signage identifying public hunting and fishing access; and
(3) not to exceed $10,000,000 per fiscal year shall be used
by the Secretary of Agriculture to pay the costs of facilitating
the passage of aquatic species beneath roads in the National
Forest System, including the costs of constructing, maintaining,
replacing, or removing culverts and bridges, as appropriate.

(n)  NOTE: 23 USC 401 note.  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
submit 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)  NOTE: Deadline.  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.

[[Page 1191]]
119 STAT. 1191

(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.

(o) Limitation on Applicability.--The requirements of the January 4,
2005, Federal Highway Administration, a final rule on the implementation
of the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition
policy Act of 1970 (42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.) shall not apply to the
voluntary conservation easement activities of the Department of
Agriculture or the Department of the Interior.

SEC. 1120. PUERTO RICO HIGHWAY PROGRAM.

(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. Puerto Rico highway program

``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall allocate funds made available
to carry out this section for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 to
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico to carry out a highway program in the
Commonwealth.
``(b) Applicability of Title.--Amounts made available by section
1101(a)(14) of the SAFETEA-LU shall be available for obligation in the
same manner as if such funds were apportioned under this chapter.
``(c) Treatment of Funds.--Amounts made available to carry out this
section for a fiscal year shall be administered as follows:
``(1) Apportionment.--For the purpose of imposing any
penalty under this title or title 49, the amounts shall be
treated as being apportioned to Puerto Rico under sections
104(b) and 144, for each program funded under those sections in
an amount determined by multiplying--
``(A) the aggregate of the amounts for the fiscal
year; by
``(B) the ratio that--
``(i) the amount of funds apportioned to
Puerto Rico for each such program for fiscal year
1997; bears to
``(ii) the total amount of funds apportioned
to Puerto Rico for all such programs for fiscal
year 1997.
``(2) Penalty.--The amounts treated as being apportioned to
Puerto Rico under each section referred to in paragraph (1)
shall be deemed to be required to be apportioned to Puerto Rico
under that section for purposes of the imposition of any penalty
under this title or title 49.

``(d) Effect on Allocations and Apportionments.--Subject to
subsection (c)(2), nothing in this section affects any allocation under
section 105 and any apportionment under sections 104 and 144.''.

[[Page 1192]]
119 STAT. 1192

(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for subchapter I of chapter
1 of such title is amended by adding at the end the following:

``165. Puerto Rico highway program.''.

(c)  NOTE: 23 USC 101 note.  Definition of State.--For the
purposes of apportioning funds under sections 104, 105, 130, 144, and
206 of title 23, United States Code, and section 1404, relating to the
safe routes to school program, the term ``State'' means any of the 50
States and the District of Columbia.

SEC. 1121. HOV FACILITIES.

(a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 1 of title 23, United
States Code (as amended by section 1120 of this Act), is amended by
adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 166. 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 two occupants per vehicle may be
required for use of a HOV facility.

``(b) Exceptions.--
``(1)  NOTE: Applicability.  In general.--Notwithstanding
the occupancy requirement of subsection (a)(2), the exceptions
in paragraphs (2) through (5) shall apply with respect to a
State agency operating a HOV facility.
``(2) 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.--
``(i) In general.--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.
``(ii) Acceptance of 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.
``(3) Public transportation vehicles.--The State agency may
allow public transportation vehicles to use the HOV facility if
the agency--
``(A)  NOTE: Guidelines.  establishes requirements
for clearly identifying the vehicles; and
``(B)  NOTE: Procedures.  establishes procedures
for enforcing the restrictions on the use of the
facility by the vehicles.
``(4) 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 the vehicles pay a
toll charged by the agency for use of the facility and the
agency--

[[Page 1193]]
119 STAT. 1193

``(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)  NOTE: Procedures.  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.
``(5) 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 (or successor regulations), and are
labeled in accordance with section 88.312-93 of such
title (or successor regulations), to use the HOV
facility if the agency establishes procedures for
enforcing the restrictions on the use of the facility by
the 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 the 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)  NOTE: Procedures.  establishes
procedures for enforcing the restrictions on the
use of the facility by the vehicles.
``(C) Amount of tolls.--Under subparagraph (B), a
State agency may charge no toll or may charge a toll
that is less than tolls charged under paragraph (3).

``(c) Requirements Applicable to Tolls.--
``(1) In general.--Tolls may be charged under paragraphs (4)
and (5) of subsection (b) 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
paragraphs (4) and (5) of subsection (b) on a HOV facility on
the Interstate System.
``(3) Excess toll revenues.--If a State agency makes a
certification under section 129(a)(3) with respect to toll
revenues collected under paragraphs (4) and (5) of subsection
(b), the State, in the use of toll 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)  NOTE: Certification.  In general.--A State agency
that allows vehicles to use a HOV facility under paragraph (4)
or (5) of subsection (b) 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

[[Page 1194]]
119 STAT. 1194

the facility that provides for continuous monitoring,
assessment, and reporting on the impacts that the
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 the vehicles if the presence of the vehicles
has degraded the operation of the facility.
``(2) Degraded facility.--
``(A) Definition of minimum average operating
speed.--In this paragraph, 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.
``(B) Standard for determining degraded facility.--
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 180-day period during morning or
evening weekday peak hour periods (or both).
``(C) Management of low emission and energy-
efficient vehicles.--In managing the use of HOV lanes by
low emission and energy-efficient vehicles that do not
meet applicable occupancy requirements, a State agency
may increase the percentages described in subsection
(f)(3)(B)(i).

``(e)  NOTE: Deadline.  Certification of Low Emission and Energy-
Efficient Vehicles.--Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment
of this section, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection
Agency shall--
``(1)  NOTE: Regulations.  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 the vehicles; and
``(2)  NOTE: Guidelines.  establish guidelines and
procedures for making the vehicle comparisons and performance
calculations described in subsection (f)(3)(B), in accordance
with section 32908(b) of title 49.

``(f) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions
apply:
``(1) Alternative fuel vehicle.--The term `alternative fuel
vehicle' means a vehicle that is operating 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;

[[Page 1195]]
119 STAT. 1195

``(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, including fuels regulated under
section 490 of title 10, Code of Federal Regulations (or
successor regulations).
``(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 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) is certified by the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency, in consultation with
the manufacturer, to have achieved not less than a 50-
percent increase in city fuel economy or not less than a
25-percent increase in combined city-highway fuel
economy (or such greater percentage of city or city-
highway fuel economy as may be determined by a State
under subsection (d)(2)(C)) relative to a comparable
vehicle that is an internal combustion gasoline fueled
vehicle (other than a vehicle that has propulsion energy
from onboard hybrid sources); or
``(ii) is an alternative fuel vehicle.
``(4) Public transportation vehicle.--The term `public
transportation vehicle' means a vehicle that--
``(A) provides designated public transportation (as
defined in section 221 of the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12141) or provides
public school transportation (to and from public or
private primary, secondary, or tertiary schools); and
``(B)(i) is owned or operated by a public entity;
``(ii) is operated under a contract with a public
entity; or
``(iii) is operated pursuant to a license by the
Secretary or a State agency to provide motorbus or
school vehicle transportation services to the public.
``(5) State agency.--
``(A) In general.--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.
``(B) Inclusion.--The term `State agency' includes a
State transportation department.''.

(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Program efficiencies.--Section 102 of title 23, United
States Code, is amended--
(A) by striking subsection (a); and
(B) by redesignating subsections (b) and (c) as
subsections (a) and (b), respectively.

[[Page 1196]]
119 STAT. 1196

(2) Chapter analysis.--The analysis for such subchapter (as
amended by section 1120 of this Act) is amended by adding at the
end the following:

``166. HOV facilities.''.

(c) 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. 1122. DEFINITIONS.

(a) Transportation Enhancement Activity.--Section 101(a)(35) of
title 23, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(35) Transportation enhancement activity.--The term
`transportation enhancement activity' means, with respect to any
project or the area to be served by the project, any of the
following activities as the activities relate to surface
transportation:
``(A) Provision of facilities for pedestrians and
bicycles.
``(B) Provision of safety and educational activities
for pedestrians and bicyclists.
``(C) Acquisition of scenic easements and scenic or
historic sites (including historic battlefields).
``(D) Scenic or historic highway programs (including
the provision of tourist and welcome center facilities).
``(E) Landscaping and other scenic beautification.
``(F) Historic preservation.
``(G) Rehabilitation and operation of historic
transportation buildings, structures, or facilities
(including historic railroad facilities and canals).
``(H) Preservation of abandoned railway corridors
(including the conversion and use of the corridors for
pedestrian or bicycle trails).
``(I) Inventory, control, and removal of outdoor
advertising.
``(J) Archaeological planning and research.
``(K) Environmental mitigation--
``(i) to address water pollution due to
highway runoff; or
``(ii) reduce vehicle-caused wildlife
mortality while maintaining habitat connectivity.
``(L) Establishment of transportation museums.''.

(b) Advanced Truck Stop Electrification System.--Such section 101(a)
is amended by adding at the end the following:
``(38) Advanced truck stop electrification system.--The term
`advanced truck stop electrification system' means a system that
delivers heat, air conditioning, electricity, or communications
to a heavy duty vehicle.''.

Subtitle B--Congestion Relief

SEC. 1201.  NOTE: 23 USC 303 note.  REAL-TIME SYSTEM MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION PROGRAM.

(a) Establishment.--

[[Page 1197]]
119 STAT. 1197

(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 major highways of the United States 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)  NOTE: Deadline.  Data Exchange Formats.--Not later than 2
years after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall
establish data exchange formats 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.

(c) 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
(b) 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.

(d) 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 relating to the planning and deployment of real-time
monitoring elements that advance the goals and purposes described in
subsection (a).
(e) 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

[[Page 1198]]
119 STAT. 1198

104(b) that are obligated by the State for activities and projects under
this section.
(f) 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.

Subtitle C--Mobility and Efficiency

SEC. 1301.  NOTE: 23 USC 101 note.  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 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 States for projects of national and
regional significance.
(c) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
(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.

[[Page 1199]]
119 STAT. 1199

(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) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such term has
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 State 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 ability of the
project--
(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; and
(C) helps maintain or protect the environment.

[[Page 1200]]
119 STAT. 1200

(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)  NOTE: Deadline.  Regulations.--Not later than 180
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) In general.--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.
(B) Evaluation and rating.--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.

[[Page 1201]]
119 STAT. 1201

(B)  NOTE: Deadline.  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.  NOTE: Records.  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),
1108(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

[[Page 1202]]
119 STAT. 1202

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.
(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.
(m) Designated Projects.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
this section, the Secretary shall allocate for each of fiscal

[[Page 1203]]
119 STAT. 1203

years 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009, from funds made available to
carry out this section, 10 percent, 20 percent, 25 percent, 25 percent,
and 20 percent respectively, of the following amounts for grants to
carry out the following projects under this section:


------------------------------------------------------------------------
No.           State          Project Description         Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.            CA              Bakersfield Beltway System    $140,000,000

2.            VA, WV, OH      Heartland Corridor Project     $90,000,000
including multiple
intermodal facility
improvements and
improvements to
facilitate the movement
of intermodal freight
from VA to OH............

3.            CA              Roadway improvements in        $55,000,000
and around the former
Norton Air Force Base as
part of the Inland Empire
Goods Movement Gateway
project..................

4.            MI              Planning, design, and          $20,000,000
construction of a new
American border plaza at
the Blue Water Bridge in
or near Port Huron, MI...

5.            IL              Construction of O'Hare        $140,000,000
Bypass/Elgin O'Hare
Extension................

6.            WI              Reconstruction of the          $30,000,000
Marquette Interchange,
Milwaukee WI.............

7.            IL              CREATE....................    $100,000,000

8.            OR              I-5 Bridge repair,            $160,000,000
replacement and
associated improvements
in the I-5 corridor......

9.            CA              Alameda Corridor East.....    $125,000,000

10.           IL              Mississippi River Bridge      $150,000,000
and related roads........

11.           CA              Transbay Terminal.........     $27,000,000

12.           NY              Cross Harbor Freight          $100,000,000
Movement Project, New
York.....................

13.           WA              Alaska Way Viaduct and        $100,000,000
Seawall Replacement......

14.           CA              Gerald Desmond/I-710          $100,000,000
Gateway Project..........

15.           CO              Denver's Union Station....     $50,000,000

16.           MN              Union Depot Multimodal         $50,000,000
Transit Facility.........

17.           CA              Sacramento Intermodal           $3,000,000
Station..................

18.           NJ              Liberty Corridor..........    $100,000,000

19.           NM              Relocate the El Paso, TX       $14,000,000
rail yard to Santa Teresa


[[Page 1204]]
119 STAT. 1204


20.           PA              Route 23/US 422                $20,000,000
Interchange Modernization
and Route 363/US 422
Interchange Improvement
Project and U.S. 422
Widening, Montgomery
County, PA...............

21.           PA              Route 28 Widening and          $15,000,000
improvements, Allegheny
County, PA...............

22.           PA              Improvements to I-80,          $15,000,000
Monroe County, PA........

23.           SC              I-73, Construction of I-73     $40,000,000
from Myrtle Beach, SC to
I-95, ending at the North
Carolina State line......

24.           VA              Rail Relocation to route       $15,000,000
164/I-664 rail corridor,
Portsmouth...............

25.           WA              Replacement of the Alaskan    $120,000,000
Way Viaduct and Seawall
in Seattle...............
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 1302.  NOTE: 23 USC 101 note.  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 two 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.

[[Page 1205]]
119 STAT. 1205

(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) Applicability of Title 23.--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; except that such funds shall
remain available until expended, and the Federal share of the cost of a
project under this section shall be determined in accordance with
section 120 of such title.
(d) State Defined.--In this section, the term ``State'' has the
meaning such term has in section 101(a) of title 23, United States Code.
(e) Designated Projects.--The Secretary shall allocate for each of
fiscal years 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009, from funds made available
to carry out this section, 10 percent, 20 percent, 25 percent, 25
percent, and 20 percent respectively, of the following amounts for
grants to carry out the following projects under this section:


------------------------------------------------------------------------
No.           State          Project Description         Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.            TX, AR, MS,     Planning, Design, and          $50,000,000
TN, KY, IN      Construction of I-69 in
TX, LA, AR, MS, TN, KY,
and IN...................

2.            LA              Improvements to Louisiana      $20,000,000
Highway 1 between the
Caminada Bridge and the
intersection of LA
Highway 1 and U.S. 90....

3.            MD              Planning, design, and          $10,000,000
construction of the Inter
County Connector in
Montgomery and Prince
Georges County in
Maryland.................

4.            CA              Centennial Corridor Loop      $330,000,000
in Bakersfield...........

5.            VA              Construction of dedicated     $100,000,000
truck lanes on additional
capacity in I-81 in VA...

6.            CA              Design, Planning and          $100,000,000
Construction of State
Route 178 in Bakersfield.


[[Page 1206]]
119 STAT. 1206


7.            CA              Widening of Rosedale           $60,000,000
Highway between SR 43 and
SR 99 in Bakersfield and
widening of SR 178
between SR 99 and D
street in Bakersfield....

8.            LA              Construction of the 36        $150,000,000
mile segment of I-49 in
LA between the Arkansas
State line and I-220 in
Shreveport...............

9.            AR              Construction of an             $40,000,000
extension of I-530 from
Pine Bluff, Arkansas to
Wilmar, Arkansas to
interstate specifications

10.           IL              Construction of the U.S. I-   $152,000,000
80 to I-88 North-South
Connector in Illinois....

11.           WI              Construction and               $30,000,000
reconstruction of the
U.S. Highway 41 corridor
between Milwaukee and
Green Bay, Wisconsin.....

12.           IL              Construction of Route 34       $55,000,000
Interchange and
improvements in Illinois.

13.           CA              Increase capacity on I-80      $50,000,000
between Sacrament/Placer
County Line and SR 65....

14.           AK              Planning, design, and          $30,000,000
construction of Knik Arm
Bridge...................

15.           IA, IL          Planning, design, right-of-    $15,000,000
way acquisition and
construction of the
Interstate Route 74
bridge from Bettendorf,
Iowa, to Moline, Illinois

16.           AR              Planning, design, and          $20,000,000
construction of the I-49/
Bella Vista Bypass in
Arkansas.................

17.           SC              Planning, design, and          $10,000,000
construction of the I-73
corridor of national
significance in South
Carolina.................

18.           CA              I-405 HOV lane............    $100,000,000

19.           AR              I-69 Corridor, including       $75,000,000
the Great River Bridge...

20.           MN              Falls-to-Falls Corridor...     $50,000,000

21.           DC              Frederick Douglass             $75,000,000
Memorial Bridge..........

22.           CT              Pearl Harbor Memorial          $35,000,000
Bridge...................

23.           IN              I-80 Improvements.........     $10,000,000

24.           CA              State Route 4 East Upgrade     $20,000,000

25.           LA              LA 1 Replacement..........      $5,000,000

26.           AZ              State Route 85 Upgrade....      $3,000,000

27.           WV              I-73/I-74 Corridor........     $50,000,000


[[Page 1207]]
119 STAT. 1207


28.           LA              Construction of I-49 North     $27,500,000
from Shreveport,
Louisiana to Arkansas
State line (I-220 to AR
Line)....................

29.           LA              Transportation                 $27,500,000
improvements to I-49
South....................

30.           OK              Ports to Plain Corridor in     $35,000,000
Oklahoma.................

31.           TN              For design, ROW and           $100,000,000
construction of
Interstate 69............

32.           CO              U.S. 287, Ports-to-Plains       $3,000,000
Corridor.................

33.           OK              State of Oklahoma I-44        $110,000,000
from Riverside to Yale
Avenue in Tulsa..........
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 1303.  NOTE: 23 USC 101 note.  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.--Subject to subsection (d), 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--

[[Page 1208]]
119 STAT. 1208

(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) Projects in Canada or Mexico.--A project in Canada or Mexico,
proposed by a border State to directly and predominantly facilitate
cross-border motor vehicle and cargo movements at an international port
of entry into the border region of the State, may be constructed using
funds apportioned to the State under this section if, before obligation
of those funds, Canada or Mexico, or the political subdivision of Canada
or Mexico that is responsible for the operation of the facility to be
constructed, provides assurances satisfactory to the Secretary that any
facility constructed under this subsection will be--
(1) constructed in accordance with standards equivalent to
applicable standards in the United States; and
(2) properly maintained and used over the useful life of the
facility for the purpose for which the Secretary is allocating
such funds to the project.

(e) Transfer of Funds to the General Services Administration.--
(1) State funds.--At the request of a border State, funds
apportioned to the State under this section may be transferred
to the General Services Administration for the purpose of
funding one or more projects described in subsection (b) if--
(A) the Secretary determines, after consultation
with the transportation department of the border State,
that the General Services Administration should carry
out the project; and
(B) the General Services Administration agrees to
accept the transfer of, and to administer, those funds
in accordance with this section.
(2) Non-federal share.--
(A) In general.--A border State that makes a request
under paragraph (1) shall provide directly to the
General Services Administration, for each project
covered by the request, the non-Federal share of the
cost of the project.

[[Page 1209]]
119 STAT. 1209

(B) No augmentation of appropriations.--Funds
provided by a border State under subparagraph (A)--
(i) shall not be considered to be an
augmentation of the appropriations made available
to the General Services Administration; and
(ii) shall be--
(I) administered, subject to
paragraph (1)(B), in accordance with the
procedures of the General Services
Administration; but
(II) available for obligation in the
same manner as if the funds were
apportioned under chapter 1 of title 23,
United States Code.
(3) Obligation authority.--Obligation authority shall be
transferred to the General Services Administration for a project
in the same manner and amount as the funds provided for the
project under paragraph (1).
(4) Limitation on transfer of funds.--No State may transfer
to the General Services Administration under this subsection an
amount that is more than the lesser of--
(A) 15 percent of the aggregate amount of funds
apportioned to the State under this section for such
fiscal year; or
(B) $5,000,000.

(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, subject to subsection (e), 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 determined in
accordance with section 120 of such title.
(g) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Border region.--The term ``border region'' means any
portion of a border State within 100 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. 1304. HIGH PRIORITY CORRIDORS ON THE NATIONAL HIGHWAY SYSTEM.

(a) Evacuation Routes.--Section 1105(b) of the Intermodal Surface
Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (Public Law 102-240; 105 Stat.
2032) is amended in the first sentence by inserting ``and evacuation
routes'' after ``corridors'' the first place it appears.
(b) Corridors.--Section 1105(c) of the Intermodal Surface
Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (105 Stat. 2032) is amended--

[[Page 1210]]
119 STAT. 1210

(1) by striking paragraph (14) and inserting the following:
``(14) Heartland Expressway from Denver, Colorado, through
Scottsbluff, Nebraska, to Rapid City, South Dakota as follows:
``(A) In the State of Colorado, the Heartland
Expressway Corridor shall generally follow--
``(i) Interstate 76 from Denver to Brush; and
``(ii) Colorado Highway 71 from Limon to the
border between the States of Colorado and
Nebraska.
``(B) In the State of Nebraska, the Heartland
Expressway Corridor shall generally follow--
``(i) Nebraska Highway 71 from the border
between the States of Colorado and Nebraska to
Scottsbluff;
``(ii) United States Route 26 from Scottsbluff
to the intersection with State Highway L62A;
``(iii) State Highway L62A from the
intersection with United States Route 26 to United
States Route 385 north of Bridgeport;
``(iv) United States Route 385 to the border
between the States of Nebraska and South Dakota;
and
``(v) United States Highway 26 from
Scottsbluff to the border of the States of
Nebraska and Wyoming.
``(C) In the State of Wyoming, the Heartland
Expressway Corridor shall generally follow United States
Highway 26 from the border of the States of Nebraska and
Wyoming to the termination at Interstate 25 at
Interchange number 94.
``(D) In the State of South Dakota, the Heartland
Expressway Corridor shall generally follow--
``(i) United States Route 385 from the border
between the States of Nebraska and South Dakota to
the intersection with State Highway 79; and
``(ii) State Highway 79 from the intersection
with United States Route 385 to Rapid City.'';
(2) 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 Salina, 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'';
(3) in paragraph (33) by striking ``I-395'' and inserting
``and including the I-395 corridor'';
(4) 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.'';
(5) by adding at the end the following:
``(46) Interstate Route 710 between the terminus at Long
Beach, California, to California State Route 60.

[[Page 1211]]
119 STAT. 1211

``(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 94 via Interstate Route 894 and Highway 45 near Milwaukee
and Interstate Route 43 near Green Bay in the State of
Wisconsin.
``(58) The Theodore Roosevelt Expressway from Rapid City,
South Dakota, north on United States Route 85 to Williston,

[[Page 1212]]
119 STAT. 1212

North Dakota, west on United States Route 2 to Culbertson,
Montana, and north on Montana Highway 16 to the international
border with Canada at the port of Raymond, Montana.
``(59) The Central North American Trade Corridor from the
border between North Dakota and South Dakota, north on United
States Route 83 through Bismark and Minot, North Dakota, to the
international border with Canada.
``(60) The Providence Beltline Corridor beginning at
Interstate Route 95 in the vicinity of Hope Valley, Rhode
Island, traversing eastwardly intersecting and merging into
Interstate Route 295, continuing northeastwardly along
Interstate Route 95, and terminating at the Massachusetts
border, and including the western bypass of Providence, Rhode
Island, from Interstate Route 295 to the Massachusetts border.
``(61) In the State of Missouri, the corridors consisting of
the following highways:
``(A) Interstate Route 70, from Interstate Route 29/
35 to United States Route 61/Avenue of the Saints.
``(B) Interstate Route 72/United States Route 36,
from the intersection with Interstate Route 29 to United
States Route 61/Avenue of the Saints.
``(C) United States Route 67, from Interstate Route
55 to the Arkansas State line.
``(D) United States Route 65, from United States
Route 36/Interstate Route 72 to the East-West
TransAmerica corridor, at the Arkansas State line.
``(E) United States Route 63, from United States
Route 36 and the proposed Interstate Route 72 to the
East-West TransAmerica corridor, at the Arkansas State
line.
``(F) United States Route 54, from the Kansas State
line to United States Route 61/Avenue of the Saints.
``(62) The Georgia Developmental Highway System Corridors
identified in section 32-4-22 of the Official Code of Georgia,
Annotated.
``(63) The Liberty Corridor, a corridor in an area
encompassing very critical and significant transportation
infrastructure providing regional, national, and international
access through the State of New Jersey, including Interstate
Routes 95, 80, 287, and 78, and United States Routes 1, 3, 9,
17, and 46, and portways and connecting infrastructure.
``(64) The corridor in an area of passage in the State of
New Jersey serving significant interstate and regional traffic,
located near the cities of Camden, New Jersey, and Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, and including Interstate Route 295, United States
Route 42, United States Route 130, and Interstate Route 676.
``(65) The Interstate Route 95 Corridor beginning at the New
York State line and continuing through Connecticut to the Rhode
Island State line.
``(66) The Interstate Route 91 Corridor from New Haven,
Connecticut, to the Massachusetts State line.
``(67) The Fairbanks-Yukon International Corridor consisting
of the portion of the Alaska Highway from the international
border with Canada to the Richardson Highway, and the Richardson
Highway from its junction with the Alaska Highway to Fairbanks,
Alaska.

[[Page 1213]]
119 STAT. 1213

``(68) The Washoe County corridor, along Interstate Route
580/United States Route 95/United States Route 95A, from Reno,
Nevada, to Las Vegas, Nevada.
``(69) The Cross Valley Connector connecting Interstate
Route 5 and State Route 14, Santa Clarita Valley, California.
``(70) The Economic Lifeline corridor, along Interstate
Route 15 and Interstate Route 40, California, Arizona, and
Nevada, including Interstate Route 215 South from near San
Bernadino, California, to Riverside, California, and State Route
91 from Riverside, California, to the intersection with
Interstate Route 15 near Corona, California.
``(71) The High Desert Corridor/E-220 from Los Angeles,
California, to Las Vegas, Nevada, via Palmdale and Victorville,
California.
``(72) The North-South corridor, along Interstate Route 49
North, from Kansas City, Missouri, to Shreveport, Louisiana.
``(73) The Louisiana Highway corridor, along Louisiana
Highway 1, from Grand Isle, Louisiana, to the intersection with
United States Route 90.
``(74) The portion of United States Route 90 from Interstate
Route 49 in Lafayette, Louisiana, to Interstate Route 10 in New
Orleans, Louisiana.
``(75) The Louisiana 28 corridor from Fort Polk to
Alexandria, Louisiana.
``(76) The portion of Interstate Route 75 from Toledo, Ohio,
to Cincinnati, Ohio.
``(77) The portion of United States Route 24 from the
Indiana/Ohio State line to Toledo, Ohio.
``(78) The portion of Interstate Route 71 from Cincinnati,
Ohio, to Cleveland, Ohio.
``(79) Interstate Route 376 from the Pittsburgh Interchange
(I/C No. 56) of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, westward on
Interstate Route 279, United States Route 22, United States
Route 30, and Pennsylvania Route 60, continuing past the
Pittsburgh International Airport on Turnpike Route 60, to the
Pennsylvania Turnpike (Interstate Route 76), Interchange 10, and
continuing north on Pennsylvania Turnpike Route 60 and on United
States Route 422 to Interstate Route 80.
``(80) The Intercounty Connector, a new east-west multimodal
highway between Interstate Route 270 and Interstate Route 95/
United States Route 1 in Montgomery and Prince George's
Counties, Maryland.''; and
(6) by aligning paragraph (45) with paragraph (46) (as added
by paragraph (5)).

(c) Interstate Routes.--Section 1105(e)(5) of the Intermodal Surface
Transporation Efficiency Act of 1991  NOTE: 105 Stat. 2031.  is
amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A) by striking ``and subsection
(c)(45)'' and inserting ``subsection (c)(45), subsection
(c)(54), and subsection (c)(57)'';
(2) by redesignating subparagraphs (B) through (D) as
subparagraphs (C) through (E); and
(3) by inserting after subparagraph (A) the following:
``(B) Interstate route 376.--
``(i) Designation of interstate route 376.--
``(I) In general.--The routes
referred to in subsection (c)(79),
except the portion of Pennsylvania
Turnpike Route 60 and United States
Route

[[Page 1214]]
119 STAT. 1214

422 between Pennsylvania Turnpike
Interchange 10 and Interstate Route 80,
shall be designated as Interstate Route
376.
``(II) Signs.--The State of
Pennsylvania shall have jurisdiction
over the highways described in subclause
(I) (except Pennsylvania Turnpike Route
60) and erect signs in accordance with
Interstate signing criteria that
identify the routes described in
subclause (I) as Interstate Route 376.
``(III) Assistance from secretary.--
The Secretary shall assist the State of
Pennsylvania in carrying out, not later
than December 31, 2008, an activity
under subclause (II) relating to
Interstate Route 376 and in complying
with sections 109 and 139 of title 23,
United States Code.
``(ii) Other segments.--The segment of the
route referred to in subsection (c)(79) located
between the Pennsylvania Turnpike, Interchange 10,
and Interstate Route 80 may be signed as
Interstate Route 376 under clause (i)(II) if that
segment meets the criteria under sections 109 and
139 of title 23, United States Code.''.

(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to carry out, in accordance with title 23, United States
Code, projects on corridors identified in section 1105(c) of the
Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (105 Stat.
2032) such sums as may be necessary.

SEC. 1305.  NOTE: 23 USC 137 note.  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 (as defined in section 101(a) of title 23,
United States Code), 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.

[[Page 1215]]
119 STAT. 1215

(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) Report to Congress.--Not later than 3 years after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to Congress a report
on the results of the pilot program.
(d) 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 $6,250,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
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; 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 determined in accordance with sections 120(b) and 120(c) of
such title.

(e) Treatment of Projects.--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. 1306.  NOTE: 23 USC 103 note.  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 for the Secretary to make grants to States--
(1) to facilitate and support intermodal freight
transportation initiatives at the State and local levels to
relieve congestion and improve safety; and

[[Page 1216]]
119 STAT. 1216

(2) to provide capital funding to address infrastructure and
freight distribution needs at inland ports and intermodal
freight facilities.

(c) Eligible Projects.--Projects for which grants may be made under
this section shall help relieve congestion, improve transportation
safety, facilitate international trade, and encourage public-private
partnership and may include projects for the development and
construction of intermodal freight distribution and transfer facilities
at inland ports.
(d) Selection Process.--
(1) Applications.--A State (as defined in section 101(a) of
title 23, United States Code) shall submit for approval by the
Secretary an application for a grant under this section
containing such information as the Secretary may require to
receive such a grant.
(2) Priority.--In selecting projects for grants, the
Secretary shall give priority to projects that will--
(A) reduce congestion into and out of international
ports located in 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.
(3) Designated projects.--Subject to the provisions of this
section, the Secretary shall allocate for each of fiscal years
2005 through 2009, from funds made available to carry out this
section, 20 percent of the following amounts for grants to carry
out the following projects under this section:
(A) Short-haul intermodal projects, Oregon,
$5,000,000.
(B) The Georgia Port Authority, $5,000,000.
(C) The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach,
California, $5,000,000.
(D) Fairbanks, Alaska, $5,000,000.
(E) Charlotte Douglas International Airport Freight
Intermodal Facility, North Carolina, $5,000,000.
(F) South Piedmont Freight Intermodal Center, North
Carolina, $5,000,000.

(e) Use of Grant Funds.--Funds made available to a recipient of a
grant under this section shall be used by the recipient for the project
described in the application of the recipient approved by the Secretary.
(f) Report.--Not later than 3 years after the date of enactment of
this Act, the Secretary shall submit to Congress a report on the results
of the pilot program carried out under this section.
(g) 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 $6,000,000 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
and shall remain available until expended, and the Federal share
of the cost of a project under this section

[[Page 1217]]
119 STAT. 1217

shall be determined in accordance with section 120 of such
title.

(h) Treatment of Projects.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, projects for which grants are made under this section shall be
treated as projects on a Federal-aid system under chapter 1 of title 23,
United States Code.

SEC. 1307.  NOTE: 23 USC 322 note.  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
one or more States.

(d) Allocation.--Of the amounts made available to carry out this
section for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall allocate 50 percent for
the MAGLEV project between Las Vegas and Primm, Nevada,

[[Page 1218]]
119 STAT. 1218

and 50 percent for a MAGLEV project located east of the Mississippi
River.

SEC. 1308.  NOTE: State listing. 23 USC 101 note.  DELTA REGION
TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--The Secretary shall carry out a program in the 8
States comprising the Delta Region (Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee) to--
(1) support and encourage multistate transportation planning
and corridor development;
(2) provide for transportation project development;
(3) facilitate transportation decisionmaking; and
(4) support transportation construction.

(b) Eligible Recipients.--A State transportation department or
metropolitan planning organization in a Delta Region State may receive
and administer funds provided under the program.
(c) Eligible Activities.--The Secretary shall make allocations under
the program for multistate highway planning, development, and
construction projects.
(d) Other Provisions Regarding Eligibility.--All activities funded
under this program shall be consistent with the continuing, cooperative,
and comprehensive planning processes required by sections 134 and 135 of
title 23, United States Code.
(e) Selection Criteria.--The Secretary shall select projects to be
carried out under the program based on--
(1) whether the project is located--
(A) in an area under the authority of the Delta
Regional Authority; and
(B) on a Federal-aid highway;
(2) endorsement of the project by the State department of
transportation; and
(3) evidence of the ability of the recipient of funds
provided under the program to complete the project.

(f) Program Priorities.--In administering the program, the Secretary
shall--
(1) encourage State and local officials to work together to
develop plans for multimodal and multijurisdictional
transportation decisionmaking; and
(2) give priority to projects that emphasize multimodal
planning, including planning for operational improvements that--
(A) increase the mobility of people and goods;
(B) improve the safety of the transportation system
with respect to catastrophic natural disasters or
disasters caused by human activity; and
(C) contribute to the economic vitality of the area
in which the project is being carried out.

(g) Federal Share.--Amounts provided by the Delta Regional Authority
to carry out a project under this subsection may be applied to the non-
Federal share of the project required by section 120 of title 23, United
States Code.
(h) 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 $10,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009.

[[Page 1219]]
119 STAT. 1219

(2) Contract authority.--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.

SEC. 1309. 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. 1310.  NOTE: 23 USC 111 note.  INTERSTATE OASIS PROGRAM.

(a)  NOTE: Deadline.  In General.--Not later than 180 days after
the date of enactment of this section, in consultation with the States
and other interested parties, the Secretary shall--
(1) establish an interstate oasis program; and
(2)  NOTE: Standards.  after providing an opportunity for
public comment, develop standards for designating, as an
interstate oasis, a facility that--
(A) offers--
(i) products and services to the public;
(ii) 24-hour access to restrooms; and
(iii) parking for automobiles and heavy
trucks; and
(B) meets other standards established by the
Secretary.

(b) Standards for Designation.--The standards for designation under
subsection (a) shall include standards relating to--
(1) the appearance of a facility; and
(2) the proximity of the facility to the Dwight D.
Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways.

(c) Eligibility for Designation.--If a State (as defined in section
101(a) of title 23, United States Code) elects to participate in the
interstate oasis program, any facility meeting the standards established
by the Secretary shall be eligible for designation under this section.
(d) Logo.--The Secretary shall design a logo to be displayed by a
facility designated under this section.

Subtitle D--Highway Safety

SEC. 1401. HIGHWAY SAFETY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.

(a) Safety Improvement.--
(1) In general.--Section 148 of title 23, United States
Code, is amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 148. Highway safety improvement program

``(a) 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 those functional classes of roadway; or
``(B) that will likely have increases in traffic
volume that are likely to create an accident rate for
fatalities

[[Page 1220]]
119 STAT. 1220

and incapacitating injuries that exceeds the statewide
average for those functional classes of roadway.
``(2) Highway safety improvement program.--The term `highway
safety improvement program' means the program carried out under
this section.
``(3) Highway safety improvement project.--
``(A) In general.--The term `highway safety
improvement project' means a project described in the
State strategic highway safety plan that--
``(i) corrects or improves a hazardous road
location or feature; or
``(ii) addresses a highway safety problem.
``(B) Inclusions.--The term `highway safety
improvement project' includes a project for one or more
of the following:
``(i) An intersection safety improvement.
``(ii) Pavement and shoulder widening
(including addition of a passing lane to remedy an
unsafe condition).
``(iii) Installation of rumble strips or
another warning device, if the rumble strips or
other warning devices do not adversely affect the
safety or mobility of bicyclists, pedestrians, and
the disabled.
``(iv) Installation of a skid-resistant
surface at an intersection or other location with
a high frequency of accidents.
``(v) An improvement for pedestrian or
bicyclist safety or safety of the disabled.
``(vi) Construction of any project for the
elimination of hazards at a railway-highway
crossing that is eligible for funding under
section 130, including the separation or
protection of grades at railway-highway crossings.
``(vii) Construction of a railway-highway
crossing safety feature, including installation of
protective devices.
``(viii) The conduct of a model traffic
enforcement activity at a railway-highway
crossing.
``(ix) Construction of a traffic calming
feature.
``(x) Elimination of a roadside obstacle.
``(xi) Improvement of highway signage and
pavement markings.
``(xii) Installation of a priority control
system for emergency vehicles at signalized
intersections.
``(xiii) Installation of a traffic control or
other warning device at a location with high
accident potential.
``(xiv) Safety-conscious planning.
``(xv) Improvement in the collection and
analysis of crash data.
``(xvi) Planning integrated interoperable
emergency communications equipment, operational
activities, or traffic enforcement activities
(including police assistance) relating to workzone
safety.
``(xvii) Installation of guardrails, barriers
(including barriers between construction work
zones

[[Page 1221]]
119 STAT. 1221

and traffic lanes for the safety of motorists and
workers), and crash attenuators.
``(xviii) The addition or retrofitting of
structures or other measures to eliminate or
reduce accidents involving vehicles and wildlife.
``(xix) Installation and maintenance of signs
(including fluorescent, yellow-green signs) at
pedestrian-bicycle crossings and in school zones.
``(xx) Construction and yellow-green signs at
pedestrian-bicycle crossings and in school zones.
``(xxi) Construction and operational
improvements on high risk rural roads.
``(4) Safety project under any other section.--
``(A) In general.--The term `safety project under
any other section' means a project carried out for the
purpose of safety under any other section of this title.
``(B) Inclusion.--The term `safety project under any
other section' includes a project to promote the
awareness of the public and educate the public
concerning highway safety matters (including
motorcyclist safety) and a project to enforce highway
safety laws.
``(5) State highway safety improvement program.--The term
`State highway safety improvement program' means projects or
strategies included in the State strategic highway safety plan
carried out as part of the State transportation improvement
program under section 135(g).
``(6) State strategic highway safety plan.--The term `State
strategic highway safety plan' means a plan developed by the
State transportation department that--
``(A) is developed after consultation with--
``(i) a highway safety representative of the
Governor of the State;
``(ii) regional transportation planning
organizations and metropolitan planning
organizations, if any;
``(iii) representatives of major modes of
transportation;
``(iv) State and local traffic enforcement
officials;
``(v) persons responsible for administering
section 130 at the State level;
``(vi) representatives conducting Operation
Lifesaver;
``(vii) representatives conducting a motor
carrier safety program under section 31102, 31106,
or 31309 of title 49;
``(viii) motor vehicle administration
agencies; and
``(ix) other major State and local safety
stakeholders;
``(B) analyzes and makes effective use of State,
regional, or local crash data;
``(C) addresses engineering, management, operation,
education, enforcement, and emergency services elements
(including integrated, interoperable emergency
communications) of highway safety as key factors in
evaluating highway projects;
``(D) considers safety needs of, and high-fatality
segments of, public roads;

[[Page 1222]]
119 STAT. 1222

``(E) considers the results of State, regional, or
local transportation and highway safety planning
processes;
``(F) describes a program of projects or strategies
to reduce or eliminate safety hazards;
``(G) is approved by the Governor of the State or a
responsible State agency; and
``(H) is consistent with the requirements of section
135(g).

``(b) Program.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall carry out a highway
safety improvement program.
``(2) Purpose.--The purpose of the highway safety
improvement program shall be to achieve a significant reduction
in traffic fatalities and serious injuries on public roads.

``(c) Eligibility.--
``(1) In general.--To obligate funds apportioned under
section 104(b)(5) to carry out this section, a State shall have
in effect a State highway safety improvement program under which
the State--
``(A) develops and implements a State strategic
highway safety plan that identifies and analyzes highway
safety problems and opportunities as provided in
paragraph (2);
``(B) produces a program of projects or strategies
to reduce identified safety problems;
``(C) evaluates the plan on a regular basis to
ensure the accuracy of the data and priority of proposed
improvements; and
``(D)  NOTE: Reports.  submits to the Secretary an
annual report that--
``(i) describes, in a clearly understandable
fashion, not less than 5 percent of locations
determined by the State, using criteria
established in accordance with paragraph
(2)(B)(ii), as exhibiting the most severe safety
needs; and
``(ii) contains an assessment of--
``(I) potential remedies to
hazardous locations identified;
``(II) estimated costs associated
with those remedies; and
``(III) impediments to
implementation other than cost
associated with those remedies.
``(2) Identification and analysis of highway safety problems
and opportunities.--As part of the State strategic highway
safety plan, a State shall--
``(A) have in place a crash data system with the
ability to perform safety problem identification and
countermeasure analysis;
``(B) based on the analysis required by subparagraph
(A)--
``(i) identify hazardous locations, sections,
and elements (including roadside obstacles,
railway-highway crossing needs, and unmarked or
poorly marked roads) that constitute a danger to
motorists (including motorcyclists), bicyclists,
pedestrians, and other highway users; and
``(ii) using such criteria as the State
determines to be appropriate, establish the
relative severity of

[[Page 1223]]
119 STAT. 1223

those locations, in terms of accidents, injuries,
deaths, traffic volume levels, and other relevant
data;
``(C) adopt strategic and performance-based goals
that--
``(i) address traffic safety, including
behavioral and infrastructure problems and
opportunities on all public roads;
``(ii) focus resources on areas of greatest
need; and
``(iii) are coordinated with other State
highway safety programs;
``(D) advance the capabilities of the State for
traffic records data collection, analysis, and
integration with other sources of safety data (such as
road inventories) in a manner that--
``(i) complements the State highway safety
program under chapter 4 and the commercial vehicle
safety plan under section 31102 of title 49;
``(ii) includes all public roads;
``(iii) identifies hazardous locations,
sections, and elements on public roads that
constitute a danger to motorists (including
motorcyclists), bicyclists, pedestrians, the
disabled, and other highway users; and
``(iv) includes a means of identifying the
relative severity of hazardous locations described
in clause (iii) in terms of accidents, injuries,
deaths, and traffic volume levels;
``(E)(i) determine priorities for the correction of
hazardous road locations, sections, and elements
(including railway-highway crossing improvements), as
identified through crash data analysis;
``(ii) identify opportunities for preventing the
development of such hazardous conditions; and
``(iii) establish and implement a schedule of
highway safety improvement projects for hazard
correction and hazard prevention; and
``(F)(i) establish an evaluation process to analyze
and assess results achieved by highway safety
improvement projects carried out in accordance with
procedures and criteria established by this section; and
``(ii) use the information obtained under clause (i)
in setting priorities for highway safety improvement
projects.

``(d) Eligible Projects.--
``(1) In general.--A State may obligate funds apportioned to
the State under section 104(b)(5) to carry out--
``(A) any highway safety improvement project on any
public road or publicly owned bicycle or pedestrian
pathway or trail; or
``(B) as provided in subsection (e), other safety
projects.
``(2) Use of other funding for safety.--
``(A) Effect of section.--Nothing in this section
prohibits the use of funds made available under other
provisions of this title for highway safety improvement
projects.
``(B) Use of other funds.--States are encouraged to
address the full scope of their safety needs and
opportunities by using funds made available under other
provisions of this title (except a provision that
specifically prohibits that use).

[[Page 1224]]
119 STAT. 1224

``(e) Flexible Funding for States With a Strategic Highway Safety
Plan.--
``(1)  NOTE: Certification.  In general.--To further the
implementation of a State strategic highway safety plan, a State
may use up to 10 percent of the amount of funds apportioned to
the State under section 104(b)(5) for a fiscal year to carry out
safety projects under any other section as provided in the State
strategic highway safety plan if the State certifies that--
``(A) the State has met needs in the State relating
to railway-highway crossings; and
``(B) the State has met the State's infrastructure
safety needs relating to highway safety improvement
projects.
``(2) Other transportation and highway safety plans.--
Nothing in this subsection requires a State to revise any State
process, plan, or program in effect on the date of enactment of
this section.

``(f) High Risk Rural Roads.--
``(1) In general.--After making an apportionment under
section 104(b)(5) for a fiscal year beginning after September
30, 2005, the Secretary shall ensure, from amounts made
available to carry out this section for such fiscal year, that a
total of $90,000,000 of such apportionment is set aside by the
States, proportionally according to the share of each State of
the total amount so apportioned, for use only for construction
and operational improvements on high risk rural roads.
``(2) Special rule.--A State may use funds apportioned to
the State pursuant to this subsection for any project under this
section if the State certifies to the Secretary that the State
has met all of State needs for construction and operational
improvements on high risk rural roads.

``(g) Reports.--
``(1) In general.--A State shall submit to the Secretary a
report that--
``(A) describes progress being made to implement
highway safety improvement projects under this section;
``(B) assesses the effectiveness of those
improvements; and
``(C) describes the extent to which the improvements
funded under this section contribute to the goals of--
``(i) reducing the number of fatalities on
roadways;
``(ii) reducing the number of roadway-related
injuries;
``(iii) reducing the occurrences of roadway-
related crashes;
``(iv) mitigating the consequences of roadway-
related crashes; and
``(v) reducing the occurrences of crashes at
railway-highway crossings.
``(2) Contents; schedule.--The Secretary shall establish the
content and schedule for a report under paragraph (1).
``(3)  NOTE: Public information.  Transparency.--The
Secretary shall make reports submitted under subsection
(c)(1)(D) available to the public through--
``(A) the Web site of the Department; and
``(B) such other means as the Secretary determines
to be appropriate.

[[Page 1225]]
119 STAT. 1225

``(4) Discovery and admission into evidence of certain
reports, surveys, and information.--Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, reports, surveys, schedules, lists, or data
compiled or collected for any purpose directly relating to
paragraph (1) or subsection (c)(1)(D), or published by the
Secretary in accordance with paragraph (3), shall not be subject
to discovery or admitted into evidence in a Federal or State
court proceeding or considered for other purposes in any action
for damages arising from any occurrence at a location identified
or addressed in such reports, surveys, schedules, lists, or
other data.

``(h) Federal Share of Highway Safety Improvement Projects.--Except
as provided in sections 120 and 130, the Federal share of the cost of a
highway safety improvement project carried out with funds apportioned to
a State under section 104(b)(5) shall be 90 percent.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The analysis for chapter 1 of such
title is amended by striking the item relating to section 148
and inserting the following:

``148. Highway safety improvement program.''.

(3) Conforming amendments.--
(A) Transfers of apportionments.--Section 104(g) of
such title is amended in the first sentence by striking
``sections 130, 144, and 152 of this title'' and
inserting ``sections 130 and 144''.
(B) Uniform transferability.--Section 126(a) of such
title is amended by inserting ``under'' after ``State's
apportionment''.
(C) Other sections.--Sections 154, 164, and 409 of
such title are amended by striking ``152'' each place it
appears and inserting ``148''.

(b) Apportionment of Highway Safety Improvement Program Funds.--
Section 104(b) of such title (as amended by section 1103 of this Act) is
amended--
(1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by inserting
after ``Improvement program,'' the following: ``the highway
safety improvement program,''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:
``(5) Highway safety improvement program.--
``(A) In general.--For the highway safety
improvement program, in accordance with the following
formula:
``(i) 33\1/3\ percent of the apportionments in
the ratio that--
``(I) the total lane miles of
Federal-aid highways in each State;
bears to
``(II) the total lane miles of
Federal-aid highways in all States.
``(ii) 33\1/3\ percent of the apportionments
in the ratio that--
``(I) the total vehicle miles
traveled on lanes on Federal-aid
highways in each State; bears to
``(II) the total vehicle miles
traveled on lanes on Federal-aid
highways in all States.
``(iii) 33\1/3\ percent of the apportionments
in the ratio that--

[[Page 1226]]
119 STAT. 1226

``(I) the number of fatalities on
the Federal-aid system in each State in
the latest fiscal year for which data
are available; bears to
``(II) the number of fatalities on
the Federal-aid system in all States in
the latest fiscal year for which data
are available.
``(B) Minimum apportionment.--Notwithstanding
subparagraph (A), each State shall receive a minimum of
one-half of 1 percent of the funds apportioned under
this paragraph.''.

(d) Elimination of Hazards Relating to 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.--Before making an apportionment under
section 104(b)(5) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall set
aside, from amounts made available to carry out the highway
safety improvement program under section 148 for such fiscal
year, at least $220,000,000 for the elimination of hazards and
the installation of protective devices at railway-highway
crossings. 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
section for other purposes under this subsection.''.
(2) Apportionment.--Section 130(f) of such title is amended
to read as follows:

``(f) Apportionment.--
``(1) Formula.--Fifty percent of the funds set aside to
carry out this section pursuant to subsection (e)(1) 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 one-half 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 set aside to carry out this
section shall be 90 percent of the cost thereof.''.
(3) Biennial reports to congress.--Section 130(g) of such
title is amended in the third sentence--
(A) by inserting ``and the Committee on Commerce,
Science, and Transportation,'' after ``Public Works'';
and
(B) 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
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).''.

[[Page 1227]]
119 STAT. 1227

(e)  NOTE: 23 USC 148 note.  Transition.--
(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  Implementation.--Except as provided
in paragraph (2), the Secretary shall approve obligations of
funds apportioned under section 104(b)(5) of title 23, United
States Code (as added by subsection (b)), to carry out section
148 of that title, only if, not later than October 1 of the
second fiscal year beginning after the date of enactment of this
Act, a State has developed and implemented a State strategic
highway safety plan as required pursuant to section 148(c) of
that title.
(2) Interim period.--
(A) In general.--Before October 1 of the second
fiscal year after the date of enactment of this Act and
until the date on which a State develops and implements
a State strategic highway safety plan, the Secretary
shall apportion funds to a State for the highway safety
improvement program and the State may obligate funds
apportioned to the State for the highway safety
improvement program under section 148 for projects that
were eligible for funding under sections 130 and 152 of
that title, as in effect on the day before the date of
enactment of this Act.
(B) No strategic highway safety plan.--If a State
has not developed a strategic highway safety plan by
October 1, 2007, the State shall receive for the highway
safety improvement program for each subsequent fiscal
year until the date of development of such plan an
amount that equals the amount apportioned to the State
for that program for fiscal year 2007.

SEC. 1402.  NOTE: Deadline. Regulations. 23 USC 401 note.  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. The regulations may also require such
other worker-safety measures for workers with those duties as the
Secretary determines to be appropriate.

SEC. 1403. 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;

[[Page 1228]]
119 STAT. 1228

(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 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 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 2006.
(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 the funds were apportioned
under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code, except that the
Federal share of the cost of the project shall be 100 percent,
and the funds shall remain available until expended and shall
not be transferable.

SEC. 1404.  NOTE: 23 USC 402 note.  SAFE ROUTES TO SCHOOL PROGRAM.

(a) Establishment.--Subject to the requirements of this section, the
Secretary shall establish and carry out a safe routes to school program
for the benefit of children in primary and middle schools.
(b) Purposes.--The purposes of the program shall be--
(1) to enable and encourage children, including those with
disabilities, to walk and bicycle to school;
(2) 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
(3) 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.

(c) Apportionment of Funds.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraphs (2), (3), and (4),
amounts made available to carry out this section for a fiscal
year shall be apportioned among the States in the ratio that--
(A) the total student enrollment in primary and
middle schools in each State; bears to
(B) the total student enrollment in primary and
middle schools in all States.
(2) Minimum apportionment.--No State shall receive an
apportionment under this section for a fiscal year of less than
$1,000,000.
(3) Set-aside for administrative expenses.--Before
apportioning under this subsection amounts made available to
carry out this section for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall
set aside not more than $3,000,000 of such amounts for the

[[Page 1229]]
119 STAT. 1229

administrative expenses of the Secretary in carrying out this
subsection.
(4) Determination of student enrollments.--Determinations
under this subsection concerning student enrollments shall be
made by the Secretary.

(d) Administration of Amounts.--Amounts apportioned to a State under
this section shall be administered by the State's department of
transportation.
(e) Eligible Recipients.--Amounts apportioned to a State under this
section 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 section.
(f) Eligible Projects and Activities.--
(1) Infrastructure-related projects.--
(A) In general.--Amounts apportioned to a State
under this section may be used for the planning, design,
and construction of infrastructure-related projects that
will substantially improve the ability of students to
walk and bicycle 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.
(B) 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.
(2) Noninfrastructure-related activities.--
(A) In general.--In addition to projects described
in paragraph (1), amounts apportioned to a State under
this section 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.
(B) Allocation.--Not less than 10 percent and not
more than 30 percent of the amount apportioned to a
State under this section for a fiscal year shall be used
for noninfrastructure-related activities under this
subparagraph.
(3) Safe routes to school coordinator.--Each State receiving
an apportionment under this section 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.

(g) Clearinghouse.--
(1)  NOTE: Grants.  In general.--The Secretary shall make
grants to a national nonprofit organization engaged in promoting
safe routes to schools to--
(A) operate a national safe routes to school
clearinghouse;

[[Page 1230]]
119 STAT. 1230

(B) develop information and educational programs on
safe routes to school; and
(C) provide technical assistance and disseminate
techniques and strategies used for successful safe
routes to school programs.
(2) Funding.--The Secretary shall carry out this subsection
using amounts set aside for administrative expenses under
subsection (c)(3).

(h) Task Force.--
(1) 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.
(2) Report.--Not later than March 31, 2006, the Secretary
shall submit to Congress a report containing the results of the
study conducted, and a description of the strategy developed,
under paragraph (1) and information regarding the use of funds
for infrastructure-related and noninfrastructure-related
activities under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (f).
(3) Funding.--The Secretary shall carry out this subsection
using amounts set aside for administrative expenses under
subsection (c)(3).

(i) 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
or activity under this section shall be 100 percent.
(j) Treatment of Projects.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, projects assisted under this subsection shall be treated as
projects on a Federal-aid system under chapter 1 of title 23, United
States Code.
(k) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) 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).
(2) Primary and middle schools.--The term ``primary and
middle schools'' means schools providing education from
kindergarten through eighth grade.

SEC. 1405.  NOTE: 23 USC 401 note.  ROADWAY SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS FOR
OLDER DRIVERS AND PEDESTRIANS.

(a) In General.--The Secretary shall carry out a program to improve
traffic signs and pavement markings in all States (as such term is
defined in section 101 of title 23, United States Code) in a manner
consistent with the recommendations included in the publication of the
Federal Highway Administration entitled ``Guidelines and Recommendations
to Accommodate Older Drivers and Pedestrians (FHWA-RD-01-103)'' and
dated October 2001.
(b) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of a project
carried out under this section shall be determined in accordance with
section 120 of title 23, United States Code.

[[Page 1231]]
119 STAT. 1231

(c) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be
appropriated such sums as may be necessary to carry out this section for
each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009.

SEC. 1406. SAFETY INCENTIVE GRANTS FOR USE OF SEAT BELTS.

Section 157(g)(1) of title 23, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``2004, and'' and all that follows through ``2005'' and
inserting ``2004, and $112,000,000 for fiscal year 2005''.

SEC. 1407. 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)  NOTE: Deadline.  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
by striking ``2004, and'' and inserting ``2004, and $110,000,000 for
fiscal year 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.

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

(a) Update of Implementation Guidance.--The Secretary, in
cooperation with the American Association of State Highway and
Transportation Officials, shall update as appropriate the August 28,
1998, Federal Highway Administration Policy on Implementation of the
report of the Transportation Research Board

[[Page 1232]]
119 STAT. 1232

of the National Research Council entitled ``NCHRP Report 350-Recommended
Procedures for the Safety Performance Evaluation of Highway Features''.
(b)  NOTE: Publication.  Guidance.--The Secretary, in cooperation
with the Association, shall publish updated guidance regarding the
conditions under which States, when choosing to improve or replace
highway features on the National Highway System, should improve or
replace such features with highway features that have been tested,
evaluated, and found to be acceptable under the guidelines of the report
referred to in subsection (a).

(c) Matters To Be Considered.--Guidance published in accordance with
subsection (a)--
(1) shall address those highway features that are covered by
the guidelines in the report referred to in subsection (b); and
(2) shall consider types of highway features, cost-
effectiveness, and practicality of replacement with highway
features that have been found to be acceptable under the report
guidelines to determine conditions when such features should be
used.

SEC. 1409. WORK ZONE SAFETY GRANTS.

(a)  NOTE: 23 USC 401 note.  In General.--The Secretary shall
establish and implement a work zone safety grant program under which the
Secretary may make grants to nonprofit organizations and not-for-profit
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 2006
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.

[[Page 1233]]
119 STAT. 1233

``(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,
however, when 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 of a day the worker is employed on the
project. Where 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 and shall be
excluded from the calculation of wages.
``(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 road
miles or more from the international airport in
Fairbanks, Anchorage, or Juneau, Alaska, as the case may
be, 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
road miles of the midpoint of the project for at least
12 consecutive months prior to the award of the
project.''.

SEC. 1410.  NOTE: 23 USC 401 note.  NATIONAL WORK ZONE SAFETY
INFORMATION CLEARINGHOUSE.

(a) Grants.--The Secretary shall make grants for fiscal years 2006
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
2006 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

[[Page 1234]]
119 STAT. 1234

out using such funds shall be 100 percent, and such funds shall remain
available until expended and shall not be transferable.

SEC. 1411.  NOTE: 23 USC 402 note.  ROADWAY SAFETY.

(a) Road Safety.--
(1)  NOTE: Contracts.  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 2006 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)
$300,000 for fiscal year 2005 and $500,000 for each of fiscal
years 2006 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. 1412. IDLING REDUCTION FACILITIES IN INTERSTATE RIGHTS-OF-WAY.

Section 111 of title 23, United States Code, is amended by adding at
the end the following:
``(d) Idling Reduction Facilities in Interstate Rights-of-Way.--
``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding subsection (a), a State
may--
``(A) permit electrification or other idling
reduction facilities and equipment, for use by motor
vehicles used for commercial purposes, to be placed in
rest and recreation

[[Page 1235]]
119 STAT. 1235

areas, and in safety rest areas, constructed or located
on rights-of-way of the Interstate System in the State,
so long as those idling reduction measures do not reduce
the existing number of designated truck parking spaces
at any given rest or recreation area; and
``(B) charge a fee, or permit the charging of a fee,
for the use of those parking spaces actively providing
power to a truck to reduce idling.
``(2) Purpose.--The exclusive purpose of the facilities
described in paragraph (1) (or similar technologies) shall be to
enable operators of motor vehicles used for commercial
purposes--
``(A) to reduce idling of a truck while parked in
the rest or recreation area; and
``(B) to use installed or other equipment
specifically designed to reduce idling of a truck, or
provide alternative power for supporting driver comfort,
while parked.''.

Subtitle E--Construction and Contract Efficiency

SEC. 1501. PROGRAM EFFICIENCIES.

(a) Advance Construction.--Section 115 of title 23, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
(2) by striking subsections (a) and (b) and inserting the
following:

``(a) In General.--The Secretary may authorize a State to proceed
with a project authorized under this title--
``(1) without the use of Federal funds; and
``(2) in accordance with all procedures and requirements
applicable to the project other than those procedures and
requirements that limit the State to implementation of a
project--
``(A) with the aid of Federal funds previously
apportioned or allocated to the State; or
``(B) with obligation authority previously allocated
to the State.

``(b) Obligation of Federal Share.--The Secretary, on the request of
a State and execution of a project agreement, may obligate all or a
portion of the Federal share of a project authorized to proceed under
this section from any category of funds for which the project is
eligible.''.
(b) Obligation and Release of Funds.--Section 118(d) of such title
is amended to read as follows:
``(d) Obligation and Release of Funds.--
``(1) In general.--Funds apportioned or allocated to a State
for a purpose for any fiscal year shall be considered to be
obligated if a sum equal to the total of the funds apportioned
or allocated to the State for that purpose for that fiscal year
and previous fiscal years is obligated.
``(2) Released funds.--Any funds released by the final
payment for a project, or by modifying the project agreement for
a project, shall be--
``(A) credited to the same class of funds previously
apportioned or allocated to the State for the project;
and

[[Page 1236]]
119 STAT. 1236

``(B) immediately available for obligation.
``(3) Net obligations.--Notwithstanding any other provision
of law (including a regulation), obligations recorded against
funds made available under this subsection shall be recorded and
reported as net obligations.''.

SEC. 1502.  NOTE: 23 USC 114 note.  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--

[[Page 1237]]
119 STAT. 1237

(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 1
year 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 $5,000,000, 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 one 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, to the maximum extent possible,
shall approve at least 1 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.

[[Page 1238]]
119 STAT. 1238

(7) Maximum number of projects.--The maximum number of
projects for which the Secretary may allocate funds under this
subsection in a fiscal year is 15.

(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)  NOTE: Procedures.  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.--Except as otherwise provided in this
section, 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 in section 101(a) of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 1503. DESIGN BUILD.

Section 112(b)(3) of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subparagraph (D) as subparagraph (E);
and
(2) by striking subparagraph (C) and inserting the
following:
``(C) Qualified projects.--A qualified project
referred to in subparagraph (A) is a project under this
chapter (including intermodal projects) for which the
Secretary has approved the use of design-build
contracting under criteria specified in regulations
issued by the Secretary.
``(D)  NOTE: Deadline. Regulations.  Regulatory
process.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, the Secretary shall issue
revised regulations under section 1307(c) of the
Transportation Equity Act for 21st Century (23 U.S.C.
112 note; 112 Stat. 230) that--

[[Page 1239]]
119 STAT. 1239

``(i) do not preclude a State transportation
department or local transportation agency, prior
to compliance with section 102 of the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332),
from--
``(I) issuing requests for
proposals;
``(II) proceeding with awards of
design-build contracts; or
``(III) issuing notices to proceed
with preliminary design work under
design-build contracts;
``(ii) require that the State transportation
department or local transportation agency receive
concurrence from the Secretary before carrying out
an activity under clause (i); and
``(iii) preclude the design-build contractor
from proceeding with final design or construction
of any permanent improvement prior to completion
of the process under such section 102.''.

Subtitle F--Finance

SEC. 1601. TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE FINANCE AND INNOVATION ACT
AMENDMENTS.

(a) Definitions.--Section 181 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (3) by striking ``category'' and ``offered
into the capital markets'';
(2) by striking paragraph (7) and redesignating paragraphs
(8) through (15) as paragraphs (7) through (14), respectively;
(3) in paragraph (8) (as redesignated by paragraph (2) of
this subsection)--
(A) in subparagraph (B) by striking the period at
the end and inserting a semicolon; and
(B) by striking subparagraph (D) and inserting the
following:
``(D) a project that--
``(i) is a project--
``(I) for a public freight rail
facility or a private facility providing
public benefit for highway users;
``(II) for an intermodal freight
transfer facility;
``(III) for a means of access to a
facility described in subclause (I) or
(II);
``(IV) for a service improvement for
a facility described in subclause (I) or
(II) (including a capital investment for
an intelligent transportation system);
or
``(V) that comprises a series of
projects described in subclauses (I)
through (IV) with the common objective
of improving the flow of goods;
``(ii) may involve the combining of private
and public sector funds, including investment of
public funds in private sector facility
improvements; and
``(iii) if located within the boundaries of a
port terminal, includes only such surface
transportation infrastructure modifications as are
necessary to facilitate direct intermodal
interchange, transfer, and access into and out of
the port.''; and

[[Page 1240]]
119 STAT. 1240

(4) in paragraph (10) (as redesignated by paragraph (2) of
this subsection) 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, 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)(A)(ii) by striking ``50'' and inserting
``33\1/3\'';
(4) in paragraph (3)(B) by striking ``$30,000,000'' and
inserting ``$15,000,000''; and
(5) 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 subparagraph (A) by inserting ``of any
project selected under section 602'' after ``costs'';
(B) by striking the semicolon at the end of
subparagraph (B) and all that follows through ``under
section 182.'' and inserting ``of any project selected
under section 602; or''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following:
``(C) to refinance long-term project obligations or
Federal credit instruments if such refinancing provides
additional funding capacity for the completion,
enhancement, or expansion of any project that--
``(i) is selected under section 602; or
``(ii) otherwise meets the requirements of
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--

[[Page 1241]]
119 STAT. 1241

(A) in paragraph (2)--
(i) by inserting ``the lesser of'' after
``exceed''; and
(ii) by inserting ``or, if the secured loan
does not receive an investment grade rating, the
amount of the senior project obligations'' after
``costs'';
(B) in paragraph (3)(A)(i) by inserting ``that also
secure the senior project obligations'' after
``sources''; and
(C) in paragraph (4) by striking ``marketable''.
(4) Repayment.--Section 183(c) of such title is amended--
(A) by striking paragraph (3);
(B) by redesignating paragraphs (4) and (5) as
paragraphs (3) and (4), respectively;
(C) in paragraph (3)(A) (as redesignated by
subparagraph (B) of this paragraph) by striking ``during
the 10 years''; and
(D) in subparagraph (3)(B)(ii) (as so redesignated)
by striking ``loan'' and all that follows and inserting
``loan.''.

(e) Lines of Credit.--
(1) Terms and limitations.--Section 184(b) of such title is
amended--
(A) by striking paragraph (2) and inserting the
following:
``(2) Maximum amounts.--The total amount of the line of
credit shall not exceed 33 percent of the reasonably anticipated
eligible project costs.'';
(B) in paragraph (3) by striking ``, any debt
service reserve fund, and any other available reserve''
and inserting ``but not including reasonably required
financing reserves'';
(C) 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'';
(D) in paragraph (5)(A)(i) by inserting ``that also
secure the senior project obligations'' after
``sources''; and
(E) in paragraph (6) by striking ``line of credit''
and inserting ``full amount of the line of credit, to
the extent not drawn upon,''.
(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 ``to 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 instruments made available under this
subchapter.
``(b) Fees.--

[[Page 1242]]
119 STAT. 1242

``(1) In general.--The Secretary may collect and spend fees,
contingent upon authority being provided in appropriations Acts,
at a level that is sufficient to cover--
``(A) the costs of services of expert firms retained
pursuant to subsection (d); and
``(B) all or a portion of the costs to the Federal
Government of servicing the Federal credit instruments.

``(c) Servicer.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary may appoint a financial
entity to assist the Secretary in servicing the Federal credit
instruments.
``(2) Duties.--The servicer shall act as the agent for the
Secretary.
``(3) Fee.--The servicer shall receive a servicing fee,
subject to approval by the Secretary.

``(d) Assistance From Expert Firms.--The Secretary may retain the
services of 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. Funding

``(a) 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 subchapter $122,000,000 for each of
fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
``(2) Availability.--Amounts made available to carry out
this chapter shall remain available until expended.
``(3) Administrative costs.--From funds made available to
carry out this chapter, the Secretary may use, for the
administration of this subchapter, not more than $2,200,000 for
each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009.

``(b) Contract Authority.--
``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, approval by the Secretary of a Federal credit instrument
that uses funds made available under this subchapter shall
impose upon the United States a contractual obligation to fund
the Federal credit investment.
``(2) Availability.--Amounts authorized under this section
for a fiscal year shall be available for obligation on October 1
of the fiscal year.''.

(h) Dates for Submission of Reports.--Section 189 of such title is
amended--
(1) by striking the section designation and heading and
inserting the following:

``Sec. 189. Reports to Congress'';

(2) by striking ``Not later than 4 years after the date of
enactment of this subchapter,'' and inserting ``On June 1, 2006,
and every 2 years thereafter,''; and
(3) by striking ``subchapter'' each place it appears and
inserting ``chapter (other than section 610)''.

[[Page 1243]]
119 STAT. 1243

(i) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 1 of such title is
amended by striking the item relating to section 185 and inserting the
following:

``185. Program administration.''.

SEC. 1602. STATE INFRASTRUCTURE BANKS.

(a) In General.--Subchapter II of chapter 1 of title 23, United
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 190. 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.
``(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.
``(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.

[[Page 1244]]
119 STAT. 1244

``(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.
``(c) Interstate Compacts.--
``(1) In general.--Congress grants consent to two or more of
the States, entering into a cooperative agreement under
subsection (a) with the Secretary for the establishment by such
States of a multistate 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.

``(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.

[[Page 1245]]
119 STAT. 1245

``(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 relating 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;

[[Page 1246]]
119 STAT. 1246

``(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)  NOTE: Deadline.  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)  NOTE: Deadline.  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)  NOTE: Reports. Deadline.  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.

``(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.

``(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 amended--
(A) by striking the section designator and heading
and inserting the following:

[[Page 1247]]
119 STAT. 1247

``Sec. 181. Generally applicable provisions'';

(B) by striking ``In this subchapter'' and inserting
the following:

``(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 amended by inserting ``and chapter 1'' after ``this
chapter''.
(3) Section 183.--Section 183(a)(3) of such title is amended
by striking ``182(b)(2)(B)'' and inserting ``602(b)(2)(B)''.
(4) Section 184.--Section 184 of such title is 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  NOTE: 23 USC 181-183, 185-188.  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. Funding.
``609. Reports to Congress.
``610. 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--

[[Page 1248]]
119 STAT. 1248

(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.  NOTE: 23 USC 118 note.  USE OF EXCESS FUNDS AND FUNDS FOR
INACTIVE PROJECTS.

(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Eligible funds.--
(A) In general.--The term ``eligible funds'' means
excess funds or inactive funds for a specific
transportation project or activity that were--
(i) allocated before fiscal year 1991; and
(ii) designated in a public law, or a report
accompanying a public law, for allocation for the
specific surface transportation project or
activity.
(B) Inclusion.--The term ``eligible funds'' includes
funds described in subparagraph (A) that were allocated
and designated for a demonstration project.
(2) Excess funds.--The term ``excess funds'' means--
(A) funds obligated for a specific transportation
project or activity that remain available for the
project or activity after the project or activity has
been completed or canceled; or
(B) an unobligated balance of funds allocated for a
transportation project or activity that the State in
which the project or activity was to be carried out
certifies are no longer needed for the project or
activity.
(3) Inactive funds.--The term ``inactive funds'' means--
(A) an obligated balance of Federal funds for an
eligible transportation project or activity against
which no expenditures have been charged during any 1-
year period beginning after the date of obligation of
the funds; and
(B) funds that are available to carry out a
transportation project or activity in a State, but, as
certified by the State, are unlikely to be advanced for
the project or activity during the 1-year period
beginning on the date of certification.

(b) Availability for STP Purposes.--Eligible funds shall be--
(1) made available in accordance with this section to the
State that originally received the funds; and
(2) available for obligation for any eligible purpose under
section 133 of title 23, United States Code.

(c) Retention for Original Purpose.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary may determine that eligible
funds identified as inactive funds shall remain available for
the purpose for which the funds were initially made available if
the applicable State certifies that the funds are necessary for
that initial purpose.
(2) Report.--A certification provided by a State under
paragraph (1) shall include a report on the status of, and

[[Page 1249]]
119 STAT. 1249

an estimated completion date for, the project that is the
subject of the certification.

(d) Authority to Obligate.--Notwithstanding the original source or
period of availability of eligible funds, the Secretary may, on the
request by a State--
(1) obligate the funds for any eligible purpose under
section 133 of title 23, United States Code; or
(2)(A) deobligate the funds; and
(B) reobligate the funds for any eligible purpose under that
section.

(e) Applicability.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), this section
applies only to eligible funds.
(2) Discretionary allocations; section 125 projects.--This
section does not apply to funds that are--
(A) allocated at the discretion of the Secretary and
for which the Secretary has the authority to withdraw
the allocation for use on other projects; or
(B) made available to carry out projects under
section 125 of title 23, United States Code.

(f) Period of Availability; Title 23 Requirements.--
(1) In general.--Notwithstanding the original source or
period of availability of eligible funds obligated, or
deobligated and reobligated, under subsection (d), the eligible
funds--
(A) shall remain available for obligation for a
period of 3 fiscal years after the fiscal year in which
this Act is enacted; and
(B) except as provided in paragraph (2), shall be
subject to the requirements of title 23, United States
Code, that apply to section 133 of that title, including
provisions relating to Federal share.
(2) Exception.--With respect to eligible funds described in
paragraph (1)--
(A) section 133(d) of title 23, United States Code,
shall not apply; and
(B) the period of availability of the eligible funds
shall be determined in accordance with this section.

(g) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of
this Act, and annually thereafter, the Secretary shall submit to the
Committee on Environment and Public Works of the Senate and the
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives a report describing any action taken by the Secretary
under this section.
(h) Sense of Congress Regarding Use of Eligible Funds.--It is the
sense of Congress that eligible funds made available under this Act or
title 23, United States Code, should be available for obligation for
transportation projects and activities in the same geographic region for
which the eligible funds were initially made available.

SEC. 1604. TOLLING.

(a) Value Pricing Pilot Program.--Section 1012(b)(8) of the
Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (23 U.S.C. 149
note; 105 Stat. 1938) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as
subparagraphs (C) and (D), respectively; and

[[Page 1250]]
119 STAT. 1250

(2) by inserting before subparagraph (C) (as redesignated by
paragraph (1)) the following:
``(A) In general.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary from the Highway Trust
Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) to carry out
this subsection--
``(i) for fiscal year 2005, $11,000,000; and
``(ii) for each of fiscal years 2006 through
2009, $12,000,000.
``(B) Set-aside for projects not involving highway
tolls.--Of the amounts made available to carry out this
subsection, $3,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available only for congestion
pricing pilot projects that do not involve highway
tolls.''.

(b)  NOTE: 23 USC 129 note.  Express Lanes Demonstration
Program.--
(1) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following
definitions apply:
(A) Eligible toll facility.--The term ``eligible
toll facility'' includes--
(i) a facility in existence on the date of
enactment of this Act that collects tolls;
(ii) a facility in existence on the date of
enactment of this Act that serves high occupancy
vehicles;
(iii) a facility modified or constructed after
the date of enactment of this Act to create
additional tolled lane capacity (including a
facility constructed by a private entity or using
private funds); and
(iv) in the case of a new lane added to a
previously non-tolled facility, only the new lane.
(B) Nonattainment area.--The term ``nonattainment
area'' has the meaning given that term in section 171 of
the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7501).
(2) Demonstration program.--Notwithstanding sections 129 and
301 of title 23, United States Code, the Secretary shall carry
out 15 demonstration projects during the period of fiscal years
2005 through 2009 to permit States, public authorities, or a
public or private entities designated by States, to collect a
toll from motor vehicles at an eligible toll facility for any
highway, bridge, or tunnel, including facilities on the
Interstate System--
(A) to manage high levels of congestion;
(B) to reduce emissions in a nonattainment area or
maintenance area; or
(C) to finance the expansion of a highway, for the
purpose of reducing traffic congestion, by constructing
one or more additional lanes (including bridge, tunnel,
support, and other structures necessary for that
construction) on the Interstate System.
(3) Limitation on use of revenues.--
(A) Use.--
(i) In general.--Toll revenues received under
paragraph (2) shall be used by a State, public
authority, or private entity designated by a
State, for--
(I) debt service;
(II) a reasonable return on
investment of any private financing;

[[Page 1251]]
119 STAT. 1251

(III) the costs necessary for proper
operation and maintenance of any
facilities under paragraph (2)
(including reconstruction, resurfacing,
restoration, and rehabilitation); or
(IV) if the State, public authority,
or private entity annually certifies
that the tolled facility is being
adequately operated and maintained, any
other purpose relating to a highway or
transit project carried out under title
23 or 49, United States Code.
(B) Requirements.--
(i) Variable price requirement.--A facility
that charges tolls under this subsection may
establish a toll that varies in price according to
time of day or level of traffic, as appropriate to
manage congestion or improve air quality.
(ii) HOV variable pricing requirement.--The
Secretary shall require, for each high occupancy
vehicle facility that charges tolls under this
subsection, that the tolls vary in price according
to time of day or level of traffic, as appropriate
to manage congestion or improve air quality.
(iii) HOV passenger requirements.--Pursuant to
section 166 of title 23, United States Code, a
State may permit motor vehicles with fewer than
two occupants to operate in high occupancy vehicle
lanes as part of a variable toll pricing program
established under this subsection.
(C) Agreement.--
(i) In general.--Before the Secretary may
permit a facility to charge tolls under this
subsection, the Secretary and the applicable
State, public authority, or private entity
designated by a State shall enter into an
agreement for each facility incorporating the
conditions described in subparagraphs (A) and (B).
(ii) Termination.--An agreement under clause
(i) shall terminate with respect to a facility
upon the decision of the State, public authority,
or private entity designated by a State to
discontinue the variable tolling program under
this subsection for the facility.
(iii) Debt.--If there is any debt outstanding
on a facility at the time at which the decision is
made to discontinue the program under this
subsection with respect to the facility, the
facility may continue to charge tolls in
accordance with the terms of the agreement until
such time as the debt is retired.
(D) Limitation on federal share.--The Federal share
of the cost of a project on a facility tolled under this
subsection, including a project to install the toll
collection facility shall be a percentage, not to exceed
80 percent, determined by the applicable State.
(4) Eligibility.--To be eligible to participate in the
program under this subsection, a State, public authority, or
private entity designated by a State shall provide to the
Secretary--
(A) a description of the congestion or air quality
problems sought to be addressed under the program;
(B) a description of--

[[Page 1252]]
119 STAT. 1252

(i) the goals sought to be achieved under the
program; and
(ii) the performance measures that would be
used to gauge the success made toward reaching
those goals; and
(C) such other information as the Secretary may
require.
(5) Automation.--Fees collected from motorists using an
express lane shall be collected only through the use of noncash
electronic technology that optimizes the free flow of traffic on
the tolled facility.
(6) Interoperability.--
(A)  NOTE: Regulations. Deadline.  In general.--
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of
this Act, the Secretary shall promulgate a final rule
specifying requirements, standards, or performance
specifications for automated toll collection systems
implemented under this section.
(B) Development.--In developing that rule, which
shall be designed to maximize the interoperability of
electronic collection systems, the Secretary shall, to
the maximum extent practicable--
(i) seek to accelerate progress toward the
national goal of achieving a nationwide
interoperable electronic toll collection system;
(ii) take into account the use of noncash
electronic technology currently deployed within an
appropriate geographical area of travel and the
noncash electronic technology likely to be in use
within the next 5 years; and
(iii) seek to minimize additional costs and
maximize convenience to users of toll facility and
to the toll facility owner or operator.
(7) Reporting.--
(A)  NOTE: Public information.  In general.--The
Secretary, in cooperation with State and local agencies
and other program participants and with opportunity for
public comment, shall--
(i) develop and publish performance goals for
each express lane project;
(ii) establish a program for regular
monitoring and reporting on the achievement of
performance goals, including--
(I) effects on travel, traffic, and
air quality;
(II) distribution of benefits and
burdens;
(III) use of alternative
transportation modes; and
(IV) use of revenues to meet
transportation or impact mitigation
needs.
(B) Reports to congress.--The Secretary shall submit
to the Committee on Environment and Public Works of the
Senate and the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives--
(i) not later than 1 year after the date of
enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter, a
report that describes in detail the uses of funds
under this subsection in accordance with paragraph
(8)(D); and
(ii) not later than 3 years after the date of
enactment of this Act, and every 3 years
thereafter, a report

[[Page 1253]]
119 STAT. 1253

that describes any success of the program under
this subsection in meeting congestion reduction
and other performance goals established for
express lane programs.

(c)  NOTE: 23 USC 129 note.  Interstate System Construction Toll
Pilot Program.--
(1) 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.
(2) Limitation on number of facilities.--The Secretary may
permit the collection of tolls under this section on three
facilities on the Interstate System.
(3) 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:
(A) An identification of the facility on the
Interstate System proposed to be a toll facility.
(B) In the case of a facility that affects a
metropolitan area, an assurance that the metropolitan
planning organization designated under section 134 or
135 for the area has been consulted concerning the
placement and amount of tolls on the facility.
(C) 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.
(D) A facility management plan that includes--
(i) a plan for implementing the imposition of
tolls on the facility;
(ii) a schedule and finance plan for the
construction of the facility using toll revenues;
(iii) a description of the public
transportation agency that will be responsible for
implementation and administration of the pilot
program;
(iv) 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
(v) such other information as the Secretary
may require.
(4) Selection criteria.--The Secretary may approve the
application of a State under paragraph (3) only if the Secretary
determines that--
(A) the State's analysis under paragraph (3)(C) is
reasonable;
(B) the State plan for implementing tolls on the
facility takes into account the interests of local,
regional, and interstate travelers;
(C) the State plan for construction of the facility
using toll revenues is reasonable;
(D) the State will develop, manage, and maintain a
system that will automatically collect the tolls; and

[[Page 1254]]
119 STAT. 1254

(E) 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.
(5)  NOTE: Contracts.  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--
(A) excessive congestion;
(B) pavement wear; and
(C) an increased incidence of traffic accidents,
injuries, or fatalities.
(6)  NOTE: Contracts.  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--
(A) all toll revenues received from operation of the
toll facility will be used only for--
(i) debt service;
(ii) reasonable return on investment of any
private person financing the project; and
(iii) 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
(B) regular audits will be conducted to ensure
compliance with subparagraph (A) and the results of such
audits will be transmitted to the Secretary.
(7) 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.
(8) 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.
(9) 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.

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 to read as follows:
``(a) Authorization of High Priority Projects.--

[[Page 1255]]
119 STAT. 1255

``(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to carry out
high priority projects with funds made available to carry out
the high priority projects program under this section.
``(2) Availability of funds.--
``(A) For tea-21.--Of amounts made available to
carry out this section for fiscal years 1998 through
2003, the Secretary, subject to subsection (b), shall
make available to carry out each project described in
section 1602 of the Transportation Equity Act for the
21st Century the amount listed for such project in such
section.
``(B) For safetea-lu.--Of amounts made available to
carry out this section for fiscal years 2005 through
2009, the Secretary, subject to subsection (b), shall
make available to carry out each project described in
section 1702 of the SAFETEA-LU the amount listed for
such project in such section.
``(3) Availability of unallocated funds.--Any amounts made
available to carry out such program that are not allocated for
projects described in such section shall be available to the
Secretary, subject to subsection (b), to carry out such other
high priority projects as the Secretary determines
appropriate.''.

(b) Allocation Percentages.--Section 117(b) of such title is amended
to read as follows:
``(b) For TEA-21.--For each project to be carried out with funds
made available to carry out the high priority projects program under
this section for fiscal years 1998 through 2003--
``(1) 11 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 1998;
``(2) 15 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 1999;
``(3) 18 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 2000;
``(4) 18 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 2001;
``(5) 19 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 2002; and
``(6) 19 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 2003.

``(c) For SAFETEA-LU.--For each project to be carried out with funds
made available to carry out the high priority projects program under
this section for fiscal years 2005 through 2009--
``(1) 20 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 2005;
``(2) 20 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 2006;
``(3) 20 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 2007;
``(4) 20 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 2008; and
``(5) 20 percent of such amount shall be available for
obligation beginning in fiscal year 2009.''.

(c) Advance Construction.--Section 117(e) of such title is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by inserting after ``21st Century'' the
following: ``or section 1701 of the SAFETEA-LU, as the case may
be,''; and

[[Page 1256]]
119 STAT. 1256

(2) by striking ``section 1602 of the Transportation Equity
Act for the 21st Century.'' and inserting ``such section 1602 or
1702, as the case may be.''

(d) Availability of Obligation Limitation.--Section 117(g) of such
title is amended by inserting after ``21st Century'' the following: ``or
section 1102(g) of the SAFETEA-LU, as the case may be''.
(e) Federal-State Relationship.--Section 145(b) of such title is
amended--
(1) by inserting after ``described in'' the following:
``section 1702 of the SAFETEA-LU,'';
(2) by inserting after ``for such projects by'' the
following: ``section 1101(a)(16) of the SAFETEA-LU,''; 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)(16) of this
Act) for fiscal years 2005 through 2009 to carry out each such project:

Highway Projects  High Priority Projects
------------------------------------------------------------------------
No.           State         Project Description          Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1              CA            Construct safe access to           $400,000
streets for bicyclists and
pedestrians including
crosswalks, sidewalks and
traffic calming measures,
Covina....................
2              CA            Develop and implement ITS          $800,000
master plan in Anaheim....
3              TN            Improve circuitry on                $47,200
vehicle protection device
installed at highway/RR
crossing in Athens, TN....
4              CA            Builds a pedestrian bridge       $1,960,000
from Hiller Street to the
Bay Trail, Belmont........
5              OH            Renovate and expand              $2,750,000
National Packard Museum
and adjacent historic
Packard facilities........
6              IL            Land acquisition for the         $4,000,000
widening of Rt. 47 in
Yorkville, IL.............
7              NE            Interstate 80 Interchange        $1,600,000
at Pflug Road, Sarpy
County, Nebraska..........
8              TX            Construction of Segment #1       $1,600,000
of Morrison Road for the
City of Brownsville.......
9              MI            I-96 at Latson Road              $4,800,000
Interchange improvements..
10             IL            Preconstruction and                $800,000
Construction of IL 83 at
IL 132....................
11             TN            Add third lane on U.S. 27        $4,800,000
(State Route 29) 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         $600,000
from the Manistee Bascule
Bridge to Lincoln Street
in the City of Manistee...
13             AR            Bentonville, Arkansas--          $1,420,000
Widen and improve I-540
and SH 102 Interchange....
14             WA            Interstate 5 and 41st            $3,180,000
Street/Broadway
Interchange and Arterial
Improvement Project,
Everett...................

[[Page 1257]]
119 STAT. 1257


15             CA            Reconstruct and deep-lift        $4,000,000
asphalt on various roads
throughout the district in
Santa Barbara County......
16             OK            Improving the I-35               $1,600,000
Interchange at Milepost 1
Near Thackerville.........
17             NJ            Laurel Avenue Bridge               $800,000
replacement in Holmdel
Township..................
18             OH            Construct overpass over CSX        $448,000
Railroad on Columbia Road
(State Route 252), Olmsted
Falls.....................
19             TN            Reconstruct and widen U.S.         $800,000
72 from south of State
Route 175 to State Route
57, Shelby County.........
20             NY            Construct roundabout at            $380,000
Oregon Road--Westbrook
Drive--Red Mill Road in
Town of Cortlandt.........
21             IL            Construct Bike, Pedestrian         $320,000
Paths, Orland Hills.......
22             PA            Construct I-79/Rte 3025            $920,000
missing ramps at Jackson
Township, PA..............
23             NY            John Street Extension-           $2,000,000
Lehigh Station Road to
Bailey Road in the Town of
Henrietta.................
24             TX            Extension of SH 349 to U.S.      $2,000,000
87 Relief Route in Dawson
County....................
25             IL            Parking facility in Peoria,        $800,000
IL........................
26             IL            Construct Interchange on        $17,500,000
Interstate 255/Davis Ferry
Road, Dupo................
27             MN            Construction and right-of-       $3,200,000
way acquisition for
interchange at TH 65 and
TH 242 in Blaine, MN......
28             CA            Huntington Beach, Remove           $400,000
off-ramp on I-405 at Beach
Blvd. Construct fourth
lane on I-405 North, at
the Beach Blvd.
interchange...............
29             TN            Addition of an interchange       $2,400,000
on I-40 in Roane County at
Buttermilk Road and I-40..
30             NY            Purchase Three Ferries and      $15,000,000
Establish System for Ferry
Service from Rockaway
Peninsula to Manhattan....
31             IL            Reconstruction of                $1,600,000
Mockingbird Lane and
Stratford St, Granite City
32             FL            Construction a new multi-          $400,000
lane tunnel below 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             $720,000
Baltimore Trail and
Implementation of
Pedestrian Improvements
Along Associated Roadways.
34             TN            Removal and Reconfiguration      $2,400,000
of Interstate Ramps/I-40..
35             CA            Replace structurally unsafe      $1,600,000
Winters Bridge for
vehicles, bicycles and
pedestrians between Yolo
and Solano Counties.......
36             IL            City of Havana, Illinois           $762,058
Upgrades to Broadway
Street....................
37             MN            Construction of Gitchi-Gami        $900,000
State Trail from Cascade
River to Grand Marais.....
38             LA            Develop master                     $400,000
transportation plan for
the New Orleans Regional
Medical Center............

[[Page 1258]]
119 STAT. 1258


39             VA            Final Design and                   $800,000
Construction for
improvements at I-64 and
City Line Road, Virginia
Beach and Chesapeake......
40             MA            Replacement of Cross Street        $800,000
Bridge spanning flood
prone Aberjona River,
Winchester................
41             NC            Construction of and              $8,800,000
improvement to I-73, I-74,
and U.S. 220 in Montgomery
and Randolph Counties, NC.
42             IA            Access and transportation        $1,600,000
enhancements to access
Lake Belva Deer, Sigourney
43             CA            Roadway surface                    $640,000
improvements, street
lighting, and storm drain
improvements to South
Center Street from
Baughman Road to State
Route 78/86, Westmorland..
44             TX            Construct two connectors         $1,800,000
between SH 288 and Beltway
8.........................
45             NY            Implement Central NY             $1,600,000
highway grade crossing and
grade separation project..
46             CA            Douglas St. Improvements,        $3,200,000
El Segundo................
47             MA            Reconstruction of                $1,600,000
Massachusetts Avenue
including safety
improvements and related
pedestrian, bike way in
Arlington.................
48             NY            Reconstruction of Rt. 5, 8,        $800,000
12 (North South Arterial)
Burrstone Rd. to Oriskany
Circle, City of Utica.....
49             OK            Construction of Norman           $1,600,000
highway-rail Grade
Separation................
50             PA            Construction of the Montour      $1,600,000
Trail, Great Allegheny
Passage...................
51             CA            Route 1 San Pedro Creek          $2,500,000
Bridge replacement in
Pacifica..................
52             MI            South Lyon, 2nd St. between        $100,000
Warren and Haggadorn......
53             PA            Street improvements,             $1,600,000
Abington Township.........
54             IA            Study of a direct link to I-       $400,000
80, Pella.................
55             TN            Knoxville, TN Cessna Rd.            $76,800
Improving At-Grade highway-
railroad Crossings........
56             OR            Construct bike/pedestrian          $440,000
path, Powers..............
57             IL            IL 29 from IL 6 to I-180--       $1,600,000
Phase 2 study and land
acquisition...............
58             FL            Construct a new bridge at          $800,000
Indian Street, Martin
County....................
59             GA            Improve sidewalks, upgrade         $400,000
lighting, and add
landscaping in downtown
Glennville................
60             LA            Continue planning and            $1,520,000
construction of the 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       $2,400,000
gutter improvements on Hwy
33 in Kearney.............
62             TX            The SH 146, Port Rd. direct     $10,560,000
connectors allows traffic
bypass several rail lines
and traffic signals at,
near intersection of SH
146 and Port Rd...........
63             UT            Reconstruct South Moore Cut-     $7,500,000
off Road in Emery County..
64             PA            Improvements to exits along      $6,560,000
Interstate 81 in Franklin
County, PA--Antrim Road...

[[Page 1259]]
119 STAT. 1259


65             OH            Plan and construct the           $4,480,000
Southeast Arterial
Connector highway at
Delaware, Ohio............
66             TN            To construct transportation      $6,400,000
enhancements on a multi-
faceted greenway in
downtown Columbia on the
Duck River................
67             RI            New Interchange constructed      $4,640,000
from I-195 to Taunton and
Warren Avenue in East
Providence................
68             NY            Town of Chester                     $64,000
reconstruction of Walton
Lake Estates subdivision
and related roads.........
69             NC            Extend M.L. King, Jr.,           $1,600,000
Boulevard in Monroe.......
70             NY            Town of Fishkill Old               $260,400
Glenham Road (aka
Washington Ave.)
reconstruction............
71             PA            U.S. Route 13 Corridor           $4,000,000
Reconstruction,
Redevelopment and
Beautification, Bucks
County....................
72             NY            Rochester and Southern           $1,464,000
Highway-Rail Grade
Crossing Bypass, Silver
Springs, New York.........
73             IL            Upgrade streets in the City        $800,000
of Rushville, IL..........
74             MO            Construct 2 lanes on             $1,600,000
Chouteau Trafficway from
MO 210 to I-35............
75             AZ            U.S. 60 to Gonzalez Pass...      $3,040,000
76             LA            Interstate lighting system         $240,000
(I-10 and LA 93)..........
77             ............  ...........................              $0
78             WA            SR 704 Cross-Base Highway,       $1,200,000
Spanaway Loop Road to SR 7
79             NY            Village of Brewster Main           $780,000
Street and Route 6 related
construction and
improvements..............
80             PA            Design and construct             $4,544,000
relocation of U.S. 11
between Ridge Hill and
Hempt Roads...............
81             VA            Improve Route 42 (Main             $400,000
Street) in Bridgewater,
Virginia..................
82             NY            Construction of Route 59         $1,000,000
Palisades Interstate
Parkway to Route 303......
83             IL            Improve University Drive,          $400,000
Macomb....................
84             CA            Adams Street Rehabilitation        $310,400
Project, Glendale.........
85             NY            Construct grade separation-      $1,160,000
interchange between
Taconic Parkway and
Pudding Street............
86             IA            Construction of 100th St.          $800,000
interchange on I-35/I-80,
Urbandale.................
87             MO            Lewis and Clark Expressway.      $1,600,000
88             PA            Mercer County, PA I-79 and       $2,400,000
PA 208 Interchange
Improvement Project.......
89             WA            Plan to relieve traffic            $440,000
until North-South freeway
Hwy 2.....................
90             CA            San Diego River Multiuse           $400,000
Bicycle and Pedestrian
Path......................
91             PA            Construction of the              $9,120,000
Lafayette Street extension
project in Montgomery
County, PA................
92             NJ            Construct new ramps between      $4,000,000
I-295 and Route 42........
93             PA            Construct SR 29 Wal-mart to      $1,360,000
River Betterment, Eaton
Tunkhannock, Wyoming
County....................
94             WV            Construct Shawnee Parkway..        $880,000
95             FL            Improve pedestrian and             $480,000
bicycle sidewalks,
lighting, and ADA ramps--
Main Street, Canal Street,
Miramar...................
96             MN            Reconstruct CSAH 19 from           $160,000
CSAH 36 to CSAH 2,
Morrison County...........

[[Page 1260]]
119 STAT. 1260


97             TN            Develop trails, bike paths         $200,000
and recreational
facilities on Bird
Mountain, Morgan County
for Cumberland Trail State
Park......................
98             MN            Lyndale Avenue Bridge,          $13,000,000
Richfield.................
99             MI            Provide a bypass around the         $80,000
Village of Almont during M-
53 reconstruction which is
contiguous with Macomb
County....................
100            NY            Town of Wallkill new               $800,000
construction road-tunnel
under Rt. 17..............
101            NY            Village of Cold Spring Main        $656,000
Street and ancillary road
and sidewalk improvements.
102            IL            West Ridge Nature Preserve,      $2,800,000
Chicago...................
103            TN            Widen Campbell Station Road      $1,440,000
in Knoxville, TN..........
104            AL            Widen Hwy 84 to 4 lanes          $4,800,000
west of I-65 from
Evergreen to Monroeville
and beyond to the State of
AL line...................
105            MS            Widen State Highway 57 from      $4,800,000
I-10 through Vancleave....
106            WA            Widening SR 527 from 2           $1,200,000
lanes to 5 from Bothell to
Mill Creek................
107            TX            Paving of County Roads 3230      $1,000,000
and 3240 connecting FM
1158 to FM 1159 Northeast
of Clarksville, TX........
108            MI            Construct improvements to        $3,520,000
Finkbeiner Road from
Patterson Road to
Whitneyville Road in Barry
County, and new bridge
over Thornapple River.....
109            PA            York Road improvements from      $1,000,000
Horsham Road to Summit
Avenue, Borough of Hatboro
110            OH            Construct Highland Road            $489,600
pedestrian path and
intersection improvements
at Highland and Bishop
Roads in the City of
Highland Heights, OH......
111            WI            Reconstruct Wisconsin State      $2,400,000
Highway 21 at I-94
interchange...............
112            MN            Safety improvements and          $1,440,000
intersection enhancements
of TH 95 and TH 169,
Princeton.................
113            NY            Wading River Bicycle and           $960,000
Pedestrian Project in
Riverhead.................
114            FL            Widen County Line Road (CR       $4,800,000
578) from Suncoast Parkway
to U.S. 41 to four lanes..
115            IL            Improve Great River Road,          $600,000
Warsaw....................
116            WA            SR 518 3rd lane                  $1,600,000
construction, King County.
117            FL            Construct East Central             $800,000
Regional Rail Trail in
Volusia County, Florida...
118            MO            Y Highway U.S. 71 to MO 58,      $1,600,000
Cass County...............
119            WY            WYO 59 Reconstruction......      $1,600,000
120            LA            Plan and construct bike/         $3,200,000
pedestrian crossings of
Washington-Palmetto Canal
in the vicinity of Xavier
University, New Orleans...
121            NC            Winston-Salem Northern           $4,000,000
Beltway, Eastern Section
and Extension, NC.........
122            CA            Willow and Herndon Traffic         $240,000
Flow Improvements, City of
Clovis, California........
123            MO            U.S. 71 at Y Highway North       $1,600,000
and Southbound Ramps......

[[Page 1261]]
119 STAT. 1261


124            CA            Will add landscaping             $2,320,000
enhancements along the
Ronald Reagan Freeway
Route 118 for aesthetic
purposes..................
125            NC            Widens U.S. 29 Business          $8,000,000
Freeway Drive from South
Scales St. to NC 14 in
Rockingham County.........
126            PA            Widening, rechannelization,        $640,000
signalization to 2nd Ave.
and Bates street, replace
Elisa Furnace bridge over
Bates Street..............
127            KS            Resurfacing, grading,              $627,200
replacing guardrails and
adding shoulders to Old
Highway 77 in Geary
County, to accommodate
expected traffic increase.
128            MO            Widening, curb and gutter        $2,400,000
improvements on Hwy 92 as
part of Hwy 33
redevelopment project in
Kearney...................
129            IL            Construct streetscape along      $1,600,000
Morse avenue from Clark
street to Sheridan road,
Chicago...................
130            SC            Build extension of North         $5,600,000
Rhett Boulevard from
Liberty Hall Road to U.S.
176 in SC.................
131            NH            Construct and upgrade              $800,000
intersection of Route 3
and Franklin Industrial
Drive in Franklin.........
132            GA            Construct Waycross East          $2,560,000
Bypass from U.S. 84 in
Pierce County, Georgia to
U.S. 1 in Ware County,
Georgia...................
133            NY            Design and Construction of       $1,200,000
a transportation
enhancement project at the
Erie Canal Aqueduct in
downtown Rochester........
134            CA            Improvement of intersection        $400,000
at Balboa Blvd. and San
Fernando Rd...............
135            TN            Impove Vehicle Efficiencies         $79,200
at highway At-Grade
Railroad Crossing in
Athens, TN................
136            WI            Develop pedestrian and bike      $1,680,000
connections that link to
Hank Aaron State Trail in
Milwaukee.................
137            AK            Keystone Drive Road              $1,000,000
Improvements..............
138            GA            Pedestrian and streetscape         $250,000
improvements, Ellaville...
139            NY            Construct and improve            $1,600,000
pedestrian access on Main
Street in Hempstead.......
140            IL            Preconstruction activities       $1,600,000
IL 336 from Macomb to
Peoria....................
141            OH            Purchase of right-of-ways          $400,000
for construction of
pedestrian and bicycle
improvements in the City
of Aurora, OH.............
142            IL            Replacement of bridge on           $800,000
Harlem Avenue, The Village
of River Forest...........
143            CA            State Route 86S and Ave. 66      $3,600,000
highway safety grade
separation................
144            IL            Construct Bissel Street            $800,000
Roadway Connector, Tri-
City Regional Port
District..................
145            CT            Improve Route 1 between          $1,600,000
East Avenue and Belden
Avenue, Norwalk, CT.......
146            IA            Central IA Trail Loop,             $800,000
bicycle and pedestrian,
Ankeny to Woodward section
147            MI            Chippewa County, Upgrade           $800,000
Tilson Road between M-28
South to intersection of M-
48 at Rudyard.............

[[Page 1262]]
119 STAT. 1262


148            WA            Coal Creek Parkway Bridge          $800,000
Replacement, Newcastle WA.
149            PA            Complete gaps in the               $600,000
Pittsburgh Riverfront
Trail Network including
the Hot Metal Bridge......
150            TX            Construct passing lanes on         $797,000
Texas State Highway 16 in
Atascosa County...........
151            TX            Construct street and               $250,000
drainage improvements to
road system in Encinal....
152            MN            Environmental assessment         $1,600,000
and right of-way-
acquisition at U.S. 52 and
CSAH 24 Interchange,
Cannon Falls, Goodhue
Cnty, MN..................
153            NY            Planning and design,             $8,000,000
construction, and related
relocations for approaches
to Peace Bridge
Development Project,
Buffalo...................
154            MN            Construct recreational           $1,300,000
visitor center on the
Mesabi Trail, City of
Virginia..................
155            NE            Engineering, right-of-way          $400,000
and construction of the
23rd Street Viaduct in
Fremont, Nebraska.........
156            MN            Phase III of Devil Track         $1,200,000
Road Project, Cook County.
157            ME            Relocation of southbound on-     $1,500,000
ramp to I-95 at Exit 184,
Bangor....................
158            MA            Construct access roads to        $1,600,000
Hospital Hill project in
Northampton, MA...........
159            IN            Construct interchange for        $2,400,000
146th St. and I-69,
Hamilton County, Indiana..
160            NY            Design and construct a             $950,000
bicycle and pedestrian
walkway along the
decommissioned Putnam Rail
Line......................
161            AK            False Pass Road                  $3,000,000
construction from small
boat harbor dock to
airport and town..........
162            IL            Improve North Illinois St.       $5,000,000
and related roads,
Belleville................
163            AR            Construction of I-49,           $17,000,000
Highway 71: Arkansas
portion of Bella Vista
Bypass....................
164            NM            Coors--I-40 Interchange         $15,600,000
Reconstruction,
Albuquerque...............
165            GA            Extend the south Toccoa          $2,320,000
Bypass east of Toccoa to
CR 311, four lanes for
approximately 5.7 miles on
new location..............
166            TX            Construct SH 183 from SH         $1,600,000
360 to Belt Line Road in
Irving, Texas.............
167            CA            Construct pedestrian,              $240,000
bicycle and ADA accessible
boardwalks at the Pismo
Beach Promenade in San
Luis Obispo County........
168            TX            SH 44 E of Alice near SH         $1,600,000
359 to U.S. 281, Jim Wells
County....................
169            AR            Conway Western Loop--For           $400,000
engineering, rights-of-
way, relocations, and
continued planning and
design....................
170            PA            For design, land and ROW           $800,000
acquisition, and
construction of a parking
facility and associated
activities in the City of
Wilkes-Barre..............
171            TN            Hawkins County, Tennessee          $800,000
SR 31 reconstruction......
172            WI            Reconstruct U.S. Highway         $1,000,000
41--STH 67 interchange
(Dodge County, Wisconsin).

[[Page 1263]]
119 STAT. 1263


173            MA            Reconstruct Route 24/Route      $13,000,000
140 Interchange, replace
bridge and ramps, widen
and extend acceleration
and deceleration lanes....
174            OR            Study landslides on U.S.         $1,000,000
Highway 20 between
Cascadia and Santiam Pass
to develop long-term
repair strategy...........
175            MS            Upgrade Alex Gates Road and      $1,400,000
Walnut Road in Quitman
County, and roads in
Falcon, Sledge and Lambert
176            IL            Upgrades for Muller Road in        $224,000
the City of Washington, IL
177            AL            Construction of Valleydale       $4,720,000
Road Flyover and widening
and improvements from U.S.
31 to I-65 (Shelby County
Rd. 17)...................
178            MS            Upgrade roads in Beauregard        $800,000
(U. S. Hwy 51), Dentville-
Jack Rd. near Crystal
Springs, and Hazelhurst
(U.S. Highway 51 and I-
55), Copiah County........
179            NY            Westchester County, NY             $520,000
Rehabilitation of June
Road Town of North Salem..
180            CA            Implement streetscape              $960,000
improvements on segments
of Laurel Canyon Blvd. and
Victory Blvd. in North
Hollywood.................
181            OH            Construct loop road along        $6,960,000
U.S. 23 in City of
Fostoria, Seneca County...
182            PA            Design, engineering, ROW         $1,600,000
acquisition, and
construction of street
improvements, parking,
safety enhancements, and
roadway redesign in
Nanticoke.................
183            LA            Improve Ralph Darden               $280,000
Memorial Parkway Between
LA 182 and Martin Luther
King, Jr., Road, St. Mary
Parish....................
184            CA            Reconstruct segments of          $2,000,000
Hollister Avenue between
San Antonio Road and State
Route 154 in Santa Barbara
County....................
185            NY            Reconstruction of Schenck        $4,000,000
Avenue from Jamaica Avenue
to Flatlands Avenue,
Brooklyn..................
186            CO            Construct Wadsworth              $1,600,000
Interchange over U.S. 36
in Broomfield.............
187            NY            Enhance Battery Park             $1,600,000
Bikeway Perimeter, New
York City.................
188            FL            I-95 Interchange in the         $11,400,000
City of Boca Raton........
189            NJ            Construct Long Valley              $800,000
Bypass....................
190            MI            Alpena County, Resurface           $512,000
3.51 miles of Hamilton and
Wessel Roads..............
191            CA            Construct a 2.8 mile             $2,000,000
bikeway along Lambert Road
from Mills Ave., to Valley
Home Ave., in the City of
Whittier, CA..............
192            TX            Hidalgo County Loop........        $800,000
193            ME            Improvements to Route 108        $1,500,000
to enhance access to
business park, Rumford....
194            NY            Installation of new turning        $340,000
lane from Mohansic Ave.
onto eastbound Route 202
and addition of new
striped crosswalk.........
195            NY            Rockland County Hudson           $1,600,000
River Greenway Trail
Project construction......
196            TX            Construct a segment of FM        $1,000,000
110 in San Marcos.........

[[Page 1264]]
119 STAT. 1264


197            TX            Big Spring, TX Construction      $7,320,000
of the Big Spring Reliever
Route.....................
198            NY            Improvements to Intermodal       $2,240,000
Transportation Facility
and Construction of
Waterfront Esplanade at
Fort Totten...............
199            PA            Reconstruction and repair          $240,000
of Haverford Ave. Between
68th St. and Lansdowne Ave
200            ND            Bismarck/Mandan Liberty         $24,000,000
Memorial Bridge over the
Missouri River............
201            WI            City of Glendale, WI.            $2,400,000
Develop and rehabilitate
exit ramps on I-43, and
improvements at West
Silver Spring Drive and
North Port Washington Rd..
202            TX            Construction of Lake Ridge       $2,800,000
and U.S. 67 Project, Cedar
Hill, TX..................
203            NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety
including in the vicinity
of PS K277................
204            WI            Resurface U.S. 8 between           $880,000
CTH C and Monico..........
205            PA            South Phila. Access Rd.          $2,400,000
Design and construction of
port access road from
South Phila Port and
intermodal facilities,
Philadelphia..............
206            NY            Implement ITS system and           $100,000
apparatus to 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-    $13,600,000
way and completion of four
lane extension from the
Town of Somerset to the
Maryland border...........
208            WI            Expand U.S. 41 between           $1,600,000
Oconto and Peshtigo,
Wisconsin (Oconto and
Marinette Counties,
Wisconsin)................
209            IA            Study for NE Beltway, Polk         $400,000
Co........................
210            NY            This project involves a          $1,920,000
full reconstruction of all
the streets in Long Island
City surrounding 11th
Street....................
211            AZ            Upgrade and Widen SR 85 to       $1,200,000
I-10 (Mileposts 120-141)..
212            MS            Upgrade Dog Pen Road,              $840,000
Galilee Road, and Holmes
County Bridge in Holmes
County, and roads in
Cruger, Pickens, and
Goodman...................
213            GA            U.S. 19/SR 92 median work        $1,200,000
from Ellis Rd. to West
Taylor ST, Griffin........
214            MS            Upgrade roads at Coahoma         $1,200,000
Community College, and
roads in Coahoma and
Jonestown, Coahoma County.
215            IN            Construction of Dixon Road         $400,000
from Markland Avenue to
Judson Road in Kokomo,
Indiana...................
216            CA            Construction of Cross            $4,000,000
Valley Connector between I-
5 and SR 14...............
217            MA            State Street Corridor            $4,800,000
Redevelopment Project
includes street
resurfacing, pedestrian
walkway improvements and
ornate lighting from Main
Street to St. Michael's
Cemetery, Springfield.....
218            MI            Resurfacing of Stephenson          $280,000
Highway in Madison Heights
219            CA            Soundwall construction on        $1,440,000
the 210 Freeway, Pasadena.
220            GA            Streetscape-Ashburn........        $200,000

[[Page 1265]]
119 STAT. 1265


221            NY            Improve traffic flow on            $500,000
Rockaway Point Boulevard
in the Breezy Point
neighborhood of Queens
County, including work to
install a traffic signal
at the intersection of
Rockaway Point Boulevard
and Reid Avenue...........
222            WI            Improve Superior Avenue:         $1,000,000
Interstate 43 to State
Highway 32, Sheboygan
County, Wisconsin.........
223            TX            Design, construction, and          $800,000
streetscape improvements
to enhance pedestrian
access, pedestrian access
to bus services and
facilities................
224            IL            Upgrade roads, The Village         $800,000
of Berkeley...............
225            GA            Upgrade sidewalks and              $320,000
lighting, Wrightsville....
226            PA            Upgrades to Bedford Route        $1,680,000
220 at the entrance of the
Bedford Business Park to
Beldon Ridge intersection.
227            MI            Widen Baldwin Road from          $3,200,000
Morgan to Waldon in Orion
Township..................
228            FL            Construct Saxon Boulevard        $1,680,000
Extension, Volusia County,
Florida...................
229            NY            Construction and                   $816,000
rehabilitation of East and
West Gates Avenues in the
Village of Lindenhurst, NY
230            TN            Widen Interstate 240 from          $800,000
Interstate 55 to
Interstate 40 West of
Memphis, Shelby County....
231            NJ            Rahway River Corridor            $1,200,000
Greenway Bicycle and
Pedestrian Path, South
Orange....................
232            CT            Reconstruct Pearl Harbor         $1,600,000
Memorial Bridge, New Haven
233            PA            Development of Northwest           $200,000
Lancaster County River
Trail.....................
234            CA            Widen SR 89 at existing          $2,827,744
mousehole two lane RR
underpass.................
235            LA            Construct Mississippi River        $400,000
Trail and Bikepath, New
Orleans...................
236            NY            Utica Marsh-Reestablish          $2,120,000
Water Street..............
237            AR            Widen to 5 lanes,                $3,200,000
improvement, and other
development to U.S.
Highway 79B/University
Ave. in Pine Bluff........
238            WA            SR 9 and 20th St. SE               $250,000
Intersection
Reconstruction in
Snohomish County..........
239            OH            Streetscape and related            $280,000
safety improvements to
U.S. 20 in Painesville
Township, OH..............
240            PA            Design, construct                  $800,000
intersection and other
upgrades on PA 24 and 124
in York County, PA........
241            WA            Issaquah Historical                $200,000
Society, Issaquah Valley
Trolley Project...........
242            IL            Construct new bridge on            $240,000
Illinois Prairie Path over
East Branch River in
Milton Township, IL.......
243            TN            Plan and construct                  $40,000
improvements, Livingston
public square.............
244            GA            Construction on U.S. 82            $800,000
from Dawson to Alabama
Line......................
245            IA            Construct I-74 Bridge in         $1,200,000
Bettendorf, IA............

[[Page 1266]]
119 STAT. 1266


246            CA            Operations and management          $800,000
improvements, including
ITS technologies, on U.S.
Highway 101 in Santa
Barbara County............
247            OH            Plan and construct new           $4,160,000
interchange on Interstate
71 at Big Walnut Road in
Delaware County, Ohio.....
248            PA            Design and construct access      $1,600,000
to intermodal facility in
York County...............
249            WA            Complete preliminary             $1,500,000
engineering and
environmental analysis for
SR 14 through Camas and
Washougal.................
250            UT            Construct Bingham Junction       $5,400,000
Boulevard in Midvale City.
251            MD            Construct Centreville, MD          $305,600
spur of Queen Annes County
Cross Island Trail,
Centreville to U.S. Route
301.......................
252            MN            Polk, Pennington, Marshall       $4,480,000
County 10-Ton Corridor in
Northwestern Minnesota....
253            CA            Quincy-Oroville Highway            $800,000
Rehabilitation in Plumas
County....................
254            CA            Construct Coyote Creek           $2,000,000
Trail Project from Story
Road to Montague
Expressway in San Jose....
255            TX            Construct Depression of          $5,600,000
Belt Line Road at I-35 E
Intermodal Transportation
Project in Carrollton, TX.
256            AL            Construct Anniston Eastern      $21,600,000
Bypass from Golden Springs
Road to U.S. Highway 431..
257            NY            Construct greenway along         $1,000,000
East River waterfront
between East River Park
(ERP) and Brooklyn Bridge,
and reconstruct South
entrance to ERP, in
Manhattan.................
258            NE            Construction of I-80/Cherry      $6,400,000
Avenue Interchange and
East Bypass, Kearney,
Nebraska..................
259            MN            Corridor study, EIS, and           $800,000
ROW acquisition for a
future highway and bridge
over the Mississippi
River, City of Brainerd...
260            CA            Escondido, CA Construction       $1,600,000
of Bear Valley Parkway,
East Valley Parkway.......
261            AR            Junction Bridge--                $1,280,000
Rehabilitation and
conversion from rail to
pedestrian use............
262            WA            Port of Tacoma Rd.--               $400,000
Construct a second left
turn lane for traffic from
westbound Pac. Hwy E. to
Port of Tacoma Rd. and I-5
263            NY            Realign Union Valley Road          $264,000
in Town of Carmel.........
264            MO            Roadway improvements to          $3,200,000
U.S. 67 in St. Francois
County....................
265            FL            Homestead, FL Widening of        $5,600,000
SW 328 from SW 137 Ave. to
152 Ave...................
266            CA            Reconstruct I-710 southern       $2,400,000
terminus off ramps, Long
Beach.....................
267            GA            SR 4 widen from                  $4,000,000
Milledgeville Road to
Government Street,
Richmond County...........
268            TN            Develop trails, bike paths         $200,000
and recreational
facilities on Western
Slope of Black Mountain,
Cumberland County for
Cumberland Trail State
Park......................

[[Page 1267]]
119 STAT. 1267


269            NJ            Routes 1 and 9 Secaucus            $800,000
Road to Broad Avenue in
Hudson and Bergen Counties
270            MA            Massachusetts Avenue             $3,850,000
Reconstruction, Boston....
271            NY            Improve Ashburton Ave. from      $1,200,000
the Saw Mill River Parkway
to the waterfront, Yonkers
272            MN            Trail extensions to Mesabi         $235,796
Trail, City of Aurora.....
273            LA            I-10 Ryan Street exit ramp       $4,000,000
to include 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         $880,000
widen to 5 lanes between
Tyler and Ecorse..........
275            IA            Widening University Blvd.,         $800,000
Clive.....................
276            HI            Construct Waimea Bypass....        $800,000
277            IL            Widening two blocks of             $384,000
Poplar St. from Park Ave.
to 13th Street, Williamson
County....................
278            CA            Widening the highway and         $5,600,000
reconstructing off ramps
on Hwy 101 between Steele
Lane and Windsor, CA to
reduce traffic and promote
carpools..................
279            WA            Granite Falls Alternate          $2,834,000
Freight Route in Granite
Falls.....................
280            NY            Construction and                   $616,000
rehabilitation of North
Queens Avenue and Grand
Avenue in the Village of
Lindenhurst, NY...........
281            SC            Extension and expansion of         $560,000
Lower Richland Roads Phase
I.........................
282            OR            Kuebler Boulevard                $1,200,000
improvements, Salem.......
283            NC            Upgrade U.S. 1 in                $8,000,000
Rockingham................
284            CA            Implement Southwest San          $1,840,000
Fernando Valley Road and
Safety Improvements.......
285            VA            Upgrade DOT crossing               $161,440
#467662S to constant
warning time devices......
286            TX            Construct new location          $12,800,000
highway and interchanges
on Inner Loop, from Global
Reach to Loop 375
including the Global Reach
ext., El Paso.............
287            CA            Rehabilitation, repair, and/     $2,800,000
or reconstruction of
deficient 2-lane roads
that connect to Interstate
5, SR 180, SR 41 and SR 99
countywide, Fresno County.
288            OH            Relocate SR 149 from 26th          $520,000
Street to Trough Run in
Bellaire..................
289            WA            Auburn, Washington--M              $400,000
Street SE rehabilitation
between 29th Street SE and
37th Street SE............
290            KY            Replace Bridge over Stoner         $800,000
Creek, 2 Miles East of
U.S. 27 Junction, Bourbon
County....................
291            NM            Development of Paseo del         $1,600,000
Volcan corridor located in
Sandoval County from Iris
Road to U.S. Highway 550..
292            OH            Stan Hywet Hall and Gardens        $144,000
to restore, expand,
construct, and improve
pedestrian paths and bike
trail system..............
293            MS            Construct bicycle path,            $160,000
Petal.....................
294            NJ            Construction of Route 206        $1,600,000
Chester Township, NJ......

[[Page 1268]]
119 STAT. 1268


295            IL            For IDOT to conduct Phase          $800,000
II engineering for
reconstruction of 159th
St./US 6/IL 7 in Will and
Cook Counties.............
296            IL            For Will County to begin         $1,600,000
Phase II engineering and
preconstruction activities
for a high level bridge
linking Caton Farm Road
with Bruce Road...........
297            CA            Study of Thomas Bridge to        $1,600,000
meet future cargo and
passenger traffic needs of
the ports of Long Beach
and Los Angeles...........
298            MD            Construct new Greenbelt          $1,000,000
Metro Station Access
Interchange at I-95/I-495.
299            IL            Construct Citywide bicycle         $200,000
path network, City of
Evanston..................
300            CA            Mount Vernon Avenue grade        $1,600,000
separation and bridge
expansion in Colton.......
301            NJ            Improvements for St.               $400,000
Georges Avenue from Wood
Avenue to Chestnut Street
including the Linden and
Roselle sides of the
street....................
302            PA            Design, construct and            $3,200,000
upgrade interchange of
U.S. 15 and U.S. 30 in
Adams County..............
303            OH            State Route 8 Improvements       $3,000,000
in Northern Summit County.
304            CO            U.S. 50 East, State Line to      $6,000,000
Pueblo....................
305            IN            Widening road (along Gordon     $11,520,000
Road, Sixth 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         $1,200,000
Bagley Road (Rte 27),
Parma and Middleburg
Heights...................
307            MA            Rehabilitation of I-95           $1,600,000
Whittier Bridge--Amesbury
and Newburyport...........
308            CA            Streetscape improvements at        $600,000
East 14th St-Mission Blvd.
in Alameda County.........
309            NY            Construct W. 79th St.            $1,600,000
Rotunda, New York City....
310            TX            Acquire Kelly Parkway              $400,000
Corridor Right-of-way
through San Antonio.......
311            NC            Construct new route from           $800,000
U.S. 17 to U.S. 421 in
Brunswick and New Hanover
Counties..................
312            PA            Construct safety and               $200,000
capacity improvements to
Route 309 and Old
Packhouse Road............
313            OR            Delta Ponds Bike/Pedestrian      $2,880,000
Path......................
314            FL            Hollywood U.S. Route 1           $1,840,000
Young Circle Safety
Improvement...............
315            MI            Houghton County, Gravel and        $344,000
paving of remaining 3.2
miles in 5.5 mile stretch
of Jacobsville Rd.........
316            PA            Improve access to Airport          $800,000
Connector from PA 283 to
the terminus of the
Airport Connector at State
Route 230 and adjacent
access roads..............
317            CA            Construct one additional         $2,568,000
all purpose lane 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,       $3,200,000
Cook County...............

[[Page 1269]]
119 STAT. 1269


319            CA            Improve traffic safety,          $1,120,000
including streetlights,
from Queen to Barclay to
Los Angeles River to
Riverside in Elysian
Valley, Los Angeles.......
320            MI            Construction and                 $2,320,000
improvements to Western
Avenue and associated
streets between Third
Street and Terrace Street
in Muskegon...............
321            IL            Construct Reed Station           $1,655,004
Parkway Extension to IL
Rt. 3, Carbondale.........
322            AL            Construction of Patton           $8,000,000
Island Bridge Corridor....
323            MI            Highland, Clyde Road from          $100,000
Hickory Ridge to
Strathcona................
324            MI            Alger County, Repaving a         $1,280,720
portion of H-58 from Buck
Hill towards Little Beaver
Road......................
325            TX            Improvements to U.S. 183 in        $400,000
Gonzales County...........
326            CA            Construct a raised                 $320,000
landscaped median on
Alondra Blvd. between
Clark Ave. and Woodruff
Ave. in Bellflower........
327            MN            Right-of-way acquisition         $2,000,000
for TH 23 Paynesville
Bypass....................
328            FL            Construct interchange              $400,000
improvements at I-75 and
University Parkway........
329            CO            For construction and             $4,000,000
architectural improvements
of Wadsworth Bypass (SH
121) Burlington Northern
Railroad and Grandview
Grade Separation..........
330            KS            Construction of 4-lane           $2,000,000
improvement on K-18 in
Riley County, Kansas......
331            NJ            Replace Rockaway Road              $800,000
Bridge, Randolph Township,
New Jersey................
332            FL            Construction of paved road       $2,400,000
over existing unpaved
roadway on SE 144th Ave.
from SR 100 to U.S. 301,
distance of 1.2 miles.....
333            FL            Construct I-4 Frontage Rd.,      $1,600,000
Volusia County, Florida...
334            MD            Construction of Fringe and       $3,200,000
Corridor Parking Facility
at intersection of Clinton
Street and Keith Avenue in
Baltimore.................
335            OH            Purchase of right-of-way         $1,152,000
for transportation
enhancement activities in
Bainbridge Township, OH...
336            NJ            Rowan Boulevard Parking            $800,445
adjacent to Highway 322
Corridor in Glassboro
Township..................
337            CA            Construct interchange on         $1,440,000
U.S. 50 at Empire Ranch
Road in Folsom............
338            FL            Bicycle and Pedestrian             $240,000
Improvements in the Town
of Windermere, Florida....
339            TN            Plan and construct a             $2,400,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, Smyrna.............
340            CA            Santa Anita Avenue Corridor      $2,400,000
Improvement project,
Arcadia, California.......
341            AL            Phoenix City on/off ramps          $257,200
for U.S. Highway 80.......
342            PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $480,000
acquisition, and
construction of a
connector road between
Pennsylvania Rt. 93 and
Pennsylvania Rt. 309 in
Hazle Township............
343            GA            South Tifton Bypass from           $400,000
U.S. 82/SR 520 west to
U.S. 319/SR 35 east, Tift
County....................

[[Page 1270]]
119 STAT. 1270


344            NJ            Streetscape and Traffic            $800,000
Improvement Project to
Downtown West Orange......
345            NJ            Bergen County, NJ On Route       $4,400,000
17, address congestion,
safety, drainage,
maintenance, signing,
access, pedestrian
circulation and transit
access....................
346            CA            Road widening, construct         $5,200,000
bike path, lighting, and
safety improvements on
road leading to Hansen Dam
Recreation Area, Los
Angeles...................
347            OH            Highway grade crossing              $54,400
improvement on Summit Road
at Pataskala, Ohio........
348            NY            Reconstruct a historic             $464,000
bridge crossing Maxwell
Creek in the Town of
Sodus, NY.................
349            NJ            Safety and operation               $960,000
improvements on Route 73
in Berlin, Voorhees and
Evesham...................
350            NJ            Study and preliminary              $800,000
engineering designs for a
boulevard on State Route
440 and U.S. Highway
Routes 1 and 9, Jersey
City......................
351            VA            Construction of Route 17         $6,400,000
Dominion Boulevard,
Chesapeake, VA............
352            LA            Installation of proper             $160,000
lighting standards to
illuminate inbound and
outbound ramps of I-10 and
portions of Hwy 95........
353            IN            Cyntheanne Rd. Interchange         $800,000
and Corridor Improvements,
Town of Fishers, Indiana..
354            ME            Plan and construct North-        $3,000,000
South Aroostook highways,
to improve access to St.
John Valley, including
Presque Isle Bypass and
other improvements........
355            TN            Plan and construct a             $1,200,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, LaVergne...........
356            TX            Build Arkansas Street Grade      $1,000,000
Separation in Laredo......
357            CA            Construct new left turn            $560,000
lane at State Route 19 and
Telstar in El Monte.......
358            NY            Meadow Drive Extension--         $1,600,000
North Tonawanda, New York.
359            CA            Reconstruct I-880 and            $8,000,000
Coleman Avenue Interchange
and implement other I-880
Corridor operational
improvements in Santa
Clara County..............
360            OR            Improve Millican, West           $1,600,000
Butte Road which connects
U.S. Highway 20 with U.S.
Highway 126...............
361            VA            Metropolitan Washington,         $1,600,000
D.C. Regional
Transportation
Coordination Program......
362            NY            Brooks Landing                     $400,000
Transportation
Improvements and
Enhancement project,
Rochester.................
363            NJ            Construct CR 538 Coles Mill        $400,000
Road Bridge over Scotland
Run, Gloucester County....
364            TX            Convert discontinuous 2-way      $4,000,000
frontage roads to
continuous one-way
frontage roads on IH 30 in
Texarkana, TX.............
365            TX            Regional bicycle routes on         $800,000
existing highways in
Austin, TX................
366            IN            Construct Interchange at I-      $5,963,375
65 and 109th Avenue, Crown
Point.....................
367            GA            Intersection improvement at        $480,000
Harris Drive at SR 42.....

[[Page 1271]]
119 STAT. 1271


368            IL            Engineering and                     $80,000
construction of the East
Branch DuPage River
Greenway Trail in central
DuPage County, IL.........
369            NY            Rehabilitate a historic            $480,000
transportation-related
warehouse on the Erie
Canal in the Town of
Lyons, NY.................
370            NY            Relocating Miller Highway W      $2,000,000
59th-72 St. Manhattan
under future expansion of
Riverside Park............
371            MI            Allen Road under the CN          $3,560,000
Railroad Grade Separation,
Woodhaven.................
372            PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition, and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking, and
roadway redesign in
Larksville Borough,
Luzerne County............
373            AR            Northeast Arkansas               $2,400,000
Connector (relocation of
Highway 226)..............
374            NJ            Reconstruct Route 168 from         $526,400
Route 41 to 6th Avenue in
Runnemede.................
375            NY            Renovation of Metropolitan       $1,700,000
Avenue and Unionport Road
center islands............
376            PA            Rt. 60 Millennium Park             $640,000
Interchange, construct new
interchange on Rt. 60 to
provide access to new
Lawrence County Industrial
Park......................
377            AR            Bentonville, Arkansas--          $1,500,000
Widen Arkansas Highway 102
between U.S. 71B and the
west city limits..........
378            PA            Purchase of right-of-way,        $2,400,000
utilities and construction
for Northern Access to
Altoona from Interstate
99, Blair County, PA......
379            CA            Construct Class I bike and         $320,000
pedestrian path from San
Luis Obispo to Avila Beach
380            MN            Reconstruct CSAH 61 from           $252,800
south county line to TH
73, Moose Lake............
381            AZ            Improving Lone Pine Dam          $2,000,000
Road in Navajo County.....
382            MI            Construct Road Improvements      $2,160,000
to North Henry St. from
Vermont Ave. to Wilder Rd.
Bay City..................
383            TX            Reconstruct I-35E Trinity       $12,000,000
River Bridge, Dallas......
384            NY            Town of Greenville                 $100,000
rehabilitation of
Grahamtown Rd. and Burnt
Corners Rd................
385            NJ            Completion of Hudson River         $800,000
Waterfront Walkway through
Stevens Institute of
Technology in Hoboken.....
386            NC            Construct U.S. 74 Bypass,        $2,400,000
Shelby, NC................
387            WA            Tukwila Urban Access               $800,000
Improvement Project--
Address necessary
improvements to
Southcenter Parkway in
Tukwila to relieve
congestion................
388            CA            Construction of a traffic          $100,000
signal at the intersection
of Independence Avenue and
Sherman Way...............
389            NH            Design and construction of         $800,000
intersection of Rte 101A
and Rte 13 in Milford.....
390            NJ            Construct Rte 30--Pomona         $4,000,000
Road Intersection
Improvements, Atlantic
County....................

[[Page 1272]]
119 STAT. 1272


391            CA            I-10 and Indian Ave.             $2,200,000
Interchange, Palm Springs,
CA........................
392            CA            Complete the Bay Trail             $800,000
along the western edge of
the American Canyon
Wetlands Edge Bay Trail...
393            KY            Right-of-way for and             $2,560,000
construction of Pennyrile
Parkway Extension from 41A
S. to I-24................
394            TN            Sevier County, Tennessee SR      $1,400,000
66 widening...............
395            TN            Plan and construct                 $320,000
interchange improvements,
I-65 at Highland Road.....
396            IA            Reconstruction of NW Madrid        $800,000
Drive, Polk Co............
397            NH            Relocation and                   $1,040,000
Reconstruction of
intersection at Route 103
and North Street in
Claremont.................
398            IL            To construct a new 2-lane          $400,000
road extending 1650 feet
north from intersection
with University Park
Drive, Edwardsville.......
399            NY            Town of Highlands                  $180,000
reconstruction of bridge
on School Street..........
400            AK            Unalaska, AK Construction        $7,500,000
of AMHW ferry terminal
including approach,
staging, and upland
improvements..............
401            PA            Design and construct             $2,800,000
interchange and related
improvements to I-83 Exit
4.........................
402            MD            Great Allegheny Passage,         $1,600,000
Allegany County, MD.
Construction of 5 miles of
trail from Cumberland to
Wharf Branch..............
403            MI            Northwestern Highway             $7,280,000
Extension projects in
Oakland County............
404            PA            PA Route 61 safety               $2,400,000
improvements, Leesport
Borough and Ontelaunee and
Muhlenburg Townships......
405            OH            Improve Rt. 62 (Main and         $5,200,000
Town Streets) Bridges over
Scioto River, Columbus....
406            AK            Planning, design, and          $100,000,000
construction of a bridge
joining the Island of
Gravina to the Community
of Ketchikan..............
407            MN            U.S. Trunk Highway 14 from       $3,315,200
Waseca to Owatonna,
Minnesota.................
408            TX            Construct Mission Trails         $3,820,000
Project Packages 4 and 5
in San Antonio............
409            MS            Upgrade Roads in Carthage,         $160,000
Leake County..............
410            MI            Construct access road at            $20,800
intersection of 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         $680,000
County Districts 1 and 5
and Isola.................
412            IN            126th Street Project, Town       $1,000,000
of Fishers, Indiana.......
413            HI            Construct Puanaiko Street..        $800,000
414            AZ            Burro Creek section between        $800,000
Wikieup and the Santa
Maria River...............
415            PA            Conduct Environmental              $800,000
Impact Statement study for
Parkway West corridor.....
416            SC            Build Railroad Avenue            $1,600,000
Extension in Berkeley
County, SC--SCDOT.........
417            MD            Construct a visitors center      $3,760,000
and related roads serving
Fort McHenry..............

[[Page 1273]]
119 STAT. 1273


418            OH            Construction of Gracemont        $2,400,000
Street Exchange Interstate
77--Bethlehem Township and
Pike Township, Ohio.......
419            MI            Design, Right-of-Way and        $15,480,000
Construction of the I-196
Chicago Drive (Baldwin
Street) Interchange
Modification, Michigan....
420            CA            Folsom Blvd. Transportation      $5,600,000
Enhancements, City of
Rancho Cordova............
421            TN            improve streetscape and            $240,000
pavement repair, Monroe
County, TN................
422            TX            IH37 frontage roads in           $1,600,000
Mathis....................
423            WV            Construct New River Parkway      $3,600,000
424            NY            Construct sidewalk and             $264,000
improvements on Broadway
in the Town of Cortlandt..
425            PA            Erie, PA Powell Avenue           $3,200,000
Bridge Replacement, Asbury
Road Improvement Project..
426            VA            Liberty Street Construction        $236,800
in Martinsville, Virginia.
427            CA            Implement streetscape            $3,200,000
project on Central Avenue
from 103rd Street to Watts/
103rd Street Station,
Watts.....................
428            MA            Realignments and                 $2,560,000
reconstruction of a
section of Route 32 in
Palmer to the Ware town
line......................
429            CA            Seismic retrofit of the          $8,800,000
Golden Gate Bridge........
430            CA            Upgrade and extend Commerce      $1,600,000
Avenue, City of Concord...
431            MA            Somerville Roadway               $2,300,000
Improvements..............
432            LA            Replace Almonaster Bridge,         $400,000
New Orleans...............
433            IN            Upgrade Traffic Signals            $512,000
Phase III in the City of
Muncie, Indiana...........
434            FL            Sharpes Ferry Bridge             $2,240,000
replacement in Marion
County....................
435            IA            U.S. 34 Missouri River           $2,000,000
bridge relocation and
replacement...............
436            NY            Village of Highland Falls          $120,000
repaving and sidewalk
construction of Oak Avenue
437            MN            Interchange Reconstruction         $800,000
at CSAH 4 and U.S. 169....
438            IL            Development and                  $4,800,000
construction of an
interchange at Brisbin Rd.
and Interstate 80.........
439            NE            Design, right-of-way and        $12,000,000
construction of rail-grade
separations throughout
Nebraska as identified by
Nebraska Dept. of Roads...
440            MO            Redesign and Reconstruction      $1,600,000
of the I-270 Dorsett Road
Interchange Complex in the
City of Maryland Heights..
441            SC            Build Berlin Myers               $6,400,000
Extension in Summerville,
SC........................
442            IN            Improve 100 South, Porter          $800,000
County....................
443            NY            Improve safety measures at       $1,280,000
the railroad grade
crossings on the West
Short River Line, Rockland
County....................
444            NJ            Street Improvements and            $640,000
Traffic Signal Replacement
in Union City Central
Business District.........
445            GA            Streetscape project to             $300,000
replace sidewalks in
downtown Forsyth..........
446            AK            Westside development             $5,000,000
Williamsport-Pile Bay Road

[[Page 1274]]
119 STAT. 1274


447            NV            Construct Interstate 15-Las     $10,000,000
Vegas Beltway Interchange.
448            NY            Palisades Trailway Phase 2-        $150,000
Rockland County, New York.
449            PA            Replace a Highway Rail             $400,000
Grade crossing in
Jeanette, PA at Wegleys
Road......................
450            CA            Conduct project design and       $2,800,000
environmental analysis of
Heritage Bridge on
Heritage Road linking
Chula Vista to Otay Mesa..
451            MA            Assabet River National             $420,000
Wildlife Refuge, MA,
Design and Construction of
parking areas.............
452            NY            Reconstruct Main Street in          $72,000
the Town of Lewisboro.....
453            MA            Study and analysis of              $500,000
Lowell Westford St.-Wood
St. Rourke Bridge
Corridor, Lowell..........
454            OR            Highway 20, Lincoln County.      $5,600,000
455            MN            Construction of 8th Street       $1,600,000
North: Stearns C.R. 120 to
TH 15 in St. Cloud, MN....
456            IL            Construction of a                  $180,000
pedestrian sidewalk along
S. Chicago Street in
Geneseo, IL...............
457            OH            Construct Bike and Walking         $280,000
Path from West 210 St. to
Metroparks Fairview Park..
458            PA            Great Allegheny Passage,           $800,000
Somerset County, PA.
Garrett Crossing Bridge,
realign trail and
construct a new bridge to
eliminate a dangerous
crossing of a State
highway...................
459            MN            City of East Grand Forks           $960,000
Construct 13th St. SE
Extension.................
460            NY            Improvements to Clark Pl.          $296,000
and Cherry Ln.--Rt. 6 and
6 N in Putnam County......
461            NJ            Construct Garden State          $32,000,000
Parkway Grade Separation,
Cape May County...........
462            VA            High Knob Horse Trails--           $600,000
Construction of horse
riding trails and
associated facilities in
High Knob area of
Jefferson National Forest.
463            TN            Plan and construct a             $2,000,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, Cookeville.........
464            UT            Provo, Utah Westside               $800,000
Connector from I-15 to
Provo Municipal Airport...
465            CA            I-5 Santa Clarita-Los            $1,600,000
Angeles Gateway
Improvement Project.......
466            NY            Project will revitalize            $800,000
staircases used as streets
due to steep grade of
terrain in areas in which
they are located, the
Bronx.....................
467            TX            Construct and rehabilitate         $800,000
pedestrian walkways along
the Main Street Corridor
to improve transit-related
accessibility.............
468            MD            Reconstruct East North           $4,000,000
Avenue (US Route 1) in
Baltimore.................
469            CT            Reconstructoin of Lakeville        $716,000
Center to improve
pedestrian and vehicle
safety at the intersection
of Routes 41 and 44.......
470            TX            City of Robstown Trade           $5,000,000
Processing and Inland
Center....................
471            CA            San Gabriel Blvd.                  $240,000
Rehabilitation Project--
Mission Rd. to Broadway,
San Gabriel...............
472            NC            To plan, design, and             $2,131,200
construct the 10th Street
Connector Project in
Greenville, NC............

[[Page 1275]]
119 STAT. 1275


473            OH            To widen Western Reserve         $2,000,000
Road from SR 7 to
Hitchcock Road, Mahoning
Co........................
474            NY            Binghamton, Improve Front        $4,000,000
Street....................
475            FL            U.S. Highway 19 Bayside          $1,600,000
Segment...................
476            MI            Arenac County, Upgrade           $1,316,800
Maple Ridge Road from
Briggs Road east to M-65..
477            NY            Village of Highland Falls          $180,000
repaving and sidewalk
construction of Mearns Ave
478            NY            Village of Nelsonville             $200,000
improvements, paving and
sidewalk installation to
North Pearl St., Crown
St., Pine St., and Wood
Ave.......................
479            CA            Widen Firestone Blvd.            $1,600,000
between Ryerson Blvd. and
Stewart and Gray Road in
Downey....................
480            CA            Construct Air Cargo Access         $720,000
Road to Oakland
International Airport.....
481            MD            Peer review study of                $80,000
conflicts between road
system and light rail
operations in Linthicum,
MD........................
482            GA            Resurface and widen Jac-Art        $200,000
Road as part of the
Bleckley County
Development Authority
project...................
483            VA            Construction of Virginia           $240,000
Blue Ridge Trail in
Amherst County, VA........
484            FL            Implement NE 6th Street/           $800,000
Sistrunk Boulevard
Streetscape and
Enhancement Project, City
of Fort Lauderdale........
485            CA            Widen Lakewood Blvd.             $1,600,000
between Telegraph Rd. and
Fifth St. in Downey.......
486            TX            Widen Motor Street               $4,400,000
thoroughfare in Dallas to
improve accessibility to
Southwestern Medical
District..................
487            MN            Construction of Gitchi-Gami        $500,000
State Trail, Lutsen Phase,
CR 34 to Lockport store...
488            PA            Widen of SR 309 through the      $2,400,000
Borough of Coopersburg to
create left-turn lanes and
complete the Rt. 309
Corridor Improvement
Project...................
489            CA            Pasadena Ave/Monterey Rd.          $240,000
Partial Grade Separation--
Preliminary Engineering--
Feasibility, South
Pasadena..................
490            OH            Intermodal Bikeway,              $2,000,000
Independence..............
491            MO            Widen shoulder and               $2,400,000
resurface U.S. 136 and
replace 2 deficient
bridges between Rock Port
and Bethany, Missouri.....
492            FL            SR 43 (U.S.301) Improvement      $3,200,000
Project--Ellentown to
Parrish, Florida..........
493            GA            Bike and pedestrian paths          $640,000
and other transportation
enhancements at Georgia
Veterans Memorial Park....
494            AK            Citywide pavement                $1,000,000
rehabilitation in City of
North Pole................
495            GA            Replace and upgrade                 $50,000
sidewalks, Glenwood.......
496            MI            Reconstruction of Leeman         $1,200,000
Road from County Road 581
west 7 miles to Lerza
Road, Dickinson County....
497            GA            Widen SR 133 from Spence           $800,000
Field to SR 35 in Colquitt
County, Georgia...........
498            CA            Mariposa County, CA Improve      $2,800,000
16 roads, bridge and one
bike path.................

[[Page 1276]]
119 STAT. 1276


499            LA            Upgrade highway-rail               $160,000
crossings at Madison
Street, City of Gretna....
500            PA            Two-lane Extension of            $1,600,000
Bristol Road, Bucks County
501            TN            Widen SR 30 From Athens to       $4,606,400
Etowah, Tennessee.........
502            MI            Iosco County, Reconstruct          $258,000
Bissonette Road from
Lorenz Road to Chambers
Road......................
503            TX            Development of one-story         $1,200,000
300-vehicle parking
facility..................
504            WA            Design and construct             $1,600,000
improved I-182 interchange
ramps at Broadmoor Blvd.
in Pasco, WA..............
505            NY            Erie Canalway National           $2,600,000
Heritage Corridor in
Lockport, NY--
Transportation
Enhancements..............
506            MI            M-6 Paul Henry Freeway           $2,224,000
trail design and
construction..............
507            CT            Reconstruction and               $1,364,000
conversion of Union
Station in North Canaan to
establish a transportation
museum....................
508            OR            Construct passing lanes on       $1,827,000
U.S. 199, Josephine County
509            CA            Scenic preservation and run-     $1,200,000
off mitigation in the
Santa Monica Mountains
National Recreation Area
near PCH and U.S. 101.....
510            IL            South Shore Drive and 67th       $1,040,000
Underpass.................
511            CA            Mission Boulevard/State          $3,360,000
Route 71 Interchange--
Corridor Improvements.....
512            OR            For purchase of right-of-        $8,545,600
way, planning, design, and
construction of a highway,
Newberg...................
513            VA            Smith River Trail--                $400,000
Construction of trail
along Smith River in Henry
County....................
514            IL            Resurface Clifton Park Ave.        $320,000
and S. Louis Ave., Village
of Evergreen..............
515            NJ            University Heights                 $509,600
Connector for improvements
to First Street in Newark
from Sussex Street to West
Market Street.............
516            GA            Broad Avenue Bridge: Albany        $400,000
517            CA            Carlsbad, CA Construction        $1,600,000
of Poinsettia Lane........
518            CA            Construct pedestrian             $2,000,000
enhancements on Broadway
in Los Angeles............
519            NJ            Construct Rt. 56 Maurice         $1,600,000
River Bridge Replacement,
Salem and Cumberland
Counties..................
520            WA            Conduct route analysis for          $50,000
community pathway through
Chehalis..................
521            WA            Construct a multi-               $1,600,000
jurisdictional non-
motorized transportation
project parallel to SR 99
called the Interurban
Trail.....................
522            FL            Construct Downtown Bypass          $400,000
Roadway Connector, Lake
Mary, Florida.............
523            NY            To study, design, and            $6,600,000
construct the Brooklyn
Waterfront Greenway in Red
Hook, Greenpoint, and the
Navy Yard in Brooklyn.....
524            NY            Update all county and town         $220,000
traffic signage in Wayne
County, NY................
525            CA            Construct Route 101              $3,000,000
Auxiliary Lanes 3rd Ave.
in the City of San Mateo
to Millbrae Ave. in
Millbrae..................

[[Page 1277]]
119 STAT. 1277


526            CA            Undertake Cordelia Hill Sky      $2,400,000
Valley transportation
enhancement project,
including upgrade of
pedestrian and bicycle
corridors, Solano County..
527            MS            Construct I-20 Interchange       $2,000,000
at Hawkins Crossing,
Lauderdale County.........
528            TN            Sevier, Jefferson, Cocke         $1,400,000
Counties, Tennessee SR 35
and U.S. 411 widening.....
529            GA            Upgrade Safety of Bicycle        $2,400,000
and Pedestrian Access to
Public Schools, Dekalb
County....................
530            OH            Construction of Safety and          $96,000
related improvements on
Rutlege Transfer Road in
Vernon Township, OH.......
531            WI            Reconstruct U.S. 45 in           $1,616,000
Antigo....................
532            WA            SR 2/Main Street/Old Owen          $384,000
Road Intersection in
Monroe....................
533            GA            Install landscaping and            $350,000
upgrade lighting on Fall
Line Freeway, Reynolds....
534            WA            Congestion relief on I-405         $800,000
with added lanes from SR
520-SR 522 including 2
lanes each way from NE
85th-NE 124th.............
535            NY            Conduct NYS 5 construction          $64,000
study.....................
536            PA            Widen lanes, add left turn       $1,200,000
lanes and update and
install traffic signals at
SR 309, SR 4010
interchange in North
Whitehall Township........
537            KY            Reconstruct I-64-KY 180          $1,600,000
Interchange, Boyd County,
Kentucky..................
538            TX            Widen U.S. 271 from a 2-         $1,600,000
lane facility to a 4 lane
divided facility from
Paris, TX to Pattonville,
TX........................
539            TN            Carter County, Tennessee SR        $400,000
362 reconstruction........
540            OH            Construct Ohio River Trail,        $220,000
Anderson Township.........
541            MI            Delta County, CR 515 from          $256,000
U.S. 2 and U.S. 41 in
Rapid River to County Road
446 at Days River Road-
Bituminous overlay and
joint repair..............
542            FL            Fund design phase for              $800,000
widening U.S. 41 north of
Dunnellon to four lanes...
543            TN            Construction of                    $800,000
Elizabethton Connector in
Carter County, Tennessee..
544            NJ            Newark Waterfront                $1,200,000
Pedestrian and Bicycle
Access project............
545            ME            Plan and construct Lewiston/     $4,360,000
Auburn Downtown Connector.
546            OH            Conduct Miami St. along SR         $800,000
Route 53 safety
enhancement project to
improve access to railroad
crossing..................
547            AK            Planning, design, and           $15,000,000
construction of Juneau
access roads in Juneau,
Alaska....................
548            TN            Construction of an               $1,920,000
intersection/interchange
in the City of Cleveland
along I-75................
549            FL            Construct Flagler Avenue           $808,000
Improvements, City of Key
West, Florida.............
550            CA            Rehabilitate street surface         $34,400
of Cedros Avenue between
Burbank Blvd. and Magnolia
Blvd......................

[[Page 1278]]
119 STAT. 1278


551            VA            Engineering and Right-of-        $1,000,000
way to widen Route 221 in
Forest, Virginia..........
552            NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety
including in the vicinity
of PS Q200................
553            TX            SH 146 grade separation         $13,600,000
over Red Bluff Rd.........
554            TN            Construction of park access        $240,000
road and adjacent trails
at the Athens Regional
Park in Athens, TN........
555            IL            State Street Road                $3,080,000
Improvements from 43rd
Street to IL Rt. 157, East
St. Louis.................
556            GA            Streetscape-Dawson.........        $160,000
557            SC            Build Carolina Bays Parkway      $2,400,000
Segment from SC 544 to
U.S. 17 in Myrtle Beach,
SC........................
558            GA            U.S. 341 U.S. 41 SR 7 from       $3,200,000
Barnesville to SR 3,
Georgia...................
559            OH            Reconstruct and widen State        $800,000
Route 82 in North Royalton
560            FL            Acquisition, engineering,          $800,000
and construction of West
Avenue Connector Bridge,
City of Miami Beach, FL...
561            ME            Safety Enhancements on             $400,000
Routes 11, 6, and 16 for
Piscataquis County
Industrial Development....
562            IL            Study, design, and                 $905,600
construction of a
designated truck route
through the City of
Monticello................
563            CA            Improvement of intersection      $2,000,000
at Aviation Blvd. and
Rosecrans Ave. to reduce
congestion, City of
Hawthorne.................
564            WI            Preliminary engineering for      $7,200,000
upgrading I-94 between
Illinois State Line and
Mitchell Interchange in SE
Wisconsin.................
565            MI            Cogshall Road Crossing             $960,000
Improvement and Life
Safety Access Project in
Holly, MI.................
566            MI            Ontonagon County, Improve          $400,000
Fed. Forest Hwy 16 from M-
38 to Houghton County Line
567            UT            Forest Street Improvements,      $2,000,000
Brigham City, UT..........
568            NC            I-40 Union Cross Road              $800,000
Interchange in Forsyth
County, NC................
569            NJ            Construct Sea Isle               $1,600,000
Boulevard Reconstruction
from Garden State Parkway
to Ludlams Thoroughfare,
Cape May County...........
570            CA            I-5 HOV Improvements from          $400,000
Route 134 to Route 170....
571            NY            Reconfiguration of                 $400,000
intersection and redesign
of traffic signal timing
at Mohegan Ave. and
Lakeland St...............
572            CA            Shoal Creek Pedestrian           $1,200,000
Bridge (San Diego)........
573            GA            Streetscape-Cordele........        $200,000
574            CA            Construct I-605 Interchange      $1,600,000
Capacity Improvements in
Irwindale.................
575            SC            Construction of interchange      $1,760,000
at I-385 and SC 14, Exit
19, in Laurens County,
South Carolina............
576            NE            Design, right-of-way and         $7,600,000
construction of Nebraska
Highway 35 between Norfolk
and South Sioux City......

[[Page 1279]]
119 STAT. 1279


577            MO            Complete impact study for          $400,000
North Oak Highway corridor
redevelopment.............
578            MA            Design and construct the         $1,200,000
1.5 mile East Long-meadow
Redstone rail Trail bike
path......................
579            NY            Improve bicycle and                $100,000
pedestrian safety on Main
Street, Holbrook..........
580            CA            Tuolumne, Stanislaus and         $2,000,000
Merced Counties Upgrade
existing county highway,
J59.......................
581            FL            U.S. 19 Continuous right         $5,760,000
turn lanes in Pasco County
582            NJ            Union Boulevard                    $400,000
Revitalization and
Streetscape Enhancements,
Totowa....................
583            IL            Improve roads, The Village         $800,000
of Westchester............
584            IN            Reconstruct 45th Avenue          $2,160,000
from Colfax Street to
Grant Street, Lake County.
585            IN            Construct Grade Separation       $1,600,000
Underpass on Main Street
in Mishawaka, Indiana.....
586            UT            Construct 2-lane divided         $4,000,000
highway from the
Atkinville Interchange to
the new replacement
airport access road in St.
George....................
587            CA            Diamond Bar On-Off Ramp at       $9,600,000
Lemon Ave. on SR 60.......
588            NY            Transportation parking           $8,000,000
facility serving the
Harlem Hospital Complex...
589            MA            Downtown revitalization for      $1,520,000
Pleasant Street, Malden...
590            NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety in the
vicinity of Prospect Park
Yeshiva...................
591            NY            Emergency vehicle                  $500,000
preemption system at
traffic signals, Smithtown
592            CA            Reconstruct interchange for      $3,120,000
south-bound traffic
entering I-80 from Central
Avenue, City of Richmond..
593            KY            Reconstruct KY 393, Oldham       $1,600,000
County, Kentucky..........
594            CA            Reduce Orange County               $200,000
Congestion Program........
595            CA            Street Closure at Chevy            $640,000
Chase Drive, Glendale.....
596            PA            Allegheny County Urban             $800,000
Runoff Mitigation-
eliminate urban highway
runoff and the discharge
of culverted streams into
municipal combined sewers.
597            SC            Construct Briggs-Pearson-       $16,080,000
DeLaine Connector.........
598            NM            Construct an interchange on      $5,600,000
I-25 to provide access to
Mesa del Sol in
Albuquerque...............
599            MI            Reconstruction of 30th             $270,080
Avenue from 13th Street to
22nd Street, Menominee....
600            VA            Rivermont Ave. (Lynchburg)       $1,760,000
Bridge improvements.......
601            MA            Construct new interchange          $500,000
on I-95 between existing
Route 1A ramp to the north
and Route 123 ramp to the
south, Attleboro..........
602            OH            Construct Waverly, Ohio          $2,560,000
South Connector from U.S.
23 to SR 104 to SR 220....
603            VA            Craig County Trail--               $120,000
Improvements to trail in
Craig County..............
604            CO            U.S. 160, State Highway 3        $4,800,000
to East of the Florida
River.....................

[[Page 1280]]
119 STAT. 1280


605            TX            Bridge Access Road for FM        $5,000,000
493 from U.S. 281 to U.S.
83........................
606            AZ            Pinal Avenue/Main Street           $800,000
right-of-way acquisition--
Pinal County, Casa Grande,
AZ--To reconstruct Main
St. to include a bypass
for commercial traffic....
607            PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition, and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking,
garage, and roadway
redesign in Duryea
Borough, Luzerne County...
608            OK            SH-33, Widen SH 33 from the      $6,400,000
Cimarron River East to
U.S. 177 Payne County, OK.
609            TX            Washington Boulevard             $2,080,000
Improvements in Beaumont,
Texas.....................
610            FL            Widen Midway Road from           $1,600,000
South 25th Street to U.S.
1 in St. Lucie County.....
611            NY            Enhance road and                 $4,000,000
transportation facilities
in the vicinity of W. 65th
St. and Broadway, New York
City......................
612            LA            Construct Kansas-Garrett         $4,000,000
Connector and I-20
Interchange Improvements..
613            PA            Construct the SR 1058            $1,280,000
Connector between PA 309
and the Pennsylvania
Turnpike Northeast
Extension in Montgomery
County....................
614            OK            Reconstruct the Interstate       $2,400,000
44 193rd street
interchange...............
615            NY            Roadway improvements to          $1,600,000
Woodbury Rd. at
intersection with Syosset-
Woodbury Rd...............
616            RI            Construct a handicapped            $160,000
accessible trail and
platform at Kettle Pond
Visitor Center
Administrative Facility...
617            NJ            Construct Great Swamp              $200,000
National Wildlife Refuge
Road......................
618            CA            Grade Separation at 32nd           $800,000
Street between I-15 and
Harbor Drive, San Diego...
619            IN            Widen Old Meridian Street          $900,000
from 2 to 4 lanes, City of
Carmel, Indiana...........
620            WI            Construct a bicycle/             $1,760,000
pedestrian path, City of
Portage...................
621            VA            Widen Route 17 in Stafford.      $4,000,000
622            VA            Widen Route 820 in Bergton,      $1,240,000
Virginia..................
623            IL            Construction of 2 North/         $8,320,000
South Blvds. and 2 East/
West Blvds. in the
vicinity of Northern
Illinois University.......
624            CA            Begin construction of road         $800,000
from U.S. 395 west towards
SR 14.....................
625            PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition, and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking, and
roadway redesign in Old
Forge Borough, Lackawanna
County....................
626            PA            Improvements to Amtrak             $400,000
Keystone Corridor grade
crossings at Irishtown
Rd., New Comer Rd., and a
new bridge at Ebychiques
Rd........................
627            TN            Acquire and construct trail      $1,280,000
and bikeway along S.
Chickamauga Creek in
Chattanooga, TN...........

[[Page 1281]]
119 STAT. 1281


628            TX            Interchange improvements IH-     $1,600,000
30 Arlington at FM 157
(Collins Street) and
Center Street.............
629            MO            Highway 350 Access                 $800,000
Management Study from I-
435 to I-470..............
630            TX            Reconstruct Mile 6 W from          $800,000
US83 to SH 107, Hidalgo
County....................
631            NJ            Pedestrian facilities and          $346,400
street lighting on Haddon
Avenue from Albertson
Avenue to Glenwood Avenue,
Haddon Township...........
632            NY            Rehabilitate highway             $2,000,000
bridges--Ithaca secondary
line......................
633            WA            Buckley, WA; New Road            $1,600,000
alignments on 112th Street
Corridor..................
634            ID            Construct Washington Street      $4,400,000
North from the end of
Project # (STP 7072(102))
to the beginning of
Project # (DHP-NH-F-
2390(104))................
635            SC            Construction of the U.S. 15/     $3,600,000
SC-341 connector parallel
to I-20, Lee County.......
636            PA            Construct Recreational           $1,200,000
Trail from Oil City to
Rynd Farm (Venango County)
637            TX            FM 1637 from FM 3051 to FM       $1,600,000
185, Waco.................
638            VA            Green Cove Station--                $80,000
Improvements to existing
Forest Service facility
located at trailhead of
Virginia Creeper Trail....
639            NJ            South Essex Street Bridge          $462,400
Pedestrian Access
Improvements, Orange......
640            TX            FM 3391 (East Renfro St.)        $2,200,000
from I-35W to CR 602,
Burleson..................
641            WI            Replace Wisconsin Street        $10,000,000
Bridge (STH 44) in
Oshkosh, Wisconsin........
642            CT            Construct Route 11              $14,400,000
Extension and bicycle and
pedestrian path from Salem
to Waterford..............
643            TX            Drainage Study and                 $800,000
Engineering for U.S. 83 in
Starr County..............
644            TN            Widen SR 62 in Knox County,      $6,500,000
TN........................
645            GA            Widen U.S. 17 SR 25 from         $1,600,000
Yacht Drive to Harry
Driggers Boulevard, Glynn
County, Georgia...........
646            KY            Widen U.S. 25 from U.S. 421        $800,000
North to KY 876, Madison
County....................
647            GA            Widen U.S. 280/SR 30 from          $800,000
east of Flint River to SR
300 Connector west of
Cordele...................
648            MS            Upgrade roads in Gunnison,       $1,600,000
Mound Bayou, Beulah,
Benoit, Pace and Shaw,
Bolivar County............
649            NY            Construct and enhance            $1,200,000
Fillmore Avenue and
traffic down-grade and
infrastructure
improvements to Humboldt
Parkway, Buffalo..........
650            NJ            Construct Route 46 and Main      $1,600,000
Street intersection in
Lodi......................
651            MN            Phase III construction of        $4,000,000
Trunk Highway 61010
Minnesota.................
652            NM            NM 128 JCT NM 31 East to         $3,200,000
Texas State Line..........
653            NJ            Replacement of Prospect            $320,000
Avenue Culvert, City of
Summit, County of Union...
654            FL            U.S. 441 Traffic                   $720,000
Improvements--Road
surface, road access,
curb, gutter, and right-of-
way, Miami Gardens........

[[Page 1282]]
119 STAT. 1282


655            MN            Environmental studies and        $4,000,000
right-of-way acquisition
for Trunk Highway 55
Corridor Protection
Project...................
656            NY            Roadway improvements on            $640,000
Woodbine Avenue between
5th Avenue and Beach
Avenue....................
657            NY            Saugerties, Improve                $960,000
downtown streets..........
658            IN            Widen U.S. 31 Hamilton             $800,000
County, Indiana...........
659            GA            Build a bridge across Big        $1,000,000
Indian Creek, Perry.......
660            MI            Carpenter Road                   $1,600,000
Reconstruction--700 feet
South of Textile Road to I-
94, Washtenaw County......
661            IN            Resurface and widen Shelby         $800,000
County Indiana 400 North
Phases IV and V...........
662            SC            Widen West Georgia Road          $1,600,000
from Neely Ferry Road to
Fork Shoals Road..........
663            TX            Construct Phase II of City       $4,800,000
of Killeen SH 201.........
664            MN            Interchange improvements at        $800,000
I-94 and CSAH 19 and at
CSAH 37 in the City of
Albertville, MN...........
665            KY            Construction of bypass           $1,200,000
between KY 55 and U.S. 68
at Lebanon in Marion
County....................
666            NY            Peruville Road/Creating          $1,600,000
overpass to address
intersection safety issue.
667            OR            Add a southbound lane to         $4,000,000
section of I-5 through
Portland, OR between Delta
Park and Lombard..........
668            MN            10th Street Bridge                 $800,000
Expansion in St. Cloud, MN
669            NJ            Intermodal Access                $1,600,000
Improvements to the
Peninsula at Bayonne
Harbor....................
670            TX            Nolana Loop from FM 1426 to      $1,600,000
FM 88, Hidalgo County.....
671            OH            Perry Park Road                     $53,600
Improvements and
Pedestrian Trail Expansion
at Call Road in the
Village of Perry, OH......
672            NV            Implement Regional               $5,000,000
Transportation of Southern
Nevada FAST system........
673            NY            Bronx River Greenway 233rd         $750,000
Street Connection.........
674            ............  ...........................              $0
675            FL            Planning and design for            $400,000
development of future
highway connections to the
Florida International
Airport, Hardee County....
676            WI            Reconstruct and rebuild St.      $5,600,000
Croix River 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         $400,000
SR 386 Connector..........
678            IN            Reconstruct and widen              $800,000
Shelby County Indiana 500
East from 1200 N to U.S.
52........................
679            MO            Removal and Replacement of       $2,800,000
the Grand Avenue Bridge in
the City of St. Louis.....
680            TX            Conduct reconstruction and       $4,000,000
managed lanes project on
Airport Freeway (SH 183-SH
121) from IH 820 to the
Dallas County Line........
681            FL            Reconstruction of Hanford        $2,200,000
Boulevard, North Miami
Beach.....................
682            MA            Commonwealth Ave/Kenmore         $4,000,000
Sq. roadway and pedestrian
improvements..............

[[Page 1283]]
119 STAT. 1283


683            NY            Pedestrian walkway and           $2,560,000
bikeway improvements along
the NYC Greenway System in
Coney Island..............
684            PA            Restore Route 222 in             $2,000,000
Maxatawny and Richmond
Townships, Berks County,
PA........................
685            OH            Study and design of              $2,400,000
modifications to I-75
interchanges at M.L. King,
Jr.,/Hopple, I-74, and
Mitchell in Cincinnati....
686            VA            Widen Route 10 to six lanes        $800,000
from Route 1 to
Meadowville Road,
Chesterfield..............
687            GA            Rebuild sidewalks, install         $250,000
sidewalks, and add speed
monitoring system, Alamo..
688            CA            Widen Wilmington Ave. from       $4,000,000
223rd street including
ramp modifications, Carson
689            WI            Construct SH 32 (Claude            $400,000
Allouez) bridge in DePere,
Wisconsin (Brown County,
Wisconsin)................
690            NY            Construction of drainage           $408,000
improvements and aesthetic
enhancements to Oak Beach
Road in the Town of
Babylon, NY...............
691            WI            Construct an alternative         $3,200,000
connection to divert local
traffic from I-90, a major
highway, and allow
movement through the
Gateway commercial
development project.......
692            WA            East Marine View Drive           $3,500,000
Widening in Everett.......
693            OH            Construction of safety             $240,000
improvements at
intersection of U.S. 422
and SR 700 in Geauga
County, OH................
694            WV            Upgrade Route 10, Logan Co.      $4,000,000
695            TX            Conduct Preliminary              $3,200,000
Engineering for Funnel
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 U.S. 70             $800,000
Clayton Bypass............
697            PA            Brighton Road Extension-Add        $800,000
new street to N Shore
roadway network to
facilitate access to
amphitheater..............
698            NJ            Broad Street Streetscape           $560,000
Project in Elizabeth to
provide physical
improvements and to
enhance transportation
flow and efficiency.......
699            FL            Construction of 4 lane           $2,400,000
highway around
Jacksonville connecting
U.S. 1 to Route 9A........
700            WA            510-507 Loop--Conduct            $2,000,000
engineering, design, and
ROW acquisition for
alternative route to two
existing highways that
bisect Yelm, WA...........
701            CA            Develop and implement            $1,600,000
traffic calming measures
for traffic exiting the I-
710 into Long Beach.......
702            CA            San Diego, CA Construction       $6,400,000
of the I-5 and SR 56
Connectors................
703            IL            Upgrade Ridge Avenue,            $2,400,000
Evanston..................
704            SC            Widening and improvements        $1,600,000
of SC Highway 5 Bypass in
York County...............
705            IA            Widening and                     $8,720,000
Reconstruction, I-235, Des
Moines....................

[[Page 1284]]
119 STAT. 1284


706            CA            Bay Road improvements            $4,800,000
between University 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 U.S. 501        $3,200,000
from NC 49 in Roxboro to
the VA State line with
part on new location......
708            NY            Congestion reduction,              $640,000
traffic flow improvement
and intermodal transfer
study at Roosevelt Avenue/
74th Street in Queens.....
709            CA            Construct bicycle and              $600,000
pedestrian bridge between
Oyster Bay Regional Park
in San Leandro and
Metropolitan Golf Course
in Oakland................
710            TX            For right-of-way                 $4,800,000
acquisition and
construction of Seg 5 and
6 of SH 130 from 183 to
Seguin, TX................
711            NJ            Construct the Airport              $800,000
Circle Elimination at
Tilton and Delilah Roads,
Atlantic County...........
712            CA            The Alameda Corridor SR 47       $8,000,000
Port Access Expressway
design funding............
713            NV            Construct U.S. Highway 95--     $10,000,000
Las Vegas Beltway
Interchange...............
714            NY            Repair and repave the north        $120,000
side of the Mineola train
station...................
715            IL            Repair of CH 29 and                $800,000
reconstruction of CH 8 at
interchanges with
Interstate 55 at Towanda
and Lexington, Illinois...
716            CA            Conduct a Project Study            $400,000
Report for new Highway 99
interchange between SR 165
and Bradbury Road, serving
Turlock/Hilmar region.....
717            PA            Construction of U.S. 22 to       $1,200,000
I-79 Section of Southern
Beltway, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania..............
718            MN            Construction of new highway      $2,400,000
between the 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       $2,936,000
between Soquel and
Morrissey Blvd. including
merge lanes and the La
Fonda overpass, Santa Cruz
720            WA            The West Corridor Coalition        $250,000
in Washington State.......
721            WA            North Sound Connecting             $960,000
Communities Transportation
Project Planning..........
722            FL            West Relief Bridge               $1,200,000
Rehabilitation, Bay Harbor
Islands...................
723            NE            Western Douglas County           $5,600,000
Trails Project, Nebraska..
724            TN            Bristol, Tennessee highway--        $80,000
RR grade Crossing
improvement--Hazelwood
Street....................
725            GA            Extend East Greene Street,         $400,000
install street lights,
utilities, and
landscaping, Milledgeville
726            CA            Grade Separation at Vanowen        $800,000
and Cliveborne, Burbank...

[[Page 1285]]
119 STAT. 1285


727            MA            Improve traffic signal           $1,200,000
operations, pavement
markings and regulatory
signage, Milton-Boston
City Line.................
728            NY            Port Jervis, NY downtown           $560,000
pedestrian mall and
promenade.................
729            MN            Construct Soo Line Trail           $396,000
from north of Bowlus to
the east side of
Mississippi River.........
730            WI            Construct traffic                  $320,000
mitigation signals, signs,
and other upgrades for
Howard Ave, St. Francis...
731            NH            Reconstruction of NH 11 and        $560,000
NH 28 Intersection in
Alton.....................
732            CA            Riverside Drive                    $320,000
Improvements, Los Angeles.
733            CA            Upgrade CA SR 4 East from       $16,000,000
the vicinity of Loveridge
Road to G Street, Contra
Costa County..............
734            TX            Widen SH 24 from a 2-lane        $1,600,000
facility to 4-lane divided
facility from SH 19 to
Cooper, TX................
735            PA            Rail crossing signalization        $260,320
upgrade, Willow Street,
Fleetwood, Berks..........
736            AZ            Navajo Route 20/Navajo             $800,000
Nation, Coconino County,
AZ/To Conduct a 2-lane
road design for 28 miles
of dirt road between the
communities of Le Chee,
Coppermine, and Gap.......
737            SC            Construct Hub City                 $800,000
Connector Passage (12.5
miles of bicycle-
pedestrian improvements,
176-SC 56), part of state-
wide Palmetto Trail
Project...................
738            FL            Construct U.S. 1/SR 100          $2,000,000
Connector, Bunnell,
Florida...................
739            ............  ...........................              $0
740            CA            Design and environmental           $800,000
analysis for State Route
11 connecting State Route
905 to the new East Otay
Mesa Port of Entry, San
Diego.....................
741            NY            Improve North Fork Trail,          $200,000
Southold..................
742            HI            Interstate Route H1 Deck         $3,816,000
Repair, Airport Viaduct...
743            OH            Replace Grade Separation at        $600,000
Eastland and Sheldon Road,
Berea.....................
744            WA            Widen I-5 through Lewis          $3,750,000
County....................
745            SC            Engineering, design, and         $8,000,000
construction of I-73 from
the North Carolina State
Line to I-95..............
746            OH            Planning and construction        $2,000,000
of a bicycle trail
adjacent to the I-90 and
SR 615 Interchange in Lake
County, OH................
747            SC            Widening of Boiling Springs      $4,800,000
9 from Rainbow Lake Rd. to
SC 292....................
748            IL            Construct Streetscape              $320,000
Project, Orland Hills.....
749            ............  ...........................              $0
750            OR            Widening of Oregon Hwy 217       $7,745,600
between Tualatin Valley
Hwy and the U.S. 26
interchange, Beaverton....
751            PA            SR 10 widening, New Morgan       $1,600,000
Borough and Caernarvon
Township, PA..............
752            MI            Widen M-72 from U.S. 31          $2,000,000
easterly 7.2 miles to Old
M-72......................
753            PA            Widening of Rt. 22 and SR        $2,700,000
26 in Huntingdon. Upgrades
to the interchange at U.S.
Rt. 22 and SR 26..........

[[Page 1286]]
119 STAT. 1286


754            MN            Widening of U.S. Highway 61        $640,000
at Frontenac Station, MN..
755            KS            Construction and                 $3,200,000
reconstruction of four
interchanges on I-435, I-
35 and U.S. 69 in Johnson
Co........................
756            MA            Melnea Cass Blvd.                $2,160,000
Reconstruction............
757            NH            Improve Meredith Village           $800,000
Traffic Rotary............
758            FL            Implement Blue Heron             $2,000,000
Boulevard Streetscape
Improvements, City of
Riviera Beach.............
759            NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety
including in the vicinity
of PS Q114................
760            WI            Reconstruct SH 181 between       $3,600,000
Florist Ave. and North
Milwaukee County Line.....
761            LA            Replace the Prospect Street      $2,400,000
Bridge (LA 3087), Houma...
762            GA            Streetscape improvements           $160,000
along LaVista Road in the
Northlake business
district of DeKalb County,
Georgia...................
763            MD            Study Greater Towson Area          $160,000
traffic flow and future
needs.....................
764            FL            Construct U.S. 1                   $320,000
Improvements, Cities of
Holly Hill and Ormond
Beach, Florida............
765            OH            Transportation Enhancements        $560,000
to the downtown area of
the Village of Chagrin
Falls, OH.................
766            MA            Pedestrian Walkway for the         $780,000
Town of Norwood...........
767            NJ            Restoration of Route 35 in       $1,600,000
Ocean County, New Jersey..
768            PA            Extension of Third Street        $4,320,000
from Interstate 83 to
Chestnut Street,
Harrisburg................
769            TX            Carlton road grade               $4,000,000
separation, Laredo, TX....
770            OH            Construct connector roadway      $1,000,000
between SR 13 and Horns
Hill Road in north Newark.
771            TN            Construct new lighting on          $200,000
Veterans Memorial Bridge,
Loudon County, Tennessee..
772            NY            Roadway improvements on CR       $1,776,000
3 between Ruland Rd. and I-
495.......................
773            TN            Construct State Route 385        $2,520,000
(North and East) around
the City of Memphis.......
774            NY            Waterloo, NY by-pass             $5,600,000
project...................
775            IN            Extend Everbrook Drive from        $512,000
SR 332 to Bethel Avenue in
the City of Muncie,
Indiana...................
776            TN            Construct Proposed SR 397        $1,780,000
extension from SR 96 West
to U.S. 431 North to
Franklin Williamson County
777            AK            Construct linking road from      $1,500,000
airport to port in Akutan.
778            PA            Uniontown to Brownsville         $4,000,000
section of Pennsylvania
Mon/Fayette Expressway....
779            NY            Ashburton Avenue                 $1,000,000
Reconstruction, Yonkers,
New York..................
780            OR            Highway 22, Polk County....        $800,000
781            FL            I-75 Widening and               $36,000,000
Improvements in Collier
and Lee County, Florida...
782            WI            Pioneer Road Rail Grade          $5,000,000
Separation (Fond du Lac,
Wisconsin)................
783            FL            Design and construction of       $3,200,000
double-deck roadway system
exiting FLL airport
connecting Y.S. 1 and I-
595.......................

[[Page 1287]]
119 STAT. 1287


784            MI            Wayne, Reconstruct one             $100,000
quarter of a mile stretch
of Laurenwood.............
785            GA            Construct the West               $2,320,000
Cleveland Bypass from U.S.
129 SR 11 near Hope Road
extending west of
Cleveland, on new and
existing locations to SR
75........................
786            IL            Reconstruct Highway-Railway      $1,600,000
crossing over U.S. 14 and
realignment of U.S. 14,
Des Plaines...............
787            OR            Highway 22-Cascade Highway         $400,000
interchange improvements,
Marion County.............
788            VA            Widen Route 29 between           $2,400,000
Eaton Place and Route 123
in Fairfax City, VA.......
789            WI            Reroute State Hwy 11 near        $3,200,000
Burlington, WI (Walworth
and Racine Counties, WI)..
790            IL            East Peoria, Illinois              $800,000
Technology Blvd. upgrades.
791            DC            Metro Branch Trail               $1,600,000
Construction..............
792            MA            Study and design I-93/             $400,000
Mystic Ave. Interchange at
Assembly Sq...............
793            NM            Widening of U.S. 491 from        $1,600,000
Navajo 9 to Colorado State
border....................
794            FL            Construct access road to         $4,000,000
link Jacksonville
International Airport to I-
95........................
795            FL            Widening of SR 60 from 66th        $800,000
Avenue to I-95 in Indian
River County, FL..........
796            GA            Widening of SR 133:                $800,000
Colquitt Co./Daughtery Co.
797            IL            Upgrade streets, Stickney        $2,206,400
Township..................
798            PA            Widening of SR 1001 Section        $800,000
601 in Clinton County.....
799            PA            Widening of Route 40 in          $1,600,000
Wharton Township, Fayette
County, Pa................
800            NJ            Widening of Route 1 and            $800,000
intersection improvements
in South Brunswick........
801            PA            Construct PA 706 Wyalusing         $800,000
Bypass Bradford County,
Pennsylvania..............
802            IL            Construct four lane                $480,000
extension of IL RT29 from
Rochester to Taylorville..
803            IL            Widening of Old Madison          $1,600,000
Road, St. Clair County....
804            NY            Construction of Bicycle            $400,000
Path and Pedestrian Trail
in City of Dunkirk........
805            PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition, and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking, and
roadway redesign in Plains
Township, Luzerne County..
806            CA            Replace I-880 overpass at          $600,000
Davis St. in San Leandro..
807            PA            DuBois-Jefferson County          $1,200,000
Airport Access Road
Construction..............
808            GA            Streetscape project to             $400,000
improve accessibility and
safety for pedestrians,
Mount Vernon..............
809            IL            Replacement of Fullerton         $3,840,000
Avenue Bridge and
Pedestrian Walkway........
810            NH            Construct intersection at          $560,000
U.S. 3 and Pembroke Hill
Road in Pembroke..........

[[Page 1288]]
119 STAT. 1288


811            FL            A new interchange with the      $10,400,000
Pineda Causeway Extension
and I-95..................
812            CT            Make Improvements to Groton        $160,000
Bicycle and Pedestrian
Trails and Facilities.....
813            MN            TH 36--Stillwater Bridge;          $400,000
cut-and-cover approach to
river crossing............
814            NM            U.S. 54 Reconstruction,          $2,400,000
Tularosa to Santa Rosa....
815            VA            Daniel Boone Wilderness          $2,560,000
Trail Corridor--Acquire
site; design and
construction of
interpretative center,
enhancement of trail
corridor..................
816            MI            Widening of M-24 from two          $800,000
lanes to four lanes with a
boulevard from I-69 to the
county line...............
817            IN            Construct U.S. 231 in            $4,800,000
Spencer and Dubois
Counties in Indiana.......
818            TN            Construct overpass at            $5,200,000
Highway 321 and Highway 11
Loudon County, Tennessee..
819            SD            Improve the SD Advanced            $800,000
Traveler Information
System....................
820            GA            Streetscape, lighting, and         $500,000
traffic enhancements from
Lancaster to Church Street
on Bellevue, Dublin.......
821            NY            Implement ITS system and           $100,000
apparatus to 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,       $1,000,000
lighting, and amenities in
Balls Ferry Park,
Wilkinson County..........
823            CA            Construct Inland Empire          $1,200,000
Transportation Management
Center in Fontana to
better regulate traffic
and dispatch personnel to
incidents.................
824            IL            Reconstruct Milwaukee           $13,600,000
Avenue, including Six
Corners...................
825            TX            Implementation and              $22,796,800
quantification of benefits
of large-scale landscaping
along freeways and
interchanges in the
Houston region............
826            PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $200,000
acquisition, and
construction of a
connector road between PA
115 and Interstate 81 in
Luzerne County............
827            AL            Pedestrian Improvements for        $320,000
Homewood, AL..............
828            TN            Plan and construct a               $532,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, Gallatin...........
829            MA            Conduct design, feasibility      $1,400,000
and environmental impact
studies of proposal to
relocate New Bedford/
Fairhaven bridge..........
830            IA            Iowa City, IA Construction       $2,000,000
of arterial extension
project connecting
Coralville to west and
south Iowa City...........
831            NJ            Rehabilitate Route 139 in        $1,600,000
Jersey City--Portway......
832            NJ            Route 605 extension to U.S.        $800,000
206.......................
833            OH            Widen SR 170 Calcutta......      $2,000,000
834            IA            Widening of Hwy 44, Grimes.        $800,000
835            VA            Widening of Highway 15 in        $1,349,760
Farmville, Virginia.......

[[Page 1289]]
119 STAT. 1289


836            MA            Design and construct               $800,000
intersection improvements
at Memorial Park II on
Roosevelt Ave. from Bay
St. to Page Boulevard,
Springfield...............
837            SC            Widening of Frontage Road        $2,240,000
from U.S. 72 to U.S. 56,
Laurens, SC...............
838            NY            Mill Road: NY Rte 261 to           $400,000
North Avenue in the Town
of Greece.................
839            NC            Widening of Beckford Drive,        $768,000
City of Henderson.........
840            NY            Realignment of Clove Road          $960,000
and Rt. 208, access
management improvements in
Orange County.............
841            NY            City of Peeskill, NY Street         $41,600
Resurfacing Program, Brown
Street....................
842            FL            Fund advanced Right-of-Way       $2,960,000
Acquisition along SR 52 in
Pasco County, Florida.....
843            MA            Design, engineer, permit,          $800,000
and construct ``Border to
Boston Bikeway'' rails-
trails project, from
Salisbury to Danvers......
844            FL            Soutel Drive Road                $1,200,000
Enhancements, Jacksonville
845            NJ            Bicycle facilities in West          $92,000
Deptford Township.........
846            PA            Create a direct connection       $2,400,000
between State Road 29 and
State Route 113...........
847            MA            Design and construction of       $1,200,000
the north and southbound
ramps on Interstate 91 at
Exit 19...................
848            IA            NW 70th Ave.                     $4,000,000
reconstruction, Johnston..
849            NY            Town of Minisink South             $220,000
Plank Road................
850            VA            Town of St. Paul--                 $120,000
Restoration of historic
Hillman House to serve as
trail system information
center and construction of
stations on trails........
851            PA            Conduct environmental            $3,360,000
review and acquire right-
of-way for preferred
alternative to improve PA
41........................
852            FL            Acquire Right-of-Way for           $400,000
Ludlam Trail, Miami,
Florida...................
853            NY            Construct Safe Routes to         $2,800,000
Schools projects in New
York City.................
854            CO            Construction of U.S. 24--        $4,800,000
Tennessee Pass, Colorado..
855            CA            Implement Riverside Avenue         $400,000
Railroad Bridge
improvements, south of
Interstate 10 in Rialto...
856            MA            Longwood Ave/Urban Ring            $450,000
Tunnel Study..............
857            MN            Ely Area Joint Public Works      $1,500,000
Complex...................
858            IA            U.S. 63 improvement near         $6,960,000
New Hampton, Iowa.........
859            NY            Village of Unionville               $64,000
reconstruction of Main
Street....................
860            TX            Widening from two lanes to       $7,200,000
four of SH 36 from
Bellville, TX to Sealy, TX
861            KY            Comprehensive Traffic Study        $480,000
for intersection of Main
Street and Berea College
Campus, Berea.............
862            TN            Improve State Route 62 in        $3,600,000
Morgan County near U.S. 27
in Wartburg to Petit Lane
from existing two lane
highway to four lanes.....

[[Page 1290]]
119 STAT. 1290


863            IL            Construct West Corbin            $4,000,000
Overpass over Illinois
255, Bethalto.............
864            OR            I-5/99W connector..........        $248,000
865            FL            Improvements to I-75 in the      $6,000,000
City of Pembroke Pines,
Florida...................
866            CA            Planning, design,                $4,000,000
engineering, and
construction of Naval Air
Station, North Island
access tunnel on SR 75-282
corridor, San Diego.......
867            CA            Construct road from Mace           $800,000
Blvd. in Yolo County to
federally supported
Pacific Flyway wildlife
area......................
868            PA            Construction of ramps on I-      $2,400,000
95 and U.S. 322, widening
of streets and
intersections.............
869            NY            Construct and restore              $800,000
pedestrian and residential
roadways in downtown
business district in
Rockville Centre..........
870            LA            Plan, design, and construct      $2,400,000
Pointe Clair Expressway in
Iberville Parish..........
871            MA            Construction of East Milton      $1,000,000
Parking Deck over
Interstate/Rt. 93.........
872            PA            Reconstruction of I-176 in       $2,400,000
Cumru and Robeson
Townships, Berks County...
873            MI            Resurfacing of Masonic             $928,000
Boulevard in Fraser.......
874            OH            Construct Ohio River Trail       $1,600,000
from Downtown Cincinnati,
Ohio to Salem Road........
875            PA            Realignment and                  $1,600,000
reconstruction of SR 60
interchange with U.S. 22-
30 and reconstruct
adjacent Tonidale-Bayer
intersection..............
876            NY            Construction and                   $836,000
rehabilitation of East and
West John Streets in the
Village of Lindenhurst, NY
877            NY            Construct Northern State         $4,800,000
Parkway and Long Island
Expressway access at
Marcus Avenue and
Lakeville Road and
associated Park and Ride..
878            PA            Deployment of an                 $3,200,000
Intelligent Transportation
System along I-476 PA
Turnpike NE Ext/PA 309 and
I-76 Schuylkill Exprway in
Montgomery County.........
879            NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety
including in the vicinity
of PS Q153................
880            TX            Build 36th Street Extension      $1,680,000
in San Antonio............
881            CA            North Atlantic Pedestrian          $480,000
Bridge, Monterey Park.....
882            CA            Reconstruct Eastern Ave.           $800,000
from Muller St. to Watcher
St. in Bell Gardens.......
883            PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition, and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking, and
roadway redesign in West
Pittston, Luzerne County..
884            CA            Design Traffic Flow              $1,000,000
Improvements Azusa and
Amar, City of West Covina.
885            MI            Reconstruction of Nine Mile        $896,000
Road in Eastpointe........
886            WA            Redmond, WA City-wide ITS..        $800,000
887            IL            Reconstruction and               $1,664,000
realignment of Baseline
Rd., Montgomery, IL.......

[[Page 1291]]
119 STAT. 1291


888            NY            Transportation Enhancements        $240,000
to support development of
Erie Canal in Orleans
County, NY................
889            CO            U.S. 160, East of Wolf          $12,000,000
Creek Pass................
890            MA            Design, engineering, and         $2,200,000
construction at I-93 The
Junction Interchange,
Andover, Tewksbury and
Wilmington................
891            CA            Rosemead Boulevard/Highway          $80,000
19 Renovation Project,
Pico Rivera...............
892            PA            Intersection improvements          $600,000
at PA Route 209 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         $240,000
Caldwell County...........
894            HI            Interstate Route H 1 guard       $3,040,000
rail and shoulder
improvements, Waikele
Bridge to Airport
Interchange, Honolulu.....
895            MI            M-168 Reconstruction in the      $1,760,000
village of Elberta........
896            CA            Colima Road at Fullerton           $800,000
Road Intersection
Improvements..............
897            OH            Design and construct             $2,100,000
Youngstown State
University Roadway and
Pedestrian Safety
Improvements, Youngstown..
898            MO            Reconstruct Interstate 44        $4,000,000
and Highway 39 Interchange
899            WA            Complete final Columbia            $640,000
River crossing
Environmental Impact
Statement for SR 35 in
Klickitat County..........
900            KY            Reconstruct U.S. 127 at            $480,000
Bellows Road, Mercer
County....................
901            NY            Roadway and Pedestrian           $3,200,000
Improvements for Times and
Duffy Squares in New York
City......................
902            FL            Six lane expansion of State      $3,200,000
Road 200 (A1A) from
Interstate 95 east to
Amelia Island.............
903            MI            Widen and reconstruct           $10,800,000
Tienken Road in Rochester
Hills from Livernois to
Sheldon...................
904            NV            Design and Construct I-580       $1,600,000
Meadowood Complex
Improvements, Washoe
County....................
905            NY            Town of Chester                    $160,000
reconstruction of 13
independent town roads....
906            NY            Implement ITS system and           $100,000
apparatus to enhance
citywide truck route
system at 9th Street and
3rd Avenue intersection in
Kings County..............
907            TX            Construction of highway            $800,000
infrastructure to provide
flood protection for
Nueces County.............
908            FL            Widen State Road 80, Hendry      $2,800,000
County....................
909            NE            Construction of the              $3,600,000
Columbus, Nebraska North
Arterial Road.............
910            KY            Extension of Newtown Pike       $16,000,000
from West Main Street to
South Limestone Street,
Lexington.................
911            OH            Road construction and              $400,000
related improvements in
the Village of Gates
Mills, OH.................
912            IL            Widening and Reconstruction      $1,200,000
of 55th Street from Holmes
Avenue to Williams Street
in Westmont and Clarendon
Hills.....................
913            IL            Road upgrades for the              $707,200
Village of Oreana, IL.....
914            ID            Widen Amity Road from            $1,600,000
Chestnut Street to
Robinson Road in Nampa,
Idaho.....................

[[Page 1292]]
119 STAT. 1292


915            TX            Widening FM 60 (University       $2,400,000
Drive) from SH 6 to FM
158, College Station......
916            GA            Widening Cedarcrest Road         $2,520,000
from Paulding County line
to Governors Towne........
917            CA            Widening Avenue 416 in           $1,200,000
Dinuba California.........
918            MA            Infrastructure Improvements        $600,000
in the Gardner-Kilby-
Hammond Area, Worcester...
919            TX            Extend Munn Street from            $800,000
Demaree Ln. to Gellhorn
Drive.....................
920            MN            City of Moorhead SE Main         $2,400,000
GSI, 34th St. and I-94
Interchange and Moorhead
Comprehensive Rail Safety
Program...................
921            AL            Widening and safety              $1,813,333
improvements to SR 216
between SR 215 and I-59, I-
20........................
922            GA            The Carrollton Greenbelt           $280,000
Project, City of
Carrollton, Georgia.......
923            IL            Improve safety of culvert          $256,000
replacement on 250th Rd.
between 460th St. and
County Hwy 20 in Grandview
Township, Edgar County, IL
924            NY            Kingston, Improve uptown         $1,040,000
streets...................
925            PA            Replace Blair Creek Bridge       $1,280,000
over the Little Lehigh
Creek, just west of the
Maple Grove Bridge, in
Longswamp Township, Berks
County....................
926            CA            Construct highway                $7,600,000
connecting State Route 78/
86 and State Route 111,
Brawley...................
927            GA            Widening and improvements          $800,000
on Colerain Road in St.
Marys, Georgia............
928            MD            Implement Pedestrian and         $1,600,000
Roadway Improvements
Contained in the Druid
Hill Park Neighborhood
Access Program in
Baltimore.................
929            AZ            Kabba Wash project between       $1,600,000
I-40 and Wikieup..........
930            ME            Route 2 Improvements from        $1,000,000
Bethel to Gilead..........
931            FL            Widening and Improvements       $21,600,000
for I-75 in Collier and
Lee County................
932            TX            Widening 349 Dawson and          $1,600,000
Martin County.............
933            WI            Widen Wisconsin State            $3,200,000
Highway 64 between Houlton
and New Richmond..........
934            IN            Widen Wheeling Avenue from         $768,000
Centennial to McGalliard
Road in the City of
Muncie, Indiana...........
935            MN            Construct a bike trail             $540,000
along the north side of TH
11 to the Voyageurs
National Park Visitor
Center on Black Bay of
Rainy Lake................
936            FL            Construct pedestrian             $1,280,000
underpass and safety
improvements at SR A1A and
Castillo Drive, City of
St. Augustine.............
937            CA            Rehabilitate street                 $99,200
surfaces in Sherman Oaks..
938            CA            Repair and realignment of          $240,000
Brahma Drive and Winnetka
Ave.......................
939            NJ            Riverwalk in Millburn along        $600,000
the West Branch of the
Rahway River..............
940            AL            I-20 widening and safety         $4,000,000
improvements in St. Clair
County....................
941            TN            Plan and construct                 $400,000
Rutherford County
visitor's center/
Transportation information
hub.......................

[[Page 1293]]
119 STAT. 1293


942            UT            Streetscape a 2-lane road        $1,050,000
and add turning lanes at
key intersections on Santa
Clara Drive in Santa Clara
943            CA            U.S. 101 Operational             $4,000,000
Improvements, San Jose....
944            IL            Upgrade traffic signal             $400,000
system on 87th Street,
Chicago...................
945            LA            Water Well Road Gateway          $4,520,000
Corridor (LA 478)--Design,
right-of-way, and
Construction of 3.6 miles
from I-49 to LA 1.........
946            CO            East 104th and U.S. 85             $664,000
Intersection: Study,
design, and construction
of needed improvements to
intersection..............
947            FL            Widen West Virginia Drive        $2,400,000
from Floresta Drive to
U.S. 1 in St. Lucie.......
948            ID            Widen U.S. 95 in Idaho from      $2,400,000
Jct. SH 1 to Canadian
Border....................
949            IL            Engineering of the Willow          $160,000
Creek Trail Extension from
Rock Cut State Park to the
Long Prairie Trail........
950            CA            Widen Interstate 8 overpass      $1,698,000
at Dogwood Road, Imperial
County....................
951            CA            Improve bridge 58-7 on SR          $800,000
115 that crosses 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        $2,400,000
to Mica Creek, Idaho......
953            MI            Complete the 2 segments of       $4,000,000
U.S. 127 from Ithaca to
St. Johns to a limited
access freeway............
954            CA            Construct a new interchange      $8,000,000
where I-15 meets Cajalco
Road in Corona, CA........
955            OH            Construct interchange at CR      $5,000,000
80 on IR 77 near Dover....
956            TX            Colonial Drive Project,          $1,200,000
Cleburne..................
957            NC            Widen and improve I-85           $6,400,000
through Cabarrus County
from U.S. 29/49 to 29/601.
958            NC            U.S. 401 from Raleigh to         $3,200,000
Fayetteville..............
959            GA            Construct and Improve            $3,200,000
Westside Parkway, Northern
Section, in Fulton County.
960            NY            City of Peeskill, NY Street        $104,000
Resurfacing Program,
Hudson Avenue.............
961            CA            Construction of CA 101           $1,800,000
Auxiliary Lanes, Marsh Rd.
to Santa Clara County Line
962            NY            For the acquisition of           $1,200,000
ferry boats and ferry
terminal facilities and
operation of ferry service
from Rockland County-
Yonkers-Manhattan.........
963            IL            For engineering, right-of-       $1,700,000
way acquisition and
reconstruction of two
existing lanes on Arsenal
Road from Baseline Rd. to
Rt. 53....................
964            PA            For the Scranton City            $2,000,000
Redevelopment Authority to
design, engineer, acquire
ROW and construct
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting and safety
improvements, parking, and
roadway redesign..........
965            FL            Construct landscaped             $1,228,833
sidewalks, bus lanes,
pedestrian/bicycle paths,
vehicular lanes, City of
Plantation................

[[Page 1294]]
119 STAT. 1294


966            NY            Improve Route 17--Access         $2,000,000
Control, Elmira to Chemung
967            PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition, and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking, and
roadway redesign in
Plymouth Borough, Luzerne
County....................
968            ID            Improve SH 75 from               $4,800,000
Timmerman to Ketchum......
969            OR            Improve U.S. 97 from Modoc       $1,600,000
Point to Algoma...........
970            SD            Construct an interchange on      $5,600,000
I-90 at Marion Road west
of Sioux Falls............
971            CA            Realign First St. between        $1,000,000
Mission Rd. and Clarence
St. in Los Angeles........
972            MO            Relocation of Route 13           $4,160,000
Branson West Bypass.......
973            IL            Resurfacing Congress               $400,000
Parkway The Illinois
Department of
Transportation............
974            RI            Establish interchange            $4,800,000
between Route 4 and
Interstate 95.............
975            TX            Improvements to FM 676 in          $400,000
Alton.....................
976            MA            Reconstruction of Goddard          $900,000
Memorial Drive from State
Route 9 to Airport Drive,
Worcester.................
977            FL            Homestead, FL Widening of        $2,000,000
SW 320 Street (Mowry
Drive) from Flagler Avenue
to SW 187 Avenue..........
978            CT            Broad Street Reconstruction      $2,000,000
Project in New Britain....
979            PA            Construct Johnsonburg            $3,520,000
Bypass....................
980            CT            Construct Valley Service         $1,600,000
Road Extension, North
Haven.....................
981            VA            Construction of                    $800,000
transportation related
enhancements and
infrastructure of the VMFA
project...................
982            MI            Reconstruct and Widen I-94      $12,800,000
in Kalamazoo, MI..........
983            MD            Land Acquisition for            $15,600,000
Highway Mitigation in
Cecil and Worcester
Counties, MD..............
984            CA            Construct overpass on              $600,000
Central Ave. at the
railroad crossing in
Newark....................
985            IL            City of Bartonville, Street        $762,058
widening and improvements
and sidewalk improvements.
986            OH            Construct Williamsburg,            $240,000
Ohio to Batavia, Ohio
Hike, and Bike Trail......
987            IL            The continuation of U.S.         $2,400,000
Route 12 from the
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.         $400,000
Roundabout, Sanford.......
989            PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition, and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking, and
roadway redesign in
Hanover Township, Luzerne
County....................
990            MI            Reduction from 3.5 miles of      $2,400,000
travel to 1.0 mile of
travel crossing over the
Tittabawassee River on
Meridian Road.............
991            ID            Widen U.S. 95 from Top of        $1,600,000
Lewiston Hill to Moscow,
Idaho.....................

[[Page 1295]]
119 STAT. 1295


992            TX            Construct a pedestrian/            $750,000
bicycle trail in the
Sunnyside area of Houston.
993            TX            Construct remaining 800-           $928,000
foot 4-lane divided
thoroughfare for Preston
Rd. segment between
Beltway 8 and Genoa Red
Bluff Rd..................
994            ............  ...........................              $0
995            SC            Medical University of South      $3,200,000
Carolina Roadway
Enhancement...............
996            PA            Acquisition of adjacent          $2,000,000
property to planned Park-n-
Ride at Kressler and
Hamilton Boulevards in
Wescosville, PA...........
997            MI            Livonia, reconstruct Stark         $800,000
Rd. between Plymouth Rd.
and I-96..................
998            PA            PA Route 309 roadway             $1,600,000
construction and
signalization improvements
in Tamaqua Borough........
999            MA            Union Square Roadway and           $400,000
Streetscape Improvements..
1000           TX            Improvements to South            $1,920,000
McColl Road in Hidalgo
County....................
1001           MS            Widen U.S. Highway 61 and        $3,040,000
improve major
intersections, Natchez....
1002           TX            Widen U.S. 82 from 2-lane        $3,600,000
facility to 4-lane
facility from FM 1417 in
Sherman, TX to U.S. 69 in
Bells, TX.................
1003           TX            Widen U.S. 79, from FM 1512      $1,600,000
near Jewett to IH-45 to a
4-lane divided highway....
1004           TN            Construct shoulder and turn      $1,200,000
lane on SR 35 in Seymour,
Tennessee.................
1005           NE            Construction of Heartland        $6,000,000
Expressway between
Alliance and Minatare, NE.
1006           WA            Pedestrian Sidewalk                $140,000
Construction in Snohomish.
1007           TN            North Second Street              $1,600,000
Corridor Upgrade, Memphis.
1008           OH            Purchase High Speed Ferries        $600,000
for Black River Excursion
Boat Service, Lorain......
1009           MD            MD4 at Suitland Parkway....      $3,200,000
1010           OK            Widen U.S. 60 from               $1,600,000
approximately 2 miles east
of the U.S. 60/US 75
interchange east
approximately 5.5 miles...
1011           NC            Widen U.S. 401 from Wake         $2,400,000
County to Louisburg.......
1012           PA            CUPSS, Pennsylvania, Urban       $4,000,000
Maglev Demonstration Test
Project...................
1013           TX            Widen U.S. 287 Bypass at         $6,400,000
Ennis from two to four
lanes.....................
1014           KY            Widen U.S. 27 from KY 34 to      $1,600,000
U.S. 150 Bypass, Garrard
County and Lincoln County.
1015           MN            Right-of-way acquisition           $800,000
for Mississippi River
Bridge connecting I-94 and
U.S. 10 between U.S. 169
and TH 101................
1016           WI            Rehabilitate Highway 53          $3,200,000
between Chippewa Falls and
New Auburn................
1017           IL            Widen U.S. Route 67 from         $1,600,000
Macomb to Illinois 101....
1018           IL            Widen U.S. Route 51 from         $2,400,000
Pana to Vandalia..........
1019           IL            Widen U.S. Route 34 from         $3,200,000
U.S. 67 to Carmen Road....

[[Page 1296]]
119 STAT. 1296


1020           WA            Alaskan Way Viaduct and         $11,200,000
Seawall...................
1021           NJ            East Coast Greenway bicycle        $800,000
and pedestrian path from
New Brunswick to Hudson
River.....................
1022           FL            Construct bicycle and            $1,200,000
pedestrian underpass and
park under I-95, Miami....
1023           CA            Implement Van Nuys Road and        $400,000
Safety Improvements.......
1024           FL            New systems interchange          $6,400,000
ramps at SR 417 and Boggy
Creek Road in Orange
County, FL................
1025           NY            Reconstruction of Tappan           $800,000
Street Bridge in Town of
Newark Valley.............
1026           IL            Widen Rakow Road from            $5,720,000
Ackman Road to IL Rt. 31
in McHenry County,
Illinois..................
1027           IL            Widen U.S. Route 30 from           $400,000
Rock Falls to Round Grove,
Whiteside County..........
1028           TN            Bristol, Tennessee highway-         $40,000
RR grade crossing
improvement--Cedar Street.
1029           IL            Perform Broadway and             $1,200,000
Sheridan Road signal
interconnect project,
Chicago...................
1030           IL            Widen U.S. Highway 30 in           $800,000
Whiteside County, Illinois
1031           WI            Rehabilitate existing            $5,600,000
bridge and construct new
bridge on Michigan Street
in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin
1032           ME            Replacement of the Route         $3,000,000
201-A ``covered'' bridge,
Norridgewock..............
1033           AR            Widen to four lanes,             $5,000,000
improvement, and other
development to U.S.
Highway 167 from LA State
line north to I-530.......
1034           PA            Widen the Route 412              $8,000,000
corridor from I-78 into
the City of Bethlehem.....
1035           HI            Construct access road for          $800,000
Kahului Airport...........
1036           IL            Improve Highway-Railroad           $600,000
Crossings, Galesburg......
1037           MN            Sauk Rapids Bridge and           $4,800,000
Roadway Replacement in
Sauk Rapids, MN...........
1038           TN            Construct Transportation           $800,000
and Heritage Museum in
Townsend, Tennessee.......
1039           CA            Widen State Route 98,            $2,400,000
including storm drain
developments, from Kloke
Road to State Route 111,
Calexico..................
1040           CA            Widen State Route 98 from        $4,000,000
Route 111 to State Route
7, Calexico...............
1041           GA            Construction of bypass           $1,600,000
around town of Hiram, from
SR 92 to U.S. 278,
Paulding County, Georgia..
1042           TX            Construction of the              $2,000,000
interchanges at BI20 and
IH20 for JBS Parkway......
1043           CA            Widen State Route 46            $33,461,000
between Airport Road and
the Shandon Rest Stop in
San Luis Obispo County....
1044           TN            Widen State Route 4 (U.S.          $800,000
78) from Mississippi State
Line to Getwell Road (SR
176) in Memphis, Shelby
County....................
1045           MI            Baraga County,                     $600,000
Reconstruction of county
primary road on Bayshore
Drive from Haanpaa Road
northerly 1.7 miles to
Whirligig Road............
1046           NY            Town of Warwick, NY walking        $400,000
and biking trail..........

[[Page 1297]]
119 STAT. 1297


1047           AK            Bridge over Fish Creek in        $1,000,000
Matanuska-Susitna Borough.
1048           GA            GA 400 and McGinnis Ferry        $2,400,000
Road Interchange, Forsyth
County, GA................
1049           NY            Implement Improvements for         $600,000
Pedestrian Safety in Kings
County....................
1050           NY            Reconfigure road through           $316,000
FDR VA Hospital to provide
access to Battery Place in
Town of Cortlandt.........
1051           CA            Widen State Route 262,           $3,200,000
replace two railroad
overpass structures, and
rebuild on and off ramps
between SR 262 and Kato
Rd. in Fremont............
1052           TN            Widen State Route 101 in         $6,400,000
Cumberland County 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      $5,600,000
County, Florida...........
1054           AZ            Construct a passing lane         $1,600,000
between the north end of
Lake Havasu City to I-40..
1055           GA            Widen SR 85 from SR 74 to        $2,400,000
County Route 126 Bernhard
Road, Fayette County,
Georgia...................
1056           CT            Construct New arterial           $8,000,000
roadway from Barnum Avenue
north to proposed Lake
Success Business Park in
Bridgeport, CT............
1057           MI            M-13 Washington Avenue           $1,200,000
Streetscape Project. Phase
II of High Priority
Project 192 in Public Law
105-550, City of Saginaw..
1058           TX            Improvements to FM 716 in          $800,000
Duval County..............
1059           NY            Town of Chester Surrey             $240,000
Meadow subdivision road
improvements..............
1060           PA            Cresheim Valley Drive              $880,000
Revitalization project
involving scenic
enhancements and
pedestrian safety
improvements from Lincoln
Drive to Navajo Street....
1061           NC            Transportation Improvements      $2,400,000
at Piedmont Triad Research
Park, Winston-Salem, NC...
1062           MO            Upgrade and partially            $2,880,000
relocate MO Rt. 141 from I-
64 to Rt. 340.............
1063           NY            Construct Millennium             $8,400,000
Parkway in the Towns of
Dunkirk and Sheridan......
1064           AZ            Construct the Rio Salado         $6,400,000
Parkway to connect I-10
and Loop 202 freeways to
7th Street in downtown
Phoenix...................
1065           TN            Improving Vehicle                   $83,200
Efficiencies at At-Grade
highway-Railroad Crossing
in Lenoir City, TN........
1066           NJ            Replacement of Monmouth          $2,400,000
County bridges W-7, W-8,
and W-9...................
1067           OK            U.S. 54, Widen U.S. 54 from        $800,000
North of Optima Northeast
to Kansas State Line,
Texas County, OK..........
1068           FL            Widen Palm Coast Parkway         $2,320,000
and I-95 interchange and
overpass, Flagler County,
Florida...................
1069           FL            Delray Beach Federal             $1,600,000
Highway pedestrian
improvements SE 4th Street
to NE 4th Street..........
1070           WI            Expand Highway 10 between       $16,000,000
Marshfield and Stevens
Point.....................

[[Page 1298]]
119 STAT. 1298


1071           NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety
including in the vicinity
of IS R72/PS R69..........
1072           TN            Upgrade roads for Slack          $1,500,000
Water Port facility and
industrial park Lake
County....................
1073           AK            Emergency evacuation road        $3,000,000
at Point Hope in North
Slope Borough.............
1074           MI            Construct railroad grade         $1,600,000
separation on M-85 (Fort
Street) North of Van Horn
Road, Trenton.............
1075           IL            Land acquisition,                $4,000,000
engineering, and
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,         $384,000
complete minor roadway
realignment, and improve
channelization at U.S. 322
and PA 10 intersection....
1077           KS            Construction of a 4-lane         $8,548,800
access controlled
improvement for 4 miles on
US 54/400 in Pratt County.
1078           IN            Upgrade rail crossing at           $160,000
93rd Avenue, St. John.....
1079           FL            Widen SR 710 by 2 lanes          $2,400,000
from Congress Avenue to
U.S. 1....................
1080           GA            Widen SR 234/Gillionville          $800,000
Road from Eight Mile Road
to Lockett Station,
Dougherty County..........
1081           CA            Widen SR 12 to four lanes        $6,400,000
through Jamieson Canyon
(between I-80 and SR 29)
for safety concerns and
economic growth...........
1082           GA            Widen SR 104 from SR 383/        $3,200,000
Belaire Road to CR 515/
Cumberland Drive
(including bridges) in
Columbia County...........
1083           IN            Study Traffic on Muncie By-         $96,000
Pass from Centennial
Avenue to McGalliard Road
in the City of Muncie and
Delaware County, Indiana..
1084           FL            Construct U.S. 17-92             $1,200,000
improvements, Maitland,
Florida...................
1085           CA            Widen South Main St.-Soda        $3,200,000
Bay Rd. between CR 400A
(mile marker 0.0-mile
marker 0.7) and CR 502
(mile marker 0.0 and 0.9).
1086           VA            Replacement of the 635             $400,000
Bridge in Orange County,
VA........................
1087           TX            Construct Loop 20 in Laredo      $1,600,000
1088           IA            Construct SE Connector/          $7,200,000
Martin Luther King, Jr.,
Pkwy, Des Moines..........
1089           FL            Construction and Design of       $1,600,000
Miami River Greenway Road
Improvements and 5th
Street Improvements.......
1090           TX            Widen SH 317 from two lanes      $1,600,000
to four lane divided
facility..................
1091           TX            Widen SH 205 from two lanes        $800,000
to a six lane urban
divided highway from North
of SH 66 to proposed SH
276.......................
1092           CA            Widen Santa Maria River          $2,720,000
Bridge on U.S. Highway 101
between Santa Barbara
County and San Luis Obispo
County....................
1093           CA            Widen San Fernando Road            $848,000
North, including
streetscape projects,
Sylmar....................

[[Page 1299]]
119 STAT. 1299


1094           PA            Central Susquehanna Valley       $4,880,000
Transportation Project
U.S. 15: $5 million for
the final design..........
1095           NJ            Construct Rt. 49 Cohansey        $2,400,000
River Bridge Replacement,
Cumberland County.........
1096           ME            Construction and snowmobile      $4,000,000
safety accommodations for
Route 116 Bridge, Medway..
1097           MI            Construct pedestrian trail          $80,000
and bridge in Kearsley
Park in Flint.............
1098           IA            Coralville, IA                   $1,600,000
Implementation of final
phase of Safety
Improvements Project from
12th Ave. to 22nd Ave.....
1099           IL            Expand and improve Illinois      $5,720,000
Route 47 Roadway from Reed
Road to Kreutzer Road in
Huntley, Illinois.........
1100           NY            Build Route 15,                 $20,000,000
Pennsylvania to Presho....
1101           GA            I-285 Riverside interchange      $1,600,000
reconstruction, Fulton
County, Georgia...........
1102           MN            Construct 3 segments of          $1,200,000
Cuyuna Lakes Trails, Crow
Wing County...............
1103           WA            Improve I-5 interchange at      $10,772,000
134th Street in Clark
County....................
1104           GA            Construct Pedestrian Safety      $2,400,000
Improvements on Buford Hwy
(SR 13), Dekalb County....
1105           DC            11th St. Bridges,               $17,600,000
Rehabilitation of
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       $8,000,000
four lane expressway from
Macon to Route 24.........
1107           VA            Mill Road Slip Ramp........        $400,000
1108           NY            Construct sidewalks and            $300,000
curbing on Tate Avenue in
Village of Buchanan.......
1109           MI            Delta County, Widen,               $589,920
pulverize, improve
drainage at County Rd. 497
from U.S. 2 at Nahma
Junction southerly 4.75
miles to the village of
Nahma.....................
1110           UT            Construction of 200 North        $3,200,000
Street highway-rail graded
crossing separation,
Kaysville, Utah...........
1111           FL            Kennedy Blvd.                    $1,600,000
Reconstruction, Eatonville
1112           VA            Improvements to public           $2,400,000
roadways within the campus
boundaries of the Virginia
Biotechnology Park,
Richmond, VA..............
1113           VA            Install Transpiration               $94,720
Critical Incident Mobile
Data Collection Device in
Charlottesville...........
1114           NY            Ithaca, Design and                 $435,200
construct pedestrian and
bicycle path..............
1115           AZ            Navajo Mountain Road on the      $1,000,000
Navajo Nation.............
1116           PA            Expansion of existing PA         $3,280,000
Turnpike ITS System.......
1117           TX            Construction of ferryboat          $320,000
for City of Port Aransas..
1118           NY            Project will rehabilitate        $4,000,000
and reopen historic High
Bridge, which crosses the
Harlem River between
Manhattan and the Bronx...
1119           NJ            Route 17 Congestion              $9,600,000
Improvements and Widening,
from Williams Avenue to
the Garden State Parkway
and Route 4 in Bergen
County....................

[[Page 1300]]
119 STAT. 1300


1120           IN            Design and construct Tanner        $992,000
Creek Bridge on U.S. 50,
Dearborn County Indiana...
1121           NC            Environmental studies and        $4,800,000
construction of U.S. 74
Monroe Bypass Extension...
1122           OH            Construct Pedestrian Bridge      $1,712,000
from east of Dock 32 to
Voinovich Park southwest
corner, Cleveland.........
1123           GA            Extension of Sugarloaf           $2,400,000
Parkway, Gwinnett County..
1124           ME            Construct bicycle and            $1,000,000
pedestrian bridge over
Stillwater River, Orono...
1125           IL            For widening from two to           $800,000
four lanes, the Brookmont
Boulevard Viaduct in
Kankakee, IL and adjusting
approach grades...........
1126           GA            I-285 SR 400 interchange           $800,000
reconstruction and HOV
interchange, Fulton
County, Georgia...........
1127           MN            Construct a road between           $240,000
Highway 332 and TH 11
including a signalized
rail road crossing,
Koochiching County........
1128           MO            Hanley Road from I-64 to         $8,000,000
south of State Route 100,
St. Louis County..........
1129           AL            Expand SR 167 from Troy, AL      $2,400,000
to Enterprise, AL.........
1130           MN            Construction of primary and      $3,400,000
secondary access roadways
to the Duluth Air National
Guard Base, City of Duluth
1131           CT            Construct high-speed rail        $3,440,000
crossing to bike and
pedestrian trails-Enfield,
CT........................
1132           TX            Expansion of Port Rd. at         $9,552,000
Northbound Frontage Rd. of
SH 146 east to
intersection with Cruise
Terminal Rd. to 6-lane
section with raised median
1133           TN            Constuct Western Bypass          $2,720,000
from Zinc Plant Road to
Dotsonville Road,
Montgomery County.........
1134           CA            Improvements to State Route      $4,000,000
67/State Route 52
interchange...............
1135           TN            Plan and construct a               $200,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, Springfield........
1136           TX            Expansion of Daniel McCall       $2,200,000
Dr., Lufkin, TX...........
1137           NY            Rehabilitate the Pines           $2,212,000
Bridge Road and Lake
Avenue and Ryder Road, in
Ossining, York-town, and
New Castle................
1138           CA            Construct Valley Boulevard         $600,000
Drainage Improvements, El
Monte.....................
1139           NJ            Route 82 Union County              $800,000
Streetscape and
Intersection Improvements.
1140           NY            Short Clove Road Rail              $800,000
Overpass, Haverstraw......
1141           FL            Construct Atlantic                 $800,000
Boulevard Improvements,
Key West, Florida.........
1142           CA            Implement intelligent            $2,400,000
management and logistics
measures to improve
freight movement, Gateway
Cities....................
1143           WI            Expand U.S. 45 between CTH       $4,000,000
G and Winchester,
Winnebago County, WI......

[[Page 1301]]
119 STAT. 1301


1144           NY            Implement ITS system and           $100,000
apparatus to 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        $15,200,000
from U.S. 20 in Dubuque
Co, IA to U.S. 61 and U.S.
151.......................
1146           HI            Kapolei Transportation             $800,000
Improvements, Island of
Oahu......................
1147           NY            125th Street Corridor           $11,200,000
Improvements from Old
Broadway to Marginal
Street/Waterfront, New
York City.................
1148           CA            Los Angeles Regional Diesel        $400,000
Emissions Reduction
Program For Engine
Retrofit, Gateway Cities..
1149           IL            Reconstruct intersection of     $11,440,000
Wood Dale and Irving Park
roads in DuPage County, IL
1150           GA            Social Circle bypass             $2,400,000
completion, from Stanford
Road to SR 11, Social
Circle....................
1151           GA            Streetscape Project to             $500,000
install sidewalks and
bicycle trails, Gray......
1152           MO            Reconstruction of the            $5,600,000
Tucker Street Bridge in
the City of St. Louis.....
1153           PA            Bethlehem Pike improvements        $800,000
from Valley Green Road to
South of Gordon Lane,
Springfield Township......
1154           GA            Construct I-75 I-575 HOV           $480,000
interchange, Cobb County,
Georgia...................
1155           IL            Construct multi-use                $200,000
pedestrian path between
Oakton St. and Dempster
St., Skokie...............
1156           AZ            Construct link from Twin         $4,800,000
Peaks Road to I-10 and
Linda Vista Blvd.
including bridge over
Santa Cruz River and
overpass of Union Pacific
Rail Road.................
1157           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in
Newport Township, Luzerne
County....................
1158           VA            Fries Train Station and            $800,000
Trail--Restoration of
former train station for
use as visitors center and
construction of trail
along New River...........
1159           PA            Construction SR 3024,              $560,000
Middle Creek Bridge II,
South Canaan, Wayne County
1160           WI            Expand U.S. 141 between SH       $1,600,000
22 and SH 64 (Oconto and
Marinette Counties,
Wisconsin)................
1161           IL            Development of a                 $2,560,000
coordinated trail system,
parking and trial systems
in Dixon, IL..............
1162           PA            Installation of                    $720,000
comprehensive signage
system across 1700 acres
of urban parks in
Pittsburgh................
1163           GA            Interstate 75/Windy Hill         $1,600,000
Road Interchange..........
1164           NJ            Bridge replacement and SR          $800,000
31 widening over the
Raritan Valley Line in
Glen Gardner, Hampton,
Hunterdon County..........

[[Page 1302]]
119 STAT. 1302


1165           VA            Bristol Train Station--            $400,000
Historic preservation and
rehabilitation of former
Bristol, VA train station.
1166           CO            I-25 Improvements--Douglas--     $4,800,000
Arapahoe County Line to El
Paso County Line..........
1167           TN            Reconstruct connection with        $400,000
Hermitage Avenue to
Cumberland River Bluff in
Nashville.................
1168           IL            For Village of Lemont to            $80,000
construct a bridge over
Chicago Ship and Sanitary
Canal linking Centennial
Trail to I&M Canal Trail..
1169           OH            Construct roadway                  $100,000
improvement along State
Route 62 in Berlin........
1170           NY            Reconstruction and               $1,600,000
improvements of University
Avenue and the extension
of the ARTWalk project,
Rochester.................
1171           NH            Reconstruction and               $1,600,000
Improvements to NH Route
110 in Berlin.............
1172           PA            Route 6 Resurfacing from         $1,200,000
Mansfield Borough in
Richmond Township to the
Village of Mainesburg in
Sullivan Township.........
1173           WA            SR 167--Right-of-way             $2,000,000
acquisition for a new
freeway connecting SR 509
to SR 161.................
1174           MD            I-70: Frederick............      $1,600,000
1175           NY            Planning, Design, ROW and        $5,200,000
Construction of Fort Drum
Connector Road............
1176           CA            Study and construct highway      $3,200,000
alternatives between
Orange and Riverside
Counties, directed by the
Riverside Orange Corridor
Authority working with
local government agencies,
local transp. authorities,
and guided by the current
MIS.......................
1177           CA            Fresno County, CA Widen          $1,200,000
Friant Road to four lanes
with class II bicycle
lanes.....................
1178           MO            Study for Highway 160 and        $1,600,000
Kansas Expressway Corridor
1179           FL            Construct Route 9B from          $4,000,000
U.S. 1 to Route 9A (I-295)
to the Duval County line..
1180           PA            Design, const. widening of       $2,400,000
PA 94 from York-Adams
County line to Elm Street
in Hanover, PA............
1181           CA            Improvement of intersection        $128,000
at Burbank Blvd. and
Woodley Ave...............
1182           TX            Port of Beaumont Southside       $5,190,400
Intermodal Project........
1183           WA            Perform final interchange          $840,000
design and property
acquisition at Fleshman
Way where it crosses SR
129, that enhances safety
and passenger and freight
mobility and reduces
congestion................
1184           WA            Roosevelt Extension at           $3,200,000
Urban Avenue to Cameron
Way in Mount Vernon.......
1185           NJ            Hazel Street                     $3,200,000
reconstruction, Passaic
County....................
1186           FL            Improvements to Eller Drive        $800,000
including right-of-way
acquisition and
construction of return
loop connector............
1187           MO            Study Highway 37-60 Entire       $2,000,000
Corridor..................
1188           TX            The District-Tyler Outer         $5,184,000
Loop 49 Construction......

[[Page 1303]]
119 STAT. 1303


1189           PA            Tidal Schuylkill Riverfront      $1,344,000
project consists of an
eight mile bike and
pedestrian recreation
trail from Locust Street
to Historic Bar-tram's
Gardens...................
1190           NY            Town of Fishkill                    $19,600
reconstruct Maple Ave.....
1191           IL            For IDOT to expedite pre-        $2,800,000
construction and
construction to widen I-55
from Naperville Road south
to I-80...................
1192           UT            200 East Minor Arterial,           $720,000
Logan City, Utah..........
1193           NJ            Construct I-287, I-80,             $800,000
Route 202 Interchange.....
1194           NY            Design and construction of       $4,480,000
Fulton Street from Clinton
Avenue to Bedford Avenue
in Brooklyn, New York.....
1195           TX            Port of Corpus Christi Joe         $400,000
Fulton International Trade
Corridor for congestion
and safety enhancements...
1196           MO            Renovations and                    $640,000
Enhancements on the
Bicycle Pedestrian
Facility on the Old Chain
of Rocks Bridge spanning
the Mississippi River.....
1197           CT            Construct Shoreline              $1,600,000
Greenway Trail, Guilford,
Branford, East Haven......
1198           NJ            Transportation Improvements      $4,000,000
in Liberty Corridor.......
1199           OH            Construct SR 104 into a 4        $6,000,000
lane facility with a
turning lane in Ross
County....................
1200           MO            Construct 2 lanes on Hwy 45      $2,400,000
from Hwy 9 to Graden Road
in Platte County..........
1201           MS            Plan and Construct Highway       $2,400,000
45 Bypass in Columbus.....
1202           PA            Reconstruct Hwy and replace      $1,200,000
of bridge on U.S. 422
between the Berks County
Line and the Schuylkill
River in Montgomery and
Chester Counties..........
1203           FL            Construct SR 20 connection       $3,440,000
to SR 100 via CR 309-C,
Putnam County, Florida....
1204           OH            Road and related pedestrian         $80,000
improvements at SR 283 in
the Village of Grand
River, OH.................
1205           NY            Road infrastructure              $6,520,000
projects to improve
commercial access in the
Towns of Malta and
Stillwater and the Village
of Round Lake, Saratoga
County, New York..........
1206           NY            Replace structurally               $800,000
deficient bridge over the
Pocantico River, the
Village of Pleasantville..
1207           IL            Complete Heavy Truck Loop          $500,000
for DuQuoin Industrial
Park......................
1208           MD            Construction and                $12,000,000
dualization of U.S. 113...
1209           GA            Streetscape-Quitman........        $160,000
1210           NY            Town of New Windsor Toleman        $592,000
and Station Roads
Reconstruction and area
Improvements..............
1211           ............  ...........................              $0
1212           WA            Design and construct             $2,000,000
pedestrian land bridge
spanning SR 14............
1213           MI            Construction of Greenways          $239,200
in Pittsfield Charter
Township--2.5 miles to
existing Ann Arbor
Greenways, Pittsfield
Charter Township..........

[[Page 1304]]
119 STAT. 1304


1214           CA            Golden Gate National Parks       $5,000,000
Conservancy--Plan and
Implement Trails and
Bikeways Plan for the
Golden Gate National
Recreation Area and
Presidio..................
1215           NY            State of NY Village of             $600,000
Kiryas Joel sidewalk
project...................
1216           ............  ...........................              $0
1217           IL            Transportation Enhancement         $762,058
and road improvements
necessary for Downtown
Plaza improvements in
Jacksonville, IL..........
1218           CA            Upgrade and reconstruct I-       $2,000,000
580/Vasco Road
Interchange, City of
Livermore.................
1219           TX            Build Bike Trail at Chacon       $3,300,000
Creek in Laredo...........
1220           UT            3200 South Project, Nibley,        $800,000
Utah......................
1221           NJ            Expand Route 440--State          $4,000,000
Street Interchange in
Perth Amboy...............
1222           GA            Improvement and                    $800,000
construction of SR 40 from
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       $1,280,000
to urban-rural corridors..
1224           GA            Georgia Construct Three          $1,600,000
Greenway Trail Project,
Dekalb County.............
1225           FL            Cross Creek Boulevard            $1,440,000
Widening..................
1226           MD            Implement Intelligent            $1,120,000
Transportation System in
Baltimore.................
1227           OH            Construct an access road           $800,000
into the industrial park
near SR 209 and CR 345 in
Guernsey County...........
1228           CA            Improve the Rosecrans Ave.          $40,000
and Alondra Blvd. bridges
over the San Gabriel River
in Bellflower.............
1229           PA            Independence National            $3,600,000
Historic Park scenic
enhancement and pedestrian
walkways improvement
project in conjunction
with the park's Executive
Mansion Exhibit...........
1230           CA            Modesto, Riverbank and           $1,600,000
Oakdale, CA Improve SR 219
to 4-lanes................
1231           ME            Modifications to Exit 7/I-         $180,000
295 and to Franklin
Arterial, Portland........
1232           KY            Replace Bridge and                 $700,000
Approaches on Searcy
School Road over Beaver
Creek, Anderson County....
1233           NJ            Route 22 Sustainable             $2,400,000
Corridor Plan.............
1234           NY            Conduct studies, if              $4,000,000
necessary, and construct
the High Line Trail
Project, New York City....
1235           WA            Install dual left turn           $1,750,000
lanes and intersection
signal modifications at SR
432 and Columbia Blvd.....
1236           OK            Transportaion enhancements       $2,400,000
for Highway 19 from Ada to
Stratford.................
1237           CA            I-15/Base Line Road              $4,000,000
Interchange Project,
Rancho Cucamonga,
California................
1238           SC            Build Interchange at U.S.        $4,800,000
17 and Bowman Road in
Mount Pleasant, SC........
1239           CA            Complete Monterey Bay            $5,800,000
Sanctuary Scenic Trail
between Monterey and Santa
Cruz counties.............

[[Page 1305]]
119 STAT. 1305


1240           NY            Improve Hospital Road            $4,800,000
Bridge between CR 99 and
CR 101, Patchogue.........
1241           NV            Construct Martin Luther          $8,000,000
King, Jr., Blvd.--
Industrial Rd. Connector..
1242           MI            I-96 Beck, Wixom Road            $2,400,000
Interchange, design, ROW,
and construction..........
1243           IA            Muscatine, IA Construction         $400,000
of 4.2 mile multipurpose
trail from Musser Park to
Weggens Road..............
1244           GA            Historic preservation of a         $160,000
city bus station in
downtown Eastman..........
1245           TX            Construction of internal         $2,000,000
roads at Port of
Brownsville to make roads
safer with less wear and
tear......................
1246           NY            NYSDOT Route 55 turning            $400,000
lane at Gardner Hollow
Road......................
1247           TN            Plan and construct a                $80,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, Lewisburg..........
1248           TX            Reconstruct Danieldale Rd.       $1,600,000
from I-35E to Houston
School Rd. in Lancaster...
1249           CT            Relocation of Edmond Road        $1,600,000
in Newtown and
construction of additional
turning lanes at Rte 6 and
Commerce and Edmond Rds...
1250           OH            Construction of Interchange      $1,200,000
at State Route 8 and
Seasons Road, Stow, OH....
1251           NJ            North Avenue-Route 1                $60,000
Elizabeth Pedestrian and
Bicycle Project...........
1252           AL            Pedestrian Improvements for        $106,666
Morris, AL................
1253           NY            Preliminary design and           $7,360,000
environmental impact study
for a collector-
distributor road along I-
95 from Westchester Ave.
to Bartow Ave.............
1254           NJ            Replacement of Signals at          $392,000
the Intersections of
Centennial Ave. at Lincoln
Ave. and Walnut Ave. at
Lincoln Ave., Cranford, NJ
1255           KS            Replacement or                   $2,000,000
rehabilitation of the
Amelia Earhart U.S. 59
Bridge in Atchison County,
Kansas....................
1256           ............  ...........................              $0
1257           CA            Central Galt and State           $2,400,000
Route 99 Interchange and
Access Improvements.......
1258           OH            Construction of Roadways         $3,560,000
and transportation
improvements for downtown
Springfield, Ohio.........
1259           KY            Reconstruct KY 89 from             $600,000
Irvine Bypass to 2000 Feet
North of Estill County
High School, Estill County
1260           NY            Town of East Fishkill new          $640,000
construction Bypass road..
1261           CA            Establish new grade              $1,600,000
separation at Sunset Ave.
in Banning................
1262           CT            Construct and Widen                $800,000
Stamford Rail Underpass
and Road Realignment
Project...................
1263           TN            Hamblen County, Tennessee          $800,000
U.S. 11E (SR 34)
interchange improvements..
1264           IL            Implement ITS and                $3,200,000
congestion Mitigation
Project on I-294 and I-90.
1265           AZ            Design and construction of       $1,600,000
roadway improvements on
U.S. 60 from 67th Avenue
to McDowell...............

[[Page 1306]]
119 STAT. 1306


1266           TX            Hike and bike trail will           $800,000
tie into the Gellhorn
Drive project providing an
improved multimodal
transportation facility...
1267           OH            Jackson Township, Ohio--         $1,600,000
Hill and Dales Road
widening..................
1268           SC            Build 701 Connector              $4,000,000
(Southern Conway Bypass)
in SC.....................
1269           MN            Reconstruct I-694 White            $400,000
Bear Avenue (CSAH 65)
Interchange in White Bear
Lake......................
1270           WI            Replace 17th Street Lift         $6,000,000
Bridge, Two Rivers,
Wisconsin.................
1271           MA            Route 116 and Bay Road           $3,200,000
Intersection Improvements-
Amherst...................
1272           IL            Streetscape improvements on        $800,000
Blue Island from 19th-21st
St, Chicago...............
1273           TN            Construct and improve               $80,000
intersections in Niota,
Tennessee.................
1274           CA            Upgrade Bellflower                 $280,000
intersections at Alondra
Blvd. and at Rosecrans
Ave. in Bellflower........
1275           NJ            Construct Riverbank Park         $2,000,000
Bike Trail, Kearny........
1276           NC            Install ITS on U.S. 52 in          $320,000
Forsyth County............
1277           MD            Construction and                 $5,600,000
dualization of MD 404 in
Queen Anne, Talbot and
Caroline Counties.........
1278           NY            Land acquisition and               $740,000
improvements on Louisa
Street, Peekskill, NY.....
1279           IL            Upgrade connector road from      $1,920,000
IL Rt. I-255 to IL Rt. 3,
Sauget....................
1280           NJ            Reconstruction of Route 46/      $9,600,000
Route 3/Valley Rd/ Notch
Rd. Interchange...........
1281           MS            Upgrade roads in Attala            $800,000
County District 4 (Roads
4211 and 4204), Kosciusko,
Ward 3 (U.S. Highway 16),
and Ethel (U.S. Highway
12), Attala County........
1282           TX            Construction of streets in       $9,250,000
the White Heather area of
Houston...................
1283           MS            Upgrade roads in Canton            $320,000
(U.S. Highway 51, 22, 16,
and I-55), Madison County.
1284           IA            Reconstruction of the Neal       $2,880,000
Smith Trail, bicycle and
pedestrian, Polk Co.......
1285           CA            Rehabilitate pavement on           $400,000
Azusa Avenue and San
Gabriel Avenue in Azusa...
1286           CA            South Bay Cities COG             $1,600,000
Coastal Corridor
Transportation Initiative,
Phase 3, El Segundo.......
1287           MS            Upgrade roads in Terry,          $1,000,000
Edwards, Utica and Bolton,
Hinds County..............
1288           FL            U.S. 1 six laning from St.         $800,000
Lucie County line to south
of 4th St. in Indian River
County, FL................
1289           MD            Expand Route 29 in Howard        $5,440,000
County....................
1290           WA            Issaquah SE Bypass.........      $4,000,000
1291           ............  ...........................              $0
1292           MD            U.S. 220 MD 53 North South         $800,000
Corridor..................
1293           NJ            Improvements to Clove Road       $2,800,000
and Long Hill Road in
Little Falls and Upper
Mountain Ave. in Montclair
1294           HI            Study of East Hawaii               $160,000
Alternative Road, Island
of Hawaii.................
1295           FL            Town of Southwest Ranches        $1,600,000
Urban Interchange.........

[[Page 1307]]
119 STAT. 1307


1296           CA            Long Beach Intelligent           $2,400,000
Transportation 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               $2,800,000
Improvements between
Branham Lane and Blossom
Road, San Jose............
1298           AR            Construct and rehabilitate       $1,200,000
University of Arkansas
Technology Corridor
Enhancement Project.......
1299           CO            U.S. 550, New Mexico State       $4,800,000
Line to Durango...........
1300           TX            Construct bicycle and              $600,000
pedestrian trails in
Houston's historic Third
Ward......................
1301           NY            Village of Cold Spring Main        $200,000
St. sidewalk and lighting
improvements..............
1302           NY            Village of Goshen Hatfield         $200,000
Lane reconstruction.......
1303           SC            Plan and build Interstate        $8,000,000
73 from NC line to Myrtle
Beach, SC.................
1304           ............  ...........................              $0
1305           FL            Construct College Road             $400,000
Improvements, Key West,
Florida...................
1306           NY            West Harlem Waterfront-         $11,200,000
ferry, intermodal and
street improvements.......
1307           CA            Construct sound barriers at        $680,000
the I-805/SR 54
Interchange, National City
1308           NY            Road projects that develop       $1,000,000
Access to Port Byron and
Erie Canal................
1309           FL            West Palm Beach, Florida,          $800,000
Flagler Drive Re-
configuration.............
1310           AL            Construct extension of I-        $4,000,000
565 westward from existing
interchange to existing
Tennessee River bridges at
Decatur, AL...............
1311           CT            Construct Farmington Canal       $2,000,000
Greenway, City of New
Haven and Hamden..........
1312           GA            Replace sidewalks, upgrade         $320,000
lighting, and install
landscaping, Helena.......
1313           IA            Upgrade U.S. 30 Liberty          $7,600,000
Square in City of Clinton,
Iowa......................
1314           HI            Study of Waianae Coast             $400,000
Emergency Access Road.....
1315           NY            Westchester County, NY             $400,000
Rehabilitation of
Lexington Ave, Mount Kisco
1316           CA            Widen and Improve County         $1,600,000
Line Road in Calimesa.....
1317           OH            Construct turn lane,               $600,000
install traffic light, and
reorient traffic on SR 146
near Bussemer Lane in
Muskingum County..........
1318           RI            Restore and Expand Maritime        $800,000
Heritage site in Bristol..
1319           OH            City of Green, Ohio. Lauby       $1,200,000
Road exit improvements....
1320           NY            Construct Bicycle Path in          $520,000
Town of Bedford...........
1321           CA            Compton Arterial                 $3,200,000
Reconstruction and
Improvement Program,
Compton...................
1322           MT            Construction of S. 323 from      $9,600,000
Alzada to Ekalaka in
Carter County.............
1323           IL            Improve Great River Road,          $400,000
Mercer County.............
1324           FL            Normandy Blvd. and Cassat          $400,000
Ave. Transportation
Enhancements, Jacksonville

[[Page 1308]]
119 STAT. 1308


1325           OH            North Canton, OH Applegrove      $2,400,000
St. road widening.........
1326           MA            Design and Build Cape Cod        $3,200,000
Bike Trail, with Shining
Sea Bikeway, to link core
with outer Cape
communities and heavily
visited national sites....
1327           TN            Plan and construct N.              $400,000
Tennessee Boulevard
enhancements..............
1328           NJ            Quinn Road realignment,          $2,400,000
Clifton...................
1329           MO            Reconstruct Interstate 44       $13,040,000
and Highway 65 Interchange
1330           MN            Reconstruct TH 61 from           $9,664,000
Split Rock River to Silver
Bay including construction
of the Gitchi Gami Spur
Trail between the main
trail and Silver Bay
Marina along the TH 61
roadway segment...........
1331           KY            Reconstruction of KY 259 in      $1,200,000
Edmonson County from Green
River Bridge at
Brownsville to Kyrock
Elementary School.........
1332           LA            Construction of a turn lane        $400,000
expansion along with
signalization at the north
bound off ramp on I-49, at
the intersection of U.S.
190.......................
1333           AL            Expand SR 210 (Ross Clark        $3,200,000
Circle) from U.S. 231
North to U.S. 231 South in
Dothan, AL................
1334           MD            Construct interchange at MD      $1,600,000
Route 355 at Montrose and
Randolph Roads in
Montgomery County.........
1335           CA            Construct new interchange        $1,936,000
and related road
improvements on U.S. 101
near Airport Blvd.,
Salinas...................
1336           PA            Construct the French Creek       $4,000,000
Parkway in Phoenixville,
PA........................
1337           MN            Capacity and safety              $5,760,000
improvements to TH 8, west
of 306th St. to eastern
city limits, Lindstrom....
1338           VA            Eastern Seaboard Intermodal      $1,200,000
Transportation
Applications Center
(ESITAC) in Hampton Roads.
1339           IL            Construct underpass at           $4,400,000
intersection of Damen/
Fullerton/Elston Avenues,
Chicago...................
1340           AR            Highway 165: Railroad            $1,600,000
Overpass..................
1341           FL            Implement Snake Road (BIA          $800,000
Route 1281) Widening and
Improvements..............
1342           CA            Construction of new freeway      $4,000,000
between I-15 and U.S. 395,
including new interchange
at I-15...................
1343           OH            Lake Township, Ohio. Market      $1,760,000
Avenue-Lake Center
intersections improvement.
1344           CT            Construct Quinnipiac Linear        $800,000
Trail, Wallingford........
1345           MI            Construction of a hike and         $400,000
bike path from Riverbends
Park, 22 Mile Road, to
Stony Creek Park, 25 Mile
Road in Shelby Township...
1346           IN            Reconstruct Boston Street,         $600,000
from State Road 2 to Bach
St., Larson-Whirlpool St.
in LaPorte, Indiana.......
1347           OR            Improvements to Bandon-          $4,200,000
Charleston State Scenic
Tour on Randolph Road and
North Bank Lane...........

[[Page 1309]]
119 STAT. 1309


1348           VA            Conduct study of Route 460       $4,000,000
Corridor, Virginia........
1349           NJ            Construct Sparta Stanhope          $800,000
Road Bridge (AKA Bridge K-
07).......................
1350           KY            Reconstruct Turkeyfoot           $2,400,000
Road, Kenton County,
Kentucky..................
1351           OH            Construct additional lane          $800,000
to alleviate traffic
congestion on U.S. 40 in
and adjacent to St.
Clairsville...............
1352           CO            CO 56th Avenue and Quebec        $5,200,000
Street Improvements Phase
I, Denver.................
1353           OH            Construct Truck Bypass-          $4,803,520
Orville, Ohio.............
1354           PA            Conversion of Penn and Park         $40,000
Bridges located over
Spring Run in Altoona, PA
into pedestrian bridges...
1355           CA            Coyote Creek Trail Project--     $2,000,000
Story Road to Montague
Expressway................
1356           PA            Construct Cameron Street           $800,000
Bridge Northumberland
County, Pennsylvania......
1357           ............  ...........................              $0
1358           OH            Medina, Ohio. Guilford             $480,000
Avenue urban road
collector pavement
reconstruction............
1359           TN            Improvements to I-40             $2,400,000
interchange at I-240 East
of Memphis (Phase II).....
1360           WY            Casper Bypass: Reconstruct       $4,000,000
Old Yellowstone Hwy and
2nd St....................
1361           NY            Construct sidewalks and            $480,000
roadway improvements on
Oscawana Lake Road in the
Town of Putnam Valley.....
1362           LA            Engineering and right-of-        $8,000,000
way acquisition for I-49
Corridor through
Lafayette, LA.............
1363           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in
Edwardsville Borough,
Luzerne County............
1364           IL            Foster Avenue at Kedzie          $1,600,000
Avenue Streetscape........
1365           WV            Construct I-73/74 High           $8,960,000
Priority Corridor, Mercer
Co........................
1366           NY            Improve Long and Short           $2,100,000
Beach Road, Southampton...
1367           CA            Modify I-880 and Stevens         $9,600,000
Creek Boulevard
Interchange to ease
traffic congestion in San
Jose......................
1368           NY            Improve road and                   $800,000
streetscape along Prospect
Avenue in North Hempstead.
1369           CA            Palm Drive and Interstate        $2,200,000
10 interchange project....
1370           MN            Reconstruct TH 36 from           $4,800,000
expressway to freeway in
North St. Paul............
1371           CA            Construct I-580 Interchange        $960,000
Improvements in Castro
Valley....................
1372           AL            Expand U.S. 331 from             $2,400,000
Luverne, AL to Montgomery,
AL........................
1373           TX            Construction of highway            $400,000
medians, pedestrian
walkways for City of South
Padre Island..............
1374           NY            Construct Rt. 12                 $1,920,000
intersection between
Pamela Drive-River Road-
Located in the Town of
Chenango..................

[[Page 1310]]
119 STAT. 1310


1375           IL            Construct Streetscape              $640,000
Project, Village of
Robbins...................
1376           GA            Effingham Parkway to             $3,200,000
Connect SR 119 to SR 30...
1377           MD            Construct Phase 2 of the         $3,200,000
Jones Falls Trail from
Baltimore Penn Station to
the Maryland Science
Center on the Inner Harbor
1378           IL            For Will County for                $400,000
engineering and right-of-
way acquisition to extend
95th Street from
Plainfield-Naperville Road
east to Boughton Road.....
1379           PA            Construct Valley Business        $2,160,000
Park Access Road C,
Bradford County...........
1380           LA            Improve by widening,             $2,400,000
realigning, and
resurfacing 3.2 miles of
LA Hwy 820 btwn LA Hwy 145
and LA Hwy 821............
1381           IN            45th Street Improvements,          $400,000
Munster...................
1382           NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety
including in the vicinity
of PS K124................
1383           VT            Construction and                   $868,411
engineering for the
Vermont Smugglers Notch
Scenic Highway Corridor
Southern Gateway and Notch
Proper Facilities.........
1384           OH            Planning and construction          $760,000
of a network of
recreational trails in
Perry Township............
1385           GA            Construction of the Truman       $1,008,000
Linear Park Trail-Phase II
1386           NJ            Pedestrian and bicycle             $600,000
facilities, and street
lighting in Haddon Heights/
Barrington................
1387           CA            Reconstruct interchange at       $1,600,000
I-10 and Riverside Avenue
to improve traffic in
Rialto....................
1388           CA            Reconstruct Bloomfield Ave.        $320,000
with medians from Carson
St. to north city limits
in Hawaiian Gardens.......
1389           SC            Extension of Wells Highway,      $1,600,000
Oconee County, South
Carolina..................
1390           CA            Reconstruct Paramount Blvd.        $480,000
with medians and improve
drainage from Artesia
Blvd. to Candlewood St. in
Long Beach................
1391           IL            Reconstruction of 5th              $762,056
Street Road (FAS 569) in
Logan County, IL..........
1392           WA            Reconstruction of SR 99          $1,600,000
(Aurora Ave. N) between N
145th St. and N 205th St..
1393           NY            Page Green--Phase III--          $2,880,000
Reconstruction of 2.6
miles. Town of Virgil,
Cortland County...........
1394           MI            Gogebic County, Reconstruct        $644,000
Lake Road in Ironwood from
Margaret Street to Airport
Road......................
1395           ............  ...........................              $0
1396           IN            Redevelop and Complete the       $2,400,000
Cardinal Green-way and
Starr-Gennett Area in the
City of Richmond, Indiana.
1397           NY            Rehabilitate and redesign          $400,000
Erie Canal Museum in
Syracuse, NY through the
Erie Canalway National
Heritage Corridor
Commission................
1398           OH            Construction of 6.25 mile          $400,000
bicycle project in
Mahoning County...........
1399           NM            I-40/Munoz Reconstruction        $1,200,000
in the City of Gallup.....

[[Page 1311]]
119 STAT. 1311


1400           TX            Rehabilitate Yale Street           $800,000
between IH 10 to IH 610...
1401           CA            Reconstruct Long Beach           $2,400,000
Blvd. with medians and
improve drainage from Palm
Ave. to Tweedy Blvd. in
Lynwood...................
1402           CA            Expand carsharing pilot          $1,600,000
program to serve low-and
moderate-income
neighborhoods in the City
and County of San
Francisco.................
1403           FL            Implement Kennedy Boulevard      $2,000,000
corridor improvements to
improve safety in Tampa...
1404           MD            Construct Broadneck              $1,200,000
Peninsula Trail, Anne
Arundel County, Maryland..
1405           MO            Relocation and                  $13,744,000
reconstruction of Rt. MM
from Rt. 21 to Rt. 30.....
1406           MN            Replace three at-grade             $473,600
highway-railroad crossings
with grade-separated
crossings adjacent to
Winona State University...
1407           CA            Construct Traffic flow             $600,000
improvements Vincent and
Lakes Drive, West Covina..
1408           CA            Construction of a Lincoln        $2,400,000
Bypass on SR 65 in Placer
County, CA................
1409           KS            Construct highway-rail          $11,200,000
grade separation from
Douglas Avenue to 17th
Street North in Wichita,
KS........................
1410           OH            Conduct Phase II of U.S.         $1,840,000
Route 68 bypass project in
Urbana....................
1411           GA            Construct sidewalks and            $500,000
install landscaping,
Vienna....................
1412           TX            Extension of FM 1427 in            $560,000
Penitas...................
1413           MD            MD 124, Woodfield Road,          $1,600,000
from Midcounty Highway to
Warfield Road.............
1414           CA            Rio Vista Bridge                   $560,000
Realignment Study and
Street Sign Safety Program
1415           CO            SH 121/Bowles Ave.               $1,600,000
Intersection and Roadway
Improvements, Jefferson
County Colorado...........
1416           NY            Implement Improvements for         $600,000
Pedestrian Safety in
Queens County.............
1417           NY            Repair and improve Jericho       $1,600,000
Turnpike (NYS Hwy 25) and
construct streetscapes
along the Turnpike in New
Hyde Park.................
1418           GA            SR 316/SR 20 interchange           $400,000
construction Gwinnett
County....................
1419           IL            Construct pedestrian             $3,553,600
walkways and streetscaping
projects in the Village of
Western Springs...........
1420           WA            SR 518 corridor--                  $800,000
Improvements to SR 518-509
interchange and addition
of eastbound travel lane
on a portion of the
corridor..................
1421           CA            Development and                  $2,400,000
construction of
improvements to State
Route 79 in the San
Jacinto Valley............
1422           MN            Construct roadway                $5,568,000
improvements on the Great
River Road on CSAH 10 and
CSAH 21, Aitkin County....
1423           WA            Conduct preliminary              $7,000,000
engineering and EIS for
Columbia River Crossing in
WA and OR.................
1424           NC            Greensboro Signal System        $10,000,000
Replacement ITS
Enhancement Project.......

[[Page 1312]]
119 STAT. 1312


1425           MN            Reconstruction of 1 mile of        $400,000
CR 107 from CSAH 2 to
Highway 11 and 71,
Koochiching County........
1426           OH            Plain Township, Ohio.            $4,000,000
Market Avenue widening....
1427           LA            Construct right-of-way           $2,400,000
improvements from 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              $1,200,000
Rehabilitation, Hamburg...
1429           OH            Construct Flats East             $3,720,000
Bulkhead and Riverwalk:
construct bulkhead and
riverwalk connecting Front
and Maine Ave.............
1430           NY            Construct/reconstruct              $720,000
Lincoln Road: Commercial
Street to Route 31F in the
Town-Village of East
Rochester.................
1431           OH            Acquire land and construct         $800,000
Portage Bike and Hike
Trail, Portage Co.........
1432           NC            Continued development of         $1,200,000
Cary, NC pedestrian bike
paths.....................
1433           TX            Cottonflat Road overpass at      $1,200,000
Interstate 20.............
1434           NY            Improve Rt. 17M access,            $600,000
safety and traffic
management................
1435           OH            Safety improvements to           $1,200,000
Paris Avenue intersections
and Meese Rd. and Easton
St.-Nimishillen Township,
Ohio......................
1436           CA            Alameda Corridor-East              $240,000
Construction Authority,
San Gabriel Valley........
1437           WA            Construct a tunnel as part      $16,800,000
of the Bremerton
Pedestrian-Bremerton
Transportation Center
Access Improvement project
1438           NC            Eliminate highway-railway          $800,000
crossings in the City of
Fayetteville, NC..........
1439           NJ            Hoboken Observer Highway         $2,000,000
Operational and Safety
Improvements..............
1440           CA            Reconfigure San Fernando         $5,160,000
Road from Fletcher Drive
to I-5 Fwy, Los Angeles...
1441           NY            Construction of an access        $2,156,000
road, drainage
improvements, and
aesthetic enhancements
adjacent to Ocean Parkway
in the Town of Babylon, NY
1442           TX            Construct highway                $2,000,000
improvements on E.
Tidwell, Ley Rd., and E.
Little York Rd............
1443           AZ            Construct pedestrian and         $2,400,000
bicycle overpass at
McDowell Road and 35th
Avenue in Phoenix.........
1444           TX            Reconstruct I-30 Trinity        $20,000,000
River Bridge, Dallas......
1445           PA            Armstrong and Indiana            $1,600,000
County, Pennsylvania, U.S.
422 Improvements..........
1446           TX            Bicycle and Pedestrian           $7,680,000
Trail Network in East
Austin....................
1447           NV            Construct I-15 Cactus            $8,000,000
Avenue....................
1448           AL            I-65 Widening from U.S. 31       $6,400,000
in Alabaster (Exit 238) to
AL 25 in Calera (Exit 228)
1449           NY            Improve Route 4 Streetscape      $3,480,000
and replace waterlines,
Town and Village of Fort
Edward, Washington County.
1450           OH            Planning and construction          $800,000
on bike paths and trails
as part of Phases III-VI
in Ashtabula Metroparks
Western Reserve Greenway..

[[Page 1313]]
119 STAT. 1313


1451           CO            Construction of Powers           $8,000,000
Boulevard and Woodman Road
interchange, Colorado
Springs...................
1452           MN            Environmental review for TH        $480,000
8 upgrade, Forest Lake to
Chisago City..............
1453           MD            Construct Pedestrian Bridge      $2,640,000
and Garage at Coppin State
University in Baltimore...
1454           MD            Historic Preservation and        $1,520,000
Traffic Improvements along
Liberty Heights Ave. and
in Druid Hill Park in
Baltimore.................
1455           NC            I-85 in Vance County.......        $800,000
1456           PA            Design and construct             $4,800,000
interchange and related
improvements at I-83 Exit
19........................
1457           IL            Preconstruction and              $1,936,000
Construction at IL 31 from
Bull Valley Road to IL 176
1458           MS            Replace Popps Ferry Road         $4,000,000
Bridge, Biloxi............
1459           IL            Reconstruct Lakeshore Drive      $1,200,000
Overpass over Wilson
Avenue, Chicago...........
1460           AL            Pedestrian Improvements for        $106,666
Moody, AL.................
1461           MA            Design and construct Canal         $800,000
and Union Street Corridor
improvements, Lawrence....
1462           OH            Construct new two lane road      $1,000,000
to Sycamore Street in
Gallia County.............
1463           AL            Construct interchange on           $400,000
Interstate 85 at Beehive
Road in Auburn, AL........
1464           ME            Improvements to the                $500,000
Interconnecting Trail
System for bike/pedestrian
trails near Baxter State
Park......................
1465           TX            ROW acquisition for 87           $1,200,000
Relief Route..............
1466           WA            Restore and construct              $400,000
historic Naches Depot and
Trail project.............
1467           GA            SR 20 widening from I-575          $800,000
to SR 369, Cherokee County
1468           IL            Road Construction and            $1,840,000
reconstruction in the
Village of Hampshire:
Keyes Ave., Industrial
Drive Overlay, and Mill
Avenue....................
1469           IL            Conduct study and design of        $800,000
Chicago North lakefront
path expansion project....
1470           MS            I-59 interchange at U.S. 84      $4,000,000
and SR 15, Laurel.........
1471           TX            Improvements to IH-35E from      $3,200,000
U.S. 77 North of
Waxahachie to U.S. 77
South of Waxahachie.......
1472           MO            Scudder Road and I-170           $1,600,000
Interchange Improvements,
St. Louis County..........
1473           GA            Construct and improve Cobb         $900,000
County Trails.............
1474           MS            Extend SR 590 from U.S. 11       $3,200,000
to SR 29 near Ellisville..
1475           IN            Improve Intersection at            $448,000
Jackson Street and
Morrison Road in the City
of Muncie, Delaware
County, Indiana...........
1476           CO            Construction of McCaslin           $800,000
Boulevard U.S. 36
Interchange in Superior...
1477           MA            Route 128 Improvements--         $1,600,000
Route 114 in Peabody to
Route 62 in Danvers.......
1478           TX            Lubbock, Texas Construction     $12,440,000
for Marsha Sharp Freeway
main lanes between Chicago
and Salem Avenues.........
1479           NH            South Road Mitigation in         $1,200,000
Londonderry...............

[[Page 1314]]
119 STAT. 1314


1480           NY            Paul Road--Fisher Road           $4,000,000
Improvements, Town of
Chili, Monroe County......
1481           CA            Construct truck lane on          $2,000,000
Keystone Road from State
Route 111 to Austin Road,
Imperial County...........
1482           MS            Construct East Metropolitan      $4,960,000
Corridor linking I-20 at
Brandon to Hwy 25 at
Flowood...................
1483           LA            Leeville Bridge, Port            $4,000,000
Fourchon to Golden Meadow.
1484           GA            National Infantry Museum         $2,400,000
Transportation Network....
1485           AL            Interchange at I-65 and            $800,000
Limestone County Road 24
Constuction...............
1486           PA            Project to realign               $1,319,200
intersection of King of
Prussia Road and Upper
Gulph Road to provide
turning lanes and
signalization.............
1487           FL            Widen State Road 80, Hendry        $800,000
County....................
1488           SD            Construction of 4-lane           $6,400,000
highway on U.S. 79 between
Maverick Junction, and the
Nebraska border...........
1489           IL            130th and Torrance Avenue        $7,200,000
Intersection Improvement,
Chicago...................
1490           OK            Improvements to Hereford           $800,000
Lane and US69 Interchange,
McAlester.................
1491           GA            Athens-Clarke County Bike        $1,120,000
Trail Project.............
1492           CT            Construct UCONN Storrs           $1,600,000
Campus-Hillside Road......
1493           NM            I-25, Tramway North to           $2,800,000
Bernalillo, Reconstruction
1494           NJ            Planning for Liberty               $400,000
Corridor..................
1495           OR            Sellwood Bridge Replacement-     $2,000,000
Multnomah County..........
1496           ............  ...........................              $0
1497           FL            Englewood Interstate             $2,400,000
Connector in Sarasota
County, Florida...........
1498           NY            Elevate and construct            $2,400,000
drainage improvements to
Beach Road, Canal Road,
and Sea Breeze Road in
Massapequa, New York......
1499           TX            Design and construction            $800,000
streetscape improvements
in Midtown, enhance
pedestrian access.........
1500           NY            Replace sidewalk along             $264,000
Route 9A in Hamlet of
Montrose, Town of
Cortlandt.................
1501           MN            Construction and widening        $1,600,000
of TH 241 in the City of
St. Michael, MN...........
1502           GA            I-75 lanes from Aviation         $1,200,000
Boulevard to SR 54,
Clayton County............
1503           VT            Construction and                 $1,108,800
rehabilitation of the
Cross Vermont Trail for
the Cross Vermont Trail
Association...............
1504           NY            Construction of a new ramp       $1,420,000
from 9A Southbound to
Taconic State Parkway
Southbound, Westchester
County....................
1505           NY            Restore vehicular traffic        $4,000,000
to Main Street in Downtown
Buffalo...................
1506           MI            Construction of 5 lane           $8,000,000
concrete pavement with
curb, gutter and sewer on
Romeo Plank Road from M-59
to 23 Mile Road in Macomb
Township..................

[[Page 1315]]
119 STAT. 1315


1507           NY            Enhance road and                   $550,000
transportation facilities
in the vicinity of the
Brooklyn Children's Museum
1508           IL            Construct and expand             $3,200,000
Northwest Illinois U.S.
Rte 20 from Freeport to
Galena, IL................
1509           CA            Construction of new roadway        $800,000
lighting on major
transportation corridors
in the Southwest San
Fernando Valley...........
1510           MO            Construct Interstate            $15,200,000
flyover at Hughes Road and
Liberty Drive to 76th
Street. Part of Liberty
Parkway Project...........
1511           CA            Freeway 180 Improvements         $7,600,000
Fresno....................
1512           NY            Construct sidewalks and            $360,000
curbs on Valley Road in
Town of Bedford...........
1513           OK            Construction of rail             $1,600,000
crossing in Claremore at
Blue Star Drive and SH 66.
1514           IL            Improve U.S. Route 34 from         $400,000
Kewanee to Kentville Road.
1515           IL            For Naperville Township to         $160,000
fund improvements to North
Aurora Road...............
1516           WA            Kent--Construct a single           $800,000
point urban interchange
(SPUI) under I-5 at South
272nd St..................
1517           TN            Construct Interpretive             $800,000
Visitor Center for the
Cherokee Removal Memorial
Park Trail of Tears site
in Meigs County, TN.......
1518           GA            Create a greenway trail          $2,000,000
along the Oconee River
connecting parks,
preserving historic sites,
and promoting economic
development...............
1519           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $320,000
acquisition, and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in
Dunmore Borough,
Lackawanna County.........
1520           PA            Add turn lane, modify            $1,944,000
signals and install
pavement markings at
intersection of PA 422 and
PA 662 in Amity Township..
1521           WI            Construct bicycle/               $2,800,000
pedestrian path and
facilities in the Central
park area of Madison......
1522           VA            Expand Route 15 29 in            $1,600,000
Culpeper, Virginia........
1523           WV            Fairmont Gateway Connector      $17,600,000
System to provide an
improved highway link
between downtown Fairmont
and I-79 in the vicinity
of Fairmont...............
1524           OR            Construct Barber Street          $2,400,000
extension, Wilsonville....
1525           FL            Four-laning SR 281 (Avalon      $11,600,000
Boulevard) in Santa Rosa
County from Interstate 10
to north of CSX RR Bridge.
1526           OR            Interstate 5 Interchange at      $8,000,000
City of Coburg............
1527           IL            Construction of a bridge at     $70,400,000
Stearns Road in Kane
County, Illinois..........
1528           TX            East 7th Street                    $420,000
Improvements in Austin....
1529           GA            Rebuild SR 10 Memorial           $1,600,000
Drive for bicycle and
pedestrian safety, from
Mountain Drive to
Goldsmith Road, Dekalb
County....................
1530           NJ            Provide an alternative           $2,000,000
route for traffic passing
though congested SR 31
corridor in Flemington, NJ

[[Page 1316]]
119 STAT. 1316


1531           CA            Construction of a smart             $40,000
crosswalk system at the
intersection of Arminta
St. and Mason Ave.........
1532           WI            Reconstruct U.S. Highway 41     $13,000,000
north of Lake Butte des
Morts Bridge, Wisconsin...
1533           PA            Improvements to 8th and 9th        $392,000
Street bridges between
Pleasant Valley Blvd. and
Valley View Blvd.,
Altoona, PA...............
1534           LA            Construction of a direct        $10,400,000
intermodal truck access
road from Interstate 210
to the City Docks of the
Port of Lake Charles......
1535           TX            Construct Links Hike and           $400,000
Bike Trail Project. 2.2
mile trail project
connecting Gaylord Texan
to Grapevine Mills Mall.
Grapvine, TX..............
1536           GA            Construct sidewalks between        $300,000
Marion Middle School, City
Park, and Community
Center, Buena Vista.......
1537           IL            Construct a four lane            $1,600,000
connection between Rt. 13
and Rt. 45 and upgrades to
Netty Green Road in Saline
Co., Illinois.............
1538           MI            Plymouth, Haggerty Road            $400,000
from Plymouth Rd. to
Schoolcraft Rd............
1539           TN            Provide streetscape                $200,000
improvements and pavement
repair, Greenback,
Tennessee.................
1540           IA            Reconstruction of NE 56th          $800,000
St, eastern Polk Co.......
1541           IL            Relocate Pocket Road/              $900,000
Lakewood Place for Access
to the Racehorse Business
Park, Alorton.............
1542           CT            Construct roadway on East          $400,000
Commerce Drive, Oxford, CT
1543           TN            Niota, TN Improve vehicle           $45,600
efficiencies at highway At-
Grade Railroad Crossing...
1544           FL            Plan and Construct 17th          $1,600,000
Street connector in the
City of Sarasota, FL......
1545           VT            Reconstruction and widening      $1,200,000
of U.S. Route 5 for the
Town of Hartford..........
1546           MO            Relocate the entrance to           $400,000
the Shaw Nature Reserve
that is being altered due
to a redesign of the Gray
Summit I-44 interchange
project...................
1547           DC            Replace and reconstruct         $48,000,000
South Capitol Street/
Frederick Douglass
Memorial Bridge...........
1548           MI            Complete 13.8 miles of           $2,160,000
nonmotorized pedestrian
Fred Meijer Heartland
Trail of 30.1 miles.......
1549           MO            Roadway improvements on          $8,000,000
U.S. 60 from Willow
Springs to the Van Buren
Area......................
1550           UT            Construct Parley's Creek         $5,000,000
Trail.....................
1551           ME            Construction of Calais/St.       $7,000,000
Stephen Border Crossing
Project...................
1552           FL            Alleviate congestion at          $2,000,000
Atlantic Corridor Green-
way Network, City of Miami
Beach, FL.................
1553           MD            Construction of MD 331           $3,454,400
Dover Bridge..............
1554           NY            Improve Traffic Flow on          $1,000,000
Noel Road between Church
and Crossbay Boulevard
including work necessary
to demolish and
reconstruct the firehouse
facility..................

[[Page 1317]]
119 STAT. 1317


1555           PA            Construct 9th and 10th           $6,400,000
Street bridges over
Norfolk Southern Tracks,
Lebanon...................
1556           ............  ...........................              $0
1557           CA            Improve I-8 off ramp at            $800,000
Ocotillo to the Imperial
Valley College Desert
Museum/Regional Traveler
Visitor Center, Imperial
County....................
1558           CA            Install new grade                $4,000,000
separation at Ranchero
Road in Hesperia..........
1559           NY            Bartow Ave. Ramp and             $1,600,000
Reconstruction at the
Hutchinson Parkway........
1560           FL            Airport Access Rd.,              $1,600,000
Gainesville...............
1561           WA            Intersection project at          $2,400,000
South Access/522 beginning
and ending at the UWB-CCC
campus to improve access
and alleviate congestion..
1562           NJ            Reconstruction of CR 530         $8,000,000
from Rt. 206 to CR 644.
Construct shoulders,
travel lanes, center turn
lane, drainage
improvements and traffic
signal....................
1563           NY            Improve SCCC roads,              $1,100,000
Fallsburg.................
1564           CA            Add turn lane and adaptive       $1,280,000
traffic control system at
intersection of San Tomas
Expressway and Hamilton
Avenue in Campbell........
1565           CA            Interchange improvements at      $2,640,000
Rice Avenue and U.S.
Highway 101 in the City of
Oxnard....................
1566           GA            Northside Drive Multimodal       $1,600,000
Corridor..................
1567           GA            Replace sidewalks, meet ADA        $400,000
guidelines, and install a
crosswalk, McRae..........
1568           TX            Ritchie Road from FM 1695        $2,400,000
to U.S. 84, Waco..........
1569           AR            Maumelle Interchange--Third        $800,000
entrance into Maumelle....
1570           CT            Construct Housatonic               $800,000
Riverwalk, Shelton........
1571           MD            Rehabilitate Roadways            $6,800,000
Around East Baltimore Life
Science Park in Baltimore.
1572           AL            City of Vestavia Hills             $560,000
Pedestrian Walkway to
Cross U.S. 31.............
1573           IN            Replace Samuelson Road           $2,530,312
Underpass, Portage........
1574           IL            Construct Commuter Parking       $3,232,000
Structure in the Central
Business District in the
vicinity of La Grange Road
1575           PA            Design and construct inner         $400,000
loop roadway around
Shippensburg Boro.........
1576           WV            Construct I-73/74 High           $9,600,000
Priority Corridor, Mingo
Co........................
1577           NY            Roadway improvements to          $1,800,000
Jackson Avenue between
Jericho Turnpike and
Teibrook Avenue...........
1578           OR            Rogue River Bikeway/               $600,000
Pedestrian Path, Curry
County....................
1579           CA            San Gabriel Blvd.                  $160,000
Intersection Improvements
at Broadway and at Las
Tunas, San Gabriel........
1580           NY            Improvements to Erie             $1,000,000
Station Road, Town of
Henrietta, Monroe County..
1581           IA            Sioux City, Iowa Hoeven          $1,600,000
Corridor--Outer Drive
Project...................
1582           KY            Study and rehabilitate the       $1,600,000
I-471 corridor, Campbell
County, Kentucky..........
1583           SC            SCSU Transportation Center,      $5,200,000
Orangeburg................

[[Page 1318]]
119 STAT. 1318


1584           NY            Construction and                   $696,000
rehabilitation of North
and South Delaware Avenues
in the Village of
Lindenhurst, NY...........
1585           NY            Study on extending Rt. 5 to        $120,000
Auburn....................
1586           AL            Expand U.S. 84 from              $2,400,000
Andalusia, AL to
Enterprise, AL............
1587           NJ            Susse County, NJ, Safety         $3,440,000
and Operational
Improvements on Route 23
in Hardyston Township and
Franklin Borough..........
1588           PA            State Street and Mulberry        $4,000,000
Street Bridge Lighting
project, Harrisburg.......
1589           ............  ...........................              $0
1590           CA            Interstate 15 and State          $1,600,000
Route 79 South Freeway
Interchange and Ramp
Improvement Project.......
1591           OH            Road Improvements,                 $800,000
streetscapes, and
pedestrian safety
additions in Ashtabula
Harbor....................
1592           NY            Town of East Fishkill              $400,000
improvements to Robinson
Lane and Lake Walton Road
at NYS Route 376..........
1593           WI            Construct a bicycle/             $1,600,000
pedestrian path, Wisconsin
Dells.....................
1594           NY            Construct improvements in          $160,000
Sight Distance at Road
Grade and Trail Crossings
in Oneida and Herkimer
Counties..................
1595           NY            Repair Silver Mine Bridge          $120,000
in the Town of Lewisboro..
1596           IL            River walk Reconstruction,         $480,000
City of Chicago...........
1597           AR            Rogers, Arkansas--Construct      $5,000,000
new interchange on I-540
near the existing Perry
Road overpass.............
1598           IN            Design and construct            $16,000,000
Indiana Ohio River Bridges
Project on I-65 and 265...
1599           RI            Transportation Enhancements        $400,000
at Blackstone Valley
Heritage Corridor.........
1600           TX            Reconstruction of U.S. 79        $1,600,000
from FM 1460 to Williamson
County Road195............
1601           CA            Transportation enhancements        $960,000
to Children's Museum of
Los Angeles...............
1602           IN            Construct Shelby County            $400,000
Indiana Shelbyville
Parkway...................
1603           NY            Reconstruct the Niagara            $320,000
Street culvert/bridge
which crosses over Two
Mile Creek, City of
Tonawanda.................
1604           MA            Reconstruction of Main             $560,000
Street and Lebanon Street
in Melrose................
1605           OH            Construct the existing IR        $9,700,000
70 interchange at U.S. 40,
SR 331 west of St.
Clairsville...............
1606           GA            Install traffic lights and         $500,000
pedestrian walkways on
Highway 441 at Martin
Luther King, Jr.,
Boulevard, Dublin.........
1607           OH            Pike County, OH Fog Road           $960,000
Upgrade...................
1608           CA            Project design,                    $400,000
environmental assessment,
and roadway construction
of Lonestar Road from Alta
Road to Enrico Fermi Drive
San Diego County..........
1609           CA            Project Study Reports for I-       $320,000
105 and I-405 Interchanges
at Los Angeles
International Airport.....

[[Page 1319]]
119 STAT. 1319


1610           CA            Reconstruct Whittier Blvd.       $1,360,000
and improve parkway
drainage from Philadelphia
Ave. to Five Points in
Whittier..................
1611           NY            Rockland County Railroad         $1,000,000
Grade Crossings Safety
Study.....................
1612           TX            San Angelo Ports-to-Plains       $1,200,000
Route Loop 306 at F.M. 388
1613           MN            City of Hutchinson School          $800,000
Road Underpass of TH 7 and
TH 22 improvements........
1614           TN            construct and widen SR 33        $5,000,000
in Monroe County, TN......
1615           PA            Construct the realignment          $800,000
of Cool Creek Road in York
County, PA................
1616           NJ            Construct Waterfront             $1,600,000
Walkway from North Sinatra
Drive and 12th St. south
to Sinatra Drive in
Hoboken...................
1617           TX            Add shoulders to FM 156          $1,600,000
from Ponder, Texas to
Krum, Texas...............
1618           NJ            Bridge replacement on            $1,600,000
Section 6V of Route 1 from
Ryders Lane to Milltown
Road, North Brunswick.....
1619           MN            Construct Two Harbors High         $891,600
School Trail connecting
Two Harbors High School to
Two Harbors City..........
1620           SC            Construct I-85 Brockman-           $800,000
McClimon Interchange
between Greenville
Spartanburg Airport and SC
Highway 101 interchanges..
1621           IA            Fort Madison, IA                 $2,720,000
Construction of U.S. 61
bypass around Fort Madison
to create a safer and
faster route..............
1622           PA            Germantown Avenue                $1,856,000
Revitalization with Mount
Airy USA for landscaping,
scenic enhancements and
pedestrian safety
improvements along the
heavily traveled
thoroughfare..............
1623           NM            I-10 Reconstruction, Las         $2,400,000
Cruces to Texas State Line
1624           TX            IH 820 Widening Project....      $1,600,000
1625           IL            For Naperville Township to         $640,000
fund improvements to Diehl
Road between Eola Road and
Route 59..................
1626           KS            Remove and Replace Topeka        $5,600,000
Blvd. Bridge over the
Kansas River..............
1627           VA            Clifton, VA Main Street            $200,000
parking and sidewalk
improvements..............
1628           SC            Replace Milford Road               $400,000
Bridge, Anderson, SC......
1629           LA            Improvements to Essen Lane      $24,000,000
at I-12; and to Perkins
Rd.; and to Central
Thruway; and to O'Neal
Lane; and to Burbank Dr.;
and to Essen Park
Extension; and for LA 408
study.....................
1630           GA            Streetscape project for            $240,000
lighting and landscaping
on Main Street along
Georgia Highway 231,
Davisboro.................
1631           IA            City of Council Bluffs and       $1,200,000
Pottawattamie county East
Beltway Roadway and
Connectors Project........
1632           OR            U.S. 199/Laurel Road             $2,880,000
Intersection..............

[[Page 1320]]
119 STAT. 1320


1633           CA            Conduct project report             $400,000
study on Old River School
Rd--Firestone Blvd.
intersection re-
configuration.............
1634           FL            Conduct study for Port of        $1,600,000
Miami Tunnel, Miami, FL...
1635           NY            Ithaca, Design and                 $960,000
construct pedestrian and
bicycle path (Cayuga
Waterfront Trail).........
1636           NC            Greenway Trails Project,           $512,000
Elizabeth City............
1637           IL            Reconstruct Lakeshore Drive      $1,200,000
overpass over Lawrence
Avenue....................
1638           SC            Replace Murphy Road West           $188,000
Bridge, Anderson, SC......
1639           CA            Resurface and construct          $2,400,000
truck lane at CA Hwy 94
and I-8 interchange,
Boulevard.................
1640           CT            Undertake road improvements      $1,600,000
associated with Coltsville
Area Redevelopment,
Hartford..................
1641           AZ            Upgrade and Re-opening of          $960,000
Main Street in Yuma.......
1642           NJ            Pedestrian facilities,             $477,059
street lighting and
streetscaping improvements
in downtown Laurel Springs
1643           MS            Upgrade Blue Cane Road in          $600,000
Tallahatchie County, and
roads in Webb and Tutwiler
1644           OH            Upgrade circuitry on               $112,000
vehicle protection device
at Sheldon Road rail
crossing in Berea.........
1645           NY            Design and construct Upper         $600,000
Delaware Scenic Byway
Visitor Center, Cochecton.
1646           NY            Construct sidewalks and            $220,000
curbing on Westchester
Avenue in Village of
Buchanan..................
1647           NC            Downtown Redevelopment           $5,068,800
Project, City of Rocky
Mount.....................
1648           TX            Construction of divided            $800,000
four lane concrete
arterial with drainage
improvements--Sandy Lake
Road: Denton Tap Rd. to
North Coppell Road........
1649           IL            Preconstruction and              $1,092,000
Construction at IL 120 at
Bacon Road and Cedar Lake
Road......................
1650           GA            Revitalization project will        $400,000
extend and resurface the
Roberta Walking Trail,
Roberta...................
1651           KY            Construct Westbound Access       $2,320,000
to Mountain Parkway from
Exit 18 (KY 1057), Powell
County....................
1652           NC            Development of 2 miles of        $1,200,000
road parallel to I-95
located approximately
between the I-95/NC 125
interchange and I-95/U.S.
158 interchange...........
1653           CA            Engineering, right-of-way        $9,600,000
and construction of HOV
lanes on I-580 in the
Livermore Valley,
California................
1654           IL            Construct Streetscape              $400,000
Project, City of Markham..
1655           CA            Landscape south side of the        $200,000
91 Fwy at Bellflower Blvd.
in Bellflower.............
1656           MA            Southwick and Westfield          $4,000,000
Rail Trail, Design and
Construction..............
1657           VA            Upgrade DOT crossing               $155,680
#467665M to constant
warning time devices......

[[Page 1321]]
119 STAT. 1321


1658           TX            Reconstruct and add two          $5,600,000
lanes to U.S. 287 from the
Oklahoma State line to
U.S. 54 in Stratford......
1659           WY            Casper West Belt Loop......      $1,600,000
1660           MN            Munger Trail extension,          $2,500,000
City of Duluth............
1661           AK            Bogard/Sheldon Extension in      $4,000,000
Matanuska-Susitna Borough.
1662           CA            City of Redondo Beach              $800,000
Esplanade Improvement
Project...................
1663           MN            Kandiyohi and Meeker             $1,600,000
Counties Hwy 7 between TH
71 and TH 22..............
1664           NJ            Construction of Rowan              $480,000
Boulevard from U.S. Route
322 to Main Street,
Glassboro.................
1665           CA            Conduct Study of SR 130          $1,600,000
Realignment Project, San
Joaquin County and Santa
Clara County, CA..........
1666           CA            Passons Grade Separation in      $2,960,000
the City of Pico Rivera...
1667           MD            Construct South Shore              $800,000
Trail, Anne Arundel
County, MD................
1668           NJ            Realignment of the Routes        $1,600,000
35/36 intersection in
Eatontown.................
1669           IN            Construct Hoosier Heartland      $2,400,000
Highway in Cass and
Carroll County, Indiana...
1670           MI            Oscoda County,                     $768,000
Reconstruction and
surfacing of Valley Road
from M-33 west to Mapes
Road......................
1671           TX            Reconstruct Precinct Line          $800,000
Road 2-lane 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           $1,200,000
Street Corridor, City of
New Haven.................
1673           TN            Improving Vehicle                   $79,200
Efficiencies at At-Grade
highway-Railroad Crossing
in Philadelphia, TN.......
1674           TX            Reconstruct Mile 2 W from          $800,000
Mile 12 N to U.S. 83,
Hidalgo County............
1675           NY            Reconstruction of West Neck      $2,400,000
Road from Huntington-Lloyd
Harbor boundary to the end
of the Village-maintained
road......................
1676           GA            Rehabilitate sidewalks and         $400,000
replace street lights,
Swainsboro................
1677           SC            Replace Murphy Road East           $212,000
Bridge, Anderson, SC......
1678           MO            Access improvements and          $4,000,000
safety and mobility
upgrades along U.S. 7 as
part of the Highway 7
Corridor Development Plan
in Blue Springs...........
1679           OH            Construct Stearns Road           $3,600,000
Grade Separation, Olmsted
Township..................
1680           CA            Implement Grove Avenue           $2,400,000
Corridor I-10 interchange
improvements in Ontario...
1681           MA            Construct and Replace West         $800,000
Corner Bridge and Culvert,
Rt. 228, spanning Weir
River Estuary and Straits
Pond Inlet................
1682           OK            Complete Reconstruction of       $3,200,000
the I-35/SH 9 West
Interchange...............

[[Page 1322]]
119 STAT. 1322


1683           NJ            Construct Rte 50 Tuckahoe        $3,200,000
River Bridge Replacement,
Cape May and Atlantic
Counties..................
1684           NY            Rt. 12 reconstruction-Town       $3,288,000
and Village of Greene.....
1685           MN            Becker County CR 143 and CR        $768,000
124 Improvements..........
1686           NY            Construct and extend             $1,080,000
existing pedestrian
streetscape areas in
Valley Stream.............
1687           MI            Construct Interchange at I-      $2,000,000
675 and M-13 (Washington
Avenue). Northbound Exit.
Phase I of Construction.
City of Saginaw...........
1688           OH            Construct Cleveland Towpath      $4,640,000
Trail, 6-mile extension
towards downtown,
Cleveland.................
1689           FL            Construct widening of U.S.      $16,300,000
17 to 4 lanes from San
Mateo to Volusia County
line, Putnam County,
Florida...................
1690           MD            Construct Phase 1 of the           $800,000
South Shore Trail in Anne
Arundel County from
Maryland Route 3 at
Millersville Road to I-97
at Waterbury Road.........
1691           MI            Construction of 5 lane           $1,663,600
concrete pavement 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             $8,000,000
replacement for A. Max
Brewer Bridge, Titusville.
1693           NY            Implement ITS system and           $100,000
apparatus to enhance
citywide truck route
system on Victory Blvd.
Between Travis Ave. and
West Shore Expressway
Travis Section of SI......
1694           MI            Purchase and implementation      $9,944,000
of various Intelligent
Transportation System
technologies in the Grand
Rapids metro region.......
1695           WI            Recondition U.S. 45 between      $1,600,000
New London and
Clintonville, Wisconsin
(Waupaca County,
Wisconsin)................
1696           CA            Reconstruction of The            $1,600,000
Strand in the City of
Manhattan Beach to improve
beach access and
accommodate increased
pedestrian traffic........
1697           CA            Construction of new roadway        $400,000
lighting on major
transportation corridors
in the Northeast San
Fernando Valley...........
1698           MD            Rehabilitate Hanover Street      $1,200,000
Bridge in Baltimore.......
1699           NY            Rehabilitation of Hornbeck         $340,800
Road in the Town of
Poughkeepsie..............
1700           CA            Rehabilitation of Tulare         $3,200,000
County Farm to Market road
system....................
1701           GA            Riverside Drive Streetscape        $400,000
Project, Macon............
1702           GA            South Lumpkin Road Trail-          $400,000
Columbus..................
1703           CA            Implement Northeast San            $160,000
Fernando Valley Road and
Safety Improvements.......
1704           NY            Big Ridge Road: Spencerport      $1,000,000
Village Line to Gillet
Road in the Town of Ogden.
1705           TX            Build south bound ramp from      $4,400,000
east bound I-20 to Clark
Road at the southern
terminus of Spur 408.
Duncanville, TX...........
1706           ............  ...........................              $0

[[Page 1323]]
119 STAT. 1323


1707           TN            Reconstruct U.S. 64 from         $4,180,000
west of Bolivar to the
Lawrence County Line in
Hardemant, McNairy,
Hardin, Wayne Counties....
1708           PA            Improve safety of Route 145      $1,780,000
in Whitehall Township.....
1709           GA            Construct Stone Mountain-          $800,000
Lithonia Road Bike Lane
and Sidewalks, Dekalb
County....................
1710           OK            Texanna Road improvements          $800,000
around Lake Eufaula.......
1711           OH            North Huntington Street          $1,088,000
Improvements, Medina, OH..
1712           IL            To construct a new                 $440,000
intersection of a public
road and U.S. Route 50 and
a new street..............
1713           NC            To plan, design, and               $473,600
construct the Northwest
Corridor-Western Blvd.
Project in Jacksonville,
NC........................
1714           CT            Upgrade Mark Twain Drive,        $1,600,000
Hartford..................
1715           CO            CO I-70 East Multimodal          $2,000,000
Corridor (Highway
Expansion), Denver........
1716           MS            Upgrade roads in Indianola,      $1,600,000
Ruleville, Moorehead,
Doddsville, Sunflower and
Drew, Sunflower County....
1717           MS            Upgrade Marshall Road in           $320,000
North Carrollton (U.S.
Highway 35 and 82) McCain
Street, South Street, Love
Street, and Colver Street,
Carroll County............
1718           NJ            Passaic-Bergen intermodal       $12,000,000
transportation deployment
initiative................
1719           IL            Upgrade roads, The Village         $800,000
of Maywood................
1720           PA            Upgrade Route 30 Corridor          $800,000
and Airport Access........
1721           GA            Upgrade sidewalks and              $400,000
lighting, Lyons...........
1722           CA            State Route 88--Pine Grove         $400,000
Corridor Improvement
Project...................
1723           WA            Tacoma--Lincoln Avenue             $800,000
Grade Separation..........
1724           NY            Improve NY 112 from Old          $8,000,000
Town Road to NY 347.......
1725           NJ            Construct I-195 Noise            $2,000,000
Barrier, Hamilton
Township, Mercer County...
1726           AR            Highway 77 Rail Grade              $800,000
Separation................
1727           WA            Kent, WA Willis Street BNSF        $400,000
Railroad Grade Separation
Project...................
1728           MI            Menominee, Ogden Street            $160,000
Bridge rehabilitation
project-replacement of
deck, expansion joints,
sidewalks, railing and all
other joints..............
1729           VA            Pochantas Trail--                  $400,000
Development and
construction of trail from
Bluestone Junction to
Pochantas adjacent to
abandoned rail line.......
1730           NY            Suffolk County ITS arterial        $500,000
monitoring and performance
measures..................
1731           LA            Conduct study for Highway          $400,000
25 in Washington Parish...
1732           IL            Construction of the 43rd           $480,000
Street Bicycle Pedestrian
Bridge over Lake Shore
Drive, City of Chicago....
1733           NY            To design and reconstruct        $1,920,000
Nassau Avenue, improve
sidewalks and include
pedestrian amenities in
Greenpoint, Brooklyn......
1734           OH            Upgrade the I-480 and            $1,600,000
Tiedman Road interchange,
Brooklyn..................

[[Page 1324]]
119 STAT. 1324


1735           NJ            Interchange improvements         $4,000,000
and bridge replacement,
Route 46, Passaic County..
1736           ............  ...........................              $0
1737           IA            Construction of a Four Lane      $8,000,000
U.S. Highway 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-     $3,440,000
off of I-40 at Houck, AZ
(Exit 348) to Pine Springs
Day School................
1739           OH            Red Bank Road Improvements       $3,120,000
from I-71 to Fair Lane in
Eastern Hamilton County,
Ohio......................
1740           CA            Construct earthen berm           $1,600,000
along Esperanza Road from
Yorba Linda Blvd. to the
west city limits to
mitigate noise............
1741           TX            U.S. 90--Construct 6             $1,600,000
mainlines from east of
Mercury to east of
Wallisville...............
1742           NY            Town of Chester Trout Brook         $56,000
road improvements and
reconstruction............
1743           OR            Upgrade the I-5 Fern Valley      $2,400,000
Interchange (Exit 24).....
1744           CA            Construct I-80 Gilman            $1,200,000
Street interchange
improvements in Berkeley..
1745           NJ            Construct Vineland               $1,400,000
Boulevard and Sherman
Avenue Intersection
Improvements, Vineland,
Cumberland County.........
1746           WA            Terry's Corner Park and          $1,120,000
Ride on Camano Island.....
1747           OR            Upgrade U.S. 101 and               $200,000
Utility Relocation, Gold
Beach.....................
1748           WI            Upgrade U.S. 41 from DePere      $2,000,000
to Suamico, Wisconsin
(Brown County, Wisconsin).
1749           IL            Upgrade Veterans Drive in          $800,000
Pekin, Illinois...........
1750           NY            Saugerties, Improve Tissle         $500,000
Road-Old Kings Highway
intersection..............
1751           TX            Design and Construct the           $800,000
Cottonwood Trail
pedestrian-bicycle
connection................
1752           NY            Rehabilitation of the            $2,080,000
Ashford Ave. bridge over I-
87 in the Villages of
Dobbs Ferry and Ardsley...
1753           OH            Streetscape completion              $80,000
along U.S. 40 in
Bridgeport................
1754           SD            Design and construct new         $7,108,844
Meridian Bridge across the
Missouri River at Yankton.
1755           MD            Upgrade MD 210 from MD 228       $3,000,000
to I-495..................
1756           IL            For DuPage County to                $80,000
construct certain segments
of Southern DuPage County
Regional Trail............
1757           IA            U.S. 20 relocated, Webster,      $2,400,000
Sac and Calhoun Counties,
Iowa......................
1758           NJ            Construction of new access         $800,000
roads along Route 42/
Blackhorse Pike in
Washington Township.......
1759           CA            Highways 152-156                   $800,000
Intersection improvements,
CA........................
1760           AK            Coffman Cove IFA ferry           $3,200,000
terminal or IFA vessel
debt repayment for MV
Prince of Wales Ferry.....

[[Page 1325]]
119 STAT. 1325


1761           MA            Acquisition, engineering,        $1,500,000
design, and construction
of the Assabet River Rail
Trail, Acton, Hudson,
Maynard, and Stow.........
1762           MI            Conduct Feasibility Study          $480,000
to Extend I-475 to U.S. 23
in Genesee County.........
1763           TX            Construct a reliever route       $2,400,000
on U.S. 287 South of Dumas
to U.S. 287 North of Dumas
1764           TN            construct new exit on I-75       $3,600,000
and connect U.S. 11, U.S.
411, and SR 30............
1765           PA            Design, engineering, ROW         $1,400,000
acquisition and
construction of street
improvements, parking,
safety enhancements and
roadway redesign in
Pittston..................
1766           TX            Dowlen Road Improvements         $2,764,800
for Beaumont, Texas.......
1767           CA            Construct Hwy 101 bicycle-         $400,000
pedestrian project in
Marin and Sonoma Counties
from north of Atherton
Ave. to south of Petaluma
River bridge..............
1768           TX            Construct raised median          $2,680,000
from Loop 224 to Sradley
St. in Nacogdoches, TX....
1769           OH            Construction of bicycle            $400,000
trail extension in Geauga
Park District in Chardon,
OH........................
1770           CA            Extension of a regional            $320,000
Class I bikeway from the
West City limits to the
East City limits along
leased railroad right-of-
way.......................
1771           AR            For rail grade separations       $8,000,000
identified by 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 and Smith             $640,000
Street Shopping District
Enhancements..............
1773           MA            Hampshire County Bike            $4,400,000
Paths, Design and
Construction..............
1774           NV            Construct I-15 Starr             $8,000,000
Interchange...............
1775           CA            Construct full-access            $3,200,000
interchange at SR 120--
McKinley Avenue, with the
necessary SR 120 auxiliary
lanes, Manteca, CA........
1776           CA            Install emergency vehicle          $400,000
preemption equipment along
major arterials in the I-
880 corridor, Alameda
County....................
1777           OH            Construct a proposed             $4,800,000
relocation of U.S. 22 and
SR 93 from the current IR
70, U.S. 40 west of
Zanesville................
1778           CA            Conduct Study and Construct        $800,000
I-205 Chrisman Road
Interchange Project,
Tracy, CA.................
1779           IL            Construction of part of a        $1,360,000
230 mile corridor U.S. 67
near Jerseyville and
Carrolton, Illinois.......
1780           CA            Construction of Campus             $400,000
Parkway from State Route
99 to Yosemite Ave.,
Merced County.............
1781           MI            Construction of Superior           $600,000
Road Roundabout, Superior
Township..................
1782           OR            Construction and                   $198,400
preliminary engineering of
a railroad crossing at the
intersection of Havlik
Road and Hwy 30, Scappoose
1783           FL            Clark Road Clover Leaf at I-     $4,400,000
95, Jacksonville..........

[[Page 1326]]
119 STAT. 1326


1784           PA            Construct and widen PA 94        $1,200,000
from the Adams and York
County line north to
Appler Road...............
1785           IL            For the reconstruction and       $1,600,000
realignment of 2 miles of
Evergreen Ave. located
west of the City of
Effingham.................
1786           IN            Improve State Road 332 and       $2,400,000
Nebo Road Intersection in
Delaware County, Indiana..
1787           AL            Birmingham Northern              $8,000,000
Beltline..................
1788           WI            Construct Lake Butte des        $28,000,000
Morts Bridge, U.S. Highway
41, Winnebago County,
Wisconsin.................
1789           MA            North Worcester County Bike      $4,000,000
Paths, Design and
Construction..............
1790           TX            Old Reliance Road Overpass       $2,000,000
at SH 6 (Earl Rudder
Freeway)--Widening project
in Brazos Co..............
1791           IA            Phase III of Main St.              $800,000
project, Amana............
1792           MN            Realign Vadnais Boulevard          $800,000
at interchange of I-694/
Highway 49, Ramsey County.
1793           CA            Reconfigure intersection at     $11,120,000
Highways 152 and 156 in
Santa Clara County........
1794           KY            Construct Georgetown             $2,400,000
Northwest Bypass from U.S.
460 West to I-75 North,
Scott County..............
1795           AZ            Grand Canyon Greenway            $2,560,000
Trails....................
1796           NY            Remediate road runoff in         $1,000,000
vicinity of Peconic
Estuary watershed.........
1797           ............  ...........................              $0
1798           OH            Construction of road               $120,000
improvements from Richmond
Road to new Cuyahoga
Community College in
Warrensville Heights, OH..
1799           MI            Construction of the I-696        $1,600,000
and Northwestern Highway
Interchange Freeway Ramps
at Franklin Road in
Southfield................
1800           OH            Construct access                 $1,600,000
improvements to I-680 and
internal roadways for
Corridor of Opportunity,
Mahoning Co...............
1801           NY            Mount Vernon Railroad Cut..      $2,000,000
1802           TX            Reconstruct and add two          $4,800,000
lanes to IH 27 from
Western Street in Amarillo
to Loop 335...............
1803           CO            SH 83-SH 88 Interchange          $3,200,000
Reconstruction--Arapahoe
County, CO................
1804           NY            Town of Pawling Old Rt. 55.        $400,000
1805           IL            Upgrade Curtis Road in           $5,600,000
conjunction with State
plan for I-57 interchange;
from Duncan Rd. to 1st
Street in Champaign.......
1806           MO            Upgrade Rt. 249 [Range           $8,000,000
Line] from Rt. 171 to I-44
1807           VA            Bland County Trails and            $800,000
Visitor Center--
Establishment of multi-use
trail network, associated
facilities and begin work
on visitors center........
1808           NH            Upgrade Sewalls Falls Road         $800,000
bridge over Merrimack
River in Concord..........
1809           IL            Perform Old Orchard Road           $800,000
Expansion and improvement
project between Harms Road
and U.S. 41, Cook County..
1810           MN            Design, engineering, and         $7,120,745
ROW acquisition to
reconstruct TH 95 bridge,
North Branch..............
1811           NY            Tappan Zee Bridge to I287        $1,000,000
Transportation Corridor...

[[Page 1327]]
119 STAT. 1327


1812           CA            Upgrade and reconstruct the     $17,480,000
I-80/I-680/SR 12
Interchange, Solano County
1813           MD            U.S. 219 Oakland Bypass....        $800,000
1814           NC            U.S. 221 widening from U.S.      $1,600,000
421 to Jefferson, NC......
1815           IL            Complete 80,000 lb truck         $2,400,000
route between CH 2 (Burma
Rd) and IL Rt. 130 in
Cumberland County.........
1816           CA            Improvement of intersection        $320,000
at Burbank Blvd. and
Hayvenhurst Ave...........
1817           OH            Construct pedestrian bridge      $2,000,000
over I-77; tunnel
underneath railroad;
bridge over Tuscarawas
River along OH and Erie
Canal in Tuscarawas County
1818           MN            Lake Street Access to I-         $1,600,000
35W, Minneapolis..........
1819           WI            Upgrade U.S. 2 in Ashland        $3,200,000
County....................
1820           OR            Construct an urban arterial      $4,200,000
street between NE Weidler
and NE Washington on NE
102nd, Portland...........
1821           CA            Construct an Interchange on      $2,028,000
Highway 70 at Georgia
Pacific Road in Oroville..
1822           AZ            Construct or Modify             $10,640,000
Railroad Grade Separations
on 6th St. and 22nd St.
and Reconstruct Speedway
Blvd. Underpass in Tucson.
1823           FL            Construct North Ormond             $880,000
Beach Business Park
Interchange at I-95
between U.S. 1 and SR 40,
Volusia County............
1824           MN            Environmental review for         $1,040,000
improvement along the
entire U.S. 10 corridor...
1825           NY            Construct visitor center,          $400,000
access road, and parking
at Sam's Point Preserve,
Ellenville................
1826           OH            Installation of road                $80,000
improvements on Old State
Road-SR 608 in
Middlefield, OH...........
1827           WA            To replace BNSF trestle,         $1,600,000
Sammamish River bridge and
reconstruct SR 202/127th
Pl. NE and SR 202/180th
Ave. NE intersections.....
1828           PA            Completion of beltway              $800,000
interchanges along
Business Route 60 in Moon
Township, Allegheny County
1829           TX            U.S. 290 Improvements in         $2,400,000
Austin, TX................
1830           CA            City of Madera, CA Improve       $2,400,000
SR 99--SR 145 Interchange.
1831           AL            Construct a new interchange        $800,000
on I-65 at Cullman, AL
County Road 222...........
1832           VA            National Park Service            $3,400,000
transportation
improvements to Historic
Jamestowne, Virginia......
1833           MI            Design and construction of       $2,400,000
West Michigan Regional
Trail Network connector to
link two trail systems
together and to Grand
Rapids....................
1834           TN            Plan and construct a             $7,200,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail including
enhancements, Murfreesboro
1835           AZ            Replacement of Safford           $3,520,000
Bridge which crosses the
Gila River directly north
of Safford, AZ on North
8th Avenue................
1836           TX            Design and construct               $800,000
streetscape improvements
to Old Spanish Trail--SH
288 to Griggs, Griggs to
Mykawa....................

[[Page 1328]]
119 STAT. 1328


1837           TN            For each rail-highway               $45,600
crossing: Improve
circuitry on vehicle
protection device
installed at crossing in
Knoxville, TN.............
1838           OH            Reconstruct Broadway Ave.          $600,000
in Lorain.................
1839           OH            Road Widening and related        $2,728,000
improvements to SR 82 in
Macedonia, OH.............
1840           MN            Reconstruct CSAH 4 and CSAH      $1,392,000
5 (Forest Highway 11)
between CSAH 15 and TH 61,
Silver Bay................
1841           CA            Ramona Avenue Grade              $1,600,000
Separation, Montclair,
California................
1842           MN            Roadway improvements, City         $800,000
of Federal Dam............
1843           VA            Rocky Knob Heritage Center--     $1,200,000
Planning, design, site
acquisition, and
construction for trail
system and visitors center
on Blue Ridge Parkway.....
1844           FL            Design and construct             $1,600,000
capacity and safety
improvements for State
Road 426-County Road 419
in Oviedo from Pine St. to
west of Lockwood Blvd.....
1845           FL            Coordinated Regional             $1,200,000
Transportation Study of
U.S. 98 from Pensacola Bay
Bridge, Escambia County to
Hathaway Bridge, Bay
County, Florida...........
1846           PA            Paving and reconstruction        $1,600,000
in the townships: North
and South Eldorado, North
Altoona, Fairview,
Juniata, East End,
Pleasant Valley, South
Tracks, Lyswen-Altoona, PA
1847           AK            Ferry infrastructure at          $3,000,000
Seward Marine Center......
1848           AZ            Realign Davis Road from          $2,640,000
State Route 80 to State
Route 191.................
1849           PA            Reesdale Street roadway            $800,000
reconfiguration to allow
HOV access to new parking
facility..................
1850           WA            SR 538 (College Way) and           $140,000
North 26th St. Signal in
Mount Vernon..............
1851           TX            Acquisition of right-of-way     $11,200,000
and environmental
preservation from I-45 to
U.S. 59 for Grand Parkway.
1852           ID            Reconstruct Grangemont Road      $1,600,000
(Idaho Forest Highway 67)
from Orofino to Milepost
9.3.......................
1853           VA            Expansion of South Airport       $6,240,000
Connector Road (Clarkson
Road to Charles City).....
1854           NY            Design and Construction of         $384,000
bicycle and pedestrian
facilities in the area of
the Roosevelt Avenue
Bridge....................
1855           NC            Construct Endor Iron               $800,000
Furnace Greenway
enhancements from Deep
River to Sanford..........
1856           CO            Improve and widen State          $3,200,000
Highway 44 from Colorado
Boulevard to State Highway
2.........................
1857           FL            Fund improvement of U.S.         $1,600,000
301 corridor in Sumter and
Marion Counties...........
1858           TN            Complete construction and           $80,000
landscaping of visitor
center on Cherohala Skyway
in Monroe County, TN......
1859           OR            Construction of the East         $5,200,000
Burnside Street
improvements, Portland....
1860           AL            Expand to 4 lanes U.S.             $800,000
Highway 278 from Sulligent
to Guin...................

[[Page 1329]]
119 STAT. 1329


1861           IL            Francis Cabrini/W. Green           $480,000
Homes CHA Street
Construction, City of
Chicago...................
1862           NY            Plan and construct               $8,000,000
greenway, bicycle path,
esplanades and ferry
landing along New York Bay
in Sunset Park, Brooklyn..
1863           PA            Construct Dubois Regional          $480,000
Medical Center Access Road
1864           NY            To design and construct          $1,680,000
safe route to school
projects in Brooklyn,
Queens and Manhattan, NY..
1865           PA            U.S. 30 corridor                 $2,600,000
improvements from PA 896
to PA 897. Connects PA 41.
1866           MD            U.S. 40 Alternate,               $4,000,000
Middletown Bypass.........
1867           CA            Construction of a smart             $40,000
crosswalk system at the
intersection of Topanga
Canyon Blvd. and Gault St.
1868           WI            Expand U.S. 51 and SH 29 in      $6,400,000
Marathon County...........
1869           PA            Construct 2 flyover ramps        $5,600,000
and S Linden St. ext for
access to industrial sites
in the cities of
McKeesport and Duquesne...
1870           NY            Improvements and upgrades          $160,000
on Main Street, Beekman,
NY........................
1871           NY            Construct pedestrian             $5,600,000
walkway along Route 9A in
Hudson River Park, New
York City.................
1872           IN            Design engineering, right-       $1,600,000
of-way acquisition, and
construction for the Grant
County Economic Corridor..
1873           MN            City of Marshall TH 23 4-        $2,630,400
Lane Extension............
1874           IL            Henry Horner Homes CHA             $800,000
Street Construction, City
of Chicago................
1875           TN            Improve circuitry on               $126,400
vehicle protection device
installed at highway-RR
crossing in Knoxville, TN.
1876           NJ            Construct Intersection at        $1,200,000
Route 46 and Little Ferry
Circle in Little Ferry....
1877           AR            Improve State Highway 88         $3,560,000
(Higdon Ferry Road) in Hot
Springs...................
1878           MD            Improve U.S. 1, Washington         $800,000
Boulevard Corridor in
Howard County.............
1879           NY            Downtown Flushing Traffic          $800,000
and Pedestrian
Improvements..............
1880           FL            Arlington Expressway Access      $1,200,000
Rd., Jacksonville.........
1881           CO            Construct arterial on W          $6,000,000
side of Montrose to ease
traffic congestion on SH
550 between Grand Avenue,
N/S of city...............
1882           CO            North I-25: Denver to Fort       $7,733,333
Collins, Colorado.........
1883           CA            Planning for Orange Line           $280,000
Mag Lev from downtown Los
Angeles to central Orange
County....................
1884           NJ            Rahway Streetscape                 $400,000
Replacement Project.......
1885           CT            Reconstruct I-95/I-91            $1,600,000
interchange and construct
pedestrian walkway, New
Haven.....................
1886           VA            Blue Ridge Music Center--        $1,200,000
Install lighting/ steps,
upgrade existing trail
system and equip
interpretative center with
visitor information.......

[[Page 1330]]
119 STAT. 1330


1887           VA            Ceres Recreation Trail and         $120,000
Center--Design and
construct pedestrian/
bicycle trail in community
of Ceres and establish
trail center..............
1888           ME            Construction of trails           $1,000,000
within the Eastern Trail
Management District.......
1889           GA            I-75 interchanges from             $800,000
north of Tifton to Turner
County line...............
1890           GA            City of Savannah, Construct        $160,000
bike and pedestrian paths
along Heritage Rail.......
1891           FL            Implementation of the            $1,600,000
Advanced Traffic
Management System, Boca
Raton, FL.................
1892           NY            Lyell Avenue: NY Rt. 259         $1,280,000
(Union Street) to Village
Line, Village of
Spenscerport, Town of
Ogden.....................
1893           WI            Construct U.S. 151 between       $3,000,000
CTH D and SH 175, Fond du
Lac County, WI............
1894           OH            Construct transportation         $8,400,000
enhancement projects,
Toledo....................
1895           TX            Contruct grade separation        $4,000,000
at U.S. 59 and SH 99.
Replace the proposed
interim cloverleaf ramps
at the intersection.......
1896           MS            Gateways Transportation            $200,000
Enhancement Project,
Hancock County............
1897           NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety
including in the vicinity
of IS X194................
1898           OK            Improvements to SH 412P at       $3,600,000
412 Interchange...........
1899           FL            Acquire right-of-way and         $4,000,000
construct East-West
Connector from SR 37 to SR
563 in Lakeland, FL.......
1900           WA            Design Valley Mall Blvd.         $5,120,000
for Main St. to I-82 and
two I-82 interchanges at
Mileposts 36 and 38 in
Union Gap, WA.............
1901           WA            Extension of Waaga Way west        $400,000
to Old Frontier Rd........
1902           ME            Plan and construct highway       $1,000,000
access between U.S. Route
161 and U.S. Route 1 in
Madawaska.................
1903           CA            Randolph St. improvements          $960,000
between Wilmington Ave.
and Fishburn Ave. in
Huntington Park...........
1904           CA            Reconstruct Azusa Ave. and       $2,000,000
San Gabriel Ave. for 2-way
traffic in Azusa..........
1905           KS            Construction of a 1.5 mile         $400,000
alternate truck route in
Downs, Kansas.............
1906           AL            Pedestrian Improvements for        $106,667
Columbiana, AL............
1907           MN            Reconstruct CSAH 91 from         $4,000,000
the D.M. and I.R. Railroad
crossing at 8th Street in
Duluth to CSAH 56, St.
Louis County..............
1908           NY            Construct Wayne County, NY         $276,000
rails to trails initiative
1909           MA            Design and construct signal        $600,000
crossing and other safety
improvements to Emerald
Necklace Greenway Bicycle
Trail, Town of Brookline..
1910           MI            Construction of                    $240,000
Nonmotorized Pathway, City
of Rockwood...............
1911           WA            Purchase of scenic easement        $480,000
or site at I-90 and
Highway 18................

[[Page 1331]]
119 STAT. 1331


1912           PA            Reconstruct the SR 33, 512       $2,000,000
interchange in the Borough
of Wind Gap...............
1913           NY            Access improvements for          $3,200,000
terminal located on 12th
Ave. between W. 44th and
W. 54th St. in Manhattan..
1914           IL            Completion of the Grand          $1,034,000
Illinois Trail, Cook
County....................
1915           CA            Construct and improve            $1,360,000
medians and drainage on
Imperial Highway from west
border to east border of
city in La Mirada.........
1916           CT            Construct Pomfret                   $80,000
Pedestrian Bridge.........
1917           NV            Construct Laughlin Bullhead      $1,600,000
City Bridge...............
1918           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $800,000
acquisition, and
construction of the
widening of Pennsylvania
Rt. 443 Corridor in Carbon
County....................
1919           NY            Palisades Interstate               $600,000
Parkway Mitigation
Measures for New Square...
1920           CA            Reconstruct and widen Del        $2,400,000
Amo Blvd. to four lanes
between Normandie Ave. and
New Hampshire Ave., Los
Angeles County............
1921           MN            Reconstruct Unorganized            $820,000
Township Road 488 from
CSAH 138, Koochiching
County....................
1922           NY            Reconstruction of Empire         $5,120,000
Boulevard.................
1923           PA            Reconstruction of PA 309         $2,000,000
from Greenwood Avenue to
Welsh Road................
1924           TN            Construction of I-69 in         $11,300,000
Obion, Dyer, Lauderdale
and Tipton Counties.......
1925           IL            Design, land acquisition,        $1,600,000
and construction of South
Main St. (IL 2) Corridor
from Beltline Rd. to Cedar
Street in Rockford, IL....
1926           OH            Grading, paving, roads for      $12,000,000
the transfer of rail to
truck for the intermodal
facility at Rickenbacker
Airport...................
1927           MA            Reconstruction of Pleasant       $1,600,000
Street, Watertown.........
1928           MN            Lake Wobegon Trail corridor        $281,600
from Sauk Centre to the
Stearns County line.......
1929           RI            Replace Sakonnet Bridge....      $1,600,000
1930           CA            Conduct study and construct      $4,000,000
CA State Route 239 from
State Route 4 in Brentwood
area to I-205 in Tracy
area......................
1931           MA            Geometric improvements,          $1,200,000
safety enhancements and
signal upgrades at Rt. 28
and Rt. 106, intersection
West Bridgewater..........
1932           WA            Fife--Widen 70th Ave. East         $800,000
and Valley Ave. East......
1933           CA            Construct two right hand           $400,000
turn for Byzantine Latino
Quarter transit plazas at
Normandie and Pico, and
Hoover and Pico, Los
Angeles...................
1934           WA            I-90 Two-Way Transit-HOV         $3,200,000
Project...................
1935           AL            Construct Talladega                $800,000
Mountains Natural Resource
Center--An educational
center and hub for hikers,
bicyclists, and
automobiles...............
1936           MD            Gaithersburg, MD Extension       $1,120,000
of Teachers Way-Olde Towne
Gaithersburg
Revitalization............
1937           IL            Millburn By-Pass (US Route       $2,080,000
45 at Gross Lake Road/
Millburn Road), Lake
County....................
1938           AK            Planning, design, and EIS        $2,000,000
of Bradfield Canal Road...

[[Page 1332]]
119 STAT. 1332


1939           TX            Reconstruct Clinton Drive       $11,200,000
from Federal Rd. to N.
Wayside Drive.............
1940           GA            Pave portions of CR 345, CR        $400,000
44, and CR 45, Hancock
County....................
1941           NY            Deer Avoidance System, to          $200,000
deter deer from milepost
marker 494.5, Ripley, PA,
to 304.2., Weedsport, NY
along I-90................
1942           CA            El Camino Real Grand Blvd.       $3,000,000
Initiative in San Mateo
County....................
1943           CA            Construct Guadalupe River        $6,400,000
Trail from I-880 to
Highway 237 in Santa Clara
County....................
1944           TN            Cocke County, Tennessee SR         $800,000
32 reconstruction.........
1945           IL            Construct I-80, Ridgeland          $800,000
Ave. Improvements, Tinley
Park......................
1946           KY            Construct Pedestrian Mall        $3,124,000
and Streetscape
Improvements on Lexington,
College, Walnut and
Gilespie Sts, Wilmore.....
1947           PA            PA 23 corridor improvements      $2,400,000
from U.S. 30 to U.S. 322..
1948           NJ            Replacement and realignment        $844,000
of Amwell Road Bridge over
Neshanic River............
1949           FL            City of Wilton Manors              $300,000
Powerline Road Streetscape
Enhancement Project.......
1950           TX            Construct SH 199 (Henderson      $6,400,000
St.) through the Trinity
Uptown Project between the
West Fork and Clear Fork
of the Trinity River in
Fort Worth................
1951           IN            Construction of multi-use          $200,000
paths, Town of Fishers,
Indiana...................
1952           OH            Construct White Pond Drive         $800,000
project in Akron..........
1953           MN            Design and right-of-way            $800,000
acquisition for I-35 E
CSAH 14 Main Street
Interchange, City of Lino
Lakes, Minnesota..........
1954           OR            Expand storage facilities        $2,500,000
in Eugene to support
transportation enhancement
activities throughout the
State.....................
1955           CA            Improvements to U.S. 101           $320,000
ramps between Winnetka
Ave. and Van Nuys Blvd....
1956           IN            Acquire right-of-way for         $2,400,000
and construct University
Parkway from Upper Mount
Vernon Road to SR 66......
1957           CA            Pine Avenue extension from       $6,800,000
Route 71 to Euclid Avenue
in the City of Chino,
California................
1958           MO            Confluence Greenway Land           $560,000
Acquisition for Riverfront
Trail development in St.
Louis.....................
1959           TN            Retrofit noise abatement         $2,000,000
walls in Davidson County..
1960           MA            Streestcape and pedestrian       $3,200,000
access improvements
between Museum Road and
Forsyth Way...............
1961           MI            Commerce, Haggerty Road          $1,200,000
from 14 Mile to Richardson
1962           WI            Expand SH 23, County            $24,000,000
Highway OJ to U.S. Highway
41, WI....................
1963           FL            Construct interchange at I-        $800,000
95 and Matanzas Woods
Parkway, Flagler County...
1964           IL            Miller Road Widening and         $6,364,000
Improvement, McHenry......

[[Page 1333]]
119 STAT. 1333


1965           NC            Construct Neuse River Trail      $1,600,000
in Johnston County........
1966           TX            Construct landscaping and        $1,600,000
other pedestrian amenities
in segments of the Old
Spanish Trail and Griggs
Road rights-of-way........
1967           NY            Construction of and                $800,000
improvements to Union Road
and Walden Avenue in
Cheektowaga...............
1968           LA            Construction of West             $3,200,000
Covington Bypass-LA 21
Widening..................
1969           MS            Construct Byrd Parkway           $1,200,000
Extension, Petal..........
1970           NY            Intermodal transportation        $3,200,000
improvements in Coney
Island....................
1971           MN            Construct one mile of new        $2,624,000
roadway and a bridge
crossing the DM&IR
railroad tracks, and
construct connector
between CSAH 14 and CSAH
284, Proctor..............
1972           NH            Construct Park and Ride,         $1,600,000
Exit 5 on I-93--
Londonderry, NH...........
1973           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in Exeter
Borough, Luzerne County...
1974           PA            Extension of River Road in       $1,200,000
Reading, PA to provide
access to major industrial
and brownfields sites.....
1975           AK            Point MacKenzie in               $1,000,000
Matanuska-Susitna Borough
plan and design road
access....................
1976           TX            Repair 4.35 miles of Lake        $4,800,000
Ridge Parkway. 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            $440,000
Street Construction, City
of Chicago................
1978           OR            Rockwood Town Center for         $2,000,000
Stark Street from 190th to
197th for pedestrian,
bicycle and transit
facilities and safety
mitigation................
1979           PA            Route 89 Curve Realignment         $240,000
one mile north of
Titusville on Route 89....
1980           FL            Sand Lake Road Improvements      $4,800,000
between Presidents Drive
and I-4...................
1981           MI            Sault Ste. Marie,                  $760,000
Reconstruct East Spruce
Street with drainage,
curb, gutter, pavement,
traffic control devices...
1982           MI            Study and construct I-96/        $2,000,000
U.S. 31/Sternberg Road
area improvements.........
1983           PA            Provide access to HOV ramp       $1,600,000
from Reedsdale Street with
traffic signals, pavement
markings, lane control and
fast acting gates.........
1984           IL            The extension of MacArthur       $1,200,000
Blvd. from Wabash to Iron
Bridge Road. Springfield..
1985           IL            Construct Cedar Creek              $400,000
Linear Park Trail, Quincy.
1986           IN            Conduct study for U.S. 50          $240,000
Corridor Improvements,
Dearborn County, Indiana..
1987           IL            Design, land acquisition,        $1,600,000
and construct West State
St. (US Business 20) from
Meridan Rd. to Rockton
Ave. in Rockford, IL......

[[Page 1334]]
119 STAT. 1334


1988           CA            The Foothill South Project,      $8,000,000
construct 16 miles of a
six-lane limited access
highway system............
1989           MI            Construct Road Improvements      $2,400,000
to Miller Rd. from I-75 to
Linden Rd. Flint Township.
1990           CA            State Route 99 improvements      $3,200,000
at Sheldon Road...........
1991           KY            The Kentucky Multi-Highway       $1,280,000
Preservation Project......
1992           NY            Town of Warwick, NY. Bridge        $140,000
replacement on Buttermilk
Falls Rd..................
1993           TN            Improve existing two lane        $8,000,000
highway to a four lane
facility along the U.S.
412 Corridor west of
Natchez Trace to U.S. 43
at Mount Pleasant.........
1994           NY            Town of Warwick, NY East           $640,000
Shore Road reconstruction.
1995           FL            Traffic Reconfiguration of         $800,000
SR 934 and U.S. 1 Route,
Miami.....................
1996           PA            For design, engineering,           $240,000
ROW acquisition, and
construction of the third
phase of the Marshalls
Creek Bypass Project in
Monroe County,
Pennsylvania..............
1997           MI            Construct North Central          $1,840,000
Muskegon County Corridor
Improvements at U.S. 31
and Russell Road..........
1998           OH            Reconstruct I-75/I-475           $2,400,000
Interchange, Toledo.......
1999           NY            College Point 20th Avenue          $700,000
Streetscapes Improvements
Project in Queens.........
2000           OH            Construct a 4 lane limited         $550,000
access road to link
Newcomerstown and Cadiz...
2001           CT            Construct trail to extend          $400,000
the Pequonnock Valley rail-
trail through Trumbull and
into Bridgeport, CT.......
2002           AK            Providence Hospital Public       $3,000,000
Access Road...............
2003           TX            I Road Between Nolana Loop       $1,520,000
and FM 495 in Hidalgo
County....................
2004           NC            North Carolina. Add passing      $4,800,000
lanes and safety
improvements to U.S.
Highway 64 in Transylvania
County....................
2005           TN            Improve streetscape and            $240,000
pavement repair, Blount
County, TN................
2006           CT            Reconstruction of State          $1,200,000
Route 111 from Purdy Hill
Road to Fan Hill Road,
Monroe, CT................
2007           IL            Resurface Trumbull Ave. and        $320,000
Homan Ave., Evergreen Park
2008           GA            Hwy 78 Corridor Improvement        $400,000
Gwinnett County...........
2009           TX            Construct Southwest Bypass       $3,200,000
in Georgetown, Texas,
between SH 29 and Ranch
Road 2243.................
2010           MO            To improve U.S. 54 to a            $800,000
four lane highway from the
Osage River to MO Route KK
2011           MS            Upgrade roads in                   $160,000
Mayersville (U.S. Highway
14 and 1), Issaquena
County....................
2012           MA            Gainsborough St. and St.           $900,000
Botolph St. Improvements..
2013           IN            Construct U.S. 31 Kokomo           $800,000
Corridor Project for
Kokomo Howard County,
Indiana...................
2014           OH            Construction of Tri-State        $1,600,000
Outer Belt in Lawrence
County....................

[[Page 1335]]
119 STAT. 1335


2015           PA            Completion of I-79-Kirwin        $1,600,000
Heights Interchange and
construction of retaining
walls, bridge and new
ramps.....................
2016           OH            Construction of the Carroll      $3,600,000
Area Interchange in
Fairfield County..........
2017           CA            Construct the Silicon            $6,400,000
Valley Transportation
Incident Management Center
in San Jose...............
2018           CA            Design and Construction            $800,000
Camino Tassajara Crown
Canyon to East Town
Project, Danville, CA.....
2019           NY            Traffic mitigation on              $120,000
Bridge Street and Maple
Avenue, Florida, NY.......
2020           WI            North 28th Street Phase 2        $1,024,000
roadway safety
improvements from Weeks
Avenue to Hill Avenue in
Superior..................
2021           NC            Upgrade U.S. 74 in Columbus      $5,600,000
County....................
2022           MS            Upgrade U.S. 78 to               $8,000,000
Interstate Standards from
the MS/TN State line to
the MS/AL State line......
2023           IN            Improve Bailie Street,             $256,000
Kentland..................
2024           CA            Realignment of La Brea           $2,640,000
Avenue to reduce
congestion, City of
Inglewood.................
2025           IL            Resurface Elston Avenue          $1,600,000
from Milwaukee to Pulaski,
Chicago...................
2026           TN            Sullivan, Washington             $1,600,000
Counties, Tennessee SR 75
widening..................
2027           GA            U.S. 17/SR 404 Spur, Back        $4,000,000
River bridge replacement,
Savannah..................
2028           MS            U.S. 98 access improvements      $4,000,000
and new I-59 interchange,
Lamar County..............
2029           VA            Construct South Airport            $400,000
Connector, Richmond
International Airport.....
2030           NY            City of Peeskill, NY Street        $104,000
Resurfacing Program.
Riverview Avenue..........
2031           GA            SR 400 at SR 120 Old Milton        $800,000
Parkway intersection
improvement Fulton County,
Georgia...................
2032           MA            East Boston Haul Road            $5,000,000
Construction..............
2033           NY            Town of Goshen Orzeck Road         $320,000
reconstruction............
2034           VA            Revitalize Main Street in          $580,000
Dumfries..................
2035           FL            Replace Platt Street Bridge      $2,400,000
2036           FL            Access Rd. Streetscaping,          $400,000
Sanford Airport...........
2037           NY            Rockland County and City of        $800,000
Yonkers to Lower-Manhattan
Ferry Boat project........
2038           SC            Complete construction of         $5,600,000
Palmetto Parkway (I520)
Extension (Phase II) to I-
20........................
2039           NM            U.S. 62-180 Reconstruction,      $4,000,000
Texas State Line to
Carlsbad..................
2040           IL            For U.S. Rt. 30                  $5,600,000
intersection signals, turn
and deceleration lanes
btwn Williams St. and IL
Rt. 43 incl. 80th Ave,
Wolf Rd., Lincoln Way HS
and Locust St.............
2041           OH            Construct Orchard Lane to          $400,000
Factory Road Connector,
Greene County.............
2042           TX            Construct a bridge impact          $400,000
protection system for
TxDOT.....................
2043           NC            Design and construction of       $4,000,000
the Airport Area Roadway
Network, High Point, North
Carolina..................

[[Page 1336]]
119 STAT. 1336


2044           VA            Repair Colorado Street           $1,400,000
bridge in Salem, Virginia.
2045           CA            Project to evaluate air             $80,000
quality and congestion
mitigation benefits of a
Hybrid Utility Vehicle in
Santa Barbara County......
2046           PA            Mill Street improvements,          $720,000
Borough of Lansdale.......
2047           MN            Construction of County           $2,560,000
State Aid Highway 21,
Scott County, MN..........
2048           ............  ...........................              $0
2049           TX            Two direct connectors in         $4,000,000
Houston, Texas between IH
10 and SH 99, The Grand
Parkway...................
2050           MO            Upgrade of Rt. 71 from          $12,000,000
Pineville to Arkansas
State Line................
2051           CA            Improve interstates and         $20,000,000
roads part of the Inland
Empire Goods Movement
Gateway project in and
around the former Norton
Air Force Base............
2052           IL            Preconstruction activities         $400,000
for Sangamon Valley
Bicycle Trail (IL)........
2053           MI            St. Clair County Parks is          $400,000
working with 13 local
units to develop the 54-
mile Bridge-to-Bay trail..
2054           NJ            New Jersey Underground             $256,000
Railroad for preservation,
enhancement and promotion
of sites in New Jersey....
2055           CA            Construction of an                 $800,000
interchange at Lammers
Road and I-205, Tracy, CA.
2056           MN            Corridor Preservation            $2,400,000
Studies and Right-of-Way
acquisition, St. Cloud
Metro Area................
2057           NY            Improve CR 39 from NY 27 to      $3,000,000
NY 27A, Suffolk County....
2058           PA            Street improvements,               $520,000
Borough of Ambler.........
2059           KY            Reconstruction of KY 61            $800,000
from Greensburg in Green
County to Columbia in
Adair County..............
2060           TX            Construct Loop 12-IH 35E           $800,000
and SH 183 west extension
to MacArthur, Irving,
Texas.....................
2061           NC            To plan, design, and               $236,800
construct the segment of
Berkeley Blvd. from Royal
Avenue to Hew Hope Rd. (SR
1003) in Goldsboro, NC....
2062           OH            Upgrade Manchester Rd. in        $3,200,000
Akron.....................
2063           IL            St. Charles Road, The              $800,000
Village of Bellwood.......
2064           TN            Engineer, design and             $7,200,000
construction of connector
road from I-75 interchange
across Enterprise South
Industrial Park to Hwy 58
in Hamilton County........
2065           TX            Construct 4 lane divided         $1,600,000
roadway along SH 71 from
the Perdernales River to
Bee Creek.................
2066           CT            I-84 Danbury Exits I-11          $2,720,000
Upgrade Interchanges......
2067           CA            Complete the engineering         $4,000,000
design and acquire the
right-of-way needed for
the Arch-Sperry project in
San Joaquin County........
2068           UT            Increase lane capacity on        $3,000,000
bridge over Virgin River
on Washington Fields Road
in Washington.............
2069           NY            Installation of Utica            $2,400,000
Traffic Signal System.....

[[Page 1337]]
119 STAT. 1337


2070           NC            To construct an interchange        $947,200
at an existing grade
separation at SR 1602 (Old
Stantonsburg Rd.) and U.S.
264 Bypass in Wilson
County, NC................
2071           WA            U.S. 12 Burbank to Walla         $3,440,000
Walla: Construct new four
lane highway for portion
of U.S. 12................
2072           ............  ...........................              $0
2073           OH            Structural improvements to         $400,000
two bridges over the
Zimber Ditch between 38th
St. and Whipple Ave. in
Canton, Ohio..............
2074           OK            U.S. 281, Widen U.S. 281           $800,000
from the new U.S. 281 Spur
North to Geary Canadian
County, OK................
2075           MI            City of Negaunee, Croix            $900,000
Street reconstruction-
Streetscape and
resurfacing from U.S. 41
to Maas Street............
2076           KS            Construct I-35 and Lone Elm      $4,000,000
Road interchange and widen
I-35 from 151st St. to
159th St., Olathe.........
2077           MI            Integrated highway                 $400,000
realignment and grade
separations at Port Huron,
MI to eliminate road
blockages from NAFTA rail
traffic...................
2078           OK            U.S. 60, Widen U.S. 60           $2,400,000
between Bartlesville and
Pawhuska, Osage County, OK
2079           WA            Construct an off-ramp from         $400,000
I-5 to the intersection of
Alderwood Mall Blvd. and
Alderwood Mall Pkwy.......
2080           CA            Reduce congestion and boost      $5,600,000
economies through safer
access to the coast by
realigning Hwy 299 between
Trinity and Shasta
Counties..................
2081           IL            Pre-construction and               $800,000
construction activities on
U.S. 45/LaGrange Road from
131st Street to 179th
Street....................
2082           AR            Van Buren, Arkansas--Widen       $3,000,000
and reconstruct Rena Road.
2083           GA            Construction of                  $4,800,000
infrastructure for inter-
parcel access, median
upgrades, lighting, and
beautification along
Highway 78 corridor.......
2084           CA            Construct Alviso Bay Trail         $800,000
from Gold Street in
historic Alviso to San
Tomas Aquino Creek in San
Jose......................
2085           MS            Construct bicycle and              $680,000
trolley path, Hattiesburg.
2086           WI            Construct a bike and               $240,000
pedestrian bridge across
SH 100 at the 1800 block
of S. 108th Street, West
Allis.....................
2087           IL            Increasing the height on         $2,400,000
the IL Rt. 82 Railroad
Underpass in Geneseo, IL..
2088           NC            U.S. 70 Goldsboro Bypass...        $800,000
2089           CA            Vasco Road Safety                  $800,000
Improvements, Contra Costa
Transportation Authority
and the County of Alameda
Public Works, California..
2090           NY            Downtown Flushing                  $880,000
Multimodal Connection
Project, Queens...........
2091           MD            Construct Safety and             $2,000,000
Operations Improvements at
Martin Luther King, Jr.,
Blvd. and W. Baltimore
Street in Baltimore.......
2092           NY            Rehabilitate Riis Park             $300,000
Boardwalk.................

[[Page 1338]]
119 STAT. 1338


2093           TX            Construct 25 mile stretch        $9,200,000
of the 177-mile loop,
between IH-45 south and SH
288.......................
2094           UT            Construction of Midvalley          $800,000
Highway, Tooele County,
Utah......................
2095           WA            Improve Willapa Hills              $700,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail between Chehalis and
Pacific County............
2096           PA            Design and construct             $4,800,000
interchange and related
improvements at I-83 Exit
18........................
2097           VA            Northern Virginia Potomac          $800,000
Heritage National Scenic
Trail.....................
2098           NC            Wilmington Area Port Access      $2,400,000
Improvements..............
2099           OK            Construction of Midwest            $800,000
City Pedestrian Walkway...
2100           ............  ...........................              $0
2101           GA            Construct access roads on        $1,600,000
Airport Loop road in
Hapeville.................
2102           TN            Construct 2nd Creek                $548,560
Greenway, Knoxville,
Tennessee.................
2103           NE            Design, right-of-way and         $2,000,000
construction for the
Louisville Bypass,
Nebraska..................
2104           HI            Construct Honoapiilani           $2,400,000
Highway Realignment.......
2105           TN            Hamblen County, Tennessee          $800,000
U.S. 25E interchange
improvements..............
2106           IL            Construction of a new              $960,000
bicycle-pedestrian bridge
in Wayne, IL..............
2107           PA            David Lawrence Convention          $960,000
Center Phase IV-
reconstruction of roadways
assoc. with HQ hotel
project...................
2108           CO            I-70 and SH 58 Interchange:      $5,976,000
Reconstruction of existing
ramps, building of missing
ramps and ROW acquisition.
2109           OH            Reconstruct U.S. Route 6         $2,640,000
(Lake Road). Rocky River..
2110           WA            Construct 6 mile span over       $4,108,000
I-5 in Thurston County to
connect Chehalis Western
Trail.....................
2111           IL            Extend Frank Scott Parkway       $2,240,000
East Road to Scott AFB,
St. Clair County..........
2112           OH            Reconfigure I-480 and              $800,000
Transportation Blvd.
Interchange, Garfield
Heights...................
2113           NY            Rehabilitation of Route 100        $880,000
from Virginia Road to
Westchester Community
College...................
2114           TN            Restoration of historic L&N         $16,000
Depot, McMinn County,
Tennessee.................
2115           SD            Resurface 10 miles of U.S.       $1,840,000
18 from Okreek to Carter
on the Rosebud Indian
Reservation...............
2116           CA            Route 198 Expansion, from        $2,400,000
SR 99 to SR 43............
2117           WA            SR 543 Interstate 5 to           $3,000,000
International Boundary
Enhancement in Blaine.....
2118           MD            Rockville, MD Construction       $3,200,000
of Maryland Avenue and
Market Street Intermodal
Access Project............
2119           MN            U.S. Highway 212 expansion         $800,000
from Carver Cnty Rd. 147
to Cologne and from
Cologne to Norwood Young
America...................
2120           VA            Vienna, VA Maple Avenue          $1,320,000
improvement project.......
2121           IL            Village of South                   $762,058
Jacksonville--West
Vandalia Road upgrades....
2122           ............  ...........................              $0

[[Page 1339]]
119 STAT. 1339


2123           ............  ...........................              $0
2124           FL            Destiny Rd. Reconstruction,        $800,000
Eatonville................
2125           KY            Construct New Technology         $1,600,000
Triangle Access Road,
Campbell County, Kentucky.
2126           NY            Town of Wawayanda                  $400,000
reconstruction of McVeigh
Road......................
2127           VA            Virginia Creeper Trail--           $680,000
Trail needs, including
construction of restroom
facilities at Watauga and
Alvarado and parking
expansion at Watauga......
2128           CA            Construct grade separation      $12,800,000
on State College Blvd. at
the Burlington Northern
Santa Fe railroad,
Fullerton.................
2129           MA            Warren Street--Blue Hill         $2,400,000
Avenue....................
2130           FL            Design and construct Dunn        $1,600,000
Avenue Extension, Volusia
County....................
2131           CA            Construct operational and        $2,000,000
safety improvements to I-
880 N at 29th Ave. in
Oakland...................
2132           WA            U.S. 395, North Spokane          $4,640,000
Corridor Improvements.....
2133           NY            Route 531 Expansion              $5,920,000
Spencerport-Brockport, 4-
lane Highway is a project
to extend Rt. 531.........
2134           OR            Columbia Intermodal             $11,000,000
Corridor for rail
congestion relief,
improved intersections and
access to Interstate-5 for
trucks, and grade-separate
road from rail, Portland..
2135           OH            Interchange and related          $2,000,000
road improvements to SR 44
in Painesville, OH........
2136           GA            Greene County, Georgia             $960,000
conversion of I-20 and
Carey Station Road
overpass to full
interchange...............
2137           IL            Pioneer Parkway upgrade in       $1,600,000
Peoria--Extension from
Allen Road to Route 91....
2138           MS            Construct historic bicycle         $120,000
path, Pascagoula..........
2139           PA            Crows Run Relocation from        $3,080,000
SR 65 to Freedom Crider
Road......................
2140           OH            Replace the Edward N.            $8,000,000
Waldvogel Viaduct in
Cincinnati................
2141           NC            Construct I-540 from NC 55       $8,800,000
South to NC 55 North......
2142           NY            Roadway, streetscape,            $3,200,000
pedestrian, and parking
improvements to the
Buffalo Niagara Medical
Campus, Buffalo...........
2143           VA            Upgrade DOT crossing                $35,520
#470515H to constant
warning devices in Halifax
2144           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in Avoca
Borough, Luzerne County...
2145           WA            Bridge Modification and          $3,000,000
Interstate Highway
Protection Project, Skagit
River, in Skagit County...
2146           TN            Construct welcome center,          $160,000
Macon County..............
2147           CA            Construction of new roadway        $800,000
lighting on major
transportation corridors
in the Northwest San
Fernando Valley...........

[[Page 1340]]
119 STAT. 1340


2148           MO            Interchange design and             $800,000
construction for the Main
Street Extension at I-55,
Cape Girardeau County.....
2149           CA            Replace SR 22 interchanges,      $5,200,000
construct HOV lanes, and
lengthen bridges in Garden
Grove.....................
2150           IL            Construction of CAP I-290          $800,000
Village of Oak Park.......
2151           RI            Rehabilitation of Bridge         $4,400,000
Number 550 in Pawtucket...
2152           WA            Complete analysis,                 $600,000
permitting and right-of-
way procurement for I-5/SR
501 Interchange
replacement in Ridgefield.
2153           CA            Design and construct new         $1,600,000
interchange at Potrero
Blvd. and State Route 60
in Beaumont...............
2154           TN            Construction of a                  $800,000
pedestrian bridge in
Alcoa, TN.................
2155           WV            Construct 4 lane                $35,400,000
improvements on U.S. Route
35 in Mason County........
2156           OH            Construct Grade Separation         $400,000
at Front Street, Berea....
2157           CA            Crenshaw Blvd.                     $640,000
Rehabilitation, 182nd St.
190th St.; and Crenshaw
Blvd. at 182nd St. Fwy on-
off Ramp Capacity
Enhancement, City of
Torrance..................
2158           CA            Construct Interchange at         $4,000,000
Intersection of SR 44 and
Stillwater Road...........
2159           MN            CSAH 61 improvements, City         $392,000
of Coleraine..............
2160           KY            Expansion to four lanes of       $8,000,000
Hwy 55 and Hwy 555
Heartland Parkway in
Taylor County.............
2161           KS            Interchange improvement at       $4,000,000
K-7 and 55th St. in
Johnson Co................
2162           CA            Construct truck lane on            $440,000
Baughman Road from State
Route 78/86 to Forrester
Road, Westmorland.........
2163           AZ            Construct bridges at Aspen       $3,000,000
St., at Birch St., at
Cherry St., at Bonito St.,
at Thorpe St..............
2164           CT            Construct Putnam curb cuts.         $80,000
2165           OH            Canton, OH Cleveland Ave.          $320,000
bridge replacement over
the Nimishilen Creek......
2166           MN            Design and right-of-way          $2,400,000
acquisition for I-35 and
CSAH 2 interchange in
Forest Lake, MN...........
2167           PA            Complete the connection of       $8,000,000
the American Parkway
between the east and west
sides of the Lehigh River
with bridge and
interchanges..............
2168           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $200,000
acquisition and
construction of street
improvements, parking and
safety enhancements Main
and Parsonage Streets in
Pittston..................
2169           TX            Grade separation bridges at      $6,560,000
Wintergreen 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        $1,200,000
Mill Road to Salem Road,
Dekalb and Rockdale
Counties..................
2171           NV            Improve Las Vegas Beltway-       $3,200,000
Airport Connector
Interchange...............

[[Page 1341]]
119 STAT. 1341


2172           CA            Oregon-Page Mill expressway      $3,200,000
Improvements between U.S.
101 and SR 82, Palo Alto..
2173           MA            Design and construct the           $800,000
Quinebaug River Rail Trail
Bikeway...................
2174           CA            Park Boulevard-Harbor Drive        $800,000
Rail Grade Separation, San
Diego.....................
2175           MN            Paul Bunyan Trail, Walker          $560,000
to Bemidji segment........
2176           CA            Construct road surface           $1,120,000
improvements, and improve
road safety from Brawley
Water plant to Hwy 86 to
9th Street to 18th Street,
Brawley...................
2177           TX            Improvements to FM 1017 in         $400,000
Hebbronville..............
2178           CA            Alameda Corridor East           $12,400,000
Gateway to America 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-             $800,000
Columbus..................
2180           IL            Pre-construction and             $5,568,000
construction IL 15 over
Wabash River at Mount
Carmel....................
2181           NY            Queens, Bronx, and Kings,        $4,750,000
and Richmond County
Graffiti Elimination
Program including Kings
Highway from Ocean Parkway
to McDonald Avenue........
2182           IA            Improvements at the IA 146         $800,000
and I-80 interchange,
Grinnell..................
2183           TX            Construct Grade separation       $4,000,000
at U.S. 277 in Eagle Pass.
2184           LA            Plan, design, and construct      $2,200,000
the internal roadway at
Port of South Louisiana,
Saint John the Baptist
Parish and LA 22 in
Ascension Parish..........
2185           KS            Construction of a 2-lane on     $10,240,000
a 4-lane right-of-way
bypass with controlled
access on U,S, 400 at
Dodge City................
2186           MN            Reconstruct CR 203 between         $268,800
U.S. 10 and CSAH 1,
Morrison County...........
2187           NY            Reconstruction of York           $2,800,000
Street Industrial Corridor
Project, Auburn, NY.......
2188           NY            Construction of and                $800,000
improvements to Route 62
in the Village of Hamburg.
2189           IN            Convention Center Area          $12,280,000
Redevelopment Project
includes street
resurfacing, pedestrian
walkway and streetscape
improvements,
signalization, safety
enhancements, plaza and
pedestrian area upgrades,
and pedestrian bridges on
South Street, Capitol
Street, West Street,
Missouri Street, and
McCarty Street,
Indianapolis..............
2190           AL            Construct pedestrian urban-      $1,200,000
edge riverwalk in
Montgomery, AL............
2191           PA            Johnstown, Pennsylvania,         $4,000,000
West End bypass safety
improvements..............
2192           CA            Construction of traffic and      $1,600,000
pedestrian safety
improvements in Yucca
Valley....................
2193           CA            710 Freeway Study to             $2,400,000
Evaluate Technical
Feasibility and Impacts of
a Tunnel Alternative to
Close 710 Freeway Gap.....

[[Page 1342]]
119 STAT. 1342


2194           CA            Greenleaf right-of-way           $3,200,000
Community Enhancement
Project-design and
construct bikeways,
pedestrian walkways and
upgrade signalization,
Compton...................
2195           KY            Improve Prospect Street          $2,200,000
Pedestrian Access, Berea..
2196           OH            Construct Crocker Stearns          $880,000
Connection, North Olmsted
and Westlake..............
2197           NY            Construction of and                $480,000
improvements to Seneca
Street in Buffalo.........
2198           CA            Avalon Boulevard/I-405           $4,800,000
Interchange modification
project, Carson...........
2199           IL            Construct Illinois Route         $1,600,000
336 from Macomb to Peoria.
2200           NC            North Carolina. Pack Square      $3,840,000
Pedestrian and Roadway
Improvements, Asheville...
2201           PA            Provide pedestrian and             $880,000
water access to Convention
Center from surrounding
neighborhoods.............
2202           NY            Reconstruction of Times and      $1,200,000
Duffy Squares in New York
City......................
2203           LA            Construction of I-10 Access        $880,000
Road (Crowley)............
2204           NY            Repaving of I-86 in towns        $6,000,000
of Coldspring, Randolph,
Allegany, and Olean; City
of Olean; Village of
Randolph in Cattaraugus
County....................
2205           PA            Replace Bridge, SR 106,            $640,000
Tunkhannock Creek Bridge
2, Clifford Township,
Susquehanna County........
2206           NJ            Replace Route 7-Wittpen            $800,000
Bridge, Hudson County.....
2207           MN            Right-of-Way acquisition         $3,200,000
for 8th Street North and
Pinecone Road.............
2208           IL            For Village of Lemont to           $280,000
modernize and improve the
intersection of McCarthy
Road, Derby Road, and
Archer Avenue.............
2209           CA            Construct I-80 HOV lanes           $800,000
and interchange in Vallejo
2210           PA            Rail Crossing signalization        $165,040
upgrade, East Wesner Road,
Maidencreek Twp, Berks
County....................
2211           OH            Construct road projects and      $5,184,000
transportation
enhancements as part of
RiverScape Phase III,
Montgomery County, Ohio...
2212           TN            Riverside Drive Cobblestone        $800,000
Restoration and Walkway,
Memphis...................
2213           TX            Reconstruction of West             $320,000
Airport between U.S. 59
and Kirkwood in the City
of Meadows Place, Texas...
2214           PA            Construct additional             $1,320,000
northbound lane on Rt. 28
between Harmar and
Creighton Interchange.....
2215           NJ            Roadway and intersection           $800,000
modifications on New
Jersey Route 82...........
2216           OH            Jackson Township, Ohio.          $1,600,000
Intersection improvements
at Fulton Drive and Wales.
2217           GA            Rockdale County Veteran's          $400,000
Park--Create park trails..

[[Page 1343]]
119 STAT. 1343


2218           MA            Construct the Blackstone         $1,600,000
River Bikeway and
Worcester Bikeway Pavilion
between Providence, RI and
Worcester, MA.............
2219           OH            Improvements to SR 91 in         $1,560,000
City of Twinsburg, OH.....
2220           TX            Completion of U.S. 77            $2,400,000
relief route around City
of Robstown...............
2221           NY            Improve Maple Avenue,            $1,000,000
Smithtown.................
2222           HI            Replace and Rehabilitate           $800,000
Kamehameha Highway
Bridges, Island of Oahu...
2223           TX            SH 71 from W of FM 20 to         $1,600,000
Loop 150, Bastrop County..
2224           IN            Construct U.S. 31 Plymouth       $8,800,000
to South Bend Freeway
Project in Marshall and
St. Joseph Counties,
Indiana...................
2225           LA            Plan and develop a 4-lane          $160,000
roadway, Jeanerette to
U.S. 90 connection........
2226           LA            Construct I-12 and LA 1088       $2,400,000
Interchange...............
2227           CA            4 lane widening/safety           $2,928,000
improvements on State
Route 25 from Hollister to
Gilroy....................
2228           NY            Comprehensive traffic              $600,000
congestion mitigation
study of Hauppauge
Industrial Park and
surrounding area..........
2229           NY            Develop an identity and            $800,000
signage program for the
Erie Canalway National
Heritage Corridor.........
2230           CO            Dillon Drive Overpass at         $3,200,000
Interstate 25 in Pueblo...
2231           NY            Improvements at highway-           $900,000
rail crossings along the
Southern Tier Extension
Railroad in Allegany,
Cattaraugus, and Steuben
Counties..................
2232           FL            Depot Ave. Enhancements,         $4,800,000
Gainesville...............
2233           CA            Interstate 15 and                $1,600,000
Winchester Road
Interchange Project.......
2234           PA            Construct the Eastern Inner      $4,000,000
Loop in Centre County
around State College, PA..
2235           NJ            Streetscape Improvements           $800,000
along Berlin Road between
Gibbsboro Road and White
Horse Road in Lindenwold
Borough...................
2236           FL            SR 70 improvements in            $1,600,000
Highland, DeSoto and
Okeechobee Counties.......
2237           GA            Streetscape-Albany.........        $400,000
2238           GA            Streetscape-Richland.......        $160,000
2239           MO            Construct four lanes for         $8,000,000
Route 5 in Camden County..
2240           IL            Improve Cottage Grove              $800,000
intersection, South
Chicago Avenue and 71st
Street....................
2241           NY            Study, design, and                 $750,000
reconstruction of
pedestrian walkways, the
Bronx.....................
2242           MS            Upgrade roads in Anguilla          $600,000
and Rolling Fork, Sharkey
County....................
2243           TX            For center to center               $800,000
communication link between
highway traffic
transportation management
centers...................
2244           OH            Upgrade the interchange of       $2,105,600
Interstates 270 and 71 in
Franklin County, Ohio.....
2245           CA            U.S. 101 Corridor                $4,000,000
Improvements--Route 280 to
the Capitol-Yerba Buena
Interchange...............
2246           CA            Rancho Vista Blvd. Widening      $2,800,000
Project...................

[[Page 1344]]
119 STAT. 1344


2247           NJ            Newark Access Variable             $400,000
Message Signage System....
2248           IA            Construct SW Connector,          $1,600,000
West Des Moines...........
2249           IA            U.S. 30 reconstruction,          $3,200,000
near Tama.................
2250           GA            Construction of interchange      $3,200,000
on I-985 north of SR 13,
Hall County, Georgia......
2251           MI            Marquette County,                  $400,000
Realignment of 3200 feet
of County Road 492 from
U.S. 41 north to County
Road HD...................
2252           WI            Realign U.S. 8 near              $1,600,000
Cameron, Barron County....
2253           PA            Restoration of PA422, in           $800,000
Berks County, including
slab repair and diamond
grinding..................
2254           CA            Monte Vista Avenue Grade         $1,600,000
Separation, Montclair,
California................
2255           NY            Deploy intermodal chassis        $1,600,000
ITS project in New York...
2256           NY            Reconstruction of Route 590      $6,000,000
in the Town of
Irondequoit, NY...........
2257           NY            Design and Construction of       $1,600,000
Downtown Jamestown
Connector Trail...........
2258           LA            Further construction to          $2,640,000
improve draining at
Clearview Parkway (LA
3152) and Earhart
Expressway (LA 3139)......
2259           MI            Houghton County,                   $216,000
Rehabilitate 2 piers and
remove old bridge caissons
for Sturgeon River Bridge.
2260           AK            Make necessary improvements      $2,000,000
to Indian River Road in
City and Borough of Sitka.
2261           MN            Reconstruct CSAH 61 from         $1,680,000
Barnum to TH 210 at
Carlton, and improve
Munger Trail..............
2262           TX            Build I-30 Trinity River           $800,000
Bridge, Dallas, Texas.....
2263           AK            Realign rail track to            $5,000,000
eliminate highway-rail
crossings and improve
highway safety and transit
times.....................
2264           MS            Relocate SR 44 from SR 198       $3,200,000
to Pierce Road, Columbia..
2265           AL            Interstate 565 west              $1,600,000
extension towards Decatur.
2266           MO            Roadway Improvements on Rt.      $4,000,000
21 from Hayden Road to
Lake Lorraine.............
2267           IL            Halsted Bridge over North          $480,000
Branch Canal
Reconstruction, City of
Chicago...................
2268           VA            Town of Pound Riverwalk--           $80,000
Construction of pedestrian
riverwalk in Town of Pound
2269           IL            U.S. 67 west of                  $1,600,000
Jacksonville, IL Bypass to
east of IL 100............
2270           NY            Village of Wappingers Falls        $600,000
North Mesier Ave..........
2271           AR            War Eagle Bridge                   $640,000
Rehabilitation--Benton
County, Arkansas..........
2272           WI            Build additional                   $640,000
staircases, landscape, and
other improvements to the
marsupial bridge at the
Holton St. Viaduct in
Milwaukee.................
2273           TN            Washington County,                 $800,000
Tennessee SR 36 widening..
2274           MI            Westland, Ann Arbor Trail        $2,520,000
between Farmington and
Merriman..................
2275           MI            White Lake and Commerce,           $400,000
pave Cooley Lake Road
Between Ripple Way and
Havenwood.................
2276           GA            Bridge replacement on              $450,000
County Road 183-FAS Route
1509, Peach County........

[[Page 1345]]
119 STAT. 1345


2277           NC            I40 I-77 Interchange in          $4,000,000
Iredell County, NC........
2278           CA            Construct safe routes to           $800,000
school in Cherryland and
Ashland...................
2279           CA            Install Central Ave.             $1,656,000
Historic Corridor
comprehensive streetscape
improvements thus
improving traffic, ped
safety, and economic
development, Los Angeles..
2280           VA            Whitetop Station--                  $80,000
Completion of renovation
of Whitetop Station (which
serves as trailhead
facility) including
construction of trail.....
2281           CT            Make Improvements to             $1,600,000
Montville-Preston Mohegan
Bridge....................
2282           IL            Widen and improve Pulaski          $560,000
Road, Alsip...............
2283           AK            For completion of the            $4,000,000
Shotgun Cove Road, from
Whittier, Alaska to the
area of Decision Point,
Alaska....................
2284           NY            Study and Implement              $1,000,000
Intelligent Transportation
System Sensor Technology
to Improve Safety at
Bridges and Tunnels in
Metropolitan New York City
2285           NY            Warburton Avenue Bridge            $500,000
over Factory Lane,
Hastings-on-Hudson, New
York......................
2286           NY            Improve intersection of Old        $400,000
Dock and Church Street,
Kings Park................
2287           TN            Widen and improve State          $6,500,000
Route 33, Knox County,
Tennessee.................
2288           CA            Reconstruct Paramount Blvd.      $1,080,000
with medians and improve
drainage from north border
to south border of city in
Lakewood..................
2289           NY            Upgrade Metro North              $2,400,000
stations in the Bronx and
construct station at
Yankee Stadium............
2290           OH            Construct the existing           $4,100,000
industrial park road from
local to State standards
near Cadiz................
2291           LA            Upgrade LA 28 to four lanes      $1,600,000
from LA 121 to LA 465.....
2292           NY            Reconstruction of Historic       $1,920,000
Eastern Parkway...........
2293           CA            Widen and make ITS                 $800,000
improvements on Paramount
Blvd. between Telegraph
Rd. and Gardendale St. in
Downey....................
2294           VA            Conduct planning and             $2,400,000
engineering for Hampton
Roads Third Crossing and
Interconnected Roadways...
2295           IL            Widen Annie Glidden Road to      $6,400,000
five lanes with
intersection improvements.
DeKalb, IL................
2296           CA            Widen California State          $14,400,000
Route 132 from California
State Route 99 west to
Dakota Avenue.............
2297           NC            Widen Derita Road from           $1,600,000
Poplar Tent Road in
Concord to the Cabarrus
Mecklenburg County line...
2298           TX            Widen from 4 to 6 lanes          $5,600,000
Interstate 35 East from
Lake Lewisville to Loop
288.......................
2299           CA            Widen Haskell Avenue               $160,000
between Chase St. and
Roscoe Blvd...............
2300           TX            Widen Hempstead Highway            $800,000
from 12th Street to
Washington Avenue from
four lanes to six lanes...

[[Page 1346]]
119 STAT. 1346


2301           NH            Reconstruction and                 $400,000
relocation of the
intersection of Maple
Avenue and Charleston Road
in Claremont..............
2302           OH            Construct highway-rail             $240,000
crossing safety upgrades
at 3 grade crossings in
Madison Village, OH.......
2303           WA            Cultural and Interpretive        $1,280,000
Center (Hanford Reach
National Monument)
facility, Richland, WA....
2304           NY            Implement Improvements for         $600,000
Pedestrian Safety in New
York County...............
2305           NY            Construction of and                $320,000
improvements to Main
Street in the Town of Eden
2306           GA            SR 85 widening from Adams        $1,200,000
DR to I-75 and reconstruct
the Forest Parkway
interchange, Clayton
County....................
2307           GA            Jogging and Bicycle Trails         $400,000
around CSU, Columbus......
2308           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in Throop
Borough, Lackawanna County
2309           IL            Reconstruct Winter Ave,          $4,320,000
existing 1 lane RR subway,
and 1 lane bridge to
provide access to Winter
Park in Danville..........
2310           OR            Construct highway and            $7,200,000
pedestrian access to
Macadam Ave. and street
improvements as part of
the South Waterfront
development, Portland.....
2311           TX            Relocation of 10th Street          $600,000
near McAllen-Miller
International Airport.....
2312           IL            Construct pedestrian tunnel        $800,000
at railroad crossing in
Winfield, IL..............
2313           IN            Construct Margaret Avenue        $2,400,000
Safety and Capacity
Enhancement Project.......
2314           TX            Construct Loop 574 from BU       $1,600,000
77 to I-35 in McLennan Co.
2315           NY            Construction of a bicycle/       $1,840,000
pedestrian off 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        $4,000,000
West-Florida Turnpike to
CR 714 to 36th Street--
Cross S. Fork of St. Lucie
River--Indian Street to
U.S. 1 on east side.......
2317           WI            Recondition SH 16 from           $4,000,000
Columbus to SH 26 (Dodge
County, Wisconsin)........
2318           ............  ...........................              $0
2319           NY            Riverwalk in Irvington             $200,000
development...............
2320           OH            Road resurfacing and               $560,000
improvements in the
Village of Bentleyville,
OH........................
2321           PA            Improvements to Stella             $600,000
Street rail-highway
crossing in Wormleysburg,
PA........................
2322           CT            Construct Entrance Ramp at         $800,000
Route 8 Exit 11, Shelton,
CT........................
2323           AL            Pedestrian Improvements for        $160,000
Leeds, AL.................

[[Page 1347]]
119 STAT. 1347


2324           WA            Federal Way Triangle--           $1,600,000
Conduct final engineering
work for the
reconstruction of the I-5--
SR 18 interchange.........
2325           MI            Garden City, Reconstruct           $980,000
Maplewood between Inkster
and Merriman..............
2326           OR            Lake Road Reconstruction         $4,000,000
and Safety Improvements,
Milwaukie.................
2327           NY            Resurface Grade Crossing at        $200,000
Old State Road............
2328           MN            Construction of Cedar            $4,800,000
Avenue Busway, MN.........
2329           IL            Upgrade streets and              $3,920,000
implement traffic and
pedestrian safety
signalization
improvements, Oak Lawn....
2330           GA            Streetscape-Thomasville....        $240,000
2331           AZ            State Route 77/Project             $240,000
funds for the Ore Trail in
the Copper Corridor on SR
77........................
2332           PA            To enhance existing                $400,000
directional markers and
increase wayfinding
signage infrastructure in
Monroe County.............
2333           CA            Construct and repair lining      $2,400,000
in four tunnels on Kanan,
Kanan Dume, and Malibu
Canyon Roads between U.S.
1 and U.S. 101............
2334           GA            Sidewalk revitalization            $400,000
project in downtown
Eastman...................
2335           TX            Port of Corpus Christi Up          $400,000
River Road for upgrade of
roadway to and from docks
and IH 37.................
2336           GA            Construct U.S. 411              $16,000,000
Connector from U.S. 41 to
I-75, Bartow County,
Georgia...................
2337           NY            Construction of U.S. Route       $4,800,000
219 Expressway: Sections V
and VI....................
2338           PA            Engineering, design and          $1,600,000
construction of an
extension of Park Avenue
north to Lakemont Park in
Altoona...................
2339           MN            Reconstruct I-35E from I-94      $2,800,000
to Maryland Avenue in St.
Paul......................
2340           CA            Construct truck ramp             $2,400,000
linking Interstate 5 to
the National City Marine
Cargo Terminal, National
City......................
2341           GA            Reconstruct the interchange      $1,444,800
at Interstate 185 and
Victory Drive (SR 520),
Columbus, GA Victory Drive
(SR 520), Columbus, GA....
2342           OH            Streetscaping, bicycle           $2,800,000
trails, and related
improvements to the I-90--
SR 615 Interchange in
Mentor, OH................
2343           IN            Preliminary engineering,         $4,480,000
right-of-way, and
construction for Perimeter
Parkway-West Lafayette/
Purdue University, Indiana
2344           TN            Reconstruct Interchange 55         $800,000
at Mallory Avenue,
Memphis, Shelby County....
2345           CA            Upgrade first responders            $25,600
signal pre-emption
hardware, Culver City.....
2346           IN            Construction of Maplecrest       $8,800,000
Rd. Extension--Allen
County, Indiana...........
2347           MS            Upgrade roads in Arcola,         $1,400,000
Leland, Greenville, and
Hollandale (U.S. Highway
61 and 18), Washington
County....................
2348           MS            Canal Road Intermodal            $6,400,000
Connector, Gulfport.......
2349           NY            Long Pong Road: Larkins          $1,152,000
Creek to Lake Ontario
State Parkway, Town of
Greece....................

[[Page 1348]]
119 STAT. 1348


2350           NY            Construct the Auburn               $800,000
Connector Road Corridor,
Auburn, NY................
2351           MA            Engineering and                  $6,400,000
construction of Blackstone
Valley Visitors Center at
intersection of State
Route 146 and Millbury
Street, Worcester.........
2352           CA            Improve I-8 off ramp to the        $800,000
Desert Farming Institute,
Imperial County...........
2353           KS            Construct bike and                 $400,000
pedestrian path along K-10
between Douglas and
Johnson Counties..........
2354           HI            Construct Bike Lanes on            $240,000
Kalanianaole Highway,
vicinity of Makapuu to
Keolu Drive...............
2355           TX            Donna/Rio Bravo                  $1,600,000
International Bridge......
2356           IL            Improve Sheridan Road,           $1,600,000
Evanston..................
2357           MD            Intercounty Connector......      $3,200,000
2358           MI            Resurfacing of Ten Mile            $716,800
Road in St. Clair Shores..
2359           NY            Conduct studies to consider      $1,200,000
transportation planning
and community involvement
for infrastructure
projects that address
congestion relief in New
York City.................
2360           MO            Construct an extension of        $2,000,000
MO 740 from U.S. 63 to the
I-70 Lake of the Woods
Interchange...............
2361           LA            Construct improvements to        $3,200,000
Enterprise Blvd. in
Iberville Parish; and LA 1/
I-10 Connector Study; and
improvements to LA 10/
Zachary Taylor Parkway....
2362           NY            Monroe County ITS project..        $720,000
2363           MO            Roadway improvement on I-44        $800,000
in Phelps County, Missouri
2364           MA            Rt. 128/95 ramp Northbound       $1,400,000
to Kendrick Street,
Needham...................
2365           IN            Realign State Road 312,          $3,330,313
Hammond...................
2366           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $200,000
acquisition and
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            $6,400,000
Durelee Road to SR 92 at
Malone, including grade
separation, Douglas
County, Georgia...........
2368           IN            Construct I-69 Evansville       $11,200,000
to Indianapolis, Indiana..
2369           CA            Construct fourth bore of         $1,600,000
Caldecott Tunnel on SR 24,
California................
2370           TN            Construct interchange on I-        $800,000
40 in Wilson County.......
2371           IN            Construct service road           $3,200,000
parallel to I-69 in the
City of Anderson, Indiana.
2372           NY            Croton-on-Hudson, NY             $2,000,000
Restoration of Van
Cortlandt Manor entrance
road......................
2373           OH            Construction and repair of         $231,200
pedestrian walkways along
Lake Shore Blvd. in
Lakeline Village, OH......
2374           MD            Reconstruct MD 32 from MD        $3,040,000
108 to I-70 in Howard
County....................
2375           NY            Repair and Improve Streets       $1,400,000
in Astoria damaged by
water main breaks.........

[[Page 1349]]
119 STAT. 1349


2376           MI            Reconstruct two bridges            $570,000
over Black Creek Drain in
Sanilac County............
2377           FL            Construction of Little             $800,000
Venice Road, Marathon, FL.
2378           CA            Make traffic and safety            $400,000
improvements to Atlantic
Blvd. in Maywood..........
2379           MN            Stearns County Bridge No.          $320,000
73501 Improvements........
2380           LA            Construct LA 16 Interchange     $10,400,000
at I-12 and improvements,
and Cook Road improvements
2381           MO            Reconstruct Highway 60 and       $1,600,000
Highway 65 Interchange....
2382           CO            I-70, Havana, Yosemite           $1,200,000
Street Interchange
Reconstruction Project,
Denver....................
2383           CO            Reconstruct C 470-US 85          $3,200,000
Interchange...............
2384           VA            Reconstruction of the              $800,000
entranceway to Montpelier
on Orange County, Virginia
2385           TN            Construct and widen                $395,440
underpass at intersection
of Boydstation, Harvey,
and McFee Roads, Knox
County, TN................
2386           GA            Extend sidewalks, upgrade          $400,000
landscaping in downtown
Hawkinsville..............
2387           OH            Conduct Sarah St. along SR       $2,080,000
18 and 101 enhancement
project to calm traffic in
the City of Tiffin........
2388           LA            Improvements to Zachary          $1,600,000
Taylor Parkway............
2389           CA            Las Tunas Drive Pedestrian         $120,000
Enhancement, San Gabriel..
2390           OH            Reconstruction, widening,        $2,400,000
and bicycle improvements
to Pettibone Road in the
City of Solon, OH.........
2391           NH            Replacement of Ash Street        $1,520,000
and Pillsbury Road Bridge.
2392           PA            Swamp Road Corridor Safety       $2,400,000
and Roadway Improvements,
Bucks County..............
2393           FL            Construct St. Augustine to       $2,320,000
Palatka Rail Trail,
Florida...................
2394           IL            Construction of a traffic        $1,600,000
circle to reduce traffic
congestion, Museum Campus
Chicago...................
2395           AL            Pedestrian Improvements for        $533,334
Gardendale, AL............
2396           PA            Extension of Second Street         $880,000
from Race to the
intersection of Lehigh and
Poplar Street in the
Borough of Catasauqua.....
2397           NE            Cuming Street                    $3,600,000
Transportation Improvement
Project, Omaha, Nebraska..
2398           TN            Construct State Route 1          $9,200,000
(U.S. 70) to a four lane
divided highway on new
alignment from Centertown
to McMinnville in Warren
County....................
2399           CA            Improve access to I-80 at        $1,600,000
Eureka Road Interchange...
2400           LA            Expand existing South            $1,440,000
Central Planning and
Development Commission
Intelligent Transportation
System program in Houma-
Thibodaux area by
installing signals,
sensors and systems.......
2401           IL            Install traffic control            $192,000
devices on traffic signals
in Village of Oak Lawn....

[[Page 1350]]
119 STAT. 1350


2402           CA            Interstate 15, California        $1,600,000
Oaks Road Interchange
Project...................
2403           TX            Choate Road overpass to          $7,840,000
eliminate at-grade
intersection between
Choate Rd. and SH 146.....
2404           OH            Construction of I-75 Austin      $6,000,000
Road Interchange,
Montgomery County, Ohio...
2405           CA            Acquire lands for                  $400,000
mitigation adjacent to
U.S. 101 as part of
Southern Santa Clara
County Wildlife Corridor
Protection and Scenic
Enhancement Project.......
2406           TX            Construct U.S. Business 287      $6,400,000
through the Trinity Uptown
Project from 7th St. NE to
11th St. NE in Fort Worth.
2407           KS            Construct K-10 and Lone Elm      $4,000,000
Road interchange, Lenexa..
2408           OH            Construct connector road         $5,000,000
between SR 79 and
Thornwood Drive in Licking
County....................
2409           NH            Construct Pedestrian,              $640,000
Bicycle bridge in Keene...
2410           FL            Coral Way, SR 972 Highway        $1,200,000
Beautification, Phase One,
Miami, Florida............
2411           TN            Develop historic                   $108,000
preservation
transportation enhancement
project, Sumner Co. and
surrounding counties......
2412           NY            Develop terminal facilities      $4,400,000
for water taxi projects in
New York City.............
2413           WI            Expand U.S. 151 between          $1,600,000
Dickeyville and Belmont...
2414           NY            Improve bicycle and                $240,000
pedestrian safety, NY 25,
Jamesport.................
2415           PA            PA Route 183 widening and        $1,600,000
ramp enhancement, Bern
Township..................
2416           IN            Reconstruct Hoosier                $800,000
Heartland Highway, Wabash,
Huntington and Miami
County Indiana segments...
2417           GA            Replace sidewalks, upgrade         $400,000
lighting, and install
landscaping, Soperton.....
2418           LA            Lafayette, LA                    $8,800,000
Implementation of
Intelligent Transportation
System....................
2419           NY            Conduct improvements to I-       $2,000,000
87--Exit 18 Interchange...
2420           IL            To construct an extension        $1,600,000
of U.S. 51 from 9 miles
south of Moweaqua to 4.6
miles south of Moweaqua...
2421           IL            Upgrade roads, The Village         $800,000
of Hillside...............
2422           MS            Upgrade safety devices at           $40,000
Front Street rail
crossing, Ellisville......
2423           CO            U.S. 287--Ports-to-Plains        $6,133,333
Corridor in Colorado......
2424           AZ            Many Farms, Apache County--        $480,000
For the Construction of
N8086 and N8084 on the
Navajo Nation.............
2425           VA            Construct I-95 Interchange       $1,600,000
at Temple Ave, Colonial
Heights...................
2426           KS            Route designation,               $3,200,000
environmental clearance,
final design and right-of-
way acquisition for
Crawford County, KS
corridor of U.S. Highway
69........................
2427           CA            U.S. 395 Realignment and           $400,000
Widening Project..........
2428           IL            To connect about a 2-mile        $1,600,000
segment through
Collinsville at two or
three lanes...............

[[Page 1351]]
119 STAT. 1351


2429           IL            Construct Parking Facility         $192,000
and pedestrian walkways at
94th and S. Oak Park Ave,
Oak Lawn..................
2430           UT            I-15 Freeway                     $3,600,000
Reconstruction--Springvill
e 200 South Interchange...
2431           MA            Washington St. from High         $1,400,000
St. to Water St., Walpole.
2432           VA            White's Mill Trail and             $400,000
Renovation--Design and
construction of
recreational trail and
preservation of watermill
for use as visitors center
2433           CA            Implement San Francisco          $6,400,000
Street Improvements
Program...................
2434           MA            Design, engineering, and           $600,000
construction of Methuen
Rotary alternative at I-93
and Routes 110 and 113,
Methuen...................
2435           IL            Improve Mill Street, Rock          $400,000
Island....................
2436           PA            For the Nanticoke City           $5,600,000
Redevelopment 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            $4,000,000
Walton Boulevard Bridge in
Auburn Hills between
Opdyke and Squirrel Road..
2438           OR            Widen Delaura Beach Lane           $148,800
and add a bike lane both
directions, Warrenton.....
2439           MA            Design and construct the 3-        $560,000
mile long Grand Trunk
Trail bikeway from
Sturbridge to Southbridge.
2440           TN            Develop trails, bike paths         $200,000
and recreational
facilities on the Crest of
Black Mountain, Cumberland
County for Cumberland
Trail State Park..........
2441           NY            Study and Improve Traffic        $2,000,000
Flow Improvement at
Atlantic Yard Arena
Development...............
2442           MD            Upgrade and widen MD 237        $12,000,000
from Pegg Road to MD 235..
2443           PA            Main Street improvements           $640,000
from Broad Street to
Richardson Avenue and Main
Street to Madison Avenue,
Borough of Lansdale.......
2444           CA            Widen Highway 101 in Marin      $12,000,000
and Sonoma Counties from
Hwy 37 in Novato to Old
Redwood Highway in
Petaluma..................
2445           NY            Road and pedestrian safety       $1,500,000
improvements Main Street,
Village of Patchogue......
2446           UT            Widen Highway 92 from Lehi       $2,500,000
to Highland...............
2447           AZ            Widen I-10 to 3 lanes in         $1,360,000
each direction north of
Tucson from Marana
Interchange to Cortato
Interchange...............
2448           CA            Widen I-238 between I-580          $800,000
and I-880 in Alameda
County....................
2449           VA            Widen I-66 westbound inside      $5,600,000
the Capital Beltway from
the Rosslyn Tunnel to the
Dulles Connector Road.....
2450           NC            Construction of I-74             $4,000,000
between I-40 and U.S. 220,
High Point, North Carolina
2451           MD            Widen I-695, Baltimore           $3,440,000
Beltway, Southwest........

[[Page 1352]]
119 STAT. 1352


2452           GA            Replace sidewalks, upgrade         $400,000
lighting in downtown
Vidalia...................
2453           MN            Construct bicycle and              $700,000
pedestrian trails in
Cuyuna Recreation Area....
2454           HI            Construct Kapaa Bypass.....      $2,400,000
2455           FL            Temple Terrace Highway           $1,600,000
Modification..............
2456           TN            Widen Interstate 240 from          $800,000
Poplar Avenue (SR 57) to
near Walnut Grove Road (SR
23) East of Memphis,
Shelby County.............
2457           IL            For the Village of                  $86,400
Woodridge to resurface
Internationale Parkway....
2458           OR            I-5 Trade Corridor,              $4,220,000
Portland, Oregon to
Vancouver, Washington
segment...................
2459           GA            Streetscape, Pedestrian          $4,000,000
Improvements in City
Center, City of Clarkston.
2460           KY            Widen KY 1991 from               $1,000,000
Maysville Road to Midland
Trail Industrial Park,
Montgomery County.........
2461           NC            Construct new Route from         $3,200,000
Beach Drive (SR 1104) to
NC 211 in Brunswick County
2462           NJ            International Trade and          $1,200,000
Logistics Center Roadway
Improvements at Exit 12 of
the New Jersey Turnpike,
Carteret..................
2463           IL            Interstate 41 and Route 176        $600,000
Interchange replacement...
2464           MA            Northern Avenue Bridge           $2,400,000
rehabilitation, Boston....
2465           AK            Planning, design, and          $151,000,000
construction of Knik Arm
Bridge....................
2466           IN            North Calumet Avenue               $960,000
Improvements, Valparaiso..
2467           OR            I-205/Highway 213                  $800,000
interchange improvements..
2468           TN            Improving Vehicle                   $45,600
Efficiencies at highway At-
Grade Railroad Crossing in
Loudon, TN................
2469           AZ            Design, right-of-way             $3,200,000
acquisition, and
construction I-10
Collector Distributor
Roadway from 40th Street
to Baseline Maricopa
County, Arizona...........
2470           LA            Improvements to LA 42 in         $8,000,000
Ascension Parish; and LA
73 improvements in
Ascension Parish..........
2471           MN            Construct Paul Bunyan trail        $775,000
from Mississippi River
Bridge Trail to Crow Wing
State Park................
2472           MN            Construct Mesabi Trail from      $2,700,000
Grand Rapids to City of
Ely.......................
2473           GA            Install sidewalks on               $300,000
Highway 23 from Dykes
Street to Sarah Street,
Cochran...................
2474           AK            Kodiak, AK Construction of       $7,500,000
AMHW ferry terminal and
approach..................
2475           OK            Reconstruction of SH 66            $800,000
from Craig and Rogers
Counties to SH 66 and U.S.
60 intersection...........
2476           CA            Enhance pedestrian               $1,600,000
environment and increase
safety along Olympic Blvd.
between Vermont and
Western Avenues, Los
Angeles...................
2477           NY            Enhancement of the Michigan      $1,600,000
Avenue Corridor, Buffalo..
2478           NJ            Kapkowski Road Area              $4,560,000
Improvements in Elizabeth.

[[Page 1353]]
119 STAT. 1353


2479           CA            Construct landscape medians        $800,000
along Skyline Drive from
Sears Avenue to 58th
Street, San Diego.........
2480           NY            Jamaica Air Train Station        $4,000,000
Area Infrastructure
Improvements..............
2481           MO            Construct Highway 465 to         $4,800,000
Highway 376 south from Hwy
76 to Hwy 376.............
2482           WA            New Country Road on Whidbey        $960,000
Island....................
2483           NM            Chaco Wash Bridge and Road       $1,600,000
Improvements on Navajo
Route 46..................
2484           CA            Reconstruct Interstate 880-      $1,400,000
Route 92 interchange in
Hayward...................
2485           MA            Relocate Rt. 79 in Fall          $1,800,000
River to create 4-lane
urban boulevard with
landscaped median and
developable waterfront....
2486           IL            Road extension for Highway         $534,400
22 in Macon County, IL....
2487           NY            Portageville Bridge--            $1,464,000
Purchase existing bridge
to convert to pedestrian
bridge....................
2488           PA            Rt. 422 complete                 $2,400,000
preliminary engineering
and four lane expansion
from Ebensburg to
Kittanning................
2489           CA            Upgrade essential road           $1,600,000
arterials, connectors,
bridges and other road
infrastructure
improvements in the Town
of Desert Hot Springs, CA.
2490           KY            Construct the Heartland            $960,000
Parkway in Adair County...
2491           NV            Horse-US-95 Interchange          $4,800,000
Project...................
2492           CT            Make Improvements to               $200,000
Plainfield Moosup Pond
Road......................
2493           FL            Construction design ROW          $8,000,000
U.S. 27 from SR 540 to SR
544 and from I-4 to U.S.
192 in Polk County, FL....
2494           IA            Construction of approaches       $1,280,000
and viaduct on Edgewood
Rd. SW over the UP
Railroad, Prairie Creek,
and the CRANDIC railroad..
2495           NJ            Construct Hackensack River       $1,600,000
Walkway in Bergen County..
2496           TX            Hwy 80/123 Overpass at Hwy         $240,000
181 in Karnes County......
2497           NM            Improvements to U.S.             $1,600,000
Highway 87 from Clayton,
NM to Raton, NM...........
2498           VA            Route 11 Interchange               $800,000
improvements in Lexington,
Virginia..................
2499           CA            Improvements to Ben Maddox       $1,600,000
Way Bridge................
2500           WA            SR 18 Widening, Maple            $6,000,000
Valley to I-90............
2501           NY            City of Beacon construction        $252,000
of pedestrian and Bicycle
trail.....................
2502           TX            FM 544, widen 2-lane             $1,600,000
roadway to 6-lane roadway
from SH 121 to Dozier-
Parker Road...............
2503           TX            Construct an alternate             $500,000
truck route to Interstate
35 in Buda................
2504           NY            Improvements on the Cross        $3,376,000
Island Bridge Overpass/
212th Street and vicinity,
Queens....................
2505           MI            Novi, Reconstruct Grand            $800,000
River between Novi and
Haggerty..................

[[Page 1354]]
119 STAT. 1354


2506           SD            Resurface U.S. Highway 18          $960,000
from Lake Andes to U.S.
Highway 50 on Yankton
Sioux Reservation.........
2507           TX            Lajitas Relief Route.......      $1,200,000
2508           WY            U.S. 85 Passing Lanes......      $1,600,000
2509           MA            Design and Construct             $2,000,000
Blackstone River Bikeway
and Worcester Bikeway
Pavilion between
Providence, RI and
Worcester.................
2510           NY            Little Falls Access: Repair        $192,000
and reconstruct High
School and Lower School
Road......................
2511           FL            Replace Columbus Drive           $3,200,000
Bridge....................
2512           ............  ...........................              $0
2513           MI            Construction of two              $1,840,000
railroad-highway grade
separations on Farm Lane
north of Mount Hope Road..
2514           CA            Widen Atlantic Bl bridge           $800,000
over the Los Angeles River
in Vernon.................
2515           CA            Widen Bundy Drive between        $3,400,000
Wilshire and Santa Monica
Boulevards in the City of
Los Angeles...............
2516           AL            To provide four lanes on        $11,200,000
U.S. 80, Perry County,
Marengo County, and Sumter
County....................
2517           CA            Widen Maine Avenue in              $300,000
Baldwin Park..............
2518           NM            Ease traffic congestion and      $1,600,000
improve intersection
safety by identifying
alternative alignment to
U.S. 84/285 and NM 68
through Espanola..........
2519           MS            Widen MS Hwy 19 between         $10,000,000
Philadelphia and
Collinsville, MS..........
2520           NY            Construct the Fire Island        $1,600,000
ferry terminal facility,
Patchogue.................
2521           IL            IL 8 from East Peoria to           $762,056
Washington, IL............
2522           NJ            Preliminary engineering for      $1,200,000
missing connections of NJ
23 and I-80...............
2523           ME            Penobscot Riverfront             $2,800,000
Development for bicycle
trails, amenities, and
traffic circulation
improvements, Bangor and
Brewer....................
2524           IL            Restoration and                    $960,000
reconstruction of the
central business district
street. Cambridge, IL.....
2525           NC            Widen NC 150 from                  $800,000
Cherryville to Lincolnton.
2526           NY            Second phase of the Grand        $8,000,000
Concourse improvements
from East 166th St. to
East 171st St.............
2527           VT            U.S. Route 7 and U.S. Route      $2,848,000
4 road improvements for
the City of Rutland.......
2528           IL            Improve 63rd Street,             $1,600,000
Chicago...................
2529           MI            Alcona County,                     $650,400
Reconstruction of Ritchie
Road from Village of
Lincoln to Hubbard Lake
road......................
2530           SC            Construct roadway btwn I-26      $1,600,000
and U/S/ 1 in Lexington
County. Intermodal
connector from U.S. 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           $260,000
Drive in the Town of
Poughkeepsie..............

[[Page 1355]]
119 STAT. 1355


2533           TX            Conduct study of I-10 and          $160,000
U.S. 190 with a focus on
congestion relief and the
need for a military and
emergency relief
transportation corridor...
2534           MD            MD 85 at I270..............      $4,000,000
2535           GA            SR 36 passing lanes north        $2,440,000
of Jackson to Newton
County line, Butts County,
Georgia...................
2536           VA            I-66 and Route 29                $8,000,000
Gainesville Interchange
Project...................
2537           NY            Construct and extend               $800,000
existing pedestrian
streetscape areas in
Lynbrook..................
2538           CA            Construct traffic                  $200,000
intersection island
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         $1,200,000
corridor in Snohomish
County....................
2540           PA            Replace a highway                $1,720,000
railcrossing in Osborne
Borough, PA...............
2541           AL            Pedestrian Improvements for        $533,334
Centerpoint, AL...........
2542           CA            Replace twin 2 lane bridge         $400,000
with single 4 lane bridge
on SR 138 over Big Rock
Wash......................
2543           CA            State Route 86S and Ave. 50        $800,000
highway safety grade
separation................
2544           TX            Construct Fredericksburg         $3,040,000
Road-Medical Drive grade
separation in San Antonio.
2545           PA            For design, engineering,           $400,000
ROW acquisition, and
construction of a
connector road between the
Valmont Industrial Park
and Pennsylvania Rt. 924
at Cranberry Creek........
2546           AR            Interstates 30/440/530           $1,200,000
Interchanges/For
interchange improvements,
Little Rock...............
2547           NJ            Rehabilitation of Benigno          $320,000
Boulevard from I295 to
Route 168 in Bellmawr.....
2548           PA            Preconstruction studies for        $800,000
improvement to U.S. 22
from Irving Street to
Mickley Road..............
2549           IL            Establish transportation           $432,000
museum on Navy Pier,
Chicago...................
2550           WA            Continuing construction of       $2,640,000
I-90, Spokane to Idaho
State Line................
2551           VA            Improve transportation             $425,520
infrastructure for
visitors to Jamestown 2007
2552           AR            Highway 67: Kiehl Avenue--       $2,960,000
Vandenberg Boulevard:
rehabilitating and
widening Highway 67 from
four to six lanes from
Kiehl Ave. to Vandenberg
Blvd......................
2553           NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety
including in the vicinity
of PS X81.................
2554           GA            Memorial Drive Corridor....      $1,600,000
2555           VA            Route 11 improvements in           $800,000
Maurertown, Virginia......
2556           PA            Street improvements,             $1,200,000
Whitemarsh Township.......
2557           VT            Construction of the              $5,814,789
Lamoille Valley Rail Trail
for the Vermont
Association of Snow
Travelers.................
2558           CO            I-76: Colorados Northeast        $6,133,334
Gateway...................
2559           VA            Construct Maersk Terminal        $1,600,000
interchange in Portsmouth.
2560           GA            I-75 Welcom Project........        $200,000

[[Page 1356]]
119 STAT. 1356


2561           PA            Improve handicapped              $2,400,000
accessibility and provide
pedestrian overpass in
Villanova.................
2562           NY            Install Two Permanent              $500,000
Variable Message Signs
(VMS) on Belt Parkway.....
2563           MI            Re-surfacing Sebewaing Road        $332,800
in Huron County...........
2564           IN            Complete construction of           $300,000
paths at Hamilton County
Riverwalk, Noblesville,
Indiana...................
2565           NY            Study and Implement Traffic        $250,000
and Pedestrian Safety
Enhancements to Gerritsen
Beach, Brooklyn...........
2566           PA            Upgrade circuit for gates          $220,000
and lights at Sixth Street
in Emmaus, PA USDOT
crossing number 592402P to
constant warning time
devices...................
2567           TN            Plan and construct a               $160,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, Eagleville.........
2568           NY            Improvements for pedestrian        $600,000
and vehicular access to
Baychester Avenue and
Bartow Avenue.............
2569           GA            SR 400 reconstruction from         $800,000
I-285 to McFarland Road,
Fulton and Forsyth
Counties..................
2570           MI            Construct pedestrian and            $64,000
bicycle pathway at
Chippewa Landing River
Park in the Village of
Caro......................
2571           GA            Upgrade sidewalks, replace         $400,000
street lights, and
landscaping, Metter.......
2572           AR            Highway 412: Baxter Co. to       $1,600,000
Ash Flat..................
2573           NY            Town of North Salem                $160,000
improvements and repaving
to Hawley Road............
2574           IA            U.S. 20 Mississippi River       $20,000,000
Bridge and approaches,
Dubuque Co, IA............
2575           NY            Construct access road and        $2,000,000
exit lanes for Center for
Advanced Medicine: North
Shore LIJ Health System...
2576           NY            Improve key intersections          $600,000
and highway 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        $4,160,000
Improve Corridor
Arterials, SR 91 to I-710.
2578           IL            For the construction of the        $928,000
Grand Avenue Underpass,
Village of Franklin Park..
2579           NY            Rehabilitation of North and      $1,728,000
South Ridge Street and
Wappanocca Avenue in the
Village of Rye Brook and
City of Rye...............
2580           NY            NYSDOT Route 55                  $1,200,000
construction over Fishkill
Creek and left turn lane
construction..............
2581           AL            Alabama Hwy 36 Extension           $800,000
and Widening-Phase II.....
2582           OH            Construct Eagle Avenue             $400,000
Viaduct-Demolition bridge,
realignment of roadway to
replace bridge and
reconstruction of two
other bridges, Cleveland..
2583           NV            Construct U.S. 93 Corridor--     $8,000,000
Boulder City..............
2584           NY            Reconstruction of NYS 5, 8,        $800,000
12. Viaduct and Rt. 5A and
5S: City of Utica.........
2585           CT            Street and streetscape           $1,200,000
improvements along
Campbell Ave., West Haven.

[[Page 1357]]
119 STAT. 1357


2586           MA            Reconstruct North                $4,000,000
Washington Street Bridge
to connect Boston and
Charlestown...............
2587           MS            Upgrade roads in Fayette           $320,000
(U.S. Highway 61 and 33),
Jefferson County..........
2588           MN            Heritage Center at the           $1,400,000
Grand Portage National
Monument..................
2589           NY            Redesign and reconstruction        $500,000
of the Putnam Rail-Trail,
Bronx.....................
2590           OR            Highway 34/Corvallis Bypass      $2,100,000
Intersection..............
2591           CA            Install traffic signal on           $96,000
Balboa Blvd. at Knollwood
Shopping Center...........
2592           MA            Chelsea Street Bridge            $9,000,000
Reconstruction............
2593           AL            Pedestrian Improvements for        $213,334
Northport, AL.............
2594           NV            Construct widening of U.S.       $4,000,000
50A from Fernley to
Leeteville Junction.......
2595           WA            Rebuild and widen Cemetery         $160,000
Road bridge over U.S.
Bureau of Reclamation
canal near Othello, WA....
2596           FL            Roadway construction of SW       $1,600,000
62--SW 24 Avenue in
Gainesville...............
2597           WA            SR 2/Kelsey Street                 $832,000
Intersection Improvements
in Monroe.................
2598           NY            Town of Southeast                  $240,000
construction and repaving
of town roads.............
2599           MI            Reconstruct Third Ave. from      $2,400,000
Saginaw St. to Flint
River, City of Flint......
2600           PA            Upgrade circuit for gates          $220,000
and lights at 31st Street
in Allentown, PA USDOT
crossing number 592410G to
constant warning time
devices...................
2601           NV            Construct U.S. 95 Widening       $6,400,000
from Rainbow Blvd. to Kyle
Canyon....................
2602           IN            Improve campus streets to        $1,600,000
increase pedestrian safety
and ease vehicular
congestion in the City of
Anderson, Indiana.........
2603           PA            Schaefferstown Bypass, PA        $1,600,000
Route 501, Lebanon........
2604           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in Dupont
Borough, Luzerne County...
2605           GA            Intersection improvement at        $480,000
Lake Dow Road and SR 81
Harris Drive at SR 42.....
2606           CA            Replace South Access to the      $8,000,000
Golden Gate Bridge--Doyle
Drive.....................
2607           IL            Resurface Yellow Banks             $320,000
Road, Franklin County.....
2608           AL            CR 52 from U.S. 31 (Pelham)      $8,000,000
and continuation 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        $720,000
at U.S. 12-IL 31 Tryon
Grove Road................
2610           NY            Streetscape of Herald and          $400,000
Greeley Squares in New
York City.................

[[Page 1358]]
119 STAT. 1358


2611           NJ            Construct Cape May and             $600,000
Supawna Meadows National
Wildlife Refuges Roadway
and Parking Improvements..
2612           TX            Del Rio-Laughlin Air Force      $11,600,000
Base Relief Route.........
2613           NC            Study feasibility of             $2,800,000
widening U.S. 221/NC 226
from Woodlawn to Spruce
Pine, start planning and
design, and make upgrades
to improve safety.........
2614           NY            Transportation improvements      $1,920,000
to the Far Rock-away
Business District, Queens,
New York..................
2615           AL            Construction of Patton           $4,000,000
Island Bridge Corridor....
2616           NH            Hampton Bridge                   $1,200,000
Rehabilitation--Hampton,
NH........................
2617           CA            Gale Avenue widening                $80,000
between Fullerton Road and
Nogales Street, and
Nogales Street widening at
Gale Avenue...............
2618           CA            Grade Separation at Cesar          $400,000
Chavez Parkway and Harbor
Drive, San Diego..........
2619           MO            Improve access to I-55 at        $8,000,000
River Des Peres...........
2620           PA            PA Route 61 enhancements,        $8,000,000
Schuylkill Haven..........
2621           MO            Kansas City SmartPort ITS        $4,000,000
for highways..............
2622           PA            City of Philadelphia in          $3,200,000
conjunction with American
Cities Foundation for
neighborhood
transportation enhancement
and pedestrian safety
projects..................
2623           DE            Reconstructing I-95/SR 1         $4,400,000
interchange, adding a
fifth lane, and replacing
toll plaza on Delaware's
portion of I-95 corridor..
2624           OH            Study possible road                $100,000
upgrades in Tuscarawas
County due to flood issues
based on dams in Muskingum
Watershed District........
2625           OR            Sunrise Corridor, Clackamas      $3,000,000
County....................
2626           CA            Construct Cabot-Camino             $670,952
Capistrano Bridge Project
and related roadway
improvements in Cities of
Mission Viejo and Laguna
Niguel, California........
2627           TX            Construction of mainlanes       $12,800,000
and interchanges on SH 121
from Hillcrest to U.S. 75.
2628           WA            Enumclaw, WA Welcome Center      $1,200,000
2629           PA            Upgrade narrow existing            $800,000
roads, Plank, Otts,
Meyers, Seitz Roads, along
1 mile corridor to 2 lane
road with shoulders,
improve intersections.....
2630           GA            Widen Old Petersburg Road-       $3,200,000
Old Evans Road from Baston
Road to Washington Road,
Columbia County, Georgia..
2631           CA            Widen Peyton Drive from          $5,628,888
Grand Ave. to Chino Hills
Pky., construct Eucalyptus
Ave. from Peyton Drive to
Galloping Hills, improve
English Channel...........
2632           TX            New construction for the SH      $2,000,000
349 Reliever Route
beginning at the SH 191
intersection in Midland...
2633           PA            Widen Route 22 between           $1,160,000
Export and Delmont........
2634           CA            Construction of a traffic          $100,000
signal at the intersection
of Hamlin St. and Corbin
Ave.......................
2635           NY            Design/Environmental work        $1,920,000
on the Inner Loop from
Clinton Avenue to East
Main Street, Rochester....

[[Page 1359]]
119 STAT. 1359


2636           MO            I-35 access modification         $1,200,000
planning, City of Kearney.
2637           OH            Construction and road              $400,000
improvements to Hubbard
Road in Burton Township,
OH........................
2638           MN            North-South Corridor with        $1,200,000
Railroad Overpass, City of
Staples...................
2639           CA            Port of Hueneme Intermodal       $3,760,000
Access Improvement
Project, including grade
separation at Rice Avenue
and State Route 34; widen
Hueneme Road..............
2640           CA            Reconstruct and deep-lift        $4,800,000
asphalt on various roads
throughout the district in
Ventura County............
2641           GA            Upgrade sidewalks, parking,        $400,000
street lighting, and
landscaping, Claxton......
2642           MS            Upgrade roads in Itta Bena       $1,200,000
(U.S. Highway 82 and 7)
and in vicinity of Viking
Range Corp. (U.S. Highway
7 and 49), Leflore County.
2643           VA            Widen Route 262 in Augusta         $800,000
County....................
2644           CA            Forest Highway 171 Upper         $5,800,000
Skyway Improvement........
2645           NV            Construct overpass and exit      $2,400,000
lane improvements on Lake
Mead Parkway to Lake Las
Vegas entrance............
2646           IL            Construct Bridge Overpass,         $800,000
DuSable Museum-Chicago....
2647           WA            Expand size and improve            $146,000
safety Lewis and Clark
Discovery Trailhead and
Scenic Overlook...........
2648           PA            Construction of access             $520,000
improvement at the I-79 SR
228 interchange in
vicinity of Cranberry Town
Center....................
2649           PA            Development of bicycle and       $8,000,000
pedestrian trails and
access links along North
Delaware Riverfront.......
2650           OH            Highway--RR grade                  $240,000
separation over the
Norfolk Southern Rail Line
for the Hines Hill Road--
Milford Connector project
in Hudson, Ohio...........
2651           CA            Construct crosswalk bump-          $400,000
outs and related
streetscape improvements
on Temple St. between
Hoover St. and Glendale
Blvd., Los Angeles........
2652           NC            Improve SR 1923 from U.S.        $4,000,000
70 Business to U.S. 301
Smithfield................
2653           MA            Improvements to Mass. Ave,         $800,000
Andover Street, Osgood
Street, Salem Street, and
Johnson Street in the Old
Town Center of North
Andover...................
2654           KY            Reconstruct U.S. 127 at            $480,000
U.S. 127 South, Mercer
County....................
2655           CA            Construct truck lane from        $1,200,000
Britannia Blvd. to the
Otay Mesa Port of Entry,
San Diego County..........
2656           PA            Beford, PA Relocation of        $12,228,000
Old Route 220 and Sweet
Road. Complete preliminary
engineering, purchase
right-of-way, construction

[[Page 1360]]
119 STAT. 1360


2657           GA            Design and construction of         $160,000
2.2 miles of multiuse
trail in the City of
Douglas, Georgia..........
2658           IL            Entry Road to Southern           $1,000,000
Illinois University
Research Park, Carbondale.
2659           NY            Kingston, Construct              $1,040,000
pedestrian waterfront
walkway...................
2660           MN            Reconstruction of Airport        $1,700,000
Road from TH 53 to CR 296,
Cirrus Drive from Airport
Road to TH 53 and TH 53
from Airport Road to
Stebner Road..............
2661           KS            Replacement of U.S. 169          $6,800,000
bridge in Kansas City.....
2662           PA            Route 313 Turning Lanes and      $1,600,000
Truck Climbing Lanes,
Bucks County..............
2663           CA            Purchase of Rosemead Blvd.         $800,000
ROW, Temple City..........
2664           NJ            Reconfiguration of Bay           $6,400,000
Avenue and Polaris Street
in Newark, NJ.............
2665           MI            Reconstruct highway under a        $800,000
railroad bridge, Wyoming
Ave. from Eagle Pass to
Michigan Avenue, Wayne
County....................
2666           OK            Construct vehicular bridge         $800,000
over the Burlington
Northern RR at War Bonnet
Crossing, Mannford, OK....
2667           UT            Construction and                 $7,000,000
Rehabilitation of 13th
East in Sandy City........
2668           VA            Construct 3.6 miles of             $615,680
Interstate 73 near
Martinsville..............
2669           WA            Maple Valley SR 169 and SR         $800,000
516 improvements..........
2670           FL            Construct access road to         $1,600,000
entrances to Opa-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          $4,000,000
from 2 to 5 lanes and
improve alignment within
rights-of-way in St.
George....................
2672           OH            Bethlehem Township, Ohio.        $1,040,000
Riverland Avenue Bridge
Replacement...............
2673           MD            MD 295, BWI Access               $3,792,000
Improvements..............
2674           OR            Connect Boeckman Road to           $800,000
Tooze Road, Wilsonville...
2675           LA            Lincoln Parish, LA/I-20          $4,000,000
Transportation Corridor
Program...................
2676           TX            FM 937 from SH 164 to FM         $1,600,000
3371, Limestone Co........
2677           MO            Construct additional exit        $3,856,000
ramp access lane from I-44
to Kings highway and
enhance Shaw Ave. corridor
2678           IN            Construction of I-64             $4,248,000
Interchange, Harrison
County, Indiana...........
2679           OH            Bridge Replacement at SR 84        $400,000
and I-90 on Bishop Road in
Willougby Hills, OH.......
2680           TN            Continue Shelby Avenue--         $5,200,000
Demonbreun Street project
in Nashville..............
2681           WI            Construct a bicycle/             $1,600,000
pedestrian path from
Waunakee to Westport......

[[Page 1361]]
119 STAT. 1361


2682           CT            Construct bike and                  $80,000
pedestrian paths along
Salem Greenway-Salem, CT..
2683           TX            Construct I-635/35E              $3,600,000
Interchange in Dallas, TX.
2684           CA            Hwy 199 Narrow Enhancement       $1,800,000
to reduce active slides
that cause significant
road closures on primary
connecting route from U.S.
101 to I-5................
2685           MD            Construction of New             $12,000,000
Interchange at MD5, MD373,
and Brandywine Road.......
2686           GA            I-20 West from SR 5 Bill         $5,800,000
Arp to SR 6--HOV Lanes....
2687           PA            Install and construct              $360,000
signals, calming devices
and signs in Mechanicsburg
and surrounding
municipalities............
2688           FL            44th St. Extension to            $1,200,000
Golfair Blvd.,
Jacksonville..............
2689           NJ            Passaic River-Newark Bay           $800,000
Restoration and Pollution
Abatement Project, Route
21, River Road, CR 510....
2690           CA            San Gabriel Blvd. and              $160,000
Mission Road Intersection
Improvements, San Gabriel.
2691           NY            Rehabilitate 125th Street        $2,000,000
Corridor from Old Broadway
to Marginal Street/
Waterfront................
2692           MI            Repair M-10 corridor from I-       $800,000
696 to downtown Detroit...
2693           FL            Capital Circle Northwest,        $8,000,000
Tallahassee...............
2694           TN            Installation of Intelligent      $1,600,000
Transportation System on
various major routes in
Memphis...................
2695           MI            Planning and Engineering         $1,200,000
for The American Road, The
Henry Ford Museum,
Dearborn..................
2696           TX            Reconstruct Ella/Wheatley        $1,000,000
from Little York to West
Gulf Bank.................
2697           NY            Implement Improvements for         $600,000
Pedestrian Safety in
Richmond County...........
2698           FL            Palm Bay Parkway from              $800,000
Emerson Drive to U.S. 192,
Palm Bay, FL..............
2699           CA            Construct the Los Angeles          $460,000
River bicycle and
pedestrian path in the San
Fernando Valley...........
2700           TX            Construct Santa Fe Trail           $800,000
DART LR overpass from Hill
St. to Commerce St. along
abandoned Santa Fe Rail
right-of-way in Dallas....
2701           CA            Construct Route 101 bicycle/     $1,000,000
pedestrian overpass at
Millbrae Ave. for the San
Francisco Bay Trail.......
2702           ............  ...........................              $0
2703           LA            New Iberia Rail Grade            $1,600,000
Separation................
2704           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in Ashley
Borough, Luzerne County...
2705           MN            Reconstruct Grand Avenue           $600,000
(from Central Ave. 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                $80,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, Cannon County......

[[Page 1362]]
119 STAT. 1362


2707           TX            Develop, deploy and              $2,560,000
integrate municipal ITS in
San Antonio...............
2708           TN            Jefferson, Hamblen               $1,600,000
Counties, Tennessee SR 66
relocation................
2709           MD            Rehabilitate Pennington          $1,200,000
Avenue Drawbridge in
Baltimore.................
2710           PA            Construction of I-79 to Mon-     $1,200,000
Fayette Section of
Southern Beltway,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania..
2711           FL            Springfield Rd.                  $1,200,000
Improvements, Jacksonville
2712           LA            Elimination of highway-rail        $800,000
grade crossings along
Louisiana and Delta
railroad..................
2713           CA            Conduct necessary planning       $1,120,000
and engineering and
implement comprehensive
Corridor Management Plan
for Arroyo Seco Historic
Parkway, Los Angeles......
2714           FL            Plant City Traffic               $2,400,000
Management System.........
2715           GA            SR 347 widen-new                 $8,000,000
construction from I-985 to
SR 211, Hall County,
Georgia...................
2716           WA            SR 28 and SR 285 Sellar          $4,000,000
Bridge Improvements: ramp
and roadway network
improvements at the west
end and a new lane on the
Sellar Bridge.............
2717           NY            Stabilize Poughkeepsie             $874,000
Railroad Bridge and
construct a pedestrian
walkway linking the two
sides of the Hudson River,
Poughkeepsie..............
2718           WA            International Mobility and       $1,040,000
Trade Corridor Project for
Whatcom County............
2719           CA            State Route 76 Road              $4,000,000
Widening, Melrose Drive to
Interstate 15.............
2720           NJ            Streetscape Improvements to        $400,000
Clements Bridge Road from
Newton Avenue to New
Jersey Turnpike,
Barrington................
2721           FL            Construct Eastern Connector        $800,000
from SR 417 to I-95,
Volusia and Seminole
Counties Florida..........
2722           GA            Construction of the                $160,000
McIntosh Path on SR 99,
7.15 miles between Darien,
Georgia and the Sapelo
Island Visitor Center.....
2723           AL            Construction of Sulphur          $4,000,000
Springs Road Bypass in
City of Hoover, Alabama...
2724           AZ            Pliocene Cliffs                    $800,000
reconstruction between
Wikieup and the Santa
Maria River...............
2725           MN            Construct roadway                  $851,200
improvements to CSAH 76,
Little Falls..............
2726           IN            Study alternatives along 2         $120,000
miles of railroad to
eliminate in-town highway-
rail crossings to improve
safety and reduce
congestion in Delaware
County....................
2727           NV            Design and construct               $800,000
separation of rail-highway
crossings in downtown Reno
2728           NJ            Maple Shade Township               $800,000
Streetscape Improvements
of Mill Road, Rudderow
Ave., North and South
Coles Ave. and Schoolhouse
Lane......................
2729           WA            Conduct study for I-5 and          $300,000
SR 503 interchange........
2730           WA            Implement Red Mountain Area      $2,800,000
Vision transportation
plan, includes Webber
Canyon Road realignment at
existing I-82 Kiona-Benton
interchange and new Red
Mountain I-82 interchange
at SR 224.................

[[Page 1363]]
119 STAT. 1363


2731           TX            Downtown Streetscape               $512,000
Improvements in Beaumont,
Texas.....................
2732           NY            Improve Traffic Flow on            $500,000
Lefferts Boulevard by
Rehabilitating Facilities
Surrounding LIRR/Kew
Gardens Eastbound Station.
2733           FL            Construct reliever road to         $800,000
SR A-1-A in the City of
Deerfield Beach beginning
at A-1-A/ Hillsboro Blvd.
and ending at A-1-A/NE 2nd
Street....................
2734           ............  ...........................              $0
2735           CA            SR 52 East Improvements          $6,000,000
(San Diego)...............
2736           OR            Study to evaluate                  $248,000
alternatives in support of
an eventual Astoria
bypass, Astoria...........
2737           GA            Commission a study and              $80,000
report regarding the
construction and
designation of a new
Interstate linking
Savannah, Augusta, and
Knoxville.................
2738           VT            Construction of the St.            $960,000
Albans, Vermont intermodal
connector roadway with I-
89 for the City of St.
Albans....................
2739           OR            I-5/Highway 214 interchange        $800,000
improvements, Woodburn....
2740           OR            Construction of                    $793,600
transportation facilities
at the Tualatin River
Wildlife Refuge...........
2741           WY            I-80 Rock Springs Marginal.      $1,520,000
2742           ............  ...........................              $0
2743           IL            Improve safety of a                 $70,400
horizontal curve on
Clarksville St. .25 mile
north of 275th Road in
Grandview Township, Edgar
County, Illinois..........
2744           UT            Provo Reservoir Canal            $6,750,000
Trail, Utah...............
2745           MO            South County Riverfront          $3,200,000
Access and Trails Project,
Lemay.....................
2746           AK            Road improvements in the         $5,000,000
City of Fairbanks.........
2747           MD            Construct Ferry Terminal,          $800,000
Somerset County, Maryland.
2748           MS            Plan and Construct two           $2,400,000
lanes to SR 6 from SR 342
to Alabama State line.....
2749           CA            Construct bypass along Hwy       $5,600,000
101 around Willits, CA to
reduce congestion, improve
air quality and enhance
economic lifeline of No.
Coast.....................
2750           CA            Engineering support to I-5         $120,000
Joint Powers Authority to
widen I-5 freeway and
improve corridor arterials
from I-710 to Orange
County line...............
2751           LA            Kerner Ferry Bridge,             $1,680,000
Jefferson Parish Bayou
Barataria.................
2752           WA            Renton, WA SR 167 HOV,             $800,000
Strander Boulevard
Connection................
2753           NJ            Sussex County, NJ, Vernon        $2,800,000
Township, Mountain Creek
Rt. 94 Traffic Calming,
Ped. Safety and Traffic
Congestion, Circulation
Improvement...............
2754           PA            Linglestown Square, roadway      $2,400,000
and intersection
improvements, Lower Paxton
Township..................
2755           MD            Rehabilitate road including      $2,320,000
bridges over CSX tracks in
Baltimore.................

[[Page 1364]]
119 STAT. 1364


2756           WA            Extend 18th Street between       $3,200,000
87th Avenue and NE 192nd
Avenue in Vancouver.......
2757           TX            Implement repairs on Old           $403,000
Pleasanton Road Bridge in
Atascosa County...........
2758           CA            Hazel Avenue Improvements,       $2,400,000
U.S. Highway 50 to Madison
Avenue....................
2759           MI            Menominee County, County           $224,000
Road 557 Bridge
Replacement over the Big
Cedar River...............
2760           OH            Massillon, Ohio. Tremont         $1,216,000
Avenue Bridge
Rehabilitation............
2761           MI            Montmorency County,                $640,000
Reconstruction of County
Road 612 from W. County
Line to County Road 491...
2762           ............  ...........................              $0
2763           NM            Planning, design and             $1,600,000
construction of bikeways
and walkway at the City of
Santa Fe's downtown
railyard redevelopment
project...................
2764           GA            Streetscape-Bainbridge.....        $200,000
2765           PA            Construct SR 706 Corridor,       $1,600,000
Susquehanna County,
Pennsylvania..............
2766           NY            Town of North Salem                $120,000
reconstruction and
repaving of Keeler Lane...
2767           FL            Conduct planning and             $3,200,000
engineering for U.S. 17
widening and improvements
in Hardee County, Florida.
2768           IL            Traffic Signalization,             $726,000
Matteson..................
2769           MS            Upgrade Poe Road in                $160,000
Kilmichael, Montgomery
County....................
2770           NC            Upgrade U.S. 220 to I-73/74      $1,600,000
interstate standards in
Montgomery County.........
2771           WA            U.S. 2/Sultan Basin Road           $480,000
Improvements in Sultan....
2772           ............  ...........................              $0
2773           FL            A-1-A Transportation               $800,000
Enhancements, Daytona
Beach.....................
2774           MI            City of Menominee,                 $180,000
Resurface Hattie Street
Bridge deck 250 feet from
9th avenue in Menominee to
Riverside Avenue in
Marinette, WI.............
2775           TN            Construct streetscape            $1,600,000
improvements near TN
Theater in Knoxville, TN..
2776           MI            Emmet County, Ultra thin            $48,000
demonstration project
resurfacing of Mitchell
Road from the City of
Petoskey limits east to
Division..................
2777           NY            Gowanus Expressway Project.        $400,000
2778           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in Moosic
Borough, Lackawanna County
2779           AL            Expand to 4 lanes on U.S.        $2,800,000
278 from I-65 to U.S. 231.
2780           IL            Preconstruction and                $713,600
construction McCarthy
Road, Bell Road to U.S. 45
and 123rd Street U.S. 45
to 86th Avenue in Palos
Park......................
2781           WY            Riverton: Reconstruct Hwy          $880,000
26--Main St...............
2782           MA            Somerville Bicycle Path            $900,000
Improvements--Cedar Street
to Central Street.........

[[Page 1365]]
119 STAT. 1365


2783           MI            U.S. 31 improvements and         $7,200,000
relocation between Holland
and Grand Haven...........
2784           PA            Replace Messinger Street           $800,000
Bridge in the Borough of
Bangor....................
2785           NY            Owego, Construct pedestrian      $1,000,000
waterfront walkway........
2786           KY            Reconstruct U.S. 127 from        $1,200,000
Hustonville Road to the
Mercer County Line, Boyle
County....................
2787           ............  ...........................              $0
2788           CA            Design and construct access      $6,400,000
improvements in North
Central Business District,
Sacramento................
2789           NC            Construction of the              $5,440,000
southbound lane of U.S.
321 bridge replacement
over the Catawba River....
2790           FL            Grand Lagoon Bridge              $5,200,000
Replacement Project. The
replacement of a two lane
bridge with a four lane
bridge....................
2791           FL            Construct SR 9B Extension,       $3,520,000
St. Johns County, Florida.
2792           AL            Design and construct a 4-          $800,000
lane highway from Muscle
Shoals, AL to I-10........
2793           IN            Improve SR 9 Greenfield            $400,000
Corridor, Indiana.........
2794           NJ            Interstate 280 Interchange       $8,000,000
Improvements, Harrison....
2795           KY            Construct Northern Bypass       $28,000,000
of Somerset, KY and I-66
from the Cumberland
Parkway west of Somerset,
Kentucky to I-75 south of
London, Kentucky..........
2796           VA            Preliminary Engineer,            $1,200,000
Design, and Construct
improvements to Virginia
Beach Blvd. in Virginia
Beach and Norfolk.........
2797           PA            Fayette County,                  $1,600,000
Pennsylvania, State Road
21 Improvements...........
2798           ME            Replacement of Waldo-           $11,000,000
Hancock Bridge............
2799           CT            Reconstruct and widen Homer      $1,600,000
St. and Chase Ave. in
Waterbury from Waterville
Ave. to Nottingham Terrace
2800           FL            Construct new east-west            $800,000
road from the intersection
of Beeline Highway and PGA
Boulevard west to Seminole
Pratt Whitney Road........
2801           WI            Enhance West Silver Spring         $320,000
Ave. with lighting
enhancement, crosswalk
improvements, sign-age,
landscaping, Milwaukee....
2802           NY            Completion of 1.6 mile              $99,200
trail network in the Utica
Marsh, NY.................
2803           TX            Construct I-635/I-30            $12,000,000
Interchange, Dallas, Texas
2804           IL            Establish transportation           $400,000
museum on Navy Pier,
Chicago...................
2805           CA            Establish I-15 Interchange       $1,200,000
at Nisqualli and Mojave
River crossing in San
Bernardino County.........
2806           MA            Massachusetts Bay                $1,000,000
Transportation Authority
Secure Station, Boston....
2807           FL            Construct bridges on SR 710      $2,000,000
in Palm Beach County......
2808           PA            Reconstruct intersection of      $1,720,000
SR 51 and Franklin Ave,
Beaver County.............

[[Page 1366]]
119 STAT. 1366


2809           NJ            Rehabilitation existing            $800,000
structure at the Bridge
Street bridge over the CSX
Railroad Trenton Line in
Manville, NJ..............
2810           OR            Repair and recoat logging          $120,000
bridge over Highway 99 E,
Canby.....................
2811           CA            San Gabriel Blvd.                  $160,000
Rehabilitation Project--
Broadway to Las Tunas, San
Gabriel...................
2812           CA            Signal upgrades on Avenida         $100,160
de las Flores, Melinda
Road, Avenida de las
Banderas, and Alma Aldea,
Rancho Santa Margarita,
California................
2813           CA            Construct State Route 905       $12,000,000
to connect the Otay Mesa
Port of Entry to
Interstate 805, San Diego.
2814           MA            Crosby Drive Improvement           $800,000
Project...................
2815           WI            Construct North Shore              $350,000
Extension of Friendship
State Trail, Calumet and
Winnebago Counties,
Wisconsin.................
2816           AR            Construct and rehabilitate       $5,000,000
Fayetteville Expressway
Economic Development
Corridor..................
2817           PA            Armstrong County,                $1,600,000
Pennsylvania, construction
of the Freeport Bridge....
2818           IL            Road extension for Redco           $800,000
Drive to Skyline Drive,
Williamson County.........
2819           CA            Rosecrans Avenue and Bridge      $3,200,000
Arterial Reconstruction
Project, Compton..........
2820           MA            Canalside Rail Trail               $800,000
Construction of the
Canalside Rail Trail,
Deerfield and Montague....
2821           CA            Conduct study and construct      $7,200,000
Daggett Road, Port of
Stockton, CA, Access
Project...................
2822           WI            Construct a bicycle/             $1,600,000
pedestrian path, and two
bridges across
Starkweather Creek,
Madison...................
2823           GA            Construct City of                  $500,000
Fayetteville, Ga. School
Access Bike Ped Project...
2824           TN            Sevier County, Tennessee SR        $800,000
449 extension.............
2825           GA            SR 133 south bound lane            $800,000
bridge replacement over
the Georgia Florida
Railnet line, Dougherty
County....................
2826           CA            Construct grade separation       $1,600,000
on State Street and Cajon
Boulevard along BNSF
tracks in San Bernardino..
2827           WA            Construct SR 9 Pedestrian          $880,000
Overpass in Arlington.....
2828           CA            Implement streetscape               $80,000
improvements along Wilbur
Avenue to enhance traffic
and pedestrian safety.....
2829           MD            I-95, I-495, MD5 Branch          $3,200,000
Avenue Metro Access.......
2830           TN            Improving Vehicle                   $45,600
Efficiencies at At-Grade
highway-Railroad Crossing
in Loudon, TN.............
2831           MO            I-470, I-435 and Rt. 71          $2,400,000
Completion of Interstate
realignment...............
2832           PA            Ridge Avenue Revitalization        $800,000
project in conjunction
with Roxborough Dev. Corp.
for scenic enhancements
and pedestrian safety
improvements along a
heavily traveled
thoroughfare..............

[[Page 1367]]
119 STAT. 1367


2833           PA            Corridor improvements for          $800,000
PA 72 from PA 283 to PA
Turnpike..................
2834           AR            Construction of I-49,            $6,000,000
Highway 71: Highway 22 to
Highway 71 near Jenny Lind
2835           CA            Provide landscape                $1,200,000
enhancement of an existing
open culvert on Atherton
Street, Long Beach........
2836           NY            Rehabilitate Guy Lombardo          $956,000
Avenue and construct
drainage improvements and
new sidewalks and curb
cuts in Freeport, NY......
2837           IA            I-35 interchange                 $4,000,000
improvements, Ankeny......
2838           PA            Improve Freemansburg Avenue      $1,600,000
and its intersections at
Route 33..................
2839           NJ            Pedestrian facilities and          $320,000
street lighting on Route
551 from Route 130 to
Chestnut Street, Brooklawn
2840           IL            I-57 and I-294 Interchange.      $2,400,000
2841           FL            New Kings Rd. Pedestrian         $1,600,000
Overpass and Enhancements,
Jacksonville..............
2842           TX            Grimes Co., TX Bridge              $400,000
Improvement Project.......
2843           CA            Crenshaw Blvd.                     $800,000
Rehabilitation, Maricopa
St. to Sepulveda Blvd.,
City of Torrance..........
2844           VA            Engineering and Right-of-        $1,200,000
Way for Interstate 73 in
Roanoke County............
2845           GA            Johnson Ferry Road               $2,000,000
Glenridge Drive Widening,
Abernathy Road to Hammond
Drive.....................
2846           GA            Install walkways, bridges,       $6,160,000
lighting, landscaping in
Water Works Park and south
along river through
Ocmulgee Monument and
Central City Park.........
2847           OH            Intersection improvements          $489,600
and related road
improvements in the City
of Chardon, OH............
2848           WV            Construct Coalfields             $5,760,000
Expressway................
2849           CA            Improve pedestrian and             $800,000
biking trails within East
Bay Regional Park
District, Contra Costa
County....................
2850           MA            Berkshire County Bike            $4,000,000
Paths, Design and
Construction..............
2851           MI            Ogemaw County, Overlay of          $295,680
Fairview Road to improve
network of all-season
truck routes..............
2852           VA            Old Mill Road Extension....        $800,000
2853           PA            Construct Campbelltown           $2,000,000
Connector, Lebanon County.
2854           NJ            Construct Rt. 40                 $2,400,000
Reconstruction from Rt. 77
to Elmer Lake, Elmer,
Salem County..............
2855           OH            Design and Construct             $1,200,000
Riverwalk and adjacent
facilities, Warren,
Trumbull Co...............
2856           CA            Realign SR 4 within the          $1,600,000
City of Oakley............
2857           IL            Construct recreational             $320,000
trail from Spring Creek
Forest Preserve to Greene
Valley Forest Preserve in
DuPage County, IL.........
2858           MN            Construct trail link             $1,200,000
between Bruce Vento
Regional Trail and
Mississippi River Corridor
in St. Paul...............
2859           FL            Construct Interstate-4/            $800,000
Crosstown Connector.......
2860           UT            Add lights to road from            $200,000
Halchita to Mexican Hat on
the Navajo Nation.........
2861           CA            Construct off ramp at            $2,400,000
Interstate 8/Imperial
Avenue Interchange, El
Centro....................

[[Page 1368]]
119 STAT. 1368


2862           VA            Cranesnest Trail--                 $520,000
Construction of hiking,
biking, horse trail from
Route 83 to Cranesnest
Campground................
2863           NC            Durham and Chatham               $1,600,000
Counties, NC Completion of
American Tobacco Trail....
2864           TX            Austin to Manor Rail Trail,      $1,600,000
Texas.....................
2865           PA            Eliminate existing rail          $3,200,000
line in Indian, PA to
eliminate 37 at grade
crossings and reconstruct
the line outside the town
from Glenn Lock to
Middletown................
2866           MN            Extend Cuyuna Range and            $320,000
Great River Road Trails,
Aitkin....................
2867           NY            Conduct planning,                  $400,000
engineering, and eventual
construction of Rt. 5 in
City of Oneida, from
Seneca St. to county line.
2868           NY            Great Neck Road Traffic            $320,000
Calming Project...........
2869           NJ            Design and construct new           $800,000
streetscape through
Irvington Center..........
2870           IL            Construct connector road         $4,800,000
between Collinsville Rd.
to IL 3/North 1st St, St.
Clair County..............
2871           NJ            Carteret, NJ Ferry Service       $1,680,000
Terminal..................
2872           AL            Construct I-10/U.S. 231          $2,400,000
Connector from Dothan, AL
to Florida................
2873           OH            Bicycle Paths for the Magic        $640,000
Mile in Willougby, OH.....
2874           NC            Construct I-73/I-74 in          $14,400,000
Montgomery County and
Richmond County, North
Carolina..................
2875           NY            Construct Phase II I-90          $4,800,000
Connector ITS Laboratory
in Rensselaer County......
2876           NC            Design and Construction of       $2,240,000
the Airport Area Roadway
Network, High Point.......
2877           WA            Engineering and                    $800,000
Construction of the
Centennial Trail in
Snohomish.................
2878           OR            I-5 Beltline Interchange...     $20,000,000
2879           IL            Extension North from Rt. 30      $3,808,000
to Wheeler Road and Galena
Boulevard extension west
of Rt. 47 in Sugar Grove,
IL........................
2880           NY            Newburgh, Improve East End       $1,490,800
Roads.....................
2881           ME            Construction of the                $400,000
Kennebec River Rail Trail.
2882           CA            Construct Bristol Street         $2,800,000
multimodal corridor in
Santa Ana.................
2883           CA            Construct pedestrian               $400,000
sidewalk enhancements in
Bellflower................
2884           KS            Improvement and expansion       $11,600,000
for 2.7 miles of K18 in
Geary County..............
2885           CA            I-110/SR 47/Harbor Blvd.         $4,000,000
Interchange Improvements,
San Pedro.................
2886           MA            Oxbow National Wildlife          $1,500,000
Refuge, Design and
construction of a Visitor
Contact Station...........
2887           AL            Pedestrian Improvements for        $266,666
Pell City, AL.............
2888           WI            Rehabilitate Highway 51          $1,600,000
between CTH S and U.S. 8
in Lincoln County.........
2889           OH            Rehabilitate tunnel and            $700,000
bridge on National Road
Bikeway in St. Clairsville
2890           MD            Pennington Ave. Drawbridge,        $800,000
Baltimore.................
2891           MA            Rehabilitation and paving          $200,000
of Parker River Road......

[[Page 1369]]
119 STAT. 1369


2892           MN            Reconstruct CSAH 7 between       $2,560,000
Itasca CR 341 and the
Scenic State Park entrance
to improve safety and
structural integrity......
2893           OH            Grading, paving, roads for       $5,200,000
the transfer of rail to
truck for the intermodal
facility at Rickenbacker
Airport...................
2894           PA            Relocation of PA 52 at             $960,000
Longwood Gardens..........
2895           TX            Construct Interstate 35          $1,000,000
improvements in Buda......
2896           TN            Improve streetscape and            $240,000
signage, McMinn County, TN
2897           OR            Culvert Replacement, Sweet         $130,000
Home......................
2898           AL            AL 5 Widening in Bibb            $2,400,000
County....................
2899           CO            Design and build a               $4,000,000
multimodal corridor on
U.S. 36...................
2900           WA            Development of highway-rail        $800,000
crossings in Spokane
County, WA and Kootenai
County, ID................
2901           OH            Acquire right-of-way land          $800,000
along U.S. 24, Lucas
County....................
2902           IL            Improve Streets,                   $224,000
Westchester...............
2903           NY            Enhance road and                 $2,000,000
transportation facilities
in the vicinity of W. 65th
St. and Broadway, New York
City......................
2904           TN            Construction of Knob Creek         $400,000
Road in Washington County,
Tennessee.................
2905           TN            Improve streetscape and            $240,000
pavement repair, Loudon
County, TN................
2906           CA            Improvement of intersection      $2,600,000
at Inglewood Ave. and
Marine Ave. to reduce
congestion, City of
Lawndale..................
2907           HI            Interstate Route H1              $5,944,000
rehabilitation, Kaahumanu
Street to Kaimakani Street
2908           ID            Construct Interchange on I-      $1,600,000
84 at Ten Mile Rd.,
Meridian, Idaho...........
2909           NJ            Pedestrian facilities and          $277,696
street lighting on Haddon
Avenue from Voorhees
Township Line to Bate
Avenue, Berlin Township...
2910           WA            267th Street NW Pedestrian         $480,000
Path in Stanwood..........
2911           KY            Replace U.S. 68 and U.S.           $600,000
150 Bridge over Chaplin
River, Perryville.........
2912           UT            Geveva Rd-Provo Center           $6,000,000
Street, Orem 1600 North to
I-15 FWY, Provo-widen from
2 to 4 lanes..............
2913           IL            Construction of a new            $7,600,000
roadway and grade
separation of the UP West
Line east of Elburn.......
2914           VA            Haymarket, VA. Washington          $400,000
Street improvements.......
2915           NJ            Improvements to implement          $400,000
the Readington Tewksbury
Transportation Improvement
District..................
2916           IL            Allow IDOT to proceed with       $1,600,000
engineering and
construction of Airport-
Lockport Rd. and Illinois
Route 126 interchanges on
I-55......................
2917           AR            Caraway Bridge Overpass....      $7,200,000
2918           OH            Construction of an                 $400,000
Intermodal Facility at
University Circle in the
City of Cleveland.........
2919           PA            Jeannette Truck Route......        $400,000
2920           MD            MD45, Cavan to Ridgley           $4,416,000
Roads.....................
2921           MD            MD 30 Hampstead Bypass.....        $800,000

[[Page 1370]]
119 STAT. 1370


2922           MI            Monroe Area Highway-Railway      $5,120,000
Crossing Improvements,
City of Monroe............
2923           OH            Conduct study of new             $2,000,000
interchange at Routes 161/
37 and Cherry Valley Road
in Licking County, Ohio...
2924           CT            Enfield, Connecticut make        $2,328,000
improvements to South
Maple Street Bridge.......
2925           NY            Conduct studies, if              $3,200,000
necessary, and construct
infrastructure projects
for Governor's Island.....
2926           NY            Harlem River Park and              $800,000
Bikeway...................
2927           CT            Make Improvements to               $160,000
Plainfield Cemetery Road..
2928           SC            Construct grade separation         $800,000
and interchange
improvements at U.S. 521,
Lancaster County..........
2929           NJ            Replacement of the Magnolia        $800,000
Avenue Bridge over Routes
1 and 9...................
2930           ............  ...........................              $0
2931           MI            Resurfacing of Frazho Road       $1,024,000
in Roseville..............
2932           CA            Construct 213th Street             $800,000
pedestrian bridge to
provide safe passage for
pedestrians and
wheelchairs, Carson.......
2933           MO            Conduct impact studies for       $4,000,000
Missouri River Bridge
siting in Kansas City, MO.
2934           CA            Construction of Lenwood          $1,200,000
Road Grade Separation in
Barstow, CA...............
2935           PA            Improvements to Frankford        $1,000,000
Avenue from Cottman Avenue
to Harbison Avenue........
2936           IN            Revelop Hazeldell Road,            $800,000
Hamilton County, Indiana..
2937           AK            Road Improvements and            $5,000,000
upgrades to service road
areas and miscellaneous
projects within Northstar
Borough...................
2938           OH            Rehabilitation or                  $288,000
replacement of highway-
rail grade separations
along the West Central
Ohio Port Authority route
in Champaign and Clark
Counties..................
2939           MI            Otsego County, Resurfacing         $294,400
and widening of Parmater
Rd........................
2940           WA            Realign West Main Street         $2,000,000
through Kelso.............
2941           TN            Reconstruct State Route 109        $800,000
from I-40 in Wilson County
to Portland in Sumner
County....................
2942           PA            Redesigning the                  $1,200,000
intersection of U.S. 322/
High Street and Rosedale
Ave.......................
2943           DE            Replacement of the Indian        $4,800,000
River Inlet Bridge, Sussex
County, Delaware..........
2944           FL            Construct link from I-95 to      $4,000,000
I-10 through Clay County
with terminus points SR 23
to CAR 739B...............
2945           MN            Construct ramps and new          $5,616,595
bridge over Interstate 35
at CSAH 17, and
reconstruct CSAH 17 from
west County Line to CSAH
30, Chisago County........
2946           CT            Conduct multimodal study of        $800,000
Route 8 corridor between
Beacon Falls-Seymour town
line and Exit 40..........

[[Page 1371]]
119 STAT. 1371


2947           AR            Hwy 65 improvements in Van       $1,200,000
Buren County, including
construction of passing
lanes, bridge
improvements, intersection
improvements and other
roadway improvements......
2948           AZ            Scott Ranch Road. Navajo         $1,000,000
County--Connect White
Mountain Road (SR 260) and
Penrod Road (SR 77).......
2949           NY            Construction of Pedestrian         $500,000
and Bike Trail campus
access and improvements,
St. Bonaventure, NY.......
2950           NY            Eastern Laurelton Area           $6,880,000
Improvements, Queens, New
York......................
2951           NY            Bicycle and pedestrian           $1,200,000
safety improvements, Main
Street, Riverhead.........
2952           AL            Construct County Road 83         $8,000,000
corridor from Foley Beach
Express to I-10...........
2953           PA            Design and construct             $3,096,400
improvements to PA 465
from Walnut Bottom Rd. to
PA 641 and at I-81 Exit 44
2954           IL            Reconstruct and Widen Route      $9,000,000
60 Bridge over I-94 in
Lake Forest...............
2955           VA            Improve Downtown Staunton,       $1,200,000
Virginia, Streetscape.....
2956           PA            Route 322 Halls Run              $1,360,000
Upgrades from the
intersection of Horsecreek
Road to Mapleshade Road--
Venango County............
2957           PA            Design, engineering, ROW         $2,000,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in Wilkes-
Barre.....................
2958           IN            SR 56 Reconstruction,            $4,096,000
Aurora, Indiana...........
2959           MI            Study and implement              $2,800,000
transportation system
alternatives in the
vicinity of U.S. 31/M 46..
2960           MA            Longfellow Bridge                $3,000,000
Rehabilitation............
2961           IL            For Village of Bolingbrook         $400,000
to construct Remington
Blvd. extension...........
2962           AZ            Design and Construction of       $2,400,000
Rio Salado Pedestrian
Bridge in Tempe, AZ.......
2963           MI            Study to determine               $3,200,000
replacement options for
obsolete and structurally
deteriorating bridge
(Trenton-Grosse Isle
Bridge) including approach
roadways, Charter County
of Wayne..................
2964           PA            Mount Joy Bridge                   $360,000
Replacement on Route 230..
2965           CA            Modifies 9 traffic signals         $240,000
between Willow Road and
Middlefield Road and
Hamilton Avenue, Menlo
Park......................
2966           OH            Summit County Engineer             $400,000
Reconstruct Access Roads
to Cuyahoga Valley
National Park.............
2967           OR            To study the feasibility of        $992,000
widening Hwy 26 from the
Hwy 217 interchange to the
Cornelius Pass exit.......
2968           GA            Athens-Clarke County             $1,856,000
Greenway Enhancement
Project...................
2969           WA            Improve Wahkiakum County           $250,000
Ferry landing.............
2970           IL            Irving Park Bridge over the      $3,200,000
Chicago River.............
2971           MI            Design, right-of-way and         $1,760,000
construction of passing
relief lanes and
improvements necessary on
M-55, between M-37 and M-
115.......................

[[Page 1372]]
119 STAT. 1372


2972           NE            Design, right-of-way and         $3,200,000
construction of South and
West Beltway in Lincoln,
Nebraska..................
2973           TX            Tower 55 CMAQ Congestion         $1,600,000
and Preliminary
Engineering Study.........
2974           NY            Town of Chester, Lake Hill         $120,000
Farms subdivision road
improvements..............
2975           MN            Improvements on TH 169 east      $1,772,800
and west of East Two
Rivers Crossing and TH 135
from Enterprise Drive to
TH 169....................
2976           IN            Reconstruct Standard             $1,040,000
Avenue, Whiting...........
2977           TX            Barron Rd. Interchange at        $2,400,000
SH 6 (Earl Rudder Freeway)
College Station...........
2978           CA            Develop conceptual master          $172,000
plan to improve the
efficiency of
transportation facilities,
Covina....................
2979           PA            Transportation enhancements      $2,400,000
along the Delaware Canal
between Yardley, PA and
Bristol, PA...............
2980           VA            Upgrade DOT crossing               $137,360
#467661K to constant
warning time devices......
2981           UT            Add lighting on Highway 262        $175,000
on the Navajo Nation in
Aneth.....................
2982           VA            Chestnut Mountain Road--           $400,000
Feasibility study, design,
and construction start for
road improvement on
National Forest lands.....
2983           MI            Construction of roads and          $880,000
trails Humbug Marsh Unit
Linked Greenways System,
Detroit International
Wildlife Refuge...........
2984           TX            Construct access road            $1,440,000
connecting Port of
Beaumont property on east
bank of Neches River to I-
10 access road east of the
Neches River..............
2985           ............  ...........................              $0
2986           SC            Lexington County, widen          $1,600,000
U.S. 1 and SC 6, and
improve U.S. 1, SC 6, and
U.S. 378..................
2987           IL            Midlothian Road                    $480,000
Signalization, Lake Zurich
2988           VA            Glen Alton--Design and             $800,000
construction of recreation
trails, access and visitor
information center........
2989           MI            Expansion of Cass Avenue in      $7,355,200
Clinton Township..........
2990           CO            Bromley Lane and U.S. 85           $664,000
interchange feasibility
study and construction of
needed improvements.......
2991           MD            Constructing Chestertown           $240,000
Trail, Chestertown, MD....
2992           IL            Eastern Peoria Bypass and        $2,400,000
(Ring Road) study and land
acquisition...............
2993           VA            Conduct planning and             $1,600,000
engineering for Mayo
Bridge in Richmond........
2994           NY            Elevation of road and              $556,000
construction of drainage
improvements on Sequams
Lane Center and Sequams
Lane West in the Town of
Islip, NY.................
2995           NM            Improvements to San Juan           $800,000
County Road 7950..........
2996           WA            116th St/Interstate 5            $1,400,000
Interchange Reconstruction
in Marysville.............

[[Page 1373]]
119 STAT. 1373


2997           SC            Construction of public           $4,800,000
roads at the International
Center for Automotive
Research and
reconstruction of
Fairforest Way in
Greenville, South Carolina
2998           PA            Provide 4 through-lanes on       $4,000,000
PA 100 by constructing two
thru lanes to the east of
Ludwigs Corner............
2999           PA            Completion of construction       $1,600,000
of final 2 ramps of I-79
interchange with Parkway
West; widening of 1 mile
of Parkway West leading to
ramps.....................
3000           CA            Diamond Bar, CA Grand            $1,280,000
Avenue Rehabilitation.....
3001           NY            Reconfigure intersection of        $600,000
Ridge Street and Hallocks
Mill Road and install new
traffic signal............
3002           WA            Guard Street Reconstruction        $640,000
Project in Friday Harbor..
3003           CO            Roadway widening and             $5,976,000
interchange rebuilding on
I-225 from I-70 to Parker
Road......................
3004           PA            Roosevelt Boulevard              $3,200,000
improvements by the
Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation............
3005           MN            Construct Paul Bunyan Trail        $560,000
Walker to Bemidji Segment.
3006           HI            Upgrades to Farrington             $800,000
Highway...................
3007           KY            U.S. 41A Phase II Design         $3,200,000
and Right-of-Way..........
3008           NM            U.S. 54 Corona, Tularosa,          $800,000
and Vaughn Bridges
Replacement and
Rehabilitation............
3009           OH            Construction of access road        $800,000
along east side of SR 8 in
Summit County, OH.........
3010           TX            U.S. 281 from Brooks County      $1,600,000
Line to FM 3066, Brooks
County....................
3011           FL            Construction of an               $4,431,167
interchange at Florida's
Turnpike and Stirling Rd.
in Broward County.........
3012           NY            Construction of the City of      $2,400,000
Watertown Streetscape
Enhancement Project.......
3013           IL            Improve Streets,                   $480,000
Merrionette Park..........
3014           NY            Install Improvements for           $250,000
Pedestrian Safety in the
vicinity of St. Roberts
Bellarmine................
3015           NY            Rebuild Queens Plaza, a 250-     $6,400,000
foot wide roadway on the
eastern end of the
Queensborough Bridge......
3016           PA            Upgrade circuit for gates          $220,000
and lights at Seventh
Street in Emmaus, PA USDOT
crossing number 592401H to
constant warning time
devices...................
3017           UT            SR 158 Improvements, Pine        $1,680,000
View Dam, Weber County,
Utah......................
3018           CA            Valley Boulevard Capacity        $1,600,000
Improvement between 710
Freeway and Marguerita
Avenue, Alhambra..........
3019           IL            Offramp and overpass from I-     $4,000,000
57 outside of Marion and
necessary connector roads.
3020           AK            Construction of and              $3,000,000
improvements to roads at
Alaska Pacific University.
3021           SC            Upgrade of the I-95/SC 327       $6,000,000
Interchange near Florence.

[[Page 1374]]
119 STAT. 1374


3022           CA            Valley View/Stage Grade            $720,000
Separation Project, La
Mirada and Santa Fe
Springs, California.......
3023           OR            Renewal of Wooden Bridge         $7,500,000
West of Albany............
3024           MI            Northville, Taft Road from         $400,000
8 Mile North to city
limits....................
3025           NY            Village of Pawling                  $80,000
Rehabilitation of
Grandview Ave. from
Lakeside to end...........
3026           SD            Pave and curb Cheyenne           $1,200,000
River Tribe Route 900,
``Chinatown'' in Eagle
Butte.....................
3027           FL            Church Street Improvements,     $11,200,000
Orlando...................
3028           MI            Walled Lake, Widen Maple           $100,000
Road, west of Decker to
Welch.....................
3029           AR            Washington County,                 $800,000
Arkansas--Replace and
rebuild Tilly Willy Bridge
3030           AR            Russellville Intermodal          $2,000,000
Facility construct access
roads from AR Hwy 247,
purchase Right-of-Way.....
3031           TX            Construct IH 30 Monty            $1,200,000
Stratton Parkway
Interchange in Greenville,
TX........................
3032           PA            Design and Construction of       $1,600,000
Portzer Road Connector,
Bucks County..............
3033           IL            For Plainfield Township             $80,000
Park District to construct
DuPage River Bike and
Pedestrian Trail linking
Grand Illinois, Midewin,
and I&M Canal Trails......
3034           TX            Pedestrian Path and                $400,000
Sidewalk Improvements
along U.S. 83 in Rio
Grande City...............
3035           MS            Upgrade roads at Tougaloo          $400,000
College...................
3036           IL            Washington Street Widening,      $2,688,000
Gurnee....................
3037           LA            Replacement Bridge for             $400,000
Tunnel, Belle Chasse......
3038           FL            Implement Busch Boulevard        $2,000,000
corridor improvements to
improve safety in Tampa...
3039           MI            Construction of Pittsfield         $160,800
Greenways Bridge--Non-
motorized bridge
enhancement onto existing
Bemis Road Bridge,
Pittsfield Charter
Township..................
3040           NC            North Carolina. Repair and      $11,360,000
improve safety features on
U.S. Highway 19 from
Maggie Valley to Cherokee.
3041           NC            Northern Loop Project, City        $800,000
of Wilson.................
3042           OR            Weaver Road Extension and       $17,000,000
Bridge Project, Douglas
County....................
3043           MI            Complete 58 miles of White       $2,240,000
Pine Trail from Grand
Rapids to Cadillac........
3044           NY            Elmira Congestion                $1,800,000
Mitigation................
3045           IL            Improve Roads and Bridges,       $1,200,000
Cicero....................
3046           MI            Carlysle Road                    $2,000,000
Reconstruction, Inkster...
3047           UT            Construct pedestrian safety        $325,000
project on the Navajo
Nation in Montezuma Creek.
3048           MD            Construct MD5, Hughesville       $8,000,000
Bypass....................
3049           OH            Repair and Construct Rock          $500,000
Spring Bridge, Portage
County....................
3050           RI            Replace I-195 Washington         $1,600,000
Bridge Eastbound..........
3051           UT            Bear River Migratory Bird        $3,600,000
Refuge Access Road
Improvements, Box Elder
County, UT................
3052           MA            Reconstruction of Union St.      $1,220,000
and Rt. 138W, Holbrook....
3053           MI            Replacement of the               $7,200,000
interchange at 44th Street
and U.S. 131 in Grand
Rapids....................

[[Page 1375]]
119 STAT. 1375


3054           OH            Construct interchange              $450,000
improvements at SR 46 and
82 in Howland Township,
Trumbull Co...............
3055           GA            Widen and construct U.S. 84      $2,400,000
Connector Bypass from west
of U.S. 84 SR 119 west of
Hinesville to U.S. 84 SR
196 south of Flemington,
Liberty County, Georgia...
3056           IL            Project is a stand-alone           $800,000
roadway improvement
consisting of the complete
reconstruction of the
roadway, The Village of
Forest Park...............
3057           MI            Jackson Freeway                 $12,800,000
Modernization Project. I-
94 Modernization Project
from Michigan State Route
60 [M60] easterly to
Sargent Road..............
3058           VA            Smart Travel and Traffic           $400,000
Management Systems in
Salem and Staunton
District, Virginia........
3059           OH            Construct Great Miami River      $1,016,000
Multi-Use Trail, Miami
County, Ohio..............
3060           DC            Rock Creek Recreational            $800,000
Trail study to assess
feasibility of
constructing recreation
trail.....................
3061           MI            Study road runoff in Little        $320,000
Black Creek between U.S.
31 and Seaway Drive.......
3062           CA            Conducts environmental             $400,000
review of proposed
improvements related to
the connection of
Dumbarton Bridge to
Highway 101...............
3063           NY            Construction of and                $800,000
improvements to Union Road
in West Seneca............
3064           WI            Upgrade I-43 between State       $2,400,000
Highway 140 and East
County Line in Rock
County, Wisconsin.........
3065           NJ            Separation of the                  $844,000
intersection of 13th
Street and the Lehigh Rail
Line through bridge or
tunnel in Manville, NJ....
3066           CA            Construct parking facility         $302,000
and improve access to
Imperial Valley Expo......
3067           CA            Develop bicycle paths and          $240,000
pedestrian access to Third
Avenue, Chula Vista.......
3068           IL            Upgrade County Highways 18       $1,600,000
and 22 in conjunction with
State I-57 interchange
plan north of Mattoon.....
3069           CA            Widen and Reconfigure            $2,192,000
Sepulveda and Culver
Boulevards, Culver City...
3070           OH            Construct interchange or         $6,935,000
other appropriate access
on IR 70 west of existing
mall road exit in Belmont
County....................
3071           AZ            Widen and expand the             $4,000,000
existing roadway and
railroad overpass in the
Houghton Road Corridor....
3072           OK            Construction of Duncan           $2,400,000
Bypass Grade Separation...
3073           SC            Pine Needles Widening and        $1,600,000
Bridge Replacement........
3074           CA            Olsen Road widening and          $1,680,000
roadway improvements in
Simi Valley, California...
3075           GA            Streetscape project to             $500,000
upgrade sidewalks,
lighting and streets,
Jeffersonville............
3076           NY            Implement Diamond Grinding         $700,000
Measures on I-95, I-278,
Mosholu Parkway, I-495,
Grand Central Parkway, and
Richmond Parkway..........

[[Page 1376]]
119 STAT. 1376


3077           MD            Upgrade Conduit System for         $960,000
Traffic Signal Systems,
Street Lighting, and
Traffic-related Video
Cameras for Baltimore.....
3078           WA            5th Street/US 2                     $80,000
Signalization Improvements
in Sultan.................
3079           WI            Implementation of                  $480,000
recommendations contained
in 2005 Safe Routes to
School in Superior plan...
3080           LA            Widen and improve LaPalco        $3,200,000
Boulevard from Westwood
Drive to U.S. 90,
Jefferson Parish..........
3081           NY            Realign Kirk Lake Drive in          $88,000
Carmel....................
3082           NY            Town of Somers road                $400,000
reconstruction............
3083           OH            Upgrade grade crossing             $761,600
safety devices in Elyria
and North Ridgeville......
3084           MS            Widen and improve Martin         $2,400,000
Bluff Road, Gautier.......
3085           CA            Widen and reconstruct            $2,400,000
Washington Blvd. from
westerly city boundary at
Vernon to I-5 Fwy at
Telegraph Rd. in Commerce.
3086           CA            San Diego, CA Interstate 5,      $1,600,000
Sorrento Valley Road and
Genesee Avenue Interchange
Project...................
3087           OR            Widen I-5 between Portland,      $3,200,000
Oregon and Vancouver,
Washington................
3088           LA            North-South Corridor from        $4,000,000
Houma/Thibodaux to I-10...
3089           GA            Warren County I-20 Frontage      $4,000,000
Road......................
3090           KY            Widen KY 11 from U.S. 460        $2,000,000
to the Mount Sterling
Bypass, Montgomery County.
3091           OH            Traffic and safety                 $456,000
improvements to county
roadways in Geauga County,
OH........................
3092           CA            Develop bicycle paths and        $4,000,000
public park space adjacent
to the New River, Calexico
3093           TN            Construction of the              $7,500,000
Foothills Parkway in the
Great Smoky Mountains
National Park.............
3094           PA            Improvements to Torresdale       $1,000,000
Avenue from Harbison
Avenue to Cottman Avenue..
3095           GA            Butner Road and Stonewall          $800,000
Tell Road, Fulton County..
3096           OH            Construction of highway-         $2,600,000
rail grade separations at
intersections in Lima to
improve motorist and
pedestrian safety.........
3097           OR            Siuslaw River Bridge,            $4,250,000
Florence..................
3098           CA            Construct Cypress Avenue         $2,400,000
over-pass to separate
Interstate 10 and Union
Pacific Railroad tracks in
Fontana...................
3099           CA            Modify and reconfigure           $4,000,000
Kanan Road interchange
along U.S. 101 in Agoura
Hills.....................
3100           OH            Upgrade and widen                  $800,000
intersection for SR 14 in
Washingtonville...........
3101           NM            Upgrade NM 434 from Mora         $1,200,000
north to Black Lake.......
3102           NJ            Upgrade of Turnpike/Route        $3,200,000
440 Interchange in Bayonne
3103           LA            Widen LA 18 from Northrup        $2,000,000
Grumman/ Avondale
Shipyards to U.S. 90,
Jefferson Parish..........
3104           PA            Widen PA 896 between               $960,000
Strasburg Borough and U.S.
30........................

[[Page 1377]]
119 STAT. 1377


3105           MI            Eliminate major roadway on         $400,000
Cleary University campus
and establish a new
roadway...................
3106           PA            Reconstruction of 11 mile          $400,000
segment of the Lower Trail
between Williamsport and
Mt Edna, Blair County, Pa.
3107           KY            Construction of interchange      $1,600,000
connecting US31W to I-65
at mile marker 32 in
Warren County.............
3108           ............  ...........................              $0
3109           NC            Install Sugar Creek Road         $2,400,000
Grade Separation,
Charlotte.................
3110           LA            Improvements to LA 46 in           $320,000
St. Bernard Parish........
3111           IN            Construct Hoham Drive              $400,000
Extension in Plymouth,
Indiana...................
3112           OR            Construct turn lane on              $90,000
Gateway Boulevard, Cottage
Grove.....................
3113           TN            Replace Unitia Bridge in           $720,000
Loudon County, TN.........
3114           VA            Replacement of Robertson         $1,456,320
Bridge in Danville........
3115           MA            Public Improvements to             $240,000
Springfield Symphony Hall.
3116           NY            Realign Union Valley Road          $440,000
in Town of Carmel.........
3117           NY            Village of Pawling                 $100,000
Improvements to Reservoir
Road from State Rt. 22 to
Prospect St...............
3118           MS            Build connector between SR       $2,400,000
609 and State Highway 15
near I-10, Jackson and
Harrison Counties.........
3119           CO            I-70 West Mountain               $3,200,000
Corridor, Denver to
Garfield County...........
3120           CA            Completion of Interstate 5       $4,800,000
and Interstate 8
Connectors, San Diego.....
3121           FL            Construct U.S. 1                 $5,280,000
interchange at CR 210, St.
Johns County, Florida.....
3122           OH            Construct roadway                  $250,000
improvement project along
State Routes 37 and 78
through Fairfield, Perry,
Morgan, Noble, Monroe
Counties..................
3123           IL            Construct I-57 Bridge              $480,000
Overpass, City of Markham.
3124           NJ            Design, plan and build a           $400,000
permanent pedestrian/
bicycle path along the
banks of the Elizabeth
River.....................
3125           NJ            Improve the U.S. Interstate        $800,000
78 Interchange at Exit 15
in Franklin Township,
Union Township, and Town
of Clinton................
3126           CA            Reconstruct Rosecrans Ave.         $320,000
and construct bus pads
from Garfield Ave. to
Century Blvd. in Paramount
3127           TN            Bristol, Tennessee highway-         $80,000
RR crossing grade
improvement--USDOT#731120J
3128           CO            Glenwood Springs South           $5,200,000
Bridge (new, off-system
bridge)...................
3129           NJ            Improvements of Newark and         $240,000
First Streets in Hoboken..
3130           OH            Feasibility Study to               $200,000
construct a bridge over
the Muskingum River in the
vicinity of McConnelsville
3131           MN            Construction of Gitchi-Gami      $1,500,000
State Trail from Silver
Bay to Tettegouche State
Park......................
3132           CA            Improvements/Widening of SR      $6,560,000
99 from Goshen to
Kingsburg in Tulare
County, California........

[[Page 1378]]
119 STAT. 1378


3133           CA            Design and implement Harbor        $800,000
Boulevard ITS in Garden
Grove.....................
3134           WI            Complete the Glacial               $240,000
Drumlin Trail, from
Madison to Waukesha.......
3135           PA            Design and construct turn          $464,000
lanes, signal upgrades and
improvements at PA 34 and
174 intersection..........
3136           PA            Design, engineering, ROW           $160,000
acquisition and
construction of
streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in Wright
Township, Luzerne County..
3137           PA            I-70/I-79 South Interchange      $1,600,000
Redesign and Upgrade......
3138           KS            Elimination of highway-          $4,584,000
railway crossings at the
City of Pittsburg Port
Authority to increase
safety and reduce
congestion................
3139           CA            Improve Access Road to           $3,000,000
Beale Air Force Base
(Smartville Road).........
3140           CA            Interstate 215, Los Alamos       $1,600,000
Road Interchange Project..
3141           NE            Missouri River Bridges           $2,800,000
between U.S. 34, I-29 in
Iowa and U.S. 75 in
Nebraska..................
3142           AL            Huntsville Southern Bypass       $2,400,000
planning and engineering..
3143           MO            Redesign and reconstruct I-        $320,000
170 interchange at Ladue
Rd........................
3144           NY            Construct Interstate 87          $2,400,000
Exit 3 Airport Connector
in Albany.................
3145           CA            Citywide traffic signal            $400,000
upgrades requiring the
installation of hardware
and software at 9 major
intersections, Palo Alto..
3146           OH            Construct replacement of         $3,300,000
Morgan Township Road 209
between SR 60 and SR 78 in
Morgan County.............
3147           ............  ...........................              $0
3148           NY            Construct the Setauket/Port      $5,000,000
Jefferson Greenway Trail
Project...................
3149           AR            Develop a railroad overpass      $2,640,000
connecting U.S. Highway 67
and U.S. Highway 371 in
Prescott..................
3150           FL            Construct SR 312 Extension       $5,300,000
Bypass, St. Johns County,
Florida...................
3151           GA            Construct Welcome Center,          $300,000
and pedestrian trail,
Abbeville.................
3152           VA            Improve Erickson Avenue and        $600,000
Stone Spring Road
connection................
3153           TX            Reconstruct Loop 12 IH 35E       $4,000,000
and SH 183 west extension
to MacArthur, Irving,
Texas.....................
3154           OR            Completion of the first of       $5,000,000
three phases of trails in
the Regional Trails
Program...................
3155           MN            Construct bridge for Paul        $1,500,000
Bunyan Trail over
Excelsior Road, Baxter....
3156           KY            Reconstruct U.S. 127 at the        $480,000
U.S. 127 and U.S. 127
North Bypass, Mercer
County....................
3157           CA            Rehabilitate street surface         $37,600
of Addison St. between
Kester Ave. and Lemona Ave
3158           IL            City of Springfield, IL for        $762,058
improvements to Cockrell
Lane......................

[[Page 1379]]
119 STAT. 1379


3159           OH            Repair/Construct Mill            $1,240,000
Street Bridge, Akron......
3160           MI            Resurface Caseville Road in        $153,600
Huron County..............
3161           PA            River Trail and Esplanade          $600,000
Development at the
Southside Riverfront Park.
3162           IL            Construct access roads to        $1,000,000
National Great Rivers
Research Center...........
3163           IL            Construct Roadway from           $1,600,000
Mississippi River Barge
Dock to IL Rt. 3-IL Rt.
157, Cahokia..............
3164           PA            Context Sensitive Design         $1,200,000
Elements for the Market
Street Bridge, Lycoming
County, PA................
3165           NY            Implement Pedestrian Safety        $500,000
Improvements on Queens
Boulevard.................
3166           NV            Design and construct               $800,000
interchange on I-15 in
Mesquite..................
3167           CA            Construct grade separations        $400,000
at Washington Ave. and
UPRR crossing east and
Washington Ave. and La
Cadena Drive in Colton....
3168           MD            Intercounty Connector......      $4,800,000
3169           MA            Charlemont Bridge, Route 2,      $3,840,000
Charlemont................
3170           MN            CSAH 47 rehabilitation from        $352,000
165th Ave. to TH 25,
Morrison County...........
3171           MS            Improve Old Augusta Road         $2,800,000
and construct Kaiser Road,
Perry County..............
3172           PA            Reconstruction of U.S. 30        $4,000,000
from PA 10 to Business
U.S. 30 including travel
lanes, shoulders, etc.....
3173           NY            Route 78 (Transit Road),         $2,400,000
Genesee Street to Main
Street, Towns of Amherst,
Cheektowaga and Clarence
in Erie County............
3174           NY            Planning and design,             $8,560,000
construction, and
relocations for Southtowns
Connector--NY Route 5 from
Coast Guard Base to Ohio
Street, including Fuhrmann
Boulevard.................
3175           CA            SR 91 I-605 Needs                   $12,800
Assessment Study,
Whittier, CA..............
3176           GA            SR 70/Fulton Industrial          $1,200,000
Boulevard widening from
Camp Creek Parkway to the
SCL RR, Fulton County.....
3177           MO            Ste. Genevieve Co.,              $1,200,000
Missouri Rt. 61 bridge
replacement over
Establishment Creek.......
3178           MN            Construction of                  $2,400,000
intersection at County
Road 5 and TH 13 in City
of Burnsville.............
3179           GA            SR 307 overpass over             $4,000,000
Georgia Port Authority
rail line, Savannah.......
3180           MO            Study railroad                     $800,000
reconfiguration to
eliminate highway
crossings in and around
Springfield, MO...........
3181           NC            Construct relocated NC 16        $1,360,000
in Lincoln and Catawba
Counties, NC..............
3182           IL            Construction of highway          $1,280,000
approaches to the Sullivan
Road bridge in Aurora, IL.
3183           IL            Engineering and                    $800,000
construction of 15.1 mile
Alliance trail between
Lock 14 in LaSalle and
Lock 2 in Bureau Junction.
3184           CA            Construct parking facility         $800,000
and improve museum
pedestrian access from
trolley station, San Diego
3185           PA            Relocation and upgrade of        $1,320,000
Beaner Hallow Rd., Beaver
County, PA................

[[Page 1380]]
119 STAT. 1380


3186           MN            TH 36-Stillwater Bridge,         $4,000,000
ROW acquisition and
Utility Relocation........
3187           IL            To construct Veterans              $800,000
Memorial Drive Extension.
Will link Mount Vernon on
the east side of I-57 with
incorporated area lying
west......................
3188           MN            I-494 U.S. 169 Interchange       $4,000,000
Reconstruction, Twin
Cities Metropolitan Area,
Minnesota.................
3189           AL            Jackson County Industrial          $800,000
Park Access Road,
Hollywood.................
3190           FL            North-South Corridor             $2,400,000
between Archer Road and
Newberry Road.............
3191           AK            Construct access road and a      $3,000,000
bridge crossing the Naknek
River terminus points in
South Naknek-King Salmon
Highway...................
3192           NY            Route 303 Orangeburg Road          $800,000
and Route 340 and Erie
Street intersection.......
3193           MS            Upgrade roads in Port              $320,000
Gibson (U.S. Highway 61),
Claiborne County..........
3194           GA            Construct Horsestamp Road          $800,000
Interchange on I-95 in
Camden County, Georgia....
3195           MO            Upgrade Route 94 in St.          $9,600,000
Charles County from East
of Harvester road to West
of Mid-Rivers Drive.......
3196           OH            Upgrade the I-71                $11,200,000
interchange with SR 665
and widen SR 665 from
Hoover Road on the east to
a relocated Haughn Road on
the west, in Grove City,
OH........................
3197           NY            Village of Highland Falls           $60,000
repaving and sidewalk
construction of Berry Hill
Road......................
3198           PA            Westmoreland County,             $3,200,000
Pennsylvania, four lane
limited access facility
connecting State Road 119
to the Pennsylvania
Turnpike (Sony Connector).
3199           NJ            Edison National Historic           $192,000
Site Traffic Improvement
Project to improve traffic
flow and promote safety...
3200           IL            Construction of Eldamain         $4,000,000
Road over the Fox River...
3201           CA            Construction of a traffic          $100,000
signal at the intersection
of Oso Ave. and Vanowen St
3202           OR            Reroute U.S. 97 at Redmond,      $5,600,000
OR and improve the
intersection of U.S. 97
and Oregon 126............
3203           CA            Widen and realign Cherry         $3,200,000
Avenue from 19th Street to
one block south of Pacific
Coast Highway, Signal Hill
3204           AR            Fort Smith, Arkansas:            $6,000,000
Improvements to Jenny Lind
Rd. and Ingersoll Rd......
3205           OH            Widen Pearl Road in                $800,000
Strongsville..............
3206           CA            Interstate 5 and State           $4,000,000
Route 78 Interchange
Improvements..............
3207           OK            Improvements to SH 3 from        $5,000,000
Antlers to Broken Bow.....
3208           KY            Construct the Albany Bypass      $4,800,000
in Clinton County.........
3209           CA            Highway 74 and Interstate          $800,000
215 Interchange Project...

[[Page 1381]]
119 STAT. 1381


3210           SC            Improve intersection and         $9,600,000
corridor on U.S. 278 to
improve safety. Poss build
frontage roads widen road
and change traffic
controls..................
3211           WA            Port of Bellingham               $7,280,000
Transportation Enhancement
Projects..................
3212           OH            Rehabilitation of SR 53            $800,000
from Miami St. to North
city limits including
approaches to the CSX
railroad bridge, City of
Tiffin....................
3213           OH            Upgrade U.S. Route 30            $8,072,000
between State Route 235
and Upper Sandusky in
Hancock and Wyandot
Counties..................
3214           MN            Main Street streetscape          $1,520,000
reconstruction, 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       $2,160,000
and County Route 519
Intersection Improvements.
3216           HI            Widen Queen Kaahumanu            $2,400,000
Highway...................
3217           CT            Widen Route 34, Derby......      $2,400,000
3218           IN            Construction of County Road      $4,000,000
17--Elkhart, IN...........
3219           PA            Widen Route 666 in Forest        $1,200,000
County....................
3220           CA            Upgrade Jepson Parkway at        $3,200,000
North and South Gates of
Travis Air Force Base and
widen Vanden Road segment,
Solano County.............
3221           CT            Widen Route 67, Seymour....        $800,000
3222           ............  ...........................              $0
3223           CT            Widen Canal Street,                $400,000
Shelton, CT...............
3224           NJ            Construct CR 521/Ocean           $1,600,000
Drive and Middle
Thoroughfare Bridge
Replacement, Cape May
County....................
3225           OR            I-205 widening, Clackamas        $1,600,000
County....................
3226           OK            Construct interchange south        $200,000
of I-40 along Indian
Nation Turnpike near
Henryetta.................
3227           MO            Complete upgrade of U.S. 40-     $1,600,000
61 to 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          $11,120,000
Force Base North Entry
Access Project with
related improvements......
3229           CA            Construction and                   $800,000
enhancements of trails in
the Santa Monica Mountains
National Recreation Area..
3230           KY            Construct South Airfield         $2,400,000
Road, Boone County,
Kentucky..................
3231           LA            Construction of pedestrian         $160,000
and bike path adjacent to
Tammany Trace Rails-to-
Trails Corridor...........
3232           NY            Construction of pedestrian          $80,000
walkways in Village of
Northport.................
3233           NV            Design and Construction of       $1,600,000
I-80 interchange in
Fernley...................
3234           OH            Eastgate Area Improvements,      $3,360,000
I-275 and SR 32, Clermont
County....................
3235           PA            Pennsylvania Turnpike-           $8,000,000
Interstate 95 Interchange
Project, Bucks County, PA.
3236           GA            Commission a study and              $80,000
report regarding
construction and
designation of a new
Interstate linking
Augusta, Macon, Columbus,
Montgomery, and Natchez...

[[Page 1382]]
119 STAT. 1382


3237           CT            Construct Shoreline                $800,000
Greenway Trail, Madison...
3238           NE            New roads and overpasses to      $7,200,000
relieve congestion and
improve traffic flow
Antelope Valley--Lincoln,
NE........................
3239           CA            Reconstruct Atlantic Ave.        $2,600,000
and improve drainage from
Ardmore St. to Imperial
Hwy in South Gate.........
3240           SD            Construct Railroad                 $880,000
Underpass on Hwy 34 in
Pierre....................
3241           AR            I40-Highway 89 Interchange.      $2,400,000
3242           WA            Kent, WA Willis Street UP          $400,000
Railroad Grade Separation
Project...................
3243           IL            Replace Interstate 74            $3,200,000
Bridge, Moline............
3244           CA            Implement SFgo Van Ness          $5,600,000
Corridor Improvements.....
3245           NC            Battleground Avenue Rail to        $800,000
Trail Project, Guilford
County, NC................
3246           IL            Construction of an               $4,800,000
Extension of Atkinson Road
to Intersect with IL 120
and IL 137................
3247           OH            I-70, I-71 Split                 $6,400,000
reconfiguration, Columbus.
3248           MI            Delta County, CR 186 from M-       $192,000
35 at Brampton to U.S. 2
and U.S. 41--Bituminous
overlay with super
elevation, correction,
curb, and gutter..........
3249           TN            Niota, TN Improving Vehicle         $79,200
Effiecies at At-Grade
highway-Railroad Crossings
3250           NY            Construct access to the NYS      $1,200,000
Thruway--Montezuma
National Wildlife Reserve.
3251           MN            Corridor design work, I-94         $400,000
and Radio Drive, Woodbury,
MN........................
3252           TN            Develop trails, bike paths         $200,000
and recreational
facilities on Brady
Mountain, Cumberland
County for Cumberland
Trail State Park..........
3253           WA            Access Downtown Phase II: I-     $9,200,000
405 Downtown Bellevue
Circulation Improvements..
3254           PA            Reconstruct PA Route 274,          $800,000
at PA Route 11/15,
Duncannon.................
3255           PA            Road and pedestrian              $1,200,000
improvements and
realignment, through
construction, in York City
NW Triangle...............
3256           NY            Rockland County highway          $1,400,000
railroad grade crossing
safety improvements.......
3257           OH            Calm traffic on Greenfield       $1,360,000
St. in City of Tiffin and
improve intersection of
Greenfield St. with Routes
18 and 101................
3258           IA            Construction of NW 26th St.        $800,000
interchange on I-35, Polk
Co........................
3259           NY            To conduct design and            $4,800,000
environmental studies
along proposed Northern
Tier Expressway...........
3260           IL            Undertake Traffic                $1,600,000
Mitigation and Circulation
Enhancements on 57th and
Lake Shore Drive, Chicago.
3261           IL            For the construction of a        $1,400,000
highway on new alignment
to create a cross town
route across Godfrey......
3262           MI            Construct Industrial Park          $395,200
Service Road and Caine
Road Bridge Replacement.
Village of Millington,
Tuscola County............

[[Page 1383]]
119 STAT. 1383


3263           TX            Loop 281 Mobility and            $2,736,000
Safety Improvements,
Longview, TX..............
3264           TX            Upgrade Fulghum Road Bridge      $2,480,000
on I-45 in Dallas County
(TX) to provide safety and
access for expanded
intermodal traffic........
3265           MN            Edge of Wilderness                 $471,000
Discovery Center, Marcell.
3266           IN            Construction of Star Hill        $1,772,000
Road, Clark County,
Indiana...................
3267           TN            Plan and construct a               $320,000
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, Shelbyville........
3268           TX            Construct Park Row bypass        $1,600,000
from Texas State Highway 6
to the Eldridge Parkway in
Houston, TX...............
3269           CA            Implement Northwest San          $2,444,800
Fernando Valley Road and
Safety Improvements.......
3270           KY            Construct two bridges           $28,000,000
across the Ohio River from
Louisville to southern
Indiana...................
3271           ME            Construction of the Gorham      $11,220,000
Village Bypass, Gorham....
3272           OK            Reconstruction of the I-40      $16,000,000
Crosstown Expressway from
I-44 to I-35 in downtown
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma...
3273           MD            I-695, MD147 to I-695......      $3,792,000
3274           SC            Upgrade Hwy 21 Bypass Grade        $560,000
Crossings.................
3275           MD            Upgrade MD 175 in Anne             $800,000
Arundel County between MD
170 and the Baltimore
Washington Parkway........
3276           OK            Construct and widen six          $8,800,000
lanes on Interstate 44
from the Arkansas River
extending east
approximately 3.7 miles to
Yale Avenue in Tulsa, OK..
3277           OR            North Bend Waterfront              $992,000
District Boardwalk
Construction..............
3278           CT            Make Improvements to North         $240,000
Stonington, CT Westerly,
R.I. Pawcatuck River
Bridge....................
3279           VA            Construct improvements at I-     $9,400,000
264 interchange in
Virginia Beach............
3280           CA            Construct Western                $2,400,000
Placerville Interchanges
on State Route 50.........
3281           CT            Construction of Housatonic         $800,000
River Walk, Shelton, CT...
3282           NY            NYS Route 5, 8, 12                 $800,000
Interchange
reconstruction: Town of
New Hartford..............
3283           NY            Implement Improvements for         $600,000
Pedestrian Safety in Bronx
County....................
3284           CA            Improve West Adams Blvd.           $200,000
Streetscape in West Adams
Historic District, Los
Angeles...................
3285           CA            Improve access from I-8 and        $800,000
construct parking lot for
the Imperial Sand Dunes
Recreation Area Visitor's
Center, Imperial Valley...
3286           PA            Construction of low-impact,      $8,000,000
spine roadway serving the
North Delaware Riverfront
corridor, City of
Philadelphia..............
3287           AL            Construct interchange on I-      $2,400,000
59 between I-59 and 49th
Street in Fort Payne, AL..
3288           FL            Coordinated Regional             $1,200,000
Transportation Study of
U.S. 98 from Pensacola Bay
Bridge, Escambia County,
to Hathaway Bridge, Bay
County, Florida...........

[[Page 1384]]
119 STAT. 1384


3289           GA            Leesburg North Bypass from         $400,000
U.S. 19 to SR 195, Lee
County....................
3290           LA            Peters Road improvements in        $800,000
Plaquemines Parish........
3291           GA            Upgrade sidewalks,                 $400,000
lighting, landscaping from
Cherry Street to Hampton
Street, Industrial Park to
Dooly Street, Montezuma...
3292           ............  ...........................              $0
3293           GA            U.S. 27 Reconstruction from        $800,000
Colquit to CR 279.........
3294           TX            Loop 180 (Project code 1190-       $800,000
01-035) in Whitney, TX
from FM 933/FM 1713 to FM
933S of Whitney...........
3295           IA            U.S. 30 widening,                $1,840,000
reconstruction in Story
and Marshall Counties,
Iowa......................
3296           TX            U.S. 377 from SH 144 to the      $3,000,000
eastern intersection of
BUS 377H, Hood Co.........
3297           NY            Construct and improve              $400,000
pedestrian streetscapes
along Sunrise Highway in
Freeport..................
3298           IA            Construct Principal              $4,000,000
Riverwalk, Des Moines.....
3299           NY            Construct access ramps to        $6,400,000
Rt. 32-6/17-CR 105 in
Orange County.............
3300           IL            Resurface Shawnee College        $1,261,000
Road, Pulaski County......
3301           MI            Canton, Pave Cherry Hill         $1,600,000
Rd. between Canton Ctr.,
and Haggerty..............
3302           AR            Springdale, AR--                 $9,000,000
Improvements to Johnson
Road from Hwy 412 to I-540
through Springdale and
Johnson...................
3303           NC            Environmental studies and        $4,800,000
construction of Garden
Parkway...................
3304           AZ            U.S. 60 and U.S. 93              $1,600,000
connection on the eastern
edge of central Wickenburg
3305           GA            Construction of I-575 HOV          $800,000
Lanes from Sixes Road to
SR 20, Cherokee County,
Georgia...................
3306           WA            I-405-SR 167 interchange--       $1,600,000
Rebuild the interchange
and add additional lanes
to relieve congestion.....
3307           MN            U.S. 10 corridor                 $2,000,000
improvement between Blaine
and St. Cloud: design and
ROW acquisition...........
3308           CA            Walnut Grove at Broadway           $200,000
Intersection Capacity
Enhancements, San Gabriel.
3309           KY            Widen and Reconstruct KY           $960,000
698 at Mason Gap Road,
Lincoln County............
3310           OR            Medford, OR to construct           $800,000
sidewalks and improve
storm drainage and gutters
for the Citys Safe Walk
Plan......................
3311           MN            Construct a pedestrian and         $878,080
bicycle bridge across TH
169, Onamia...............
3312           NY            Improve Montauk Highway          $6,400,000
from CR 46 to Barnes Road,
Suffolk County............
3313           ............  ...........................              $0
3314           AR            Study and construction of       $35,000,000
8th Street, in
Bentonville, AR from
Interstate 540, (including
direct access to I-540) to
SW Elm Tree Road..........
3315           MN            Cedar Lake Regional Trail,       $3,000,000
Minneapolis...............
3316           TX            Reconstruct Union Pacific          $800,000
Railroad bridge over
widened Business U.S. 287.
3317           AK            Anchorage Traffic                $5,000,000
Congestion Relief.........

[[Page 1385]]
119 STAT. 1385


3318           VA            Expansion of Battlefield         $1,600,000
Parkway from East Market
Street at Route 7 to
Sycolin Road, SE..........
3319           OR            Construction of the I-84,        $1,600,000
U.S. 395 Stanfield
Interchange Improvement
Project...................
3320           IN            Design and reconstruct             $744,000
residential streets in the
City of Muncie, Indiana...
3321           CA            Improvement of Main Street--       $800,000
Shenandoah Road/SR 49
Intersection, Plymouth....
3322           SD            Design and construct new         $3,200,000
Meridian Bridge across the
Missouri River south of
Yankton, South Dakota.....
3323           AK            Earthwork and roadway           $48,000,000
construction Gravina
Access Project............
3324           GA            Improvement and                    $800,000
construction of SR 40 from
east of St. Marys cutoff
at mile post 5.0, Charlton
County to County Route 61,
Camden County, Georgia....
3325           NJ            Route 22 Sustainable             $3,000,000
Corridor Plan.............
3326           OR            Hood River, OR, Frontage           $400,000
Road Crossing Project.....
3327           GA            Construct and Improve            $1,600,000
Westside Parkway, Northern
Section, in Fulton County.
3328           ............  ...........................              $0
3329           GA            Widen SR 133 from Spence           $800,000
Field to SR 35 in Colquitt
County, Georgia...........
3330           FL            West Palm Beach, Florida,          $800,000
Flagler Drive Re-
configuration.............
3331           FL            Implement Snake Road (BIA          $800,000
Route 1281) Widening and
Improvements..............
3332           NY            Reconstruction of Portland       $2,400,000
Ave. from Rochester City
line to Titus Ave. in
Irondequoit, NY...........
3333           FL            Alleviate congestion at            $400,000
Atlantic Corridor Greenway
Network, City of Miami
Beach, FL.................
3334           ............  ...........................              $0
3335           WA            SR 704 Cross-Base Highway,       $4,000,000
Spanaway Loop Road to SR 7
3336           CA            Restoration of Victoria            $400,000
Avenue in the City of
Riverside, CA.............
3337           MN            I-494 Lane Addition........      $1,600,000
3338           GA            Uptown Jogging, Bicycle,           $400,000
Trolley Trail, Columbus,
Georgia...................
3339           CA            Study and construct highway     $12,600,000
alternatives between
Orange and Riverside
Counties, directed by the
Riverside Orange Corridor
Authority working with
local government agencies,
local transp. authorities,
and guided by the current
MIS.......................
3340           OH            Rehabilitation or                  $240,000
replacement of highway-
rail grade separations
along the West Central
Ohio Port Authority route
in Champaign and Clark
Counties..................
3341           FL            Improvements to I-75 in the      $1,800,000
City of Pembroke Pines,
Florida...................
3342           LA            Construction of new              $1,440,000
interchange Causeway at
Earhart-LA 3139...........

[[Page 1386]]
119 STAT. 1386


3343           GA            Construction of                    $400,000
infrastructure for inter-
parcel access, median
upgrades, lighting, and
beautification along
Highway 78 corridor.......
3344           MI            Design, Right-of-Way and         $2,400,000
Construction of the I-196
Chicago Drive (Baldwin
Street) Interchange
Modification, Michigan....
3345           VA            I-66 and Route 29                $5,600,000
Gainesville Interchange
Project...................
3346           FL            SR 688 Ulmerton Road             $8,000,000
Widening (Lake Seminole
Bypass Canal to El Centro
Ranchero).................
3347           OK            Navajoe Gateway                    $800,000
Improvements Project, U.S.
62 in Altus, OK...........
3348           NV            Construction of Carson City        $800,000
Freeway...................
3349           TN            Upgrade lights and gates           $160,000
and motion sensor
controlling circuitry at
the highway rail grade
crossing located on
Wenasoga Road/ FAS 8224,
Middleton, TN.............
3350           WV            Construct connector road           $600,000
from north end of RHL
Boulevard to State Route
601 (Jefferson Road)......
3351           NY            Construct Siena College            $800,000
campus perimeter road,
Loudonville, NY...........
3352           AL            Construct additional lanes       $1,360,000
on SR 77 from Southside,
Alabama to Green Valley
Road......................
3353           TX            Environmental mitigation         $1,600,000
related to the SH 195
project and related
improvements in Williamson
County that had adverse
effects on the Karst cave
system....................
3354           AL            The City of Calera,              $5,440,000
Alabama--Northern Bypass
Segment (U.S. Highway 31
to Alabama State Highway
25).......................
3355           WA            Construct a single point         $1,080,000
urban interchange (SPUI)
under I-5 at South 272nd
St........................
3356           IN            Reconstruct bridges at             $400,000
County Roads 200E and 300E
in LaPorte County, Indiana
3357           MI            Widen and Reconstruct            $5,920,000
Walton Blvd. in Auburn
Hills from Opdyke to
Squirrel Rd...............
3358           GA            Commission a study and             $240,000
report regarding the
construction and
designation of a new
Interstate linking
Savannah, Augusta, and
Knoxville.................
3359           ............  ...........................              $0
3360           CA            Pedestrian Beach Trail in          $800,000
San Clemente, CA..........
3361           TX            U.S. 90--Construct 6             $1,600,000
mainlanes from east of
Mercury to east of
Wallisville...............
3362           PA            Construct highway safety           $720,000
and capacity improvements
to improve the access to
the KidsPeace Broadway
Campus....................
3363           GA            GA 400 and McGinnis Ferry          $720,000
Road Interchange, Forsyth
County, GA................
3364           GA            Construction of bypass             $400,000
around town of Hiram, from
SR 92 to U.S. 278,
Paulding County, Georgia..
3365           GA            Construct U.S. 411                 $800,000
Connector from U.S. 41 to
I-75, Bartow County,
Georgia...................
3366           TX            Construct access road            $1,056,000
connecting Port of
Beaumont property on east
bank of Neches River to I-
10 access road east of the
Neches River..............
3367           MD            U.S. 220/MD 53 North-South         $800,000
Corridor..................

[[Page 1387]]
119 STAT. 1387


3368           FL            Acquire Right-of-Way for           $200,000
Ludlam Trail, Miami,
Florida...................
3369           NY            Construct Northern State         $1,360,000
Parkway and LIE access at
Marcus Ave. and Lakeville
Rd. and associated Park
and Ride..................
3370           PA            Construct interim U.S. 422         $800,000
improvements at Valley
Forge river crossing......
3371           NY            Design and construction of       $1,600,000
Renaissance Square in
Rochester, NY.............
3372           AL            Alabama Hwy 36 Extension           $240,000
and Widening--Phase II....
3373           PA            Northfield site roadway            $400,000
extension from Rt. 60 to
Industrial Park near the
Pittsburgh International
Airport...................
3374           OH            Plan and construct                 $760,000
pedestrian trail along the
Ohio and Erie Canal
Towpath Trail in downtown
Akron, OH.................
3375           TX            Reconstruct I-30 Trinity        $27,200,000
River Bridge--Dallas, TX..
3376           TX            Reconstruct I-30 Trinity           $800,000
River Bridge--Dallas, TX..
3377           GA            Construction of interchange        $800,000
on I-985 north of SR 13,
Hall County, Georgia......
3378           ............  ...........................              $0
3379           FL            Temple Terrace Highway             $800,000
Modification..............
3380           WY            Burma Rd: Extension from I-      $1,600,000
90 to Lakeway Rd..........
3381           NJ            Construct Western Blvd.          $3,200,000
extension from Northern
Blvd. to S.H. Rt. 9, Ocean
County, NJ................
3382           FL            Powerline Rearvision motor         $800,000
carrier backover motor
carrier safety research...
3383           NH            Environmental mitigation at      $1,200,000
Sybiak Farm in Londonderry
to offset effects of I-93
improvements..............
3384           MI            East Grand River                 $1,600,000
Improvements, Brighton
Township, Michigan........
3385           KY            Replace Brent Spence             $1,600,000
Bridge, Kenton County,
Kentucky..................
3386           TX            Construction of projects         $9,600,000
that relieve congestion in
and around the Texas
Medical Center complex....
3387           CA            Hazel Avenue ITS                   $400,000
Improvements, Folsom Blvd.
to Placer County..........
3388           FL            SR 688 Ulmerton Road             $8,000,000
widening (west of 38th
street to west of I275)...
3389           NH            Environmental mitigation at      $1,520,000
Crystal Lake in Manchester
to offset effects of I-93
improvements..............
3390           VA            Widening I-95 between Rt.          $800,000
123 and Fairfax County
Parkway...................
3391           PA            Armstrong County, PA             $1,920,000
Slatelick Interchange for
PA 28 at SR 3017..........
3392           OK            Reconstruct the I-44--Fort         $800,000
Still Key Gate Interchange
3393           GA            Greene County, Georgia           $1,600,000
conversion of I-20 and
Carey Station Road
overpass to full
interchange...............

[[Page 1388]]
119 STAT. 1388


3394           OH            Upgrade overpass and               $800,000
interchange at U.S. 24 and
SR 66 in the City of
Defiance..................
3395           NE            I-80 Interchange at Pflug          $800,000
Road, Sarpy County,
Nebraska..................
3396           FL            SR 70 improvements in              $400,000
Highland, DeSoto and
Okeechobee Counties.......
3397           VA            Cathodic Bridge Protection         $560,000
for Veterans Memorial
Bridge and the Berkely
Bridge in the Commonwealth
of Virginia...............
3398           IN            Reconstruct McClung Road           $600,000
from State Road 39 to Park
Street in LaPorte, Indiana
3399           OH            Riversouth Street Network        $2,400,000
Improvements in Columbus..
3400           GA            National Infantry Museum         $3,000,000
Transportation Network,
Georgia...................
3401           AK            Wideband multimedia mobile       $5,000,000
emergency communications
pilot project Wasilla,
Alaska....................
3402           MD            Widen road and improve             $800,000
interchanges of I-81 from
south of I-70 to north of
Halfway Boulevard.........
3403           TX            Expansion of U.S. 385 4-         $1,600,000
lane divide south of Crane
to McCarney...............
3404           VA            Old Mill Road Extension....      $1,280,000
3405           GA            Commission a study and             $240,000
report regarding
construction and
designation of a new
Interstate linking
Augusta, Macon, Columbus,
Montgomery, and Natchez...
3406           CO            Improvements on U.S. 36          $1,120,000
corridor from I-25 to
Boulder. Improvements
include interchange and
overpass reconstruction...
3407           AZ            Design and construct bridge      $2,960,000
and roadway approaches
across Tonto Creek at
Sheeps Crossing south of
Payson, AZ................
3408           NE            Missouri River Bridges           $2,000,000
between U.S. 34, I-29 in
Iowa and U.S. 75 in
Nebraska..................
3409           NY            Reconstruct--Orangeport            $680,000
Road from NYS Rt. 31 to
Slayton Settlement Road--
Niagara County, NY........
3410           TN            Construct sound-walls              $664,000
between I-65 and Harding
Place in Davidson County..
3411           ID            Reconstruct and Realign SH       $1,600,000
55 in Idaho between
Mileposts 94 and 102......
3412           FL            Pinellas Countywide              $8,000,000
Intelligent Transportation
System--Phase 2...........
3413           OK            Realignment of U.S. 287            $800,000
around Boise City, OK.....
3414           FL            Replace Heckscher Drive (SR      $1,600,000
105) Bridge across Broward
River.....................
3415           TX            FM 156 Road Relocation at        $6,500,000
Alliance Airport, Texas...
3416           TX            Upgrade Caesar Chavez            $2,400,000
Boulevard from San Antonio
Street to Brazos Street...
3417           FL            Coral Way, SR 972 Highway          $400,000
Beautification, Phase One,
Miami, Florida............
3418           OR            Cascade Locks Marine Park          $400,000
Underpass to address
necessary improvements....
3419           NY            Reconstruction of East           $3,360,000
Genesee Street connective
corridor to Syracuse
University in Syracuse, NY

[[Page 1389]]
119 STAT. 1389


3420           IL            For Cook County to                 $360,000
reconstruct and widen
127th Street between Smith
Road and State Street in
Lemont....................
3421           TN            Widen I-65 from SR 840 to          $776,000
SR 96, including
interchange modification
at Goose Creek Bypass,
Williamson County.........
3422           CA            Auburn Boulevard                   $400,000
Improvements, City of
Citrus Heights............
3423           LA            Bossier Parish Congestion        $2,400,000
Relief....................
3424           LA            Fund the 8.28 miles of the       $1,600,000
El Camino East-West
Corridor along LA 6 from
LA 485 near Robeline, LA
to I-49...................
3425           FL            Bryan Dairy Road                 $3,200,000
improvements from Starkey
Road to 72nd Street.......
3426           GA            Buckhead Community                 $800,000
Improvements to
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        $640,000
fire safety equipment,
Hampton Roads.............
3428           MI            Holmes Road Reconstruction--     $1,600,000
From Prospect Road to
Michigan Avenue, Charter
Township of Ypsilanti.....
3429           TN            Construct a system of              $800,000
greenways in Nashville--
Davidson County...........
3430           UT            Improve pedestrian and           $2,000,000
traffic safety in Holladay
3431           OH            Construction of road             $1,080,000
improvements from Richmond
Road to Cuyahoga Community
College, Warrensville
Heights...................
3432           OH            Construct road with access         $800,000
to memorial Shoreway,
Cleveland.................
3433           TX            North Cameron County East-          $80,000
West Railroad Relocation
Project...................
3434           OR            Construct Pathway From             $520,000
Multimodal Transit Station
to Swanson Park, Albany...
3435           NY            Transportation Initiative          $500,000
to provide for a parking
facility, in the vicinity
of the Manhattan College
Community.................
3436           NY            Phase II Corning Preserve        $4,800,000
Transportation Enhancement
Project...................
3437           NY            Study of goods movement          $1,200,000
through I-278 in New York
City and New Jersey.......
3438           NY            Study and Implement Traffic      $1,000,000
Improvements to the area
surrounding the Stillwell
Avenue train station......
3439           CA            Expand Diesel Emission           $2,480,000
Reduction Program of
Gateway Cities COG........
3440           TX            Construct pedestrian             $1,000,000
walkway on Houston Texas'
Main Street Corridor......
3441           CA            Sacramento County,               $3,200,000
California--Watt Avenue
Multimodal Mobility
Improvements, Kiefer
Boulevard to Fair Oaks
Boulevard.................
3442           NJ            Passaic River--Newark Bay          $400,000
Restoration and Pollution
Abatement Project, Route
21........................
3443           NJ            Downtown West Orange             $1,440,000
streetscape and traffic
improvement program.......

[[Page 1390]]
119 STAT. 1390


3444           NY            High-Speed EZ pass at the          $800,000
New Rochelle Toll Plaza,
New Rochelle..............
3445           TX            Access to Regional               $1,600,000
Multimodal Center--FM 1016
and SH 115................
3446           AR            For acquisition and                $160,000
construction of an
alternate transportation
(pedestrian/bicycle) trail
from East Little Rock to
Pinnacle Mountain State
Park......................
3447           MN            Construct 4th Street               $159,835
overpass grade separation
crossing a BNSF Rail Road,
City of Carlton...........
3448           TX            North Rail Relocation            $1,600,000
Project, Harlingen........
3449           MN            Construct Pfeifer Road,            $201,374
remove 10 foot raised
crossing, Twin Lakes
Township..................
3450           MS            Safety improvements and to         $640,000
widen Hardy Street at the
intersection of U.S. 49 in
Hattiesburg...............
3451           ............  ...........................              $0
3452           MN            Safety improvements to TH       $20,464,331
169 between Virginia and
Winton....................
3453           LA            U.S. 190 (LA 22 to Little          $800,000
Bayou Castine) Widening...
3454           NC            Construct bicycle and            $1,600,000
pedestrian trails, Durham
and Durham County.........
3455           MN            TH 61 Reconstruction from        $8,053,600
2.7 miles to 6.2 miles
north of Tofte............
3456           MN            Phase II/part II--CSAH 15        $2,272,000
to East of Scenic Highway
7 (1.2 miles).............
3457           MN            Reconstruction with some           $800,000
rehabilitation of 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              $2,560,000
Hattiesburg...............
3459           NJ            Study of safe and efficient        $400,000
commercial multimodal
transportation systems
serving the East Coast
Port Complex..............
3460           IL            Construct bike/pedestrian        $2,480,000
paths, Chicago............
3461           IL            Construct Leon Pass                $768,000
overpass, Hodgkins........
3462           IL            Undertake Streetscaping          $3,280,000
project on Harlem Avenue
initiating from 71st
Street to I-80, Cook
County....................
3463           IL            Construct bike path,             $1,920,000
parking facility, and
related transportation
enhancement projects,
North Riverside...........
3464           IL            Upgrade Roads, Summit......        $768,000
3465           IL            Undertake streetscaping on         $768,000
Ridgeland Avenue, Oak Park
Avenue, and 26th Street,
Berwyn....................
3466           IL            Construct bike/pedestrian          $576,000
paths, facilities and
infrastructure
improvements in Spring
Rock Park, Western Springs
Park District.............
3467           SD            Extend the Sioux Falls Bike        $960,000
Trail to the Great Bear
Recreation Area...........
3468           SD            Redesign T corner on BIA #2        $600,000
5 miles SW of Kyle on the
Pine Ridge Reservation....
3469           SD            Extend bike trail in Pine          $200,000
Ridge to the SuAnne Big
Crow Boys and Girls Center
3470           SD            Extend bicycle trail system        $640,000
in Aberdeen...............

[[Page 1391]]
119 STAT. 1391


3471           GA            City of Moultrie                   $750,000
Streetscape Improvements,
Phase III.................
3472           GA            Restore and renovate for           $500,000
historic preservation and
museum the 1906 AB&A
Railroad Building,
Fitzgerald................
3473           GA            Improve sidewalks, upgrade         $500,000
lighting, and add
landscaping, Ocilla.......
3474           GA            Improve sidewalks, upgrade         $750,000
lighting, and add
landscaping, Newton County
3475           GA            Improve sidewalks, upgrade         $500,000
lighting, and add
landscaping, Monticello...
3476           GA            City of Sylvester Bicycle          $400,000
and Pedestrian Project....
3477           GA            Improve sidewalks, upgrade         $750,000
lighting, and add
landscaping, Tifton.......
3478           GA            Improve sidewalks and curbs        $500,000
on Wheeler Avenue and
Carlos Avenues, Ashburn...
3479           GA            Improve sidewalks, upgrade         $500,000
lighting, and add
landscaping, Jackson......
3480           CA            Construct traffic circle in        $240,000
San Ysidro at the
intersection of Via de San
Ysidro and West San Ysidro
Boulevard, San Diego......
3481           CA            Construct and resurface            $800,000
unimproved roads 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               $2,160,000
environmental assessment
of widening and improving
the interchange at ``H''
Street and I-5, Chula
Vista, Chula Vista........
3483           FL            Jacksonville International       $1,600,000
Airport Access Rd. to I-
95, Jacksonville..........
3484           FL            Mathews Bridge Replacement,        $800,000
Jacksonville..............
3485           FL            Hecksher Bridge                    $800,000
Replacement, Jacksonville.
3486           FL            NE 3 Ave. to NE 8th Ave.           $800,000
Rd. Reconstruction,
Gainesville...............
3487           FL            University Ave. to NE 8          $1,600,000
Avenue Rd. Reconstruction,
Gainesville...............
3488           KY            Central Kentucky Multi-          $1,840,000
Highway Preservation
Project...................
3489           WV            Construct East Beckley           $4,000,000
Bypass, including $500,000
for preliminary
engineering and design of
the Shady Spring connector
(Route 3/Airport Road)....
3490           WV            Construct I-73/I-74 High         $4,000,000
Priority Corridor, Wayne
County....................
3491           KY            Construct Kidville Road (KY      $1,360,000
974) Interchange at the
Mountain Parkway, Clark
County....................
3492           NY            Construction and                   $400,000
improvements to Ridge
Road, Lackawanna..........
3493           CA            Construction at I-580 and        $2,000,000
California SR 84 (Isabel
Avenue) Interchange.......
3494           NY            Construction of and                $160,000
improvements to Amherst
Street, Buffalo...........
3495           NY            Construction of and                $160,000
improvements to Grant
Street, Buffalo...........
3496           NY            Construction of and                $160,000
improvements to Hertel
Avenue, Buffalo...........

[[Page 1392]]
119 STAT. 1392


3497           NY            Construction of and                $160,000
improvements to Hopkins
Street, Buffalo...........
3498           NY            Construction of and                $400,000
improvements to Main
Street in the Town of
Aurora....................
3499           NY            Construction of and                $400,000
improvements to McKinley
Parkway, Buffalo..........
3500           NY            Construction of and                $400,000
improvements to Route 5 in
the Town of Hamburg.......
3501           NY            Construction of and                $400,000
improvements to South Park
Avenue and Lake Avenue in
the Village of Blasdell...
3502           NY            Construction of and                $160,000
improvements to South Park
Avenue, Buffalo...........
3503           NY            Construction of Bicycle            $640,000
Path and Pedestrian Trail
in City of Buffalo........
3504           NY            Construction, redesign, and      $1,600,000
improvements to Fargo
Street in Buffalo.........
3505           TN            Improve existing two lane        $4,400,000
highway to a 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        $3,500,000
116 between Lincoln and
Medway to bring road up to
modern standard...........
3507           ME            Improve portions of Route        $1,000,000
26 between Bethel and
Oxford....................
3508           NY            Road improvements and              $400,000
signage in City of
Lackawanna................
3509           NJ            Belmont Ave. Gateway               $400,000
Community Enhancement
Project, Haledon..........
3510           TX            Conduct feasibility study          $800,000
for an off ramp on I-30 on
to Hall Street for direct
access to Baylor
University Medical Center
in Dallas.................
3511           NJ            Livingston Pedestrian              $720,000
Streetscape Project along
Mount Pleasant and
Livingston Avenues........
3512           MD            MD4 at Suitland Parkway....      $4,000,000
3513           NJ            Pompton Lakes Downtown             $800,000
Streetscape...............
3514           PA            Street improvements along          $100,000
North Broad Street,
Hatfield Borough..........
3515           PA            Street improvements to Old         $800,000
York Road, Jenkintown
Borough...................
3516           PA            Street improvements to             $640,000
Ridge Pike and Joshua
Road, Whitemarsh Township.
3517           PA            Street improvements to             $480,000
Skippack Pike (Rt. 73),
Whitpain Township.........
3518           PA            Street Improvements, Upper       $1,200,000
Dublin Township...........
3519           PA            Street Improvements, Upper         $300,000
Gwynedd Township..........
3520           VA            Construct access road and        $1,040,000
roadway improvements to
Chessie development site,
Clifton Forge.............
3521           WA            Fruitdale and McGarigle            $760,000
Arterial Improvements
Project in Sedro Woolley,
Washington................
3522           MS            Improve Ridge Road, Pearl          $800,000
River County..............
3523           MS            Port Bienville Intermodal        $2,400,000
Connector, Hancock County.
3524           WA            Realign Airport Road/              $250,000
Springhetti Ave./Marsh
Road in Snohomish County,
Washington................

[[Page 1393]]
119 STAT. 1393


3525           LA            U.S. 61 (Airline Highway)        $2,240,000
Improvements, Orleans and
Jefferson Parishes........
3526           UT            Widen Redwood Road from          $1,000,000
Bangerter Highway in Salt
Lake County through
Saratoga Springs in Utah
County....................
3527           VA            Widen Rolfe Highway from           $400,000
near the intersection of
Rolfe Highway and Point
Pleasant Road to the Surry
ferry landing approach
bridge....................
3528           MI            Bristol Road improvement         $1,600,000
project from Interstate 69
to North Torrey road......
3529           NJ            Construct parking facility       $1,600,000
at the Robert Wood Johnson
University Hospital and
UMDNJ with access to the
intermodal train station,
New Brunswick.............
3530           WA            Olympia Infrastructure             $684,000
Enhancement Project.......
3531           IN            Downtown Road Improvements,      $5,720,000
Indianapolis..............
3532           TX            Continuation of item number      $1,120,000
92 of the table contained
in section 1602 of the
Transportation Equity Act
for the 21st Century
(Public Law 105-178)......
3533           IL            Upgrade roads, Plainfield..        $240,000
3534           CA            Acquisition of land along          $800,000
CA 86 at the Desert
Cahuilla Prehistoric Site,
Imperial County for
environmental mitigation
related to reducing
wildlife mortality while
maintaining habitat
connectivity..............
3535           NY            Queens and Bronx Counties          $200,000
Graffiti Elimination
Program...................
3536           MA            Cambridge Bicycle Path           $1,000,000
Improvements..............
3537           CA            Conduct preliminary                $800,000
engineering and design
analysis for a dedicated
intermodal right-of-way
link between San Diego and
the proposed Regional
International Airport in
Imperial Valley including
a feasibility study and
cost benefit analysis
evaluating the comparative
options of dedicated
highway or highway lanes,
Maglev and conventional
high speed rail or any
combination thereof.......
3538           MA            Chelsea Roadway                  $2,000,000
Improvements..............
3539           NY            Congestion reduction             $2,000,000
measures in Richmond
County....................
3540           NJ            Construct Hudson River             $800,000
Waterfront Walkway over
Long Slip Canal--Hoboken
and Jersey City...........
3541           CA            Construct Illinois Street        $3,200,000
Bridge/Amador Street
Connection and
Improvements, San
Francisco.................
3542           NY            Construct multi-modal              $240,000
facility in the vicinity
of Brooklyn Childrens
Museum....................
3543           NJ            Construct Parking Facility         $840,000
at McGinley Square in
Jersey City...............
3544           OR            Construction of access road        $814,000
including sidewalks, bike
lanes and railroad
crossing from Highway 99W
to industrial zoned
property, Corvallis.......

[[Page 1394]]
119 STAT. 1394


3545           NY            Continuation of the public         $400,000
awareness program to the
subcontracting entity
which was funded under
Section 1212(b) of Public
Law 105-178 about
infrastructure in Lower
Manhattan.................
3546           OR            Continue bridge repair           $8,000,000
project authorized under
Public Law 105-178, Coos
Bay.......................
3547           NJ            Expand TRANSCOM Regional           $800,000
ITS System in NJ, NY, and
CT........................
3548           CA            Construct new sidewalks in         $400,000
the City of Heber, CA.....
3549           NY            Graffiti Elimination               $500,000
Program in Riverdale
neighborhood of Bronx
County....................
3550           NY            Graffiti Elimination               $500,000
Program on Smith Street in
Kings County..............
3551           ............  ...........................              $0
3552           NJ            Hudson County Fire and             $960,000
Rescue Department, North
Bergen: Transportation
Critical Incident Mobile
Data Collection Device....
3553           NJ            Hudson County Pedestrian           $800,000
Safety Improvements.......
3554           OR            Hwy 199 Safety                   $2,000,000
Improvements, Josephine
County....................
3555           OR            Hwy 99E/Geary Street Safety      $1,002,000
Improvements, Albany......
3556           NY            Implement Improvements for         $500,000
Pedestrian Safety in
Riverdale neighborhood of
Bronx County..............
3557           WA            Improve Mill Plain Blvd.         $1,250,000
between SE 172nd and SE
192nd in Vancouver........
3558           WA            Improve signage along               $60,000
scenic highways in Clark,
Skamania and Pacific
counties..................
3559           ............  ...........................              $0
3560           NJ            Jersey City 6th Street           $1,600,000
Viaduct Pedestrian and
Bicycle Pathway Project...
3561           OR            Middle Fork Willamette           $3,000,000
River Path, Springfield...
3562           ............  ...........................              $0
3563           OR            Pedestrian improvements            $600,000
including boardwalk
extension and sidewalk
construction, Port of
Brookings Harbor..........
3564           NJ            Port Reading--Improvements         $640,000
to air quality through
reduction of engine idling
behind Rosewood Lane......
3565           OR            Purchase communications          $9,000,000
equipment related to
traffic incident
management in Linn,
Benton, Lane, Douglas,
Coos, Curry, and Josephine
Counties..................
3566           MA            Reconstruction of the I-95/      $1,040,000
Rt. 20 Interchange in
Waltham...................
3567           NJ            Route 440 Rehabilitation         $1,000,000
and Boulevard Creation
Project in Jersey City....
3568           MA            Rutherford Avenue                $1,000,000
Improvements, Boston......
3569           GA            SR 10/Peters Street/Olympic      $1,600,000
Drive interchange, Athens.
3570           ............  ...........................              $0
3571           OR            To construct and enhance           $500,000
bikeway between Hood River
and McCord Creek..........

[[Page 1395]]
119 STAT. 1395


3572           NY            To construct greenway along      $1,200,000
East River waterfront
between East River Park
(ERP) and Brooklyn Bridge,
and reconstruct South
entrance to ERP, in
Manhattan.................
3573           OR            Transportation enhancements      $1,000,000
at Eugene Depot, Eugene...
3574           OR            U.S. 101 Slide Repair,           $2,895,200
Curry County..............
3575           OR            U.S. Highway 20 and Airport        $837,000
Road Intersection
Improvements, Lebanon.....
3576           IL            Upgrade 31st Street and          $1,200,000
Golfview Rd. intersection
and construct parking
facilities, Brookfield....
3577           NJ            Weehawken Baldwin Avenue         $1,600,000
Improvements..............
3578           WA            Widen SR 503 through             $1,000,000
Woodland..................
3579           ............  ...........................              $0
3580           NC            Expand Derita Road.........      $1,600,000
3581           IL            Construct Rt. 3 Loop Hog           $600,000
Hollow Road to Monsanto
Road, St. Clair County....
3582           NY            Planning and design,               $800,000
construction, and
relocations for Southtowns
Connector--NY Route 5 from
Coast Guard Base to Ohio
Street, including Fuhrmann
Boulevard.................
3583           ............  ...........................              $0
3584           NY            Implement a roadway                $800,000
evacuation study for the
South Shore of Long
Island, Mastic............
3585           NY            Improve Brooksite Drive            $720,000
from NY 25/25A to Rt. 347,
Smithtown.................
3586           NY            Improve Clover Ln. from Bay        $216,000
Ave. to Bay Rd., Hamlet of
Brookhaven................
3587           ............  ...........................              $0
3588           NY            Improve Dare Rd. from Old          $352,000
Town Rd. to Rt. 25, Selden
3589           ............  ...........................              $0
3590           NY            Improve intersection of Old        $100,000
Dock and Church Street,
Kings Park................
3591           ............  ...........................              $0
3592           NY            Improve Old Town Rd. from          $336,000
Rt. 347 to Slattery Rd.,
Setauket..................
3593           NY            Improve Old Willets Path           $812,000
from NY 454 to Rabro Dr.,
Smithtown.................
3594           NY            Improve Pipe Stave Hollow          $200,000
Rd. to Harbor Beach Rd.,
Miller Place..............
3595           IL            Reconstruction and               $1,339,996
Improvement of North
Lincoln Ave, O'Fallon.....
3596           IL            Reconstruction of 20th           $1,200,000
Street, Granite City......
3597           IL            Road Alignment from                $900,000
Caseyville Road to
Sullivan Drive, Swansea...
3598           NY            Road Improvements Hamlet of        $400,000
Medford, Town of
Brookhaven................
3599           NY            Road improvements, Hamlet          $344,000
of Gordon Heights, Town of
Brookhaven................
3600           NY            Road improvements, Village       $1,200,000
of Patchogue..............
3601           NY            Roadway improvements,              $320,000
Hamlet of Mastic Beach....
3602           ............  ...........................              $0
3603           NY            WLIU Public Radio Emergency        $900,000
and Evacuation
Transportation Information
Initiative, Southampton...

[[Page 1396]]
119 STAT. 1396


3604           UT            Reconstruct 500 West,              $250,000
including pedestrian and
bicycle access, in Moab...
3605           PA            Construct improvements to          $800,000
Chambers Hill Road and
Lindle Road (SR 441) at
its intersections with
Interstate 283 and
Eisenhower Boulevard......
3606           PA            Construct Regional Trail,          $600,000
Muhlenberg Township.......
3607           PA            Rail Crossing signalization        $165,040
upgrade, Main Street,
Lyons Station, Berks
County....................
3608           PA            Rail Crossing signalization        $165,040
upgrade at Hill Road,
Township of Blandon,
County of Berks...........
3609           PA            Safety improvements at           $1,524,560
Liberty Street
intersection with PA Route
61 in W. Brunswick and N.
Manheim Twp., Schuylkill
County....................
3610           PA            Replace Stossertown Bridge         $400,000
(Main Street) over West
Creek in Branch Township,
Schuylkill County.........
3611           PA            Replace bridge over Little         $200,000
Mahantongo Creek at
intersection of Hepler and
Valley Roads in Upper
Mahantongo Twp.,
Schuylkill County.........
3612           PA            Replace Union Street Bridge        $400,000
over Middle Creek in the
borough of Tremont,
Schuylkill County.........
3613           PA            Replace Burd St. Bridge            $400,000
over Amtrak and Norfolk
Southern railroad tracks
in the Borough of
Royalton, Dauphin County..
3614           PA            Hummelstown Borough, PA for      $1,600,000
intersection and
pedestrian realignment and
drainage..................
3615           MN            City of Moorhead Southeast       $1,600,000
Main GSI 34th Street and I-
94 interchange............
3616           MN            Paynesville Highway 23           $1,600,000
Bypass....................
3617           AR            Construction of I-530           $32,000,000
between Pine Bluff and
Wilmer....................
3618           NY            Conduct study to develop            $80,000
regional transit strategy
in Herkimer and Oneida
counties..................
3619           NY            Improve town weatherization        $200,000
capabilities on Tucker
Drive, Poughkeepsie, NY...
3620           NY            Bedell Road improvements,          $104,000
Poughkeepsie, NY..........
3621           NY            Land acquisition and               $400,000
improvements on Main
Street, Beacon, NY........
3622           NY            Construction of sidewalks           $80,000
in Sugar Loaf.............
3623           CT            I-84 Expressway                  $1,200,000
Reconstruction from
Waterbury to Southbury....
3624           DC            Road and trail                     $480,000
reconstruction and
drainage improvements
(APHCC)...................
3625           GA            Central Hall Recreation and      $1,600,000
Multi-Use Trail, Hall
County, GA................
3626           OH            Land acquisition for               $560,000
construction of pedestrian
and bicycle trails at
Mentor Marsh in Ohio......
3627           OH            Design and construct road          $240,000
enhancements Andrews Road
and Lakeshore Blvd. in
Mentor-on-the-Lake, OH....
3628           OH            Design and construct road        $2,500,000
enhancements Cleveland
Port Authority in
Cleveland, Ohio...........
3629           LA            Red River National Wildlife      $2,400,000
Refuge Visitor Center.....

[[Page 1397]]
119 STAT. 1397


3630           TN            For the advancement of           $1,600,000
project development
activities for SR 33 from
Knox County Line to SR 61
at Maynardville, TN.......
3631           CA            To convert a railroad            $4,000,000
bridge into a highway
bridge spanning over the
Feather River between Yuba
City and Marysville.......
3632           ............  ...........................              $0
3633           GA            Construction of interchange        $800,000
on I-985 north of SR 13,
Hall County, Georgia......
3634           ............  ...........................              $0
3635           ............  ...........................              $0
3636           ............  ...........................              $0
3637           CA            Planning design and             $92,000,000
construction to widen SR
in Kern, CA between San
Luis Obispo County Line
and I-5...................
3638           ............  ...........................              $0
3639           ............  ...........................              $0
3640           GA            Design and Construct               $300,000
Railroad Grade Crossing
Gates in Acworth, GA......
3641           ............  ...........................              $0
3642           KS            Northwest Bypass between         $1,600,000
K96 and 119th Street West.
3643           ............  ...........................              $0
3644           IL            State Rt. 78 to Lathrop          $1,840,000
Street to 2900 E (Township
Road)--A 1.5 mile village
street extension, bridges,
and upgrading of existing
street....................
3645           ............  ...........................              $0
3646           ............  ...........................              $0
3647           ............  ...........................              $0
3648           ............  ...........................              $0
3649           CA            Increase Capacity on I-80       $21,600,000
between Sacramento/Placer
County Line and SR 65.....
3650           IL            Bloomington-Normal East            $800,000
Side Highway Corridor.....
3651           ............  ...........................              $0
3652           OH            Morse Road Corridor                $800,000
Improvements, Phase II,
Columbus..................
3653           ............  ...........................              $0
3654           ............  ...........................              $0
3655           ............  ...........................              $0
3656           ............  ...........................              $0
3657           ............  ...........................              $0
3658           ............  ...........................              $0
3659           ............  ...........................              $0
3660           MI            Holland, Michigan,               $2,320,000
Construct River Avenue
Corridor Improvements.....
3661           ............  ...........................              $0
3662           ............  ...........................              $0
3663           ............  ...........................              $0
3664           ............  ...........................              $0
3665           ............  ...........................              $0
3666           ............  ...........................              $0
3667           ............  ...........................              $0
3668           ............  ...........................              $0
3669           ............  ...........................              $0
3670           KY            Central Kentucky Multi-            $460,000
Highway Preservation
Project (plus-up).........

[[Page 1398]]
119 STAT. 1398


3671           KY            The Kentucky Multi-Highway         $320,000
Preservation Project (plus-
up).......................
3672           AZ            Pave remaining stretch of        $1,600,000
the Turquoise 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       $14,000,000
facilities in Ketchikan...
3674           DC            Highway improvements to          $4,000,000
improve access to the
Kennedy Center............
3675           KY            Construct two bridges           $10,000,000
across the Ohio River from
Louisville to southern
Indiana (plus-up).........
3676           OR            TransPacific Parkway               $350,000
Realignment Project, Coos
County....................
3677           AK            Planning, Design, and           $28,425,000
Construction of Knik Arm
Bridge....................
3678           AK            Intermodel facility             $25,000,000
improvements at the Port
of Anchorage..............
3679           AK            Upgrade city roads and           $3,700,000
construct a road and
acquire a hovercraft to
transit the bay between
King Cove and Cold Bay in
King Cove.................
3680           AK            Municipal Road Paving--          $2,000,000
Kotzebue..................
3681           AK            Various Road Improvements        $2,000,000
in Petersburg.............
3682           AK            Construction and                 $3,000,000
Improvements at Alaska
Pacific University........
3683           AK            Various road improvements        $1,000,000
in the City of Kenai......
3684           AK            Float Plane Road in              $1,000,000
Aleknagik.................
3685           AK            Olympic Circle road paving         $500,000
in Gridwood...............
3686           AK            Coffman Cove road paving in        $375,000
Coffman Cove..............
3687           AK            Port Saint Nicholas road         $3,000,000
improvements in Craig.....
3688           AK            Construction of a road           $2,000,000
between Lake Lucille and
Big Lake in Matanuska-
Sustina Borough...........
3689           AK            Hatcher Pass Ski                 $1,000,000
Development Road in
Matanuska-Sustina Borough.
3690           AK            Access roads for the Barrow      $3,000,000
Arctic Research Center in
Barrow....................
3691           AK            Intermodal ferry dock in         $2,000,000
Hoonah....................
3692           AK            Construction of relocation       $5,000,000
road in Shishmaref........
3693           AK            Improvements to Lake Camp        $3,000,000
Road in Bristol Bay
Borough...................
3694           AK            Study on the feasibility of      $2,000,000
constructing a natural gas
pipeline from the North
Star Borough to South
Central Alaska along the
existing transportation
corridors.................
3695           AK            Soldotna: Keystone Drive         $3,000,000
Road improvements in
Soldotna..................
3696           AK            Metlakatla: Walden Point         $5,000,000
Road......................
3697           AK            Anchorage: Traffic               $5,000,000
Congestion Relief.........
3698           AK            Bristol Bay: Transportation      $3,000,000
improvements to the access
road and a bridge crossing
at the Naknek River.......
3699           AK            Statewide: Road culvert          $5,000,000
replacement and repair to
improve fish habitat......
3700           AK            Construction of a ferry          $5,000,000
between Anchorage and Port
MacKenzie.................

[[Page 1399]]
119 STAT. 1399


3701           AK            Aleknagik: Wood River            $3,000,000
Bridge, or design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction..........
3702           AK            Chignik: Inter-Village           $5,000,000
Road, for design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction..........
3703           AK            Kotzebue: Cape Blossom           $5,000,000
Road, for design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction..........
3704           AK            Fairbanks: Tanana River          $5,000,000
Bridge replacement, for
design, engineering,
permitting, and
construction..............
3705           AK            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
in Cook Inlet for the
Westside development/
Williamsport-Pile Bay Road
3706           AK            Fairbanks/North Star             $5,000,000
Borough: Road improvements
to service roads and other
misc......................
3707           AK            Upgrades for road access to      $5,000,000
McCarthy, AK, for design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction..........
3708           AK            Upgrades on the Dalton           $4,500,000
Highway, for design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction..........
3709           AK            Kotzebue: Municipal Road         $2,000,000
Paving Project............
3710           AK            Crooked Creek: Road to           $2,000,000
Donlin Mine, for design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction..........
3711           AK            Kenai: Borough road              $2,500,000
improvements..............
3712           AK            Wrangell: Road improvements      $4,000,000
3713           AK            Petersburg: Road                 $1,500,000
improvements, including
but not limited to design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction..........
3714           AK            Ketchikan: Improve marine        $2,000,000
dry-dock and facilities...
3715           AK            Southeast: Planning,             $2,000,000
design, and EIS of
Bradfield Canal Road......
3716           AK            Gustavus: Dock replacement       $3,000,000
for the Alaska Marine
Highway...................
3717           AK            Upgrades on the Richardson       $4,500,000
Highway, including but not
limited to design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction..........
3718           AK            Bethel: Dust Control             $1,500,000
Mitigation for Rural Roads
3719           AK            Nome: Dust Control               $1,500,000
Mitigation for Rural Roads
3720           AK            Sitka: Improvements to             $500,000
Indian River Road,
including but not limited
to design, engineering,
permitting, and
construction..............
3721           AK            Anchorage: handicapped and       $2,000,000
pedestrian access
construction, surfacing
and other improvements for
2006 National Veterans'
Wheelchair Games..........
3722           AK            Statewide: Mobility                $250,000
coalition--Job access
transportation............
3723           AK            AK-North Pole: Homestead           $500,000
Road/North Pole High
School Boulevard Extension
Project...................
3724           AK            Fairbanks: O'Connor Road           $250,000
Bridge Replacement........
3725           AK            Anchorage: Transportation        $3,000,000
Improvements to the
Creekside development.....
3726           AK            Anchorage: Dimond Center         $2,500,000
Intermodal Facility,
including but not limited
to design, engineering,
permitting, and
construction..............

[[Page 1400]]
119 STAT. 1400


3727           AK            Anchorage: Transportation        $1,000,000
needs for Glacier/Winner
Creek Development.........
3728           AL            Preliminary Engineering,        $25,000,000
Design, ROW Acquisition
and Construction of the
Tuscaloosa Bypass.........
3729           AL            Preliminary Engineering,        $15,000,000
Design, ROW Acquisition
and Construction of the I-
10 Connector..............
3730           AL            Preliminary Engineering,        $50,000,000
Design, ROW Acquisition
and Construction of the I-
85 Extension..............
3731           AL            To construct approximately      $18,000,000
13 mile four lane
thoroughfare to connect
the Foley Beach Express to
I-10/Highway 83 Baldwin
County....................
3732           AL            To construct a new              $18,000,000
interchange on I-85 at
Beehive Road in Auburn, AL
3733           AL            To widen Highway 84 to 4         $4,000,000
lanes west of I-65 from
Evergreen to Monroeville
and beyond to the Alabama
State line................
3734           AL            I-65 Widening from U.S. 31       $5,000,000
in Alabaster (Exit 238) to
AL 25 in Calera (Exit 228)
3735           AR            Northeast Arkansas              $10,600,000
Connector (relocation of
Highway 226)..............
3736           AR            Interchange Modification to     $15,000,000
I-430/I-630...............
3737           AR            Hot Springs Extension, East-    $10,000,000
West Arterial: Highway 70
to Highways 5/7...........
3738           AR            Caraway Bridge Overpass....      $1,800,000
3739           AR            Highway 67: Kiehl Avenue--       $4,000,000
Vandenberg Boulevard:
rehabilitating and
widening Highway 67 from
four to six lanes from
Kiehl Ave. to Vandenberg
Blvd......................
3740           AR            Improve State Hwy 88             $3,000,000
(Higdon Ferry Road) in Hot
Springs...................
3741           AR            I-40/Highway 89 Interchange      $3,000,000
Planning and Construction.
3742           AR            Conway, AR Western Loop--        $2,000,000
For engineering, rights-of-
way, relocations, and
continued planning and
design....................
3743           AR            Develop a railroad overpass        $528,000
connecting U.S. Highway 67
and U.S. Highway 371 in
Prescott..................
3744           AR            Highway 77 Rail Grade            $3,000,000
Separation in Marion......
3745           AR            Maumelle Interchange--For        $1,500,000
third entrance into
Maumelle..................
3746           AR            Rogers--Construct new            $3,372,000
interchange on I-540 near
the existing Perry Road
overpass..................
3747           AR            Construction of I-49,            $1,000,000
Highway 71: Highway 22 to
Highway 71 near Jenny Lind
3748           AR            Highway 165: Railroad            $2,000,000
Overpass Construction.....
3749           AR            Improve Highway 412: Baxter      $1,000,000
Co. to Ash Flat...........
3750           AR            Highway 412 Relocation:          $1,000,000
Paragould South Bypass....
3751           AR            Widening of Highway 65/82:       $2,000,000
Pine Bluff-Greenville
Bridge....................
3752           AR            Highway 167 Widening:            $2,000,000
Fordyce to Sheridan Bypass
3753           AR            Fort Smith: Improvements to      $1,200,000
Jenny Lind Rd. and
Ingersoll.................

[[Page 1401]]
119 STAT. 1401


3754           AR            Van Buren--Widen and               $600,000
reconstruct Rena Road.....
3755           AR            Russellville Intermodal            $400,000
Facility: construct access
roads from AR Hwy 247,
purchase Right-of-Way.....
3756           AR            Springdale--Improvements to      $7,000,000
Johnson Road from Hwy 412
to I-540 through
Springdale and Johnson....
3757           AR            Construct and rehabilitate       $4,000,000
Fayetteville Expressway
Economic Development
Corridor..................
3758           AR            Construct and rehabilitate       $2,000,000
University of Arkansas
Technology Corridor
Enhancement Project.......
3759           AR            Develop U.S. Highway 71 (I-      $3,000,000
49) to Interstate
standards on new location
between Mena, AR and LA
State line................
3760           AZ            Arizona Department of           $41,335,473
Transportation; for those
projects it has identified
as its highest priorities.
3761           AZ            Replacement of Safford           $3,664,527
Bridge which crosses the
Gila River directly north
of Safford, AZ on North
8th Avenue................
3762           CA            Widen Highway 101 in Marin      $15,000,000
and Sonoma Counties from
Hwy 37 in Novato to Old
Redwood Highway in
Petaluma..................
3763           CA            Construct Hwy 101 bicycle-         $500,000
pedestrian project in
Marin and Sonoma Counties
from north of Atherton
Ave. to south of Petaluma
River bridge..............
3764           CA            ITS and Intersection             $1,000,000
Improvements, LAX.........
3765           CA            Complete Monterey Bay            $1,000,000
Sanctuary Scenic Trail
between Monterey and Santa
Cruz counties.............
3766           CA            Airport Boulevard                $4,000,000
Interchange Improvements,
Salinas and Vicinity,
Monterey County...........
3767           CA            Improvements to Bay Road         $6,000,000
and Northern Access (City
of East Palo Alto)........
3768           CA            Compton Arterial                 $2,500,000
Reconstruction and
Improvement Program,
Compton...................
3769           CA            University Avenue Overpass:      $2,000,000
Construction of bicycle
and pedestrian lanes--East
Palo Alto.................
3770           CA            Sealing unpaved roads in         $1,000,000
Calaveras County..........
3771           CA            Mission Boulevard/State          $3,000,000
Route 71 Interchange--
Corridor Improvements in
Pomona....................
3772           CA            Construct Bristol Street         $1,000,000
multimodal corridor in
Santa Ana.................
3773           CA            Reconstruct I-710                $5,500,000
Interchanges at I-405, at
SR 91, and at I-105.......
3774           CA            Riverside Highway Grade          $5,000,000
Separation................
3775           CA            Hunts Lane Rail Grade            $5,000,000
Separation, San Bernardino
3776           CA            Construct truck lane from        $3,000,000
Britannia Blvd. to the
Otay Mesa Port of Entry,
San Diego County..........
3777           CA            Park Boulevard-Harbor Drive      $2,000,000
Rail Grade Separation, San
Diego.....................

[[Page 1402]]
119 STAT. 1402


3778           CA            Virginia Corridor Rails to       $3,000,000
Trails: Reconstruct Union
Pacific Right-of-Way to
bicycle and pedestrian
trail, City of Modesto,
Stanislaus County.........
3779           CA            Construct bicycle and            $1,000,000
pedestrian trail between
Port Costa and Martinez as
part of the San Francisco
Bay Trail, Contra Costa
County....................
3780           CA            Improve air quality in the       $5,000,000
Sacramento region,
Sacramento Area Council of
Governments...............
3781           CA            Builds a pedestrian bridge       $1,000,000
from Hiller Street to the
Bay Trail, Belmont........
3782           CA            Plan and improve Orange          $1,000,000
County's transportation
system to reduce
congestion, Orange County
Council of Governments....
3783           CA            Construct 20 mile managed        $5,000,000
lanes on Interstate 15
between State Route 163
and State Route 78 (San
Diego)....................
3784           CA            Design and construct access      $2,000,000
improvements in North
Central Business District,
Sacramento................
3785           CA            Modify I-880 and Stevens         $3,000,000
Creek Boulevard
Interchange to ease
traffic congestion in San
Jose......................
3786           CA            Construction of Cross            $5,000,000
Valley Connector between I-
5 and SR 14...............
3787           CA            I-680: Construct High            $2,000,000
Occupancy Toll Lanes in
Alameda County............
3788           CA            Interchange Improvements:        $4,000,000
Laval and I-5, City of
Lebec.....................
3789           CA            Planning, design,                $5,000,000
engineering, and
construction of Naval Air
Station, North Island
access tunnel on SR 75-282
corridor, San Diego.......
3790           CA            ITS Improvements--City of        $2,000,000
Pasadena..................
3791           CA            Construct Interchange at         $1,000,000
Harbor Blvd. and I-80 in
West Sacramento...........
3792           CA            Road and signage                   $500,000
improvements, Southeast
corner of Tahquitz Canyon
Way and Hermosa Drive,
Agua Caliente Museum, Palm
Springs...................
3793           CA            To improve California            $1,000,000
Avenue between Willow and
Spring Streets, Long Beach
3794           CA            For Environmental Review           $500,000
Process at I-5
Interchanges, Stockton,
North Grove, Eight Mile
Road, Otto Drive, and
Hammer Lane...............
3795           CA            Folsom Boulevard Corridor        $1,000,000
Transportation
Enhancements, between Rod
Beaudry Drive and Sunrise
Boulevard, City of Rancho
Cordova...................
3796           CA            Construct I-80 HOV lanes         $2,000,000
and interchange in Vallejo
3797           CA            Alameda Corridor SR 47 Port      $2,000,000
Access Expressway design..
3798           CA            Rehabilitation, repair and/      $1,500,000
or reconstruction of
deficient 2-lane roads
that connect to Interstate
5, SR 180, SR 41 and SR 99
countywide, Fresno County.

[[Page 1403]]
119 STAT. 1403


3799           CA            Improvement of intersection      $2,000,000
at Aviation Blvd. and
Rosecrans Ave. to reduce
congestion (El Segundo)...
3800           CA            Improvements/Widening of SR      $8,000,000
99 from Goshen to
Kingsbury in Tulare
County, California........
3801           CA            Modesto, Riverbank and           $4,000,000
Oakdale, CA Improve SR 219
to 4 lanes................
3802           CA            Improvements of State Route      $1,000,000
4 in Calaveras County
between Stockton and
Angels Camp...............
3803           CA            Expansion of Kelseyville/        $5,000,000
Lower Lake Expressway in
Lake County...............
3804           CA            Widening of State Route 156      $5,000,000
in Monterey between
Castroville and U.S. 101..
3805           CA            Planning, design, and            $2,000,000
preliminary engineering of
on/off ramp system at
intersection of I-10 and
Robertson/National
Boulevards in Culver City.
3806           CA            Construct eastern loop of        $2,000,000
Campus Parkway in Merced..
3807           CA            Diesel Emission Reduction        $2,000,000
Program of South Coast Air
Quality Management
District..................
3808           CA            Replace South Access to the      $6,000,000
Golden Gate Bridge--Doyle
Drive.....................
3809           CO            Transportation Improvements      $3,000,000
to I-70/Havana/Yosemite
Interchange...............
3810           CO            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to Wadsworth and U.S. 36
Interchange in Broomfield.
3811           CO            Transportation Improvements      $3,000,000
to Wadworth Bypass
(Grandview Grade
Separation)...............
3812           CO            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to U.S. 287, Ports-to-
Plains Corridor...........
3813           CO            Transportation Improvements      $5,000,000
to I-70 and SH 58
Interchange...............
3814           CO            Transportation Improvements      $8,000,000
to Powers Blvd. and
Woodman Road Interchange..
3815           CO            Transportation Improvements      $5,000,000
to I-25 South, Douglas/
Arapahoe Co. line to El
Paso Co...................
3816           CO            Transportation Improvements      $4,000,000
to U.S. 36 Corridor.......
3817           CO            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to U.S. 24--Tennessee Pass
3818           CO            Transportation Improvements      $1,000,000
to Bromley Lane and U.S.
85 Interchange............
3819           CO            Transportation Improvements      $1,000,000
to 104th and U.S. 85
Intersection..............
3820           CO            Transportation Improvements      $4,000,000
to I-25 North, Denver to
Fort Collins..............
3821           CO            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to I-70 East Multimodal
Corridor (Highway Portion)
3822           CO            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to Parker and Arapahoe
Road Interchange..........
3823           CO            Transportation Improvements      $6,000,000
to I-225, Parker Road to I-
70........................
3824           CO            Transportation Improvements      $3,000,000
to I-70 West Mountain
Corridor, Denver to
Garfield Co...............
3825           CO            Transportation Improvements      $3,000,000
to I-76--Northeast Gateway
3826           CO            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to C 470 and U.S. 85
Interchange...............

[[Page 1404]]
119 STAT. 1404


3827           CO            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to Wadsworth and Bowles
Intersection..............
3828           CO            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to U.S. 160--SH 3 to the
Florida River.............
3829           CO            Transportation Improvements      $4,000,000
to U.S. 160, Wolf Creek
Pass......................
3830           CO            Transportation Improvements      $4,000,000
to 56th Avenue and Quebec
Street....................
3831           CO            U.S. 287/Ports to Plains/        $5,000,000
Reconstruction of Existing
Roadways/Expansion to Four
Lanes/Concrete............
3832           CO            U.S. 160/Wolf Creek Pass:        $5,000,000
widen lanes and shoulders.
3833           CO            U.S. 36/Widen lanes and          $5,000,000
construct new interchanges
3834           CO            Fort Carson: I-25 and            $5,000,000
Highway 12/Improvements
and upgrades of
interchange and renovation
to handle increased
capacity..................
3835           CO            U.S. 50 East/Pueblo to           $5,000,000
Kansas Border/Road
widening and improvements.
3836           CO            Heartland Expressway             $5,000,000
improvements..............
3837           CO            I-25 North Denver to Fort        $5,000,000
Collins/Improved
interchanges and road
construction..............
3838           CO            Pueblo Dillon Drive at I-25      $2,000,000
overpass and ramp--
Construction of a Dillon
Drive overpass and ramp
connections to I-25.......
3839           CO            Denver Union Station/            $3,000,000
Renovations...............
3840           CO            Improvements to 56th Avenue      $5,000,000
from Quebec St. to Havana
St. and to Quebec St. from
I-70 to 56th Ave. in
Denver....................
3841           CT            Undertake road improvements      $7,000,000
associated with Coltsville
Area Redevelopment,
Hartford..................
3842           CT            Upgrade Mark Twain Drive,        $1,750,000
Hartford..................
3843           CT            Realign, widen, and              $2,000,000
reconstruct Arch Street
and connect pedestrian
walkways to Constitution
Plaza in Hartford.........
3844           CT            Construct Farmington Canal       $3,500,000
Greenway enhancements in
New Haven, Connecticut and
connect Greenway to
waterfront at Longwharf
Pier......................
3845           CT            Land acquisition,                $5,000,000
remediation, improvements
and construction for ferry-
highway-rail terminal at
junction of Interstates 91
and 95 adjacent to East
Street and Forbes Avenue
in New Haven..............
3846           CT            Planning, design,                $5,000,000
engineering, and
improvements converting
Route 34 highway between I-
95 and Park Street with
corresponding site
recovery in New Haven.....
3847           CT            Construct terminal               $3,000,000
facilities in Bridgeport
for high-speed ferry......
3848           CT            Restructure and widen            $2,000,000
Seaview Avenue in
Bridgeport, to accommodate
future developments.......
3849           CT            Construction of Intermodal       $5,000,000
Transportation facility in
Bridgeport................
3850           CT            Design and widen Route 34        $2,000,000
in Derby..................

[[Page 1405]]
119 STAT. 1405


3851           CT            Streetscape and pedestrian-      $2,000,000
oriented improvements to
and around Campbell Avenue
in West Haven.............
3852           CT            Construct high-speed ferry       $2,000,000
terminal in Stamford,
Connecticut to facilitate
transportation between
Connecticut and New York..
3853           CT            Construct walking bridge         $1,500,000
and trail connecting Mill
River Revitalization
Project with west side of
river in Stamford.........
3854           CT            Relocate Route 72 in             $3,800,000
Bristol...................
3855           CT            Reconfigure four rail            $7,000,000
underpasses in Stamford,
Connecticut to accommodate
commuter and commercial
traffic...................
3856           CT            Upgrade Storrs Road in           $2,500,000
Mansfield, Connecticut and
accompanying streetscape
to improve safety and
mitigate congestion.......
3857           CT            Improve roads for Norwalk-       $2,000,000
Center--West Avenue
Corridor Municipal
Development Plan area and
the Academy Street
Extension Project in
Norwalk...................
3858           CT            Construct improvements and       $2,000,000
upgrades to riverwalk in
Ansonia...................
3859           CT            Replace existing parking         $8,000,000
garage in Middletown, with
4-story, handicapped
accessible parking garage.
3860           CT            Acquire and develop Rails-       $2,000,000
to-Trails project in park
next to Willimantic River
in Windham................
3861           CT            Construct access drive to        $4,000,000
Reidsville Industrial Park
in Waterbury..............
3862           CT            Design and construct             $1,000,000
Quinnipiac River Linear
Trail in Meriden..........
3863           CT            Fund University of               $1,000,000
Connecticut for improving
air quality and reducing
emissions.................
3864           CT            Construct Farmington Canal       $3,750,000
Greenway, City of New
Haven and City of Hamden..
3865           CT            Refurbish and upgrade              $200,000
Powder Hollow Bridge
connecting State Route 190
and Interstate 91 in
Enfield...................
3866           CT            Construct and expand roads       $2,000,000
to relieve congestion on
Route 6 between Commerce
Road and I-84 in Newtown..
3867           CT            Construct pedestrian and           $250,000
vehicular access road to
Riverfront Park in
Glastonbury...............
3868           CT            Widen Route 82 in Norwich..      $1,000,000
3869           CT            Extend Rails-to-Trails             $250,000
project from Southington
to Chesire................
3870           CT            Reconstruct Pearl Harbor        $10,000,000
Memorial Bridge, New Haven
3871           CT            Widen Interstate 95 between      $7,500,000
Branford and North
Stonington................
3872           CT            Widen Interstate 84 between      $7,500,000
Danbury and Waterbury.....
3873           CT            Make improvements to South       $1,000,000
Maple Street Bridge in
Enfield...................
3874           CT            Widen Route 34, Derby......      $1,000,000
3875           CT            Construct and Widen              $1,000,000
Stamford Rail Underpass
and Road Realignment
Project...................

[[Page 1406]]
119 STAT. 1406


3876           CT            Reconstruct and widen Homer      $1,000,000
St. and Chase Ave. in
Waterbury from Waterville
Avenue to Nottingham
Terrace...................
3877           CT            Make improvements to Groton        $750,000
Bicycle and Pedestrian
Trails and Facilities.....
3878           CT            Street and streetscape             $750,000
improvements along
Campbell Ave., West Haven.
3879           CT            Construct New Arterial             $750,000
Roadway from Boston Avenue
North to proposed Lake
Success Business Park in
Bridgeport................
3880           CT            Make improvements to               $500,000
Plainfield Moosup Pond
Road......................
3881           CT            Construct UCONN Storrs             $500,000
Campus-Hillside Road......
3882           CT            Construct Shoreline                $250,000
Greenway Trail, Guilford,
Banford, East Haven.......
3883           DE            Improve Access to the           $20,000,000
Wilmington Riverfront from
I-95 including design and
construction of an
interchange and street
grid redesign.............
3884           DE            Replacement of the Indian       $41,400,000
River Inlet Bridge, Sussex
County....................
3885           DE            Reconstructing I-95/SR 1        $20,000,000
interchange, adding a
fifth lane, and replacing
toll plaza on Delaware's
portion of I-95 corridor..
3886           DE            City of Dover                    $1,000,000
Transportation and
Community and System
Preservation..............
3887           DE            Wilmington Train Station         $6,500,000
Restoration...............
3888           DE            Replacement of the Lake          $1,600,000
Gerar Bridge in Rehoboth
Beach.....................
3889           DE            Wyoming Mill Road                $1,500,000
Realignment, Dover........
3890           DE            Replacement of the Woodland      $2,500,000
Ferry on the Naticoke
River between Seaford and
Laurel....................
3891           DE            Hydrogen Storage Research        $2,000,000
at Delaware State
University in Dover.......
3892           DE            Northeast Corridor Commuter      $5,000,000
Rail Project from
Wilmington to Newark......
3893           DE            Replacement of Railroad          $1,500,000
Crossings in Wilmington
and Marshallton...........
3894           DE            Rehabilitate Auto Tour           $5,000,000
Route at the Bombay Hook
National Wildlife Refuge..
3895           DE            Improve pedestrian and           $1,000,000
bicycle access at the
University of Delaware in
Newark....................
3896           DE            Replacement of Fixed Route       $3,000,000
Transit Buses.............
3897           DE            Enhance and expand the           $3,000,000
DelTrac Integrated
Transportation Management
System....................
3898           FL            I-75 Widening and               $15,000,000
improvements in Collier
and Lee County, Florida...
3899           FL            Sand Lake Road improvements      $9,000,000
between President's Drive
and I-4...................
3900           FL            Construction of Gulf Coast      $10,000,000
Parkway, Gulf County/Port
St. Joe with Bay County/
Panama City...............
3901           FL            Improvements to                  $1,000,000
Jacksonville International
Airport Access Road to I-
95, Jacksonville..........
3902           FL            New systems interchange          $2,000,000
ramps at SR 417 and Boggy
Creek Road in Orange
County, Florida...........
3903           FL            Widening (four lanes) of SR      $4,000,000
87 North from Whiting
Field to the Alabama
border....................

[[Page 1407]]
119 STAT. 1407


3904           FL            Widen SR 710 by two lanes          $600,000
from Congress Avenue to
U.S. 1....................
3905           FL            Widen Palm Coast Parkway         $1,000,000
and I-95 Interchange and
overpass, Flagler County,
Florida...................
3906           FL            Construction of new multi-       $1,000,000
lane tunnel below the
channel to link the Port
of Miami on Dodge Island
with I-395 on Watson
Island and I-95 in
Downtown Miami............
3907           FL            Construct Flagler Avenue           $500,000
improvements, City of Key
West, Florida.............
3908           FL            Improvements to SR 52 in           $800,000
Pasco County, FL..........
3909           FL            Four-Laning SR 281 (Avalon       $3,000,000
Boulevard) in Santa Rosa
County from I-10 to north
of CSX RR Bridge..........
3910           FL            Widen SR 80, Hendry County.      $3,000,000
3911           FL            Construct new bridge from        $1,000,000
West Florida Turnpike to
CR 714 to 36th Street--
Cross S. Fork of St. Lucie
River--Indian Street to
U.S. 1 on east side.......
3912           FL            Construction of four lane        $2,000,000
highway around
Jacksonville connecting
U.S. 1 to Route 9A........
3913           FL            Expansion of Capital             $1,100,000
Circle, NW/SW (SR 263)
from Tallahassee Regional
Airport to Interstate 10..
3914           FL            Construct I-4 crosstown          $8,200,000
connector in Hillsborough
from I-4 to Port of Tampa.
3915           FL            Gulf Coast Parkway--Design,      $8,000,000
engineering, and
construction of a 2-lane
Gulf Coast/US 98 bypass...
3916           FL            City of Hollywood, U.S. Rt.      $1,000,000
1 Young Circle Safety
improvements..............
3917           FL            City of Miami Greenway           $1,000,000
Roadway, construction and
design of Miami Greenway
Road improvements and 5th
St. improvements..........
3918           FL            Orlando, Lake County, widen      $5,000,000
to four lanes State Road
50 from U.S. 27 to Orange
County Line, with
interchange U.S. 27.......
3919           FL            Gainesville, Alachua             $1,500,000
County, Improve North-
South corridor between
Archer Rd. and Newberry
Rd. to provide congestion
relief to I-75 corridor,
SR 21, SR 24, SR 26.......
3920           FL            I-75 improvements, widen to      $8,500,000
six lanes I-75 from Golden
Gate Parkway in Collier
County to Daniels Parkway
in Lee County.............
3921           FL            Orlando, Church Street,          $5,800,000
design and re-construction
of the segment of Church
Street from Terry Avenue
to Westmoreland in
Parramore Neighborhood....
3922           FL            West Palm Beach,                 $2,000,000
Construction of U.S. 1,
Flagler Drive Waterfront
Redevelopment and Traffic
Calming Project...........
3923           FL            Leon County FL: Capital          $7,000,000
Circle, NW/SW, widen
Capital Circle, NW/SW to 4
lanes from I-10 to West
U.S. 90...................
3924           FL            Snake Road, improvements,        $2,000,000
widen and improve Snake
Road (BIA 1281) in Hendry
and Broward Counties......

[[Page 1408]]
119 STAT. 1408


3925           GA            Hwy 78 Corridor Improvement      $4,000,000
Gwinnett County...........
3926           GA            Transportation improvements     $18,000,000
to I-285 interchange at
Atlanta Rd. Cobb Co.......
3927           GA            Queens Road widening and         $1,500,000
reconstruction Cobb Co....
3928           GA            Widening Cedarcrest Rd.            $500,000
from Paulding Co. to
Governor's Towne..........
3929           GA            City of Duluth sidewalk and        $300,000
streetscape improvements..
3930           GA            East Hiram Parkway, from SR      $1,000,000
92 to U.S. 278, Paulding
County new location.......
3931           GA            Transportation improvements      $1,000,000
to U.S. 84 Connector/
Bypass from west of U.S.
84/SR 119 west of
Hinesville to U.S. 84/SR
196 south of Flemington,
Liberty County............
3932           GA            Transportation improvements      $1,000,000
to SR 746/SE Rome Bypass
from SR 101 U.S. 411 Floyd
Co........................
3933           GA            Transportation improvements      $1,000,000
to I-575 from I-75/Cobb
north to Sixes Rd/Cherokee
for HOV...................
3934           GA            Upgrade SR 316 from I-85 to      $1,000,000
SR 10 Loop, Gwinnett,
Barrow, Oconee Counties
new interchanges and HOV
lanes.....................
3935           GA            SR 204/Abercorn Street from      $1,000,000
King George Boulevard to
Rio Road widening.........
3936           GA            SR 96 from I-75 to old           $1,000,000
Hawkinsville Road widening
and reconstruction........
3937           GA            SR 40 from west of CR 61 to      $1,000,000
SR 25/US 17 widening......
3938           GA            SR 247 Connector                 $2,000,000
Improvements from SR 11/US
41 to SR 247, Warner
Robbins widening and
intersection..............
3939           GA            I-285/I-20 West--                $2,000,000
Reconstruct interchange...
3940           GA            Johnson Ferry Road/              $2,500,000
Glenridge Drive widening
from Abernathy Road to
Hammond Drive, Fulton
County....................
3941           GA            SR 15 From Clayton City          $2,000,000
limits to North Carolina
lane widening.............
3942           GA            SR 105 from Cannon Bridge        $2,000,000
Road to Walnut Street
widening..................
3943           GA            SR 369 from Cherokee Circle      $1,500,000
to CR 267/Hightower Circle
Truck Lanes, Forsyth
County passing lanes......
3944           GA            SR 369 widening from SR 9        $1,900,000
to SR 306 and interchange
at SR 400, Forsyth County.
3945           GA            Widen SR 20 from CR 293 to       $1,600,000
CS 5231, Forsyth County...
3946           GA            Transportation improvements      $2,200,000
to SR 306 at CR 65/Waldrip
Road, Forsyth County......
3947           GA            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
to U.S. 411 Connector from
U.S. 41 to I-75, Bartow
County....................
3948           GA            Construct access roads on        $3,000,000
Airport Loop road in
Hapeville.................
3949           GA            Warren County I-20 Frontage      $5,000,000
Road......................
3950           GA            Kennesaw National                $3,000,000
Battlefield Park for land
acquisition in carrying
out viewshed protection
and wildlife abatement....

[[Page 1409]]
119 STAT. 1409


3951           GA            State of Georgia road           $10,000,000
infrastructure
improvements associated
with capacity increases at
statewide military
installations.............
3952           GA            State Road 133, widening         $2,000,000
and improvements from
Moultrie to Valdosta......
3953           GA            Highway 78, improvements to        $500,000
7 mile corridor,
Snellville, GA, Gwinnett
County....................
3954           GA            Greene County, Conversion          $800,000
of I-20 and Carey Station
Road to a full interchange
3955           GA            Southeastern Economic            $2,000,000
Alliance, Next Generation
High Speed Rail
Development...............
3956           GA            Commission a study and           $1,000,000
report regarding the
construction and
designation of a new route
linking Savannah, Augusta,
and Knoxville.............
3957           GA            Commission a study and           $1,000,000
report regarding
construction and
designation of a new
Interstate linking
Augusta, Macon, Columbus,
Montgomery, and Natchez...
3958           GA            Dekalb County, Northlake           $800,000
Streetscape...............
3959           GA            Dekalb County Schools            $1,000,000
bicycle and pedestrian
upgrades..................
3960           GA            Dekalb County, Buford            $1,000,000
Highway pedestrian safety
improvements..............
3961           GA            Transportation improvements      $1,000,000
to Dekalb County, Stone
Mountain Side/Bike Lanes..
3962           GA            Dekalb County, Rockbridge        $2,000,000
Road Corridor improvements
3963           GA            Transportation improvements        $500,000
to Dekalb County,
Southeast DeKalb Arterial
Analysis..................
3964           GA            City of Macon, Second            $3,000,000
Street Bridge Replacement,
Reconstruction of ROW.....
3965           GA            Middle Georgia Clean Air         $4,500,000
Coalition for congestion
mitigation transportation
projects..................
3966           GA            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
to Chattahoochee Hill
Country Regional Greenway
Trail Master Plan.........
3967           GA            City of East Point, Semmes       $1,000,000
Street Construction.......
3968           GA            Transportation Improvements        $500,000
to Broad Avenue Bridge,
Albany, GA................
3969           GA            Fulton County, Atlanta,          $2,000,000
Georgia, right-of-way
acquisition to complete a
multimodal corridor on SR
1019 by closing property
ownership gap.............
3970           GA            Tift County Bypass U.S. 82/      $4,500,000
SR 520 W to U.S. 319/SR 35
E Truck Route U.S. Highway
82........................
3971           GA            Cherokee County, SR 20           $2,000,000
Widening from I-575 to SR
369.......................
3972           GA            Transportation improvements      $2,500,000
to Paulding County, East
Hiram Parkway from SR 92
to U.S. 278...............
3973           GA            Columbia County, SR 104,         $2,000,000
improvements from SR 383
to CR 515.................
3974           GA            Columbia County, Old             $1,000,000
Petersburg Road/Old Evans
Road improvements from
Baston Way to Washington
Road......................
3975           GA            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
to White County, West
Cleveland Bypass from U.S.
129 to SR 75..............

[[Page 1410]]
119 STAT. 1410


3976           GA            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
to Stephens County, Toccoa
Bypass Extension from SR
17 to SR 365..............
3977           GA            Hall County, Widen SR 53         $5,000,000
from Duckett Mill Rd. to
Lake Ranch Court and Old
Sardis Road from SR 53 to
Chestatee Road............
3978           GA            Bartow County, U.S. 411          $3,000,000
Connector from U.S. 41 to
I-75......................
3979           GA            Coffee County, Broxton           $2,200,000
Rocks Restoration Project,
Coffee, and Jeff Davis
Counties..................
3980           GA            City of Smyrna, Railroad         $1,000,000
Quiet Zone................
3981           GA            City of Smyrna, Brawner          $1,000,000
Park development and
construction..............
3982           GA            City of Smyrna, Railroad         $1,000,000
Pedestrian Bridge.........
3983           GA            City of Duluth,                    $800,000
intersection realignment
and road extension of
Davenport Rd. at Buford
Hwy.......................
3984           GA            City of Duluth, sidewalks          $500,000
along Davenport Road......
3985           GA            Pickens County, Repair of          $500,000
Steve Tate Road...........
3986           GA            Gwinnett County, Extension       $5,000,000
of Sugarloaf Parkway, Hwy
120.......................
3987           GA            City of Macon, Bloomfield        $1,500,000
Road, purchase of right-of-
way and engineering.......
3988           GA            City of Macon, Wimbish             $500,000
Road, widening and
striping for bike lanes...
3989           GA            Pierce Avenue, widening/           $500,000
striping to create bike
lanes from Ingelside Ave.
to Riverside Drive........
3990           GA            City of Macon, Rivoli              $900,000
Drive, widening, striping
to create bike lanes......
3991           GA            Rockdale County, Georgia           $500,000
Veterans Memorial Park
pedestrian walkway........
3992           GA            City of Macon, Riverside           $500,000
Drive Streetscapes and
Bike Pedestrian Amenities.
3993           HI            Kapolei transportation          $35,000,000
improvements, Island of
Oahu......................
3994           HI            Widen Queen Kaahumanu           $15,000,000
Highway...................
3995           HI            Construct Honoapiilani          $10,000,000
Highway Realignment.......
3996           HI            Improvements to Saddle Road     $40,000,000
on the Island of Hawaii...
3997           IA            Transportation improvements     $11,000,000
to U.S. 20, 4-lane in
Webster, Sac, Calhoun, and
Webster Counties..........
3998           IA            Transportation improvements     $12,000,000
to U.S. 30, 4-lane in
Marshall, Story, and Boone
Counties..................
3999           IA            Transportation improvements     $12,000,000
to U.S. 34 Missouri River
Bridges, Mills County.....
4000           IA            Transportation improvements      $6,000,000
to I-74, including
Mississippi River
preliminary work, in Scott
County, Iowa..............
4001           IA            U.S. 63 improvements,            $5,000,000
Chickasaw, Bremer, and
Black Hawk Counties,......
4002           IA            Transportation improvements      $8,000,000
to Hoven Corridor/Outer
Drive Project, Sioux City.
4003           IA            Transportation improvements      $6,000,000
to East Beltway,
Pottawattamie County......
4004           IA            Transportation improvements      $6,000,000
to U.S. 30 ``Liberty
Square'', Clinton.........

[[Page 1411]]
119 STAT. 1411


4005           IA            Transportation improvements      $5,000,000
to Edgewood Road Viaduct,
Cedar Rapids..............
4006           IA            Transportation improvements      $3,000,000
to I-80 Interchange at
Alice's Road/105th Street,
Waukee....................
4007           IA            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
to U.S. 61 Bypass, Fort
Madison...................
4008           IA            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
to U.S. 61 and Hershey
Avenue Interchange,
Muscatine.................
4009           IA            Transportation improvements      $3,000,000
to U.S. 63, Waterloo......
4010           IA            Transportation improvements      $4,000,000
to Grand Avenue, Ames.....
4011           IA            Transportation improvements      $3,000,000
to SE Connector/Martin
Luther King, Jr., Parkway,
Des Moines................
4012           IA            Transportation improvements      $3,000,000
to Highland Acres Road,
Marshalltown..............
4013           IA            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
to 65th/67th Street,
Davenport.................
4014           IA            Transportation improvements      $1,000,000
to Highway 4 underpass in
Jefferson.................
4015           IA            Transportation improvements      $1,000,000
to I-235 reconstruction,
Des Moines................
4016           IA            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
to Lake Belva Deer
Transportation Project,
Sigourney.................
4017           IA            Construct SE Connector/          $5,000,000
Martin Luther King, Jr.,
Pkwy, Des Moines..........
4018           IA            I-35 interchange                 $2,000,000
improvements, Ankeny......
4019           IA            City of Council Bluffs and       $3,000,000
Pottawattamie County East
Beltway Roadway and
Connectors Project........
4020           IA            Trail Planning in the Des          $100,000
Moines MPO area...........
4021           IA            Highway 63 in Waterloo,          $3,000,000
Iowa improvements.........
4022           IA            Cedar Falls recreational         $2,000,000
trails including Highway
58 intersection...........
4023           IA            Rail extension to the            $3,000,000
Eastern Iowa Industrial
Center, Davenport, IA.....
4024           IA            Design and construct               $650,000
trails, Carlisle to Des
Moines....................
4025           IA            Improve Great Western               $25,000
Trail, Warren County......
4026           IA            Highway 61 improvements,         $1,500,000
Muscatine.................
4027           IA            Improve, construct, and          $3,000,000
land acquisition, Central
Iowa Loop Trail, Ankeny to
Woodward including the Des
Moines River High Bridge..
4028           IA            Collins Road Improvements,       $2,000,000
Cedar Rapids..............
4029           IA            I-74 improvements in Scott       $2,000,000
County Iowa including
Mississippi River bridge
design....................
4030           IA            Access and transportation          $400,000
enhancements to access
Lake Belva Deer, Sigourney
4031           IA            Widening of Hwy 44, Grimes.        $200,000
4032           IA            Highway 92 improvements            $200,000
including Design in Warren
County....................
4033           IA            Construction of approaches       $1,500,000
and viaduct on Edgewood
Rd. SW over the UP
Railroad, Prairie Creek,
and the CRANDIC railroad..
4034           IA            NW 70th Ave.                     $1,000,000
reconstruction, Johnston..
4035           IA            Construction of Sioux City,      $3,000,000
Iowa Hoeven Corridor--
Outer Drive Project.......

[[Page 1412]]
119 STAT. 1412


4036           IA            U.S. 34 Missouri River           $1,425,000
bridge relocation and
replacement...............
4037           ID            Transportation improvements     $20,000,000
to Widen U.S. 95, Worley
to Mica Creek.............
4038           ID            Transportation improvements     $16,000,000
to Improve SH 75,
Timmerman to Ketchum......
4039           ID            Transportation improvements     $12,000,000
to U.S. 20, Menan-Lorenzo
Interchange...............
4040           ID            Construct interchange on I-     $16,000,000
84 at Ten-Mile Road,
Meridian, Idaho...........
4041           ID            Transportation improvements     $13,000,000
to U.S. 93, Twin Falls
Alternate Route, Stages II
and III...................
4042           ID            Transportation improvements     $11,000,000
to U.S. 30, McCammon to
Lava East.................
4043           ID            Reconstruct Grangemont Road      $7,000,000
(ID Forest Hwy 67) from
Orofino to MP 9.3, Segment
I, II, and III............
4044           ID            Widen Amity Road from            $3,000,000
Chestnut St. to Robinson
Road, Nampa, Idaho........
4045           ID            Construct Washington St.         $1,000,000
North From Addison Ave. to
Pole Line Road, Twin
Falls, Idaho..............
4046           ID            Transportation improvements      $5,000,000
to Bridging the Valley,
Kootenai County...........
4047           ID            Transportation improvements      $3,000,000
to Three Cities River
Crossing, Eagle...........
4048           ID            Transportation improvements      $4,000,000
to SH 55, Between Miles
Posts 94 and 102..........
4049           ID            Transportation improvements      $4,000,000
to Amity Road Widening to
Kings Overpass, Nampa.....
4050           IL            Construct extension of U.S.      $5,000,000
51 from .9 miles south of
Moweaqua to 4.6 miles
south of Moweaqua.........
4051           IL            Construction of Galena and       $5,000,000
Freeport bypasses, U.S. 20
4052           IL            Widen U.S. 30, Fulton-Rock       $2,250,000
Falls (Morrison),
Whiteside County..........
4053           IL            Construction of 11th Street      $6,000,000
Extension, Springfield....
4054           IL            Construction of Capital          $4,000,000
Avenue Project, 7th--11th
Streets, Springfield......
4055           IL            Design, land acquisition,        $5,000,000
and construction of West
State St. (US Business 20)
from Meridian Rd. to
Rockton Ave. in Rockford..
4056           IL            To conduct study of U.S. 67      $4,000,000
bridge over Illinois
River, Beardstown.........
4057           IL            Construction to improve          $2,000,000
access of Interstate 57/
64, Mount Vernon..........
4058           IL            Expand U.S. 67, Brighton to      $1,000,000
Bunker Hill Road, Macoupin
County....................
4059           IL            Improvements to Harrison         $1,500,000
Street, Quincy............
4060           IL            Construction of Joliet           $2,000,000
Arsenal Road improvements,
Will County...............
4061           IL            Continue expansion of IL         $2,000,000
336, Macomb-Peoria........
4062           IL            Construct I-290, The             $2,000,000
Village of Oak Park.......
4063           IL            Improve U.S. Route 34 from         $500,000
Kewanee to Kentville Road.
4064           IL            Construction of IL Route         $3,000,000
31--Algonquin Bypass to
Rakow Road................

[[Page 1413]]
119 STAT. 1413


4065           IL            Road improvements in             $1,000,000
Elmwood Park, Franklin
Park, Northlake, Oak Park,
River Forest, River Grove,
and Stone Park............
4066           IL            Bourbonnais road                 $1,500,000
improvements, Bourbonnais.
4067           IL            Bayview Bridge                     $250,000
improvements, Adams County
4068           IL            Improvements to Maple/           $1,000,000
Manteno Lake Road, Manteno
4069           IL            Replace Interstate 74            $1,500,000
Bridge, Moline............
4070           IL            Constitution Trail                 $750,000
Extension--Grove Street
south to Lafayette Street,
Bloomington...............
4071           IL            Improve transportation           $1,500,000
accessibility at Chicago
Botanic Garden, Glencoe...
4072           IL            Loyola University-Chicago          $750,000
vehicular-pedestrian right-
of-way, Chicago...........
4073           IL            Construct extension of           $1,500,000
Route 3 from Loop Hog
Hollow Road to Monsanto
Road, Cahokia/Sauget......
4074           IL            Engineering,                    $10,000,000
Preconstruction and
Construction of North-
South Wacker Drive,
Chicago...................
4075           IL            Upgrade Roads, Summit......        $750,000
4076           IL            Widen U.S. Highway 30 in         $2,200,000
Whiteside County..........
4077           IL            For the construction of the      $1,000,000
Grand Avenue Underpass,
Village of Franklin Park..
4078           IL            Illinois 31 Roadway              $7,000,000
improvements, Algonquin
Bypass--Rakow Road........
4079           IL            Road improvements                  $700,000
associated with
Diversatech Campus,
Manteno...................
4080           IL            Upgrade Veterans Drive in        $4,000,000
Pekin Illinois............
4081           IL            Street Resurfacing, City of        $500,000
Centreville...............
4082           IL            Design, land acquisition,        $5,000,000
and construction of South
Main Street (IL 2)
Corridor from Beltline
Road to Cedar Street in
Rockford..................
4083           IL            Preconstruction and              $7,500,000
construction activities
for U.S. 51...............
4084           IL            Construct I-290, The             $2,000,000
Village of Oak Park.......
4085           IL            Mitchell Road to Farnsworth      $2,500,000
Avenue improvements,
Aurora....................
4086           IL            Preconstruction and              $3,000,000
construction, East New
York Street, Aurora.......
4087           IL            Improve Great River Road,          $500,000
Mercer County.............
4088           IL            Improve Great River Road,          $250,000
Warsaw....................
4089           IL            Undertake traffic                $1,200,000
mitigation and circulation
enhancements on 57th and
Lakeshore Drive, Chicago..
4090           IL            Upgrade 31st Street and          $1,000,000
Golfview Road intersection
and construct parking
facilities, Brookfield....
4091           IL            Phase II Road Construction,      $1,500,000
Outer Belt West, Effingham
4092           IL            Construct four lane              $1,000,000
extension of IL Rt. 29
from Rochester to
Taylorville...............
4093           IL            Preconstruction and              $7,000,000
construction activities on
U.S. 67 from Macomb to
Alton.....................
4094           IL            Preconstruction and              $5,000,000
construction activities on
U.S. 34 from Monmouth to
Plano.....................
4095           IL            Improve Lightfoot Road,            $500,000
City of Farmington........
4096           IL            Pioneer Parkway                  $1,000,000
improvements, Peoria......

[[Page 1414]]
119 STAT. 1414


4097           IL            Transportation enhancements      $1,000,000
and road improvements
necessary for Downtown
Plaza improvements in
Jacksonville..............
4098           IL            City of Havana, Illinois           $500,000
upgrades to Broadway
Street....................
4099           IL            Improvements to County           $1,000,000
Highway One, Calhoun
County....................
4100           IL            Resurfacing of East Main           $500,000
Street in Staunton,
Macoupin County...........
4101           IL            Bike trail extension for           $400,000
the Kankakee River Trail
Project, Kankakee.........
4102           IL            Improve Highway-Railroad           $500,000
Crossings, Galesburg......
4103           IL            Improvements to township           $500,000
roads in Shawnee National
Forest, Pope County.......
4104           IL            Associated improvements for        $500,000
the Intersection of IL 13
and 37, Marion............
4105           IL            Construction of 11th Street        $800,000
Extension in Springfield..
4106           IL            Widen U.S. 30 in Whiteside         $550,000
County....................
4107           IL            Upgrade 31st Street and          $1,000,000
Golfview Road and
construct parking
facilities in Brookfield..
4108           IL            Bayview Bridge improvements        $250,000
in Adams County...........
4109           IL            Preconstruction and              $2,000,000
construction of IL 13
connector in Harrisburg...
4110           IL            Expansion of U.S. 67 from        $1,000,000
Brighton to Bunker Hill
Road in Macoupin County...
4111           IL            Loyola University-Chicago          $250,000
vehicular-pedestrian right-
of-way in Chicago.........
4112           IL            Constitution Trail                 $250,000
Extension (Grove Street
south to Lafayette Street)
in Bloomington............
4113           IL            Improvements to 11th Avenue      $1,500,000
streetscape, campus trails
and bridges at Augustana
College in Rock Island....
4114           IL            Improvements to Oakland,         $1,500,000
Main Street, Elderado and
Fairview, streetscape in
the vicinity of Millikin
University, Decatur.......
4115           IL            The extension of MacArthur       $2,000,000
Boulevard from Wabash to
Iron Bridge Road in
Springfield...............
4116           IL            Restoration of the historic      $1,200,000
railroad depot and
intermodal in Mattoon.....
4117           IL            Construct overpass, U.S. 40      $1,000,000
to Southwest Andrews Drive
in Greenville.............
4118           IL            Improvements to Cockrell         $1,200,000
Lane in the City of
Springfield...............
4119           IL            Construct extension of             $500,000
Route 3 from Loop Hog
Hollow Road to Monsanto
Road in Cahokia/Sauget....
4120           IN            Construct interchange for          $600,000
146th and I-69, Hamilton
County, Indiana...........
4121           IN            Construction of Dixon Road         $100,000
from Markland Avenue to
Judson Road in Kokomo,
Indiana...................
4122           IN            Widening road (along Gordon      $2,880,000
Road, 6th Street, and West
Shafer Drive) to three-
lane street, with sidewalk
and improvements to
existing bridge, White
County/Monticello, Indiana

[[Page 1415]]
119 STAT. 1415


4123           IN            Cyntheanne Road Interchange        $200,000
and corridor improvements,
Town of Fishers...........
4124           IN            Construct interchange at I-      $1,490,844
65 and 109th Avenue, Crown
Point, Indiana............
4125           IN            Transportation improvements        $250,000
to 126th Street Project,
Town of Fishers...........
4126           IN            Reconstruct 45th Avenue            $540,000
from Colfax Street to
Grant Street, Lake County.
4127           IN            Construct grade separation         $400,000
underpass on Main Street
in Mishawaka..............
4128           IN            Widen Old Meridian Street          $225,000
from two to four lanes,
City of Carmel............
4129           IN            Upgrade traffic signals            $128,000
Phase III in the City of
Muncie, Indiana...........
4130           IN            Transportation improvements        $200,000
to 100 South, Porter
County....................
4131           IN            Widen U.S. 31 Hamilton             $200,000
County....................
4132           IN            Resurface and widen Shelby         $200,000
County, Indiana 400 North
Phases IV-V...............
4133           IN            Reconstruct and widen              $200,000
Shelby County, Indiana 500
East from 1200 North to
U.S. 52...................
4134           IN            Extend Everbrooke Drive            $128,000
from SR 332 to Bethel
Avenue in the City of
Muncie....................
4135           IN            Construct U.S. 231 in            $1,200,000
Spencer and Dubois
Counties..................
4136           IN            Widening Wheeling Avenue           $192,000
from Centennial to
McGailliard Road in the
City of Muncie............
4137           IN            Upgrade rail crossing at            $40,000
93rd Avenue, St. John.....
4138           IN            Study traffic on Muncie             $24,000
bypass from Centennial
Avenue to McGailliard Road
in the City of Muncie and
Delaware County...........
4139           IN            Design and construct Tanner        $248,000
Creek Bridge on U.S. 50,
Dearborn County...........
4140           IN            Reconstruct Boston Street,         $150,000
from State Road 2 to Bach
Street, Larson-Whirlpool
Street in LaPorte, Indiana
4141           IN            45th Street improvements,          $100,000
Munster, Indiana..........
4142           IN            Redevelop and complete the         $600,000
Cardinal Greenway and
Starr-Genett Area in the
City of Richmond..........
4143           IN            Improve Intersection at            $112,000
Jackson Street and
Morrison Road in the City
of Muncie, Delaware County
4144           IN            Replace Samuelson Road             $632,578
Underpass, Portage........
4145           IN            Design and construct             $4,000,000
Indiana Ohio River Bridges
Project on I-65 and 265...
4146           IN            Construct Shelby County,           $100,000
Indiana Shelbyville
Parkway...................
4147           IN            Construct Hoosier Heartland        $600,000
Highway in Cass and
Carroll County............
4148           IN            Improve State Road 332 and         $600,000
Nebo Road Intersection in
Delaware County...........
4149           IN            Design, engineering, right-        $400,000
of-way acquisition, and
construction for the Grant
County Economic Corridor..
4150           IN            Construction of multi-use           $50,000
paths, Town of Fishers....

[[Page 1416]]
119 STAT. 1416


4151           IN            Acquire right-of-way for           $600,000
and construct University
Parkway from Upper Mount
Vernon Road to SR 66......
4152           IN            Conduct study for U.S. 50           $60,000
Corridor improvements,
Dearborn County...........
4153           IN            Construct U.S. 31 Kokomo           $200,000
Corridor Project for
Kokomo and Howard County..
4154           IN            Improve Bailie Street,              $64,000
Kentland..................
4155           IN            Downtown road improvements,      $4,500,000
Indianapolis..............
4156           IN            Construct U.S. 31 Plymouth       $2,200,000
to South Bend Freeway
Project in Marshall and
St. Joseph Counties.......
4157           IN            Construct Margaret Avenue          $600,000
Safety and Capacity
Enhancement Project.......
4158           IN            Preliminary engineering,         $1,120,000
right-of-way and
construction for Perimeter
Parkway--West Lafayette/
Purdue University.........
4159           IN            Construction of Maplecrest       $2,200,000
Road Extension, Allen
County....................
4160           IN            Realign State Road 312,            $832,578
Hammond...................
4161           IN            Construct I-69 Evansville        $2,800,000
to Indianapolis...........
4162           IN            Construct service road             $800,000
parallel in the City of
Anderson..................
4163           IN            Reconstruct Hoosier                $200,000
Heartland Highway, Wabash,
Huntington and Miami
County Indiana segments...
4164           IN            North Calumet Avenue               $240,000
improvements, Valparaiso..
4165           IN            Complete construction of            $75,000
paths at Hamilton County
Riverwalk, Noblesville....
4166           IN            Improve campus streets to          $400,000
increase pedestrian safety
and ease vehicular
congestion in the City of
Anderson..................
4167           IN            Construction of I-64             $1,062,000
interchange, Harrison
County, Indiana...........
4168           IN            Study alternatives along 2          $30,000
miles of railroad to
eliminate in-town highway-
rail crossings to improve
safety and reduce
congestion in Delaware
County....................
4169           IN            Improve SR 9 Greenfield            $100,000
Corridor..................
4170           IN            Redevelop Hazeldell Road,          $200,000
Hamilton County...........
4171           IN            SR 56 Reconstruction,            $1,024,000
Aurora....................
4172           IN            Reconstruct Standard               $260,000
Avenue, Whiting...........
4173           IN            Construct Hoham Drive              $100,000
Extension in Plymouth.....
4174           IN            Construction of County Road      $1,000,000
17-Elkhart................
4175           IN            Construction of Star Hill          $443,000
Road, Clark County........
4176           IN            Design and reconstruct             $186,000
residential streets in the
City of Muncie............
4177           IN            Reconstruct bridges at             $100,000
County Roads 200 East and
300 East in LaPorte County
4178           IN            Reconstruct McClung Road           $150,000
from State Road 39 to Park
Street in LaPorte.........
4179           IN            Highway-rail crossing            $1,400,000
safety related
improvements on Route 37
between U.S. 35 and U.S.
50........................
4180           IN            Maintain full funding of        $20,263,000
TEA-LU HPPs as necessary,
with balance for other
eligible INDOT projects...

[[Page 1417]]
119 STAT. 1417


4181           IN            Removal of I-65/I-70 Market      $5,000,000
Street Ramp and
Streetscaping,
Indianapolis..............
4182           IN            Downtown Indianapolis road       $6,000,000
improvements,
transportation
enhancements,
streetscaping, bicycle
paths and pedestrian
walkways..................
4183           IN            Relocation of railroad           $7,000,000
lines at Gary/Chicago
Airport in Gary...........
4184           IN            Design, engineering, right-      $2,000,000
of-way acquisition, and
construction for the Grant
County Economic Corridor..
4185           IN            Improve Clinton Street           $4,000,000
Corridor and Replace
Clinton Street Bridge
spanning St. Mary's River
in downtown Fort Wayne....
4186           IN            Widen unsafe U.S. 24             $3,000,000
between Fort Wayne and
Defiance, OH..............
4187           IN            Construct and Improve ISR        $4,000,000
62 (Lloyd Expressway) in
Evansville................
4188           IN            Margaret Avenue Safety and       $4,000,000
Capacity Enhancement--
Construct a 4-lane roadway
extending from SR 63 on
Terre Haute's west side to
SR 46.....................
4189           KS            Construction of 4-lane          $20,000,000
improvement on K-18 in
Riley County..............
4190           KS            Reconstruction of I-235/        $10,000,000
U.S.-54 and I-235/Central
interchanges and expansion
of I-235 to a 6-lane
facility between the
interchanges in Wichita...
4191           KS            Replacement or                   $5,000,000
rehabilitation of the
Amelia Earhart U.S.-59
Bridge in Atchison County.
4192           KS            Debt retirement for Dodge        $2,000,000
City Depot project, Dodge
City......................
4193           KS            Reconstruction and              $10,000,000
rehabilitation of the
intersection of K-18 and
12th Street interchange in
Riley County, KS..........
4194           KS            Reconstruction of an             $2,500,000
interchange at U.S. 73 and
20th Street in the City of
Leavenworth...............
4195           KS            Replacement of the Spring        $1,200,000
Creek Bridge on U.S. 160
in Cowley County..........
4196           KS            Construction, improvements,      $3,500,000
and streetscaping for
Wyatt Earp Boulevard/U.S.
Business 50 in Dodge City.
4197           KS            Construction of an               $3,000,000
interchange at K-7 and
55th Street/Johnson Drive,
an overpass structure for
Clear Creek Parkway, and
other access improvements
to K-7 in the City of
Shawnee...................
4198           KS            Reconstruction of K-27 in        $5,000,000
Sherman County............
4199           KS            Street and sidewalk              $1,000,000
replacement in downtown
Fort Scott................
4200           KS            Reconstruction or widening       $3,000,000
of 135th Street from
Metcalf to Nall in
Overland Park.............
4201           KS            Reconstruction of Desoto         $2,000,000
Road in the City of
Lansing...................
4202           KS            Construct I-35 and Lone Elm      $3,000,000
Road interchange and widen
I-35 from 51st St. to 59th
St. in the City of Olathe.
4203           KS            Reconstruction of I-70 in        $2,000,000
Saline County.............
4204           KS            Construction of the Prairie      $3,000,000
State Parkway (KS Hwy 7 to
Mize Blvd.) in the City of
Lenexa....................

[[Page 1418]]
119 STAT. 1418


4205           KS            Rehabilitation and               $4,000,000
reconstruction of U.S. 169
and interchange with U.S.
166 in Montgomery County..
4206           KS            Rehabilitation of U.S. 54        $2,550,000
in Kingman County.........
4207           KS            Replacement of K-39 bridge       $1,189,000
over SKO Railroad in the
City of Chanute...........
4208           KS            Reconstruction and                 $561,000
relocation of interchanges
on U.S. 156 near RS 255
and the Horse Thief Canyon
Reservoir entrance in
Hodgeman County...........
4209           KS            U.S. Highway 50 Shoulder         $4,500,000
widening between Dodge
City and Garden City......
4210           KS            Research and development of      $4,500,000
advanced vehicle
technology concepts at the
University of Kansas
Transportation Research
Institute, Lawrence.......
4211           KS            Research and development of      $1,500,000
rural transportation
infrastructure at Kansas
State University,
Manhattan.................
4212           KY            Owensboro Riverfront            $30,000,000
Development Project in
Owensboro.................
4213           KY            Construction of new I-65        $23,000,000
Interchange in Warren
County....................
4214           KY            Oregon Road Bridge               $1,000,000
Replacement Project in
Mercer County.............
4215           KY            Ashland Riverfront              $10,220,000
Development Project in
Ashland...................
4216           KY            Henderson Riverfront            $10,000,000
Development Project in
Henderson.................
4217           KY            Transportation improvements     $34,000,000
to Brent Spence Bridge....
4218           KY            Transportation improvements      $6,000,000
to AA--I-275 Connector,
Campbell County...........
4219           KY            Abraham Lincoln Project,         $3,500,000
LaRue County..............
4220           KY            Breathitt-Pennyrile              $2,500,000
Extension, Christian
County....................
4221           KY            Transportation improvements      $5,500,000
to U.S. 60 Owensboro,
Daviess County............
4222           KY            Transportation improvements      $4,000,000
to Hwy 163 from Hwy 90 to
Tompkinsville, Monroe
County....................
4223           KY            Feasibility study of               $500,000
construction on U.S. 27 to
I-75 connector road,
Jessamine County..........
4224           KY            Reconstruction of KY 61          $3,000,000
from U.S. 68 in Greensburg
to Columbia (the national
highway system truck
route) 16.1 miles, Green
County....................
4225           KY            Southern Connector from KY       $1,000,000
139 to KY 9, Caldwell
County....................
4226           LA            Transportation improvements     $22,500,000
to I-49 North.............
4227           LA            Transportation improvements     $16,000,000
to I-49 South.............
4228           LA            Improvements to Louisiana       $20,000,000
Highway 1 between the
Caminada Bridge and the
intersection of Louisiana
Highway 1 and U.S. 90.....
4229           LA            Upgrade LA 28 to four lanes     $17,400,000
from LA 121 to LA 465.....
4230           LA            Construct Kansas-Garrett         $8,350,000
Connector and I-20
interchange improvements..

[[Page 1419]]
119 STAT. 1419


4231           LA            Further construction to          $3,585,000
improve draining at
Clearview Parkway (LA
3152) and Earhart
Expressway (LA3139).......
4232           LA            Study of Baton Rouge Loop          $500,000
Project...................
4233           LA            Water Well Road Gateway            $831,000
Corridor (LA 478)--design,
right-of-way, and
construction of 3.6 miles
from I-49 to LA 1.........
4234           LA            Widen LA 18 from Northrup        $1,325,000
Grumman/Avondale Shipyards
to U.S. 90, Jefferson
Parish....................
4235           LA            Red River National Wildlife        $850,000
Refuge Visitor Center.....
4236           LA            Construct ROW improvements         $400,000
from Third St. at James
St. to LA Hwy One at
Broadway St. Acquire
property at Third St. and
Winn St...................
4237           LA            West Lake Overpass--To make      $2,200,000
grade separation
interchange improvements
at Sampson Street.........
4238           LA            Improve by widening,               $400,000
realigning, and resurface
3.2 miles of LA Hwy 820
between LA Hwy 145 and LA
Hwy 821...................
4239           LA            Connection between Highway         $100,000
51 By-Pass and Old Baton
Rouge Highway 1040--
Hammond...................
4240           LA            LA 3224--Hemlock Street at         $519,000
U.S. 61 improvements--St.
John the Baptist Parish...
4241           LA            Louisiana Interstate 49          $7,500,000
South Corridor............
4242           LA            Design and acquire right-of-     $2,500,000
way, Louisiana I-69,
Louisiana Segment, SIU 15.
4243           LA            Construction to improve            $900,000
drainage at Clearview
Parkway (LA 3152) and
Earhart Expressway (LA
3139).....................
4244           LA            Shreveport Intelligent           $1,500,000
Transportation System in
Northwest, LA.............
4245           LA            Widen I-10 in New Orleans..      $2,000,000
4246           LA            St. Tammany U.S. 11 bicycle      $2,000,000
path and sidewalk
improvements..............
4247           LA            Bossier Parish Congestion        $1,500,000
Relief Program............
4248           LA            I-10 Ryan Street exit ramp       $1,500,000
and relocation/
realignments..............
4249           LA            Improve Zachary Taylor           $2,000,000
Parkway...................
4250           LA            LA-1 drainage and sidewalk       $1,500,000
improvements in Grande
Isle......................
4251           LA            Construct I-20 interchanges      $1,500,000
at U.S. 167 at Tarbutton
Rd. Construct East West
Frontage Roads along I-20.
4252           LA            Louisiana University             $2,000,000
Consortium for Smart
Growth Study and
Educational Outreach......
4253           LA            Upgrade El Camino East-West      $1,500,000
Corridor along LA 6.......
4254           LA            Develop and construct St.        $1,000,000
Martinville Bypass, LA 31
North to LA 96............
4255           LA            Construct Leeville Bridge        $1,000,000
from Port Fouchon to
Golden Meadow.............
4256           LA            Improve Natchitoches               $500,000
Johnson Chute and Posey
Road connection to I-49 to
LA 1......................
4257           LA            LA 50 (Almedia) widening           $500,000
and I-310/U.S. 90
interchange improvements,
St. Charles Parish........

[[Page 1420]]
119 STAT. 1420


4258           LA            Upgrade LA 28 to four lanes      $1,000,000
from LA 121 to LA 465.....
4259           LA            Rehabilitation of Street           $500,000
Routes Project in Bogalusa
4260           LA            Construction of I-10 Access        $500,000
Rd., Crowley, LA..........
4261           LA            Replace Kerner Ferry Bridge        $500,000
Jefferson Parish Bayou
Barataria.................
4262           LA            Peters Road improvements in        $500,000
Plaquemines Parish........
4263           LA            Improvements to LA 46 in           $100,000
St. Bernard Parish........
4264           LA            Baton Rouge Intelligent          $1,000,000
Transportation System.....
4265           MA            Reconstruct Chelsea Street       $6,000,000
Bridge in Boston..........
4266           MA            Design and construct             $4,500,000
downtown roadway and
streetscape enhancements
in Worcester..............
4267           MA            Design and construct Rt. 24      $5,500,000
Interchange in Fall River
and Freetown..............
4268           MA            Design and construct             $5,500,000
multimodal improvements
and facilities in New
Bedford...................
4269           MA            Construct access                 $2,500,000
improvements to the
Lawrence Gateway Project,
Lawrence..................
4270           MA            Construct pedestrian and           $500,000
vehicular access
improvements on the
existing Brightman Street
Bridge in Fall River......
4271           MA            Northern Avenue Bridge           $6,000,000
rehabilitation in Boston..
4272           MA            Construct Phase II of the        $6,000,000
Quincy Center Concourse
Extension in Quincy.......
4273           MA            Design and construct             $2,000,000
downtown roadway and
streetscape improvements
in North Adams............
4274           MA            Construct Holyoke Canalwalk      $3,500,000
and streetscape
improvements in Holyoke...
4275           MA            Road improvements between        $3,000,000
Museum Road and Forsyth
Way in Boston.............
4276           MA            Design and construct access      $8,000,000
improvements and
intermodal facilities at
the former South Weymouth
Naval Air Station in South
Weymouth..................
4277           MA            Design and construct Boston      $7,000,000
National Park traveler
information system and
visitor center in Boston..
4278           MA            Construct Haverhill              $3,000,000
intermodal center access
and vehicle capacity
improvements in Haverhill.
4279           MA            Design and construct             $5,000,000
roadway and streetscape
improvements in Franklin..
4280           MA            Construct Lechmere Station       $5,000,000
area roadway and access
improvements in Cambridge.
4281           MA            Design and construct             $5,000,000
Assembly Square multimodal
access improvements in
Somerville................
4282           MA            Construct downtown roadway       $3,000,000
and corridor improvements
in Gloucester.............
4283           MA            Construct the Blackstone         $2,000,000
River Bikeway and
Worcester Bikeway Pavilion
between Providence, RI and
Worcester.................
4284           MA            Construct Melnea Cass            $4,000,000
Corridor improvements in
Boston....................

[[Page 1421]]
119 STAT. 1421


4285           MA            Construct Southeastern           $5,000,000
Massachusetts freight rail
corridor improvements in
Bristol County............
4286           MA            Reconstruct Rt. 24/Rt. 140       $4,000,000
Interchange, replace
bridge and ramps, widen
and extend acceleration
and deceleration lanes....
4287           MA            Design and construct Rt. 20      $2,000,000
access road in Westfield..
4288           MA            Reconfigure Kilby-Gardner-       $2,000,000
Hammond area road network
in Worcester..............
4289           MD            I-70 Improvement Project:       $13,400,000
Frederick, MD.............
4290           MD            Construction and                $11,000,000
dualization of MD 404 in
Queen Anne's, Talbot and
Caroline Counties.........
4291           MD            Construct U.S. 220 MD 53         $9,200,000
North/South Corridor......
4292           MD            Upgrade MD 175 in Anne           $6,700,000
Arundel county between MD
170 and BW Parkway........
4293           MD            Construct a visitor center       $5,300,000
and related roads, and
parking serving Fort
McHenry...................
4294           MD            Construct Assateague Island      $6,300,000
National Seashore visitors
center and related road
improvements..............
4295           MD            Construction of new              $4,000,000
interchange at MD 5, MD
373 and Brandywine Rd.....
4296           MD            Rehabilitate Pennington          $5,500,000
Avenue Drawbridge,
Baltimore.................
4297           MD            Construction and                 $3,200,000
dualization of U.S. 113...
4298           MD            Construct MD 5 Hughesville       $3,000,000
Bypass....................
4299           MD            Construct U.S. 40, MD 715        $3,000,000
interchange at Aberdeen
Proving Ground............
4300           MD            Construct MD 4 at Suitland       $2,800,000
Parkway...................
4301           MD            Baltimore Rail Tunnel            $3,000,000
improvement study.........
4302           MD            Construct Allegheny              $2,000,000
Highlands pedestrian/
bicycle trail.............
4303           MD            Upgrade MD 210 from MD 228       $2,000,000
to I-495..................
4304           MD            Patuxent Research Refuge         $3,000,000
Road improvements.........
4305           MD            Rehabilitate roadways            $2,200,000
around East Baltimore Life
Science Park..............
4306           MD            Construction of new              $2,000,000
Baltimore water taxi
terminals.................
4307           MD            Upgrade I-95, I-495, MD 5/       $1,800,000
Branch Avenue Metro Access
4308           MD            Construct Blackwater             $1,500,000
National Wildlife Refuge
visitors center, trails
and road improvements.....
4309           MD            Edgewood, MD train station       $1,500,000
streetscaping and parking
improvements..............
4310           MD            Roadway improvements from        $2,000,000
intersection of U.S. 29 in
Montgomery Co. along
Industrial Parkway thru to
FDA access/Cherry Hill
Road......................
4311           MD            Roadway access                   $1,500,000
improvements, boardwalks,
and pier construction at
Hanover Street and West
Cromwell, Baltimore.......
4312           MD            MD 295 BWI access                $1,200,000
improvements..............
4313           MD            Construction of Maryland           $800,000
Ave. and Market St.
intermodal access project,
including pedestrian
safety improvements and
Baltimore Rd. corridor,
Rockville.................

[[Page 1422]]
119 STAT. 1422


4314           MD            Construct Woodrow Wilson         $1,600,000
Bridge Anacostia River
wetlands mitigation
project...................
4315           MD            Construct Potomac River            $500,000
Gorge stormwater
mitigation project........
4316           ME            I-295 improvements in           $15,000,000
Portland..................
4317           ME            Construction of Calais/St.       $4,000,000
Stephan Border Crossing
Project, Calais...........
4318           ME            Improvements and                 $2,000,000
construction of the
Lewiston-Auburn Highway,
Lewiston..................
4319           ME            Replacement of Waldo-           $18,000,000
Hancock bridge and
construction of related
pedestrian walkways.......
4320           ME            Transportation improvements     $18,000,000
for Maine East-West
Corridor Project..........
4321           ME            Augusta Memorial Bridge          $6,000,000
improvements, Augusta.....
4322           ME            Plan and construct North-        $5,000,000
South Aroostook highways,
to improve access to St.
John Valley, including
Presque Isle Bypass and
other improvements........
4323           ME            Construction of an               $4,000,000
Intermodal Center in
Acadia Park, Bar Harbor...
4324           ME            Replacement of the Route         $6,000,000
201-A ``covered'' bridge,
Norridgewock..............
4325           ME            Repair and improvements of       $3,750,000
Richmond-Dresden Bridge,
Richmond-Dresden..........
4326           ME            Access and traffic               $1,250,000
improvements to Route 15
in Brewer.................
4327           ME            State of Maine Pedestrian        $1,000,000
and Bicycle Trail Project.
4328           ME            Plan and construct North-       $20,000,000
South Aroostook highways,
to improve access to St.
John Valley, including
Presque Isle Bypass and
other improvements........
4329           ME            Construction of the Gorham       $2,000,000
Village Bypass, Gorham....
4330           ME            Improvements for statewide       $1,000,000
bike and pedestrian
projects..................
4331           ME            Repair and improvement of        $3,000,000
Harpswell Cribstone
Bridge, Harpswell.........
4332           ME            Repair and improvement of       $10,000,000
Deer Isle-Sedgwick Bridge,
Deer Isle-Sedgwick........
4333           MI            Plan and construct, land         $9,000,000
acquisition, Detroit West
Riverfront Greenway.......
4334           MI            Reconstruct and widen I-94       $8,000,000
in Kalamazoo..............
4335           MI            Construct Interchange at I-      $8,000,000
675 and M-13 (Washington
Avenue), Northbound exit,
in Saginaw................
4336           MI            Rehabilitate bridge lift         $5,000,000
over Black River on 7th
Street Bridge in Port
Huron.....................
4337           MI            Reconstruct I-75 from North      $6,000,000
of U.S.-2 to Sault Ste.
Marie and reconstruct the
existing roadway, Sault
Ste. Marie................
4338           MI            Construct at-grade crossing      $5,000,000
and I-75 interchange to
reconnect Milbocker and
McCoy Roads and construct
overpass to reconnect Van
Tyle to South Wisconsin
Road in Gaylord...........

[[Page 1423]]
119 STAT. 1423


4339           MI            Improvements to Trowbridge       $9,000,000
Road Extension to Farm
Lane, Ingham County, Farm
Lane between Mount Hope
Road and Trowbridge Road
with underpasses for CN
and CSX railroad crossings
4340           MI            Allen Road under the CN          $6,000,000
Railroad Grade Separation,
Woodhaven.................
4341           MI            Blue Water Bridge Plaza          $5,000,000
improvements and
relocation of segments of
I-94 and I-69.............
4342           MI            West Portage Avenue              $2,000,000
realignment, Sault Ste.
Marie.....................
4343           MI            Construct road improvements      $8,000,000
to Van Dyke Road, from I-
696 to Red Run Drain, City
of Warren.................
4344           MI            Construction of the I-696        $3,000,000
and Northwestern Highway
Interchange Freeway ramps
at Franklin Road in
Southfield................
4345           MI            Construct road improvements      $2,500,000
to Miller Road from I-75
to Linden Road, Flint
Township..................
4346           MI            University of Michigan           $1,500,000
Health Systems auto crash
notification system.......
4347           MI            Alger County, repaving a         $1,000,000
portion of H-58 between
Sullivan Creek towards
Little Beaver Road........
4348           MI            Jackson Road Boulevard           $1,000,000
Extension, utilizing fly
ash and recycled concrete
in road surface...........
4349           MN            Transportation improvements      $5,000,000
for City of Moorhead SE
Main GSI, 34th St. and I-
94 Interchange and
Moorhead Comprehensive
Rail Safety Program in
Moorhead..................
4350           MN            Reconstruct I-35E from           $5,000,000
University Avenue to
Maryland Avenue in St.
Paul......................
4351           MN            Construct last segment of        $2,000,000
the Victory Drive project
to link Victory Drive with
Highway 14 in Blue Earth
County....................
4352           MN            Phase III construction of        $9,000,000
Trunk Highway 610-10......
4353           MN            U.S. Trunk Highway 14 from       $4,000,000
One Mile West of Waseca to
Owatonna..................
4354           MN            Construction of 8th Street       $2,000,000
North: Stearns CR 120 to
TH 15 in St. Cloud........
4355           MN            Design, engineering, and           $750,000
ROW acquisition to
reconstruct Trunk Highway
95 bridge in North Branch.
4356           MN            Construction and right-of-       $2,000,000
way acquisition for
interchange at TH 65 and
TH 242 in Blaine..........
4357           MN            Design, construct, and           $2,500,000
expand TH 241 in the City
of St. Michael............
4358           MN            Design, construct, and           $9,000,000
acquire right-of-way for
St. Croix River Crossing
in Stillwater.............
4359           MN            Design and construction of       $5,000,000
Cedar Avenue Busway in
Dakota County.............
4360           MN            Planning and Pre-Design for      $3,000,000
Twin Cities Bioscience
Corridor in St. Paul......
4361           MN            TH 23--Construction of 4-        $2,500,000
Lane Bypass in Paynesville
4362           MN            I-494 U.S. 169 interchange       $2,000,000
reconstruction, Twin
Cities Metropolitan Area..

[[Page 1424]]
119 STAT. 1424


4363           MN            Replace three at-grade           $3,000,000
highway-railroad crossings
with grade-separated
crossings adjacent to
Winona State University...
4364           MN            Reconstruct County Highway       $3,250,000
42 Interchange at U.S.
Highway 52 in Dakota
County....................
4365           MN            34th Street realignment and      $4,000,000
interchange at 34th Street
and I-94 in Moorhead......
4366           MN            Construct last segment of        $2,000,000
the Victory Drive project
to link Victory Drive with
Highway 14 in Blue Earth
County....................
4367           MN            Phase III Construction of        $8,000,000
Trunk Highway 610-10......
4368           MN            Construction of U.S.             $4,000,000
Highway 14 from Waseca to
Owatonna..................
4369           MN            Reimbursement of 8th Street      $2,000,000
North in St. Cloud........
4370           MN            Construction and right-of-       $2,000,000
way acquisition for
interchange at TH 65 and
TH 242 in Blaine..........
4371           MN            Construction and widening        $2,500,000
of TH 241 in the City of
St. Michael...............
4372           MN            Program for replacement and      $3,000,000
upgrade of deficient
township signs, statewide.
4373           MN            Improvement of State             $3,500,000
Highway 11 to 10 ton-
status....................
4374           MN            Reconstruct I-35E from I-94      $3,000,000
to Maryland Avenue in St.
Paul......................
4375           MN            Right-of-way acquisition         $1,000,000
for TH 23 Paynesville
Bypass....................
4376           MO            Construct four lanes for        $25,000,000
Hwy 60 from Willow Springs
to Van Buren, Missouri....
4377           MO            Construct four lanes for        $20,000,000
Hwy 65 North of I-44 from
I-44 N to Route EE........
4378           MO            Construct fours lanes on        $20,000,000
Hwy 50 west of Jefferson
City to west of
California, Missouri (From
St. Martens to California,
Missouri).................
4379           MO            Construct Hwy 13 Bypass in       $5,000,000
Warrensburg...............
4380           MO            Improvements to Hwy 60/65       $10,000,000
Interchange...............
4381           MO            Improve Highway 13 from          $5,000,000
Springfield, MO to Bolivar
4382           MO            I-470/Strother Road              $5,000,000
Interchange in Lee's
Summit....................
4383           MO            Improve U.S. 36 to divided      $30,000,000
four lane expressway from
Macon to Route 24.........
4384           MO            Improve Highway 291 from         $4,000,000
Harrisonville to Lee's
Summit in Cass County.....
4385           MO            Route 364, Phase II Page         $5,000,000
Avenue Extension, St.
Charles County............
4386           MO            Transportation Improvements      $4,000,000
for U.S. 63 Interchange at
Gans Road, Boone County...
4387           MO            Improve Highway 67 from          $5,000,000
Fredericktown, MO to
Poplar Bluff..............
4388           MO            Upgrade to 4 lanes MO 66         $2,000,000
from Duquesne Road to Rt.
249 in Jasper County......
4389           MO            Interchange design and           $5,000,000
construction for the Main
Street Extension at I-55,
Cape Girardeau County.....
4390           MO            Relocation and                   $2,000,000
reconstruction of Rt. MM
from Rt. 21 to Rt. 30.....

[[Page 1425]]
119 STAT. 1425


4391           MO            Upgrade Route 59 at rail         $3,000,000
crossing in St. Joseph, MO
4392           MO            Realignment and bridge           $2,000,000
replacement over First
Creek from east of 2nd
Street to Route 169 on MO
92, Clay County...........
4393           MO            Roadway improvements on Rt.      $2,000,000
21 from Hayden Road to
Lake Lorraine.............
4394           MO            Construct Interstate             $4,000,000
flyover at Hughes Road and
Liberty Drive to 76th
Street. Part of Liberty
Parkway Project, Liberty..
4395           MO            I-55 Redesign, Cape              $2,000,000
Girardeau County..........
4396           MS            Widening of I-55 from           $20,240,000
Highway 304 in DeSoto
County to TN State line...
4397           MS            Upgrade U.S. 78 to               $8,000,000
Interstate standards from
the MS/TN State line to
the MS/AL State line......
4398           MS            For construction and ROW        $26,400,000
acquisition U.S. 49 from
South of Florence to I-20.
4399           MS            To upgrade Old Fannin Road       $6,400,000
connecting Highway 25 to
Spillway Road in Rankin
County....................
4400           MS            Plan and construct an           $10,000,000
intermodal connector
linking I-20 to Hwy 49,
Pearl-Richland............
4401           MS            Airport Parkway/Pearl River      $8,960,000
Bridge for ROW acquisition
and construction of west
segment between I-55 and
Highway 475 at Jackson
International Airport,
with connector to Highway
25........................
4402           MS            Byram-Clinton/Norrell           $15,000,000
Corridor--Connects the
Norrell Road Interchange
on I-20 to the Byram-
Clinton Multimodal
Corridor on I-55..........
4403           MS            Lake Harbour Drive              $10,000,000
Extension, Ridgeland--
Connects U.S. Highway 51
to Highland Colony Parkway
4404           MS            Transportation Improvements     $10,000,000
for Greenville Bypass--
Highway 82--U.S. Highway
82 bypass between
Greenville and Leland.....
4405           MS            Transportation Improvements     $10,000,000
for Port Connector Road,
Claiborne County..........
4406           MS            Transportation Improvements     $10,000,000
for South Entrance Loop--
Mississippi State
University................
4407           MS            Lynch Street Extension to        $5,000,000
Metro Parkway, Jackson--An
extension of the Metro
Parkway that connects
intermodal traffic between
the Metro Center Area and
Jackson State University..
4408           MS            Transportation improvements      $5,000,000
for Highway 7 and Highway
49 Connector, Greenwood...
4409           MS            Transportation improvements      $5,000,000
for Pearl-Pirates Cove
Interchange, Pearl........
4410           MS            Transportation improvements      $5,000,000
for Washington Street/Old
U.S. Highway 61, Vicksburg
4411           MS            Star Landing Corridor,           $5,000,000
Southaven.................
4412           MT            Transportation improvements     $10,000,000
for MT 78 Corridor
Development...............
4413           MT            Transportation improvements     $17,000,000
for Bench Boulevard
Connection and Corridor
Project, Billings.........
4414           MT            Transportation improvements      $5,000,000
for Babcock to Kagy
Project, Bozeman..........

[[Page 1426]]
119 STAT. 1426


4415           MT            Transportation improvements     $10,000,000
for Townsend--South
Project, U.S. 287.........
4416           MT            Transportation improvements      $6,000,000
for Cutbank Railroad
Overpass, Cutbank.........
4417           MT            Transportation improvements     $10,000,000
for Havre--East Project,
including Glasgow to
Poplar, U.S. 2............
4418           MT            Transportation improvements      $7,000,000
for Lonepine North and
East Project, MT 28.......
4419           MT            U.S. 93 transportation          $15,000,000
improvement projects
between Lolo and Hamilton.
4420           MT            U.S. 2 transportation           $20,000,000
improvement projects
between North Dakota State
Line and Browning.........
4421           MT            MT 3 transportation             $15,000,000
improvement projects
between Billings and Great
Falls.....................
4422           MT            MT 16, reconstruction of         $7,000,000
roadway and structures
northeast of Glendive.....
4423           MT            Develop and reconstruct Two     $25,000,000
Medicine Bridge, U.S. 2,
East of Glacier National
Park......................
4424           MT            U.S. 93 Ninepipe to Ronan        $8,000,000
transportation improvement
projects..................
4425           NC            Construction of the              $2,160,000
southbound lane of U.S.
321 bridge replacement
over the Catawba River in
Caldwell and Catawba
Counties..................
4426           NC            Construction and expansion       $3,155,000
of Little Sugar Creek
Greenway Charlotte........
4427           NC            Falls of Neuse Road              $3,000,000
Widening and Improvement,
Raleigh...................
4428           NC            Interstate 20 Extension          $5,000,000
study.....................
4429           NC            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
at Piedmont Triad Research
Park, Winston Salem.......
4430           NC            Plan, design, and construct      $1,500,000
the 10th street Connector
Project in Greenville.....
4431           NC            Randall Parkway Widening         $3,000,000
and Improvement,
Wilmington................
4432           NC            Widen Derita Road from           $3,400,000
Poplar Tent Road in
Concord to the Cabarrus
Mecklenburg County line,
Concord...................
4433           NC            Construction improvements        $1,020,000
to Highway 10 in Newton...
4434           NC            U.S. 64 upgrade and              $5,000,000
improvement between
Raleigh, NC and Rocky
Mount.....................
4435           NC            Construction and                 $2,200,000
improvement of I-73, I-74,
U.S. 220, in Montgomery
and Randolph Counties.....
4436           NC            U.S. 1 Bypass and                $1,000,000
improvements around
Rockingham................
4437           NC            Norfolk Southern Intermodal      $4,000,000
System, Charlotte.........
4438           NC            Design and construction of       $1,000,000
the Airport Area Roadway
Network, High Point.......
4439           NC            Independence Boulevard           $3,000,000
Extension, Wilmington.....
4440           NC            Design, engineering, and         $5,000,000
construction of I-77/
Catawba Avenue Interchange
Cornelius.................
4441           NC            Eliminate highway-railway        $4,000,000
crossings in City of
Fayetteville..............
4442           NC            Construction of I-74             $6,000,000
between I-40 and U.S. 220,
High Point................

[[Page 1427]]
119 STAT. 1427


4443           NC            Environmental studies and        $4,200,000
construction of U.S. 74
Bypass Extension, Monroe..
4444           NC            Greenways Expansion and          $1,600,000
Improvement Project,
Greenville................
4445           NC            Northern Loop Project,           $3,000,000
Wilson....................
4446           NC            Rail Track Replacement,            $565,000
Spencer...................
4447           NC            Construction of Interstate      $10,000,000
73 and Interstate 74......
4448           NC            Construction of Charlotte        $7,500,000
Douglas International
Airport Freight Intermodal
Distribution Center.......
4449           NC            Rehabilitate existing            $2,500,000
roadway, make safety
improvements and add lanes
to Interstate 95 in North
Carolina..................
4450           NC            Construction of the              $2,000,000
southbound lane of U.S.
321 bridge replacement
over the Catawba River in
North Carolina............
4451           NC            Widening of Beckford Drive,        $192,000
City of Henderson.........
4452           NC            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
for Peters Creek Pkwy, 1st
St., 2nd St., and
Brookstown Ave. in Winston-
Salem.....................
4453           NC            Environmental studies and        $5,000,000
construction of U.S. 74
Monroe Bypass Extension...
4454           NC            To plan, design and              $2,500,000
construct the 10th Street
connector project in
Greenville................
4455           NC            Transportation                   $2,500,000
improvementsat Piedmont
Triad Research Park,
Winston-Salem.............
4456           NC            Acquisition of rail              $2,000,000
corridors for use as
bicycle and pedestrian
trails, Durham............
4457           NC            Northern Loop Project, City      $2,933,000
of Wilson.................
4458           NC            Widen Derita Road from           $3,350,000
Poplar Tent Road in
Concord to the Cabarrus
Mecklenburg County line...
4459           NC            Winston-Salem Northern           $1,300,000
Beltway, Eastern Section
and Extension.............
4460           NC            To perform a study to be         $2,000,000
performed by East Carolina
University to find the
feasibility of
constructing a mid-
Currituck Sound bridge....
4461           NC            Transportation improvements        $725,000
at the Marion Diehl
Center, Charlotte.........
4462           NC            Pack Square pedestrian and         $700,000
roadway improvements,
Asheville.................
4463           NC            Study feasibility of               $700,000
widening U.S. 221/NC 226
from Woodlawn to Spruce
Pine, start planning and
design, and make upgrades
to improve safety.........
4464           NC            Continued development of           $400,000
Cary, NC pedestrian bike
paths.....................
4465           NC            Extend M. L. King, Jr.,          $1,000,000
Boulevard in Monroe.......
4466           NC            Design and Construction of         $900,000
the Airport Area Roadway
Network, High Point.......
4467           ND            I-29 Reconstruction from        $10,000,000
Main Avenue N. to County
Road 20 in Fargo..........
4468           ND            Reconstruct U.S. 281 in          $6,000,000
Jamestown--South Corporate
limits to 17th St., SW....
4469           ND            Reconstruction of U.S. 2         $7,000,000
from Towner to Rugby--WB..
4470           ND            Reconstruct ND 1804 from         $5,900,000
University of Mary to 48th
St. South of Bismarck.....

[[Page 1428]]
119 STAT. 1428


4471           ND            Reconstruction of U.S. 85        $6,500,000
north of Grassy Butte to
Long-X Bridge near Teddy
Roosevelt National Park
North Unit................
4472           ND            ND 22 Reconstruction from        $2,000,000
15th St. to North
Corporate Limits in
Dickinson.................
4473           ND            ND 200 Reconstruction from       $3,500,000
Jct. ND 49 at Beulah to
Hazen.....................
4474           ND            North Bound I-29                 $8,000,000
Reconstruction from south
of ND 15 to Near Grand
Forks.....................
4475           ND            East Bound I-94                  $7,000,000
Reconstruction from Near
South Heart to Dickinson..
4476           ND            ND 294/12th Avenue N            $11,000,000
Reconstruction and Bridge
Widening in Fargo.........
4477           ND            Replace Red River Valley         $3,100,000
Bridge at Drayton, ND.....
4478           ND            U.S. 12 improvements            $10,000,000
between Bowman and
Hettinger.................
4479           ND            U.S. 83/North Broadway          $10,000,000
Reconstruction in Minot...
4480           ND            Mandan Avenue                    $2,000,000
Reconstruction in Mandan..
4481           ND            ND 127 Reconstruction from       $3,000,000
ND 11 N. to Wahpeton......
4482           ND            U.S. 83 Reconstruction from      $6,000,000
Max to ND 23 SB...........
4483           ND            U.S. 281 Reconstruction          $4,000,000
from Carrington to Jct. ND
15........................
4484           NE            Construction of the              $1,400,000
Columbus, Nebraska North
Arterial Road.............
4485           NE            U.S. 34 Missouri River             $500,000
Bridge relocation and
replacement...............
4486           NE            Missouri River Bridges           $1,200,000
between U.S. 34, I-29 in
Iowa and U.S. 75 in
Nebraska..................
4487           NE            Design, right-of-way and         $4,000,000
construction of Nebraska
Highway 35 between Norfolk
to South Sioux City.......
4488           NE            Transportation improvements      $1,800,000
for U.S. 81 Meridian
Bridge, Yankton...........
4489           NE            Railroad Grade Separation        $6,000,000
Structures, Statewide.....
4490           NE            Engineering, right-of-way          $700,000
and construction of the
23rd Street Viaduct in
Fremont, Nebraska.........
4491           NE            Design, right-of-way and           $400,000
construction of the
Louisville bypass,
Nebraska..................
4492           NE            Construction of I-80/Cherry      $1,000,000
Avenue Interchange and
East bypass, Kearney,
Nebraska..................
4493           NE            Interstate 80 Interchange          $600,000
at Pflug Road, Sarpy
County, Nebraska..........
4494           NE            Construction of Heartland        $8,000,000
Expressway between
Alliance and Minatare, NE.
4495           NE            New roads and overpass to        $3,000,000
relieve congestion and
improve traffic flow for
Antelope Valley--Lincoln,
NE........................
4496           NE            Design of right-of-way and       $2,000,000
construction of South and
West beltway in Lincoln,
NE........................
4497           NE            Cuming Street                      $900,000
Transportation improvement
project in Omaha, NE......
4498           NE            Nebraska Intelligent             $1,000,000
Transportation Systems
Statewide.................

[[Page 1429]]
119 STAT. 1429


4499           NE            Midwest Roadside Safety          $1,000,000
Facility, UNL--Lincoln, NE
4500           NE            U.S. Highway 75 expressway,      $5,000,000
Plattsmouth to Bellevue,
Nebraska..................
4501           NE            U.S. 275 So. Omaha Veterans      $3,000,000
Memorial Bridge...........
4502           NE            Lincoln East Beltway, NE...        $500,000
4503           NE            I-80 six lane (I-80 to 56th      $3,000,000
Street) Lincoln, NE.......
4504           NE            Antelope Valley                 $10,000,000
Transportation Improvement
Project in Lincoln........
4505           NE            Design and construction of       $5,000,000
the South and West Beltway
in Lincoln................
4506           NE            Cuming Street                    $5,500,000
Transportation Improvement
Project in Omaha..........
4507           NE            Design and construction of       $9,500,000
Highway 35 between Norfolk
and South Sioux City......
4508           NE            I-80/Cherry Avenue               $8,000,000
Interchange and East
Bypass in Kearney.........
4509           NE            Construction of the              $5,000,000
Heartland Expressway
between Alliance and
Minatare..................
4510           NE            Plan and design I-80             $1,000,000
Interchange at Pflug Road.
4511           NE            Design and construction of       $3,000,000
Missouri River Bridges
between U.S. 34, I-29 in
Iowa and U.S. 75 in
Nebraska..................
4512           NE            Construction of the North        $2,000,000
Arterial Road in Columbus.
4513           NE            Design and construction of       $1,000,000
Meridian Bridge between
Nebraska and Yankton,
South Dakota..............
4514           NH            Construction, including         $20,000,000
widening and structural
improvements, of Little
Bay Bridge to eliminate
congestion--Portsmouth, NH
4515           NH            I-93 water quality study         $4,000,000
project...................
4516           NH            Reconfiguration of Pelham        $2,000,000
Intersection to Improve
Safety....................
4517           NH            Reconstruction of NH 11 and      $1,400,000
NH 28 Intersection in
Alton.....................
4518           NH            Construct and upgrade            $2,000,000
intersection of Route 3
and Franklin Industrial
Drive in Franklin.........
4519           NH            Design and construction of       $2,000,000
intersection of Rt. 101A
and Rt. 13 in Milford.....
4520           NH            Relocation and                   $2,600,000
reconstruction of
intersection at Route 103
and North Street in
Claremont.................
4521           NH            Improve Meredith Village         $1,600,000
Traffic Rotary............
4522           NH            Construct intersection at        $1,400,000
U.S. 3 and Pembroke Hill
Road in Pembroke..........
4523           NH            Reconstruction and               $3,600,000
improvements to NH Route
110 in Berlin.............
4524           NH            South Road Mitigation in         $2,000,000
Londonderry...............
4525           NH            Construct Park and Ride,         $2,000,000
Exit 5 on I-93--
Londonderry, NH...........
4526           NH            Reconstruction and               $1,000,000
relocation of the
intersection of Maple
Avenue and Charleston Road
in Claremont..............
4527           NH            Replacement of Ash Street        $1,400,000
and Pillsbury Road Bridge.
4528           NH            Hampton Bridge                   $3,000,000
Rehabilitation--Hampton...

[[Page 1430]]
119 STAT. 1430


4529           NJ            PATCO Rolling Stock             $40,000,000
acquisition and/or
renovation for use on line
between Lindenwold and
Locust Street in
Philadelphia..............
4530           NJ            Construct new ramps between     $15,000,000
I-295 and Route 42........
4531           NJ            Route 46 Corridor upgrades.      $9,500,000
4532           NJ            Route 18 Reconstruction in       $7,500,000
downtown New Brunswick....
4533           NJ            Interstate 280 Interchange       $2,000,000
improvements, Harrison....
4534           NJ            Construct Waterfront             $8,000,000
Walkway from North Sinatra
Drive and 12th St. south
to Sinatra Drive in
Hoboken...................
4535           NJ            Widening of Route 1 and          $3,500,000
intersection improvements
in South Brunswick........
4536           NJ            Route 29 conversion project      $4,000,000
to a full access freeway..
4537           NJ            Improvements to River Road       $4,000,000
in Camden.................
4538           NJ            Design and Construct Newark      $2,000,000
Waterfront Pedestrian and
Bicycle Access............
4539           NJ            Route 9W operational and         $4,000,000
safety improvements,
including I-95 Southbound
entrance alterations......
4540           NJ            New Jersey Underground             $100,000
Railroad for preservation,
enhancement and promotion
of sites in New Jersey....
4541           NJ            International Trade and          $1,000,000
Logistics Center roadway
improvements at Exit 12 of
the New Jersey Turnpike,
Carteret..................
4542           NJ            Kapkowski road area              $1,000,000
improvements in Elizabeth.
4543           NJ            Expand TRANSCOM Regional         $1,900,000
ITS System in NJ, NY, and
CT........................
4544           NJ            Construct Rt. 49 Cohansey        $1,500,000
River Bridge Replacement,
Cumberland County.........
4545           NM            Double Eagle II aviation         $8,000,000
facility for road
construction..............
4546           NM            Double Eagle II aviation        $12,000,000
facility for interchange
construction..............
4547           NM            Extension of University          $5,000,000
Blvd. in Albuquerque......
4548           NM            For construction work on NM-     $5,000,000
176 in Lea County.........
4549           NM            Rio Rancho, Iris Rd. to         $14,600,000
U.S. Highway 550..........
4550           NM            For U.S. 62/180 in Carlsbad      $5,000,000
4551           NM            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
for I-10 reconstruction in
Las Cruces................
4552           NM            I-10/I-25 bridge                 $7,000,000
reconstruction in Las
Cruces....................
4553           NM            Transportation improvements      $1,400,000
to FS 235 and access to
Magdalena Ridge
Observatory...............
4554           NM            Reconstruction of I-25/         $20,000,000
Paseo del Norte and
Jefferson Interchange,
Albuquerque...............
4555           NM            Reconstruction of NM 524         $5,000,000
South Truck Bypass in
Carlsbad..................
4556           NM            Reconstruction of I-10 and       $7,000,000
I-25 Interchange, Las
Cruces....................
4557           NM            Extend College Blvd.,            $2,000,000
Roswell...................
4558           NM            Widen U.S. 64 between            $7,000,000
Farmington and Bloomfield.
4559           NM            Rehabilitate Espanola Main       $4,000,000
Street, Espanola..........

[[Page 1431]]
119 STAT. 1431


4560           NV            Blue Diamond Hwy/SR 160         $20,000,000
Widening..................
4561           NV            I-15 Widening and                $8,000,000
Interchanges, Las Vegas
Valley....................
4562           NV            Transportation improvements      $6,000,000
to I-80 at Fernley
Interchange...............
4563           NV            Transportation improvements     $12,000,000
to Pyramid Highway
Corridor, Sparks..........
4564           NV            U.S. 95 Widening and             $7,000,000
interchanges, Las Vegas...
4565           NV            Railroad Reconstruction,         $2,000,000
Ely and White Pine County.
4566           NV            I-15 Widening northbound        $25,000,000
from Primm to Sloan
Interchange, Clark County.
4567           NV            I-580/U.S. 395 Capacity         $25,000,000
improvements, Washoe
County....................
4568           NV            Construct I-15/Las Vegas         $3,000,000
Beltway Interchange.......
4569           NV            Construct U.S. 95/Las Vegas      $3,000,000
Beltway Interchange.......
4570           NV            Construct Las Vegas Beltway/     $3,000,000
Airport Connector
Interchange...............
4571           NV            Transportation improvements      $2,000,000
on Henderson Lake Mead
Parkway, Henderson, Nevada
4572           NV            Transportation improvements      $3,000,000
on Laughlin-Bullhead City
Colorado Bridge...........
4573           NV            Transportation improvements      $8,000,000
for Mesquite Airport
Access....................
4574           NV            U.S. 395 Design............      $3,000,000
4575           NY            I-86/Route 17 Upgrade for        $9,000,000
Broome, Delaware, Chemung,
Orange, Sullivan, and
Cattaraugus Counties......
4576           NY            Roadway and intermodal           $5,000,000
improvements to the Nassau
County Hub................
4577           NY            For Studies, Design, and         $9,000,000
Construction of the High
Line Trail Project, New
York City.................
4578           NY            Improvements to the Harlem       $7,000,000
River Bridges.............
4579           NY            Road improvements for the        $2,000,000
Village of Kyrias Joel....
4580           NY            I-86/Route 17 Upgrade for        $1,000,000
Tioga County..............
4581           NY            Reconstruction of Ashburton      $4,000,000
Avenue in Yonkers.........
4582           NY            To Conduct Scoping and           $1,500,000
Planning Studies for the
Northern Tier Expressway..
4583           NY            Improvements to Route 12 in      $9,000,000
Broome and Oneida Counties
4584           NY            Improvements for West 125th      $2,500,000
Street in West Harlem.....
4585           NY            Enhance Road and                 $5,000,000
Transportation Facilities
Near W. 65th Street and
Broadway, New York City...
4586           NY            Design and Construction of       $6,000,000
the Short Clove Crossing
in Haverstraw.............
4587           NY            Planning and Construction        $1,000,000
of Fort Drum Connector
Road......................
4588           NY            Design and Construction for      $4,000,000
a Syracuse University
Transportation Facility in
Syracuse..................
4589           NY            Road and transportation          $5,000,000
improvements near the
Brooklyn Children's Museum
4590           NY            Construction and                 $5,000,000
improvements to U.S. Route
219 Expressway............

[[Page 1432]]
119 STAT. 1432


4591           NY            For research at the              $4,000,000
Rochester Institute of
Technology Alternative
Fuels and Life-Cycle
Engineering...............
4592           NY            Improve Bronx Zoo                $4,000,000
Intermodal Facility.......
4593           NY            Conversion of NY Route 15        $3,000,000
to I-99 Road improvements.
4594           NY            University of Buffalo            $3,000,000
Multidisciplinary Center
for Earthquake Engineering
Research (MCEER)..........
4595           NY            Tappan Zee Bridge to I-287       $1,500,000
Transportation Corridor
Study, Assessments, and
Design....................
4596           NY            Corning Preserve                 $2,000,000
improvements Phase II.....
4597           NY            Siena College Perimeter            $500,000
Road improvements and
construction..............
4598           NY            Southtown connector              $8,000,000
improvements on NY Route 5
from the Coast Guard Base
to Ohio Street, Buffalo,
NY/Buffalo Outer Harbor
Road improvements.........
4599           NY            Miller Highway improvements      $4,000,000
4600           NY            Roadway, pedestrian, and         $2,000,000
streetscape Improvements
for the New Cassel
Revitalization Project in
North Hempstead...........
4601           NY            Farm to Fork Transportation        $200,000
Distribution Network Study
and Support in Upstate....
4602           NY            Reconstruction of East           $2,000,000
Avenue from Main Street to
Henry Street in Hornell...
4603           NY            Improvements to Widmer Road        $500,000
in the Town of Wappinger..
4604           NY            Improvements to Erie             $2,000,000
Boulevard in Schenectady..
4605           NY            Construction of highway          $1,500,000
noise suppression barriers
bordering I-84 in Newburgh
4606           NY            Improve Traffic Flow on          $1,000,000
Noel Road between Church
and Crossbay Boulevard
Including Work Necessary
to Demolish and
Reconstruct the Firehouse
Facility in Broad Channel.
4607           NY            Design, Planning, and            $5,000,000
Construction of a
Community Transportation
Center from Broadway to
Manhattan College Parkway.
4608           NY            Construction of Pedestrian       $1,500,000
and Bike Trail Campus
Improvements at St.
Bonaventure...............
4609           NY            For the CargoWatch               $3,500,000
Transportation Management
Project for Study and
Implementation............
4610           NY            Design and Construction of         $500,000
an Access Road to
Plattsburgh International
Airport...................
4611           NY            Improvements and                 $2,000,000
Enhancements for Oak Beach
Road in the Town of
Babylon...................
4612           NY            Design and Construction of       $1,000,000
Downtown Jamestown
Connector Trail...........
4613           NY            Restoration of the Van           $1,000,000
Cortlandt Manor Entrance
near Croton...............
4614           NY            Sound Shore Medical Center       $1,000,000
of Westchester Intermodal
Facility Improvements.....
4615           NY            Route 17 Widening Study and      $1,000,000
Design....................
4616           NY            Erie Community College           $1,000,000
Transportation
Improvements..............
4617           NY            Roadway and Traffic              $1,500,000
Improvements for Suffolk
County....................

[[Page 1433]]
119 STAT. 1433


4618           NY            Construction and                   $800,000
Improvements to Soundview
Connection Greenway from
Bruckner Boulevard to
Soundview Park............
4619           OH            Reconstruction of Cleveland     $21,970,000
Inner Belt and
rehabilitation of the
Central Viaduct Bridge,
Cleveland, OH.............
4620           OH            Grading, paving, roads, and      $8,200,000
the transfer of rail-to-
truck for the intermodal
facility at Rickenbacker
Airport Columbus, OH......
4621           OH            Ramp and Roadway approaches     $10,000,000
on I-75 toward Brent
Spence Bridge. Cincinnati,
OH........................
4622           OH            Rehabilitation of the            $2,000,000
Martin Luther King, Jr.,
Bridge. Toledo, OH........
4623           OH            Reconstruction, widening,        $5,000,000
and interchange upgrades
to I-75 between Cincinnati
and Dayton. Dayton, OH....
4624           OH            Replace the Edward N.            $6,000,000
Waldvogel Viaduct.
Cincinnati, OH............
4625           OH            SR 8 safety improvement and      $2,600,000
road expansion project in
Northern Summit County. OH
4626           OH            Reconstruction of the 70/71      $8,000,000
split in downtown
Columbus, OH..............
4627           OH            Widen U.S. 35 to three           $4,000,000
contiguous lanes from I-75
to I-675 in Montgomery
County, OH................
4628           OH            Construct pedestrian bridge      $3,300,000
from east of Dock 32 to
park. Cleveland, OH.......
4629           OH            South Connector in Waverly       $4,100,000
from U.S. 23 to SR 104 to
SR 220 for new development
areas in a depressed
Appalachian region.
Waverly, OH...............
4630           OH            Construct full movement            $750,000
interchange on I-75 at
Austin/Miamisburg-
Springboro Rd. and widen
Miamisburg-Springboro Rd.
from Wood Rd. to SR 741,
Dayton, OH................
4631           OH            Reconstruct I-75/I-475           $5,000,000
Interchange. Toledo, OH...
4632           OH            Construct 1,100 foot             $1,280,000
bulkhead/riverwalk
connecting Front and Maine
Ave. public rights-of-way.
Cleveland, OH.............
4633           OH            Construction of new bridges      $3,300,000
that will replace two
unsafe spans that carry
U.S. Route 62 across the
Scioto River. Columbus, OH
4634           OH            Construction of a full 4-          $400,000
way interchange at SR 44
and Shamrock Boulevard to
replace current 2-way
interchange of SR 44 and
Jackson St. Painesville,
OH........................
4635           OH            Construction of interchange      $2,800,000
at SR 8 and Season Road,
Cuyahoga Falls, OH........
4636           OH            Eliminate at-grade               $3,000,000
signalized intersections
between North Fairfield
Road and the Xenia Bypass
on U.S. 35 in Greene
County, OH................
4637           OH            Design and construct a           $1,800,000
Towpath Trail from
southern Cuyahoga County
through downtown Cleveland
to Lake Erie. Cleveland,
OH........................
4638           OH            Reconstruct and widen SR         $1,000,000
82, North Royalton, OH....
4639           OH            Construct connector between        $500,000
Crocker and Stearns County
Highways. Westlake and
North Olmsted, OH.........

[[Page 1434]]
119 STAT. 1434


4640           OH            Construct I-75/SR 122            $2,000,000
interchange and related
improvements. Middletown,
OH........................
4641           OH            NW Butler County TID U.S.       $14,000,000
27 widening, bypass,
intersection improvements,
and safety projects.......
4642           OH            Allen County SR 309 road         $5,000,000
reconstruction and safety
improvements..............
4643           OH            Licking County SR 79             $4,090,000
service road construction,
safety improvements, and
congestion relief.........
4644           OH            Clermont County SR 125 turn      $2,400,000
lane additions and related
safety improvements.......
4645           OH            Portage County SR 14 turn          $500,000
lane addition,
signalization, and related
safety improvements.......
4646           OH            Mahoning County U.S. 224         $4,000,000
turn lane addition,
widening, signage, and
safety improvements.......
4647           OH            I-75 at Austin/Miamisburg-         $750,000
Springboro interchange
construction, Miamisburg-
Springboro Rd. from Wood
Rd. to SR 741 widening....
4648           OH            Delaware County U.S. 23            $935,000
turn lane addition,
realignment, and related
safety improvements.......
4649           OH            Fairfield County U.S. 33         $2,000,000
safety improvements and
signalization, including
section 13.2 to 15.01.....
4650           OH            City of Springfield North        $3,715,000
Street relocation, land
acquisition, utility
replacement, and repaving.
4651           OH            Grading, paving, roads for       $5,000,000
the transfer of rail to
truck for the intermodal
facility at Rickenbacker
Airport...................
4652           OH            Knox County SR 13 rail-            $480,000
grade crossing
improvements, realignment,
and related safety
measures..................
4653           OH            Jackson County SR 93               $730,000
widening, turn-lane
addition, and related
safety improvements.......
4654           OH            Stark County SR 172 safety       $2,500,000
construction and related
improvements..............
4655           OH            City of Cincinnati               $2,500,000
Waldvogel Viaduct
reconstruction project....
4656           OH            Delaware County SR 750           $1,300,000
realignment and safety
improvements (PID 79367)..
4657           OH            Highway rail crossing              $110,000
safety upgrades at three
locations in Madison
Village, OH...............
4658           OH            Highway rail grade                  $60,000
separation over NS rail
line for Hines Hill Road/
Milford Connector.........
4659           OH            Mill Street Bridge               $3,500,000
reconstruction and related
improvements, Akron OH....
4660           OH            Columbiana County Port           $1,000,000
Authority construct
intermodal facility,
transportation safety
improvements..............
4661           OH            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to downtown Columb
RiverSouth Bridge.........
4662           OH            Transportation Improvements      $1,000,000
for Ohio River Trail from
Salem to Downtown.........
4663           OH            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
for Montgomery County I-75
at South Dixie Drive/
Central Avenue
Interchange, W. Carrolton.

[[Page 1435]]
119 STAT. 1435


4664           OH            Medina County U.S. 224 turn      $2,200,000
lane addition,
resurfacing, signage, and
other improvements........
4665           OH            Washington County SR 7           $3,230,000
safety improvements,
widening, and signage.....
4666           OH            Establish a Trans-Erie           $1,000,000
Ferry line from Cleveland,
Ohio to Port Stanley,
Ontario...................
4667           OK            To the University of OK to       $5,000,000
conduct research on global
tracking methods for
intermodal containerized
freight...................
4668           OK            Improving the I-35                 $400,000
Interchange at Milepost 1
Near Thackerville.........
4669           OK            Construction of Norman           $8,400,000
highway-rail Grade
Separation................
4670           OK            Transportation Improvements      $1,600,000
for SH 33 Widen SH 33 from
the Cimarron River East to
U.S. 177 Payne County.....
4671           OK            Reconstruct the Interstate         $600,000
44 193rd Street
Interchange...............
4672           OK            Widen U.S. 60 from                 $400,000
approximately 2 miles east
of U.S. 60/U.S. 75
interchange east
approximately 5.5 miles...
4673           OK            Widen U.S. 54 from North of        $200,000
Optima Northeast to Kansas
State Line, Texas County,
OK........................
4674           OK            Improvement to Hereford            $200,000
Lane and U.S. 69
Interchange, McAlester....
4675           OK            Construction of rail               $400,000
crossing in Claremore at
Blue State Drive and SH 66
4676           OK            Complete Reconstruction of         $800,000
the I-35-SH 9 West
Interchange...............
4677           OK            Texanna Road improvements          $200,000
around Lake Eufaula.......
4678           OK            Improvements to SH 412P at      $10,900,000
412 Interchange...........
4679           OK            Widen U.S. 281 from the new        $200,000
U.S. 281 Spur North to
Geary Canadian County.....
4680           OK            Widen U.S. 60 between,             $600,000
Bartlesville and Pawhuska,
Osage County..............
4681           OK            Construction of Midwest            $200,000
City Pedestrian Walkway...
4682           OK            Reconstruction SH 66 from          $200,000
Craig and Rogers Counties
to SH 66 and U.S. 60
intersection..............
4683           OK            Construct vehicular bridge         $200,000
over the Burlington
Northern RR at War Bonnet
Crossing, Mannford........
4684           OK            Construction of Duncan             $600,000
Bypass Grade Separation...
4685           OK            Improvements to SH 3 from        $1,250,000
Antlers to Broken Bow.....
4686           OK            Reconstruction of the I-40       $4,000,000
Cross-town Expressway from
I-44 to I-35 in downtown
Oklahoma City.............
4687           OK            Construct and widen six-         $2,200,000
lanes on Interstate 44
from the Arkansas River
extending east
approximately 3.7 miles to
Yale Avenue in Tulsa, OK..
4688           OK            Navajoe Gateway                    $200,000
Improvements Projects,
U.S. 62 in Altus, OK......

[[Page 1436]]
119 STAT. 1436


4689           OK            Reconstruct the I-44--Fort         $200,000
Sill Key Gate Interchange.
4690           OK            Realignment of U.S. 287            $200,000
around Boise City.........
4691           OK            To study the feasibility of        $300,000
creating a by-pass around
the City of Durant to
accommodate the traffic
needs of the International
Trade Assistance Center...
4692           OK            To construct a viaduct on        $6,400,000
U.S. Highway 70 over the
railroad tracks in Durant.
4693           OK            Enhancement projects for         $1,000,000
Woodward..................
4694           OK            Improvements to highways        $53,150,000
and bridges in the State
of Oklahoma, divided
equally among the eight
field divisions...........
4695           OK            For improvements to the         $45,000,000
State maintained
interstate system in the
State of Oklahoma.........
4696           OR            Highway 20 Improvements          $5,000,000
from Pioneer Mountain to
Eddyville, Lincoln County.
4697           OR            For purchase of right-of-       $15,000,000
way, planning, design and
construction of a highway,
Newberg...................
4698           OR            Upgrade, to add a                $7,000,000
southbound lane to a
section of I-5 through
Portland, between Delta
Park and Lombard, Portland
4699           OR            Widening of Oregon Highway       $1,000,000
217 between Tualatin
Valley Highway and the
U.S. 26 Interchange,
Beaverton.................
4700           OR            Improve Highway 22, Polk         $1,700,000
County....................
4701           OR            Improve I-5/99W Connecter,      $10,000,000
Washington County.........
4702           OR            Improvements to U.S 97 from      $3,500,000
Modoc Point to Algoma.....
4703           OR            Construct Barber Street            $700,000
Extension, Wilsonville....
4704           OR            For Interstate 5                 $1,000,000
interchange, City of
Coburg....................
4705           OR            Upgrade the I-5 Fern Valley      $5,000,000
Interchange at Exit 24,
Medford...................
4706           OR            Construction of highway and      $2,000,000
pedestrian access to
Macadam Ave. and street
improvements as part of
South Waterfront
Development, Portland.....
4707           OR            Plan, design, and acquire,      $15,000,000
Sunrise Corridor,
Clackamas County..........
4708           OR            Relocate and improve             $1,000,000
Cascade Locks Southbank
Enhancements, Cascade
Locks.....................
4709           OR            Reroute U.S. 97 at Redmond,      $7,000,000
and improve intersection
of U.S. 97 and Oregon 126.
4710           OR            Construction of I-84, U.S.       $3,400,000
395 Stanfield Interchange
Improvement Project.......
4711           OR            Plan, design, and construct        $500,000
Frontage Road Crossing
Project, Hood River.......
4712           OR            Improve Marine Park                $400,000
Underpass to address
necessary transportation
improvements, Cascade
Locks.....................
4713           OR            Improve Barnhart Road,           $3,900,000
Umatilla County...........
4714           OR            P&W Rehabilitation Project,        $700,000
Yamhill County............
4715           OR            Transportation Improvements      $1,000,000
Around the Eugene, Oregon
Federal Courthouse........
4716           OR            Plan, design, and construct      $1,800,000
the Dalles, Oregon
Riverfront Access.........
4717           OR            Troutdale Interchange            $1,000,000
enhancements at I-84 and
257th St, Troutdale.......

[[Page 1437]]
119 STAT. 1437


4718           OR            Interchange Improvements to      $1,000,000
I-205 at Airport Way......
4719           OR            Beaverton Hillsdale/Scholls      $3,000,000
Ferry/Oleson Rd.
Intersection
Reconfiguration,
Washington County.........
4720           OR            Rehabilitate Sellwood            $3,000,000
Bridge, Multnomah County,
Oregon....................
4721           OR            I-5 Franklin-Glenwood              $400,000
Interchange Study.........
4722           PA            Road improvements for North      $1,500,000
Shore Transportation
Connection, HOV
modification, Pittsburgh..
4723           PA            Planning, environment and        $1,000,000
preliminary engineering
for East-West Corridor
Rapid Transit, Pittsburgh.
4724           PA            Warrendale-Bayne Road            $2,000,000
improvements from I-79 to
SR 19, in Allegheny County
4725           PA            New interchange off Route          $200,000
60 into proposed
industrial park in
Neshannock Township.......
4726           PA            Upgrade of Route 60              $1,000,000
Interchange with Route 22/
30, Allegheny County......
4727           PA            Streetscape improvements,        $1,345,000
Geneva College............
4728           PA            Construct the Alle-Kiski         $1,000,000
Bridge and Connector,
Pennsylvania..............
4729           PA            Relocation of existing two       $1,000,000
lane road, Rose Street,
Indiana County............
4730           PA            I-70/I-79 South Interchange      $2,000,000
Redesign and Upgrade......
4731           PA            Construct 2 flyover ramps        $3,000,000
and S Linden St. extension
for access to industrial
sites in the cities of
McKeesport and Duquesne...
4732           PA            Crows Run Relocation from          $400,000
SR 65 to Freedom Crider
Road, Beaver County.......
4733           PA            Transportation Improvements        $100,000
to Jeannette Truck Route,
Westmoreland County.......
4734           PA            Construction of Central          $5,000,000
Susquehanna Valley Thruway
4735           PA            Construction of ramps on I-      $5,000,000
95 and U.S. 322 widening
of streets and
intersections.............
4736           PA            Construct parking facility       $2,000,000
in Upper Darby............
4737           PA            Improve Freemansburg Avenue      $1,000,000
and its intersections at
Route 33..................
4738           PA            For design, engineering,         $2,000,000
ROW acquisition, and
construction of the third
phase of the Marshalls
Creek Bypass Project in
Monroe County,
Pennsylvania..............
4739           PA            Construct Campbelltown           $1,000,000
Connector, Lebanon County.
4740           PA            Widen the Route 412              $5,000,000
corridor from I-78 into
the City of Bethlehem.....
4741           PA            Asbury Road and associated       $3,700,000
intersection improvement
projects, Erie............
4742           PA            ROW acquisition and              $1,000,000
construction for the South
Valley Parkway, Luzerne
County....................
4743           PA            Widening of SR 68 S. of I-       $1,000,000
80 interchange, Clarion
County....................
4744           PA            State Street Bridge              $1,000,000
Replacement, Sharon.......
4745           PA            Intersection improvements        $1,000,000
and upgrades of SR 62/257
in Cranberry Township.....

[[Page 1438]]
119 STAT. 1438


4746           PA            Design-build in-house,           $1,000,000
bridge rehabilitation of
six bridges in Warren
County....................
4747           PA            Engineering, design and          $2,000,000
construction of an
extension of Park Avenue
north to Lakemont Park in
Altoona...................
4748           PA            Widening of Rt. 22 and SR        $1,000,000
26 in Huntingdon, upgrades
to the interchange at U.S.
Rt. 22 and SR 26..........
4749           PA            Road impact study along            $250,000
Potomac River tributaries,
Pennsylvania..............
4750           PA            Construct Dubois Regional          $600,000
Medical Center Access
Road, Clearfield County...
4751           PA            Road Improvements and              $750,000
upgrades related to the
Pennsylvania State
Baseball Stadium..........
4752           PA            Construction of turn lanes,        $425,000
increase curve radius at
the intersection of SR
3041 and Industrial Park
Road, Somerset............
4753           PA            Construct Johnsonburg            $2,000,000
Bypass, Elk County........
4754           PA            DuBois-Jefferson County          $2,000,000
Airport Access Road
Construction..............
4755           PA            Replacement of existing          $1,000,000
bypass on U.S. 219, McKean
County....................
4756           PA            Complete heritage tourism          $300,000
work plans for communities
along SR 6, Pennsylvania..
4757           PA            Improvements and                 $1,000,000
resurfacing on U.S. 6
through the Borough of
Mansfield.................
4758           PA            Construction of a road to        $3,000,000
join Route 247 and Salem
Road, Lackawanna County...
4759           PA            PA Route 61 enhancements,        $1,600,000
Schuylkill Haven..........
4760           PA            PA Route 309 roadway               $400,000
construction and
signalization improvements
in Tamaqua Borough........
4761           PA            Design, engineering, ROW         $1,000,000
acquisition construction
of streetscaping
enhancements, paving,
lighting, safety
improvements, parking and
roadway redesign in Wilkes-
Barre.....................
4762           PA            Construct Valley Business          $400,000
Park Access Road C,
Bradford County...........
4763           PA            Construct PA 706 Wyalusing         $200,000
Bypass Bradford County,
Pennsylvania..............
4764           PA            Construct SR 29 to River           $340,000
Betterment, Eaton
Tunkhannock, Wyoming
County....................
4765           PA            Modernize traffic signals,         $100,000
complete minor roadway
realignment, and improve
channelization at U.S. 322
and PA 10 intersection....
4766           PA            Replace Bridge, SR 106,            $160,000
Tunkhannock Creek Bridge
2, Clifford Township,
Susquehanna County........
4767           PA            Construction SR 3024,              $140,000
Middle Creek Bridge II,
South Canaan, Wayne County
4768           PA            Restore Route 222 in               $280,000
Maxatawny and Richmond
Townships, Berks County...
4769           PA            Widening and improvements        $1,000,000
to SR 10, New Morgan
Borough, Berks County.....
4770           PA            Construct parking facility       $2,000,000
in Norristown, Montgomery
County....................
4771           PA            Design and construct French      $1,000,000
Creek Parkway and
connector roads in
Phoenixville..............

[[Page 1439]]
119 STAT. 1439


4772           PA            Design and Construction of       $1,600,000
Portzer Road Connector,
Bucks County..............
4773           PA            Construction of pedestrian       $2,000,000
tunnel under Cherry Street
in Philadelphia...........
4774           PA            U.S. Route 13 Corridor           $1,000,000
Reconstruction,
Redevelopment and
Beautification, Bucks
County....................
4775           PA            Two-lane Extension of              $400,000
Bristol Road, Bucks County
4776           PA            Relocation of PA 52 at             $200,000
Longwood Gardens, Chester
County....................
4777           PA            Improvements to SR 39/I-81,        $500,000
West Hanover Township.....
4778           PA            Construction of alternate        $1,000,000
truck route for SR 441,
Columbia Borough..........
4779           PA            Concord Road Extension,            $500,000
Springettsbury Township...
4780           PA            Widen PA 896 between               $500,000
Strasburg Borough and U.S.
30........................
4781           PA            Design and construct               $750,000
relocation of U.S. 11
between Ridge Hill and
Hempt Roads...............
4782           PA            Construct and widen PA 94          $300,000
from the Adams and York
County line north to
Appler Road...............
4783           PA            Construct a turning lane           $500,000
off Route 16 in
McConnellsburg, Fulton
County....................
4784           PA            Improvements from U.S. 11          $250,000
to southbound ramp to I-81
in Antrim Township........
4785           PA            Construction of the Montour        $200,000
Trail, Great Allegheny
Passage...................
4786           PA            Transportation Improvements        $500,000
for Armstrong County, PA
Slatelick Interchange for
PA 28 at SR 3017..........
4787           PA            Widening of Route 40 in            $750,000
Wharton Township, Fayette
County....................
4788           PA            Completion of I-79-Kirwin          $400,000
Heights Interchange and
construction of retaining
walls, bridge and new
ramps.....................
4789           PA            Construction of U.S. 22 to         $300,000
I-79 Section of Southern
Beltway, Pittsburgh.......
4790           PA            Reconstruct intersection of        $400,000
SR 51 and Franklin Ave,
Beaver County.............
4791           PA            South Phila. Access Rd.            $500,000
Design and construction of
port access road from
South Phila Port and
intermodal facilities,
Philadelphia..............
4792           PA            Widen Route 22 between             $260,000
Export and Delmont........
4793           PA            Construct a new highway          $4,000,000
interchange between the PA
Turnpike and I-95 and
widen both routes to six
lanes.....................
4794           PA            Construct a highway              $4,000,000
connecting U.S. 119 near
Uniontown with SR 88 near
Brownsville...............
4795           PA            Construct a road along the       $4,000,000
North Delaware Riverfront
Corridor from Buckius
Street to Poquessing Creek
4796           PA            Construct an intermodal          $2,000,000
center at the Philadelphia
Zoo.......................
4797           PA            Widen Route 412 corridor         $2,000,000
from I-78 into the City of
Bethlehem.................
4798           PA            Improvements to the Erie         $1,000,000
Airport corridor..........
4799           PA            Widen I-81 from four to six      $2,000,000
lanes in the Wilkes-Barre/
Scranton corridor.........

[[Page 1440]]
119 STAT. 1440


4800           PA            Construct the South Valley       $1,500,000
Parkway, Pennsylvania.....
4801           PA            Complete the connection of       $2,000,000
the American Parkway
between the east and west
sides of the Lehigh River
with bridges and
interchanges..............
4802           PA            Construct safety and             $2,500,000
capacity improvements to
Route 309 and Old
Packhouse Road............
4803           PA            Flyover ramps and                $2,500,000
improvements to I-79 and
SR 228, Cranberry Township
4804           PA            Construct the Valley View        $1,500,000
Business Park Access Road.
4805           PA            Construct the North              $3,000,000
Delaware River East Coast
Greenway Trail............
4806           PA            Improvements to the              $2,000,000
Pleasant Valley and Sandy
Hill Roads intersection
with SR 130 in Penn
Township..................
4807           PA            Construct an intermodal          $1,000,000
facility servicing
Children's Hospital of
Pittsburgh................
4808           PA            Widening and construction        $1,000,000
of grade-separated
interchanges along SR 28
from Pittsburgh to
Millvale, Pennsylvania....
4809           PA            Lafayette Street extension         $500,000
and interchange
improvements..............
4810           PA            Construct the Church Street      $2,000,000
Transportation Center in
Williamsport..............
4811           PA            For the Children's Hospital      $1,000,000
of Philadelphia Partners
for Child Passenger Safety
program...................
4812           PA            Construct improvements to        $2,400,000
SR 29 and SR 113 in Upper
Providence Township,
Pennsylvania..............
4813           PA            Construct ramps off of I-95      $1,000,000
and U.S. 322 and access
improvements to Chester,
Pennsylvania..............
4814           PA            Improvements to access           $1,000,000
roads at the Please Touch
Museum, Philadelphia......
4815           PA            Construction of the              $1,000,000
Schuylkill Gateway Project
in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania..............
4816           PA            Security improvements to         $1,000,000
the Commodore Barry
Bridge, Pennsylvania......
4817           PA            Improve Freemansburg Avenue      $1,000,000
and its intersections at
Route 33, Pennsylvania....
4818           PA            Study and construct              $1,000,000
improvements to the
intersection of the
Bucknell University main
campus entrance road and
SR 15, Pennsylvania.......
4819           PA            Improvements to rural              $450,000
corridors in Erie,
Pennsylvania..............
4820           PA            Widen the ramp at the              $500,000
intersection of Peach
Street and I-90,
Pennsylvania..............
4821           PA            Implement the Clearfield         $1,000,000
Cluster Pennsylvania
highway grade crossing
project, Clearfield and
Clinton Counties..........
4822           PA            Rail traffic safety                $500,000
improvements, Homer City,
Pennsylvania..............

[[Page 1441]]
119 STAT. 1441


4823           PA            Design and construct             $1,000,000
interchange improvements
including sound barriers
at I-83, Exit 19, or other
projects designated by
York County, MPO..........
4824           PA            Construct the Alle-Kiski         $1,000,000
Bridge and Connector......
4825           PA            Reconfiguration of the           $1,000,000
Rochester Riverfront ramp.
4826           PA            Expand U.S. 422 between          $1,000,000
Indiana and Kittaning.....
4827           PA            PATCO high-speed line fleet      $1,000,000
upgrade...................
4828           PA            For interpretive signage           $300,000
and trails in Pittsburgh
urban park land...........
4829           PA            Construct rail crossings to        $600,000
access Schuylkill River
Park, Philadelphia........
4830           PA            Repair and upgrade Cresheim        $450,000
Valley Drive, Philadelphia
4831           PA            Improvements to Penn's             $400,000
Landing Ferry Terminal,
Philadelphia..............
4832           PA            Shippensburg University            $250,000
campus circulation
improvements..............
4833           PA            To incorporate a portion of        $400,000
Old Delaware Avenue as the
South Philadelphia Port
Access Road...............
4834           PA            Construct a new interchange        $400,000
and additional northbound
lane along SR 28 near
Tarentum..................
4835           PA            Linglestown Square, Lower          $250,000
Paxton Township...........
4836           PA            Study the future needs of          $500,000
east-west road
infrastructure in Adams
County....................
4837           PA            Completion and enhancements        $500,000
to the Pittsburgh
Riverfront trail system...
4838           PA            Road impact study along            $200,000
Potomac River tributaries.
4839           PA            Da Vinci Center hydrogen           $200,000
fuel-celled transit
vehicles..................
4840           PA            Complete heritage tourism          $100,000
work plans for communities
along SR 6................
4841           PA            Relocation of East Lake            $100,000
Road in Pyamatuning
Township..................
4842           RI            Transportation Improvements     $22,000,000
for the Apponaug Bypass...
4843           RI            Transportation Improvements      $4,000,000
for the Washington
Secondary Bicycle Facility/
Coventry Greenway/Trestle
Trail (Coventry)..........
4844           RI            Transportation Improvements      $6,000,000
for the Northwest
Biketrail/Woonasquatucket
River Greenway
(Providence, Johnston)....
4845           RI            New Interchange constructed      $7,000,000
from I-195 to Taunton and
Warren Avenue in East
Providence................
4846           RI            Transportation Improvements     $10,000,000
for the Blackstone River
Bikeway (Providence,
Woonsocket)...............
4847           RI            Transportation Improvements      $4,000,000
for the Jamestown Bridge
Demolition--Bicycle Access/
Trestle Span Demolition/
Fishing Pier (N.
Kingstown)................
4848           RI            Weybosset Street (200              $750,000
Block) Streetscape and
Drop-off Lane Improvement--
Providence................

[[Page 1442]]
119 STAT. 1442


4849           RI            Acquisition of fee or            $1,000,000
easement, construction of
a trail, and site
improvements in Foster....
4850           RI            Open space acquisition to        $8,000,000
mitigate growth associated
with SR 4 and Interstate
95, by non-profit land
conservation agencies
through acquisition of fee
or easement, with a match
requirement of 50% of the
total purchase price......
4851           RI            Replace Sakonnet Bridge....      $7,000,000
4852           RI            Transportation Enhancements        $500,000
at Blackstone Valley
Heritage Corridor.........
4853           RI            Bury the Power Lines at          $2,500,000
India Point...............
4854           RI            Restore and Expand Maritime        $500,000
Heritage site in Bristol..
4855           RI            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
for the Colt State Park
Bike Path.................
4856           RI            Construct trails and             $1,000,000
facility improvements
within the Rhode Island
National Wildlife Refuge
complex...................
4857           RI            Improvements for the             $5,000,000
Commuter rail in Rhode
Island....................
4858           RI            Transportation Improvements      $5,000,000
for the East Main Road in
Middletown................
4859           RI            Downtown Circulation             $2,000,000
Improvements Providence...
4860           RI            Transportation Improvements      $4,000,000
for the Route 138 (South
Kingstown)................
4861           RI            Transportation Improvements      $2,750,000
for the Route 1 Gilbert
Stuart Turnaround (N.
Kingstown)................
4862           RI            Rehabilitate and improve        $12,000,000
Rt. 138 from Rt. 108 to
Rt. 2.....................
4863           RI            Improve traffic circulation      $5,000,000
and road surfacing in
downtown Providence.......
4864           RI            Improve access to Pell           $5,000,000
Bridge in Newport.........
4865           RI            Completion of Washington         $7,000,000
Secondary Bike Path from
Coventry to Connecticut
Border....................
4866           RI            Replace Warren Bridge in        $11,000,000
Warren....................
4867           RI            Rehabilitation of                $5,000,000
Stillwater Viaduct in
Smithfield................
4868           RI            Completion of                    $5,000,000
Woonasquatucket River
Greenway from Johnston to
Providence................
4869           RI            Replace Natick Bridge in         $5,000,000
Warwick and West Warwick..
4870           SC            Construction of I-73 from       $10,000,000
Myrtle Beach, SC to I-95,
ending at the NC State
line......................
4871           SC            Widening of U.S. 278 to six     $15,000,000
lanes in Beaufort County,
SC between Hilton Head
Island and SC 170.........
4872           SC            Engineering, design and         $10,000,000
construction of a Port
Access Road connecting to
I-26 in North Charleston,
SC........................
4873           SC            Improvements to U.S. 17 in      $10,000,000
Beaufort and Colleton
Counties to improve safety
between U.S. 21 and SC 64.
4874           SC            Widening of SC 9 in              $2,000,000
Spartanburg County from SC
292 to Rainbow Lake Road..
4875           SC            Complete Construction of         $3,000,000
Palmetto Parkway Extension
(I-520) Phase II to I-20..

[[Page 1443]]
119 STAT. 1443


4876           SC            Complete a multi-lane            $4,000,000
widening project on SC Hwy
5 Bypass in York County,
SC between I-77 and I-85..
4877           SC            Re-construction of an            $2,000,000
existing interchange at I-
385 and SC 14, in Laurens
County....................
4878           SC            Construction of the              $2,000,000
Lexington Connector in
Lexington County, to
alleviate traffic
congestion................
4879           SC            Widening of 4.4 miles of         $2,000,000
West Georgia Road in
Greenville County.........
4880           SC            Extension of Wells Highway       $2,000,000
in Oconee County..........
4881           SC            Demolition of the old            $5,000,000
Cooper River Bridges in
Charleston................
4882           SC            Transportation Improvements      $5,000,000
for the I-73 in South
Carolina-Proposed
interstate corridor
beginning at NC State line
continuing to the Grand
Strand area of SC.........
4883           SC            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
for the U.S. 278 in
Beaufort/Jasper County to
alleviate roadway capacity
constraints and improve
safety and operations.....
4884           SC            ICAR Roads, Greenville,          $2,000,000
reconstruction of roads
around Fairforest Way for
better flow into ICAR.....
4885           SC            Harden Street Improvements       $5,000,000
in Columbia. Specific
improvements will include:
modern traffic control
signals, intersections,
improved street lighting,
driveways etc.............
4886           SC            Palmetto Parkway, Phase 2        $3,000,000
is approximately 6 miles
long and begins at U.S. 1/
78 and terminates at I-20.
4887           SC            Lexington Connector in           $1,000,000
South Carolina, to
alleviate traffic
congestion along three
major thoroughfares in
Lexington County: U.S. 1,
U.S. 378, and SC 6........
4888           SC            I-77/Peach Road Interchange      $3,000,000
in Fairfield County, SC,
project would create
interchange to encourage
development at industrial
park......................
4889           SC            I-95/SC 327 in Florence,         $3,000,000
SC, to construct
northbound ramp and expand
existing ramps............
4890           SC            Transportation Improvements      $1,000,000
for Highway 901, York
County, SC................
4891           SC            The Extension of the Mark        $3,000,000
Clark Expressway in
Charleston County.........
4892           SD            Construction of 4-lane          $27,000,000
highway on U.S. 79 between
Maverick Junction, and the
Nebraska border...........
4893           SD            Reconstruct, S. Rochford         $9,000,000
Road from Rochford to
Deerfield Rd..............
4894           SD            Reconstruct SD-50 Cherry         $3,000,000
Street in Vermillion......
4895           SD            Construct Rush Lake              $8,000,000
Crossing U.S. 12 near
Webster...................
4896           SD            Construct Phase I/South          $3,600,000
Connector Broadway to 29th
Street, Watertown.........
4897           SD            Construct Intersection of        $2,500,000
State Hwy 212 and U.S. 81,
Watertown.................

[[Page 1444]]
119 STAT. 1444


4898           SD            Reconstruction of U.S. 14/       $3,000,000
Medary Ave. to 22nd Ave.,
Brookings.................
4899           SD            Extension of Main Street         $1,500,000
and replacement of rail
crossing, Mobridge........
4900           SD            Reconstruction and paving        $6,000,000
of BIA Route 27, Wounded
Knee-Porcupine Butte......
4901           SD            Purchase critical                $2,000,000
conservation easements
along the Heartland
Expressway (Highway 79)
adjacent to Custer State
Park and Wind Cave
National Park.............
4902           SD            Reconstruction and paving        $2,000,000
of streets on the
Flandreau Indian
Reservation...............
4903           SD            Construct Exit 61 I-90          $15,116,000
Rapid City (Heartland
Expressway)...............
4904           SD            Construct SD 1806 from U.S.        $862,000
83 East/15.6 miles toward
Lower Brule...............
4905           SD            Construct Wagner Community         $200,000
Streets, Yankton
Reservation...............
4906           SD            Construct Marty Community          $200,000
Streets, Yankton
Reservation...............
4907           SD            Construct Riverfront               $300,000
Walking trail between 4th
Ave. and Main Street,
Mobridge..................
4908           SD            Reconstruct Exit 79--I-29       $12,323,000
in Sioux Falls (12th
Street)...................
4909           SD            East Anamosa St. extension       $6,127,000
to east/north and lacrosse
St. road and bridge.......
4910           SD            To replace bridge over          $15,000,000
Missouri River, I-90 in
Chamberlain...............
4911           SD            Winter Maintenance Decision      $1,000,000
Support System/SD DOT.....
4912           SD            Reconstruct U.S. 14 to U.S.      $2,000,000
83 junction, Pierre East..
4913           SD            Resurface U.S. 12 from           $2,472,000
McLaughlin east 14.2 miles
in Standing Rock
Reservation...............
4914           SD            Reconstruct I-90 loop in         $3,000,000
Mitchell (Burr to Sanborn)
4915           SD            Road Construction                $1,000,000
Activities Turner County..
4916           SD            Pavement restoration U.S.        $1,000,000
12 2.1 miles from west of
Penn St. to east of
Melgaard in Aberdeen......
4917           SD            BIA route 3/ Tribal Farm         $6,000,000
Rd. reconstruction and
paving....................
4918           SD            BIA route 15 resurfacing         $5,000,000
between red scaffold and
cherry creek to Ziebach
county Rd. 33.............
4919           SD            For Okreek to Carter             $2,250,000
grading and resurfacing
U.S. 18 west of Okreek to
Carter....................
4920           SD            Acquisition of road              $3,000,000
maintenance equipment for
Oglala, Rosebud and
Cheyenne River Sioux
Tribes....................
4921           SD            Construct bike path in             $750,000
Vermillion................
4922           SD            Construct Rail Spur in             $750,000
Brookings.................
4923           SD            Asphalt overlay to extend          $600,000
Lewis and Clark Highway
1804 in Charles Mix County
leading to Platte Creek
Recreation Area...........
4924           SD            South Dakota Department of       $3,450,000
Transportation; for those
projects it has identified
as its highest priorities.
4925           TN            University of Tennessee         $20,000,000
Joint Institute for
Advanced Materials in
Knoxville.................

[[Page 1445]]
119 STAT. 1445


4926           TN            Center for Advanced              $5,000,000
Intermodal Transportation
Technologies at the
University of Memphis.....
4927           TN            College Street Corridor,         $8,000,000
Phase II, Great Smoky
Mountain Heritage Highway
Cultural and Visitors
Center, Maryville.........
4928           TN            Plan and construct N.            $6,000,000
Tennessee Boulevard
enhancements, Murfreesboro
4929           TN            North Second Street             $10,000,000
Corridor Upgrade, Memphis.
4930           TN            Engineer, design and            $10,000,000
construction of connector
road from I-75 interchange
across Enterprise South
Industrial Park to Hwy 58
in Hamilton County........
4931           TN            Construct force protection       $4,000,000
barriers along U.S.
Highway 41-A at Fort
Campbell..................
4932           TN            Upgrade roads for Slack          $1,500,000
Water Port facility and
industrial park, Lake
County, TN................
4933           TN            Plan and construct               $2,000,000
Rutherford County
visitor's center/
transportation information
hub, City of Murfreesboro.
4934           TN            Reconstruct connection with      $5,000,000
Hermitage Avenue to
Cumberland River Bluff in
Nashville.................
4935           TN            Six lane extension from          $4,000,000
Airways Boulevard to South
Highland Avenue in Jackson
4936           TN            Plough Boulevard                 $2,500,000
Interchange with
Winchester Road in Memphis
4937           TN            Construction of a                  $200,000
pedestrian bridge in Alcoa
4938           TN            Construct visitor                $1,800,000
interpretive center at the
Gray Fossil Site in Gray..
4939           TN            Expansion of SR 11W from         $5,000,000
Rutledge to Bean Station
in Grainger County........
4940           TN            Construction of Knob Creek       $2,500,000
Road in Washington County,
Tennessee.................
4941           TN            Riverside Drive Cobblestone      $2,500,000
Restoration and Walkway,
Memphis...................
4942           TN            Reconstruction of                $5,000,000
sidewalks, curbs, and
streetscape improvements
within the Memphis Central
Biomedical District,
Memphis, Tennessee........
4943           TN            Develop intelligent              $2,200,000
transportation signage for
access points at Fort
Campbell, Tennessee.......
4944           TN            Construction of SR 32/U.S.       $5,000,000
321 from SR 73 at Wilton
Springs road to near I-40
in Cocke County, Tennessee
4945           TN            Improvements to I-40             $5,000,000
interchange at I-240 East
of Memphis (Phase II).....
4946           TN            Warren County Mountain View      $1,500,000
Industrial Park access
road, Warren County, TN...
4947           TN            Widen U.S. Highway 127 to 4      $2,000,000
lanes between Jamestown,
Tennessee and I-40........
4948           TN            Widen a railroad underpass       $5,000,000
and make access
improvements to the I-275
industrial business park
in Knoxville..............
4949           TN            Construct Interpretive             $500,000
Visitor Center for the
Cherokee Removal Memorial
Park Trail of Tears site
in Meigs County...........
4950           TN            Construct overpass at            $1,300,000
Highway 321 and Highway 11
Loudon County.............

[[Page 1446]]
119 STAT. 1446


4951           TN            Construction of an               $1,250,000
Interchange on Highway 64
(APD 40) adjacent to I-75
Exit 20 in the City of
Cleveland, TN for
increased safety..........
4952           TN            Construct trails and               $500,000
recreational facilities at
the Warriors Path State
Park in Kingsport.........
4953           TN            Construct the Melton Lake          $650,000
greenway in Oak Ridge.....
4954           TN            Access road improvements         $1,000,000
for regional hospital in
Morristown................
4955           TN            Johnson County, Tennessee          $500,000
for a trails system.......
4956           TN            Access road from the James       $1,000,000
H. Quillen VA Medical
Center to U.S. 11-E in
Mountain Home.............
4957           TN            Widen I-65 from SR 840 to        $2,000,000
SR 96, including
interchange modification
at Goose Creek bypass,
Williamson County.........
4958           TN            Acquire and construct trail        $500,000
and bikeway along S.
Chickamauga Creek in
Chattanooga...............
4959           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Carter
County....................
4960           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, McMinn
County....................
4961           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Maury
County....................
4962           TN            Improve, Streetscape and           $500,000
pavement repair, Lincoln
County....................
4963           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Dyer
County....................
4964           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Smith
County....................
4965           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Henry
County....................
4966           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Obion
County....................
4967           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Sumner
County....................
4968           TN            Replace Unitia Bridge in           $200,000
Loudon County.............
4969           TN            Sullivan, Washington               $500,000
Counties, Tennessee SR 75
widening..................
4970           TN            Sevier County, TN SR 66            $500,000
widening..................
4971           TN            Develop the East Hickman           $200,000
County and Oak Hill
Community Greenway
Projects, Hickman County..
4972           TN            SR 397 extension from SR           $500,000
96W to U.S. 431N to
Franklin..................
4973           TN            U.S. 412 from the Madison          $500,000
County Line to Parsons TN
in Henderson and Decatur
Counties..................
4974           TN            Construction of the             $10,000,000
Foothills Parkway in Smoky
Mountains National Park,
Sevier County.............
4975           TN            Construct Transportation           $400,000
and Heritage museum,
Townsend..................
4976           TN            Plan and construct access          $300,000
road for the Overton
County Industrial Park,
Overton County............
4977           TN            Construct system of                $500,000
greenways in Nashville--
Davidson County...........
4978           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Roane
County....................

[[Page 1447]]
119 STAT. 1447


4979           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Scott
County....................
4980           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Morgan
County....................
4981           TN            Improve Streetscape and            $500,000
pavement repair, Fentress
County....................
4982           TN            Street improvements,             $6,000,000
streetscape features,
signals and signage along
3rd Avenue North and Union
Street in downtown
Nashville, Tennessee......
4983           TN            Improvements to the Blount/      $6,000,000
Sevier Corridor in
Knoxville, Tennessee to
support the South
Waterfront Redevelopment
project...................
4984           TX            Replacement of the I-30         $17,000,000
Bridge over the Trinity
River in Dallas...........
4985           TX            Replacement of the              $15,000,000
Galveston Causeway
Railroad Bridge in
Galveston.................
4986           TX            Construction of a new            $4,000,000
international rail bridge
and rail track west of
Brownsville...............
4987           TX            Construction of a three         $10,000,000
mile bypass around central
San Marcos................
4988           TX            Construction of a railroad       $6,000,000
grade separation at Calton
Rd. in Laredo, TX (part of
the West Laredo Multimodal
Trade Corridor)...........
4989           TX            Transportation Improvements      $5,000,000
for the San Angelo Ports
to Plains Route 306 at FM
388.......................
4990           TX            Reconstruct Mile 6 West          $2,000,000
from U.S. 83 to SH 107
Hidalgo County............
4991           TX            Tyler Outer Loop 49              $3,000,000
Construction..............
4992           TX            Transportation Improvements      $3,000,000
to Cotton Flat Road
Overpass @ Interstate 20..
4993           TX            Construction of a parking        $2,000,000
facility at the University
of the Incarnate Word, San
Antonio, Texas............
4994           TX            Research and construction,       $1,000,000
Southwest Center for
Transportation Research
and Testing, Pecos, TX....
4995           TX            Construct a reliever route       $3,000,000
on U.S. 287 south of Dumas
to U.S. 287 north of Dumas
4996           TX            Widen FM 60 (University          $2,000,000
Drive) from SH 6 to FM
158, College Station......
4997           TX            Complete U.S. 77 relief          $4,000,000
route around City of
Robstown..................
4998           TX            North Rail Relocation            $4,000,000
Harlingen.................
4999           TX            Improvements to KellyUSA         $2,000,000
36th Street...............
5000           TX            Beaumont, TX Washington          $1,000,000
Blvd. Improvements........
5001           TX            Improvements to Cottonwood       $1,000,000
Trail.....................
5002           TX            Improvements to FM 110 in        $1,000,000
San Marcos................
5003           TX            Improvements to SH 71 from       $2,000,000
W of FM 20 to Loop 150
Bastrop County............
5004           TX            Construct 6 mainlines from       $2,000,000
east of Mercury to east of
Wallsville................
5005           UT            Geneva Rd-Provo Center           $2,000,000
Street, Orem 1600 North to
I-15 FWY, Provo-widen from
2 to 4 lanes, Provo.......
5006           UT            Construction of Midvalley        $3,000,000
Highway, Tooele County....

[[Page 1448]]
119 STAT. 1448


5007           UT            Provo, Utah Westside             $1,000,000
Connector from I-15 to
Provo Municipal Airport,
Provo.....................
5008           UT            Reconstruct 500 West,            $1,500,000
including pedestrian and
bicycle access, in Moab...
5009           UT            Bear River Migratory Bird        $3,000,000
Refuge Access Road
Improvements, Box Elder
County....................
5010           UT            Widen Highway 92 from Lehi       $2,500,000
to Alpine/Highland........
5011           UT            I-15 Freeway Reconstruction-     $6,000,000
Springville 200 South
Interchange, Springville..
5012           UT            Construct 2-lane divided         $7,000,000
highway from the
Atkinville Interchange to
the new airport access
road in St. George........
5013           UT            I-15 Reconstruction; Salt        $3,500,000
Lake County...............
5014           UT            I-15 North and Commuter          $2,500,000
Rail Coordination, Davis
County....................
5015           UT            Streetscape a 2-lane road        $3,000,000
and add turning lanes at
key intersections on Santa
Clara Drive in Santa Clara
5016           UT            Widen Redwood Road from          $2,500,000
Saratoga Springs to
Bangerter Highway in Utah
County....................
5017           UT            Grant Tower                      $5,000,000
Reconfiguration, Salt Lake
City......................
5018           UT            200 East Minor Arterial,         $3,000,000
Logan City................
5019           UT            3200 South Project, Nibley/      $3,000,000
Cache County..............
5020           UT            Construct Parley's Creek         $5,500,000
Trail, Salt Lake City.....
5021           UT            SR 158 Improvements, Pine        $2,100,000
View Dam, Weber County....
5022           UT            Provo Reservoir Canal            $5,000,000
Trail, Provo..............
5023           UT            Improve pedestrian and           $2,000,000
traffic safety in Holladay
5024           UT            Forest Street Improvements,      $3,500,000
Brigham City..............
5025           UT            Reconstruct South Moore Cut-     $8,000,000
off Road in Emery County,
UT........................
5026           UT            Increase lane capacity on        $4,000,000
bridge over Virgin River
on Washington Fields Road
in Washington.............
5027           UT            Construct pedestrian safety        $500,000
project on the Navajo
Nation in Montezuma Creek.
5028           UT            Add lighting on Highway 262        $500,000
on the Navajo Nation in
Aneth.....................
5029           UT            Add lights to road from            $400,000
Halchita to Mexican Hat in
the Navajo Nation.........
5030           UT            Geneva Rd-Provo Center          $10,000,000
Street, Orem 1600 North to
I-15 FWY, Provo-widen from
2 to 4 lanes..............
5031           UT            Transportation Improvements      $5,500,000
for the Widen Highway 92
from Lehi to Highland.....
5032           UT            Expand Redhills Parkway          $8,000,000
from 2 to 5 lanes and
improve alignment within
rights-of-way in St.
George....................
5033           UT            I-15 Freeway Reconstruction-     $4,500,000
Springville 200 South
Interchange...............
5034           UT            Construct 2-lane divided         $6,000,000
highway from the
Atkinville Interchange to
the new replacement
airport access road in St.
George....................
5035           UT            Widen Redwood Road from          $4,000,000
Bangerter Highway in Salt
Lake County through
Saratoga Springs in Utah
County....................

[[Page 1449]]
119 STAT. 1449


5036           UT            Construction of 200 North        $5,000,000
Street highway-rail graded
crossing separation,
Kaysville.................
5037           UT            Forest Street Improvements,      $2,500,000
Brigham City..............
5038           UT            Bear River Migratory Bird        $5,500,000
Refuge Access Road
Improvements, Box Elder
County....................
5039           UT            Construction and                 $5,000,000
Rehabilitation of 13th
East in Sandy City........
5040           UT            Transportation Improvements      $1,000,000
to 200 East Minor
Arterial, Logan City......
5041           UT            Provo, Utah Westside             $1,000,000
Connector from I-15 to
Provo Municipal Airport...
5042           UT            Improve pedestrian and           $2,000,000
traffic safety in Holladay
5043           VA            I-66 Improvements and Route     $20,000,000
29 Interchange at
Gainesville...............
5044           VA            Construct Meadowcreek           $25,000,000
Parkway Interchange,
Charlottesville...........
5045           VA            Construct South Airport          $2,000,000
Connector Road, Richmond
International Airport.....
5046           VA            I-264/Lynnhaven Parkway/         $2,000,000
Great Neck Road
Interchange...............
5047           VA            Improvements to Coalfields      $12,000,000
Connector, Route 460,
Buchanan County...........
5048           VA            Rt. 460 Improvements.......      $5,000,000
5049           VA            National Park Service            $2,000,000
transportation
improvements to Historic
Jamestowne in FY 2006.....
5050           VA            Manage freight movement and      $3,500,000
safety improvements to I-
81........................
5051           VA            Route 50 Traffic Calming,        $8,000,000
Gilberts Corner...........
5052           VA            Smart Road Research and          $6,000,000
Operations, Blacksburg....
5053           VA            Replacement of Robertson         $5,000,000
Bridge, Danville..........
5054           VA            I-64/City Line Road              $5,000,000
Interchange...............
5055           VA            Dominion Boulevard               $8,000,000
Improvements, Route 17,
Chesapeake................
5056           VA            National Park Service,             $500,000
Appalachian Trail, High
Top Mountain land
acquisition, FY 2006......
5057           VA            Widen I-66 westbound inside     $22,000,000
the Capital Beltway.......
5058           VA            Construct I-73 near              $7,000,000
Martinsville,.............
5059           VA            The Journey Through              $1,000,000
Hallowed Ground Rt. 15
scenic corridor management
planning and
implementation, FY 2006...
5060           VA            Widening I-95 between Rt.       $10,000,000
123 and Fairfax County
Parkway...................
5061           VA            Widen Route 17 in Stafford.      $1,000,000
5062           VA            Construct Old Mill Road          $2,000,000
extension.................
5063           VA            Improvements to public           $1,000,000
roadways within the campus
boundaries of the Virginia
Biotechnology Park,
Richmond..................
5064           VA            Widen Route 262 in Augusta       $2,000,000
County....................
5065           VA            Bristol Train Station--          $1,000,000
Historic preservation and
rehabilitation of former
Bristol, VA train station.
5066           VA            Interstate 81 ITS message          $500,000
signs.....................
5067           VA            Improvements to Route 15,        $1,000,000
Farmville.................
5068           VA            Route 11 improvements in           $500,000
Maurertown (Shenandoah
County)...................

[[Page 1450]]
119 STAT. 1450


5069           VA            Improve Route 42 (Main             $500,000
Street) in Bridgewater....
5070           VA            Widen Rolfe Highway to the       $1,000,000
Surry Ferry landing
approach bridge in FY 2006
5071           VA            Engineering and right-of-        $1,000,000
way for Interstate 73 in
Roanoke County............
5072           VA            Double stack clearance of        $5,000,000
tunnels on the Norfolk and
Western Mainline in
Virginia located on the
Heartland Corridor........
5073           VA            Construction and                 $1,000,000
improvements from Route 60
to Mariners Museum and USS
Monitor Center............
5074           VA            Route 221 improvements in          $500,000
Forest....................
5075           VT            U.S. Route 2 Improvements        $5,000,000
in Danville...............
5076           VT            Vermont Statewide Rural         $10,000,000
Advanced Traveller System
and Fiber Construction....
5077           VT            Main Street Bridge, Johnson      $3,600,000
5078           VT            Pearl Street Bridge,             $1,400,000
Johnson...................
5079           VT            Church Street Improvements       $6,000,000
in Burlington.............
5080           VT            Burlington Waterfront            $3,500,000
Transportation
Improvements..............
5081           VT            Colchester Campus Road           $1,000,000
Project...................
5082           VT            Essex Junction Downtown          $1,000,000
Transportation
Improvements..............
5083           VT            U.S. Route 2/I-89                $3,000,000
Interchange Improvements
in South Burlington.......
5084           VT            I-91 Reconstruction at           $6,000,000
Derby Line, VT Port of
Entry.....................
5085           VT            Design and Construction of       $4,000,000
Montpelier Downtown
Redevelopment Project.....
5086           VT            Design and construction of       $5,000,000
dry span bridge in Swanton
5087           VT            Vermont Transportation           $2,000,000
Coordinated Use Facility
in Berlin.................
5088           VT            St. Lawrence and Atlantic        $5,000,000
Railroad Upgrades in
Northeastern Vermont......
5089           VT            Vermont I-89 Exit 14             $4,000,000
Upgrades..................
5090           VT            Construct Bennington Bypass     $20,000,000
(North Leg)...............
5091           VT            Improve Federal Street, St.      $1,500,000
Albans....................
5092           VT            Improvements to U.S. Rt. 7      $15,000,000
from Brandon to Pittsford.
5093           VT            Improvements to U.S. Rt. 7       $4,000,000
in Charlotte..............
5094           VT            Design and construction of       $2,500,000
roundabouts/traffic
circles at U.S. Rt. 7/Rt.
7A in Manchester and U.S.
Rt. 7/VT Rt. 103 in
Clarendon.................
5095           VT            Improvements to I-91            $15,000,000
between Hartford, VT and
Derby line................
5096           VT            Transportation Improvements      $2,500,000
to Vermont Park and Ride..
5097           VT            Transportation Improvements      $2,000,000
to Bellows Falls Tunnel...
5098           VT            Improvements to River Rd/        $2,000,000
U.S. Rt. 2 in Lunenberg...
5099           WA            SR 518 corridor--                $4,000,000
Improvements to SR 518-509
interchange and addition
of eastbound travel lane
on a portion of the
corridor..................
5100           WA            Design and construct             $2,500,000
pedestrian land bridge
spanning SR 14............

[[Page 1451]]
119 STAT. 1451


5101           WA            Riverside Avenue                 $2,500,000
Improvements, Phases 2 and
3, Spokane................
5102           WA            Hanford Reach National           $1,500,000
Monument Road Improvement.
5103           WA            Town Square Roadway and          $2,500,000
Pedestrian Improvements,
Burien....................
5104           WA            SR 704 Cross-Base Highway        $2,000,000
Improvements, Spanaway
Loop Road to SR 7.........
5105           WA            Tukwila Southcenter Parkway      $3,000,000
Improvements, Tukwila.....
5106           WA            Federal Way Triangle--           $4,000,000
Conduct final engineering
work for the
reconstruction of the I-5--
SR 18 interchange.........
5107           WA            U.S. 12 Burbank to Walla         $2,500,000
Walla: Construct new four
lane highway for portion
of U.S. 12................
5108           WA            Reconstruction of SR 99          $1,000,000
(Aurora Ave. N) between N
145th St. and N 205th St..
5109           WA            Access Downtown Phase II: I-     $1,500,000
405 Downtown Bellevue
Circulation Improvements..
5110           WA            Seattle Ferry Terminal           $2,000,000
Redevelopment and
Expansion.................
5111           WA            Port of Bellingham               $2,500,000
Transportation Enhancement
Projects..................
5112           WA            Toroda Creek Road                $1,650,000
Improvements, Ferry County
5113           WA            Toroda Creek Road                  $850,000
Improvements, Okanogan
County....................
5114           WA            Conduct preliminary              $1,000,000
engineering and EIS for
Columbia River Crossing in
WA and OR.................
5115           WA            U.S. 395, North Spokane          $2,000,000
Corridor Improvements.....
5116           WA            116th St/Interstate 5            $1,000,000
Interchange Reconstruction
in Marysville.............
5117           WA            SR 167--Right-of-way             $7,500,000
acquisition for a new
freeway connecting SR 509
to SR 161.................
5118           WA            Roadway and Pedestrian           $1,500,000
Improvements at Burien
Town Square, Burien.......
5119           WA            Complete analysis,               $8,400,000
permitting and right-of-
way procurement for I-5/SR
501 Interchange
Replacement in Ridgefield.
5120           WA            Construct improvements to        $2,500,000
Multimodal Terminal,
Bainbridge Island.........
5121           WA            Construct Intermodal             $3,250,000
Transit Facility, City of
University Place..........
5122           WA            Streetscape University           $2,800,000
Place Downtown, City of
University Place..........
5123           WA            Plan and Improve freight           $500,000
and goods transport--The
West Cost Corridor
Coalition in Washington
State.....................
5124           WA            Continuing construction of       $7,300,000
I-90, Spokane to Idaho
State Line................
5125           WA            Tukwila Urban Access             $1,750,000
Improvement--Address
necessary improvements to
Southcenter Parkway in
Tukwila to relieve
congestion................
5126           WA            Takoma--Lincoln Ave. Grade       $1,500,000
Separation................
5127           WA            Widen SR 202/SR 520 to           $1,750,000
Sahalee Way, King County..

[[Page 1452]]
119 STAT. 1452


5128           WA            Improve Vancouver traffic          $500,000
management--Vancouver
Advanced Traffic
Management System,
Vancouver.................
5129           WA            SR 240/Stevens Drive             $2,750,000
Corridor Improvements,
interchange construction
and graded rail crossing
separation at intersection
of SR 240 and Van Giesen
Street, Richland..........
5130           WI            Reconstruct Interstate 94/      $20,800,000
43/794 (Marquette
Interchange) in Milwaukee.
5131           WI            Rehabilitate existing            $7,500,000
bridge and construct new
bridge on Michigan Street
in Sturgeon Bay...........
5132           WI            Reconstruct and rebuild St.      $7,500,000
Croix River Crossing,
connecting Wisconsin State
Highway 64 in Houlton,
Wisconsin to Minnesota
State Highway in
Stillwater, Minnesota.....
5133           WI            Reconstruct U.S. Highway         $4,000,000
151 (East Washington Ave.)
in Madison................
5134           WI            Expand SH 57 between             $3,000,000
Dyckesville and Sturgeon
Bay.......................
5135           WI            Rehabilitate Highway 53          $2,000,000
between Chippewa Falls and
New Auburn................
5136           WI            Expand U.S. Highway 151          $2,500,000
between Dickeyville and
Belmont...................
5137           WI            Develop pedestrian and bike        $400,000
connections that link to
Hank Aaron State Trail in
Milwaukee.................
5138           WI            Reconstruct SH 78 between          $500,000
Prairie du Sac and
Merrimac, WI, including
reuse of rubble from
Badger Ammunition Plant
building demolition.......
5139           WI            Upgrade Interstate 94            $2,000,000
between Wilson Creek and
Red Cedar River in Dunn
County....................
5140           WI            City of Glendale, WI.            $2,000,000
Develop and rehabilitate
exit ramps on I-43, and
improvements at West
Silver Spring Drive and
North Port Washington Rd..
5141           WI            Expand U.S. 51 and SH 29 in      $2,500,000
Marathon County...........
5142           WI            Upgrade U.S. 2 in Ashland        $2,100,000
County....................
5143           WI            Widen Wisconsin State            $1,500,000
Highway 64 between Houlton
and New Richmond..........
5144           WI            Upgrade U.S. 41 from DePere      $2,000,000
to Suamico, Brown County..
5145           WI            Reconstruct and widen CTH        $2,000,000
AAA/Oneida St. between
Hansen Road and Cormier
Road including
reconstruction of SH 172
overpasses, Brown County..
5146           WI            Reconstruct SH 33,               $1,000,000
including the planned
bicycle/pedestrian
component, between Port
Washington and Saukville,
Ozaukee County............
5147           WI            Reconstruct U.S. 41/SH 144       $1,000,000
interchange near Slinger..
5148           WI            Reconstruct Wisconsin State      $1,000,000
Highway 21 at I-94
Interchange, Monroe County
5149           WI            Construct bicycle/                 $700,000
pedestrian path and
facilities in the Central
park area of Madison......
5150           WI            Construct a bicycle/               $500,000
pedestrian path, Wisconsin
Dells.....................

[[Page 1453]]
119 STAT. 1453


5151           WI            Construct a bicycle/               $500,000
pedestrian path from
Waunakee to Westport......
5152           WI            Construct an alternative         $1,000,000
connection to divert local
traffic from I-90, a major
highway, and allow
movement through the
Gateway commercial
development project.......
5153           WI            Reconstruct Highway 151          $2,000,000
from American Parkway to
Main Street, Sun Prairie..
5154           WI            Replace Highway 10 bridge        $2,000,000
over the Chippewa River
near Durand...............
5155           WI            Construct Eau Claire bypass      $2,000,000
on U.S. 53 in Eau Claire..
5156           WI            Replace the 17th Street          $2,000,000
Lift Bridge, Two Rivers...
5157           WI            Pioneer Road Rail Grade          $1,000,000
Separation (Fond du Lac,
Wisconsin)................
5158           WI            Upgrade Highway 26 between       $3,000,000
Janesville and Watertown..
5159           WV            Construct King Coal Highway-    $38,000,000
Red Jacket Segment, Mingo
County....................
5160           WV            Plan, design, and construct     $18,000,000
New Ohio River Bridge,
South of Wellsburg, Brooke
County....................
5161           WV            Plan, design, and construct     $13,000,000
Route 9 Martinsburg Bypass
5162           WV            Upgrade Route 10 Logan Co..      $7,000,000
5163           WV            Construct Coalfields            $11,000,000
Expressway................
5164           WV            Widen and reconstruct U.S.      $27,000,000
Rt. 35, Putnam County.....
5165           WV            Construct Shawnee Parkway..      $1,000,000
5166           WY            Burma Rd: Extension from I-      $2,500,000
90 to Lakeway.............
5167           WY            U.S. 26-287: repair road        $25,000,000
from Dubois to Moran
Junction, Wyoming to
improve access to
Yellowstone National Park
(Togwotee Pass
Reconstruction)...........
5168           WY            WYO 59: add lanes between       $10,000,000
Gillette and Douglas,
Wyoming for improved
safety and access.........
5169           WY            Casper West Belt Loop:          $21,000,000
connect three National
Highway System routes (WYO
220, U.S. 20-26 and I-25).
5170           WY            I-80: reconstruct section       $19,000,000
of I-80 near Rock Springs,
Wyoming for improved
safety....................
5171           WY            I-25: Widen and resurface        $5,000,000
approximately eight miles
of I-25 in Johnson County,
Wyoming between Buffalo
and Kaycee................
5172           WY            I-90: create I-90/Burma          $2,500,000
Road overpass to increase
community and emergency
access in Gillette,
Wyoming...................
5173           WY            U.S. 85: add passing lanes       $5,000,000
on U.S. 85 between
Newcastle and Lusk,
Wyoming to increase safety
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 1703. TECHNICAL AMENDMENTS TO TRANSPORTATION PROJECTS.

(a) TEA-21.--The table contained in section 1602 of the
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 257) is
amended--

[[Page 1454]]
119 STAT. 1454

(1) in item number 35 by inserting ``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 732 by striking ``reviews and other
preliminary work'' and inserting ``reviews, other preliminary
work, and transitional construction'';
(6) 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'';
(7) in item number 800 by striking ``Fairview Township'' and
inserting ``or other projects selected by the York County,
Pennsylvania MPO'';
(8) 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'';
(9) in item number 863, by adding at the end the following:
``, including the Cuyahoga-Woodland Avenue Bridge'';
(10) 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 Route 57 and 167th Street in Country Club Hills'';
(11) in item 1096 by striking ``Construct'' and all that
follows through ``Independence'' and inserting ``Construction
and improvements in Reminderville, Ohio (43 percent);
streetscaping, bicycle trails, and related improvements to the
I-90/SR 615 Interchange in Mentor, Ohio (20 percent); planning
and construction of a bicycle trail adjacent to such Interchange
(14 percent); Eastlake Stadium transit intermodal facility (16
percent); and purchase of right-of-way for transportation
enhancement activities in Bainbridge Township, Ohio (7
percent)'';
(12) 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'';
(13) in item number 1225 by striking ``Construct SR 9
bypass'' and inserting ``Study, design, and construct
transportation solutions for SR 9 corridor'';
(14) in item number 1349 by inserting ``, and improvements
to streets and roads providing access to,'' after ``along'';
(15) 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'';
(16) in item number 1392 by striking ``Construct'' and all
that follows through ``multimodal center'' and inserting

[[Page 1455]]
119 STAT. 1455

``Improve the ramp configuration at the I-476 PA Turnpike
Landsdale Interchange'';
(17) in item number 1447 by striking ``Extend'' and all that
follows through ``Valparaiso'' and inserting ``Design and
construction of interchange at I-65 and 109th Avenue, Crown
Point''; and
(18) in item number 1474 by adding at the end the following:
``, widen Cuyahoga SR 87, and $4,000,000 of the amount
authorized to construct grading separation at Front Street,
Berea''.

(b) ISTEA.--Item number 32 in the table contained in section
1106(a)(2) of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of
1991 (105 Stat. 2038) is amended by striking ``Extension of 34th Street
from IL Rt. 15 to County Road 10'' and inserting ``Extension and
improvements of 34th Street''.

Subtitle H--Environment

SEC. 1801. CONSTRUCTION OF FERRY BOATS AND FERRY TERMINAL FACILITIES.

(a) In General.--Section 147 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 147. 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 of the cost of construction
of ferry boats, ferry terminals, and ferry maintenance facilities under
this section shall be 80 percent.
``(c) Allocation of Funds.--The Secretary shall give priority in the
allocation of funds under this section to those ferry systems, and
public entities responsible for developing ferries, that--
``(1) provide critical access to areas that are not well-
served by other modes of surface transportation;
``(2) carry the greatest number of passengers and vehicles;
or
``(3) carry the greatest number of passengers in passenger-
only service.

``(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 2005 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.

[[Page 1456]]
119 STAT. 1456

``(e) Period of Availability.--Notwithstanding section 118(b), funds
made available to carry out this section shall remain available until
expended.
``(f) 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) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such subchapter is amended
by striking the item relating to section 147 and inserting the
following:

``147. Construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities.''.

(c) Conforming Repeal.--Section 1064 of the Intermodal Surface
Transportation  NOTE: 23 USC 129 note.  Efficiency Act of 1991 (105
Stat. 2005) is repealed.

(d)  NOTE: 23 USC 147 note.  Authorization of Appropriations.--In
addition to amounts made available to carry out section 147 of title 23,
United States Code, by section 1101 of this Act, there are authorized to
be appropriated such sums as may be necessary to carry out such section
147 for fiscal year 2006 and each fiscal year thereafter. Such funds
shall remain available until expended.

(e)  NOTE: 23 USC 129 note.  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)  NOTE: Deadline.  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)  NOTE: Public information.  ensure that the
database is easily accessible to the public; and
(C) make available, from the amounts made available
for the Bureau of Transportation Statistics by section
5101 of this Act, not more than $500,000 for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 to establish and maintain
the database.

(f) Territory Ferries.--Section 129(c)(5) of title 23, United States
Code, is amended by striking ``the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico'' each
place it appears and inserting ``any territory of the United States''.

SEC. 1802. NATIONAL SCENIC BYWAYS PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Section 162(a) of title 23, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``the roads as'' and all
that follows and inserting ``the roads as--
``(A) National Scenic Byways;

[[Page 1457]]
119 STAT. 1457

``(B) All-American Roads; or
``(C) America's Byways.''; and
(2) by striking paragraph (3) and inserting the following:
``(3) Nomination.--
``(A) In general.--To be considered for a
designation, a road must be nominated by a State, an
Indian tribe, or a Federal land management agency and
must first be designated as a State scenic byway, an
Indian tribe scenic byway, or, in the case of a road on
Federal land, as a Federal land management agency byway.
``(B) Nomination by indian tribes.--An Indian tribe
may nominate a road as a National Scenic Byway under
subparagraph (A) only if a Federal land management
agency (other than the Bureau of Indian Affairs), a
State, or a political subdivision of a State does not
have--
``(i) jurisdiction over the road; or
``(ii) responsibility for managing the road.
``(C) Safety.--An Indian tribe shall maintain the
safety and quality of roads nominated by the Indian
tribe under subparagraph (A).
``(4) Reciprocal notification.--States, Indian tribes, and
Federal land management agencies shall notify each other
regarding nominations made under this subsection for roads
that--
``(A) are within the jurisdictional boundary of the
State, Federal land management agency, or Indian tribe;
or
``(B) directly connect to roads for which the State,
Federal land management agency, or Indian tribe is
responsible.''.

(b) Grants and Technical Assistance.--Section 162(b) of such title
is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by inserting ``and Indian tribes''
after ``provide technical assistance to States'';
(2) in paragraph (1)(A) by striking ``designated as'' and
all that follows through ``; and'' and inserting ``designated
as--
``(i) National Scenic Byways;
``(ii) All-American Roads;
``(iii) America's Byways;
``(iv) State scenic byways; or
``(v) Indian tribe scenic byways; and''; and
(3) in paragraph (1)(B) by inserting ``or Indian tribe''
after ``State'';
(4) in paragraph (2)(A) by striking ``Byway or All-American
Road'' and inserting ``Byway, All-American Road, or 1 of
America's Byways'';
(5) in paragraph (2)(B)--
(A) by striking ``State-designated'' and inserting
``State or Indian tribe''; and
(B) by striking ``designation as a'' and all that
follows through ``; and'' and inserting ``designation
as--
``(i) a National Scenic Byway;
``(ii) an All-American Road; or
``(iii) 1 of America's Byways; and''; and
(6) in paragraph (2)(C) by inserting ``or Indian tribe''
after ``State''.

(c) Eligible Projects.--Section 162(c) of such title is amended--

[[Page 1458]]
119 STAT. 1458

(1) in paragraph (1) by inserting ``or Indian tribe'' after
``State'';
(2) in paragraph (3)--
(A) by inserting ``Indian tribe scenic byway,''
after ``improvements to a State scenic byway,''; and
(B) by inserting ``Indian tribe scenic byway,''
after ``designation as a State scenic byway,''; and
(3) in paragraph (4) by striking ``passing lane,''.

(d) Conforming Amendment.--Section 162(e) of such title is amended
by inserting ``or Indian tribe'' after ``State''.

SEC. 1803. 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, All-American Roads, and America's Byways 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 $1,500,000 for fiscal year 2005 and
$3,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 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. 1804.  NOTE: 23 USC 144 note.  NATIONAL HISTORIC COVERED BRIDGE
PRESERVATION.

(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Historic covered bridge.--The term ``historic covered
bridge'' means a covered bridge that is listed or eligible for
listing on the National Register of Historic Places.
(2) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such term has
in section 101(a) of title 23, United States Code.

(b) Historic Covered Bridge Preservation.--The Secretary shall--
(1) collect and disseminate information on historic covered
bridges;
(2) conduct educational programs relating to the history and
construction techniques of historic covered bridges;

[[Page 1459]]
119 STAT. 1459

(3) conduct research on the history of historic covered
bridges; and
(4) conduct research on, and study techniques for,
protecting historic covered bridges from rot, fire, natural
disasters, or weight-related damage.

(c) Grants.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall make a grant to a State
that submits an application to the Secretary that demonstrates a
need for assistance in carrying out one or more historic covered
bridge projects described in paragraph (2).
(2) Eligible projects.--A grant under paragraph (1) may be
made for a project--
(A) to rehabilitate or repair a historic covered
bridge; or
(B) to preserve a historic covered bridge, including
through--
(i) installation of a fire protection system,
including a fireproofing or fire detection system
and sprinklers;
(ii) installation of a system to prevent
vandalism and arson; or
(iii) relocation of a bridge to a preservation
site.
(3) Authenticity requirements.--A grant under paragraph (1)
may be made for a project only if--
(A) to the maximum extent practicable, the project--
(i) is carried out in the most historically
appropriate manner; and
(ii) preserves the existing structure of the
historic covered bridge; and
(B) the project provides for the replacement of
wooden components with wooden components, unless the use
of wood is impracticable for safety reasons.

(d) 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), $10,000,000 for each of fiscal
years 2006 through 2009.
(e) Applicability of Title 23.--Funds made available 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; except that the Federal share of the cost of any project or
activity carried out under this section shall be determined in
accordance with section 120 of such title, and such funds shall remain
available until expended and shall not be transferable.

SEC. 1805.  NOTE: 23 USC 144 note.  USE OF DEBRIS FROM DEMOLISHED
BRIDGES AND OVERPASSES.

(a) In General.--Any State that demolishes a bridge or an overpass
that is eligible for Federal assistance under the highway bridge
replacement and rehabilitation program under section 144 of title 23,
United States Code, is directed to first make the debris from the
demolition of such bridge or overpass available for beneficial use by a
Federal, State, or local government, unless such use obstructs
navigation.
(b) Recipient Responsibilities.--A recipient of the debris described
in subsection (a) shall--
(1) bear the additional cost associated with having the
debris made available;

[[Page 1460]]
119 STAT. 1460

(2) ensure that placement of the debris complies with
applicable law; and
(3) assume all future legal responsibility arising from the
placement of the debris, which may include entering into an
agreement to hold the owner of the demolished bridge or overpass
harmless in any liability action.

(c) Definition.--In this section, the term ``beneficial use'' means
the application of the debris for purposes of shore erosion control or
stabilization, ecosystem restoration, and marine habitat creation.

SEC. 1806. ADDITIONAL AUTHORIZATION OF CONTRACT AUTHORITY FOR STATES
WITH INDIAN RESERVATIONS.

Section 1214(d)(5)(A) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century (23 U.S.C. 202 note; 112 Stat. 206) is amended by striking
``$1,500,000 for each of fiscal years 1998 through 2003'' and inserting
``$1,800,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009''.

SEC. 1807.  NOTE: Missouri. California. Minnesota. Wisconsin. 23 USC
217 note.  NONMOTORIZED TRANSPORTATION PILOT PROGRAM.

(a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish and carry out a
nonmotorized transportation pilot program to construct, in the following
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:
(1) Columbia, Missouri.
(2) Marin County, California.
(3) Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota.
(4) Sheboygan County, Wisconsin.

(b) 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.
(c) Grants.--In carrying out the program, the Secretary may make a
grant of $6,250,000 per fiscal year for each of the communities set
forth in subsection (a) to State, local, and regional agencies that the
Secretary determines are suitably equipped and organized to carry out
the objectives and requirements of this section. An agency that receives
a grant under this section may suballocate grant funds to a nonprofit
organization to carry out the program under this section.
(d) 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
bicycling and walking, and promote better health and a cleaner
environment.
(e) Reports.--The Secretary shall submit 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.
(f) 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), $25,000,000
for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009.

[[Page 1461]]
119 STAT. 1461

(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 the funds were apportioned
under chapter 1 of title 23, United States Code; except that the
Federal share of the cost of the project shall be 100 percent,
and the funds shall remain available until expended and shall
not be transferable.

(g) Treatment of Projects.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, projects assisted under this subsection shall be treated as
projects on a Federal-aid system under chapter 1 of title 23, United
States Code.

SEC. 1808. ADDITION TO CMAQ-ELIGIBLE PROJECTS.

(a) Former 1-Hour Maintenance Areas.--Section 149(b) of title 23,
United States Code, is amended in the matter preceding paragraph (1)(A)
by inserting ``or is required to prepare, and file with the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, maintenance plans
under the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.)'' after ``1997,''.
(b) Eligible Projects.--Section 149(b) of such title is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following:
``(1)(A)(i) if the Secretary, after consultation with the
Administrator determines, on the basis of information published
by the Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to section
108(f)(1)(A) of the Clean Air Act (other than clause (xvi)) that
the project or program is likely to contribute to--
``(I) the attainment of a national ambient air
quality standard; or
``(II) the maintenance of a national ambient
air quality standard in a maintenance area; and
``(ii) a high level of effectiveness in reducing air
pollution, in cases of projects or programs where sufficient
information is available in the database established pursuant to
subsection (h) to determine the relative effectiveness of such
projects or programs; or,
``(B) in any case in which such information is not
available, if the Secretary, after such consultation, determines
that the project or program is part of a program, method, or
strategy described in such section 108(f)(1)(A);''.
(2) in paragraph (4)--
(A) by inserting ``, including advanced truck stop
electrification systems,'' after ``facility or
program''; and
(B) by striking ``or'' at the end;
(3) in paragraph (5)--
(A) by inserting ``improve transportation systems
management and operations that mitigate congestion and
improve air quality,'' after ``intersections,''; and
(B) by striking the period at the end and inserting
a semicolon; and
(4) by adding at the end the following:
``(6) if the project or program involves the purchase of
integrated, interoperable emergency communications equipment; or
``(7) if the project or program is for--
``(A) the purchase of diesel retrofits that are--

[[Page 1462]]
119 STAT. 1462

``(i) for motor vehicles (as defined in
section 216 of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C.
7550)); or
``(ii) published in the list under subsection
(f)(2) for non-road vehicles and non-road engines
(as defined in section 216 of the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C. 7550)) that are used in construction
projects that are--
``(I) located in nonattainment or
maintenance areas for ozone,
PM INF 10 /INF , or PM INF 2.5 /INF  (as
defined under the Clean Air Act (42
U.S.C. 7401 et seq.)); and
``(II) funded, in whole or in part,
under this title; or
``(B) the conduct of outreach activities that are
designed to provide information and technical assistance
to the owners and operators of diesel equipment and
vehicles regarding the purchase and installation of
diesel retrofits.''.

(c) States Receiving Minimum Apportionment.--Section 149(c) of such
title is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``for any project eligible
under the surface transportation program under section 133.''
and inserting the following: ``for any project in the State
that--
``(A) would otherwise be eligible under this section
as if the project were carried out in a nonattainment or
maintenance area; or
``(B) is eligible under the surface transportation
program under section 133.''; and
(2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``for any project in the
State eligible under section 133.'' and inserting the following:
``for any project in the State that--
``(A) would otherwise be eligible under this section
as if the project were carried out in a nonattainment or
maintenance area; or
``(B) is eligible under the surface transportation
program under section 133.''.

(d) Cost-Effective Emission Reduction Guidance.--Section 149 of such
title is amended by adding at the end the following:
``(f) Cost-Effective Emission Reduction Guidance.--
``(1) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following
definitions apply:
``(A) Administrator.--The term `Administrator' means
the Administrator of the Environmental Protection
Agency.
``(B) Diesel retrofit.--The term `diesel retrofit'
means a replacement, repowering, rebuilding, after
treatment, or other technology, as determined by the
Administrator.
``(2)  NOTE: Publication.  Emission reduction guidance.--
The Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary, shall
publish a list of diesel retrofit technologies and supporting
technical information for--
``(A) diesel emission reduction technologies
certified or verified by the Administrator, the
California Air Resources Board, or any other entity
recognized by the Administrator for the same purpose;
``(B) diesel emission reduction technologies
identified by the Administrator as having an application
and approvable test plan for verification by the
Administrator or the California Air Resources Board that
is submitted not later that 18 months of the date of
enactment of this subsection;

[[Page 1463]]
119 STAT. 1463

``(C) available information regarding the emission
reduction effectiveness and cost effectiveness of
technologies identified in this paragraph, taking into
consideration air quality and health effects.
``(3) Priority.--
``(A) In general.--States and metropolitan planning
organizations shall give priority in distributing funds
received for congestion mitigation and air quality
projects and programs from apportionments derived from
application of sections 104(b)(2)(B) and 104(b)(2)(C)
to--
``(i) diesel retrofits, particularly where
necessary to facilitate contract compliance, and
other cost-effective emission reduction
activities, taking into consideration air quality
and health effects; and
``(ii) cost-effective congestion mitigation
activities that provide air quality benefits.
``(B) Savings.--This paragraph is not intended to
disturb the existing authorities and roles of
governmental agencies in making final project
selections.
``(4) No effect on authority or restrictions.--Nothing in
this subsection modifies or otherwise affects any authority or
restriction established under the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401
et seq.) or any other law (other than provisions of this title
relating to congestion mitigation and air quality).''.

(e) Improved Interagency Consultation.--Section 149 of such title
(as amended by subsection (d)) is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``(g) Interagency Consultation.--The Secretary shall encourage
States and metropolitan planning organizations to consult with State and
local air quality agencies in nonattainment and maintenance areas on the
estimated emission reductions from proposed congestion mitigation and
air quality improvement programs and projects.''.
(f) Evaluation and Assessment of CMAQ Projects.--Section 149 of such
title (as amended by subsection (e)) is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``(h) Evaluation and Assessment of Projects.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation with the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, shall
evaluate and assess a representative sample of projects funded
under the congestion mitigation and air quality program to--
``(A) determine the direct and indirect impact of
the projects on air quality and congestion levels; and
``(B) ensure the effective implementation of the
program.
``(2) Database.--Using appropriate assessments of projects
funded under the congestion mitigation and air quality program
and results from other research, the Secretary shall maintain
and disseminate a cumulative database describing the impacts of
the projects.
``(3) Consideration.--The Secretary, in consultation with
the Administrator, shall consider the recommendations and
findings of the report submitted to Congress under section
1110(e) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century
(112 Stat. 144), including recommendations and findings that
would improve the operation and evaluation of the congestion
mitigation and air quality improvement program.''.

[[Page 1464]]
119 STAT. 1464

(g) Flexibility in the State of Montana.--The State of Montana may
use funds apportioned under section 104(b)(2) of title 23, United States
Code, for the operation of public transit activities that serve a
nonattainment or maintenance area.
(h) Availability of Funds for State of Michigan.--The State of
Michigan may use funds apportioned under section 104(b)(2) of such title
for the operation and maintenance of intelligent transportation system
strategies that serve a nonattainment or maintenance area.
(i) Availability of Funds for the State of Maine.--The State of
Maine may use funds apportioned under section 104(b)(2) of such title to
support, through September 30, 2009, the operation of passenger rail
service between Boston, Massachusetts, and Portland, Maine.
(j) Availability of Funds for Oregon.--The State of Oregon may use
funds apportioned on or before September 30, 2009, under section
104(b)(2) of such title to support the operation of additional passenger
rail service between Eugene and Portland.
(k) Availabilty of Funds for Certain Other States.--The States of
Missouri, Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio may
use funds apportioned under section 104(b)(2) of such title to purchase
alternative fuel (as defined in section 301 of the Energy Policy Act of
1992 (42 U.S.C. 13211)) or biodiesel.

Subtitle I--Miscellaneous

SEC. 1901. INCLUSION OF REQUIREMENTS FOR SIGNS IDENTIFYING FUNDING
SOURCES IN TITLE 23.

(a) In General.--Chapter 3 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended by inserting after section 320--
(1) the following:

``Sec. 321. Signs identifying funding sources'';

and
(2) the text of section 154 of the Federal-Aid Highway Act
of 1987 (23 U.S.C. 101 note).

(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended by
inserting after the item relating to section 320 the following:

``321. Signs identifying funding sources.''.

(c) Conforming Repeal.--Section 154 of the Federal-Aid Highway Act
of 1987 (23 U.S.C. 101 note; 101 Stat. 209) is repealed.

SEC. 1902. DONATIONS AND CREDITS.

Section 323 of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in the first sentence of subsection (c) by inserting ``,
or a local government from offering to donate funds, materials,
or services performed by local government employees,'' after
``services''; and
(2) by striking subsection (e).

SEC. 1903. INCLUSION OF BUY AMERICA REQUIREMENTS IN TITLE 23.

(a) In General.--Chapter 3 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended by inserting after section 312--
(1) the following:

[[Page 1465]]
119 STAT. 1465

``Sec. 313. Buy America'';

and
(2) the text of section 165 of the Highway Improvement Act
of 1982 (23 U.S.C. 101 note; 96 Stat. 2136).

(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 3 of such title is
amended by inserting after the item relating to section 312 the
following:

``313. Buy America.''.

(c) Conforming Amendments.--Section 313 of such title (as added by
subsection (a)) is amended--
(1) in subsection (a) by striking ``by this Act'' the first
place it appears and all that follows through ``of 1978'' and
inserting ``to carry out the Surface Transportation Assistance
Act of 1982 (96 Stat. 2097) or this title'';
(2) in subsection (b) by redesignating paragraph (4) as
paragraph (3);
(3) in subsection (d) by striking ``this Act,'' and all that
follows through ``Code, which'' and inserting ``the Surface
Transportation Assistance Act of 1982 (96 Stat. 2097) or this
title that'';
(4) by striking subsection (e); and
(5) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively.

(d) Conforming Repeal.--Section 165 of the Highway Improvement Act
of 1982 (23 U.S.C. 101 note; 96 Stat. 2136) is repealed.

SEC. 1904. STEWARDSHIP AND OVERSIGHT.

(a) In General.--Section 106 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by striking subsection (e) and inserting the following:

``(e) Value Engineering Analysis.--
``(1) Definition of value engineering analysis.--
``(A) In general.--In this subsection, the term
`value engineering analysis' means a systematic process
of review and analysis of a project, during the concept
and design phases, by a multidisciplined team of persons
not involved in the project, that is conducted to
provide recommendations such as those described in
subparagraph (B) for--
``(i) providing the needed functions safely,
reliably, and at the lowest overall cost;
``(ii) improving the value and quality of the
project; and
``(iii) reducing the time to complete the
project.
``(B) Inclusions.--The recommendations referred to
in subparagraph (A) include, with respect to a project--
``(i) combining or eliminating otherwise
inefficient use of costly parts of the original
proposed design for the project; and
``(ii) completely redesigning the project
using different technologies, materials, or
methods so as to accomplish the original purpose
of the project.
``(2) Analysis.--The State shall provide a value engineering
analysis or other cost-reduction analysis for--
``(A) each project on the Federal-aid system with an
estimated total cost of $25,000,000 or more;

[[Page 1466]]
119 STAT. 1466

``(B) a bridge project with an estimated total cost
of $20,000,000 or more; and
``(C) any other project the Secretary determines to
be appropriate.
``(3) Major projects.--The Secretary may require more than 1
analysis described in paragraph (2) for a major project
described in subsection (h).
``(4) Requirements.--Analyses described in paragraph (1) for
a bridge project shall--
``(A) include bridge substructure requirements based
on construction material; and
``(B) be evaluated--
``(i) on engineering and economic bases,
taking into consideration acceptable designs for
bridges; and
``(ii) using an analysis of life-cycle costs
and duration of project construction.''; and
(2) by striking subsections (g) and (h) and inserting the
following:

``(g) Oversight Program.--
``(1) Establishment.--
``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall establish an
oversight program to monitor the effective and efficient
use of funds authorized to carry out this title.
``(B) Minimum requirement.--At a minimum, the
program shall be responsive to all areas relating 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 practices of States for
estimating project costs, awarding contracts, and
reducing project costs.
``(3) Project delivery.--The Secretary shall perform annual
reviews that address elements of the project delivery system of
a State, which elements include one or more activities that are
involved in the life cycle of a project from conception to
completion of the project.
``(4) Responsibility of the states.--
``(A) In general.--The States shall be responsible
for determining that subrecipients of Federal funds
under this title have--
``(i) adequate project delivery systems for
projects approved under this section; and
``(ii) sufficient accounting controls to
properly manage such Federal funds.
``(B) Periodic review.--The Secretary shall
periodically review the monitoring of subrecipients by
the States.
``(5) Specific oversight responsibilities.--
``(A) Effect of section.--Nothing in this section
shall affect or discharge any oversight responsibility
of the Secretary specifically provided for under this
title or other Federal law.

[[Page 1467]]
119 STAT. 1467

``(B) Appalachian development highways.--The
Secretary shall retain full oversight responsibilities
for the design and construction of all Appalachian
development highways under section 14501 of title 40.

``(h) Major Projects.--
``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
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, and recipients for such other projects as
may be identified by the Secretary, shall submit to the
Secretary for each project--
``(A) a project management plan; and
``(B) an annual financial plan.
``(2) Project management plan.--A project management plan
shall document--
``(A) the procedures and processes that are in
effect to provide timely information to the project
decisionmakers to effectively manage the scope, costs,
schedules, and quality of, and the Federal requirements
applicable to, the project; and
``(B) the role of the agency leadership and
management team in the delivery of the project.
``(3) Financial plan.--A financial plan shall--
``(A) be based on detailed estimates of the cost to
complete the project; and
``(B) provide for the annual submission of updates
to the Secretary that are based on reasonable
assumptions, as determined by the Secretary, of future
increases in the cost to complete the project.

``(i) Other Projects.--A  NOTE: Financial plans.  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 request of the Secretary.''.

(b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 114(a) of title 23, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in the first sentence by striking ``highways or portions
of highways located on a Federal-aid system'' and inserting
``Federal-aid highway or a portion of a Federal-aid highway'';
and
(2) by striking the second sentence and inserting ``The
Secretary shall have the right to conduct such inspections and
take such corrective action as the Secretary determines to be
appropriate.''.

SEC. 1905. 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

[[Page 1468]]
119 STAT. 1468

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.''.

SEC. 1906.  NOTE: 23 USC 402 note.  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.--
(1) In general.--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.
(2) Limitation.--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
made to 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.--

[[Page 1469]]
119 STAT. 1469

(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 $7,500,000 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 80 percent, and such funds
shall remain available until expended and shall not be
transferable.

SEC. 1907.  NOTE: Alaska. Tennessee.  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
submit 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 for
each of fiscal years 2006 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. 1908. INCLUSION OF CERTAIN ROUTE SEGMENTS ON INTERSTATE SYSTEM AND
NHS.

(a) Interstate System.--
(1) Creek turnpike, oklahoma.--The Secretary shall designate
as part of the Interstate System (as defined in section 101 of
title 23, United States Code) in accordance with section
103(c)(4) of such title the portion of the Creek Turnpike
connecting Interstate Route 44 east and west of Tulsa, Oklahoma.
(2) Certain  NOTE: Tennessee.  section of interstate route
181.--The Secretary shall designate as part of Interstate Route
26 the 11-mile section of Interstate Route 181 lying northwest
of the intersection with Interstate Route 81, Tennessee.
(3) Treatment.--The designations under paragraph (2) shall
be treated, for purposes of title 23, United States Code, as
being made under section 103(c)(4) of such title.

[[Page 1470]]
119 STAT. 1470

(b)  NOTE: Arkansas. Oklahoma.  National Highway System.--The
Secretary shall designate as a component of the National Highway System
in accordance with section 103(b)(4) of title 23, United States Code,
the portion of United States Route 271 from the Arkansas State line,
west to the intersection with United States Route 59, and northwest to
the intersection with Interstate Route 40, Sallisaw, Oklahoma.

SEC. 1909. FUTURE OF SURFACE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM.

(a) Declaration of Policy.--Section 101(b) of title 23, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``(b) It is hereby declared'' and all that
follows through the first undesignated paragraph and inserting
the following:

``(b) Declaration of Policy.--
``(1) Acceleration of construction of federal-aid highway
systems.--Congress declares that it is in the national interest
to accelerate the construction of Federal-aid highway systems,
including the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate
and Defense, because many of the highways (or portions of the
highways) are inadequate to meet the needs of local and
interstate commerce for the national and civil defense.'';
(2) in the second undesignated paragraph by striking ``It is
hereby declared'' and all that follows through ``objectives of
this Act'' and inserting the following:
``(2) Completion of interstate system.--Congress declares
that the prompt and early completion of the Dwight D. Eisenhower
National System of Interstate and Defense Highways (referred to
in this section as the `Interstate System'), so named because of
its primary importance to the national defense, is essential to
the national interest''; and
(3) by striking the third undesignated paragraph and
inserting the following:
``(3) Transportation needs of 21st century.--Congress
declares that--
``(A) it is in the national interest to preserve and
enhance the surface transportation system to meet the
needs of the United States for the 21st Century;
``(B) the current urban and long distance personal
travel and freight movement demands have surpassed the
original forecasts and travel demand patterns are
expected to continue to change;
``(C) continued planning for and investment in
surface transportation is critical to ensure the surface
transportation system adequately meets the changing
travel demands of the future;
``(D) among the foremost needs that the surface
transportation system must meet to provide for a strong
and vigorous national economy are safe, efficient, and
reliable--
``(i) national and interregional personal
mobility (including personal mobility in rural and
urban areas) and reduced congestion;
``(ii) flow of interstate and international
commerce and freight transportation; and
``(iii) travel movements essential for
national security;

[[Page 1471]]
119 STAT. 1471

``(E) special emphasis should be devoted to
providing safe and efficient access for the type and
size of commercial and military vehicles that access
designated National Highway System intermodal freight
terminals;
``(F) the connection between land use and
infrastructure is significant;
``(G) transportation should play a significant role
in promoting economic growth, improving the environment,
and sustaining the quality of life; and
``(H) the Secretary should take appropriate actions
to preserve and enhance the Interstate System to meet
the needs of the 21st Century.''.

(b) National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study
Commission.--
(1) Establishment.--There is established a commission to be
known as the ``National Surface Transportation Policy and
Revenue Study Commission'' (in this subsection referred to as
the ``Commission'').
(2) Membership.--
(A) Composition.--The Commission shall be composed
of 12 members, of whom--
(i) 1 member shall be the Secretary, who shall
serve as Chairperson;
(ii) 3 members shall be appointed by the
President;
(iii) 2 members shall be appointed by the
Speaker of the House of Representatives;
(iv) 2 members shall be appointed by the
minority leader of the House of Representatives;
(v) 2 members shall be appointed by the
majority leader of the Senate; and
(vi) 2 members shall be appointed by the
minority leader of the Senate.
(B) Qualifications.--Members appointed under
subparagraph (A)--
(i) shall include--
(I) individuals representing State
and local governments, metropolitan
planning organizations, transportation-
related industries, and public interest
organizations involved with scientific,
regulatory, economic, and environmental
activities relating to transportation;
(II) individuals with a background
in public finance, including experience
in developing State and local revenue
resources;
(III) individuals involved in
surface transportation program
administration;
(IV) individuals that have conducted
academic research into related issues;
and
(V) individuals that provide unique
perspectives on current and future
requirements for revenue sources to
support the Highway Trust Fund and
policies impacting those revenues; and
(ii) shall be balanced geographically to the
extent consistent with maintaining the highest
level of expertise on the Commission.

[[Page 1472]]
119 STAT. 1472

(C) Date of appointments.--The appointment of a
member of the Commission shall be made not later than
120 days after the date of establishment of the
Commission.
(D) Terms.--A member shall be appointed for the life
of the Commission.
(E) Vacancies.--A vacancy on the Commission--
(i) shall not affect the powers of the
Commission; and
(ii) shall be filled in the same manner as the
original appointment was made.
(F) Initial meeting.--Not later than 30 days after
the date on which all members of the Commission have
been appointed, the Commission shall hold the initial
meeting of the Commission.
(G) Meetings.--The Commission shall meet at the call
of the Chairperson.
(H) Quorum.--A majority of the members of the
Commission shall constitute a quorum, but a lesser
number of members may hold hearings.
(I) Vice chairperson.--The Commission shall select a
Vice Chairperson from among the appointed members of the
Commission.
(3) Duties.--
(A) In general.--The Commission shall--
(i) conduct a comprehensive study of--
(I) the current condition and future
needs of the surface transportation
system;
(II) short-term sources of Highway
Trust Fund revenues;
(III) long-term alternatives to
replace or supplement the fuel tax as
the principal revenue source to support
the Highway Trust Fund, including new or
alternate sources of revenue;
(IV) revenue sources to fund the
needs of the surface transportation
system over at least the 30-year period
beginning on the date of enactment of
this Act, including new or alternate
sources of revenue;
(V) revenues flowing into the
Highway Trust Fund under laws in
existence on the date of enactment of
this Act, including individual
components of the overall flow of the
revenues; and
(VI) whether the amount of revenues
described in subclause (V) is likely to
increase, decrease, or remain constant
absent any change in law, taking into
consideration the impact of possible
changes in public vehicular choice, fuel
use, and travel alternatives that could
be expected to reduce or increase
revenues into the Highway Trust Fund;
(B) develop a conceptual plan, with alternative
approaches, to ensure that the surface transportation
system will continue to serve the needs of the United
States, including specific recommendations regarding
design and operational standards, Federal policies, and
legislative changes;
(C) consult with the Secretary of the Treasury in
conducting the study to ensure that the views of the
Secretary

[[Page 1473]]
119 STAT. 1473

concerning essential attributes of Highway Trust Fund
revenue alternatives are considered;
(D) consult with representatives of State
departments of transportation and metropolitan planning
organizations and other key interested stakeholders in
conducting the study to ensure that--
(i) the views of the stakeholders on
alternative revenue sources to support State
transportation improvement programs are
considered; and
(ii) any recommended Federal financing
strategy takes into account State financial
requirements; and
(E) based on the study, make specific
recommendations regarding--
(i) actions that should be taken to develop
alternative revenue sources to support the Highway
Trust Fund; and
(ii) the time frame for taking those actions.
(4) Related work.--To the maximum extent practicable, the
study shall build on related work that has been completed by--
(A) the Secretary;
(B) the Secretary of Energy;
(C) the Transportation Research Board, including the
findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the recent
study conducted by the Transportation Research Board on
alternatives to the fuel tax to support highway program
financing; and
(D) other entities and persons.
(5) Surface transportation needs.--With respect to surface
transportation needs, the investigation and study shall
specifically address--
(A) the current condition and performance of the
Interstate System (including the physical condition of
bridges and pavements and operational characteristics
and performance), relying primarily on existing data
sources;
(B) the future of the Interstate System, based on a
range of legislative and policy approaches for 15-, 30-,
and 50-year time periods;
(C) the expected demographics and business uses that
impact the surface transportation system;
(D) the expected use of the surface transportation
system, including the effects of changing vehicle types,
modes of transportation, fleet size and weights, and
traffic volumes;
(E) desirable design policies and standards for
future improvements of the surface transportation
system, including additional access points;
(F) the identification of urban, rural, national,
and interregional needs for the surface transportation
system;
(G) the potential for expansion, upgrades, or other
changes to the surface transportation system,
including--
(i) deployment of advanced materials and
intelligent technologies;
(ii) critical multistate, urban, and rural
corridors needing capacity, safety, and
operational enhancements;
(iii) improvements to intermodal linkages;

[[Page 1474]]
119 STAT. 1474

(iv) security and military deployment
enhancements;
(v) strategies to enhance asset preservation;
and
(vi) implementation strategies;
(H) the improvement of emergency preparedness and
evacuation using the surface transportation system,
including--
(i) examination of the potential use of all
modes of the surface transportation system in the
safe and efficient evacuation of citizens during
times of emergency;
(ii) identification of the location of
critical bottlenecks; and
(iii) development of strategies to improve
system redundancy, especially in areas with a high
potential for terrorist attacks;
(I) alternatives for addressing environmental
concerns associated with the future development of the
surface transportation system;
(J) the assessment of the current and future
capabilities for conducting system-wide real-time
performance data collection and analysis, traffic
monitoring, and transportation systems operations and
management; and
(K) policy and legislative alternatives for
addressing future needs for the surface transportation
system.
(6) Financing.--With respect to financing, the study shall
address specifically--
(A) the advantages and disadvantages of alternative
revenue sources to meet anticipated Federal surface
transportation financial requirements;
(B) recommendations concerning the most promising
revenue sources to support long-term Federal surface
transportation financing requirements;
(C) development of a broad transition strategy to
move from the current tax base to new funding
mechanisms, including the time frame for various
components of the transition strategy;
(D) recommendations for additional research that may
be needed to implement recommended alternatives; and
(E) the extent to which revenues should reflect the
relative use of the highway system.
(7) Financing recommendations.--
(A) Factors for consideration.--In developing
financing recommendations under this subsection, the
Commission shall consider--
(i) the ability to generate sufficient
revenues from all modes to meet anticipated long-
term surface transportation financing needs;
(ii) the roles of the various levels of
government and the private sector in meeting
future surface transportation financing needs;
(iii) administrative costs (including
enforcement costs) to implement each option;
(iv) the expected increase in nontaxed fuels
and the impact of taxing those fuels;
(v) the likely technological advances that
could ease implementation of each option;

[[Page 1475]]
119 STAT. 1475

(vi) the equity and economic efficiency of
each option;
(vii) the flexibility of different options to
allow various pricing alternatives to be
implemented; and
(viii) potential compatibility issues with
State and local tax mechanisms under each
alternative.
(B) Need and revenue analysis.--In developing
financing recommendations under this subsection, the
Commission shall distinguish between--
(i) the needs of, and revenues for, the
surface transportation system that are eligible to
receive funds from the Highway Trust Fund; and
(ii) the needs for projects and programs that
are not eligible to receive funds from the Highway
Trust Fund.
(8)  NOTE: Establishment.  Technical advisory committee.--
The Secretary shall establish a technical advisory committee, in
a manner consistent with the Federal Advisory Committee Act (5
U.S.C. App.), to collect and evaluate technical input from--
(A) appropriate Federal, State, and local officials
with responsibility for transportation;
(B) appropriate State and local elected officials;
(C) transportation and trade associations;
(D) emergency management officials;
(E) freight providers;
(F) the general public; and
(G) other entities and persons determined to be
appropriate by the Secretary to ensure a diverse range
of views.
(9) Report and recommendations.--Not later than July 1,
2007, the Commission shall submit to Congress--
(A) a final report that contains a detailed
statement of the findings and conclusions of the
Commission; and
(B) the recommendations of the Commission for such
legislation and administrative actions as the Commission
considers to be appropriate.
(10) Powers of the commission.--
(A) Hearings.--The Commission may hold such
hearings, meet and act at such times and places, take
such testimony, and receive such evidence as the
Commission considers advisable to carry out this
section.
(B) Information from federal agencies.--
(i) In general.--The Commission may secure
directly from a Federal agency such information as
the Commission considers necessary to carry out
this section.
(ii) Provision of information.--On request of
the Chairperson of the Commission, the head of a
Federal agency shall provide the requested
information to the Commission.
(C) Postal services.--The Commission may use the
United States mails in the same manner and under the
same conditions as other agencies of the Federal
Government.
(D) Donations.--The Commission may accept, use, and
dispose of donations of services or property.
(11) Commission personnel matters.--

[[Page 1476]]
119 STAT. 1476

(A) Members.--A member of the Commission shall serve
without pay but shall be allowed travel expenses,
including per diem in lieu of subsistence, at rates
authorized for an employee of an agency under subchapter
I of chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code, while
away from the home or regular place of business of the
member in the performance of the duties of the
Commission.
(B) Contractors.--The Commission may enter into
agreements with appropriate organizations, agencies, and
entities to conduct the study required under this
section, under the strategic guidance of the Commission.
(C) Administrative support.--On the request of the
Commission, the Administrator of the Federal Highway
Administration shall provide to the Commission, on a
reimbursable basis, the administrative support and
services necessary for the Commission to carry out the
duties of the Commission under this section.
(D) Detail of personnel.--
(i) In general.--On the request of the
Commission, the Secretary may detail, on a
reimbursable basis, any of the personnel of the
Department to the Commission to assist the
Commission in carrying out the duties of the
Commission under this section.
(ii) Civil service status.--The detail of the
employee shall be without interruption or loss of
civil service status or privilege.
(12) Cooperation.--The staff of the Secretary shall
cooperate with the Commission in the study required under this
section, including providing such nonconfidential data and
information as are necessary to conduct the study.
(13) Relationship to other law.--
(A) In general.--Except as provided in subparagraphs
(B) and (C), funds made available 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.
(B) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of
the study and the Commission under this section shall be
100 percent.
(C) Availability.--Funds made available to carry out
this section shall remain available until expended.
(14) Definition of surface transportation system.--In this
subsection, the term ``surface transportation system''
includes--
(A) the National Highway System, as defined in
section 103(b) of title 23, United States Code;
(B) congressional high priority corridors;
(C) intermodal connectors;
(D) intermodal freight facilities;
(E) public transportation infrastructure and
facilities; and
(F) freight and intercity passenger bus and rail
infrastructure and facilities.
(15) 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 $1,400,000 for
each of fiscal years 2006 and 2007.

[[Page 1477]]
119 STAT. 1477

(16) 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
remain available until expended, and the Federal share of the
cost of a project under this section shall be as provided in
this section.
(17) Termination.--
(A) In general.--The Commission shall terminate on
the date that is 180 days after the date on which the
Commission submits the report of the Commission under
paragraph (9).
(B) Records.--Not later than the date of termination
of the Commission under subparagraph (A), all records
and papers of the Commission shall be delivered to the
Archivist of the United States for deposit in the
National Archives.

SEC. 1910.  NOTE: Deadline.  MOTORIST INFORMATION CONCERNING FULL
SERVICE RESTAURANTS.

Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the
Secretary may initiate a rulemaking to determine whether--
(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 used; and
(2) full service restaurants should be given priority on not
more than 2 panels of the food logo-specific service signs in
such Manual when the camping or attractions logo-specific
service signs are fully used.

SEC. 1911.  NOTE: Georgia.  APPROVAL AND FUNDING FOR CERTAIN
CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.

(a) Project Approval.--If the Secretary finds that the project
number STP-189-1(15)CT 3 in Gwinnett County, Georgia, was not listed in
the current regional transportation plan because of a clerical error,
such failure to be listed shall not be a basis for not approving the
project.  NOTE: Deadline.  The Secretary shall make a final decision
on the approval of the project within 30 days after the date of receipt
by the Secretary of a construction authorization request from the
department of transportation for the State of Georgia.

(b) Conformity Determination.--
(1) In general.--Approval, funding, and implementation of
the project referred to in subsection (a) shall not be subject
to the requirements of part 93 of title 40, Code of Federal
Regulations (or successor regulations).
(2) Regional emissions.--Notwithstanding paragraph (1), all
subsequent regional emission analyses required by section 93.118
or 93.119 of title 40, Code of Federal Regulations (or successor
regulations), shall include the project.

SEC. 1912. 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 designated as the lead

[[Page 1478]]
119 STAT. 1478

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. 1913. BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION, NORTH DAKOTA.

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, and regardless of the
source of Federal funds, the Federal share of the eligible costs of
construction of a bridge between Bismarck, North Dakota, and Mandan,
North Dakota, shall be 90 percent.

SEC. 1914.  NOTE: 23 USC 101 note.  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) one member recommended by a national
motorcyclist association;
(B) one member recommended by a national motorcycle
riders foundation;
(C) one representative of the National Association
of State Motorcycle Safety Administrators;
(D) two members of State motorcyclists'
organizations;
(E) one member recommended by a national
organization that represents the builders of highway
infrastructure;
(F) one member recommended by a national association
that represents the traffic safety systems industry; and
(G) one member of a national safety organization;
and
(2) at least one, and not more than two, motorcyclists who
are traffic system design engineers or State transportation
department officials.

SEC. 1915. 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. 1916. TREATMENT OF OFF RAMP.

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the New Harbor Boulevard
North off-ramp project along the Interstate Route 405 Collector-
Distributor Road in Costa Mesa, California (Susan Street Slip-Ramp),
shall be treated for purposes of title 23, United States Code, as
satisfying all Federal requirements, and the California State department
of transportation shall authorize any final environmental, engineering,
or design analyses necessary to approve, as expeditiously as possible,
construction of the project

[[Page 1479]]
119 STAT. 1479

consistent with applicable California State operational and safety
standards.

SEC. 1917. OPENING OF INTERSTATE RAMPS.

(a) In General.--The Maryland State highway administration and the
Federal Highway Administration shall work cooperatively--
(1) to expedite the project being developed as of the date
of enactment of this Act to improve Interstate Route 495 through
the area of the Arena Drive interchange to allow for safe exit,
including improvements to the adjacent interchanges upstream and
downstream along Interstate Route 495; and
(2) to expedite action on the Interstate access request so
that the Interstate Route 495/Arena Drive interchange can be
opened safely to all vehicles 24 hours per day, 7 days per week.

(b) Report.--Not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of
this Act, the Secretary shall submit to Congress a report on the status
of opening the Interstate Route 495/Arena Drive interchange to full-time
use.

SEC. 1918. CREDIT TO STATE OF LOUISIANA FOR STATE MATCHING FUNDS.

(a) In General.--The Secretary may provide a credit to the State of
Louisiana in an amount equal to non-Federal Share of the cost of any
planning, engineering, design, or construction work carried out by the
State on any project that the Secretary determines is integral to the
project authorized by item number 202 in the table contained in section
1602 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat.
264).
(b) Eligibility of Credit.--The credit may be used for any future
payment relating to the completion of the project referred to in
subsection (a) that is required by the State under title 23, United
States Code.

SEC. 1919. ROAD USER FEES.

(a) Study.--The  NOTE: Contracts.  Secretary shall enter into an
agreement with the Public Policy Center of the University of Iowa for an
analysis and report to the Secretary and the Secretary of the Treasury
on a long-term field test of an approach to assessing highway use fees
based upon actual mileage driven by a specific vehicle on specific types
of highways by use of an onboard computer--
(1) which is linked to satellites to calculate highway
mileage traversed;
(2) which computes the appropriate highway use fees for each
of the Federal, State, and local governments as the vehicle
makes use of the highways;
(3) the data from which is periodically downloaded by the
vehicle owner to a collection center for an assessment of
highway use fees due in each jurisdiction traversed; and
(4) which includes methods of ensuring privacy of road
users.

(b) Components of Field Test.--The components of the field test
shall include 2 years for preparation, including selection of vendors
and test participants, and a 3-year testing period.
(c) Reports.--The Secretary shall submit annual reports on the
status of the analysis and, not later than July 1, 2009, a final report
on the results of the analysis, together with findings

[[Page 1480]]
119 STAT. 1480

and recommendations. The reports shall be submitted 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 authorized to be appropriated from
the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) to
carry out this section $2,000,000 fiscal year 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
analysis and report shall be 100 percent, and such funds shall
remain available until expended and shall not be transferable.

SEC. 1920. 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 Federal, State, 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. 1921. UPDATE OF OBSOLETE TEXT.

Section 137(a) of title 23, United States Code, is amended in the
first sentence by striking ``on the Federal-aid urban system'' and
inserting ``on a Federal-aid highway''.

[[Page 1481]]
119 STAT. 1481

SEC. 1922. TECHNICAL AMENDMENTS TO NONDISCRIMINATION SECTION.

(a) State Assurances.--Section 140(a) of title 23, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) in the first sentence by striking ``subsection (a) of
section 105 of this title'' and inserting ``section 135'';
(2) in the second sentence by striking ``He'' and inserting
``The Secretary'';
(3) in the third sentence--
(A) by striking ``shall, where he considers it
necessary to assure'' and inserting ``if necessary to
ensure''; and
(B) by inserting ``shall'' after ``opportunity,'';
and
(4) in the last sentence--
(A) by striking ``him'' and inserting ``the
Secretary''; and
(B) by striking ``he'' and inserting ``the Secretary
of Transportation''.

(b) Highway Construction and Technology Training.--Section 140(b) of
such title is amended--
(1) in the first sentence by striking ``highway
construction'' and inserting ``surface transportation''; and
(2) in the second sentence--
(A) by striking ``he may deem''; and
(B) by striking ``not to exceed $2,500,000 for the
transition quarter ending September 30, 1976, and''.

(c) Minority Business Training Programs.--Section 140(c) of such
title is amended in the second sentence--
(1) by striking ``subsection 104(b)(3) of this title'' and
inserting ``section 104(b)(3)''; and
(2) by striking ``he may deem''.

(d) Technical Amendment.--Section 140(d) of such title is amended in
the subsection heading by striking ``and Contracting''.

SEC. 1923.  NOTE: State listing.  TRANSPORTATION ASSETS AND NEEDS OF
DELTA REGION.

(a)  NOTE: Deadline.  Agreement.--Not later than 180 days after
the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall enter into an
agreement with the Delta Regional Authority (in this section referred to
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, 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 2 years
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 recommendations as the DRA considers to be 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.

[[Page 1482]]
119 STAT. 1482

(e) Funding.--
(1) 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 $500,000 for
each of the fiscal years 2005 and 2006.
(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. 1924.  NOTE: Washington.  ALASKA WAY VIADUCT STUDY.

(a) Findings.--Congress finds that--
(1) in 2001, the Alaska Way Viaduct, a critical segment of
the National Highway System in Seattle, Washington, was
seriously damaged by the Nisqually earthquake;
(2) an effort to address the possible repair, retrofit, or
replacement of the Viaduct that conforms with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) is
underway; and
(3) as a result of the efforts referred to in paragraph (2),
a locally preferred alternative for the Viaduct is being
developed.

(b) Study.--
(1) In general.--As soon as practicable after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary, in cooperation with the
Washington State department of transportation and the City of
Seattle, Washington, shall conduct a comprehensive study to
determine the specific damage to the Alaska Way Viaduct from the
Nisqually earthquake of 2001 that contribute to the ongoing
degradation of the Viaduct.
(2) Requirements.--The study under paragraph (1) shall--
(A) identify any repair, retrofit, and replacement
costs for the Viaduct that are eligible for additional
assistance from the emergency fund authorized under
section 125 of title 23, United States Code, consistent
with the emergency relief manual governing eligible
expenses from the emergency fund; and
(B) determine the amount of assistance from the
emergency fund for which the Viaduct is eligible.

(c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of
this Act, the Secretary shall submit to Congress a report that describes
the findings of the study.

SEC. 1925. 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:

[[Page 1483]]
119 STAT. 1483

(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, 2007, 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 on the results of the study.
(d)  NOTE: Grants. Contracts.  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 the
transportation, community, and system preservation program by section
1117 of this Act $1,000,000 shall be available for each of fiscal years
2006 and 2007 to carry out this section; except that, notwithstanding
section 1117(g) of this Act, the Federal share of the cost of the study
shall be 100 percent.

SEC. 1926.  NOTE: 49 USC 301 note.  BUDGET JUSTIFICATION.

The Department of Transportation and each agency in the Department
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 budget justification concurrently with the
President's annual budget submission to Congress under section 1105(a)
of title 31, United States Code.

SEC. 1927.  NOTE: State listing.  14TH AMENDMENT HIGHWAY AND 3RD
INFANTRY DIVISION HIGHWAY.

Not later than December 31, 2005, any funds made available to
commission studies and reports regarding construction of a route linking
Augusta, Georgia, Macon, Georgia, Columbus, Georgia, Montgomery,
Alabama, and Natchez, Mississippi and a route linking through Savannah,
Georgia, Augusta, Georgia, and Knoxville, Tennessee, shall be provided
to the Secretary to--
(1)  NOTE: Reports.  carry out a study and submit to the
appropriate committees of Congress a report that describes the
steps and estimated

[[Page 1484]]
119 STAT. 1484

funding necessary to construct a route for the 14th Amendment
Highway, from Augusta, Georgia, to Natchez, Mississippi
(formerly designated the Fall Line Freeway in the State of
Georgia); and
(2) carry out a study and submit to the appropriate
committees of Congress a report that describes the steps and
estimated funding necessary to designate and construct a route
for the 3rd Infantry Division Highway, extending from Savannah,
Georgia, to Knoxville, Tennessee, by way of Augusta, Georgia
(formerly the Savannah River Parkway in the State of Georgia).

SEC. 1928. 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) because 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. 1929.  NOTE: New York.  DESIGNATION OF DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN
INTERSTATE HIGHWAY.

(a) Designation.--The portion of Interstate Route 86 in the State of
New York, extending from the Pennsylvania border near Lake Erie through
Orange County, New York, shall be known and designated as the ``Daniel
Patrick Moynihan Interstate Highway''.
(b) References.--Any reference in a law, map, regulation, document,
paper, or other record of the United States to the highway portion
referred to in subsection (a) shall be deemed to be a reference to the
``Daniel Patrick Moynihan Interstate Highway''.

SEC. 1930.  NOTE: Massachusetts.  DESIGNATION OF THOMAS P. ``TIP''
O'NEILL, JR. TUNNEL.

(a) Designation.--In honor of his service to the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts and the United States, and in recognition of his
contributions toward the construction of the 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, shall be known and 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''.

[[Page 1485]]
119 STAT. 1485

SEC. 1931. RICHARD NIXON PARKWAY, CALIFORNIA.

(a) Designation.--The segment of the Imperial Highway located
between California State Route 91 and Esperanza Road in the State of
California shall be known and designated as the ``Richard Nixon
Parkway''.
(b) References.--Any reference in a law, map, regulation, document,
paper, or other record of the United States to the highway segment
referred to in subsection (a) shall be deemed to be a reference to the
``Richard Nixon Parkway''.

SEC. 1932.  NOTE: New York.  AMO HOUGHTON BYPASS.

(a) Designation.--The 3-mile 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, shall be known and designated as the
``Amo Houghton Bypass''.
(b) References.--Any reference in a law, map, regulation, document,
paper, or other record of the United States to the highway segment
referred to in subsection (a) shall be deemed to be a reference to the
``Amo Houghton Bypass''.

SEC. 1933.  NOTE: Louisiana.  BILLY TAUZIN ENERGY CORRIDOR.

(a) Designation.--Louisiana Route 1 shall be known and designated as
the ``Billy Tauzin Energy Corridor''.
(b) References.--Any reference in a law, map, regulation, document,
paper, or other record of the United States to the highway segment
referred to in subsection (a) shall be deemed to be a reference to the
``Billy Tauzin Energy Corridor''.

SEC. 1934. TRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENTS.

(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--
(1) In general.--For each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009,
there are authorized to be appropriated from the Highway Trust
Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) such sums as are
necessary to make allocations in accordance with paragraph (2)
to carry out each project described in the table contained in
subsection (c), at the amount specified for each such project in
that table.
(2) Allocation percentages.--Of the total amount specified
for each project described in the table contained in subsection
(c), 10 percent for fiscal year 2005, 20 percent for fiscal year
2006, 25 percent for fiscal year 2007, 25 percent for fiscal
year 2008, and 20 percent for fiscal year 2009 shall be
allocated to carry out each such project in that table.

(b) Contract Authority.--
(1) In general.--Funds authorized to be appropriated to
carry out 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 the funds shall
remain available until expended.
(2) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of a
project under this section shall be determined in accordance
with section 120 of such title.

(c) Table.--The table referred to in subsections (a) and (b) is as
follows:

[[Page 1486]]
119 STAT. 1486



Transportation Improvements
------------------------------------------------------------------------
No.          State           Project Description          Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.           AK             Denali Commission for docks,     $20,000,000
waterfront development
projects and related
transportation
infrastructure.............

2.           AK             Improvements to the Knik Arm     $20,000,000
Bridge.....................

3.           AK             Upgrades on the Dalton              $500,000
Highway, including but not
limited to design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction...........

4.           AK             Upgrades on the Richardson          $500,000
Highway, including but not
limited to design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction...........

5.           AK             Anchorage: Intermodal             $7,000,000
facility improvements at
the Port of Anchorage......

6.           AK             Petersburg: Road                    $500,000
improvements, including but
not limited to design,
engineering, permitting,
and construction...........

7.           AK             Tanana: Dust Control                $500,000
Mitigation.................

8.           AK             Anchorage: Dimond Center            $500,000
Intermodal Facility,
including but not limited
to design, engineering,
permitting, and
construction...............

9.           AK             Homer: Intermodal deep-water      $2,000,000
dock facility improvements.

10.          AK             Anchorage: Study, design,         $2,000,000
and engineering of Knik
crossing approach routes to
minimize traffic congestion

11.          AK             Sitka: World War II Causeway      $1,000,000
Trail and Multi-use Pathway
projects...................

12.          AK             McGrath: Road erosion               $500,000
control along the Yukon
River......................

13.          AK             Ketchikan: Improve marine        $20,000,000
dry-dock and facilities....

14.          AL             Preliminary Engineering,          $5,000,000
Design, Right-Of-Way
Acquisition and
Construction of the
Tuscaloosa Bypass, Alabama.

15.          AL             Preliminary Engineering,          $5,000,000
Design, Right-Of-Way
Acquisition and
Construction of the I-10
Connector, Alabama.........

16.          AL             Preliminary Engineering,         $50,000,000
Design, Right-Of-Way
Acquisition and
Construction of the I-85
Extension, Alabama.........

17.          CA             Century Boulevard Pedestrian      $3,000,000
Safety and Transportation
Improvements in City of
Inglewood..................


[[Page 1487]]
119 STAT. 1487


18.          CA             Hilmar/Turlock California         $1,000,000
Highway 99 Interchange
Engineering and
Construction in Merced
County.....................

19.          CA             Port of Hueneme Intermodal        $1,000,000
Access Improvement Access
Improvement Project,
including grade separation
at Rice Avenue and State
Route 34; widen Hueneme
Road.......................

20.          CA             Widen Northbound I-405           $30,000,000
between I-10 and U.S. 101
for HOV Lane...............

21.          CA             Alameda Corridor East            $30,000,000
Construction Authority.....

22.          CO             Improvements to I-70/Havana/      $3,000,000
Yosemite Interchange.......

23.          CO             Improvements to Wadsworth         $2,000,000
and U.S. 36 Interchange in
Broomfield.................

24.          CO             Improvements to Bromley Lane      $1,000,000
and U.S. 85 Interchange....

25.          CO             Improvements to C470 and          $4,000,000
U.S. 85 Interchange........

26.          CO             Improvements to Hwy 34 and I-     $2,000,000
25 Interchange (Loveland/
Greeley exit)..............

27.          CO             Improvements to Hwy 16 and I-     $3,000,000
25 Interchange (Fort
Carson--Phase I)...........

28.          CO             Improvements to Hwy 50 from      $12,000,000
Las Animas to Lamar........

29.          CO             Improvements to Hwy 395 and       $2,000,000
I-25 (at Windsor exit).....

30.          CO             Improvements to Pecos Street      $3,000,000
Overpass (Adams County)....

31.          CO             Improvements to U.S. 285 and      $1,000,000
Deer Creek Interchange.....

32.          CO             Improvements to U.S. 50 and       $2,000,000
Hwy 115 (safety
improvements)..............

33.          CO             Improvements to Glenwood          $1,000,000
Springs Bridge.............

34.          CO             Improvements to 104th and         $1,000,000
U.S. 85 Intersection.......

35.          CT             Development and                   $5,000,000
demonstration in
Connecticut of fuel cell
technologies for buses in
urban areas................

36.          CT             Improvements to I-95 in          $50,000,000
Connecticut, including the
Pearl Harbor Memorial/Q
Bridge, from the State
border with New York to the
State border with Rhode
Island.....................


[[Page 1488]]
119 STAT. 1488


37.          DE             Planning, Design, and             $1,000,000
Construction of the Energy
Exploration Center at
Destination Station in
Rehoboth Beach.............

38.          DE             Preliminary Engineering and       $4,000,000
Environmental Analysis of
the Middletown to Newark
Rail Connection............

39.          DE             Develop and construct an          $8,500,000
alternative route for truck
traffic in the core
downtown area of Harrington

40.          DE             Build the Pomeroy Line            $4,771,000
Pedestrian/Bicycle Trail
and Facility in Newark.....

41.          DE             Infrastructure and                $6,750,000
Streetscape Improvements on
Rehoboth Avenue in Rehoboth

42.          DE             University of Delaware's          $4,979,000
Automotive Based Fuel Cell
Hybrid Bus Program in
Newark.....................

43.          DE             Design and Construct the          $5,000,000
Indian River Inlet Bridge
on SR 1 in Sussex County...

44.          FL             Tamiami Trail Skyway              $1,000,000
Transportation Study.......

45.          FL             Sand Lake Road Improvements       $3,000,000
between President's Drive
and I-4....................

46.          FL             New systems interchange           $2,000,000
ramps at SR 417 and Boggy
Creek Road in Orange
County, Florida............

47.          FL             Florida SIS projects in           $5,000,000
Miami-Dade County..........

48.          FL             Hillsborough County I-4           $7,000,000
Crosstown Connector--
Construction of I-4
crosstown connector from I-
4 to Port of Tampa.........

49.          FL             Sand Lake Road Improvements       $6,000,000
between Presidents Drive
and I-4....................

50.          FL             Gulf Coast Parkway, Final         $7,000,000
design, engineering, and
construction for a 2-lane
Gulf Coast/U.S. 98 bypass..

51.          GA             Queens Road widening and          $1,000,000
reconstruction Cobb County.

52.          GA             Widening Cedarcrest Rd. from      $1,000,000
Paulding County to
Governor's Towne...........

53.          GA             U.S. 84 Connector/Bypass          $1,000,000
from west of U.S. 84/SR 119
west of Hinesville to U.S.
84/SR 196 south of
Flemington, Liberty County.

54.          GA             SR 746/SE Rome Bypass from        $4,000,000
SR 101 U.S. 411 Floyd
County.....................


[[Page 1489]]
119 STAT. 1489


55.          GA             SR 204/Abercorn Street from       $4,000,000
King George Boulevard to
Rio Road widening..........

56.          GA             SR 96 from I-75 to old            $4,000,000
Hawkinsville Road widening
and reconstruction.........

57.          GA             SR 40 from west of CR 61 to       $4,000,000
SR 25/U.S. 17 widening.....

58.          GA             SR 40 from east of St.            $2,000,000
Mary's cut off at mile post
5.0, Charlton County, to
County Route 61, Camden
County Widening............

59.          GA             I-75 interchanges from north      $4,000,000
of Tifton to Turner County
line interchange
reconstruction.............

60.          GA             I-75/Windy Hill Road              $5,000,000
interchange reconstruction,
Cobb County................

61.          GA             Interchange capacity              $3,000,000
improvements at I-285 and
Ashford-Dunwoody Road......

62.          GA             I-75/CR 65/Union Grove Road--     $3,500,000
New interchange, Gordon
County.....................

63.          GA             SR 85 widening from Adams         $3,500,000
Drive to I-75 and
reconstruct the Forest
Parkway interchange........

64.          GA             City of Jesup, Georgia for        $2,500,000
transportation improvements

65.          GA             Walker County, Georgia for        $2,500,000
transportation improvements

66.          GA             Catoosa County, Georgia for       $2,500,000
transportation improvements

67.          GA             I-75/CR 665/Carbondale Road       $4,000,000
interchange reconstruction,
Whitfield County...........

68.          GA             U.S. 411/SR 20 Access Rights      $3,500,000
from Floyd County to U.S.
41/SR 3 for transportation
improvements...............

69.          HI             Saddle Road traffic              $10,000,000
improvements on the Island
of Hawaii..................

70.          HI             Kapolei traffic improvements      $5,000,000
on the Island of Oahu......

71.          HI             Queen Kaahumanu Highway           $5,000,000
traffic improvements on the
Island of Hawaii...........

72.          IA             Iowa State University,           $10,000,000
National Center for
Portland Cement Concrete
Pavement Technology........

73.          IA             University of Northern Iowa,      $1,000,000
Native Roadside Vegetation
Enhancement Center,
construction and equipment.


[[Page 1490]]
119 STAT. 1490


74.          IA             University of Iowa, Public        $4,000,000
Policy Center--Field Test
of Onboard Computer
Assessment of Highway User
Fees.......................

75.          IA             Drake University, 28th and        $1,500,000
Carpenter Streets
Improvements, Des Moines...

76.          IA             Loess Hills Scenic Byways/          $330,000
Resource Protection,
Western Iowa...............

77.          IA             Great River Road National         $5,000,000
Scenic Byway, Rivers to the
Sea, Dubuque County........

78.          IA             Great River Road National           $600,000
Scenic Byway, Mud Lake
Road, Dubuque County.......

79.          IA             Great River Road National            $37,445
Scenic Byway, Renovating
Old Fort Madision..........

80.          IA             Great River Road National         $1,700,000
Scenic Byway, Louisa County

81.          IA             Great River Road National            $73,500
Scenic Byway, Montrose.....

82.          IA             Wapsi-Great Western Trail         $2,300,000
System, Mitchell and Howard
Counties...................

83.          IA             Lewis and Clark Trail Study.        $250,000

84.          IA             Recreation Trail, Comanche        $2,100,000
to Clinton.................

85.          IA             Mississippi River Trail,          $1,680,000
Heritage Trail, Dubuque
County.....................

86.          IA             Mississippi River Trail,          $2,000,000
Bridge at Credit Island,
Davenport..................

87.          IA             Mississippi River Trail,          $2,165,000
Leach Park in Bettendorf to
Riverdale..................

88.          IA             American Discovery Trail,           $200,000
Hoover Nature Trail connect
to Ely.....................

89.          IA             American Discovery Trail,           $450,000
connection to Clear Creek
Trail, Coralville..........

90.          IA             Downtown Improvement              $1,700,000
Project, DeWitt............

91.          IA             19th Avenue North Connector,      $1,500,000
Clinton....................

92.          IA             McCollister Boulevard, Iowa       $3,000,000
City (HP: 830).............

93.          IA             County Home Road, Linn            $1,200,000
County.....................

94.          IA             Collins Road, Cedar Rapids..      $6,000,000

95.          IA             I-80/Middle Road Interchange        $500,000
Justification Report with
Environmental Assessment,
Bettendorf.................


[[Page 1491]]
119 STAT. 1491


96.          IA             Highway K-35, Woodbury            $1,000,000
County.....................

97.          IA             National Transportation           $3,600,000
Heroes Center and Regional
Transportation Archival,
Research, and Library
Center, Grinnell...........

98.          IA             Highway 4 Underpass,              $3,000,000
Jefferson..................

99.          IA             IA 92 Project, Indianola....      $2,000,000

100.         IA             Rehabilitation and Retrofit         $800,000
of Historic Boone County
Wagon Bridge...............

101.         IA             Lincoln Highway                     $203,870
Rehabilitation and
Restoration Project,
Woodbine...................

102.         IA             IA 57/West 1st Street             $3,000,000
Reconstruction, Cedar Falls

103.         IA             Scotch Ridge Project,             $2,022,000
Carlisle...................

104.         IA             U.S. 63 Improvements,             $1,486,185
Chickasaw, Bremer, and
Black Hawk Counties (HP:
858).......................

105.         IA             Study of Direct Link to I-          $110,000
80, Pella (HP: 54).........

106.         IA             Construction of 100th Street        $220,000
Interchange on I-35/80,
Urbandale (HP: 86).........

107.         IA             Central Iowa Trail Loop,            $720,000
Ankeny to Woodward (HP:
146).......................

108.         IA             Study for NE Beltway, Polk          $110,000
County (HP: 209)...........

109.         IA             Widening University                 $220,000
Boulevard, Clive (HP: 275).

110.         IA             Reconstruction of NW Madrid         $220,000
Drive, Polk County (HP:
396).......................

111.         IA             Widening of Highway 44,           $2,020,000
Grimes (HP: 834)...........

112.         IA             NW 70th Avenue                    $2,100,000
Reconstruction, Johnston
(HP: 848)..................

113.         IA             U.S. 6 Final Phase of Safety        $440,000
Improvements, Coralville
(HP: 1098).................

114.         IA             Construct IA-32 Arterial          $4,180,000
from U.S. 20 to U.S. 61 and
151, Dubuque (HP: 1145)....

115.         IA             Construct Trail from Musser         $110,000
Park to Weggens Road,
Muscatine (HP: 1243).......

116.         IA             Reconstruction of Neal Smith        $792,000
Trail, Polk County (HP:
1284)......................

117.         IA             Reconstruction of NE 56th           $220,000
Street, Eastern Polk County
(HP: 1540).................

118.         IA             Hoeven Corridor/Outer Drive         $440,000
Project, Sioux City (HP:
1581)......................


[[Page 1492]]
119 STAT. 1492


119.         IA             Phase III of Main Street            $220,000
Project, Amana (HP: 1791)..

120.         IA             Improvements at IA 146 and I-       $220,000
80 Interchange, Grinnell
(HP: 2182).................

121.         IA             Construct SW Connector, West      $3,440,000
Des Moines (HP: 2248)......

122.         IA             U.S. 20 Mississippi River         $5,500,000
Bridges and Approaches,
Dubuque (HP: 2574).........

123.         IA             I-35 Interchange                  $1,100,000
Improvements, Ankeny (HP:
2837)......................

124.         IA             Construction of NW 26th             $220,000
Street Interchange I-35,
Polk County (HP: 3258).....

125.         IA             Construct Principal               $1,100,000
Riverwalk, Des Moines (HP:
3298)......................

126.         IA             Design, rehabilitation and          $800,000
construction of Clear Creek
Greenway and associated
trails in Johnson County...

127.         IA             Design and construction of        $1,000,000
Central IA Trail Loop from
Ankeny to Woodward.........

128.         IA             Design, ROW and construction        $400,000
of Ely Connector Trail in
Linn County................

129.         IA             Reconstruction of rail line       $1,000,000
from Oelwein to DeWar......

130.         IA             Purchase and rehabilitation       $1,000,000
of 9 mile Rail spur to
Bondurant..................

131.         IA             ROW and construction of           $1,000,000
Mississippi River Trail and
related trails in Dubuque
County.....................

132.         IA             ROW and construction of           $1,000,000
Mississippi River Trail and
related trails in Scott-
Muscatine Counties.........

133.         IA             Construction of SW Arterial,      $6,800,000
IA-32 Dubuque..............

134.         IA             Construction of Cedar Falls       $1,000,000
trails.....................

135.         IA             Construction of Hwy 63 in         $3,000,000
Waterloo...................

136.         IA             Kimberly Road improvements        $3,000,000
and construction in
Davenport..................

137.         IA             Mississippi River Trail,          $4,900,000
Allamakee County...........

138.         IA             U.S. 71 Bypass, Spencer.....      $5,000,000

139.         ID             Transportation improvements       $5,000,000
to widen U.S. 95, Worley to
Mica Creek.................

140.         ID             Transportation Improvements       $2,000,000
to Improve SH 75, Timmerman
to Ketchum.................


[[Page 1493]]
119 STAT. 1493


141.         ID             Construct Interchange on I-       $2,000,000
84 at Ten-Mile Road,
Meridian, Idaho............

142.         ID             Reconstruct Grangemont Road       $1,000,000
(ID Forest Hwy 67) from
Orofino to MP 9.3, Segment
I, II, and III.............

143.         IL             Preconstruction and               $7,500,000
construction activities of
U.S. 51 between Decatur and
Vandalia...................

144.         IL             Preconstruction and              $15,000,000
construction of North-South
Wacker Drive in Chicago....

145.         IL             Construct new Mississippi        $14,000,000
River Bridge and related
roads in the vicinity of
East St. Louis.............

146.         IL             Replace I-74 Bridge in Quad       $3,500,000
Cities (Moline)............

147.         IL             Conduct study of U.S. 67          $2,000,000
bridge over Illinois River
in Beardstown..............

148.         IL             Improvements to the               $1,000,000
intersection of IL 13 and
37 in Marion...............

149.         IL             Construction to improve           $2,000,000
access of Interstate 57/64
in Mount Vernon............

150.         IL             Construction of Joliet            $1,000,000
Arsenal Road Improvements
in Will County.............

151.         IL             Continue expansion of IL 336      $2,000,000
in Macomb-Peoria...........

152.         IL             Preconstruction and               $2,000,000
construction of IL 13
Connector in Harrisburg....

153.         IN             Improvements to existing          $5,000,000
roadway/railroad crossings,
City of Vincennes, Indiana.

154.         IN             Improvements to existing          $5,000,000
rail-highway crossings,
City of Elkhart, Indiana...

155.         KS             Widen South Meridian Street       $3,000,000
from 47th Street South to
71st Street South in
Sedgwick County, KS........

156.         KS             Widen 21st Street North,          $2,600,000
eastward from Hwy K-96 to
the Butler County line in
Sedgwick County............

157.         KS             Reconstruction of railroad        $2,000,000
and road grade separation
project eliminating four
high volume at grade
crossings on Ridgeview
Street, Santa Fe Street,
Loula Street, and Park
Street in Olathe, KS.......

158.         KS             Construction of South Bypass      $2,000,000
for Highway 56 in Great
Bend.......................

159.         KS             Street and sidewalk                 $400,000
replacement in downtown
Fort Scott.................


[[Page 1494]]
119 STAT. 1494


160.         KS             Construction and                  $3,600,000
improvements to RS 255
south of U.S. Highway 156
associated with the Horse
Thief Reservoir in Hodgeman
County.....................

161.         KS             Bridge replacement on             $1,200,000
Johnson Drive and Nall Ave.
associated with the Rock
Creek Project in Mission...

162.         KS             Reconstruction of the box           $200,000
under U.S. Highway 56 on
Windsor Lane associated
with the Rock Creek Project
in Fairway.................

163.         KS             Reconstruction of the             $1,000,000
Mission Road Bridge
associated with the Rock
Creek Project in Fairway,
KS.........................

164.         KS             Rehabilitation and                $2,000,000
reconstruction of U.S. 169
and interchange with U.S.
166 in Montgomery County...

165.         KS             U.S. Highway 50 Shoulder          $2,000,000
widening between Dodge City
and Garden City, KS........

166.         KY             21st Century Parks Project       $38,000,000
in Louisville, Kentucky....

167.         KY             Construction of new I-65         $12,000,000
Interchange in Warren
County, Kentucky...........

168.         KY             Owensboro Riverfront             $10,000,000
Development Project in
Owensboro, Kentucky........

169.         KY             Transportation Improvements       $8,000,000
to AA-I-275 Connector,
Campbell County............

170.         KY             Transportation Improvements       $2,000,000
to U.S. 60 Owensboro,
Daviess County.............

171.         LA             Construction of the Leeville     $10,000,000
Bridge from Port Fouchon to
Golden Meadow..............

172.         MA             Construct rail freight            $9,000,000
corridor improvements
between Boston and
Worcester..................

173.         MA             Design and construct bicycle      $3,000,000
and pedestrian trails in
Barnstable County..........

174.         MA             Rutherford Avenue                 $9,000,000
Improvements in Boston.....

175.         MA             Design and construct roadway      $5,000,000
and streetscape
improvements along State
Street in Springfield......

176.         MA             Construct I-91 Corridor           $4,000,000
Intelligent Transportation
System Communications
Network, Hampden,
Hampshire, and Franklin
Counties...................

177.         MA             Design and construct roadway      $2,000,000
and streetscape
improvements along Main
Street and Maywood Street,
Worcester, MA..............


[[Page 1495]]
119 STAT. 1495


178.         MA             Design and construct              $2,000,000
downtown roadway and
streetscape improvements in
Brockton...................

179.         MA             Design, engineering, and          $4,000,000
construction at I-93 The
Junction Interchange,
Andover, Tewksbury, and
Wilmington.................

180.         MA             Gainsborough St. and St.          $2,000,000
Botolph Street Improvements
in Boston..................

181.         MD             Upgrade MD 175 in Anne            $5,000,000
Arundel County between MD
170 and BW Parkway.........

182.         MD             Improve U.S. 40, MD 715           $5,000,000
interchange at Aberdeen
Proving Ground.............

183.         MD             Upgrade MD 4 at Suitland          $5,000,000
Parkway....................

184.         MD             Construct Fort McHenry            $2,000,000
Visitors Center and related
parking facilities.........

185.         ME             Plan and construct North-         $5,000,000
South Aroostook highways to
improve access to the St.
John Valley, including
Presque Isle Bypass and
other improvements.........

186.         ME             Repair and improvement of         $3,000,000
Deer Isle-Sedgwick Bridge..

187.         ME             Construction of Calais/St.        $1,000,000
Stephen Border Crossing
Project....................

188.         ME             Replacement of Waldo-Hancock      $1,000,000
Bridge.....................

189.         ME             Improvements and                  $1,500,000
construction of U.S. Route
1A and State Route 9 in
Bangor, Maine..............

190.         ME             Planning and construction of      $2,500,000
the Gorham Bypass, Gorham,
Maine......................

191.         ME             Access and Traffic                  $500,000
Improvements to Route 15 in
Brewer, Maine..............

192.         ME             Sedgewick--Deer Isle Bridge,      $3,000,000
Sedgewick, Maine...........

193.         ME             Augusta Memorial Bridge           $1,000,000
improvements, Augusta,
Maine......................

194.         ME             Replacement of Waldo-Hancock      $1,000,000
and construction of related
pedestrian walkways........

195.         ME             Research development of             $500,000
Cathodic Bridge Protection
to extend the life of
concrete bridges and Marine
structures within varied
climates...................

196.         MI             Detroit Riverfront               $20,000,000
Conservancy, West
Riverfront Walkway,
Greenway and Adjacent Land
Acquisition, from
Riverfront Towers to
Ambassador Bridge, Detroit.


[[Page 1496]]
119 STAT. 1496


197.         MI             Reconstruct and widen I-94       $20,000,000
in Kalamazoo...............

198.         MI             Construction of a new at-         $7,000,000
grade crossing and I-75
interchange to reconnect
Milbocker and McCoy Roads
and a new overpass to
reconnect Van Tyle to South
Wisconsin Road in Gaylord..

199.         MI             The Trowbridge Road               $6,000,000
Extension to Farm Lane,
Ingham County, MI, Farm
Lane between Mount Hope
Road and Trowbridge Road
with underpasses for CN and
CSX railroad crossings.....

200.         MI             East Riverfront, completion       $3,000,000
of Detroit Riverfront East
Walkway, Detroit...........

201.         MI             Alger County, Repaving a         $11,000,000
portion of H-58 between
Sullivan Creek towards
Little Beaver Road.........

202.         MI             Jackson Road Boulevard            $5,000,000
Project, Scio Township.....

203.         MI             Blue Water Bridge Plaza          $18,000,000
Expansion, Improve Highway
connections along I-94 and
I-69 Port Huron............

204.         MI             Midtown Detroit Greenway          $2,000,000
Loop, Detroit Cultural
Center in Detroit..........

205.         MI             Pinnacle Aeropark Access          $2,000,000
Project in Wayne County....

206.         MI             Washington Ave. Streetscape       $1,000,000
and rail relocation in
Saginaw....................

207.         MI             U.S. 131 widening from the        $3,000,000
Manistee River to north of
M-113 in Grand Traverse
County.....................

208.         MI             11 Mile Road Reconstruction--     $2,000,000
Berkley, Huntington Woods,
Oak Park...................

209.         MN             Phase III construction of         $8,000,000
Trunk Highway 610-10.......

210.         MN             Polk, Pennington, Marshall        $2,000,000
County 10-Ton Corridor in
Northwestern Minnesota.....

211.         MO             Mississippi River Bridge St.     $25,000,000
Louis, Missouri............

212.         MO             I-29 Paseo Bridge Kansas         $50,000,000
City, Missouri.............

213.         MO             Page Ave. Extension, Phase       $20,000,000
2, St. Charles County,
Missouri...................

214.         MO             U.S. 67 Corridor from Butler     $15,000,000
to St. Francois County,
Missouri line..............

215.         MO             Lewis and Clark Expressway,      $30,000,000
39th Street to Hwy 24,
Jackson County, Missouri...

216.         MO             Hwy 54 Lake Ozark Bypass,         $3,000,000
Miller and Camden Counties,
Missouri...................


[[Page 1497]]
119 STAT. 1497


217.         MO             Hwy 13 Warrensburg Bypass,       $10,000,000
Johnson County, Missouri...

218.         MO             I-55 Interchange at Main          $5,000,000
Street, Cape Girardeau,
Missouri...................

219.         MO             Rt. 13 in Polk County,           $20,000,000
Missouri CR 490 to Pinewood
Drive......................

220.         MO             Widen Rt. 66 Duquesne Rd. to     $10,000,000
Rt. 249, Jasper County,
Missouri...................

221.         MO             Grand Ave. Bridge                $15,000,000
Replacement, St. Louis
City, Missouri.............

222.         MO             Hwy 36 Macon to Rt. 24,           $7,000,000
Marion, Ralls, Monroe,
Shelby and Macon Counties..

223.         MO             Ramsey Creek Bridge, Scott        $5,000,000
County, Missouri...........

224.         MO             Upgrades to MO Route 14           $6,000,000
between U.S. 160 and U.S.
65 in Christian County.....

225.         MO             Upgrades to Scott Road (MO        $3,500,000
Route TT) between Rollins
Road and Brookview Terrace
in Boone County............

226.         MO             Construction of riverfront          $500,000
trails in the City of
Warsaw.....................

227.         MS             Widen State Highway 57 from      $32,000,000
I-10 through Vancleave.....

228.         MS             Widening of I-55 from             $8,000,000
Highway 304 in DeSoto
County to TN State line....

229.         MS             Byram-Clinton/Norrell             $5,000,000
Corridor--Connects the
Norrell Road Interchange on
I-20 to the Byram-Clinton
Multimodal Corridor on I-55

230.         MS             South Entrance Loop--             $5,000,000
Mississippi State
University.................

231.         MS             Highway 44 Extension/Pearl        $5,000,000
River Bridge Project,
Lawrence and Marion
Counties...................

232.         MS             U.S. Highway 78, New Albany       $5,000,000
Interchange................

233.         MS             Interstate 69, Unfinished        $35,000,000
Sections, Mississippi......

234.         MT             Zimmerman Trail Project,          $7,000,000
Billings, Montana..........

235.         MT             Taylor Hill Road                  $3,000,000
reconstruction, Secondary
234, Montana...............

236.         MT             Develop and construct Shiloh     $10,000,000
Road reconstruction
project, Billings..........

237.         MT             Develop and construct U.S.       $30,000,000
93 Kalispell Bypass project


[[Page 1498]]
119 STAT. 1498


238.         MT             Develop and construct St.         $8,000,000
Mary water project road and
bridge infrastructure
including: New bridge and
approaches across St. Mary
River, stabilization and
improvements to U.S. 89,
and road/canal from Siphon
Bridge to Spider Lake......

239.         MT             U.S. 2, corridor feasibility     $10,000,000
study, environmental review
and construction, which may
include construction of a 4-
lane highway, for roadway
sections from Glasgow east
to the North Dakota State
line, provided that all
currently programmed
highway improvement
projects move forward......

240.         MT             Develop East Belgrade             $8,000,000
Interchange and connecting
roadways to include
environmental review.......

241.         MT             Reconstruct Marysville Road       $5,000,000
consistent with final
environmental document,
Lewis and Clark County.....

242.         MT             Develop and construct             $5,000,000
transportation enhancements
including bicycle/
pedestrian trails,
landscaping, footbridges,
parks, and river access on
and in the vicinity of the
Milltown Dam Site, Missoula
County and Deer Lodge
County.....................

243.         MT             Develop Billings bypass,          $7,000,000
Yellowstone County.........

244.         MT             Develop Great Falls South         $4,500,000
Arterial, including
environmental review.......

245.         MT             Develop and construct Helena     $10,000,000
I-15 corridor consistent
with final environmental
document and record of
decision...................

246.         MT             Develop and construct U.S.       $22,000,000
212 Red Lodge North........

247.         MT             Develop and construct             $3,000,000
Whitefish pedestrian and
bicycle trails.............

248.         MT             Develop and construct             $1,125,000
parking lot and
transportation enhancements
including bicycle/
pedestrian trails and urban
plaza, serving the City of
Bozeman Public Library.....

249.         MT             U.S. 2, Swamp Creek East          $6,000,000
roadway and bridge
reconstruction, Lincoln
County.....................

250.         MT             Russell Street                    $6,000,000
reconstruction and bridge
expansion over the Clark
Fork River, Missoula.......

251.         MT             Conrad I-15 North                 $4,000,000
Interchange modifications
to provide access east of
the current interchange,
Pondera County.............

252.         MT             Develop and improve access        $4,000,000
road and structure serving
the Port of Montana and
Silicon Mountain Technology
Park.......................


[[Page 1499]]
119 STAT. 1499


253.         NC             Construction and expansion        $2,000,000
of Little Sugar Creek
Greenway, Charlotte........

254.         NC             Falls of Neuse Road Widening      $1,000,000
and Improvement, Raleigh...

255.         NC             Transportation Improvements       $1,000,000
at Piedmont Triad Research
Park, Winston Salem........

256.         NC             Plan, design, and construct       $1,000,000
the 10th street Connector
Project in Greenville......

257.         NC             Randall Parkway Widening and      $1,000,000
Improvement, Wilmington....

258.         NC             Construction and improvement      $1,000,000
of I-73, I-74, U.S. 220, in
Montgomery and Randolph
Counties...................

259.         NC             U.S. 1 Bypass and                 $1,000,000
improvements around
Rockingham.................

260.         NC             Design, engineering, and          $1,000,000
construction of I-77/
Catawba Avenue Interchange,
Cornelius..................

261.         NC             Eliminate highway-railway         $1,000,000
crossings in City of
Fayetteville...............

262.         NC             Right-of-way acquisition and      $3,000,000
construction of U.S. 74
bypass, Monroe.............

263.         NC             Transportation improvements       $2,000,000
for the Piedmont Triad
Research Park, Winston-
Salem......................

264.         NC             Acquire right-of-way and          $2,000,000
construct a new highway
that will begin at NC 58
and follow east to U.S.
301, Wilson................

265.         NC             Transfer of the Williams          $3,000,000
Street railroad switching
operation to the Milan Yard
switching operation site,
Fayetteville...............

266.         ND             Reconstruction of the            $16,000,000
Bismarck-Mandan Liberty
Memorial Bridge over
Missouri River.............

267.         ND             Develop and construct             $2,000,000
freight intermodal project
in North Dakota, including
access road construction...

268.         ND             Rural transportation safety       $2,000,000
and security research at
the Upper Great Plains
Transportation Institute at
North Dakota State
University.................

269.         ND             U.S. 12 Improvements between      $3,000,000
Bowman and Hettinger.......

270.         ND             Replace Red River Valley          $3,000,000
Bridge at Drayton, ND......

271.         ND             U.S. 83 Reconstruction from         $500,000
Max to ND 23 Southbound....


[[Page 1500]]
119 STAT. 1500


272.         ND             U.S. 83 Rehabilitation from       $4,500,000
Linton to Hazelton.........

273.         ND             I-29 Vertical Clearance           $2,000,000
Improvements from Bowesmont
to the Canadian Border.....

274.         ND             U.S. 281 Reconstruction from      $7,000,000
Edgely to the junction of
ND 46......................

275.         NE             Construction of the Antelope      $3,800,000
Valley Transportation
Improvement Project in
Lincoln....................

276.         NE             Design and construction of        $5,700,000
the Cuming Street
Transportation Improvement
Project in Omaha...........

277.         NE             Design and construction of        $2,000,000
the I-80-Cherry Avenue
Interchange and East Bypass
in Kearney.................

278.         NE             Construction of the               $2,500,000
Heartland Expressway
between Alliance and
Minatare...................

279.         NE             Design, right-of-way and          $2,500,000
construction of the North
Arterial Road in Columbus..

280.         NE             Research at the Midwest           $3,500,000
Roadside Safety Facility at
the University of Nebraska,
Lincoln, Nebraska..........

281.         NJ             PATCO Rolling Stock              $10,000,000
acquisition and/or
renovation for use on line
between Lindenwold and
Locust Street in
Philadelphia...............

282.         NJ             Construct new ramps between      $10,000,000
I-295 and Route 42.........

283.         NJ             Route 46 Corridor upgrades..        $500,000

284.         NJ             Route 18 Reconstruction in        $2,500,000
downtown New Brunswick.....

285.         NJ             Interstate 280 Interchange        $3,000,000
Improvements, Harrison.....

286.         NJ             Widening of Rt. 1 and             $2,500,000
intersection improvements
in South Brunswick.........

287.         NJ             Route 29 conversion project       $2,500,000
to a full access freeway...

288.         NJ             Improvements to River Road        $1,000,000
in Camden..................

289.         NJ             Design and construct Newark       $1,500,000
Waterfront Pedestrian and
Bicycle Access project.....

290.         NJ             Route 9W operational and          $1,000,000
safety improvements,
including I-95 Southbound
entrance alterations.......

291.         NJ             Expand TRANSCOM Regional ITS        $500,000
System in NJ, NY, and CT...

292.         NM             I-25/U.S. 64 Interchange          $2,000,000
rehabilitation in Raton....


[[Page 1501]]
119 STAT. 1501


293.         NM             Reconstruction of NM18 in         $3,000,000
Lea County.................

294.         NM             Reconstruction of U.S. 180        $3,000,000
in Grant County............

295.         NM             Reconstruction of U.S. 491        $2,000,000
from Tohatchi to Shiprock..

296.         NV             Hoover Dam Bypass--Boulder       $26,500,000
City Extension.............

297.         NV             California Trail                  $2,000,000
Interpretive Center
roadside improvements and
access infrastructure......

298.         NV             I-15 Widening north from         $26,500,000
U.S. 95 to Apex Road in
Clark County...............

299.         NV             V and T Railroad                 $10,000,000
Reconstruction Project in
Carson City................

300.         NV             Carson City Bypass                $2,000,000
Enhancement Project (Phase
II), Carson City (GROW and
NDOT)......................

301.         NV             Laughlin-Bullhead City           $18,000,000
Colorado River Bridge......

302.         NV             Rail Access Corridor             $15,000,000
Enhancement in Reno........

303.         NY             Peace Bridge Redevelopment       $17,000,000
Project, Road Improvements,
and Construction, Buffalo..

304.         NY             Improvements to Moynihan         $10,000,000
Station....................

305.         NY             Design and Construction of        $4,000,000
Renaissance Square
Intermodal Facility in
Rochester..................

306.         NY             Repair and Restoration of         $3,000,000
the Outdoor Area on 82nd
Street and 5th Avenue......

307.         NY             Improvements to the New York      $3,000,000
Public Library vicinity....

308.         NY             Construction and                  $2,000,000
Improvements to York Street
in Auburn..................

309.         NY             Streetscape, Roadway, and         $1,000,000
Improvements for the
College of New Rochelle....

310.         NY             South Lexington and Post          $1,000,000
Road Streetscape Expansion
in White Plains............

311.         NY             Planning and Interim              $1,000,000
Improvements for the
Manhattan, Bronx, Yonkers
Hudson River Greenway Link.

312.         NY             DestiNY USA Design,               $5,000,000
Research, Construction and
Improvements...............

313.         NY             Restoration of Vehicle            $2,000,000
Traffic to Main Street in
Downtown Buffalo...........


[[Page 1502]]
119 STAT. 1502


314.         NY             Roadway, Streetscape,             $6,000,000
Pedestrian, and Parking
Improvements to the Buffalo
Niagara Medical Campus in
Buffalo....................

315.         OH             Reconstruction of Cleveland      $85,000,000
Inner Belt and replacement
of the Central Viaduct
Bridge. Cleveland, OH......

316.         OH             SR 3 intersection/                $2,500,000
interchange improvements
and signalization, Franklin
County, OH (PID 76279).....

317.         OH             SR 81 widening, turn lane         $1,100,000
addition, and safety
improvements, Allen County,
OH (PID 75928).............

318.         OH             U.S. 422 turn lane addition         $600,000
and traffic flow
improvements at SR 88/SR
528, Geauga County OH (PID
78343).....................

319.         OH             SR 39 add 2-way left turn         $1,600,000
lane, signalization, and
safety improvements,
Tuscarawas County OH (PID
19598).....................

320.         OH             U.S. 36 signal relocation         $2,000,000
and related safety
improvements, Delaware
County, OH (PID 76276).....

321.         OH             SR 39 2-way turn lane               $600,000
addition, signalization,
and safety improvements,
Holmes County, OH (PID
23913).....................

322.         OH             Evans Avenue/CSX RR Grade         $1,600,000
Separation Improvements,
Akron, OH..................

323.         OK             State of Oklahoma I-40          $110,000,000
Crosstown Realignment in
Oklahoma City..............

324.         OK             The University of Oklahoma        $7,000,000
to conduct research in
global tracking methods for
intermodal containerized
freight....................

325.         OK             State of Oklahoma for             $1,000,000
control of outdoor
advertising................

326.         OK             Reconstruction of SH 20 in        $2,000,000
Owasso, Oklahoma...........

327.         OK             Widen Hwy 60 between Ponca       $10,800,000
City and Bartletsville.....

328.         OK             Trails in Tulsa, Mingo            $2,000,000
Creek, NCOG--Complete and
extend Mingo trail from
41st to 81st St., from 11th
St. to Mohawk Park.........

329.         OK             Signalization, Complete           $2,200,000
update of traffic signals
with LED illumination
technology.................

330.         OR             To add a southbound lane to       $2,000,000
a section of I-5 through
Portland, OR between Delta
Park and Lombard, Portland,
Oregon.....................

331.         OR             Sunrise Corridor, Clackamas       $1,000,000
County, Oregon.............


[[Page 1503]]
119 STAT. 1503


332.         OR             Reroute U.S. 97 at Redmond,       $1,400,000
Oregon and improvements to
intersection of U.S. 97 and
Oregon 126.................

333.         OR             Construct Barber Street             $600,000
extension, Wilsonville,
Oregon.....................

334.         OR             Construct highway and             $1,800,000
pedestrian access to
Macadam Ave. and street
improvements as part of
South waterfront
development, Portland,
Oregon.....................

335.         OR             Sellwood Bridge, Multnomah        $2,000,000
County, Oregon.............

336.         OR             Highway 22-Cascade Highway        $1,600,000
interchange improvements,
Marion County, Oregon......

337.         OR             I-5 Trade Corridor,               $2,000,000
Portland, Oregon to
Vancouver, Washington
Segment....................

338.         OR             Highway 101 Improvements,           $500,000
Oregon.....................

339.         OR             I-205 Widening, Clackamas         $1,400,000
County, Oregon.............

340.         OR             Phase 1 I-205/Highway 213         $1,500,000
Interchange Improvements,
Oregon.....................

341.         OR             Kuebler Boulevard                   $500,000
Improvements, Salem, Oregon

342.         OR             To construct sidewalks and        $2,000,000
improve storm drainage and
gutters for the City's Safe
Walk Plan, Medford, Oregon.

343.         OR             Highway 140 Transportation        $1,700,000
Improvements, Lake County,
Oregon.....................

344.         PA             Warrendale-Bayne Road             $2,800,000
improvements from I-79 to
SR 19, in Allegheny County.

345.         PA             For design, engineering, ROW      $1,000,000
acquisition, and
construction of the third
phase of the Marshalls
Creek Bypass Project in
Monroe County, Pennsylvania

346.         PA             Construction of Central             $600,000
Susquehanna Valley Thruway.

347.         PA             Improvements to SR 130 and          $500,000
the College Avenue
Underpass, Greensburg, PA..

348.         PA             Mifflin County Industrial           $500,000
Park Access Road...........

349.         PA             Improvements to Section 114       $2,500,000
of State Route 150, Centre
County, PA.................

350.         PA             Upgrade to SR 228, Cranberry      $1,500,000
Township, PA...............

351.         PA             Purchase of right-of-way,           $600,000
utilities and construction
for Northern Access to
Altoona from Interstate 99,
Blair County, PA...........

352.         PA             Reconfiguration of the              $500,000
Rochester Riverfront ramp..


[[Page 1504]]
119 STAT. 1504


353.         PA             Construct the Alle-Kiski          $1,500,000
Bridge and Connector.......

354.         PA             Construct an intermodal           $1,000,000
center at the Philadelphia
Zoo........................

355.         PA             For interpretive signage and      $2,000,000
trails in Pittsburgh urban
park land..................

356.         PA             Construct an intermodal           $1,000,000
facility in Derry Township.

357.         PA             Construction of the                 $700,000
Schuylkill Gateway Project.

358.         PA             Da Vinci Center hydrogen            $200,000
fuel-celled transit
vehicles...................

359.         PA             Construct a road along the        $1,000,000
North Delaware Riverfront
Corridor from Buckius
Street to Poquessing Creek.

360.         PA             Widen I-81 from four to six       $1,000,000
lanes in the Wilkes-Barre/
Scranton corridor..........

361.         PA             Improvements to the Pleasant        $300,000
Valley and Sandy Hill Roads
intersection with SR 130 in
Penn Township..............

362.         PA             Improvements to access roads        $300,000
at the Please Touch Museum.

363.         PA             Construct the North Delaware        $500,000
River East Coast Greenway
Trail......................

364.         RI             To enhance the                   $20,000,000
infrastructure surrounding
and for transportation
improvements relative to
the intermodal station at
Warwick....................

365.         RI             Improvements to Warren           $11,000,000
Bridge (Warren)............

366.         RI             Open space acquisition to         $2,000,000
mitigate growth associated
with SR 4 and Interstate
95, by non-profit land
conservation agencies
through acquisition of fee
or easement, with a match
requirement of 50% of the
total purchase price.......

367.         RI             Ten Mile River Greenway           $3,000,000
(Pawtucket, E. Providence).

368.         RI             Washington Secondary Bicycle      $4,000,000
Facility/Coventry Greenway/
Trestle Trail (Coventry)...

369.         RI             South County Bike Path            $2,000,000
(South Kingstown,
Narragansett)..............

370.         RI             New Interchange constructed       $1,500,000
from I-195 to Taunton and
Warren Avenue in East
Providence.................


[[Page 1505]]
119 STAT. 1505


371.         RI             Jamestown Bridge Demolition--    $11,500,000
Bicycle Access/Trestle Span
Demolition/Fishing Pier (N.
Kingstown).................

372.         RI             Sakonnet River Bridge            $15,000,000
Replacement................

373.         RI             Rt. 146 Safety Improvements       $5,000,000
in North Smithfield........

374.         SD             Construction of 4-lane           $19,000,000
highway on U.S. 79 between
Maverick Junction, and the
Nebraska border............

375.         SD             Rosebud community streets         $6,000,000
reconstruction and paving..

376.         SD             Aberdeen bike trail               $1,000,000
extension..................

377.         SD             Whether or not otherwise         $40,000,000
eligible in title 23,
construct Phase II and III
of Phillips to the Falls
Project. Notwithstanding
any other provision of law,
with respect to costs for
Phase II and III of this
project paid for from this
$40 million, the Federal
share of project costs
shall be 100 percent.......

378.         SD             Rapid City Greenway               $2,000,000
Pedestrian and bike path
expansion..................

379.         SD             Brookings bike path.........        $100,000

380.         SD             Sioux Falls Bike Path--           $1,170,000
Dunham Park, Skunk Creek,
12th St., and I-29 to
Sertoma Park...............

381.         SD             For bike paths and                $2,500,000
pedestrian walkways within
Yankton, Pierre, Huron,
Watertown, and Madison.
Allocation for such paths
will be determined by the
State......................

382.         SD             Directed to SD DOT for            $3,230,000
projects it determines to
be of high priority........

383.         TN             North Second Street Corridor      $2,000,000
Upgrade, Memphis...........

384.         TN             Upgrade roads for Slack           $2,000,000
Water Port facility and
industrial park, Lake
County, TN.................

385.         TN             Plan and construct                $1,000,000
Rutherford County visitor's
center/transportation
information hub, Rutherford
County, Tennessee..........

386.         TN             Warren County Mountain View       $1,000,000
Industrial Park access
road, Warren County, TN....

387.         TN             Construction of an                $2,000,000
Interchange on Highway 64
(APD 40) adjacent to I-75
Exit 20 in the City of
Cleveland, TN for increased
safety.....................

388.         TN             Sullivan, Washington              $1,000,000
Counties, Tennessee SR 75
widening...................


[[Page 1506]]
119 STAT. 1506


389.         TN             Sevier County, TN SR 66             $500,000
widening...................

390.         TN             Reconstruct U.S. 79 between       $5,000,000
Milan and McKenzie.........

391.         TN             Construct Transportation and        $500,000
Heritage museum, Townsend..

392.         UT             Widen Highway 92 from Lehi        $3,000,000
to Highland................

393.         UT             Widen Redwood Road from           $2,000,000
Bangerter Highway in Salt
Lake County through
Saratoga Springs in Utah
County.....................

394.         UT             Construction of 200 North         $2,000,000
Street highway-rail graded
crossing separation,
Kaysville, Utah............

395.         UT             Bear River Migratory Bird           $500,000
Refuge Access Road
Improvements, Box Elder
County, Utah...............

396.         UT             State Street Reconstruction       $2,500,000
Project--10600 South to
9400 South, Sandy, Utah....

397.         UT             Geneva Rd./Provo Center           $6,000,000
Street, Orem 1600 North to
I-15 Fwy, Provo-widen from
2 to 4 lanes, Provo........

398.         UT             Provo, Utah Westside              $4,000,000
Connector from I-15 to
Provo Municipal Airport,
Provo......................

399.         UT             Bear River Migratory Bird         $3,000,000
Refuge Access Road
Improvements, Box Elder
County.....................

400.         UT             Widen Highway 92 from Lehi        $5,000,000
to Alpine/Highland.........

401.         UT             Construction of 200 North         $7,000,000
Street highway-rail graded
crossing separation,
Kaysville..................

402.         UT             Expand Redhills Parkway from      $8,000,000
2 to 5 lanes and improve
alignment within rights-of-
way in St. George..........

403.         UT             Construction and                  $7,000,000
Rehabilitation of 13th East
in Sandy City..............

404.         VA             Hampton Roads Third Crossing-    $37,000,000
Segment 1..................

405.         VA             Manage Freight movement and      $38,000,000
safety improvements to I-81

406.         VA             Construct Old Mill Road           $3,000,000
extension..................

407.         VA             Widen Route 262 in Augusta        $3,000,000
County.....................

408.         VA             Construct Meadowcreek             $2,000,000
Parkway Interchange,
Charlottesville............

409.         VA             Widening I-95 between Rt.         $2,000,000
123 and Fairfax County
Parkway....................

410.         VT             Improvements to Vermont          $30,000,000
Small Bridges..............


[[Page 1507]]
119 STAT. 1507


411.         VT             Improvements to Vermont          $10,000,000
interstates................

412.         VT             Vermont Institute of Natural        $300,000
Science turning lane on
U.S. Rt. 4 in Woodstock....

413.         VT             Western Corridor Rail            $30,000,000
Improvements, ABRB&E,
Vermont....................

414.         VT             Design and Construction of        $6,500,000
the Bennington Welcome
Center.....................

415.         VT             Improvements to the E.            $5,000,000
Alburg Railroad Trestle
Swing Span.................

416.         VT             Rehabilitation of Hartford        $6,500,000
Northbound and Southbound
rest areas.................

417.         VT             Improvements to the Island        $2,000,000
Line at South Street in
South Hero.................

418.         VT             Property acquisition and          $2,000,000
improvements for public
access and viewshed
protection for the Cedar
Creek Vermont monument at
the Cedar Creek and Belle
Grove National Historical
Park in Virginia...........

419.         VT             Design and construction of        $5,000,000
the South Burlington City
Center project.............

420.         VT             Rehabilitation of statewide       $6,200,000
covered bridges............

421.         VT             Improvements to the Green         $2,500,000
Mountain Rail Line between
Rutland and Bellows Falls..

422.         VT             Streetscape and road              $1,000,000
improvements in the Village
of Enosburg Falls..........

423.         VT             Signalization and storm           $3,000,000
drainage improvements to
Main Street in Brattleboro.

424.         VT             Streetscape, trail and road       $4,000,000
improvements in Lamoille,
Caledonia, Grand Isle and
Chittenden Counties........

425.         VT             Vermont Statewide                 $6,000,000
Transportation and
Stormwater Projects........

426.         WV             Improvements to U.S. Rt.-35      $25,000,000
in Putnam County...........

427.         WV             Raleigh Street Extension         $10,000,000
Project in Martinsburg.....

428.         VA             I-64/City Line Road               $5,000,000
Interchange in Virginia
Beach......................

429.         AS             Shoreline protection and          $1,000,000
drainage mitigation for
Nuuuli village roads.......

430.         AS             Village road improvements         $1,400,000
for Ta'u, Ofu, and Olosega-
Sili counties in Manu'a
district...................


[[Page 1508]]
119 STAT. 1508


431.         AS             Shoreline protection and          $1,000,000
drainage mitigation for Aua
village roads..............

432.         AS             Drainage mitigation in            $1,400,000
Malaeloa-Leone village
roads......................

433.         AS             To upgrade, repair and            $1,600,000
continue construction of
Ta'u harbor/ferry terminal
facility on Manu'a island..

434.         AS             Village road improvements         $3,000,000
for Launiusaelua and Ituau
counties in the Central
district...................

435.         AS             Village road improvements         $3,000,000
for Tualauta, Tualatai,
Aitulagi, Fofo, and Alataua
counties in the Western
district...................

436.         AS             Village road improvements         $2,600,000
for Sua and Vaifanua
counties in the Eastern
district...................

437.         AS             Drainage mitigation for Pago      $1,000,000
Pago village roads.........

438.         GU             Reconstruct Hagatna River         $6,600,000
Bridges, Municipality of
Hagatna....................

439.         GU             Piti, GU Construct Cabras         $6,000,000
Island Intermodal Facility.

440.         GU             Guam Mass Transit Authority         $400,000
Acquisition of transit
vehicles for disabled
persons....................

441.         GU             Construct Route 3A                $3,000,000
Extension, Municipality of
Yigo.......................

442.         MP             Planning design and              $12,000,000
construction of East Coast
Highway/ Route 36, Saipan..

443.         PR             Construction of 4 lane            $1,950,000
connector serving PR 9922,
PR 9939 and PR 183.........

444.         PR             Widening of PR 111 at the         $6,000,000
intersections of PR-444
through PR-423.............

445.         PR             Replacement ferries on            $2,000,000
Culebra and Vieques routes.

446.         PR             To build an extension of PR-      $5,000,000
53 between Yabucoa and
Maunabo....................

447.         PR             To build the missing central      $5,000,000
segment of PR-10, to
complete one of only two
highways crossing Puerto
Rico North to South........

448.         PR             To revitalize Old San Juan        $3,000,000
Historic District streets..

449.         PR             Widen Route 835 to provide        $6,000,000
ready access to Guaynado
and facilitate housing,
industrial, commercial, and
recreational development...


[[Page 1509]]
119 STAT. 1509


450.         PR             Construct sidewalks, curbs          $500,000
and gutters in the
Municipality of Loiza. (PR
187 from Mediania Baja to
Puente Herrera; Community
La Torre, Pinones).........

451.         PR             Extension of PR 833, between      $1,000,000
the PR-177 and the PR 2.
The extension is
approximately of 0.8km.....

452.         PR             Reconstruct various roads         $2,000,000
throughout the Municipality
of Bayamon, including
pavings and cold millings
as well as construction of
gutters. (PR 2; PR 829; PR
830; PR 861; PR 862; PR
840; PR 29)................

453.         PR             Construct extension of 1.04       $3,000,000
km to the ``Caridad del
Cobre'' Avenue in Bayamon
between the PR 199 and Urb.
Canaa......................

454.         PR             Roadway improvements for            $661,000
municipal roads in Orocovis

455.         VI             Christiansted By-Pass             $8,000,000
Highway, St. Croix.........

456.         VI             Upgrade West-East Corridor        $8,000,000
through Charlotte Amalie,
St. Thomas.................

457.         MN             Lake Street Access to I-35W,      $6,000,000
Minneapolis................

458.         OH             Construction, including           $6,000,000
design and engineering, of
an approximately 30,000 sq.
ft. terminal building to
accommodate the Trans-Erie
ferry service which departs
the Cleveland-Cuyahoga
County Port Authority,
Cleveland, Ohio............

459.         NY             Various transportation            $5,000,000
projects related to the
DestiNY USA project........

460.         CA             Construction at Lammers Road      $5,000,000
and I-205..................

461.         CA             Feasibility study for             $6,000,000
constructing SR 130
Realignment project
connecting the central
valley and San Joaquin
County and Santa Clara
county.....................

462.         FL             Coconut Rd. interchange I-75/    $10,000,000
Lee County.................

463.         AR             Improvements to U.S. 412 in       $6,500,000
Northwest Arkansas.........

464.         CA             Construction of and              $10,000,000
improvements to State Route
239 from State Route 4 in
Brentwood area to I-205 in
the area of Tracy..........

465.         CA             Design and construction of        $5,000,000
Camino Tassajara Crown
Canyon to East Town Project

466.         CA             Engineering right-of-way and      $6,000,000
construction of I-580 in
the Livermore Valley.......
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 1935. PROJECT FLEXIBILITY.

(a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, funds
allocated for a project described in subsection (b) in a State

[[Page 1510]]
119 STAT. 1510

may be obligated for any other project in the State for which funds are
so allocated, except that the total amount of funds authorized for any
project for which funds are so allocated shall not be reduced.
(b) Projects.--The projects described in this subsection are--
(1) the projects numbered greater than 3676 listed in the
table contained in section 1702 of this Act;
(2) the projects numbered greater than 18 listed in the
table contained in section 1301 of this Act;
(3) the projects numbered greater than 27 listed in the
table contained in section 1302 of this Act; and
(4) the projects listed in the table contained in section
1934 of this Act.

SEC. 1936.  NOTE: 23 USC 104 note.  ADVANCES.

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, funds apportioned to a
State under section 104(b) of title 23, United States Code, may be
obligated to carry out a project designated in any of sections 1301,
1302, 1306, and 1934 of this Act and sections 117 and 144(g) of title
23, United States Code, in an amount not to exceed the amount authorized
for that project, only from a program under which the project would be
eligible, except that any amounts obligated to carry out the project
shall be restored from funds allocated for the project.

SEC. 1937.  NOTE: North Dakota.  ROADS IN CLOSED BASINS.

(a) In General.--The Secretary shall use funds made available to
carry out section 125 of title 23, United States Code, through
advancement or reimbursement, without further emergency declaration, to
construct such measures as the Secretary determines to be necessary for
the continuation of roadway services, or the impoundment of water to
protect roads, or both, at Devils Lake in the State of North Dakota, as
the Secretary determines to be appropriate.
(b) Requirements.--The Secretary shall carry out construction under
subsection (a) in accordance with--
(1) the options and needs identified in the report of the
Devils Lake Surface Transportation Task Force of the Federal
Highway Administration dated May 4, 2000, and entitled
``Roadways Serving as Water Barriers'';
(2) any needs relating to Devils Lake identified after May
4, 2000; and
(3) any monitoring, study, or design or preliminary
engineering associated with evaluating or constructing the
measures.

(c) Affected Areas.--The Secretary shall carry out construction
under this section in an area that has been the subject of an emergency
declaration issued during the period beginning on January 1, 1993, and
ending on the date of enactment of this Act.
(d) Funding.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), to the
extent that expenditures relating to construction under this
section could not be made pursuant to any other authority under
section 125 of title 23, United States Code, the expenditures
shall not exceed--
(A) $10,000,000 during any fiscal year; and
(B) a total amount of $70,000,000.

[[Page 1511]]
119 STAT. 1511

(2) Exception.--Nothing in paragraph (1) limits any
expenditure with respect to--
(A) emergency relief in response to a development
occurring after the date of enactment of this Act; or
(B) an authority under any other provision of law
(including section 125 of such title).

(e) Effect of Section.--Nothing in this section authorizes or
provides funding for the construction, operation, or maintenance of an
outlet at Devils Lake in the State of North Dakota.

SEC. 1938.  NOTE: Bridges.  TECHNOLOGY.

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

SEC. 1939.  NOTE: Alaska.  BIA INDIAN ROAD PROGRAM.

(a) Limitation on Applicability of Certain Rule.--The final rule
effective October 1, 2004, published in the Federal Register, July 19,
2004, at pages 43089, relating to the Indian reservation road program
administered by the Bureau of Indian Affairs of the Department of the
Interior, shall not apply to the following Alaska villages with respect
to the following projects:
(1) Craig, Alaska, Craig Community Association, Point St.
Nicholas Road improvements.
(2) Cordova, Alaska, Native Village of Eyak, Shepard's Point
Road improvements.
(3) Hydaburg, Alaska, Hydaburg Community Association,
Hydaburg community street improvements.
(4) Healy Lake, Alaska, Healy Lake Traditional, Cummings
Road improvements.

(b) Special Rule.--For the villages listed in subsection (a), the
Indian reservation road program shall be administered by the Bureau of
Indian Affairs under the rules and regulations in effect before the
adoption of the final rule referred to in subsection (a), and the
Secretary shall pay, from amounts made available to carry out section
202(d) of title 23, United States Code, for fiscal year 2006 each of the
tribal organizations referred to in subsection (a) for the Federal share
of the costs of the projects listed in subsection (a).

SEC. 1940. GOING-TO-THE-SUN ROAD, GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MONTANA.

(a) Project Authorization.--There is authorized to be appropriated
to the Secretary from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass
Transit Account) to resurface, repair, rehabilitate, and reconstruct the
Going-to-the-Sun Road at Glacier National Park, Montana, in accordance
with the framework identified in Alternative 3 (shared use alternative)
of the environmental impact statement and record of decision dated 2003
and relating to the Going-to-the-Sun Road, to remain available until
expended--
(1) $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
(2) $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(3) $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(4) $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(5) $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.

(b) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the costs of the project
described in subsection (a) shall be 100 percent.

[[Page 1512]]
119 STAT. 1512

SEC. 1941. BEARTOOTH HIGHWAY, MONTANA.

(a) Project Authorization.--Of funds made available for the State of
Montana for the project for development and construction of United
States Route 212, Red Lodge North, Montana, as described in the table
contained in section 1934 (including amounts transferred to the project
under section 1935), on request of the State of Montana, the Secretary
shall obligate such sums as are necessary to reconstruct the Beartooth
Highway in the State of Montana.
(b) Reimbursement.--The amounts used for reconstruction under
subsection (a) shall be reimbursed to the project relating to United
States Route 212 described in subsection (a) on the date or dates on
which funding is allocated for the Beartooth Highway under section 125
of title 23, United States Code.
(c) Federal Share.--The Federal share payable for funds allocated
for the Beartooth Highway under section 125 of such title shall be 100
percent.

SEC. 1943.  NOTE: State listing.  GREAT LAKES ITS IMPLEMENTATION.

(a) In General.--The Secretary shall make grants to the State of
Wisconsin to continue intelligent transportation system activities in
the corridor serving the Greater Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Chicago,
Illinois, and Gary, Indiana, areas initiated under the Intermodal
Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (Public Law 102-240) and
other areas of the State of Wisconsin.
(b) Funding.--There is authorized to be appropriated from the
Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) $2,000,000 for
each of fiscal years 2006 through 2008 and $3,000,000 for fiscal year
2009 to carry out this section.
(c) Contract Authority.--Funds made available 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.

SEC. 1944. TRANSPORTATION CONSTRUCTION AND REMEDIATION, OTTAWA COUNTY,
OKLAHOMA.

(a) In General.--The Secretary shall allocate to the State of
Oklahoma amounts made available to carry out this section for the
activities described in subsection (b).
(b) Oklahoma Plan for Tar Creek.--The activities referred to in
subsection (a) are all activities described in the Oklahoma Plan for Tar
Creek, including activities under that Plan that are to be carried out
by involved Federal and State entities.
(c) Funding.--
(1) Authorization of appropriations.--
(A) 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 fiscal year 2006.
(B) Availability.--Funds authorized to be
appropriated under subparagraph (A) shall remain
available until expended.
(2) Contract authority.--Except as otherwise provided in
this section, funds authorized to be appropriated 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.

[[Page 1513]]
119 STAT. 1513

(3) Title 23 eligibility.--Activities described in
subsection (b) shall be considered to be eligible for funding
under any program for which funds are apportioned under section
104(b) of such title, as in effect on the day before the date of
enactment of this section.

SEC. 1945. INFRASTRUCTURE AWARENESS PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--In cooperation with the subcontracting production
entity that received funds under section 1212(b) of the Transportation
Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 193), the Secretary shall
fund the production of a documentary about infrastructure that
demonstrates advancements in Alaska, the last frontier.
(b) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of production of
the documentary under subsection (a) shall be 100 percent.
(c) Funding.--There is authorized to be appropriated out of the
Highway Trust fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) to carry out
this section $1,500,000 for fiscal year 2005 and $1,450,000 for fiscal
year 2006. Such fund shall remain available until expended.
(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 State Code; except
that the Federal share of the cost of production of the documentary
under this section shall be determined in accordance with this section.

SEC. 1946.  NOTE: Vermont.  GATEWAY RURAL IMPROVEMENT PILOT PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish a pilot program in
the State of Vermont to be known as the ``Gateway Rural Improvement
Pilot Program'' (referred to in this section as the ``program'') to
demonstrate the benefits to a rural rail corridor of a freight
transportation gateway program.
(b) Eligible Activities.--Under the program--
(1) funding preference shall be given to selecting a
corridor in the State of Vermont that includes a border
crossing; and
(2) individual projects shall provide community and highway
benefits by addressing economic, congestion, security, safety,
and environmental issues.

(c) Cost Sharing.--
(1) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of a
project under this section shall be determined in accordance
with section 120 of title 23, United States Code.
(2) Non-federal share.--Project user fees may be used to
provide all or part of the non-Federal share of the cost of a
project funded under this section.

(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--In addition to such amounts as
are otherwise authorized to be appropriated for the Department, there
are authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary to carry
out this section.

SEC. 1947. ELIGIBLE SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS.

Section 120(c) of title 23, United States Code, is amended in the
first sentence by inserting ``traffic circles (also known as
`roundabouts'),'' after ``traffic control signalization,''.

[[Page 1514]]
119 STAT. 1514

SEC. 1948.  NOTE: Massachusetts.  EMERGENCY SERVICE ROUTE.

Notwithstanding any Federal law, regulation, or policy to the
contrary, no Federal funds shall be obligated or expended for the
demolition of the existing Brightman Street Bridge connecting Fall River
and Somerset, Massachusetts, and the existing Brightman Street Bridge
shall be maintained for pedestrian and bicycle access, and as an
emergency service route.

SEC. 1949.  NOTE: Alaska.  KNIK ARM BRIDGE FUNDING CLARIFICATION.

The Secretary shall provide to the public entity known as the Knik
Arm Bridge and Toll Authority, established by the State of Alaska, funds
provided in items 2465 and 3677 in the table contained in section 1702,
item 2 in the table contained in section 1934, and item 14 in the table
contained in section 1302.

SEC. 1950.  NOTE: Louisiana.  LINCOLN PARISH, LA/I-20 TRANSPORTATION
CORRIDOR PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--The Secretary shall credit non-Federal expenditures
paid on or after October 23, 2000, by project sponsors of the Lincoln
Parish transportation and community and system preservation project
funded by the Department of Transportation and Related Agencies
Appropriations Act, 2001 (Public Law 106-346), and the United States
Route 167/I-20 interchange Interstate maintenance discretionary project
funded by the Department of Transportation and Related Agencies
Appropriations Act, 2002 (Public Law 107-87), that are in excess of the
non-Federal matching requirements for such projects as non-Federal
contributions toward the non-Federal matching requirements for all LA/I-
20 Transportation Corridor Program elements between Louisiana Route 149
and Louisiana Route 33.
(b) Expiration of Authority.--The authority to provide credit under
subsection (a) expires on September 30, 2009.

SEC. 1951. BONDING ASSISTANCE PROGRAM.

Section 332 of title 49, United States Code, is amended by inserting
at the end the following:
``(e) Bonding Assistance.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary, acting through the
Minority Resource Center established under subsection (b), shall
provide assistance in obtaining bid, payment, and performance
bonds by disadvantaged business enterprises pursuant to
subsection (b)(4).
``(2) Authorization of appropriation.--There is authorized
to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary for each of
fiscal years 2005 through 2009 to carry out activities under
this subsection.''.

SEC. 1952.  NOTE: Virginia.  CONGESTION RELIEF.

The Secretary shall conduct a design and feasibility analysis to
alleviate southbound traffic congestion along the George Washington
Parkway, Virginia, between Interstate Route 495 and the 14th Street
Bridge and shall take appropriate action in response to the results of
that analysis.

SEC. 1953. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

There is authorized to be appropriated to carry out, in accordance
with title 23, United States Code, projects under section 1301 and 1302
of this Act.

[[Page 1515]]
119 STAT. 1515

SEC. 1954. BICYCLE TRANSPORTATION AND PEDESTRIAN WALKWAYS.

Section 217(c) of title 23, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``in conjunction with such trails, roads, highways, and
parkways''.

SEC. 1955. CONVEYANCE TO THE CITY OF ELY, NEVADA.

Notwithstanding sections 202 and 203 of the Federal Land Policy and
Management Act of 1976 (43 U.S.C. 1711, 1712), the Secretary of the
Interior, acting through the Director of the Bureau of Land Management,
shall convey within 45 days after the date of enactment of this Act to
the City of Ely, Nevada, subject to valid existing rights, without
consideration, all right, title, and interest of the United States in
the land located within the railroad corridor described in rights-of-way
numbered Nev-043230, Nev-043231, Nev-043232, Nev-43240, Nev-043234,
ELKO-03009, ELKO-03514, and CC-05887.

SEC. 1956. BROWNFIELDS GRANTS.

Section 104(k)(4)(B) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. 9604(k)(4)(B)) is
amended by adding at the end the following:
``(iii) Exception.--Notwithstanding clause
(i)(IV), the Administrator may use up to 25
percent of the funds made available to carry out
this subsection to make a grant or loan under this
subsection to eligible entities that satisfy all
of the elements set forth in section 101(40) to
qualify as a bona fide prospective purchaser,
except that the date of acquisition of the
property was on or before January 11, 2002.''.

SEC. 1957. TRAFFIC CIRCLE CONSTRUCTION, CLARENDON, VERMONT.

(a)  NOTE: Deadlines.  In General.--The State of Vermont agency of
transportation shall--
(1) not later than August 1, 2005, commence planning for a
traffic circle at the intersection of United States Route 7 and
Vermont Route 103 in Clarendon, Vermont; and
(2) not later than August 1, 2007, complete construction of
that traffic circle.

(b) Funding.--From amounts made available to the State of Vermont by
this Act, the Secretary shall provide to the State of Vermont agency of
transportation $1,000,000 for use in carrying out this section.

SEC. 1958.  NOTE: Florida.  LIMITATION ON PROJECT APPROVAL.

Notwithstanding any provision of title 23, United States Code, the
Secretary is prohibited from approving any Federal-aid highway project
in Orange and Seminole Counties, Florida, which provides access from
Interstate Route 4 to the right-of-way or median of Interstate Route 4
if tolls or toll facilities are used for the access to the right-of-way
or median.

SEC. 1959.  NOTE: New York. New Jersey.  CROSS HARBOR FREIGHT MOVEMENT
PROJECT.

The Secretary shall provide to the public entity known as the Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey, established by the States of New
York and New Jersey, funds provided for project numbered 12 in section
1301 of this Act.

[[Page 1516]]
119 STAT. 1516

SEC. 1960. DENALI ACCESS SYSTEM PROGRAM.

The Denali Commission Act of 1998 (42 U.S.C. 3121 note) is amended--
(1) by redesignating section 309 as section 310; and
(2) by inserting after section 308 the following:

``SEC. 309. DENALI ACCESS SYSTEM PROGRAM.

``(a)  NOTE: Deadline.  Establishment of the Denali Access System
Program.--Not later than 3 months after the date of enactment of the
SAFETEA-LU, the Secretary of Transportation shall establish a program to
pay the costs of planning, designing, engineering, and constructing road
and other surface transportation infrastructure identified for the
Denali access system program under this section.

``(b) Denali Access System Program Advisory Committee.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  Establishment.--Not later than 3
months after the date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, the Denali
Commission shall establish a Denali Access System Program
Advisory Committee (referred to in this section as the `advisory
committee').
``(2) Membership.--The advisory committee shall be composed
of nine members to be appointed by the Governor of the State of
Alaska as follows:
``(A) The chairman of the Denali Commission.
``(B) Four members who represent existing regional
native corporations, native nonprofit entities, or
tribal governments, including one member who is a civil
engineer.
``(C) Four members who represent rural Alaska
regions or villages, including one member who is a civil
engineer.
``(3) Terms.--
``(A) In general.--Except for the chairman of the
Commission who shall remain a member of the advisory
committee, members shall be appointed to serve a term of
4 years.
``(B) Initial members.--Except for the chairman of
the Commission, of the eight initial members appointed
to the advisory committee, two shall be appointed for a
term of 1 year, two shall be appointed for a term of 2
years, two shall be appointed for a term of 3 years, and
two shall be appointed for a term of 4 years. All
subsequent appointments shall be for 4 years.
``(4) Responsibilities.--The advisory committee shall be
responsible for the following activities:
``(A) Advising the Commission on the surface
transportation needs of Alaska Native villages and rural
communities, including projects for the construction of
essential access routes within remote Alaska Native
villages and rural communities and for the construction
of roads and facilities necessary to connect isolated
rural communities to a road system.
``(B) Advising the Commission on considerations for
coordinatedtransportation planning among the Alaska
Native villages, Alaska rural villages, the State of
Alaska, and other government entities.
``(C) Establishing a list of transportation
priorities for Alaska Native village and rural community
transportation projects on an annual basis, including
funding recommendations.

[[Page 1517]]
119 STAT. 1517

``(D) Facilitate the Commission's work on
transportation projects involving more than one region.
``(5) FACA exemption.--The provisions of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) shall not apply to the
advisory committee.

``(c) Allocation of Funds.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall allocate funding
authorized and made available for the Denali access system
program to the Commission to carry out this section.
``(2) Distribution of funding.--In distributing funds for
surface transportation projects funded under the program, the
Commission shall consult the list of transportation priorities
developed by the advisory committee.

``(d) Preference to Alaska Materials and Products.--To construct a
project under this section, the Commission shall encourage, to the
maximum extent practicable, the use of employees and businesses that are
residents of Alaska.
``(e) Design Standards.--Each project carried out under this section
shall use technology and design standards determined by the Commission
to be appropriate given the location and the functionality of the
project.
``(f) Maintenance.--Funding for a construction project under this
section may include an additional amount equal to not more than 10
percent of the total cost of construction, to be retained for future
maintenance of the project. All such retained funds shall be dedicated
for maintenance of the project and may not be used for other purposes.
``(g) Lead Agency Designation.--For purposes of projects carried out
under this section, the Commission shall be designated as the lead
agency for purposes of accepting Federal funds and for purposes of
carrying out this project.
``(h) Non-Federal Share.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, funds made available to carry out this section may be used to meet
the non-Federal share of the cost of projects under title 23, United
States Code.
``(i) Surface Transportation Program Transferability.--
``(1) Transferability.--In any fiscal year, up to 15 percent
of the amounts made available to the State of Alaska for surface
transportation by section 133 of title 23, United States Code,
may be transferred to the Denali access system program.
``(2) No effect on set-aside.--Paragraph (2) of section
133(d), United States Code, shall not apply to funds transferred
under paragraph (1).

``(j) Authorization of Appropriations.--
``(1) In general.--There is authorized to be appropriated
out of the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) to carry out this section $15,000,000 for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009.
``(2) 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 any project carried out using
such funds shall be determined in accordance with section
120(b).''.

[[Page 1518]]
119 STAT. 1518

SEC. 1961.  NOTE: Maryland.  I-95/CONTEE ROAD INTERCHANGE STUDY.

(a) In General.--The Secretary shall conduct a study on the I-95/
Contee Road relocated interchange project located in Prince George's
County, Maryland. The study shall assess how the proposed interchange
will--
(1) leverage Federal investment in the I-95/Contee Road
relocated interchange project by encouraging a public-private
partnership between the State of Maryland and the private
financial interests supporting the project;
(2) improve overall transportation efficiency in the area
and enhance fire, rescue, and emergency response in the area;
(3) complement planned development in the area by providing
sufficient access to the Interstate System; and
(4) otherwise provide public benefits and revenues.

(b) Data Collection.--As part of the study, the Secretary shall
collect data regarding the economic impact of the project, including new
jobs and State and county revenues in the form of real estate property
taxes, retail sales taxes, and income and hotel sales and occupancy
taxes.
(c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of
this Act, 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 on the results of
the study, including any recommendations of the Secretary.
(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), $1,000,000 for
fiscal year 2006.
(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; except 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. 1962. MULTIMODAL FACILITY IMPROVEMENTS.

(a)  NOTE: California.  Authorization of Appropriations.--The
Secretary shall make available from funds in the Highway Trust Fund
(other than the Mass Transit Account) $5,000,000 for each of fiscal
years 2006 through 2009 for multimodal facility improvements,
construction, and ferry acquisition by North Bay Ferry Service, Inc.,
located at Port Sonoma in Petaluma, California.

(b) Contract Authority.--Funds 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,
except that such funds shall remain available until expended.
(c) Limitation.--Not more than 50 percent of funds appropriated to
carry out this section shall be used for facility improvements and
construction.
(d) Federal Share.--The Federal Share of the cost of a facility
improvement or construction project under this section shall be 80
percent.

[[Page 1519]]
119 STAT. 1519

(e) Requirement.--Ferries to which assistance is provided under this
section shall be purchased by a United States company that designs and
builds vessels in the United States.

SEC. 1963.  NOTE: New York.  APOLLO THEATER LEASES.

Notwithstanding the Public Works and Economic Development Act of
1965 (42 U.S.C. 3121 et seq.), or any other provision of law, the
Economic Development Administration shall, in order to facilitate the
further financing of the project, approve, without compensation to the
agency, a series of leases of the Apollo Theater, located in Harlem, New
York, to be improved by Economic Development Administration project
numbers 01-01-7308 and 01-01-07552.

SEC. 1964.  NOTE: State listing.  PROJECT FEDERAL SHARE.

(a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, only
for the States of Alaska, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Oregon, and
South Dakota, the Federal share of the cost of a project described in
subsection (b) shall be determined in accordance with section 120(b) of
title 23, United States Code.
(b) Projects.--The projects described in this subsection are--
(1) the projects listed in section 1702;
(2) the projects listed in section 1301; and
(3) the projects listed in section 1934.

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, $163,680,000 for fiscal year
2005, $217,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $220,000,000 for fiscal
year 2007, $225,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $235,000,000
for fiscal year 2009.
(2) Highway safety research and development.--For carrying
out section 403 of title 23, United States Code, $71,424,000 for
fiscal year 2005, $110,000,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$107,750,000 for fiscal year 2007, $107,750,000 for fiscal year
2008, and $105,500,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(3) Occupant protection incentive grants.--For carrying out
section 405 of title 23, United States Code, $19,840,000 for
fiscal year 2005, $25,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $25,000,000
for fiscal year 2007, $25,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and
$25,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(4) Safety belt performance grants.--For carrying out
section 406 of title 23, United States Code, $124,500,000 for
fiscal year 2006, $124,500,000 for fiscal year 2007,
$124,500,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $124,500,000 for fiscal
year 2009.
(5) State traffic safety information system improvements.--
For carrying out section 408 of title 23, United States Code,
$34,500,000 for fiscal year 2006, $34,500,000 for fiscal year
2007, $34,500,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $34,500,000 for
fiscal year 2009.
(6) Alcohol-impaired driving countermeasures incentive grant
program.--For carrying out section 410 of title

[[Page 1520]]
119 STAT. 1520

23, United States Code, $39,680,000 for fiscal year 2005,
$120,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $125,000,000 for fiscal year
2007, $131,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $139,000,000 for
fiscal year 2009.
(7) National driver register.--For the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration to carry out chapter 303 of title
49, United States Code, $3,968,000 for fiscal year 2005,
$4,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $4,000,000 for fiscal year
2007, $4,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $4,000,000 for fiscal
year 2009.
(8) High visibility enforcement program.--For carrying out
section 2009 of this title $29,000,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$29,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $29,000,000 for fiscal year
2008, and $29,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(9) Motorcyclist safety.--For carrying out section 2010 of
this title $6,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $6,000,000 for
fiscal year 2007, $6,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and
$7,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
(10) Child safety and child booster seat safety incentive
grants.--For carrying out section 2011 of this title $6,000,000
for fiscal year 2006, $6,000,000 for fiscal year 2007,
$6,000,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $7,000,000 for fiscal year
2009.
(11) Administrative expenses.--For administrative and
related operating expenses of the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration in carrying out chapter 4 of title 23,
United States Code, and this title $17,500,000 for fiscal year
2006, $17,750,000 for fiscal year 2007, $18,250,000 for fiscal
year 2008, and $18,500,000 for fiscal year 2009.

(b)  NOTE: 23 USC 401 note.  Prohibition on Other Uses.--Except as
otherwise provided in chapter 4 of title 23, United States Code, and
this title, (including the amendments made by this title), the amounts
made available from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) for a program under such chapter shall only be used to carry
out such program and may not be used by States or local governments for
construction purposes.

(c) 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 2005 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.
(d) Transfers.--In each fiscal year, the Secretary may transfer any
amounts remaining available under paragraph (3), (5), or (6) 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, 408, and 410 of title 23, United States
Code.
(e) Clarifications.--The amounts made available by each of
subsections (a)(1) through (a)(7) shall be less any amounts made
available from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) by laws enacted before the date of enactment of this Act for
the respective programs referred to in each of such subsections for
fiscal year 2005. Amounts authorized by such subsections are post-
rescission and shall not be subject to any rescission after the date of
enactment of this Act.

[[Page 1521]]
119 STAT. 1521

SEC. 2002. HIGHWAY SAFETY PROGRAMS.

(a) Programs To Be Included.--Section 402(a) of title 23, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in clause (2) by striking ``and to increase public
awareness of the benefit of motor vehicles equipped with
airbags'';
(2) by redesignating clause (6) as clause (7);
(3) by inserting after clause (5) the following: ``(6) to
reduce accidents resulting from unsafe driving behavior
(including aggressive or fatigued driving and distracted driving
arising from the use of electronic devices in vehicles)''; and
(4) in the 10th sentence by inserting ``aggressive driving,
fatigued driving, distracted driving,'' after ``school bus
accidents,''

(b) Administration of State Programs.--Section 402(b)(1) of such
title is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (C) by striking ``and'' at the end;
(2) by redesignating clause (6) as clause (7);
(3) in subparagraph (D) by striking ``State.'' and inserting
``State; and''; and
(4) by adding at the end the following:
``(E) provide satisfactory assurances that the State
will implement activities in support of national highway
safety goals to reduce motor vehicle related fatalities
that also reflect the primary data-related crash factors
within a State as identified by the State highway safety
planning process, including--
``(i) national law enforcement mobilizations;
``(ii) sustained enforcement of statutes
addressing impaired driving, occupant protection,
and driving in excess of posted speed limits;
``(iii) an annual statewide safety belt use
survey in accordance with criteria established by
the Secretary for the measurement of State safety
belt use rates to ensure that the measurements are
accurate and representative; and
``(iv) development of statewide data systems
to provide timely and effective data analysis to
support allocation of highway safety resources.''.

(c) Deduction Deletion.--Section 402(c) of such title is amended--
(1) by striking the second sentence; and
(2) in the sixth sentence by striking ``three-fourths of 1
percent'' and inserting ``2 percent''.

(d) Law Enforcement and Consolidation of Applications.--Section 402
of such title is further amended by adding at the end the following:
``(l) Law Enforcement Vehicular Pursuit Training.--A State shall
actively encourage all relevant law enforcement agencies in such State
to follow the guidelines established for vehicular pursuits issued by
the International Association of Chiefs of Police that are in effect on
the date of enactment of this subsection or as revised and in effect
after such date as determined by the Secretary.
``(m) Consolidation of Grant Applications.--The Secretary shall
establish an approval process by which a State may apply for all grants
under this chapter through a single application process

[[Page 1522]]
119 STAT. 1522

with one annual deadline. The Bureau of Indian Affairs shall establish a
similar simplified process for applications for grants from Indian
tribes under this chapter.''.
(e) Conforming Repeal for Administrative Expenses.--Section 405(d)
of such title is repealed.

SEC. 2003. HIGHWAY SAFETY RESEARCH AND OUTREACH PROGRAMS.

(a) Revised Authority and Requirements.--Section 403(a) of title 23,
United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(a) Authority of the Secretary.--The Secretary is authorized to
use funds appropriated to carry out this section to--
``(1) conduct research on all phases of highway safety and
traffic conditions, including accident causation, highway or
driver characteristics, communications, and emergency care;
``(2) conduct ongoing research into driver behavior and its
effect on traffic safety;
``(3) conduct research on, launch initiatives to counter,
and conduct demonstration projects on fatigued driving by
drivers of motor vehicles and distracted driving in such
vehicles, including the effect that the use of electronic
devices and other factors deemed relevant by the Secretary have
on driving;
``(4) conduct training or education programs in cooperation
with other Federal departments and agencies, States, private
sector persons, highway safety personnel, and law enforcement
personnel;
``(5) conduct research on, and evaluate the effectiveness
of, traffic safety countermeasures, including seat belts and
impaired driving initiatives;
``(6) conduct research on, evaluate, and develop best
practices related to driver education programs (including driver
education curricula, instructor training and certification,
program administration and delivery mechanisms) and make
recommendations for harmonizing driver education and multistage
graduated licensing systems;
``(7) conduct research, training, and education programs
related to older drivers;
``(8) conduct demonstration projects; and
``(9) conduct research, training, and programs relating to
motorcycle safety, including impaired driving.''

(b) International Cooperation.--Section 403 of such title is amended
by adding at the end the following:
``(g) International Cooperation.--The Administrator of the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration may participate and cooperate in
international activities to enhance highway safety.''.
(c) On-Scene Motor Vehicle Collision Causation.--
(1) Study.--The Secretary shall conduct under section 403 of
title 23, United States Code, a nationally representative study
to collect on-scene motor vehicle collision data and to
determine crash causation.  NOTE: Contracts.  The Secretary
shall enter into a contract with the National Academy of
Sciences to conduct a review of the research, design,
methodology, and implementation of the study.
(2) Consultation.--The study under this subsection may be
conducted in consultation with other Federal departments and
agencies with relevant expertise.

[[Page 1523]]
119 STAT. 1523

(3) Final report.--Not later than 2 years after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit a report on
the results of the study conducted under this subsection to the
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate
and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the
House of Representatives.

(d)  NOTE: 23 USC 403 note.  Research on Distracted, Inattentive,
and Fatigued Drivers.--In conducting research under section 403(a)(3) of
title 23, United States Code, the Secretary shall carry out not less
than 2 demonstration projects to evaluate new and innovative means of
combating traffic system problems caused by distracted, inattentive, or
fatigued drivers. The demonstration projects shall be in addition to any
other research carried out under such section.

(e) Pedestrian  NOTE: Reports.  Safety.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall--
(A) produce a comprehensive report on pedestrian
safety that builds on the current level of knowledge of
pedestrian safety countermeasures by identifying the
most effective advanced technology and intelligent
transportation systems, such as automated pedestrian
detection and warning systems (infrastructure-based and
vehicle-based), road design, and vehicle structural
design that could potentially mitigate the crash forces
on pedestrians in the event of a crash; and
(B) include in the report recommendations on how new
technological developments could be incorporated into
educational and enforcement efforts and how they could
be integrated into national design guidelines developed
by the American Association of State Highway and
Transportation Officials.
(2) Due date.--The Secretary shall complete the report under
this subsection not less than 2 years after the date of
enactment of this Act and submit a copy of the report to the
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate
and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the
House of Representatives.

(f)  Refusal of Intoxication Testing.--
(1) Study.--The Secretary shall carry out under section 403
of title 23, United States Code, a study of the frequency with
which persons arrested for the offense of operating a motor
vehicle while under the influence of alcohol and persons
arrested for the offense of operating a motor vehicle while
intoxicated refuse to take a test to determine blood alcohol
concentration levels and the effect such refusals have on the
ability of States to prosecute such persons for those offenses.
(2) Consultation.--In carrying out the study under this
subsection, the Secretary shall consult with the Governors of
the States, the States' Attorneys General, and the United States
Sentencing Commission.
(3) Report.--
(A) Requirement for report.--Not later than 2 years
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary shall submit a report on the results of the
study to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives.

[[Page 1524]]
119 STAT. 1524

(B) Content.--The report shall include any
recommendation for legislation, including any
recommended model State legislation, and any other
recommendations that the Secretary considers appropriate
for implementing a program designed to decrease the
occurrence of refusals by arrested persons to submit to
a test to determine blood alcohol concentration levels.

(g) Impaired Motorcycle Driving.--
(1) Study.--In conducting research under section 403(a)(9)
of title 23, United States Code, the Secretary shall conduct a
study on educational, public information and other activities
targeted at reducing motorcycle accidents and resulting
fatalities and injuries, where the operator of the motorcycle is
impaired.
(2) Report.--Not later than 2 years after the date of
enactment of this Act, 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 a report on the results of the
study, including the data collected and statistics compiled and
recommendations to reduce the number of motorcycle accidents
described in paragraph (1) and the resulting fatalities and
injuries.

(h) Reducing Impaired Driving Recidivism.--
(1) Study.--The Secretary shall conduct a study on reducing
the incidence of alcohol-related motor vehicle crashes and
fatalities through research of advanced vehicle-based alcohol
detection systems, including an assessment of the practicability
and cost effectiveness of such systems.
(2) Report.--Not later than 2 years 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.

SEC. 2004. 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 ``SAFETEA-LU'';
(2) in paragraph (3) by striking ``1997'' and inserting
``2003''; and
(3) in each of paragraphs (4)(A), (4)(B), and (4)(C) by
inserting after ``years'' the following: ``beginning after
September 30, 2003,''.

(c) Grant Amounts.--Section 405(c) of such title is amended--
(1) by striking ``25 percent'' and inserting ``100
percent''; and
(2) by striking ``1997'' and inserting ``2003''.

SEC. 2005. GRANTS FOR PRIMARY SAFETY BELT USE LAWS.

(a) In General.--Section 406 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 406. Safety belt performance grants

``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall make grants to States in
accordance with the provisions of this section to encourage the

[[Page 1525]]
119 STAT. 1525

enactment and enforcement of laws requiring the use of safety belts in
passenger motor vehicles.
``(b) Grants for Enacting Primary Safety Belt Use Laws.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall make a single grant
to each State that either--
``(A) enacts for the first time after December 31,
2002, and has in effect and is enforcing a conforming
primary safety belt use law for all passenger motor
vehicles; or
``(B) in the case of a State that does not have such
a primary safety belt use law, has after December 31,
2005, a State safety belt use rate of 85 percent or more
for each of the 2 calendar years immediately preceding
the fiscal year of a grant, as measured under criteria
determined by the Secretary.
``(2) Amount.--The amount of a grant available to a State in
fiscal year 2006 or in a subsequent fiscal year under paragraph
(1) shall equal 475 percent of the amount apportioned to the
State under section 402(c) for fiscal year 2003.
``(3) July 1 cut-off.--For the purpose of determining the
eligibility of a State for a grant under paragraph (1)(A), a
conforming primary safety belt use law enacted after June 30th
of any year shall--
``(A) not be considered to have been enacted in the
Federal fiscal year in which that June 30th falls; but
``(B) be considered as if it were enacted after
October 1 of the next Federal fiscal year.
``(4) Shortfall.--If the total amount of grants provided for
by this subsection for a fiscal year exceeds the amount of funds
available for such grants for that fiscal year, the Secretary
shall make grants under this subsection to States in the order
in which--
``(A) the conforming primary safety belt use law
came into effect; or
``(B) the State's safety belt use rate was 85
percent or more for 2 consecutive calendar years (as
measured under by criteria determined by the Secretary),
whichever first occurs.
``(5) Catch-up grants.--The Secretary shall make a grant to
any State eligible for a grant under this subsection that did
not receive a grant for a fiscal year because of the application
of paragraph (4), in the next fiscal year if the State's
conforming primary safety belt use law remains in effect or its
safety belt use rate is 85 percent or more for the 2 consecutive
calendar years preceding such next fiscal year (subject to the
condition in paragraph (4)).

``(c) Grants for Pre-2003 Laws.--
``(1) In general.--To the extent that amounts made available
for grants under this section for any of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 exceed the total amount of grants to be awarded
under subsection (b) for the fiscal year, including amounts to
be awarded for catch-up grants under subsection (b)(5), the
Secretary shall make a single grant to each State that enacted,
has in effect, and is enforcing a conforming primary safety belt
use law for all passenger motor vehicles that was in effect
before January 1, 2003.
``(2) Amount; installments.--The amount of a grant available
to a State under this subsection shall be equal to 200

[[Page 1526]]
119 STAT. 1526

percent of the amount of funds apportioned to the State under
section 402(c) for fiscal year 2003. The Secretary may award the
grant in annual installments.

``(d) Allocation of Unallocated Funds.--
``(1) Additional grants.--The Secretary shall make
additional grants under this section of any amounts made
available for grants under this section that, on July 1, 2009,
have not been allocated to States under this section.
``(2) Allocation.--The additional grants made under this
subsection shall be allocated among all States that, as of that
date, have enacted, have in effect, and are enforcing conforming
primary safety belt laws for all passenger motor vehicles. The
allocations shall be made in accordance with the formula for
apportioning funds among the States under section 402(c).

``(e) Use of Grant Funds.--
``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), a State may use
a grant under this section for any safety purpose under this
title or for any project that corrects or improves a hazardous
roadway location or feature or proactively addresses highway
safety problems, including--
``(A) intersection improvements;
``(B) pavement and shoulder widening;
``(C) installation of rumble strips and other
warning devices;
``(D) improving skid resistance;
``(E) improvements for pedestrian or bicyclist
safety;
``(F) railway-highway crossing safety;
``(G) traffic calming;
``(H) the elimination of roadside obstacles;
``(I) improving highway signage and pavement
marking;
``(J) installing priority control systems for
emergency vehicles at signalized intersections;
``(K) installing traffic control or warning devices
at locations with high accident potential;
``(L) safety-conscious planning; and
``(M) improving crash data collection and analysis.
``(2) Safety activity requirement.--Notwithstanding
paragraph (1), the Secretary shall ensure that at least
$1,000,000 of amounts received by States under this section are
obligated for safety activities under this chapter.
``(3) Support activity.--The Secretary or his designee may
engage in activities with States and State legislators to
consider proposals related to safety belt use laws.

``(f) Carry-Forward of Excess Funds.--If the amount available for
grants under this section for any fiscal year exceeds the sum of the
grants made under this section for that fiscal year, the excess amount
and obligational authority shall be carried forward and made available
for grants under this section in the succeeding fiscal year.
``(g) Federal Share.--The Federal share payable for grants under
this section shall be 100 percent.
``(h) Passenger Motor Vehicle Defined.--In this section, the term
`passenger motor vehicle' means--
``(1) a passenger car;
``(2) a pickup truck; and

[[Page 1527]]
119 STAT. 1527

``(3) a van, minivan, or sport utility vehicle with a gross
vehicle weight rating of less than 10,000 pounds.''.

(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 4 of such title is
amended by striking the item relating to section 406 and inserting the
following:

``406. Safety belt performance grants.''.

SEC. 2006. STATE TRAFFIC SAFETY INFORMATION SYSTEM IMPROVEMENTS.

(a) In General.--Section 408 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 408. State traffic safety information system improvements

``(a) Grant Authority.--Subject to the requirements of this section,
the Secretary shall make grants to eligible States to support the
development and implementation of effective programs by such States to--
``(1) 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;
``(2) evaluate the effectiveness of efforts to make such
improvements;
``(3) link the State data systems, including traffic
records, with other data systems within the State, such as
systems that contain medical, roadway, and economic data; and
``(4) 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.

``(b) First-Year Grants.--To be eligible for a first-year grant
under this section in a fiscal year, 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--
``(A) that addresses existing deficiencies in the
State's highway safety data and traffic records system;
``(B) that is approved by the highway safety data
and traffic records coordinating committee;
``(C) that specifies how existing deficiencies in
the State's highway safety data and traffic records
system were identified;
``(D) that prioritizes, on the basis of the
identified highway safety data and traffic records
system deficiencies of the State, the highway safety
data and traffic records system needs and goals of the
State, including the activities under subsection (a);
``(E) that identifies performance-based measures by
which progress toward those goals will be determined;
and

[[Page 1528]]
119 STAT. 1528

``(F) that specifies how the grant funds and any
other funds of the State are to be used to address needs
and goals identified in the multiyear plan.

``(c) Successive Year Grants.--A State shall be eligible for a grant
under this subsection in a fiscal year succeeding the first fiscal year
in which the State receives a grant under subsection (b) if the State--
``(1) certifies to the Secretary that an assessment or audit
of the State's highway safety data and traffic records system
has been conducted or updated within the preceding 5 years;
``(2) certifies to the Secretary that its highway safety
data and traffic records coordinating committee continues to
operate and supports the multiyear plan;
``(3) specifies how the grant funds and any other funds of
the State are to be used to address needs and goals identified
in the multiyear plan;
``(4) demonstrates to the Secretary measurable progress
toward achieving the goals and objectives identified in the
multiyear plan; and
``(5) submits to the Secretary a current report on the
progress in implementing the multiyear plan.

``(d) Grant Amount.--Subject to subsection (e)(3), the amount of a
year grant made to a State for a fiscal year under this section shall
equal the higher of--
``(1) the 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 such section
for fiscal year 2003; or
``(2)(A) $300,000 in the case of the first fiscal year a
grant is made to a State under this section after the date of
enactment of this subparagraph; or
``(B) $500,000 in the case of a succeeding fiscal year a
grant is made to the State under this section after such date of
enactment.

``(e) Additional Requirements and Limitations.--
``(1) Model data elements.--The Secretary, in consultation
with States and other appropriate parties, shall determine the
model data elements that are useful for the observation and
analysis of State and national trends in occurrences, rates,
outcomes, and circumstances of motor vehicle traffic accidents.
In order to be eligible for a grant under this section, a State
shall submit to the Secretary a certification that the State has
adopted and uses such model data elements, or a certification
that the State will use grant funds provided under this section
toward adopting and using the maximum number of such model data
elements as soon as practicable.
``(2) Data on use of electronic devices.--The model data
elements required under paragraph (1) shall include data
elements, as determined appropriate by the Secretary, in
consultation with the States and appropriate elements of the law
enforcement community, on the impact on traffic safety of the
use of electronic devices while driving.
``(3) Maintenance of effort.--No grant may be made to a
State under this section in any fiscal year unless the

[[Page 1529]]
119 STAT. 1529

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 highway safety
data programs at or above the average level of such expenditures
maintained by such State in the 2 fiscal years preceding the
date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU.
``(4) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of
adopting and implementing in a fiscal year a State program
described in subsection (a) may not exceed 80 percent.
``(5) Limitation on use of grant proceeds.--A State may use
the proceeds of a grant received under this section only to
implement the program described in subsection (a) for which the
grant is made.

``(f) Applicability of Chapter 1.--Section 402(d) of this title
shall apply in the administration of this section.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 4 of such title is
amended by striking the item relating to section 408 and inserting the
following:

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

SEC. 2007. ALCOHOL-IMPAIRED DRIVING COUNTERMEASURES.

(a) Maintenance of Effort.--Section 410(a)(2) of title 23, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``under this section'' and inserting ``under
this subsection''; and
(2) by striking ``Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century'' and inserting ``SAFETEA-LU''.

(b) Revised Grant Authority.--Section 410 of such title is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) by striking paragraph (3);
(B) by redesignating paragraph (4) as paragraph (3);
and
(C) in paragraph (3) (as so redesignated) by
striking the second comma following ``sixth'';
(2) by redesignating subsections (e) and (f) as subsections
(h) and (i), respectively;
(3) by striking subsections (b) through (d) and inserting
the following:

``(b) Eligibility Requirements.--To be eligible for a grant under
subsection (a), a State shall--
``(1) have an alcohol related fatality rate of 0.5 or less
per 100,000,000 vehicle miles traveled as of the date of the
grant, as determined by the Secretary using the most recent
Fatality Analysis Reporting System of the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration; or
``(2)(A) for fiscal year 2006 by carrying out 3 of the
programs and activities under subsection (c);
``(B) for fiscal year 2007 by carrying out 4 of the programs
and activities under subsection (c); or
``(C) for fiscal years 2008 and 2009 by carrying out 5 of
the programs and activities under subsection (c).

``(c) State Programs and Activities.--The programs and activities
referred to in subsection (b) are the following:
``(1) Check point, saturation patrol program.--A State
program to conduct a series of high visibility, statewide law
enforcement campaigns in which law enforcement personnel

[[Page 1530]]
119 STAT. 1530

monitor for impaired driving, either through the use of sobriety
check points or saturation patrols, on a nondiscriminatory,
lawful basis for the purpose of determining whether the
operators of the motor vehicles are driving while under the
influence of alcohol--
``(A) if the State organizes the campaigns in
cooperation with related periodic national campaigns
organized by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, except that this subparagraph does not
preclude a State from initiating sustained high
visibility, Statewide law enforcement campaigns
independently of the cooperative efforts; and
``(B) if, for each fiscal year, the State
demonstrates to the Secretary that the State and the
political subdivisions of the State that receive funds
under this section have increased, in the aggregate, the
total number of impaired driving law enforcement
activities at high incident locations (or any other
similar activity approved by the Secretary) initiated in
such State during the preceding fiscal year by a factor
that the Secretary determines meaningful for the State
over the number of such activities initiated in such
State during the preceding fiscal year.
``(2) Prosecution and adjudication outreach program.--A
State prosecution and adjudication program under which--
``(A) the State works to reduce the use of diversion
programs by educating and informing prosecutors and
judges through various outreach methods about the
benefits and merits of prosecuting and adjudicating
defendants who repeatedly commit impaired driving
offenses;
``(B) the courts in a majority of the judicial
jurisdictions of the State are monitored on the courts'
adjudication of cases of impaired driving offenses; or
``(C) annual statewide outreach is provided for
judges and prosecutors on innovative approaches to the
prosecution and adjudication of cases of impaired
driving offenses that have the potential for
significantly improving the prosecution and adjudication
of such cases.
``(3) Testing of bac.--An effective system for increasing
from the previous year the rate of blood alcohol concentration
testing of motor vehicle drivers involved in fatal accidents.
``(4) High risk drivers.--A law that establishes stronger
sanctions or additional penalties for individuals convicted of
operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol
whose blood alcohol concentration is 0.15 percent or more than
for individuals convicted of the same offense but with a lower
blood alcohol concentration. For purposes of this paragraph,
`additional penalties' includes--
``(A) a 1-year suspension of a driver's license, but
with the individual whose license is suspended becoming
eligible after 45 days of such suspension to obtain a
provisional driver's license that would permit the
individual to drive--
``(i) only to and from the individual's place
of employment or school; and
``(ii) only in an automobile equipped with a
certified alcohol ignition interlock device; and

[[Page 1531]]
119 STAT. 1531

``(B) a mandatory assessment by a certified
substance abuse official of whether the individual has
an alcohol abuse problem with possible referral to
counseling if the official determines that such a
referral is appropriate.
``(5) Programs for effective alcohol rehabilitation and dwi
courts.--A program for effective inpatient and outpatient
alcohol rehabilitation based on mandatory assessment and
appropriate treatment for repeat offenders or a program to refer
impaired driving cases to courts that specialize in driving
while impaired cases that emphasize the close supervision of
high-risk offenders.
``(6) Underage drinking program.--An effective strategy, as
determined by the Secretary, for preventing operators of motor
vehicles under age 21 from obtaining alcoholic beverages and for
preventing persons from making alcoholic beverages available to
individuals under age 21. Such a strategy may include--
``(A) the issuance of tamper-resistant drivers'
licenses to individuals under age 21 that are easily
distinguishable in appearance from drivers' licenses
issued to individuals age 21 or older; and
``(B) a program provided by a nonprofit organization
for training point of sale personnel concerning, at a
minimum--
``(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;
and
``(v) Federal, State, and local laws that are
relevant to such personnel; and
``(C) having a law in effect that creates a 0.02
percent blood alcohol content limit for drivers under 21
years old.
``(7) Administrative license revocation.--An administrative
driver's license suspension or revocation system for individuals
who operate motor vehicles while under the influence of alcohol
that requires that--
``(A) in the case of an individual who, in any 5-
year period beginning after the date of enactment of the
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century, is
determined on the basis of a chemical test to have been
operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of
alcohol or is determined to have refused to submit to
such a test as proposed by a law enforcement officer,
the State agency responsible for administering drivers'
licenses, upon receipt of the report of the law
enforcement officer--
``(i) suspend the driver's license of such
individual for a period of not less than 90 days
if such individual is a first offender in such 5-
year period; except that under such suspension an
individual may 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

[[Page 1532]]
119 STAT. 1532

``(ii) suspend the driver's license of such
individual for a period of not less than 1 year,
or revoke such license, if such individual is a
repeat offender in such 5-year period; except that
such 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; and
``(B) the suspension and revocation referred to
under clause (i) take effect not later than 30 days
after the date on which the individual refused to submit
to a chemical test or received notice of having been
determined to be driving under the influence of alcohol,
in accordance with the procedures of the State.
``(8) Self sustaining impaired driving prevention program.--
A program under which a significant portion of the fines or
surcharges collected from individuals who are fined for
operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol
are returned to communities for comprehensive programs for the
prevention of impaired driving.

``(d) Uses of Grants.--Subject to subsection (g)(2), grants made
under this section may be used for all programs and activities described
in subsection (c), and to defray the following costs:
``(1) Labor costs, management costs, and equipment
procurement costs for the high visibility, Statewide law
enforcement campaigns under subsection (c)(1).
``(2) The costs of the training of law enforcement personnel
and the procurement of technology and equipment, including video
equipment and passive alcohol sensors, to counter directly
impaired operation of motor vehicles.
``(3) The costs of public awareness, advertising, and
educational campaigns that publicize use of sobriety check
points or increased law enforcement efforts to counter impaired
operation of motor vehicles.
``(4) The costs of public awareness, advertising, and
educational campaigns that target impaired operation of motor
vehicles by persons under 34 years of age.
``(5) The costs of the development and implementation of a
State impaired operator information system.
``(6) The costs of operating programs that result in vehicle
forfeiture or impoundment or license plate impoundment.

``(e) Additional Authorities for Certain Authorized Uses.--
``(1) Combination of grant proceeds.--Grant funds used for a
campaign under subsection (d)(3) may be combined, or expended in
coordination, with proceeds of grants under section 402.
``(2) Coordination of uses.--Grant funds used for a campaign
under paragraph (3) or (4) of subsection (d) may be expended--
``(A) in coordination with employers, schools,
entities in the hospitality industry, and nonprofit
traffic safety groups; and
``(B) in coordination with sporting events and
concerts and other entertainment events.

[[Page 1533]]
119 STAT. 1533

``(f) Allocation.--Subject to subsection (g), funds made available
to carry out this section shall be allocated among States that meet the
eligibility criteria in subsection (b) on the basis of the apportionment
formula under section 402(c).
``(g) Grants to High Fatality Rate States.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall make a separate grant
under this section to each State that--
``(A) is among the 10 States with the highest
impaired driving related fatalities as determined by the
Secretary using the most recent Fatality Analysis
Reporting System of the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration; and
``(B) prepares a plan for grant expenditures under
this subsection that is approved by the Administrator of
the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
``(2) Required uses.--At least one-half of the amounts
allocated to States under this subsection may only be used for
the program described in subsection (c)(1).
``(3) Allocation.--Funds made available under this
subsection shall be allocated among States described in
paragraph (1) on the basis of the apportionment formula under
section 402(c), except that no State shall be allocated more
than 30 percent of the funds made available to carry out this
subsection for a fiscal year.
``(4) Funding.--Not more than 15 percent per fiscal year of
amounts made available to carry out this section for a fiscal
year shall be made available by the Secretary for making grants
under this subsection.''; and
(4) by adding at the end of subsection (i) (as redesignated
by paragraph (2)) the following:
``(4) Impaired operator.--The term `impaired operator' means
a person who, while operating a motor vehicle--
``(A) has a blood alcohol content of 0.08 percent or
higher; or
``(B) is under the influence of a controlled
substance.
``(5)  NOTE: Regulations.  Impaired driving related
fatality rate.--The term `impaired driving related fatality
rate' means the rate of alcohol related fatalities, as
calculated in accordance with regulations which the
Administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration shall prescribe.''.

(c)  NOTE: Deadline. 23 USC 410 note.  NHTSA To Issue
Regulations.--Not later than 12 months after the date of enactment of
this Act, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration shall issue
guidelines to the States specifying the types and formats of data that
States should collect relating to drivers who are arrested or convicted
for violation of laws prohibiting the impaired operation of motor
vehicles.

SEC. 2008. NHTSA ACCOUNTABILITY.

(a) In General.--Chapter 4 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 412. Agency accountability

``(a) Triennial State Management Reviews.--At least once every 3
years the Secretary shall conduct a review of each State highway safety
program. The review shall include a management evaluation of all grant
programs funded under this chapter. The Secretary shall provide review-
based recommendations on how each

[[Page 1534]]
119 STAT. 1534

State could improve the management and oversight of its grant activities
and may provide a management and oversight plan for such grant programs.
``(b) Recommendations Before Submission.--In order to provide
guidance to State highway safety agencies on matters that should be
addressed in the goals and initiatives of the State highway safety
program before the program is submitted for review, the Secretary shall
provide data-based recommendations to each State at least 90 days before
the date on which the program is to be submitted for approval.
``(c) State Program Review.--The Secretary shall--
``(1) conduct a program improvement review of a highway
safety program under this chapter of a State that does not make
substantial progress over a 3-year period in meeting its
priority program goals; and
``(2) provide technical assistance and safety program
requirements to be incorporated in the State highway safety
program for any goal not achieved.

``(d)  NOTE: Reports.  Regional Harmonization.--The Secretary and
the Inspector General of the Department of Transportation shall
undertake an administrative review of the practices and procedures of
the management reviews and program reviews of State highway safety
programs under this chapter conducted by the regional offices of the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and prepare a written
report of best practices and procedures for use by the regional offices
in conducting such reviews.  NOTE: Deadline.  The report shall be
completed within 180 days after the date of enactment of this section.

``(e) Best Practices Guidelines.--
``(1) Uniform guidelines.--The Secretary shall issue uniform
management review guidelines and program review guidelines based
on the report under subsection (d). Each regional office shall
use the guidelines in executing its State administrative review
duties under this section.
``(2)  NOTE: Public information. Internet.  Publication.--
The Secretary shall make publicly available on the Web site (or
successor electronic facility) of the Administration the
following documents upon their completion:
``(A) The Secretary's management review guidelines
and program review guidelines.
``(B) All State highway safety programs submitted
under this chapter.
``(C) State annual accomplishment reports.
``(D) The Administration's Summary Report of
findings from Management Reviews and Improvement Plans.
``(3) Reports to state highway safety agencies.--The
Secretary may not make publicly available a program, report, or
review under paragraph (2) that is directed to a State highway
safety agency until after the date on which the program, report,
or review is submitted to that agency under this chapter.

``(f) GAO Review.--
``(1) Analysis.--The Comptroller General shall analyze the
effectiveness of the Administration's oversight of traffic
safety grants under this chapter by determining the usefulness
of the Administration's advice to the States regarding
administration and State activities under this chapter, the
extent to

[[Page 1535]]
119 STAT. 1535

which the States incorporate the Administration's
recommendations into their highway safety programs, and the
improvements that result in a State's highway safety program
that may be attributable to the Administration's
recommendations.
``(2) Report.--Not later than September 30, 2008, the
Comptroller General shall submit a report on the results of the
analysis to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure
of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Commerce,
Science, and Transportation of the Senate.''.

(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 4 of such title is
amended by adding at the end the following:

``412. Agency accountability.''.

SEC. 2009.  NOTE: 23 USC 402 note.  HIGH VISIBILITY ENFORCEMENT
PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--The Administrator of the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration shall establish and administer a program under
which at least 2 high-visibility traffic safety law enforcement
campaigns will be carried out for the purposes specified in subsection
(b) in each of years 2006 through 2009.
(b) Purpose.--The purpose of each law enforcement campaign under
this section shall be to achieve either or both of the following
objectives:
(1) Reduce alcohol-impaired or drug-impaired operation of
motor vehicles.
(2) Increase use of seat belts by occupants of motor
vehicles.

(c) Advertising.--The Administrator may use, or authorize the use
of, funds available to carry out this section to pay for the
development, production, and use of broadcast and print media
advertising in carrying out traffic safety law enforcement campaigns
under this section. Consideration shall be given to advertising directed
at non-English speaking populations, including those who listen, read,
or watch nontraditional media.
(d) Coordination With States.--The Administrator shall coordinate
with the States in carrying out the traffic safety law enforcement
campaigns under this section, including advertising funded under
subsection (c), with a view to--
(1) relying on States to provide the law enforcement
resources for the campaigns out of funding available under this
section and sections 402, 405, 406, and 410 of title 23, United
States Code; and
(2) providing out of National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration resources most of the means necessary for
national advertising and education efforts associated with the
law enforcement campaigns.

(e) Use of Funds.--Funds made available to carry out this section
may only be used for activities described in subsections (a), (c), and
(f).
(f) Annual Evaluation.--The Secretary shall conduct an annual
evaluation of the effectiveness of campaigns referred to in subsection
(a).
(g) State Defined.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such term has
under section 401 of title 23, United States Code.

SEC. 2010.  NOTE: Grants. 23 USC 402 note.  MOTORCYCLIST SAFETY.

(a) Authority To Make Grants.--Subject to the requirements of this
section, the Secretary shall make grants to States that

[[Page 1536]]
119 STAT. 1536

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) Allocation.--The amount of a grant made to a State for a fiscal
year under this section may not be less than $100,000 and 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.
(d) 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); and
(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).
(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 that
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 will be used for motorcycle training and safety
programs.

(e) Eligible Uses.--

[[Page 1537]]
119 STAT. 1537

(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 purchasing facilities for
closed-course motorcycle 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 driver awareness
of motorcyclists, such as the ``share-the-road'' safety
messages developed under subsection (g).
(2) Suballocations of funds.--An agency of a State 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.

(f) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Motorcyclist safety training.--The term ``motorcyclist
safety training'' means a formal program of instruction that is
approved for use in a State by the designated State authority
having jurisdiction over motorcyclist safety issues, which may
include the State motorcycle safety administrator or a
motorcycle advisory council appointed by the Governor of the
State.
(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,
which may include the State motorcycle safety administrator or a
motorcycle advisory council appointed by the Governor of the
State.
(4) State.--The term ``State'' has the same meaning such
term has in section 101(a) of title 23, United States Code.

(g)  NOTE: Deadline.  Share-the-Road Model Language.--Not later
than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary, in
consultation with the Administrator of the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, shall develop and provide to the States model
language for use in traffic safety education courses, driver's manuals,
and other driver's training materials instructing the drivers of motor
vehicles on the importance of sharing the roads safely with
motorcyclists.

[[Page 1538]]
119 STAT. 1538

SEC. 2011.  NOTE: 23 USC 405 note.  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 are enforcing a law
requiring that any child riding in a passenger motor vehicle in the
State who is 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 (49 U.S.C. 30127 note; 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 restraint 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 costs of activities
funded using amounts from grants under this section 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) Use of Grant Amounts.--
(1) Allocations.--Of the amounts received by a State in
grants under this section for a fiscal year not more than 50
percent shall be used to fund programs for purchasing and
distributing child safety seats and child restraints to low-
income families.
(2) Remaining amounts.--Amounts received by a State in
grants under this section, other than amounts subject to
paragraph (1), shall be used to carry out child safety seat and
child restraint programs, including the following:
(A) A program to support enforcement of child
restraint laws.
(B) A program to train child passenger safety
professionals, police officers, fire and emergency
medical personnel, educators, and parents concerning all
aspects of the use of child safety seats and child
restraints.
(C) A program to educate the public concerning the
proper use and installation of child safety seats and
child restraints.

(e) 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.
(f) Applicability of Chapter 1.--The provisions contained in section
402(d) of such title shall apply to this section.
(g) Report.--A State that receives a grant under this section shall
transmit to the Secretary a report documenting the manner in which the
grant amounts were obligated and expended and identifying the specific
programs carried out using the 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.
(h) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:

[[Page 1539]]
119 STAT. 1539

(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 section 405(f) of
such title.
(4) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning such term has
in section 101(a) of such title.

SEC. 2012. 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. 2013.  NOTE: 23 USC 403 note.  DRUG-IMPAIRED DRIVING ENFORCEMENT.

(a) Illicit Drug.--In this section, the term ``illicit drug''
includes substances listed in schedules I through V of section 112(e) of
the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 812) not obtained by a legal
and valid prescription.
(b) Duties.--The Secretary 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.

(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 18 months after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary, in cooperation with the
National Institutes of Health, shall submit to Congress a report
on the problem of drug-impaired driving.
(2) Contents.--The report shall include, at a minimum, the
following:
(A) An assessment of methodologies and technologies
for measuring driver impairment resulting from use of
the most common illicit drugs (including the use of such
drugs in combination with alcohol).
(B) Effective and efficient methods for training law
enforcement personnel, including drug recognition
experts, to detect or measure the level of impairment of
a driver

[[Page 1540]]
119 STAT. 1540

who is under the influence of an illicit drug by the use
of technology or otherwise.
(C) A description of the role of drugs as causal
factor in traffic crashes and the extent of the problem
of drug-impaired driving.
(D) A description and assessment of current State
and Federal laws relating to drug-impaired driving.
(E) Recommendations for addressing the problem of
drug-impaired driving, including recommendations on
levels of impairment.
(F) Recommendations for developing a model statute
relating to drug-impaired driving.

(d) Model Statute.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall develop a model statute
for States relating to drug-impaired driving.
(2) Contents.--Based on recommendations and findings
contained in the report submitted under subsection (c), the
model statute may include--
(A) threshold levels of impairment for illicit
drugs;
(B) practicable methods for detecting the presence
of illicit drugs; and
(C) penalties for drug impaired driving.
(3) Date.--The model statute shall be provided to States not
later than 1 year after date of submission of the report under
subsection (c).

(e)  NOTE: Drugs and drug abuse.  Research and Development.--
Section 403(b) of title 23, United States Code, is amended by adding at
the end the following:
``(5) Technology to detect drug use and enable States to
efficiently process toxicology evidence.
``(6) Research on the effects of illicit drugs and the
compound effects of alcohol and illicit drugs on impairment.''.

(f) Funding.--Out of amounts made available to carry out section 403
of title 23, United States Code, for each of fiscal years 2006 through
2009, the Secretary shall make available $1,200,000 for such fiscal year
to carry out this section.

SEC. 2014.  NOTE: 23 USC 402 note.  FIRST RESPONDER VEHICLE SAFETY
PROGRAM.

(a)  NOTE: Deadline.  In General.--Not later than 1 year after the
date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary, in consultation with the
Administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
should--
(1) develop and implement a comprehensive program to promote
compliance with State and local laws intended to increase the
safe and efficient operation of first responder vehicles;
(2) compile a list of best practices by State and local
governments to promote compliance with the laws described in
paragraph (1);
(3) analyze State and local laws intended to increase the
safe and efficient operation of first responder vehicles; and
(4) develop model legislation to increase the safe and
efficient operation of first responder vehicles.

(b) Partnerships.--The Secretary may enter into partnerships with
qualified organizations to carry out this section.
(c) Public Outreach.--The Secretary shall use a variety of public
outreach strategies to carry out this section, including public

[[Page 1541]]
119 STAT. 1541

service announcements, publication of informational materials, and
posting information on the Internet.
(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary such sums as may be necessary to carry out
this section for fiscal year 2006.

SEC. 2015. 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. 2016. 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 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 emergency medical services resources and
personnel.
(c)  NOTE: Contracts. Alaska.  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. 2017. OLDER DRIVER SAFETY; LAW ENFORCEMENT TRAINING.

(a) Improving Older Driver Safety.--
(1) In general.--Of the funds made available to carry out
section 403 of title 23, United States Code, the Secretary shall
allocate $1,700,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009
to conduct a comprehensive research and demonstration program to
improve traffic safety pertaining to older drivers.
(2) Elements of program.--The program shall--
(A) provide information and guidelines to assist
older drivers, physicians, and other related medical
personnel, families, licensing agencies, enforcement
officers, and various public and transit agencies in
enhancing the safety of older drivers;
(B) improve the scientific basis of medical
standards and screenings strategies used in the
licensing of all drivers in a non-discriminatory manner;

[[Page 1542]]
119 STAT. 1542

(C) conduct field tests to assess the safety
benefits and mobility impacts of different driver
licensing strategies and driver assessment and
rehabilitation methods;
(D) assess the value and improve the safety
potential of driver retraining courses of particular
benefit to older drivers; and
(E) conduct other activities to accomplish the
objectives of this section.
(3) Formulation of plan.--After consultation with affected
parties, the Secretary shall formulate an older driver traffic
safety plan to guide the design and implementation of the
program.
(4)  NOTE: Deadline.  Submision of plan to congress.--Not
later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the
Secretary shall submit the plan to the Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure House of Representatives and
the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the
Senate.

(b)  NOTE: 23 USC 402 note.  Law Enforcement Training.--
(1) Requirement for program.--The Secretary shall carry out
a program to provide guidance and support to law enforcement
agencies in police chase techniques that are consistent with the
police chase guidelines issued by the International Association
of Chiefs of Police.
(2) Amount for program.--Of the funds made available to
carry out section 403 of title 23, United States Code, the
Secretary shall allocate $500,000 in each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 to carry out this subsection.

SEC. 2018. 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.--Whoever, in or affecting interstate or foreign
commerce, knowingly sells a traffic signal preemption
transmitter to a nonqualifying user shall be fined under this
title, or imprisoned not more than 1 year, or both.
``(2) Use.--Whoever, in or affecting interstate or foreign
commerce, being a nonqualifying user makes unauthorized use of a
traffic signal preemption transmitter shall be fined under this
title, or 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) Nonqualifying user.--The term `nonqualifying user'
means a person who uses a traffic signal preemption transmitter
and 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, but does not include a person using a traffic
signal preemption transmitter for classroom or instructional
purposes.''.

[[Page 1543]]
119 STAT. 1543

(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended by
adding at the end the following:

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

SEC. 2019. NATIONAL HIGHWAY SAFETY ADVISORY COMMITTEE TECHNICAL
CORRECTION.

Section 404(d) of title 23, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``Commerce'' and inserting ``Transportation''.

SEC. 2020. PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION ON ALCOHOL-IMPAIRED DRIVING.

(a) Findings.--Congress finds that--
(1) there has been considerable progress over the past 25
years in reducing the number and rate of alcohol-related highway
facilities;
(2) the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
projects that fatalities in alcohol-related crashes declined in
2003 for the 2nd year in a row;
(3) in spite of this progress, an estimated 17,013 Americans
died in 2003, in alcohol-related crashes;
(4) these fatalities comprise 40 percent of the annual total
highway fatalities;
(5) about 250,000 are injured each year in alcohol-related
crashes;
(6) the past 2 years of decreasing alcohol-related
fatalities follows a 3-year increase;
(7) alcohol-impaired driving is the Nation's most frequently
committed violent crime;
(8) the annual cost of alcohol-related crashes is over
$100,000,000,000, including $9,000,000,000 in costs to
employers;
(9) a Presidential Commission on Alcohol Impaired Driving in
1982 and 1983 helped to lead to substantial progress on this
issue; and
(10) these facts point to the need to renew the national
commitment to preventing these deaths and injuries.

(b) Sense of the Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that, in an
effort to further change the culture of alcohol-impaired driving on our
Nation's highways, the President should consider establishing a
Presidential Commission on Alcohol-Impaired Driving--
(1) comprised of representatives of--
(A) State and local governments, including State
legislators;
(B) law enforcement;
(C) traffic safety experts, including researchers;
(D) victims of alcohol-related crashes;
(E) affected industries, including the alcohol,
insurance, motorcycle, and auto industries;
(F) the business community;
(G) labor;
(H) the medical community;
(I) public health; and
(J) Members of Congress; and
(2) that not later than September 30, 2006, would--
(A) conduct a full examination of alcohol-impaired
driving issues; and

[[Page 1544]]
119 STAT. 1544

(B) make recommendations for a broad range of policy
and program changes that would serve to further reduce
the level of deaths and injuries caused by alcohol
impaired driving.

SEC. 2021. SENSE OF THE CONGRESS IN SUPPORT OF INCREASED PUBLIC
AWARENESS OF BLOOD ALCOHOL CONCENTRATION LEVELS AND DANGERS
OF ALCOHOL-IMPAIRED DRIVING.

(a) Findings.--Congress finds that--
(1) in 2003--
(A) 17,013 Americans died in alcohol-related traffic
crashes;
(B) 40 percent of the persons killed in traffic
crashes died in alcohol-related crashes; and
(C) drivers with blood alcohol concentration levels
over 0.15 were involved in 58 percent of alcohol-related
traffic fatalities;
(2) research shows that 77 percent of Americans think they
have received enough information about alcohol-impaired driving
and the way in which alcohol affects individual blood alcohol
levels; and
(3) only 28 percent of the American public can correctly
identify the legal limit of blood alcohol concentration of the
State in which they reside.

(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration should work with State
and local governments and independent organizations to increase public
awareness of--
(1) State legal limits on blood alcohol concentration
levels; and
(2) the dangers of alcohol-impaired driving.

SEC. 2022.  NOTE: 23 USC 402 note.  EFFECTIVE DATE.

Sections 2002 through 2007 of this title (and the amendments and
repeals made by such sections) shall take effect October 1, 2005.

TITLE  NOTE: Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005. 49 USC 5101
note.  III--PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION

SEC. 3001. SHORT TITLE.

This title may be cited as the ``Federal Public Transportation Act
of 2005''.

SEC. 3002. AMENDMENTS TO TITLE 49, UNITED STATES CODE; UPDATED
TERMINOLOGY.

(a) Amendments to Title 49.--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.
(b) Updated Terminology.--Chapter 53  NOTE: 49 USC 5301.  is
amended--
(1) in the chapter heading by striking ``MASS'' and
inserting ``PUBLIC'';
(2) in section 5310(h) by striking ``Mass'' and inserting
``Public'';

[[Page 1545]]
119 STAT. 1545

(3) in the subsection heading for section 5331(b) by
striking ``Mass'' and inserting ``Public''; and
(4)  NOTE: 49 USC 5301, 5302, 5307, 5311-5314, 5318, 5319,
5321-5323, 5330, 5331, 5333-5336.  by striking ``mass'' each
place the term appears before ``transportation'' and inserting
``public'', except in sections 5301(f), 5302(a)(7), 5315, and
5323(a)(1).

(c) 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. 3003. 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, including its
economic interest, 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) General Findings.--Section 5301(b)(1) is amended--
(1) by striking ``70 percent'' and inserting ``two-thirds'';
and
(2) by striking ``urban areas'' and inserting ``urbanized
areas''.

(c) 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''.

(d) 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. 3004. 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''.

[[Page 1546]]
119 STAT. 1546

(b) Capital Project.--Section 5302(a)(1) is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (G) by inserting ``construction,
renovation, and improvement of intercity bus and intercity rail
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) in subparagraph (H) by striking ``or'' at the end;
(4) in subparagraph (I) by striking the period at the end
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 clauses
(i)(III) and (i)(IV);
``(K) establishing a debt service reserve,
made up of deposits with a bondholder's trustee,
to ensure the timely payment of principal and
interest on bonds issued by a grant recipient to
finance 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) in the paragraph heading by striking ``Handicapped
individual'' 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 intercity

[[Page 1547]]
119 STAT. 1547

bus transportation or intercity passenger rail transportation
provided by the entity described in chapter 243 (or a successor
to such entity).''.

(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 not less than 50,000 people
that has been defined and designated in the most recent
decennial census as an `urbanized area' by the Secretary of
Commerce.''.

(g) Authority to Modify Definition.--Section 5302(b) is amended--
(1) in the subsection heading by striking ``Handicapped
Individual'' and inserting ``Individual With a Disability''; and
(2) by striking ``handicapped individual'' and inserting
``individual with a disability''.

SEC. 3005. METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION PLANNING.

(a) In General.--Section 5303 is amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 5303. Metropolitan transportation planning

``(a) Policy.--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 subsection (h) and section
5304(d).

``(b)  NOTE: Applicability.  Definitions.--In this section and
section 5304, 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 subsection (e).
``(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 subsection (d).
``(3) Nonmetropolitan area.--The term `nonmetropolitan area'
means a geographic area outside a designated metropolitan
planning area.
``(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 subsection (j).

[[Page 1548]]
119 STAT. 1548

``(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.

``(c) General Requirements.--
``(1) Development of long-range plans and tips.--To
accomplish the objectives in subsection (a), metropolitan
planning organizations designated under subsection (d), 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.

``(d) 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.

[[Page 1549]]
119 STAT. 1549

``(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 one metropolitan planning
organization.--More than one 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 one metropolitan planning organization for the area
appropriate.

``(e) 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 the Federal Public Transportation
Act of 2005, 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 (d)(5).
``(5) New metropolitan planning areas in nonattainment.--In
the case of an urbanized area designated after the date of
enactment of the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005 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 (d)(1);
``(B) shall encompass the areas described in
paragraph (2)(A);

[[Page 1550]]
119 STAT. 1550

``(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.

``(f) 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.
``(2) Interstate compacts.--The consent of Congress is
granted to any two 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 5304.
``(C) Interstate compact.--
``(i) In general.--Subject to clause (ii), and
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.

[[Page 1551]]
119 STAT. 1551

``(II) Funding.--In addition to
funds made available to the metropolitan
planning organization for the Lake Tahoe
region under other provisions of this
chapter and title 23, 1 percent of the
funds allocated under section 202 of
title 23 shall 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 such title.
``(4) Reservation of rights.--The right to alter, amend, or
repeal interstate compacts entered into under this subsection is
expressly reserved.

``(g) MPO Consultation in Plan and TIP Coordination.--
``(1) Nonattainment areas.--If more than one 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 this chapter, is located within
the boundaries of more than one 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 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 this chapter;
``(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.

[[Page 1552]]
119 STAT. 1552

``(h) Scope of Planning Process.--
``(1) In general.--The metropolitan planning process for a
metropolitan planning area under this section shall provide for
consideration of projects and strategies that will--
``(A) support the economic vitality of the
metropolitan area, especially by enabling global
competitiveness, productivity, and efficiency;
``(B) increase the safety of the transportation
system for motorized and nonmotorized users;
``(C) increase the security of the transportation
system for motorized and nonmotorized users;
``(D) increase the accessibility and mobility of
people and for freight;
``(E) 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;
``(F) enhance the integration and connectivity of
the transportation system, across and between modes, for
people and freight;
``(G) promote efficient system management and
operation; and
``(H) 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 this chapter, title 23, 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.

``(i) Development of Transportation Plan.--
``(1) In general.--Each metropolitan planning organization
shall prepare 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 5 years unless the metropolitan planning organization
elects to update more frequently.
``(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) Identification of transportation facilities.--
An identification of transportation facilities
(including

[[Page 1553]]
119 STAT. 1553

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 (h) as such factors
relate to a 20-year forecast period.
``(B) Mitigation activities.--
``(i) In general.--A long-range transportation
plan shall include a discussion of types of
potential environmental mitigation activities and
potential areas to carry out these activities,
including activities that may have the greatest
potential to restore and maintain the
environmental functions affected by the plan.
``(ii) Consultation.--The discussion shall be
developed in consultation with Federal, State, and
tribal wildlife, land management, and regulatory
agencies.
``(C) Financial plan.--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.
``(D) Operational and management strategies.--
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.
``(E) Capital investment and other strategies.--
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.
``(F) Transportation and transit enhancement
activities.--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) Consultation.--
``(A) In general.--In each metropolitan area, the
metropolitan planning organization shall consult, as
appropriate, with State and local agencies responsible
for land

[[Page 1554]]
119 STAT. 1554

use management, natural resources, environmental
protection, conservation, and historic preservation
concerning the development of a long-range
transportation plan.
``(B) Issues.--The consultation shall involve, as
appropriate--
``(i) comparison of transportation plans with
State conservation plans or maps, if available; or
``(ii) comparison of transportation plans to
inventories of natural or historic resources, if
available.
``(5) Participation by interested parties.--
``(A) In general.--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.
``(B) Contents of participation plan.--A
participation plan--
``(i) shall be developed in consultation with
all interested parties; and
``(ii) shall provide that all interested
parties have reasonable opportunities to comment
on the contents of the transportation plan.
``(C) Methods.--In carrying out subparagraph (A),
the metropolitan planning organization shall, to the
maximum extent practicable--
``(i) hold any public meetings at convenient
and accessible locations and times;
``(ii) employ visualization techniques to
describe plans; and
``(iii) make public information available in
electronically accessible format and means, such
as the World Wide Web, as appropriate to afford
reasonable opportunity for consideration of public
information under subparagraph (A).
``(6) Publication.--A transportation plan involving Federal
participation shall be published or otherwise made readily
available by the metropolitan planning organization for public
review, including (to the maximum extent practicable) in
electronically accessible formats and means, such as the World
Wide Web, approved by the metropolitan planning organization and
submitted for information purposes to the Governor at such times
and in such manner as the Secretary shall establish.
``(7) Selection of projects from illustrative list.--
Notwithstanding paragraph (2)(C), 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)(C).

``(j) 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

[[Page 1555]]
119 STAT. 1555

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 an opportunity
for participation by interested parties in the
development of the program, in accordance with
subsection (i)(5).
``(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.
``(3) Included projects.--
``(A) Projects under this chapter and title 23.--A
TIP developed under this subsection for a metropolitan
area shall include the projects within the area that are
proposed for funding under this chapter and chapter 1 of
title 23.
``(B) Projects under chapter 2 of title 23.--
``(i) Regionally significant projects.--
Regionally significant projects proposed for
funding under chapter 2 of title 23 shall be
identified individually in the transportation
improvement program.
``(ii) Other projects.--Projects proposed for
funding under chapter 2 of title 23 that are not
determined to be regionally significant shall be
grouped in one line item or identified
individually in the transportation improvement
program.
``(C) Consistency with long-range transportation
plan.--Each project shall be consistent with the long-
range

[[Page 1556]]
119 STAT. 1556

transportation plan developed under subsection (i) 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 an opportunity for participation by interested parties
in the development of the program, in accordance with subsection
(i)(5).
``(5) Selection of projects.--
``(A) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (k)(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
this chapter, 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, including investments in
pedestrian walkways and bicycle transportation
facilities, for which Federal funds have been obligated
in the preceding year shall be published or otherwise
made available by the cooperative effort of the State,
transit operator, and metropolitan planning organization
for public review. The listing shall be consistent with
the categories identified in the TIP.

[[Page 1557]]
119 STAT. 1557

``(C)  NOTE: Deadline.  Rulemaking.--Not later
than 180 days after the date of enactment of the Federal
Public Transportation Act of 2005, the Secretary shall
issue regulations setting standards for the listing
required by subparagraph (B) and specifying the types of
data to be included in such list, including sufficient
information about each project to identify its type,
location, and amount obligated.

``(k) 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
this chapter and title 23 through the use of travel demand
reduction and operational management strategies. 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 this chapter 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.--

[[Page 1558]]
119 STAT. 1558

``(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 this chapter and title 23.
``(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.

``(l) 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.

``(m) Additional Requirements for Certain Nonattainment Areas.--
``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provisions of
this chapter or title 23, 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

[[Page 1559]]
119 STAT. 1559

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 (e).

``(n) 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 this chapter or title 23.
``(o) Funding.--Funds set aside under section 5305(g) of this title
or section 104(f) of title 23 shall be available to carry out this
section.
``(p) Continuation of Current Review Practice.--Since plans and TIPs
described in this section are subject to a reasonable opportunity for
public comment, since 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 since 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.''.
(b)  NOTE: Guidelines. 49 USC 5303 note.  Schedule for
Implementation.--The Secretary shall issue guidance on a schedule for
implementation of the changes made by this section, taking into
consideration the established planning update cycle for States and
metropolitan planning organizations. The Secretary shall not require a
State or metropolitan planning organization to deviate from its
established planning update cycle to implement changes made by this
section. Beginning July 1, 2007, State or metropolitan planning
organization plan or program updates shall reflect changes made by this
section.

(c) Chapter Analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53  NOTE: 49 USC
5301.  is amended by striking the item relating to section 5303 and
inserting the following:

``5303. Metropolitan transportation planning.''.

SEC. 3006. STATEWIDE TRANSPORTATION PLANNING.

(a) In General.--Section 5304 is amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 5304. Statewide transportation planning

``(a) General Requirements.--
``(1) Development of plans and programs.--To accomplish the
objectives stated in section 5303(a), each State shall develop a
statewide transportation plan and a statewide transportation
improvement program for all areas of the State, subject to
section 5303.
``(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.

[[Page 1560]]
119 STAT. 1560

``(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 5303(a), 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 5303 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.).

``(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.

``(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 of the transportation
system for motorized and nonmotorized users;
``(C) increase the security of the transportation
system for motorized and nonmotorized users;
``(D) increase the accessibility and mobility of
people and freight;
``(E) 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;
``(F) enhance the integration and connectivity of
the transportation system, across and between modes
throughout the State, for people and freight;
``(G) promote efficient system management and
operation; and
``(H) emphasize the preservation of the existing
transportation system.

[[Page 1561]]
119 STAT. 1561

``(2) Failure to consider factors.--The failure to consider
any factor specified in paragraph (1) shall not be reviewable by
any court under this chapter, title 23, 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 5303.
``(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.
``(D) Consultation, comparison, and consideration.--
``(i) In general.--The long-range
transportation plan shall be developed, as
appropriate, in consultation with State, tribal,
and local agencies responsible for land use
management, natural resources, environmental
protection, conservation, and historic
preservation.
``(ii) Comparison and consideration.--
Consultation under clause (i) shall involve
comparison of transportation plans to State and
tribal conservation plans or maps, if available,
and comparison of transportation plans to
inventories of natural or historic resources, if
available.
``(3) Participation by interested parties.--

[[Page 1562]]
119 STAT. 1562

``(A) In general.--In developing the statewide
transportation plan, the State shall 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.
``(B) Methods.--In carrying out subparagraph (A),
the State shall, to the maximum extent practicable--
``(i) hold any public meetings at convenient
and accessible locations and times;
``(ii) employ visualization techniques to
describe plans; and
``(iii) make public information available in
electronically accessible format and means, such
as the World Wide Web, as appropriate to afford
reasonable opportunity for consideration of public
information under subparagraph (A).
``(4) Mitigation activities.--
``(A) In general.--A long-range transportation plan
shall include a discussion of potential environmental
mitigation activities and potential areas to carry out
these activities, including activities that may have the
greatest potential to restore and maintain the
environmental functions affected by the plan.
``(B) Consultation.--The discussion shall be
developed in consultation with Federal, State, and
tribal wildlife, land management, and regulatory
agencies.
``(5) 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.
``(6) 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 (5).
``(7) 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.
``(8) Publication of long-range transportation plans.--Each
long-range transportation plan prepared by a State shall be
published or otherwise made available, including (to the maximum
extent practicable) in electronically accessible formats and
means, such as the World Wide Web.

``(g) Statewide Transportation Improvement Program.--

[[Page 1563]]
119 STAT. 1563

``(1) Development.--Each State shall develop a statewide
transportation improvement program for all areas of the State.
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) 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 5303.
``(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) Listing of projects.--An annual listing of
projects for which funds have been obligated in the
preceding year in each metropolitan planning area shall
be published or otherwise made available by the
cooperative effort of the State, transit operator, and
the metropolitan planning organization for public
review. The listing shall be consistent with the funding
categories identified in each metropolitan
transportation improvement program.
``(C) Projects under chapter 2 of title 23.--
``(i) Regionally significant projects.--
Regionally significant projects proposed for
funding under chapter 2 of title 23 shall be
identified individually in the transportation
improvement program.
``(ii) Other projects.--Projects proposed for
funding under chapter 2 of title 23 that are not
determined to be regionally significant shall be
grouped in 1 line item or identified individually
in the transportation improvement program.
``(D) Consistency with statewide transportation
plan.--Each project shall be--

[[Page 1564]]
119 STAT. 1564

``(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, if the project is carried
out in an area designated as nonattainment for
ozone, particulate matter, or carbon monoxide
under that Act.
``(E) 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.
``(F) 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.
``(G) Selection of projects from illustrative
list.--
``(i) No required selection.--Notwithstanding
subparagraph (F), a State shall not be required to
select any project from the illustrative list of
additional projects included in the financial plan
under subparagraph (F).
``(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 (F) for
inclusion in an approved transportation
improvement program.
``(H) Priorities.--The transportation improvement
program shall reflect the priorities for programming and
expenditures of funds, including transportation
enhancement activities, required by this chapter and
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 of
this title) 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

[[Page 1565]]
119 STAT. 1565

System or under the bridge program or the Interstate maintenance
program under title 23 or sections 5310, 5311, 5316, and 5317 of
this title 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 5303.
``(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.--Funds set aside pursuant to section 5305(g) of this
title and section 104(i) of title 23 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 5303, and sections
134 and 135 of title 23, State laws, rules, or regulations pertaining to
congestion management systems or programs may constitute the congestion
management process under this section and section 5303, and sections 134
and 135 of title 23, if the Secretary finds that the State laws, rules,
or regulations are consistent with, and fulfill the intent of, the
purposes of this section, section 5303, and sections 134 and 135 of
title 23, 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)  NOTE: Guidelines. 49 USC 5304 note.  Schedule for
Implementation.--The Secretary shall issue guidance on a schedule for
implementation of the changes made by this section, taking into
consideration the established planning update cycle for States and
metropolitan planning organizations. The Secretary shall not require a
State or metropolitan planning organization to deviate from its
established planning update cycle to implement changes made by this
section.  NOTE: Effective date.  Beginning July 1, 2007, State or
metropolitan planning organization plan or program updates shall reflect
changes made by this section.

[[Page 1566]]
119 STAT. 1566

(c) Chapter Analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5304 and inserting the following:

``5304. Statewide transportation planning.''.

SEC. 3007. 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) Grants and agreements.--Under criteria established by
the Secretary, the Secretary may award grants to States,
authorities of the States, metropolitan planning organizations,
and local governmental authorities, and make agreements with
other departments, agencies, or instrumentalities of the
Government to--
``(A) develop transportation plans and programs;
``(B) plan, engineer, design, and evaluate a public
transportation project; and
``(C) conduct technical studies relating to public
transportation.
``(2) Eligible activities.--Activities eligible 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, 5304, and 5306 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.

[[Page 1567]]
119 STAT. 1567

``(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, not later than 30
days after the date of apportionment, 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 this
section and sections 5304, 5306, 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 2005 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).

[[Page 1568]]
119 STAT. 1568

``(h) Availability of Funds.--Funds apportioned under this section
to a State that have not been obligated in the 3-year period beginning
after the last day of the fiscal year for which the funds are authorized
shall be reapportioned among the States.''.
(b) Chapter Analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5305 and inserting the following:

``5305. Planning programs.''.

SEC. 3008. PRIVATE ENTERPRISE PARTICIPATION.

Section 5306(a) is amended by inserting ``, as determined by local
policies, criteria, and decisionmaking,'' after ``feasible''.

SEC. 3009. URBANIZED AREA FORMULA GRANTS.

(a) Technical Amendments.--Section 5307 is amended--
(1) by striking subsections (h), (j) and (k); and
(2) by redesignating subsections (i), (l), (m), and (n) as
subsections (h), (i), (j), and (k), respectively.

(b) Definitions.--
(1) Associated capital maintenance items.--Section
5307(a)(1) is amended--
(A) by striking ``means equipment, tires,'' and
inserting ``means--
``(A) equipment, tires,'';
(B) in subparagraph (A) (as so designated) by
striking the period at the end and inserting ``; and'';
and
(C) by adding at the end the following:
``(B) reconstruction of equipment and material, each
of which after reconstruction will have a fair market
value of at least .5 percent of the current fair market
value of rolling stock comparable to the rolling stock
for which the equipment and material will be used.''.
(2) Designated recipient.--Section 5307(a)(2)(A) is amended
to read as follows:
``(A) an entity designated, in accordance with the
planning process under sections 5303, 5304, and 5306, by
the chief executive officer of a State, responsible
local officials, and publicly owned operators of public
transportation, to receive and apportion amounts under
section 5336 that are attributable to transportation
management areas identified under section 5303; or''.

(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;
``(E) operating costs of equipment and facilities
for use in public transportation in a portion or
portions of an urbanized area with a population of at
least 200,000, but not more than 225,000, if--

[[Page 1569]]
119 STAT. 1569

``(i) the urbanized area includes parts of
more than one State;
``(ii) the portion of the urbanized area
includes only one State;
``(iii) the population of the portion of the
urbanized area is less than 30,000; and
``(iv) the grants will not be used to provide
public transportation outside of the portion of
the urbanized area; and
``(F) operating costs of equipment and facilities
for use in public transportation for local governmental
authorities in areas which adopted transit operating and
financing plans that became a part of the Houston,
Texas, urbanized area as a result of the 2000 decennial
census of population, but lie outside the service area
of the principal public transportation agency that
serves the Houston urbanized area.'';
(2) by striking paragraph (2) and inserting the following:
``(2) Special rule for fiscal years 2005 through 2007.--
``(A) Increased flexibility.--The Secretary may
award grants under this section, from funds made
available to carry out this section for each of the
fiscal years 2005 through 2007, to finance the operating
cost of equipment and facilities for use in mass
transportation in an urbanized area with a population of
at least 200,000, as determined by the 2000 decennial
census of population, if--
``(i) the urbanized area had a population of
less than 200,000, as determined by the 1990
decennial census of population;
``(ii) a portion of the urbanized area was a
separate urbanized area with a population of less
than 200,000, as determined by the 1990 decennial
census of population;
``(iii) the area was not designated as an
urbanized area, as determined by the 1990
decennial census of population; or
``(iv) a portion of the area was not
designated as an urbanized area, as determined by
the 1990 decennial census, and received assistance
under section 5311 in fiscal year 2002.
``(B) Maximum amounts in fiscal year 2005.--In
fiscal year 2005--
``(i) amounts made available to any urbanized
area under clause (i) or (ii) of subparagraph (A)
shall be not more than the amount apportioned in
fiscal year 2002 to the urbanized area with a
population of less than 200,000, as determined in
the 1990 decennial census of population;
``(ii) amounts made available to any urbanized
area under subparagraph (A)(iii) shall be not more
than the amount apportioned to the urbanized area
under this section for fiscal year 2003; and
``(iii) each portion of any area not
designated as an urbanized area, as determined by
the 1990 decennial census, and eligible to receive
funds under subparagraph (A)(iv), shall receive an
amount of funds to carry out this section that is
not less than the

[[Page 1570]]
119 STAT. 1570

amount the portion of the area received under
section 5311 for fiscal year 2002.
``(C) Maximum amounts in fiscal year 2006.--In
fiscal year 2006--
``(i) amounts made available to any urbanized
area under clause (i) or (ii) of subparagraph (A)
shall be not more than 50 percent of the amount
apportioned in fiscal year 2002 to the urbanized
area with a population of less than 200,000, as
determined in the 1990 decennial census of
population;
``(ii) amounts made available to any urbanized
area under subparagraph (A)(iii) shall be not more
than 50 percent of the amount apportioned to the
urbanized area under this section for fiscal year
2003; and
``(iii) each portion of any area not
designated as an urbanized area, as determined by
the 1990 decennial census, and eligible to receive
funds under subparagraph (A)(iv), shall receive an
amount of funds to carry out this section that is
not less than 50 percent of the amount the portion
of the area received under section 5311 for fiscal
year 2002.
``(D) Maximum amounts in fiscal year 2007.--In
fiscal year 2007--
``(i) amounts made available to any urbanized
area under clause (i) or (ii) of subparagraph (A)
shall be not more than 25 percent of the amount
apportioned in fiscal year 2002 to the urbanized
area with a population of less than 200,000, as
determined in the 1990 decennial census of
population;
``(ii) amounts made available to any urbanized
area under subparagraph (A)(iii) shall be not more
than 25 percent of the amount apportioned to the
urbanized area under this section for fiscal year
2003; and
``(iii) each portion of any area not
designated as an urbanized area, as determined by
the 1990 decennial census, and eligible to receive
funds under subparagraph (A)(iv), shall receive an
amount of funds to carry out this section that is
not less than 25 percent of the amount the portion
of the area received under section 5311 in fiscal
year 2002.''; and
(3) by striking paragraph (4).

(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 (E)--
(A) by striking ``and'' at the end of clause (ii);
(B) by inserting ``and'' at the end of clause (iii);
and
(C) by adding at the end the following:
``(iv) will comply with sections 5323 and
5325;'';
(3) in subparagraph (H) by striking ``sections 5301(a) and
(d), 5303-5306, and 5310(a)-(d) of this title'' and inserting
``section 5301(a), section 5301(d), and sections 5303 through
5306'';
(4) in subparagraph (I) by striking ``and'' at the end;
(5) by adding at the end the following:

[[Page 1571]]
119 STAT. 1571

``(K) in the case of a recipient for an urbanized
area with a population of at least 200,000--
``(i) will expend not less than 1 percent of
the amount the recipient receives each fiscal year
under this section 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) Remaining costs.--Subject to paragraph (4), the
remainder of the net project cost shall be provided--
``(A) in cash from non-Government sources other than
revenues from providing public transportation services;
``(B) from revenues derived from the sale of
advertising and concessions;
``(C) from an undistributed cash surplus, a
replacement or depreciation cash fund or reserve, or new
capital; and
``(D) from amounts received under a service
agreement with a State or local social service agency or
private social service organization.
``(4) Use of certain funds.--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 the remainder.''.

(f) Undertaking Projects in Advance.--Section 5307(g) is amended by
striking paragraph (4).
(g) Relationship to Other Laws.--Section 5307(k) (as redesignated by
subsection (a)(2) of this section) is amended to read as follows:
``(k) Relationship to Other Laws.--
``(1) Applicable provisions.--Sections 5301, 5302, 5303,
5304, 5306, 5315(c), 5318, 5319, 5323, 5325, 5327, 5329, 5330,
5331, 5332, 5333, and 5335 apply to this section and to any
grant made under this section.
``(2) Inapplicable provisions.--
``(A) In general.--Except as provided by this
section, no other provision of this chapter applies to
this section or to a grant made under this section.
``(B) 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.''.

(h) Treatment.--Section 5307 is amended by adding at the end the
following:

[[Page 1572]]
119 STAT. 1572

``(l) Treatment.--For the purposes of this section, the United
States Virgin Islands shall be treated as an urbanized area, as defined
in section 5302.''.
(i) Contracted Paratransit Pilot.--
(1) In general.--Notwithstanding section 5302(a)(1)(I) of
title 49, United States Code, for fiscal years 2005 through
2009, a recipient of assistance under section 5307 of such title
in urbanized areas with a population of 558,329 or 747,003
according to the 2000 decennial census of population may use not
more than 20 percent of such recipient's annual formula
apportionment under section 5307 of such title for the provision
of nonfixed route paratransit services in accordance with
section 223 of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42
U.S.C. 12143), but only if the grant recipient is in compliance
with applicable requirements of that Act, including both fixed
route and demand responsive service and the service is acquired
by contract.
(2) Report.--Not later than January 1, 2009, 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 on
the implementation of this subsection and any recommendations of
the Secretary regarding the application of this subsection.

SEC. 3010. CLEAN FUELS GRANT PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Section 5308 is amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 5308. Clean fuels 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

[[Page 1573]]
119 STAT. 1573

``(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) 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.
``(d) Grant Requirements.--
``(1) In general.--A grant under this section shall be
subject to the requirements of section 5307.
``(2)  NOTE: Applicability.  Government's share of costs
for certain projects.--Section 5323(i) applies to projects
carried out under this section.

``(e) Availability of Funds.--Any amount made available or
appropriated under this section--
``(1) shall remain available to a project for 2 years 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.''.

(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5308 and inserting the following:

``5308. Clean fuels grant program.''.

SEC. 3011. CAPITAL INVESTMENT GRANTS.

(a) In General.--Section 5309 is amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 5309. Capital investment grants

``(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions
apply:

[[Page 1574]]
119 STAT. 1574

``(1) Alternatives analysis.--The term `alternatives
analysis' means a study conducted as part of the transportation
planning process required under sections 5303 and 5304, which
includes--
``(A) an assessment of a wide range of public
transportation alternatives designed to address a
transportation problem in a corridor or subarea;
``(B) sufficient information to enable the Secretary
to make the findings of project justification and local
financial commitment required under this section;
``(C) the selection of a locally preferred
alternative; and
``(D) the adoption of the locally preferred
alternative as part of the long-range transportation
plan required under section 5303.
``(2) Major new fixed guideway capital project.--The term
`major new fixed guideway capital project' means a new fixed
guideway capital project for which the Federal assistance
provided or to be provided under this section is $75,000,000 or
more.
``(3) New fixed guideway capital project.--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.

``(b) General Authority.--The Secretary may make grants under this
section to assist State and local governmental authorities in
financing--
``(1) new fixed guideway capital projects under subsections
(d) and (e), including the acquisition of real property, the
initial acquisition of rolling stock for the systems, the
acquisition of rights-of-way, and relocation, for fixed guideway
corridor development for projects in the advanced stages of
alternatives analysis or preliminary engineering;
``(2) capital projects to modernize existing fixed guideway
systems;
``(3) capital projects to replace, rehabilitate, and
purchase buses and related equipment and to construct bus-
related facilities, including programs of bus and bus-related
projects for assistance to subrecipients that are public
agencies, private companies engaged in public transportation, or
private nonprofit organizations; and
``(4) the development of corridors to support new fixed
guideway capital projects under subsections (d) and (e),
including protecting rights-of-way through acquisition,
construction of dedicated bus and high occupancy vehicle lanes
and park and ride lots, and other nonvehicular capital
improvements that the Secretary may decide would result in
increased public transportation usage in the corridor.

``(c) Grant Requirements.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary may not approve a grant for
a project under this section unless the Secretary determines
that--
``(A) the project is part of an approved
transportation plan and program of projects required
under sections 5303, 5304, and 5306; and
``(B) the applicant has, or will have--

[[Page 1575]]
119 STAT. 1575

``(i) the legal, financial, and technical
capacity to carry out the project, including
safety and security aspects of the project;
``(ii) satisfactory continuing control over
the use of the equipment or facilities; and
``(iii) the capability and willingness to
maintain the equipment or facilities.
``(2) Certification.--An applicant that has submitted the
certifications required under subparagraphs (A), (B), (C), and
(H) of section 5307(d)(1) shall be deemed to have provided
sufficient information upon which the Secretary may make the
determinations required under this subsection.
``(3) Grantee requirements.--The Secretary shall require
that any grant awarded under this section to a recipient be
subject to all terms, conditions, requirements, and provisions
that the Secretary determines to be necessary or appropriate for
the purposes of this section, including requirements for the
disposition of net increases in the value of real property
resulting from the project assisted under this section.

``(d) Major Capital Investment Grants of $75,000,000 or More.--
``(1) Full funding grant agreement.--
``(A) In general.--A major new fixed guideway
capital project shall be carried out through a full
funding grant agreement.
``(B) Criteria.--The Secretary shall enter into a
full funding grant agreement, based on the evaluations
and ratings required under this subsection, with each
grantee receiving assistance for a major new fixed
guideway capital project that--
``(i) is authorized for final design and
construction; and
``(ii) has been rated as medium, medium-high,
or high, in accordance with paragraph (5)(B).
``(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
project 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, economic
development effects, and public transportation
supportive land use policies and future patterns; 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, and maintain and
operate the entire public transportation system without
requiring a reduction in existing public transportation
services or level of service to operate the proposed
project.
``(3) Evaluation of project justification.--In making the
determinations under paragraph (2)(B) for a major capital
investment grant, the Secretary shall analyze, evaluate, and
consider--

[[Page 1576]]
119 STAT. 1576

``(A) the results of the alternatives analysis and
preliminary engineering for the proposed project;
``(B) the reliability of the forecasting methods
used to estimate costs and utilization made by the
recipient and the contractors to the recipient;
``(C) the direct and indirect costs of relevant
alternatives;
``(D) factors such as--
``(i) congestion relief;
``(ii) improved mobility;
``(iii) air pollution;
``(iv) noise pollution;
``(v) energy consumption; and
``(vi) all associated ancillary and mitigation
costs necessary to carry out each alternative
analyzed;
``(E) reductions in local infrastructure costs and
other benefits achieved through compact land use
development, such as positive impacts on the capacity,
utilization, or longevity of other surface
transportation assets and facilities;
``(F) the cost of suburban sprawl;
``(G) the degree to which the project increases the
mobility of the public transportation dependent
population or promotes economic development;
``(H) population density and current transit
ridership in the transportation corridor;
``(I) the technical capability of the grant
recipient to construct the project;
``(J) any adjustment to the project justification
necessary to reflect differences in local land,
construction, and operating costs; and
``(K) other factors that the Secretary determines to
be appropriate to carry out this subsection.
``(4) Evaluation of local financial commitment.--
``(A) In general.--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;
``(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
recapitalize and 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 or level of service to operate the
proposed project.
``(B) Evaluation criteria.--In assessing the
stability, reliability, and availability of proposed
sources of local financing under paragraph (2)(C), the
Secretary shall consider--
``(i) the reliability of the forecasting
methods used to estimate costs and utilization
made by the recipient and the contractors to the
recipient;

[[Page 1577]]
119 STAT. 1577

``(ii) existing grant commitments;
``(iii) the degree to which financing sources
are dedicated to the proposed purposes;
``(iv) any debt obligation that exists, or is
proposed by the recipient, for the proposed
project or other public transportation purpose;
and
``(v) the extent to which the project has a
local financial commitment that exceeds the
required non-Federal share of the cost of the
project.
``(C) Consideration of fiscal capacity of state and
local governments.--If the Secretary gives priority to
financing projects under this subsection that include
more than the non-Federal share required under
subsection (h), the Secretary shall give equal
consideration to differences in the fiscal capacity of
State and local governments.
``(5) Project advancement and ratings.--
``(A) Project advancement.--A proposed project under
this subsection shall not advance from alternatives
analysis to preliminary engineering or from preliminary
engineering to final design and construction unless the
Secretary determines that the project meets the
requirements of this section and there is a reasonable
likelihood that the project will continue to meet such
requirements.
``(B) Ratings.--In making a determination under
subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall evaluate and rate
the project on a 5-point scale (high, medium-high,
medium, medium-low, or low) based on the results of the
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.
``(6) Policy guidance.--
``(A) Publication.--The Secretary shall publish
policy guidance regarding the new fixed guideway capital
project review and evaluation process and criteria--
``(i) not later than 120 days after the date
of enactment of the Federal Public Transportation
Act of 2005; and
``(ii) each time significant changes are made
by the Secretary to the process and criteria, but
not less frequently than once every 2 years.
``(B) Public comment and response.--The Secretary
shall--
``(i) invite public comment to the policy
guidance published under subparagraph (A); and
``(ii)  NOTE: Publication.  publish a
response to the comments received under clause
(i).

``(e) Capital Investment Grants Less Than $75,000,000.--
``(1) In general.--
``(A) Applicability of requirements.--Except as
provided by subparagraph (B), a new fixed guideway
capital project shall be subject to the requirements of
this subsection if the Federal assistance provided or to
be provided under this section for the project is less
than $75,000,000 and the total estimated net capital
cost of the project is less than $250,000,000.

[[Page 1578]]
119 STAT. 1578

``(B) Projects receiving less than $25,000,000 in
federal assistance.--If the assistance provided under
this section with respect to a new fixed guideway
capital project is less than $25,000,000, the
requirements of this subsection shall not apply to the
project until such date as the final regulation to be
issued under paragraph (9) takes effect.
``(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 forecasting
methods used to estimate 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.--
``(A) In general.--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.
``(B) Consideration of fiscal capacity of state and
local governments.--If the Secretary gives priority to
financing projects under this subsection that include
more than the non-Federal share required under
subsection (h), the Secretary shall give equal
consideration to differences in the fiscal capacity of
State and local governments.
``(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
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.
``(B) Evaluation.--In making the findings under
subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall evaluate and rate
the project as high, medium-high, medium, medium-low,

[[Page 1579]]
119 STAT. 1579

or low 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
high, medium-high, or medium under this subsection.
``(9)  NOTE: Deadline.  Regulations.--Not later than 240
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 bus capital project if--
``(A) a substantial portion of the project operates
in a separate right-of-way dedicated for public transit
use during peak hour operations; or
``(B) the project represents a substantial
investment in a defined corridor as demonstrated by
features such as park-and-ride lots, transit stations,
bus arrival and departure signage, intelligent
transportation systems technology, traffic signal
priority, off-board fare collection, advanced bus
technology, and other features that support the long-
term corridor investment.
``(11) Impact report.--
``(A) In general.--Not later than 120 days after the
date of enactment of the Federal Public Transportation
Act of 2005, the Federal Transit Administration shall
submit to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives a report on the methodology to be used
in evaluating the land use and economic development
impacts of non-fixed guideway or partial fixed guideway
projects.
``(B) Contents.--The report submitted under
subparagraph (A) shall address any qualitative and
quantitative differences between fixed guideway and non-
fixed guideway projects with respect to land use and
economic development impacts.

``(f) Previously Issued Letter of Intent or Full Funding Grant
Agreement.--Subsections (d) and (e) 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 (e)

[[Page 1580]]
119 STAT. 1580

also does not apply to projects for which the Secretary has received an
application for final design before such date of enactment.
``(g) 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.--A full funding grant
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.
``(C) Before and after study.--

[[Page 1581]]
119 STAT. 1581

``(i) In general.--A full funding grant
agreement under this paragraph shall require the
applicant to conduct a study that--
``(I) describes and analyzes the
impacts of the new fixed guideway
capital project on transit services and
transit ridership;
``(II) evaluates the consistency of
predicted and actual project
characteristics and performance; and
``(III) identifies sources of
differences between predicted and actual
outcomes.
``(ii) Information collection and analysis
plan.--
``(I) Submission of plan.--
Applicants seeking an agreement under
this paragraph shall submit a complete
plan for the collection and analysis of
information to identify the impacts of
the new fixed guideway capital project
and the accuracy of the forecasts
prepared during the development of the
project. Preparation of this plan shall
be included in the full funding grant
agreement as an eligible activity.
``(II) Contents of plan.--The plan
submitted under subclause (I) shall
provide for--
``(aa) the collection of
data on the current transit
system regarding transit service
levels and ridership patterns,
including origins and
destinations, access modes, trip
purposes, and rider
characteristics;
``(bb) documentation of the
predicted scope, service levels,
capital costs, operating costs,
and ridership of the project;
``(cc) collection of data on
the transit system 2 years after
the opening of the new fixed
guideway capital project,
including analogous information
on transit service levels and
ridership patterns and
information on the as-built
scope and capital costs of the
project; and
``(dd) analysis of the
consistency of predicted project
characteristics with the after
data.
``(D) Collection of data on current system.--To be
eligible for a full funding grant agreement under this
paragraph, recipients shall have collected data on the
current system, according to the plan required, before
the beginning of construction of the proposed new start
project. Collection of this data shall be included in
the full funding grant agreement as an eligible
activity.
``(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

[[Page 1582]]
119 STAT. 1582

``(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(a)(3) and 5338(c) for
such projects or an amount equivalent to the last 3
fiscal years of funding allocated under subsections
(m)(1)(A) and (m)(2)(A)(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

[[Page 1583]]
119 STAT. 1583

and early system work agreements under this subsection
for small capital projects described in subsection (e)
may be not more than the greater of the amount allocated
under subsection (m)(2)(A)(i) for such projects or an
amount equivalent to the last fiscal year of funding
allocated under such subsection 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)  NOTE: Deadline.  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 Committees on Transportation and Infrastructure and
Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the
Committees on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs and
Appropriations 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.

``(h) Government's Share of Net Project Cost.--
``(1) In general.--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) Adjustment for completion under budget.--The Secretary
may adjust the final net project cost of a new fixed guideway
capital project evaluated under subsections (d) and (e) to
include the cost of eligible activities not included in the
originally defined project if the Secretary determines that the
originally defined project has been completed at a cost that is
significantly below the original estimate.
``(3) Maximum government share.--The Secretary may provide a
higher grant percentage than requested by the grant recipient
if--
``(A) the Secretary determines that the net project
cost of the project is not more than 10 percent higher
than the net project cost estimated at the time the
project was approved for advancement into preliminary
engineering; and

[[Page 1584]]
119 STAT. 1584

``(B) the ridership estimated for the project is not
less than 90 percent of the ridership estimated for the
project at the time the project was approved for
advancement into preliminary engineering.
``(4) 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.
``(5) Limitation on statutory construction.--Nothing in this
section, including paragraph (1) and subsections (d)(4)(B)(v)
and (e)(5), 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.
``(6) 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.
``(7) 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.

``(i) 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.

``(j) Availability of Amounts.--
``(1) In general.--An amount made available or appropriated
under section 5338(a)(3)(C)(iii), 5338(a)(3)(C)(iv),

[[Page 1585]]
119 STAT. 1585

5338(b)(2)(E), or 5338(c) 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 may be used by the Secretary for any purpose under
this section.
``(2) Use of deobligated amounts.--An amount available under
this section that is deobligated may be used for any purpose
under this section.

``(k) Reports on New Starts.--
``(1) Annual report on funding recommendations.--Not later
than the first Monday in February of each year, the Secretary
shall submit to the Committees on Transportation and
Infrastructure and Appropriations of the House of
Representatives and the Committees on Banking, Housing, and
Urban Affairs and Appropriations 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
subsections (d) and (e), 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 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.

``(l) Other Reports.--
``(1) Before and after study reports.--Not later than the
first Monday of August of each year, the Secretary shall submit
to the committees referred to in subsection (k)(1) a report
containing a summary of the results of the studies conducted
under subsection (g)(2)(C).
``(2) Contractor performance assessment report.--
``(A) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the
enactment of the Federal Public Transportation Act of
2005, and each year thereafter, the Secretary shall
submit to the committees referred to in subsection
(k)(1) a report analyzing the consistency and accuracy
of cost and ridership estimates made by each contractor
to public transportation agencies developing new fixed
guideway capital projects.
``(B) Contents.--The report submitted under
subparagraph (A) shall compare the cost and ridership
estimates

[[Page 1586]]
119 STAT. 1586

made at the time projects are approved for entrance into
preliminary engineering with--
``(i) estimates made at the time projects are
approved for entrance into final design;
``(ii) costs and ridership when the project
commences revenue operation; and
``(iii) costs and ridership when the project
has been in operation for 2 years.
``(C) Considerations.--In making comparisons under
subparagraph (B), the Secretary shall consider factors
having an impact on costs and ridership not under the
control of the contractor. The Secretary shall also
consider the role taken by each contractor in the
development of the project.
``(3) Contractor performance incentive report.--Not later
than 180 days after the enactment of the Federal Public
Transportation Act of 2005, the Secretary shall submit to the
committees referred to in subsection (k)(1) a report on the
suitability of allowing contractors to public transportation
agencies that undertake new fixed guideway capital projects
under this section to receive performance incentive awards if a
project is completed for less than the original estimated cost.

``(m) Allocating Amounts.--
``(1) Fiscal year 2005.--Of the amounts made available or
appropriated for fiscal year 2005 under section 5338(a)(3)--
``(A) $1,437,829,600 shall be allocated for new
fixed capital projects under subsection (d);
``(B) $1,204,684,800 shall be allocated for capital
projects for fixed guideway modernization; and
``(C) $669,600,000 shall be allocated for capital
projects for buses and bus-related equipment and
facilities.
``(2) Fiscal years 2006 through 2009.--The amounts made
available or appropriated for fiscal years 2006 through 2009
under sections 5338(b) and 5338(c) shall be allocated as
follows:
``(A) Major capital investment grants.--Of the
amounts appropriated under section 5338(c)--
``(i) $200,000,000 for each of fiscal years
2007 through 2009 shall be allocated for projects
for new fixed guideway capital projects of less
than $75,000,000 in accordance with subsection
(e); and
``(ii) the remainder shall be allocated for
major new fixed guideway capital projects in
accordance with subsection (d).
``(B) Fixed guideway modernization.--The amounts
made available under section 5338(b)(2)(D) shall be
allocated for capital projects for fixed guideway
modernization.
``(C) Buses and bus-related equipment and
facilities.--The amounts made available under section
5338(b)(2)(E) shall be allocated for capital projects
for buses and bus-related equipment and facilities.
``(3) Fixed guideway modernization.--The amounts made
available for fixed guideway modernization under section
5338(b)(2)(D) for fiscal year 2006 and each fiscal year
thereafter shall be allocated in accordance with section 5337.
``(4) Preliminary engineering and alternatives analysis.--
Not more that 8 percent of the allocation described in

[[Page 1587]]
119 STAT. 1587

paragraph (1)(A) may be expended on alternatives analysis and
preliminary engineering.
``(5) Preliminary engineering.--Not more than 8 percent of
the allocation described in paragraph (2)(A) may be expended on
preliminary engineering.
``(6) Funding for ferry boats.--Of the amounts described in
paragraphs (1)(A) and (2)(A)--
``(A) $10,400,000 shall be available in fiscal year
2005 for capital projects in Alaska and Hawaii for new
fixed guideway systems and extension projects utilizing
ferry boats, ferry boat terminals, or approaches to
ferry boat terminals;
``(B) $15,000,000 shall be available in each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 for capital projects in
Alaska and Hawaii for new fixed guideway ferry systems
and extension projects utilizing ferry boats, ferry boat
terminals, or approaches to ferry boat terminals; and
``(C) $5,000,000 shall be available for each of
fiscal years 2006 though 2009 for payments to the Denali
Commission under the terms of section 307(e) of the
Denali Commission Act of 1998 (42 U.S.C. 3121 note) for
docks, waterfront development projects, and related
transportation infrastructure.
``(7) Bus and bus facility grants.--The amounts made
available under paragraphs (1)(C) and (2)(C) shall be allocated
as follows:
``(A) Ferry boat systems.--$10,000,000 shall be
available in each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 for
ferry boats or ferry terminal facilities. Of such funds,
the following amounts shall be set aside for each fiscal
year:
``(i) $2,500,000 for the San Francisco Water
Transit Authority.
``(ii) $2,500,000 for the Massachusetts Bay
Transportation Authority Ferry System.
``(iii) $1,000,000 for the Camden, New Jersey
Ferry System.
``(iv) $1,000,000 for the Governor's Island,
New York Ferry System
``(v) $1,000,000 for the Philadelphia Penn's
Landing Ferry Terminal.
``(vi) $1,000,000 for the Staten Island Ferry.
``(vii) $650,000 for the Maine State Ferry
Service, Rockland.
``(viii) $350,000 for the Swans Island, Maine
Ferry Service.
``(B) Fuel cell bus program.--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:
``(i) $11,250,000 for fiscal year 2006.
``(ii) $11,500,000 for fiscal year 2007.
``(iii) $12,750,000 for fiscal year 2008.
``(iv) $13,500,000 for fiscal year 2009.
``(C) Projects not in urbanized areas.--Not less
than 5.5 percent shall be available in each fiscal year
for projects that are not in urbanized areas.

[[Page 1588]]
119 STAT. 1588

``(D) Intermodal terminals.--Not less than
$35,000,000 shall be available in each fiscal year for
intermodal terminal projects, including the intercity
bus portion of such projects.
``(E) Bus testing.--$3,000,000 shall be available in
each fiscal year for bus testing under section 5318.
``(8) Bus and bus facility grant considerations.--In making
grants under paragraphs (1)(C) and (2)(C), the Secretary shall
consider the age and condition of buses, bus fleets, related
equipment, and bus-related facilities.''.

(b) Chapter Analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53  NOTE: 49 USC
5301.  is amended by striking the item relating to section 5309 and
inserting the following:

``5309. Capital investment grants.''.

(c)  NOTE: 49 USC 5309 note.  Public-Private Partnership Pilot
Program.--
(1) Establishment.--The Secretary may establish and
implement a pilot program to demonstrate the advantages and
disadvantages of public-private partnerships for certain new
fixed guideway capital projects.
(2) Limitation on the number of facilities.--The Secretary
may permit the establishment of 3 public-private partnerships
for new fixed guideway capital projects.
(3) Eligibility.--To be eligible to participate in the
public-private partnership program, a recipient shall submit to
the Secretary an application that contains, at a minimum, the
following:
(A) An identification of the new fixed guideway
capital project that has not entered into a full funding
grant agreement or project construction grant agreement
with the Federal Transit Administration.
(B) A schedule and finance plan for the construction
of and operation of the proposed project.
(C) An analysis of the costs, benefits, and
efficiencies of the proposed public-private partnership
agreement.
(4) Selection criteria.--The Secretary may approve the
application of a recipient under this subsection if the
Secretary determines that--
(A) State and local laws permit public-private
agreements for all phases of project development,
construction, and operation of the project;
(B) the recipient is unable to advance the project
due to fiscal constraints; and
(C) the plan implementing the public-private
partnership is justified.
(5) Program term.--The Secretary may approve an application
of a recipient for a public-private partnership for fiscal years
2006 through 2009.
(6) Report to congress.--Not later than 2 years 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 Banking, Housing, and
Urban Affairs of the Senate, a report containing an assessment
of the costs, benefits, and efficiencies of a public-private
partnership program for new fixed guideway capital projects.

[[Page 1589]]
119 STAT. 1589

(d) Restrictions on Use of Bus Category Funds for Fixed Guideway
Projects.--Funds provided to grantees under the bus and bus facility
category for fixed guideway ferry and gondola projects in the Department
of Transportation and Related Agencies Appropriations Acts for any of
fiscal years 1998 through 2005, or accompanying committee reports, that
remain available and unobligated may be used for new fixed guideway
capital projects under section 5309 of title 49, United States Code.
Funds made available to the same grantees for similar projects under the
bus and bus facility category of section 5309 of title 49, United States
Code, in fiscal years 2006 through 2009 may be used for fixed guideway
projects under that section.
(e) Miami Metrorail.--The Secretary shall credit funds provided by
the Florida department of transportation for the extension of the Miami
Metrorail System from Earlington Heights to the Miami Intermodal Center
to satisfy the matching requirements of section 5309(h)(4) of title 49,
United Stated Code, for the Miami North Corridor and Miami East-West
Corridor projects.
(f) Adjustments.--The adjustments made in the Federal Transit
Administrator's Dear Colleague letter of April 29, 2005, to require a
``medium'' for the cost-effectiveness rating, in order for fixed
guideway projects to be recommended for funding by the Federal Transit
Administration, shall not apply to the following:
(1) San Francisco Muni--Third Street LRT Phase I/II.
(2) Santa Clara Valley Transit Authority--Silicon Valley
Rapid Transit Corridor.
(3) Washington County, Oregon--Wilsonville to Beaverton
Commuter Rail.
(4) Dulles Corridor Metrorail Project--Extension to Wiehle
Avenue.

SEC. 3012. FORMULA GRANTS FOR SPECIAL NEEDS OF ELDERLY INDIVIDUALS AND
INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES.

(a) In General.--Section 5310 is amended to read as follows:

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

``(a) General Authority.--
``(1) Grants.--The Secretary may make grants to States and
local governmental authorities under this section for 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 provided under 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)  NOTE: Certification.  certifies that
there are not any nonprofit organizations readily
available in the area to provide the services
described under paragraph (1).

[[Page 1590]]
119 STAT. 1590

``(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) 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.
``(2) Transfer of funds.--Any funds apportioned to a State
under paragraph (1) may be transferred by the State to the
apportionments made under sections 5311(c) and 5336 if such
funds are only used for eligible projects selected under this
section.

``(c) Government's Share of Costs.--
``(1) Capital projects.--
``(A) In general.--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.
``(B) Exception.--A State described in section
120(b) of title 23 shall receive an increased Government
share in accordance with the formula under that section.
``(2) 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;
``(B) may be derived from amounts appropriated or
otherwise made available to a department or agency of
the Government (other than the Department of
Transportation) that are eligible to be expended for
transportation; and
``(C) notwithstanding subparagraph (B), may be
derived from amounts made available to carry out the
Federal lands highway program established by section 204
of title 23.
``(3) Use of certain funds.--For purposes of paragraph
(2)(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 to the
extent the Secretary determines appropriate.
``(2) Certification requirements.--
``(A) Fund transfers.--A grant recipient under this
section that transfers funds to a project funded under
section 5336 in accordance with subsection (b)(2) shall
certify that the project for which the funds are
requested has

[[Page 1591]]
119 STAT. 1591

been coordinated with private nonprofit providers of
services under this section.
``(B)  NOTE: Certification.  Project selection and
plan development.--Beginning in fiscal year 2007, each
grant recipient under this section shall certify that--
``(i) the projects selected were derived from
a locally developed, coordinated public transit-
human services transportation plan; and
``(ii) 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.
``(C) Allocations to subrecipients.--Each grant
recipient under this section shall certify that
allocations of the grant to subrecipients, if any, are
distributed on a fair and equitable basis.

``(e) State Program of Projects.--
``(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 State shall submit to the
Secretary annually for approval a program of projects. The
program 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.
``(g) Meal Delivery for Homebound Individuals.--Public
transportation service providers receiving assistance under this section
or section 5311(c) may coordinate and assist in regularly providing meal
delivery service for homebound individuals if the delivery service does
not conflict with providing public transportation service or reduce
service to public transportation passengers.
``(h) Transfers of Facilities and Equipment.--With the consent of
the recipient in possession of a facility or equipment acquired with a
grant under this section, a State may transfer the facility or equipment
to any recipient eligible to receive assistance under this chapter if
the facility or equipment will continue to be used as required under
this section.''.
(b)  NOTE: 49 USC 5310 note.  Elderly Individuals and Individuals
With Disabilities Pilot Program.--
(1)  NOTE: Establishment.  In general.--In fiscal year
2006, the Secretary shall establish a pilot program that will
allow Wisconsin, Alaska, Minnesota, Oregon, and 3 other States
selected by the Secretary to use not more than 33 percent of the
funds apportioned to each State to carry out section 5310 of
title 49, United States Code, for operating costs associated
with public transportation projects planned, designed, and
carried out to meet the special needs of elderly individuals and
individuals with disabilities under such section. The Secretary
may base the selection of participating States on a State's
exemplary coordination of public transit-human services
transportation. The Secretary

[[Page 1592]]
119 STAT. 1592

may require participants to collect data necessary to support
the report to Congress required by paragraph (7).
(2) Planning coordination.--Recipients of funds made
available consistent with this subsection 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.
(3) Government's share of costs.--Operating assistance under
this subsection may not exceed 50 percent of the net operating
costs of the project, as determined by the Secretary. The credit
for any non-Federal share provided under this subsection shall
not reduce nor replace State funds required to match Federal
funds for formula grants for the special needs of elderly
individuals and individuals with disabilities program authorized
under section 5310 of title 49, United States Code.
(4) 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.
(5) Use of certain funds.--For purposes of paragraph (4)(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.
(6) Eligible activities.--Projects eligible under the pilot
program may include the collection of data necessary to support
the report to Congress required by paragraph (7).
(7) Report.--Not later than 2 years 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 Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs of the Senate a report on the pilot program, which may
include--
(A) the extent to which funds were used to subsidize
existing paratransit service provided in compliance with
the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990;
(B) whether States participating in the pilot
program use the funds to provide services to persons
with disabilities that exceed those services required by
the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 differently
than States not in the pilot program;
(C) whether States participating in this pilot
program use the funds to provide services to individuals
with disabilities that exceed those services required by
the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 to the
detriment of other eligible projects;

[[Page 1593]]
119 STAT. 1593

(D) the percentage of funds used to assist elderly
individuals;
(E) the percentage of funds used to assist
individuals with disabilities;
(F) the extent to which States participating in this
pilot program serve a wider range of elderly, low
income, and persons with disabilities populations;
(G) whether the pilot program improves services to
elderly individuals and individuals with disabilities;
(H) the extent to which States participating in the
pilot program were able to expand the range of
transportation alternatives available to elderly
individuals and individuals with disabilities; and
(I) whether the pilot program facilitates or
discourages coordination with or integration of other
funding sources.
(8) Sunset.--This subsection shall cease to be effective on
September 30, 2009.

(c) Chapter Analysis.--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. 3013. FORMULA GRANTS FOR OTHER THAN URBANIZED AREAS.

(a) Definitions.--Section 5311(a) is amended to read as follows:
``(a) Definitions.--As used in this section, the following
definitions shall apply:
``(1) Recipient.--The term `recipient' means a State or
Indian tribe that receives a Federal transit program grant
directly from the Federal Government.
``(2) Subrecipient.--The term `subrecipient' means a State
or local governmental authority, a nonprofit organization, or an
operator of public transportation or intercity bus service that
receives Federal transit program grant funds indirectly through
a recipient.''.

(b) General Authority.--Section 5311(b) is amended to read as
follows:
``(b) General Authority.--
``(1) Grants authorized.--Except as provided by paragraph
(2), the Secretary may award grants under this section to
recipients located in areas other than urbanized areas for--
``(A) public transportation capital projects;
``(B) operating costs of equipment and facilities
for use in public transportation; and
``(C) the acquisition of public transportation
services, including service agreements with private
providers of public transportation services.
``(2) State program.--
``(A) In general.--A project eligible for a grant
under this section shall be included in a State program
for public transportation service projects, including
agreements with private providers of public
transportation service.
``(B) Submission to secretary.--Each State shall
submit to the Secretary annually the program described
in subparagraph (A).

[[Page 1594]]
119 STAT. 1594

``(C) Approval.--The Secretary may not approve the
program unless the Secretary determines that--
``(i) the program provides a fair distribution
of amounts in the State, including Indian
reservations; and
``(ii) the program provides 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.
``(4) Data collection.--Each recipient under this section
shall submit an annual report to the Secretary containing
information on capital investment, operations, and service
provided with funds received under this section, including--
``(A) total annual revenue;
``(B) sources of revenue;
``(C) total annual operating costs;
``(D) total annual capital costs;
``(E) fleet size and type, and related facilities;
``(F) revenue vehicle miles; and
``(G) ridership.''.

(c) Apportionments.--Section 5311(c) is amended to read as follows:
``(c) Apportionments.--
``(1) Public transportation on indian reservations.--Of the
amounts made available or appropriated for each fiscal year
pursuant to subsections (a)(1)(C)(v) and (b)(2)(G) of section
5338, the following amounts shall be apportioned for grants to
Indian tribes for any purpose eligible under this section, under
such terms and conditions as may be established by the
Secretary:
``(A) $8,000,000 for fiscal year 2006.
``(B) $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2007.
``(C) $12,000,000 for fiscal year 2008.
``(D) $15,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.
``(2) Remaining amounts.--Of the amounts made available or
appropriated for each fiscal year pursuant to subsections
(a)(1)(C)(v) and (b)(2)(G) of section 5338 that are not
apportioned under paragraph (1)--
``(A) 20 percent shall be apportioned to the States
in accordance with paragraph (3); and
``(B) 80 percent shall be apportioned to the States
in accordance with paragraph (4).

[[Page 1595]]
119 STAT. 1595

``(3) Apportionments based on land area in nonurbanized
areas.--
``(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B), each
State shall receive an amount that is equal to the
amount apportioned under paragraph (2)(A) multiplied by
the ratio of the land area in areas other than urbanized
areas in that State and divided by the land area in all
areas other than urbanized areas in the United States,
as shown by the most recent decennial census of
population.
``(B) Maximum apportionment.--No State shall receive
more than 5 percent of the amount apportioned under this
paragraph.
``(4) Apportionments based on population in nonurbanized
areas.--Each State shall receive an amount equal to the amount
apportioned under paragraph (2)(B) multiplied by the ratio of
the population of areas other than urbanized areas in that State
divided by the population of all areas other than urbanized
areas in the United States, as shown by the most recent
decennial census of population.''.

(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)--
(A) by striking ``(1) A State'' and inserting the
following:
``(1) In general.--A State'';
(B) by striking ``after September 30, 1993,''; and
(C) by moving subparagraphs (A) through (D) 2 ems to
the right; and
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by striking ``(2) A State'' and inserting the
following:
``(2) Certification.--A State''; and
(B) by striking ``Secretary of Transportation'' and
inserting ``Secretary, after consultation with affected
intercity bus service providers,''.

(f) Government Share of Costs.--Section 5311(g) is amended to read
as follows:
``(g) Government Share of Costs.--
``(1) Capital projects.--
``(A) In general.--Except as provided by
subparagraph (B), a grant awarded under this section for
any purpose other than operating assistance shall be for
80 percent of the net capital costs of the project, as
determined by the Secretary.
``(B) Exception.--A State described in section
120(b) of title 23 shall receive a Government share of
the net capital costs in accordance with the formula
under that section.
``(2) Operating assistance.--

[[Page 1596]]
119 STAT. 1596

``(A) In general.--Except as provided by
subparagraph (B), 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.
``(B) Exception.--A State described in section
120(b) of title 23 shall receive a Government share of
the net operating costs equal to 62.5 percent of the
Government share provided for under paragraph (1)(B).
``(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;
``(B) may be derived from amounts appropriated or
otherwise made available to a department or agency of
the Government (other than the Department of
Transportation) that are eligible to be expended for
transportation; and
``(C) notwithstanding subparagraph (B), may be
derived from amounts made available to carry out the
Federal lands highway program established by section 204
of title 23.
``(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) Waiver Condition.--Section 5311(j)(1) is amended by striking
``but the Secretary of Labor may waive the application of section
5333(b)'' and inserting ``if the Secretary of Labor utilizes a special
warranty that provides a fair and equitable arrangement to protect the
interests of employees''.
(i) 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. 3014. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, DEMONSTRATION, AND DEPLOYMENT
PROJECTS.

(a) In General.--Section 5312(a) is amended to read as follows:
``(a) Research, Development, Demonstration, and Deployment
Projects.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary may make grants, contracts,
cooperative agreements, and other agreements (including
agreements with departments, agencies, and instrumentalities of
the United States Government) for research, development,
demonstration, and deployment projects, and evaluation of
technology of national significance to public transportation,
that

[[Page 1597]]
119 STAT. 1597

the Secretary determines will improve public transportation
service or help public transportation service meet the total
transportation needs at a minimum cost.
``(2) Information.--The Secretary may request and receive
appropriate information from any source.
``(3) Savings provision.--This subsection does not limit the
authority of the Secretary under any other law.''.

(b) Joint Partnership Program for Deployment of Innovation.--Section
5312 is amended by striking subsections (b) and (c) and redesignating
subsections (d) and (e) as subsections (b) and (c), respectively.
(c) International Mass Transportation Program.--Section 5312(c)(2)
(as redesignated by subsection (b) of this section) is amended by
striking ``public and private'' and inserting ``public or private''.
(d) Funding.--Section 5312(c)(3) (as redesignated by subsection (b)
of this section) is amended by striking ``shall be accounted for
separately within the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund
and''.
(e) 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. 3015. TRANSIT COOPERATIVE RESEARCH PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Section 5313 is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (b);
(2) in subsection (a)--
(A) in paragraph (1) by striking ``(1) The amounts
made available under paragraphs (1) and (2)(C)(ii) of
section 5338(c) of this title'' and inserting ``The
amounts made available under subsections (a)(5)(C)(iii)
and (d)(1) of section 5338''; and
(B) in paragraph (2) by striking ``(2) The
Secretary'' and inserting the following:

``(b) Federal Assistance.--The Secretary''; and
(3) by striking subsection (c) and inserting the following:

``(c) Government's Share.--If there would be a clear and direct
financial benefit to an entity under a grant or contract financed under
this section, the Secretary shall establish a Government share
consistent with that benefit.''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Section heading.--Section 5313 is amended by striking
the section heading and inserting the following:

``Sec. 5313. Transit 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. Transit cooperative research program.''.

[[Page 1598]]
119 STAT. 1598

SEC. 3016. 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 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
agreements'';
(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);
(6) by adding at the end of subsection (a) the following:
``(6) Medical transportation demonstration grants.--
``(A) Grants authorized.--The Secretary may award
demonstration grants, from funds made available under
paragraph (1), to eligible entities to provide
transportation services to individuals to access
dialysis treatments and other medical treatments for
renal disease.
``(B) Eligible entities.--An entity shall be
eligible to receive a grant under this paragraph if the
entity--
``(i) meets the conditions described in
section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986; or
``(ii) is an agency of a State or unit of
local government.
``(C) Use of funds.--Grant funds received under this
paragraph may be used to provide transportation services
to individuals to access dialysis treatments and other
medical treatments for renal disease.
``(D) Application.--
``(i) In general.--Each eligible entity
desiring a grant under this paragraph shall submit
an application to the Secretary at such time, at
such place, and containing such information as the
Secretary may reasonably require.
``(ii) Selection of grantees.--In awarding
grants under this paragraph, the Secretary shall
give preference to eligible entities from
communities with--
``(I) high incidence of renal
disease; and
``(II) limited access to dialysis
facilities.
``(E) Rulemaking.--The Secretary shall issue
regulations to implement and administer the grant
program established under this paragraph.
``(F) Report.--The Secretary shall submit a report
on the results of the demonstration projects funded
under this paragraph to the Committee on Banking,
Housing, and Urban Affairs of the Senate and the
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the
House of Representatives.''.

[[Page 1599]]
119 STAT. 1599

(7) in subsection (b) by striking ``or contract'' and all
that follows through ``section,'' and inserting ``, contract,
cooperative agreement, or other agreement under subsection (a)
or section 5312,''; and

(b) National Technical Assistance Center for Senior
Transportation.--Section 5314 is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``(c) National Technical Assistance Center for Senior
Transportation.--
``(1) Establishment.--The Secretary shall award grants to a
national not-for-profit organization for the establishment and
maintenance of a national technical assistance center.
``(2) Eligibility.--An organization shall be eligible to
receive a grant under paragraph (1) if the organization--
``(A) focuses significantly on serving the needs of
the elderly;
``(B) has demonstrated knowledge and expertise in
senior transportation policy and planning issues;
``(C) has affiliates in a majority of the States;
``(D) has the capacity to convene local groups to
consult on operation and development of senior
transportation programs; and
``(E) has established close working relationships
with the Federal Transit Administration and the
Administration on Aging.
``(3) Use of funds.--The national technical assistance
center established under this section shall--
``(A) gather best practices from throughout the
Nation and provide such practices to local communities
that are implementing senior transportation programs;
``(B) work with teams from local communities to
identify how the communities are successfully meeting
the transportation needs of senior citizens and any gaps
in services in order to create a plan for an integrated
senior transportation program;
``(C) provide resources on ways to pay for senior
transportation services;
``(D) create a web site to publicize and circulate
information on senior transportation programs;
``(E) establish a clearinghouse for print, video,
and audio resources on senior mobility; and
``(F) administer the demonstration grant program
established under paragraph (4).
``(4) Grants authorized.--
``(A) In general.--The national technical assistance
center established under this section, in consultation
with the Federal Transit Administration, shall award
senior transportation demonstration grants to--
``(i) local transportation organizations;
``(ii) State agencies;
``(iii) units of local government; and
``(iv) nonprofit organizations.
``(B) Use of funds.--Grant funds received under this
paragraph may be used to--
``(i) evaluate the state of transportation
services for senior citizens;

[[Page 1600]]
119 STAT. 1600

``(ii) recognize barriers to mobility that
senior citizens encounter in their communities;
``(iii) establish partnerships and promote
coordination among community stakeholders,
including public, not-for-profit, and for-profit
providers of transportation services for senior
citizens;
``(iv) identify future transportation needs of
senior citizens within local communities; and
``(v) establish strategies to meet the unique
needs of healthy and frail senior citizens.
``(C) Selection of grantees.--The Secretary shall
select grantees under this paragraph based on a fair
representation of various geographical locations
throughout the United States.''.

(c) Alternative Fuels Study.--
(1) Study.--The Secretary shall conduct a study of the
actions necessary to facilitate the purchase of increased
volumes of alternative fuels (as defined in section 301 of the
Energy Policy Act of 1992 (42 U.S.C. 13211)) for use in public
transit vehicles.
(2) Scope of study.--The study conducted under this
subsection shall focus on the incentives necessary to increase
the use of alternative fuels in public transit vehicles,
including buses, fixed guideway vehicles, and ferries.
(3) Contents.--The study shall consider--
(A) the environmental benefits of increased use of
alternative fuels in transit vehicles;
(B) existing opportunities available to transit
system operators that encourage the purchase of
alternative fuels for transit vehicle operation;
(C) existing barriers to transit system operators
that discourage the purchase of alternative fuels for
transit vehicle operation, including situations where
alternative fuels that do not require capital
improvements to transit vehicles are disadvantaged over
fuels that do require such improvements; and
(D) the necessary levels and type of support
necessary to encourage additional use of alternative
fuels for transit vehicle operation.
(4) Recommendations.--The study shall recommend regulatory
and legislative alternatives that will result in the increased
use of alternative fuels in transit vehicles.
(5) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of the Senate
and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the
House of Representatives a report containing the results of the
study completed under this subsection.

(d) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5314 and inserting the following:

``5314. National research programs.''.

SEC. 3017. NATIONAL TRANSIT INSTITUTE.

(a) Establishment and Duties.--Section 5315 is amended by striking
subsections (a) and (b) and inserting the following:

[[Page 1601]]
119 STAT. 1601

``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall award grants to Rutgers
University to conduct a national transit institute.
``(b) Duties.--
``(1) In general.--In cooperation with the Federal Transit
Administration, State transportation departments, public
transportation authorities, and national and international
entities, the institute established under subsection (a) shall
develop and conduct training and educational programs for
Federal, State, and local transportation employees, United
States citizens, and foreign nationals engaged or to be engaged
in Government-aid public transportation work.
``(2) Training and educational programs.--The training and
educational programs developed under paragraph (1) may include
courses in recent developments, techniques, and procedures
related to--
``(A) intermodal and public transportation planning;
``(B) management;
``(C) environmental factors;
``(D) acquisition and joint use rights-of-way;
``(E) engineering and architectural design;
``(F) procurement strategies for public
transportation systems;
``(G) turnkey approaches to delivering public
transportation systems;
``(H) new technologies;
``(I) emission reduction technologies;
``(J) ways to make public transportation accessible
to individuals with disabilities;
``(K) construction, construction management,
insurance, and risk management;
``(L) maintenance;
``(M) contract administration;
``(N) inspection;
``(O) innovative finance;
``(P) workplace safety; and
``(Q) public transportation security.''.

(b) Availability of Amounts.--Section 5315(d) is amended by striking
``mass'' each place it appears.

SEC. 3018. 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;

[[Page 1602]]
119 STAT. 1602

``(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 for a fiscal year 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

[[Page 1603]]
119 STAT. 1603

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

[[Page 1604]]
119 STAT. 1604

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

[[Page 1605]]
119 STAT. 1605

``(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 one 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)  NOTE: Deadline.  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)  NOTE: Reports.  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.--Effective  NOTE: 49 USC 5309 note.  October 1, 2005,
section 3037 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (49
U.S.C. 5309 note; 112 Stat. 387) is repealed.

SEC. 3019. NEW FREEDOM PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Chapter 53 is 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.

[[Page 1606]]
119 STAT. 1606

``(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.--Funds apportioned under
paragraph (1) shall be used for projects as follows:
``(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.
``(C) Funds apportioned under paragraph (1)(C) shall
be used for projects serving other than urbanized areas.
``(3) 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

[[Page 1607]]
119 STAT. 1607

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.--A grant under this section shall be
subject to all the requirements of section 5310 to the extent
the Secretary considers appropriate.
``(2) 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)  NOTE: Certification.  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--

[[Page 1608]]
119 STAT. 1608

``(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. 3020. BUS TESTING FACILITY.

(a) Facility.--Section 5318(a) is amended to read as follows:
``(a) Facility.--The Secretary 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.''.
(b) Availability of Amounts To Pay for Testing.--Section 5318(d) is
amended by striking ``under section 5309(m)(1)(C) of this title'' and
inserting ``to carry out this section''.
(c) Acquiring New Bus Models.--Section 5318(e) is amended to read as
follows:
``(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).''.

SEC. 3021. ALTERNATIVE TRANSPORTATION IN PARKS AND PUBLIC LANDS.

(a) In General.--Chapter 53 is amended by striking section 5320 and
inserting the following:

``Sec. 5320. Alternative transportation in parks and public lands

``(a) In General.--
``(1) Authorization.--
``(A) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation
with the Secretary of the Interior, may award a grant or
enter into a contract, cooperative agreement,
interagency agreement, intra--agency agreement, or other
agreement to carry out a qualified project under this
section to enhance the protection of national parks and
public lands and increase the enjoyment of those
visiting the parks and public lands by--

[[Page 1609]]
119 STAT. 1609

``(i) ensuring access to all, including
persons with disabilities;
``(ii) improving conservation and park and
public land opportunities in urban areas through
partnering with State and local governments; and
``(iii) improving park and public land
transportation infrastructure.
``(B) Consultation with other agencies.--To the
extent that projects are proposed or funded in eligible
areas that are not within the jurisdiction of the
Department of the Interior, the Secretary of the
Interior shall consult with the heads of the relevant
Federal land management agencies in carrying out the
responsibilities under this section.
``(2) Use of funds.--A grant, cooperative agreement,
interagency agreement, intra--agency agreement, or other
agreement for a qualified project under this section shall be
available to finance the leasing of equipment and facilities for
use in public transportation, subject to any regulation that the
Secretary may prescribe limiting the grant or agreement to
leasing arrangements that are more cost-effective than purchase
or construction.
``(3) Alternative transportation facilities and services.--
Projects receiving assistance under this section shall provide
alternative transportation facilities and services that
complement and enhance existing transportation services in
national parks and public lands in a manner that is consistent
with Department of Interior and other public land management
policies regarding private automobile access to and in such
parks and lands.

``(b) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions
apply:
``(1) Eligible area.--The term `eligible area' means any
federally owned or managed park, refuge, or recreational area
that is open to the general public, including--
``(A) a unit of the National Park System;
``(B) a unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System;
``(C) a recreational area managed by the Bureau of
Land Management;
``(D) a recreation area managed by the Bureau of
Reclamation; and
``(E) a unit of the National Forest System.
``(2) Federal land management agency.--The term `Federal
land management agency' means a Federal agency that manages an
eligible area.
``(3) Alternative transportation.--The term `alternative
transportation' means transportation by bus, rail, or any other
publicly or privately owned conveyance that provides to the
public general or special service on a regular basis, including
sightseeing service. Such term also includes a nonmotorized
transportation system (including the provision of facilities for
pedestrians, bicycles, and nonmotorized watercraft).
``(4) Qualified participant.--The term `qualified
participant' means--
``(A) a Federal land management agency; or
``(B) a State, tribal, or local governmental
authority with jurisdiction over land in the vicinity of
an eligible

[[Page 1610]]
119 STAT. 1610

area acting with the consent of the Federal land
management agency, alone or in partnership with a
Federal land management agency or other governmental or
nongovernmental participant.
``(5) Qualified project.--The term `qualified project' means
a planning or capital project in or in the vicinity of an
eligible area that--
``(A) is an activity described in section
5302(a)(1)(A), 5303, 5304, 5305, or 5309(b);
``(B) involves--
``(i) the purchase of rolling stock that
incorporates clean fuel technology or the
replacement of buses of a type in use on the date
of enactment of the Federal Public Transportation
Act of 2005 with clean fuel vehicles; or
``(ii) the deployment of alternative
transportation vehicles that introduce innovative
technologies or methods;
``(C) relates to the capital costs of coordinating
the Federal land management agency public transportation
systems with other public transportation systems;
``(D) provides a nonmotorized transportation system
(including the provision of facilities for pedestrians,
bicycles, and nonmotorized watercraft);
``(E) provides waterborne access within or in the
vicinity of an eligible area, as appropriate to and
consistent with this section; or
``(F) is any other alternative transportation
project that--
``(i) enhances the environment;
``(ii) prevents or mitigates an adverse impact
on a natural resource;
``(iii) improves Federal land management
agency resource management;
``(iv) improves visitor mobility and
accessibility and the visitor experience;
``(v) reduces congestion and pollution
(including noise pollution and visual pollution);
or
``(vi) conserves a natural, historical, or
cultural resource (excluding rehabilitation or
restoration of a non-transportation facility).

``(c) Federal Agency Cooperative Arrangements.--The Secretary shall
develop cooperative arrangements with the Secretary of the Interior that
provide for--
``(1) technical assistance in alternative transportation;
``(2) interagency and multidisciplinary teams to develop
Federal land management agency alternative transportation
policy, procedures, and coordination; and
``(3) the development of procedures and criteria relating to
the planning, selection, and funding of qualified projects and
the implementation and oversight of the program of projects in
accordance with this section.

``(d) Limitation on Use of Available Amounts.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation with the
Secretary of the Interior, may use not more than 10 percent of
the amount made available for a fiscal year under section
5338(b)(2)(J) to carry out planning, research, and technical

[[Page 1611]]
119 STAT. 1611

assistance under this section, including the development of
technology appropriate for use in a qualified project.
``(2) Additional amounts.--Amounts made available under this
subsection are in addition to amounts otherwise available to the
Secretary to carry out planning, research, and technical
assistance under this chapter or any other provision of law.
``(3) Maximum amount.--No qualified project shall receive
more than 25 percent of the total amount made available to carry
out this section under section 5338(b)(2)(J) for any fiscal
year.

``(e) Planning Process.--In undertaking a qualified project under
this section--
``(1) if the qualified participant is a Federal land
management agency--
``(A) the Secretary, in cooperation with the
Secretary of the Interior, shall develop transportation
planning procedures that are consistent with--
``(i) the metropolitan planning provisions
under section 5303;
``(ii) the statewide planning provisions under
section 5304; and
``(iii) the public participation requirements
under section 5307(d); and
``(B) in the case of a qualified project that is at
a unit of the National Park System, the planning process
shall be consistent with the general management plans of
the unit of the National Park System; and
``(2) if the qualified participant is a State or local
governmental authority, or more than one State or local
governmental authority in more than one State, the qualified
participant shall--
``(A) comply with the metropolitan planning
provisions under section 5303;
``(B) comply with the statewide planning provisions
under section 5304;
``(C) comply with the public participation
requirements under section 5307(d); and
``(D) consult with the appropriate Federal land
management agency during the planning process.

``(f) Cost Sharing.--
``(1) Government's share.--The Secretary, in cooperation
with the Secretary of the Interior, shall establish the
Government's share of the net project cost to be provided to a
qualified participant under this section.
``(2) Considerations.--In establishing the Government's
share of the net project cost to be provided under this section,
the Secretary shall consider--
``(A) visitation levels and the revenue derived from
user fees in the eligible area in which the qualified
project is carried out;
``(B) the extent to which the qualified participant
coordinates with a public transportation authority or
private entity engaged in public transportation;
``(C) private investment in the qualified project,
including the provision of contract services, joint
development activities, and the use of innovative
financing mechanisms;

[[Page 1612]]
119 STAT. 1612

``(D) the clear and direct benefit to the qualified
participant; and
``(E) any other matters that the Secretary considers
appropriate to carry out this section.
``(3) Special rule.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, funds appropriated to any Federal land management agency
may be counted toward the remainder of the net project cost.

``(g) Selection of Qualified Projects.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary of the Interior, after
consultation with and in cooperation with the Secretary, shall
determine the final selection and funding of an annual program
of qualified projects in accordance with this section.
``(2) Considerations.--In determining whether to include a
project in the annual program of qualified projects, the
Secretary of the Interior shall consider--
``(A) the justification for the qualified project,
including the extent to which the qualified project
would conserve resources, prevent or mitigate adverse
impact, and enhance the environment;
``(B) the location of the qualified project, to
ensure that the selected qualified projects--
``(i) are geographically diverse nationwide;
and
``(ii) include qualified projects in eligible
areas located in both urban areas and rural areas;
``(C) the size of the qualified project, to ensure
that there is a balanced distribution;
``(D) the historical and cultural significance of a
qualified project;
``(E) safety;
``(F) the extent to which the qualified project
would--
``(i) enhance livable communities;
``(ii) reduce pollution (including noise
pollution, air pollution, and visual pollution);
``(iii) reduce congestion; and
``(iv) improve the mobility of people in the
most efficient manner; and
``(G) any other matters that the Secretary of the
Interior considers appropriate to carry out this
section, including--
``(i) visitation levels;
``(ii) the use of innovative financing or
joint development strategies; and
``(iii) coordination with gateway communities.

``(h) Qualified Projects Carried Out in Advance.--
``(1) In general.--When a qualified participant carries out
any part of a qualified project without assistance under this
section in accordance with all applicable procedures and
requirements, the Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary
of the Interior, may pay the share of the net capital project
cost of a qualified project if--
``(A) the qualified participant applies for the
payment;
``(B) the Secretary approves the payment; and
``(C) before carrying out that part of the qualified
project, the Secretary approves the plans and
specifications in the same manner as plans and
specifications are approved for other projects assisted
under this section.

[[Page 1613]]
119 STAT. 1613

``(2) Financing costs.--
``(A) In general.--The cost of carrying out part of
a qualified project under paragraph (1) includes the
amount of interest earned and payable on bonds issued by
a State or local governmental authority, to the extent
that proceeds of the bond are expended in carrying out
that part.
``(B) Limitation on amount of interest.--The rate of
interest under this paragraph may not exceed the most
favorable rate reasonably available for the qualified
project at the time of borrowing.
``(C) Certification.--The qualified participant
shall certify, in a manner satisfactory to the
Secretary, that the qualified participant has exercised
reasonable diligence in seeking the most favorable
interest rate.

``(i) Relationship to Other Laws.--
``(1) Section 5307.--A qualified participant under this
section shall be subject to the requirements of sections 5307
and 5333(a) to the extent the Secretary determines to be
appropriate.
``(2) Other requirements.--A qualified participant under
this section shall be subject to any other requirements that the
Secretary determines to be appropriate to carry out this
section, including requirements for the distribution of proceeds
on disposition of real property and equipment resulting from a
qualified project assisted under this section.
``(3) Project management plan.--If the amount of assistance
anticipated to be required for a qualified project under this
section is not less than $25,000,000--
``(A) the qualified project shall, to the extent the
Secretary considers appropriate, be carried out through
a full funding grant agreement in accordance with
section 5309(g); and
``(B) the qualified participant shall prepare a
project management plan in accordance with section
5327(a).

``(j) Asset Management.--The Secretary, in consultation with the
Secretary of the Interior, may transfer the interest of the Department
of Transportation in, and control over, all facilities and equipment
acquired under this section to a qualified participant for use and
disposition in accordance with any property management regulations that
the Secretary determines to be appropriate.
``(k) Coordination of Research and Deployment of New Technologies.--
``(1) Grants and other assistance.--The Secretary, in
cooperation with the Secretary of the Interior, may undertake,
or make grants, cooperative agreements, contracts (including
agreements with departments, agencies, and instrumentalities of
the Federal Government) or other agreements for research,
development, and deployment of new technologies in eligible
areas that will--
``(A) conserve resources;
``(B) prevent or mitigate adverse environmental
impact;
``(C) improve visitor mobility, accessibility, and
enjoyment; and
``(D) reduce pollution (including noise pollution
and visual pollution).
``(2) Information.--The Secretary may request and receive
appropriate information from any source.

[[Page 1614]]
119 STAT. 1614

``(3) Funding.--Grants, cooperative agreements, contracts,
and other agreements under paragraph (1) shall be awarded from
amounts allocated under subsection (d)(1).

``(l) Innovative Financing.--A qualified project receiving financial
assistance under this section shall be eligible for funding through a
State infrastructure bank or other innovative financing mechanism
available to finance an eligible project under this chapter.
``(m) Reports.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation with the
Secretary of the Interior, shall annually submit a report on the
allocation of amounts made available to assist qualified
projects under this section to--
``(A) the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs of the Senate;
``(B) the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives; and
``(C) the Committee on Resources of the House of
Representatives and the Committee on Energy and Natural
Resources of the Senate.
``(2) Annual reports.--The report required under paragraph
(1) shall be included in the report submitted under section
5309(k)(1).''.

(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5320 and inserting the following:

``5320. Alternative transportation in parks and public lands.''.

SEC. 3022. HUMAN RESOURCES PROGRAMS.

Section 5322 is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(a) In General.--'' before ``The
Secretary''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:

``(b) 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 not be for more than 1 year of training
in an institution that offers a program applicable to
the public transportation industry.
``(B) Selection of individuals.--A recipient of a
grant for a fellowship under this subsection 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 under this
subsection may not be more than the lesser of $65,000 or
75 percent of the sum 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

[[Page 1615]]
119 STAT. 1615

``(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) is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following:
``(1) In general.--Financial assistance provided under this
chapter to a State or a local governmental authority may be used
to acquire an interest in, or to buy property of, a private
company engaged in public transportation, for a capital project
for property acquired from a private company engaged in public
transportation after July 9, 1964, or to operate a public
transportation facility or equipment in competition with, or in
addition to, transportation service provided by an existing
public transportation company, only if--
``(A) the Secretary determines that such financial
assistance is essential to a program of projects
required under sections 5303, 5304, and 5306;
``(B) the Secretary determines that the program
provides for the participation of private companies
engaged in public transportation to the maximum extent
feasible; and
``(C) just compensation under State or local law
will be paid to the company for its franchise or
property.''; and
(2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``(2) A governmental
authority'' and inserting the following:
``(2) Limitation.--A governmental authority''.

(b) Notice and Public Hearing.--Section 5323(b) is amended to read
as follows:
``(b) Notice and Public Hearing.--
``(1) In general.--For a capital project that will
substantially affect a community, or the public transportation
service of a community, an applicant shall--
``(A) provide an adequate opportunity for public
review and comment on the project;
``(B) after providing notice, hold a public hearing
on the project if the project affects significant
economic, social, or environmental interests;
``(C) consider the economic, social, and
environmental effects of the project; and
``(D) find that the project is consistent with
official plans for developing the community.
``(2) Notice.--Notice of a hearing under this subsection--
``(A) shall include a concise description of the
proposed project; and
``(B) shall be published in a newspaper of general
circulation in the geographic area the project will
serve.
``(3) Application requirements.--An application for a grant
under this chapter for a capital project described in paragraph
(1) shall include--
``(A)  NOTE: Certification.  a certification that
the applicant has complied with the requirements of this
subsection; and
``(B) in the environmental record for the project,
evidence that the applicant has complied with the
requirements of this subsection.''.

[[Page 1616]]
119 STAT. 1616

(c) Fares not Required.--Section 5323(c) is amended to read as
follows:
``(c) Fares not Required.--This chapter does not require that
elderly individuals and individuals with disabilities be charged a
fare.''.
(d) 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.''.

(e) 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 section 5304, 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 the recipient establishes pursuant to
section 5302(a)(1)(K) from amounts made available to the
recipient under section 5309.
``(4) Pilot program for urbanized areas.--
``(A)  NOTE: Establishment.  In general.--The
Secretary shall establish a pilot program to reimburse
not to exceed 10 eligible recipients for deposits of
bond proceeds in a debt service reserve that the
recipient establishes pursuant to section 5302(a)(1)(K)
from amounts made available to the recipient under
section 5307.
``(B) Report.--Not later than July 31, 2008, the
Secretary shall submit to the Committee on Banking,
Housing,

[[Page 1617]]
119 STAT. 1617

and Urban Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives a report on the status and effectiveness
of the pilot program established under subparagraph
(A).''.

(f) 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.''.

(g) Buying Buses Under Other Laws.--Section 5323(g) is amended by
striking ``103(e)(4) and 142(a) or (c)'' each place it appears and
inserting ``133 and 142''.
(h) Government's Share of Costs for Certain Projects.--Section
5323(i) is amended--
(1) in the subsection heading by striking ``Government'' and
inserting ``Government's'';
(2) by striking ``A grant'' and inserting the following:
``(1) Equipment for ada and clean air act compliance.--A
grant'';
(3) by inserting ``or facilities'' after ``equipment'' each
place it appears; and
(4) by adding at the end the following:
``(2) Certain state owned railroads.--The Government share
for financial assistance under this chapter to a State-owned
railroad (as defined in section 603 of the Rail Safety and
Service Improvement Act of 1982 (45 U.S.C. 1202)) shall be the
same as the Government share under section 120(b) of title 23
for Federal-aid highway funds apportioned to the State in which
the railroad operates.''.

(i) 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.  NOTE: Federal Register, publication.  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 2005''.
(3) Administrative review.--Section 5323(j) is amended by
adding at the end the following:

[[Page 1618]]
119 STAT. 1618

``(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)  NOTE: Effective date.  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)  NOTE: Deadline. 49 USC 5323 note.  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.

(j) Relationship to Other Laws.--Section 5323(l) is amended to read
as follows:
``(l)  NOTE: Applicability.  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 if the Secretary
determines that a recipient of such financial assistance has made a
false or fraudulent statement or related act in connection with a
Federal transit program.''.

(k) Preaward and Postdelivery Review of Rolling Stock Purchases.--
Section 5323(m) is amended by adding at the end the following: ``Rolling
stock procurements of 20 vehicles or fewer made for the purpose of
serving other than urbanized areas and urbanized areas with populations
of 200,000 or fewer shall be subject to the same requirements as
established for procurements

[[Page 1619]]
119 STAT. 1619

of 10 or fewer buses under the post-delivery purchaser's requirements
certification process under section 663.37(c) of title 49, Code of
Federal Regulations.''.
(l) 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''.
(m) Alternative Fueling Facilities.--Section 5323 is 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 planning, capital, and
operating expenses that are incurred in providing public
transportation; 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)  NOTE: Applicability.  Relocation and Real Property
Requirements.--The Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property
Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.) shall apply to
financial assistance for capital projects under this chapter.

``(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 Secretary of the Interior 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

[[Page 1620]]
119 STAT. 1620

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.

``(c) Railroad Corridor Preservation.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary may assist an applicant to
acquire railroad right-of-way before the completion of the
environmental reviews for any project that may use the right-of-
way if the acquisition is otherwise permitted under Federal law.
The Secretary may establish restrictions on such an acquisition
as the Secretary determines to be necessary and appropriate.
``(2) Environmental reviews.--Railroad right-of-way acquired
under this subsection may not be developed in anticipation of
the project until all required environmental reviews for the
project have been completed.''.

(b) Chapter Analysis.--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 to read as follows:

``Sec. 5325. Contract requirements

``(a) Competition.--Recipients of assistance under this chapter
shall conduct all procurement transactions in a manner that provides
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.--Paragraph (1) does not apply to
the extent a State has adopted by law, before the date

[[Page 1621]]
119 STAT. 1621

of enactment of the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005,
an equivalent State qualifications-based requirement for
contracting for architectural, engineering, and design services.
``(3) Additional requirements.--When awarding a contract
described in paragraph (1), recipients of assistance under this
chapter shall comply with the following requirements:
``(A) Performance of audits.--Any contract or
subcontract awarded under this chapter shall be
performed and audited in compliance with cost principles
contained in part 31 of title 48, Code of Federal
Regulations (commonly known as the Federal Acquisition
Regulation).
``(B) Indirect cost rates.--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
1-year applicable accounting periods by a cognizant
Federal or State government agency, if such rates are
not currently under dispute.
``(C) Application of rates.--After a firm's indirect
cost rates are accepted under subparagraph (B), 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 requesting or using the cost and rate data
described in subparagraph (C) shall notify any affected
firm before such request or use. Such data shall be
confidential and shall not be accessible or provided by
the group of agencies sharing cost data under this
subparagraph, except by written permission of the
audited firm. If prohibited by law, such cost and rate
data shall not be disclosed under any circumstances.

``(c) Efficient Procurement.--A recipient may award a procurement
contract under this chapter to other than the lowest bidder if the award
furthers an objective consistent with the purposes of this chapter,
including improved long-term operating efficiency and lower long-term
costs.
``(d) Design-Build Projects.--
``(1) Term defined.--In this subsection, the term `design-
build project'--
``(A) 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 of such system, that
meets specific performance criteria; and
``(B) may 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 for capital costs.--Federal
financial assistance under this chapter may be provided for the
capital costs of a design-build 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

[[Page 1622]]
119 STAT. 1622

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 two 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 Records.--Upon request, the Secretary and the
Comptroller General, or any of their representatives, shall have access
to and the right to examine and inspect all records, documents, and
papers, including contracts, related to a project for which a grant is
made under this chapter.
``(h) Grant Prohibition.--A grant awarded under this chapter or the
Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005 may not be used to support a
procurement that uses an exclusionary or discriminatory specification.
``(i)  NOTE: Applicability.  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.

``(j) Awards to Responsible Contractors.--
``(1) In general.--Federal financial assistance under this
chapter may be provided for contracts only if a recipient awards
such contracts to responsible contractors possessing the ability
to successfully perform under the terms and conditions of a
proposed procurement.
``(2) Criteria.--Before making an award to a contractor
under paragraph (1), a recipient shall consider--
``(A) the integrity of the contractor;
``(B) the contractor's compliance with public
policy;
``(C) the contractor's past performance, including
the performance reported in the Contractor Performance
Assessment Reports required under section 5309(l)(2);
and
``(D) the contractor's financial and technical
resources.''.

(b) Conforming Amendment.--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) in paragraph (11) by striking ``and'' at the end;
(2) in paragraph (12) by striking the period at the end 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.--Of the
amounts made available to carry out this chapter for a fiscal

[[Page 1623]]
119 STAT. 1623

year, the Secretary may use not more than the following amounts
to make contracts for the activities described in paragraph (2):
``(A) 0.5 percent of amounts made available to carry
out section 5305.
``(B) 0.75 percent of amounts made available to
carry out section 5307.
``(C) 1 percent of amounts made available to carry
out section 5309.
``(D) 0.5 percent of amounts made available to carry
out section 5310.
``(E) 0.5 percent of amounts made available to carry
out section 5311.
``(F) 0.5 percent of amounts made available to carry
out section 5320.
``(2)  NOTE: Applicability.  Activities.--Paragraph (1)
shall apply to the following:
``(A) Activities to oversee the construction of a
major project.
``(B) Activities to review and audit the safety and
security, procurement, management, and financial
compliance of a recipient or subrecipient of funds under
sections 5305, 5307, 5309, 5310, 5311, and 5320.
``(C) Activities to provide technical assistance to
correct deficiencies identified in compliance reviews
and audits carried out under this section.
``(3) Limitations on applicability.--Subsections (a), (b),
and (e) do not apply to contracts under this section for
activities described in paragraphs (2)(B) and (2)(C).
``(4) Government's share of costs.--The Government shall pay
the entire cost of carrying out a contract under this
subsection.
``(5) Availability of certain funds.--Beginning in fiscal
year 2006, funds available under paragraph (1)(C) shall be made
available to the Secretary before allocating the funds
appropriated to carry out any project under a full funding grant
agreement or project construction grant agreement.''.

SEC. 3027. PROJECT REVIEW.

Section 5328(a) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``(1) When the Secretary of
Transportation allows a new fixed guideway project to advance
into the alternatives analysis stage of project review, the
Secretary shall cooperate with the applicant in'' and inserting
the following:
``(1) Alternatives analysis.--The Secretary shall cooperate
with an applicant undertaking an alternatives analysis required
by subsections (d) and (e) of section 5309 in the''; and
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by striking ``(2) After'' and inserting the
following:
``(2) Advancement to preliminary engineering stage.--
After''; and
(B) by striking ``is consistent with section
5309(e)'' and inserting ``meets the requirements of
subsection (d) or (e) of section 5309'';
(3) in paragraph (3)--

[[Page 1624]]
119 STAT. 1624

(A) by striking ``(3) The Secretary'' and inserting
the following:
``(3) Record of decision.--The Secretary'';
(B) by striking ``of construction''; and
(C) by adding before the period at the end the
following: ``if the Secretary determines that the
project meets the requirements of subsection (d) or (e)
of section 5309''; and
(4) by striking paragraph (4) and inserting the following:
``(4) Funding agreements.--The Secretary shall enter into a
full funding grant agreement or project construction grant
agreement, as appropriate, between the Government and the
project sponsor if the Secretary determines that the project
meets the requirements of subsection (d) or (e) of section
5309.''.

SEC. 3028. INVESTIGATIONS OF SAFETY HAZARDS AND SECURITY RISKS.

(a) In General.--Section 5329 is amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 5329. Investigations of safety hazards and security risks

``(a) In General.--The Secretary may conduct investigations into
safety hazards and security risks associated with a condition in
equipment, a facility, or an operation financed under this chapter to
establish the nature and extent of the condition and how to eliminate,
mitigate, or correct it.
``(b) Submission of Corrective Plan.--If the Secretary establishes
that a safety hazard or security risk warrants further protective
measures, 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)  NOTE: 49 USC 5321 note. Deadline. Memorandum.  Public
Transportation Security.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 45 days after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall execute an annex to
the memorandum of understanding between the Secretary and the
Secretary of Homeland Security, dated September 28, 2004, to
define and clarify the respective roles and responsibilities of
the Department of Transportation and the Department of Homeland
Security relating to public transportation security.
(2) Contents.--The annex to be executed under paragraph (1)
shall--
(A) establish a process to develop security
standards for public transportation agencies;
(B) create a method of direct coordination with
public transportation agencies on security matters;
(C) address any other issues determined to be
appropriate by the Secretary and the Secretary of
Homeland Security; and
(D) include a formal and permanent mechanism to
ensure coordination and involvement by the Department of
Transportation, as appropriate, in public transportation
security.

(c)  NOTE: Deadline. 49 USC 5321 note.  Rulemaking.--Not later
than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary and
the Secretary of Homeland Security shall issue jointly final regulations
to establish the

[[Page 1625]]
119 STAT. 1625

characteristics of and requirements for public transportation security
grants, including funding priorities, eligible activities, methods for
awarding grants, and limitations on administrative expenses.

(d) Chapter Analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5329 and inserting the following:

``5329. Investigations of safety hazards and security risks.''.

SEC. 3029. 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 shall only apply to--
``(1) States that have rail fixed guideway public
transportation systems that are 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 striking ``may'' and inserting
``shall ensure uniform safety standards and enforcement or
shall''; and
(3) by striking subsection (f).

(b) Chapter Analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5330 and inserting the following:

``5330. State safety oversight.''.

SEC. 3030. 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. 3031. EMPLOYEE PROTECTIVE ARRANGEMENTS.

Section 5333(b) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``5318(d), 5323(a)(1), (b),
(d), and (e), 5328, 5337, and 5338(b)'' each place it appears
and inserting ``5316, 5318, 5323(a)(1), 5323(b), 5323(d), 5328,
5337, and 5338(b)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:

``(4) Fair and equitable arrangements to protect the interests of
employees utilized by the Secretary of Labor for assistance to purchase
like-kind equipment or facilities, and grant amendments which do not
materially revise or amend existing assistance agreements, shall be
certified without referral.

[[Page 1626]]
119 STAT. 1626

``(5) When the Secretary is called upon to issue fair and equitable
determinations involving assurances of employment when one private
transit bus service contractor replaces another through competitive
bidding, such decisions shall be based on the principles set forth in
the Department of Labor's decision of September 21, 1994, as clarified
by the supplemental ruling of November 7, 1994, with respect to grant
NV-90-X021. This paragraph shall not serve as a basis for objections
under section 215.3(d) of title 29, Code of Federal Regulations.''.

SEC. 3032. ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES.

Section 5334 is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) in paragraph (9) by striking ``and'' at the end;
(B) in paragraph (10) by striking the period at the
end 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.'';
and
(5) by striking subsection (c)(4) (as redesignated by
paragraph (3) of this subsection) and inserting the following:

``(4) The Secretary of Transportation shall comply with this section
(except subsection (i)) and sections 5318(e), 5323(a)(2), 5325(a),
5325(b), and 5325(f) when proposing or carrying out a regulation
governing an activity under this chapter, except for a routine matter or
a matter with no significant impact.''; and
(6) by adding at the end the following:

``(k)  NOTE: Deadline.  Notification of Pending Discretionary
Grants.--Not less than 3 full business days before announcement of award
by the Secretary of any discretionary grant, letter of intent, or full
funding grant agreement totaling $1,000,000 or more, the Secretary shall
notify the Committees on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs and
Appropriations of the Senate and Committees on Transportation and
Infrastructure and Appropriations of the House of Representatives.

``(l) Agency Statements.--
``(1) In general.--The Administrator of the Federal Transit
Administration shall follow applicable rulemaking procedures

[[Page 1627]]
119 STAT. 1627

under section 553 of title 5 before the Federal Transit
Administration issues a statement that imposes a binding
obligation on recipients of Federal assistance under this
chapter.
``(2) Binding obligation defined.--In this subsection, the
term `binding obligation' means a substantive policy statement,
rule, or guidance document issued by the Federal Transit
Administration that grants rights, imposes obligations, produces
significant effects on private interests, or effects a
significant change in existing policy.''.

SEC. 3033. 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) in paragraph (1), by striking ``(1)''; and
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``(2) The
Secretary may make a grant under section 5307 of this
title'' and inserting the following:

``(b) Reporting and Uniform Systems.--The Secretary may award a
grant under section 5307 or 5311''.
(b) Chapter Analysis.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5335 and inserting the following:

``5335. National transit database.''.

SEC. 3034. APPORTIONMENTS OF FORMULA GRANTS.

(a) Apportionments.--Section 5336 is amended--
(1) by striking subsections (d), (h), and (k);
(2) by redesignating subsections (e), (f), (g), (i), and (j)
as subsections (d), (e), (f), (g), and (h), respectively;
(3) by adding at the end the following:

``(i) Apportionments.--Of the amounts made available for each fiscal
year under subsections (a)(1)(C)(vi) and (b)(2)(B) of section 5338--
``(1) one percent shall be apportioned, in fiscal year 2006
and each fiscal year thereafter, to certain urbanized areas with
populations of less than 200,000 in accordance with subsection
(j); and
``(2) any amount not apportioned under paragraph (1) shall
be apportioned to urbanized areas in accordance with subsections
(a) through (c).''; and
(4) in subsection (a), by striking ``Of the amount made
available or appropriated under section 5338(a) of this title''
and inserting ``Of the amount apportioned under subsection
(i)(2)''.

(b) Small Transit Intensive Cities Formula.--Section 5336 is amended
by adding at the end the following:
``(j) Small Transit Intensive Cities Formula.--
``(1) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following
definitions apply:
``(A) Eligible area.--The term `eligible area' means
an urbanized area with a population of less than 200,000

[[Page 1628]]
119 STAT. 1628

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).
``(B) Performance category.--The term `performance
category' means each of the following:
``(i) Passenger miles traveled per vehicle
revenue mile.
``(ii) Passenger miles traveled per vehicle
revenue hour.
``(iii) Vehicle revenue miles per capita.
``(iv) Vehicle revenue hours per capita.
``(v) Passenger miles traveled per capita.
``(vi) Passengers per capita.
``(2) Apportionment.--
``(A) Apportionment formula.--The amount to be
apportioned under subsection (i)(1) shall be apportioned
among eligible areas in the ratio that--
``(i) 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
``(ii) 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.
``(B) 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 this section.''.

(c) Study on Incentives in Formula Programs.--Section 5336 is
amended by adding at the end the following:
``(c) Study on Incentives in Formula Programs.--
``(1) Study.--The Secretary shall conduct a study to assess
the feasibility and appropriateness of developing and
implementing an incentive funding system under sections 5307 and
5311 for operators of public transportation.
``(2) Report.--
``(A) In general.--Not later than 2 years after the
date of enactment of the Federal Public Transportation
Act of 2005, the Secretary shall submit a report on the
results of the study conducted under paragraph (1) to
the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of
the Senate and the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives.
``(B) Contents.--The report submitted under
subparagraph (A) shall include--
``(i) an analysis of the availability of
appropriate measures to be used as a basis for the
distribution of incentive payments;
``(ii) the optimal number and size of any
incentive programs;
``(iii) what types of systems should compete
for various incentives;
``(iv) how incentives should be distributed;
and

[[Page 1629]]
119 STAT. 1629

``(v) the likely effects of the incentive
funding system.''.

(d) Technical Amendments.--Section 5336 is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``of this title'' and
inserting ``to carry out section 5307'';
(2) 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'';
(3) in subsection (b)(1), by inserting ``and, beginning in
fiscal year 2006, 60 percent of the directional route miles
attributable to the Alaska Railroad passenger operations'' after
``recipient''; and
(4) in subsection (h), by striking ``a grant made under''
each place it appears and inserting ``a grant made with funds
apportioned under''.

SEC. 3035. APPORTIONMENTS BASED ON FIXED GUIDEWAY FACTORS.

(a) In General.--Section 5337 is amended--
(1) by striking the section designation and heading and
inserting the following:

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

and
(2) by adding at the end the following:

``(f) Adjustment.--For purposes of this section, an urbanized area
with a population of 55,997, according to the most recent decennial
census, shall be treated as an urbanized area eligible for assistance
under section 5336(b)(2)(A) to which amounts were apportioned under this
section for fiscal year 1997. For the purposes of subsection (e)(1), the
number of fixed guideway revenue vehicle miles of service and number of
fixed guideway route miles for that urbanized area as of the date of
enactment of the Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005 shall be
considered to have been used to determine apportionments for fiscal year
1997.''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5337 and inserting the following:

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

SEC. 3036. AUTHORIZATIONS.

Section 5338 is amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 5338. Authorizations

``(a) Fiscal Year 2005.--
``(1) Formula grants.--
``(A) Trust fund.--For fiscal year 2005,
$3,499,927,776 shall be available from the Mass Transit
Account of the Highway Trust Fund to carry out sections
5307, 5308, 5310, and 5311 and section 3038 of the
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (49
U.S.C. 5310 note).
``(B) General fund.--In addition to the amounts made
available under subparagraph (A), there is authorized to
be appropriated $499,989,824 for fiscal year 2005 to
carry out sections 5307, 5308, 5310, and 5311 and
section 3038

[[Page 1630]]
119 STAT. 1630

of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century
(49 U.S.C. 5310 note).
``(C) Allocation of funds.--Of the amounts made
available or appropriated under this paragraph--
``(i) $4,811,150 shall be available to the
Alaska Railroad for improvements to its passenger
operations under section 5307;
``(ii) $5,208,000 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) to
operators of intercity, fixed-route over-the-road
buses;
``(iii) $1,686,400 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) to
operators of over-the-road buses providing other
than intercity, fixed-route service;
``(iv) $94,526,689 shall be available to
provide transportation services to elderly
individuals and individuals with disabilities
under section 5310;
``(v) $250,889,588 shall be available to
provide financial assistance for other than
urbanized areas under section 5311;
``(vi) $3,593,195,773 shall be available to
provide financial assistance for urbanized areas
under section 5307; and
``(vii) $49,600,000 shall be available to
carry out the clean fuels program under section
5308.
``(2) Job access and reverse commute.--
``(A) Trust fund.--For fiscal year 2005,
$108,500,000 shall be available from the Mass Transit
Account of the Highway Trust Fund to carry out section
3037 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century (49 U.S.C. 5309 note).
``(B) General fund.--In addition to the amounts made
available under subparagraph (A), there is authorized to
be appropriated $15,500,000 for fiscal year 2005 to
carry out section 3037 of the Transportation Equity Act
of the 21st Century (49 U.S.C. 5309 note).
``(3) Capital program grants.--
``(A) Trust fund.--For fiscal year 2005,
$2,898,100,224 shall be available from the Mass Transit
Account of the Highway Trust Fund to carry out section
5309.
``(B) General fund.--In addition to the amounts made
available under subparagraph (A), there is authorized to
be appropriated $414,014,176 for fiscal year 2005 to
carry out sections 5308, 5309, and 5318 and section
3015(b) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century (112 Stat. 361).
``(C) Allocation of funds.--Of the amounts made
available or appropriated under this paragraph--
``(i) $49,600,000 shall be available to carry
out the clean fuels program under section 5308;
``(ii) $669,600,000 shall be available for
capital projects to replace, rehabilitate, and
purchase bus and

[[Page 1631]]
119 STAT. 1631

related equipment and to construct bus-related
facilities under section 5309;
``(iii) $1,204,684,800 shall be available for
fixed guideway modernization under section 5309;
``(iv) $1,437,829,600 shall be available for
capital projects for new fixed guideway systems
and extensions to existing fixed guideway systems
under section 5309;
``(v) $10,213,632 shall be available for
capital projects in Alaska and Hawaii under
section 5309;
``(vi) $2,976,000 shall be available to carry
out bus testing under section 5318; and
``(vii) $4,811,200 shall be available to carry
out the fuel cell bus and bus facilities program
under section 3015(b) of the Transportation Equity
Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 361).
``(4) Planning.--
``(A) Trust fund.--For fiscal year 2005, $63,364,000
shall be available from the Mass Transit Account of the
Highway Trust Fund to carry out sections 5303, 5304,
5305, and 5313(b), as in effect on the day before the
date of enactment of the Federal Public Transportation
Act of 2005.
``(B) General fund.--In addition to the amounts made
available under subparagraph (A), there is authorized to
be appropriated $9,052,000 for fiscal year 2005 to carry
out sections 5303, 5304, 5305, and 5313(b), as in effect
on the day before the date of enactment of the Federal
Public Transportation Act of 2005.
``(C) Allocation of funds.--Of the amounts made
available or appropriated under this paragraph--
``(i) 82.72 percent shall be allocated for
metropolitan planning under section 5305; and
``(ii) 17.28 percent shall be allocated for
State planning under section 5305.
``(5) Research.--
``(A) Trust fund.--For fiscal year 2005, $47,740,000
shall be available from the Mass Transit Account of the
Highway Trust Fund to carry out sections 5311(b)(2),
5312, 5313(a), 5314, 5315, and 5322.
``(B) General fund.--In addition to the amounts made
available under subparagraph (A), there is authorized to
be appropriated $6,820,000 for fiscal year 2005 to carry
out sections 5311(b)(2), 5312, 5313(a), 5314, 5315, and
5322.
``(C) Allocation of funds.--Of the funds made
available or appropriated under this paragraph--
``(i) not less than $3,968,000 shall be
available to carry out programs under the National
Transit Institute under section 5315, of which not
more than $992,000 shall be available to carry out
section 5315(a)(16);
``(ii) not less than $5,208,000 shall be
available to provide rural transportation
assistance under section 5311(b)(2);
``(iii) not less than $8,184,000 shall be
available to carry out transit cooperative
research programs under section 5313(a);

[[Page 1632]]
119 STAT. 1632

``(iv) not less than $2,976,000 shall be
available to carry out Project Action under
section 5312; and
``(v) the remainder shall be available to
carry out national research and technology
programs under sections 5312, 5314, and 5322.
``(6) University transportation research.--
``(A) Trust fund.--For fiscal year 2005, $5,208,000
shall be available from the Mass Transit Account of the
Highway Trust Fund to carry out section 5505.
``(B) General fund.--In addition to amounts made
available under subparagraph (A), there is authorized to
be appropriated $744,000 for fiscal year 2005 to carry
out section 5505.
``(C) Allocation of funds.--Of the amounts made
available or appropriated under this paragraph--
``(i) $1,984,000 shall be available for grants
under section 5505(d) to the center identified in
section 5505(j)(4)(A), as in effect on the day
before the date of enactment of the Federal Public
Transportation Act of 2005; and
``(ii) $1,984,000 shall be available for
grants under section 5505(d) to the center
identified in section 5505(j)(4)(F), as in effect
on the day before the date of enactment of the
Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005.
``(D) Special rule.--Nothing in this paragraph shall
be construed to limit the transportation research
conducted by the centers receiving financial assistance
under this section.
``(7) Administration.--
``(A) Trust fund.--For fiscal year 2005, $67,704,000
shall be available from the Mass Transit Account of the
Highway Trust Fund to carry out section 5334.
``(B) General fund.--In addition to amounts made
available under subparagraph (A), there is authorized to
be appropriated $9,672,000 for fiscal year 2005 to carry
out section 5334.
``(8) Availability of amounts.--Amounts made available or
appropriated under paragraphs (1) through (6) shall remain
available until expended.

``(b) Formula and Bus Grants.--
``(1) In general.--There shall be available from the Mass
Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund to carry out sections
5305, 5307, 5308, 5309, 5310, 5311, 5316, 5317, 5320, 5335,
5339, and 5340 and section 3038 of the Federal Transit Act of
1998 (112 Stat. 387 et seq.)--
``(A) $6,979,931,000 for fiscal year 2006;
``(B) $7,262,775,000 for fiscal year 2007;
``(C) $7,872,893,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
``(D) $8,360,565,000 for fiscal year 2009.
``(2) Allocation of funds.--Of the amounts made available
under paragraph (1)--
``(A) $95,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $99,000,000
for fiscal year 2007, $107,000,000 for fiscal year 2008,
and $113,500,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be available
to carry out section 5305;

[[Page 1633]]
119 STAT. 1633

``(B) $3,466,681,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$3,606,175,000 for fiscal year 2007, $3,910,843,000 for
fiscal year 2008, and $4,160,365,000 for fiscal year
2009 shall be allocated in accordance with section 5336
to provide financial assistance for urbanized areas
under section 5307;
``(C) $43,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $45,000,000
for fiscal year 2007, $49,000,000 for fiscal year 2008,
and $51,500,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be available
to carry out section 5308;
``(D) $1,391,000,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$1,448,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $1,570,000,000 for
fiscal year 2008, and $1,666,500,000 for fiscal year
2009 shall be allocated in accordance with section 5337
to provide financial assistance under section
5309(m)(2)(B);
``(E) $822,250,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$855,500,000 for fiscal year 2007, $927,750,000 for
fiscal year 2008, and $984,000,000 for fiscal year 2009
shall be available to carry out section 5309(m)(2)(C);
``(F) $112,000,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$117,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $127,000,000 for
fiscal year 2008, and $133,500,000 for fiscal year 2009
shall be available to provide financial assistance for
services for elderly persons and persons with
disabilities under section 5310;
``(G) $388,000,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$404,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $438,000,000 for
fiscal year 2008, and $465,000,000 for fiscal year 2009
shall be available to provide financial assistance for
other than urbanized areas under section 5311;
``(H) $138,000,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$144,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $156,000,000 for
fiscal year 2008, and $164,500,000 for fiscal year 2009
shall be available to carry out section 5316;
``(I) $78,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $81,000,000
for fiscal year 2007, $87,500,000 for fiscal year 2008,
and $92,500,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be available
to carry out section 5317;
``(J) $22,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $23,000,000
for fiscal year 2007, $25,000,000 for fiscal year 2008,
and $26,900,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be available
to carry out section 5320;
``(K) $3,500,000 in fiscal year 2006; $3,500,000 in
fiscal year 2007; $3,500,000 in fiscal year 2008; and
$3,500,000 in fiscal year 2009 shall be available to
carry out section 5335;
``(L) $25,000,000 in fiscal year 2006; $25,000,000
in fiscal year 2007; $25,000,000 in fiscal year 2008;
and $25,000,000 in fiscal year 2009 shall be available
to carry out section 5339;
``(M) $388,000,000 for fiscal year 2006,
$404,000,000 for fiscal year 2007, $438,000,000 for
fiscal year 2008, and $465,000,000 for fiscal year 2009
shall be allocated in accordance with section 5340 to
provide financial assistance for urbanized areas under
section 5307 and other than urbanized areas under
section 5311; and
``(N) $7,500,000 for fiscal year 2006, $7,600,000
for fiscal year 2007, $8,300,000 for fiscal year 2008,
and $8,800,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be available
to carry

[[Page 1634]]
119 STAT. 1634

out section 3038 of the Transportation Equity Act for
the 21st Century (49 U.S.C. 5310 note).

``(c) Capital Investment Grants.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to carry out section 5309(m)(2)(A)--
``(1) $1,503,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
``(2) $1,566,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
``(3) $1,700,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
``(4) $1,809,250,000 for fiscal year 2009.

``(d) Research and University Research Centers.--
``(1) In general.--There is authorized to be appropriated to
carry out transit cooperative research programs under section
5313, the National Transit Institute under section 5315,
university research centers under section 5506, and national
research programs under sections 5312, 5313, 5314, and 5322
$58,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $61,000,000 for fiscal year
2007, $65,500,000 for fiscal year 2008, and $69,750,000 for
fiscal year 2009, of which--
``(A) $9,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, $9,300,000
for fiscal year 2007, $9,600,000 for fiscal year 2008,
and $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2009 shall be allocated
to carry out transit cooperative research programs under
section 5313;
``(B) $4,300,000 shall be allocated for each fiscal
year to carry out programs under the National Transit
Institute under section 5315, of which not more than
$1,000,000 for each fiscal year shall be used to carry
out section 5315(a)(16);
``(C) $7,000,000 shall be allocated for each fiscal
year to carry out the university centers program under
section 5506;
``(D) $3,000,000 shall be allocated for each fiscal
year to carry out Project Action under section
5314(a)(2);
``(E) $1,000,000 shall be allocated for each fiscal
year to carry out the National Technical Assistance
Center under section 5314(c); and
``(F) any funds made available under this paragraph
that are not allocated under subparagraphs (A) through
(E) shall be allocated to carry out national research
programs under sections 5312, 5313, 5314, and 5322.
``(2) University centers program.--
``(A) Allocation.--Of the amounts allocated under
paragraph (1)(C), the following amounts shall be
available to provide transportation research, training,
and curriculum development:
``(i) $2,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 for the University of Tennessee--
Knoxville National Transportation Research Center.
``(ii) $1,500,000 for each of fiscal years
2006 through 2009 for Texas A&M University--Texas
Transportation Institute.
``(iii) $1,000,000 for each of fiscal years
2006 through 2009 for Morgan State University.
``(iv) $400,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
and 2007 for the Small Urban and Rural Transit
Center at North Dakota State University.
``(v) $550,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
and 2007 and $650,000 for each of fiscal years
2008 and

[[Page 1635]]
119 STAT. 1635

2009 for the University Transportation Center at
the University of Alabama.
``(vi) $450,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
and 2007 and $550,000 for each of fiscal years
2008 and 2009 for the Injury Control Research
Center at the University of Alabama Birmingham.
``(vii) $550,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
and 2007 and $650,000 for each of fiscal years
2008 and 2009 for the Jackson State University
Intermodal Transportation Institute at the Jackson
State University.
``(viii) $550,000 for each of fiscal years
2006 and 2007 and $650,000 for each of fiscal
years 2008 and 2009 for the University
Transportation Center at the University of Denver/
Mississippi State University.
``(B) Requirements.--The universities specified in
subparagraph (A) shall be considered to be university
transportation centers under section 5506 and shall be
subject to the requirements of subsections (b), (h),
(i), (k), (l), and (m) of such section.

``(e) Administration.--There is authorized to be appropriated to
carry out section 5334--
``(1) $82,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
``(2) $85,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
``(3) $92,500,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
``(4) $98,500,000 for fiscal year 2009.

``(f) Grants as Contractual Obligations.--
``(1) Grants financed from highway trust fund.--A grant or
contract that is approved by the Secretary and financed with
amounts made available from the Mass Transit Account of the
Highway Trust Fund pursuant to this section is a contractual
obligation of the Government to pay the Federal share of the
cost of the project.
``(2) Grants financed from general fund.--A grant or
contract that is approved by the Secretary and financed with
amounts appropriated in advance from the General Fund of the
Treasury pursuant to this section is a contractual obligation of
the Government to pay the Federal share of the cost of the
project only to the extent that amounts are appropriated for
such purpose by an Act of Congress.

``(g) Availability of Amounts.--Amounts made available by or
appropriated under subsections (b), (c), and (d) shall remain available
until expended.''.

SEC. 3037. ALTERNATIVES ANALYSIS PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Section 5339 is amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 5339. Alternatives analysis program

``(a)  NOTE: Guidelines.  Grants and Agreements.--Under criteria
established by the Secretary, the Secretary may award grants to States,
authorities of the States, metropolitan planning organizations, and
local governmental authorities to develop alternatives analyses as
defined by section 5309(a)(1).

``(b) 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.

[[Page 1636]]
119 STAT. 1636

``(c) Availability of Funds.--An amount made available or
appropriated under section 5338(b)(2)(L) for this section 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 may be used by the
Secretary for any purpose under this section.''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
striking the item relating to section 5339 and inserting the following:

``5339. Alternatives analysis program.''.

(c) Projects.--For each of fiscal years 2006 and 2007, of the funds
authorized under this section, funds shall be made available to the
following projects in not less than the amounts specified:
(1) Minnesota Red Rock Corridor/Rush Line/Central Corridors
studies, $2,000,000.
(2) Trans-Hudson Midtown corridor study, $1,500,000.
(3) Lane County, Oregon Bus Rapid Transit Phase II corridor
study, $500,000.
(4) Portland Streetcar, Oregon corridor study, $1,500,000.
(5) San Gabriel Valley-Gold Line Foothill Extension corridor
study, $1,250,000.
(6) Monmouth-Ocean-Middlesex Counties, New Jersey corridor
study, $1,250,000.
(7) Metra BNSF Naperville to Aurora corridor study,
$1,250,000.
(8) Madison and Dane Counties, Wisconsin Transport 2020
corridor study, $750,000.
(9) Sound Transit I-90 Long-Range Plan corridor studies,
$750,000.
(10) Middle Rio Grande Coalition of governments, Albuquerque
to Santa Fe corridor study, $500,000.
(11) Piedmont Authority Regional Transportation East-West
corridor study, $1,000,000.
(12) Baltimore Red Line/Green Line Transit Project study,
$1,500,000.
(13) Metra-West Line Extension, Elgin to Rockford study,
$1,000,000.
(14) Madison-Ridgeland Transportation Commission,
Mississippi, Madison Light Rail Transportation Corridor study,
$350,000.
(15) South Carolina Department of Transportation Light Rail
study, $300,000.
(16) Provo Orem BRT study, $500,000.
(17) Sevierville County Transportation Board, Sevier County
BRT study, $500,000.
(18) New Jersey Transit Access to the Region's Core study,
$2,500,000.

SEC. 3038. APPORTIONMENTS BASED ON GROWING STATES FORMULA FACTORS.

(a) In General.--Chapter 53 is amended by adding at the end the
following:

``Sec. 5340. Apportionments based on growing States and high density
States formula factors

``(a) Definition.--In this section, the term `State' shall mean each
of the 50 States of the United States.

[[Page 1637]]
119 STAT. 1637

``(b) Allocation.--Of the amounts made available for each fiscal
year under section 5338(b)(2)(M), the Secretary shall apportion--
``(1) 50 percent to States and urbanized areas in accordance
with subsection (c); and
``(2) 50 percent to States and urbanized areas in accordance
with subsection (d).

``(c) Growing State Apportionments.--
``(1) Apportionment among states.--The amounts apportioned
under subsection (b)(1) shall provide each State with an amount
equal to the total amount apportioned multiplied by a ratio
equal to the population of that State forecast for the year that
is 15 years after the most recent decennial census, divided by
the total population of all States forecast for the year that is
15 years after the most recent decennial census. Such forecast
shall be based on the population trend for each State between
the most recent decennial census and the most recent estimate of
population made by the Secretary of Commerce.
``(2) Apportionments between urbanized areas and other than
urbanized areas in each state.--
``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall apportion
amounts to each State under paragraph (1) so that
urbanized areas in that State receive an amount equal to
the amount apportioned to that State multiplied by a
ratio equal to the sum of the forecast population of all
urbanized areas in that State divided by the total
forecast population of that State. In making the
apportionment under this subparagraph, the Secretary
shall utilize any available forecasts made by the State.
If no forecasts are available, the Secretary shall
utilize data on urbanized areas and total population
from the most recent decennial census.
``(B) Remaining amounts.--Amounts remaining for each
State after apportionment under subparagraph (A) shall
be apportioned to that State and added to the amount
made available for grants under section 5311.
``(3) Apportionments among urbanized areas in each state.--
The Secretary shall apportion amounts made available to
urbanized areas in each State under paragraph (2)(A) so that
each urbanized area receives an amount equal to the amount
apportioned under paragraph (2)(A) multiplied by a ratio equal
to the population of each urbanized area divided by the sum of
populations of all urbanized areas in the State. Amounts
apportioned to each urbanized area shall be added to amounts
apportioned to that urbanized area under section 5336, and made
available for grants under section 5307.

``(d) High Density State Apportionments.--Amounts to be apportioned
under subsection (b)(2) shall be apportioned as follows:
``(1) Eligible states.--The Secretary shall designate as
eligible for an apportionment under this subsection all States
with a population density in excess of 370 persons per square
mile.
``(2) State urbanized land factor.--For each State
qualifying for an apportionment under paragraph (1), the
Secretary shall calculate an amount equal to--
``(A) the total land area of the State (in square
miles); multiplied by

[[Page 1638]]
119 STAT. 1638

``(B) 370; multiplied by
``(C)(i) the population of the State in urbanized
areas; divided by
``(ii) the total population of the State.
``(3) State apportionment factor.--For each State qualifying
for an apportionment under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall
calculate an amount equal to the difference between the total
population of the State less the amount calculated in paragraph
(2).
``(4) State apportionment.--Each State qualifying for an
apportionment under paragraph (1) shall receive an amount equal
to the amount to be apportioned under this subsection multiplied
by the amount calculated for the State under paragraph (3)
divided by the sum of the amounts calculated under paragraph (3)
for all States qualifying for an apportionment under paragraph
(1).
``(5) Apportionments among urbanized areas in each state.--
The Secretary shall apportion amounts made available to each
State under paragraph (4) so that each urbanized area receives
an amount equal to the amount apportioned under paragraph (4)
multiplied by a ratio equal to the population of each urbanized
area divided by the sum of populations of all urbanized areas in
the State. Amounts apportioned to each urbanized area shall be
added to amounts apportioned to that urbanized area under
section 5336, and made available for grants under section
5307.''.

(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 53 is amended by
adding at the end the following:

``5340. Apportionments based on growing States and high density States
formula factors.''.

SEC. 3039. 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 and shall be determined in accordance with section 5323(i) of
title 49, United States Code.''; 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,

[[Page 1639]]
119 STAT. 1639

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. 3040. 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) $7,646,336,000 for fiscal year 2005, of which not more
than $6,690,544,000 shall be from the Mass Transit Account;
(2) $8,622,931,000 for fiscal year 2006, of which not more
than $6,979,931,000 shall be from the Mass Transit Account;
(3) $8,974,775,000 for fiscal year 2007, of which not more
than $7,262,775,000 shall be from the Mass Transit Account;
(4) $9,730,893,000 for fiscal year 2008, of which not more
than $7,871,895,000 shall be from the Mass Transit Account; and
(5) $10,338,065,000 for fiscal year 2009, of which not more
than $8,360,565,000 shall be from the Mass Transit Account.

SEC. 3041. ADJUSTMENTS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2005.

(a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
Secretary shall ensure that the total apportionments and allocations
made for fiscal year 2005 to each grant recipient under the Federal
Transit Administration programs shall not exceed the amount made
available under section 5338 of title 49, United States Code, as amended
by this title, for fiscal year 2005 plus prior year balances.
(b) Fixed Guideway Modernization Adjustment.--In making the
apportionments described in subsection (a), the Secretary shall adjust
the amount apportioned for fiscal year 2005 to each urbanized area for
fixed guideway modernization to reflect the apportionment method set
forth in section 5337(a) of title 49, United States Code.
(c) Reconciliation.--Funds authorized by or made available under
section 5338, as amended by this title, for fiscal year 2005--
(1) shall not be subject to the across-the-board rescissions
in section 122 of division J of Public Law 108-477;
(2) shall be transferred or made available for the purposes
as indicated in division H of Public Law 108-477, as amended by
Public Law 109-13; and
(3) shall be administered consistent with the applicable
formula authorized under Public Law 105-178, as amended.

SEC. 3042. TERRORIST ATTACKS AND OTHER ACTS OF VIOLENCE AGAINST PUBLIC
TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS.

(a) In General.--Section 1993 of title 18, United States Code, is
amended--

[[Page 1640]]
119 STAT. 1640

(1) in the section heading by striking ``mass'' and
inserting ``public'';
(2) by striking ``mass'' each place the term appears and
inserting ``public'';
(3) in subsection (a)(5) by inserting ``controlling,'' after
``operating,''; and
(4) in subsection (c)(5) by striking ``5302(a)(7) of title
49, United States Code,'' and inserting ``5302(a) of title
49,''.

(b) Chapter Analysis.--The analysis for chapter 97 of title 18,
United States Code, is amended by striking the item relating to section
1993 and inserting the following:

``1993. Terrorist attacks and other acts of violence against public
transportation systems.''.

SEC. 3043. 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) Atlanta--North Springs Extension $263,287 for fiscal
year 2005.
(2) Baltimore--Central LRT Double Tracking $28,777,920 for
fiscal year 2005 and $12,655,664 for fiscal year 2006.
(3) Charlotte--South Corridor LRT $29,760,000 for fiscal
year 2005, $55,000,000 for fiscal year 2006, and $69,405,565 for
fiscal year 2007.
(4) Chicago--Chicago Transit Authority Douglas Branch
Reconstruction $84,320,000 for fiscal year 2005 and $45,825,190
for fiscal year 2006.
(5) Chicago--Chicago Transit Authority Ravenswood Expansion
Project $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.
(6) Cleveland--Euclid Corridor Transportation Project
$24,800,000 for fiscal year 2005 and $24,774,513 for fiscal year
2006.
(7) Denver Southeast Corridor LRT $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.
(8) Fort Lauderdale--Tri-Rail Commuter Rail Upgrade
$11,210,695 for fiscal year 2005.
(9) 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.
(10) Los Angeles--North Hollywood MOS-3 $663,339 in fiscal
year 2005.
(11) Metra North Central Corridor Commuter Rail $24,084,000
for fiscal year 2005 and $16,529,452 for fiscal year 2006.
(12) Metra South West Corridor Commuter Rail $15,500,000 for
fiscal year 2005 and $11,781,395 for fiscal year 2006.
(13) Metra Union Pacific West Line Extension $12,000,000 for
fiscal year 2005 and $14,285,749 for fiscal year 2006.

[[Page 1641]]
119 STAT. 1641

(14) Minneapolis--Hiawatha Corridor LRT $33,111,257 for
fiscal year 2005.
(15) New Jersey Urban Core--Hudson-Bergen LRT $313,896.
(16) New Jersey Urban Core--Hudson-Bergen LRT MOS-2
$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.
(17) New Jersey Urban Core--Newark-Elizabeth Rail Link MOS-1
$1,342,076 for fiscal year 2005.
(18) New Orleans MOS-1 Canal Street $16,455,206 for fiscal
year 2005.
(19) Phoenix--Central Phoenix/East Valley LRT $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.
(20) Pittsburgh--North Shore LRT Connector $54,560,000 in
fiscal year 2005, $55,000,000 in fiscal year 2006, $55,000,000
in fiscal year 2007, and $14,421,944 in fiscal year 2008.
(21) Pittsburgh--Stage II LRT Reconstruction $1,120,854 for
fiscal year 2005.
(22) Portland--Interstate MAX LRT Extension $23,292,160
fiscal year 2005 and $18,292,550 for fiscal year 2006.
(23) St. Louis--Metrolink Extension St. Clair County, IL
$53,383 for fiscal year 2005.
(24) Salt Lake City--CBD to University LRT $1,127,405 for
fiscal year 2005.
(25) Salt Lake City--Medical Center $8,682,141 for fiscal
year 2005.
(26) San Diego--Mission Valley East LRT Extension
$80,986,880 for fiscal year 2005 and $8,353,424 for fiscal year
2006.
(27) San Diego--Oceanside Escondido Rail Corridor
$54,560,000 fiscal year 2005 and $12,651,061 for fiscal year
2006.
(28) San Francisco--BART Extension to San Francisco Airport
$99,200,000 fiscal year 2005 and $82,655,680 for fiscal year
2006.
(29) San Juan--Tren Urbano $44,263,040 fiscal year 2005 and
$10,555,900 for fiscal year 2006.
(30) Seattle--Central Link Initial Segment LRT $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.
(31) Washington DC/MD--Largo Metrorail Extension $75,432,887
for fiscal year 2005.

(b) Final Design and Construction.--The following projects are
authorized for final design and construction for fiscal years 2005
through 2009 under paragraphs (1)(A) and (2)(A) of section 5309(m) of
title 49, United States Code:
(1) Baltimore--MARC Commuter Rail Improvements.
(2) Boston--Silver Line BRT Phase III.
(3) Central Florida Commuter Rail System.
(4) Charlotte--South Corridor LRT.
(5) Dallas Area Rapid Transit--Northwest-Southeast LRT
Extension.

[[Page 1642]]
119 STAT. 1642

(6) Delaware--Wilmington-Newark Commuter Rail Improvements.
(7) Denver--West Corridor LRT.
(8) El Paso--Rapid Transit (SMART) Starter Line.
(9) Harrisburg--Corridor One Commuter Rail (MOS-1).
(10) Houston Advanced Transit Program Light Rail.
(11) Kansas City, Missouri--Southtown BRT.
(12) Las Vegas--Resort Corridor Downtown Extension Project.
(13) Los Angeles MTA--Exposition LRT.
(14) Miami-Dade Transit--North Corridor.
(15) Minneapolis--North Star Corridor.
(16) Nashua--Commuter Rail.
(17) Nashville, Tennessee Commuter Rail.
(18) New Britain-Hartford Busway Project.
(19) New Orleans--Desire Corridor Streetcar.
(20) New York--Long Island Railroad East Side Access
Project.
(21) New York--Second Avenue Subway.
(22) Norfolk Light Rail.
(23) Northern Virginia--Dulles Corridor Extension to Wiehle
Avenue (Phase 1).
(24) Orange County, California--Rapid Transit Project.
(25) Philadelphia--Schuylkill Valley MetroRail.
(26) Pittsburgh--North Shore Connector.
(27) Portland, Oregon--South Corridor I-205/Portland Mall
LRT.
(28) Providence--South County Commuter Rail.
(29) Sacramento--South Corridor LRT Extension (Phase 2),
Meadowview to Consumnes River College.
(30) Salt Lake City--Weber County to Salt Lake City Commuter
Rail.
(31) San Diego--Mid-Coast Extension.
(32) San Francisco Muni--Third Street LRT-Phase I/II.
(33) San Gabriel Valley--Gold Line Foothill Extension Phase
I/Phase II, Los Angeles to Montclair.
(34) Santa Clara Valley Transit Authority--Silicon Valley
Rapid Transit Corridor.
(35) Tampa Bay--Regional Rail.
(36) Triangle Transit Authority, North Carolina--Regional
Rail Project.
(37) Washington County, Oregon--Wilsonville to Beaverton
Commuter Rail.
(38) Wasilla-Girdwood, Alaska--Commuter Rail.

(c) Preliminary Engineering.--The following projects are authorized
for preliminary engineering for fiscal years 2005 through 2009 under
paragraphs (1)(A) and (2)(A) of section 5309(m) of title 49, United
States Code:
(1) Alameda, California--Fixed Guideway Corridor Project.
(2) Alameda, California--Transit Improvements and Multimodal
Center.
(3) Albuquerque--High Capacity Corridor.
(4) Ann Arbor/Downtown Detroit--Transit Improvement Project.
(5) Atlanta--East Line 1-20 Corridor Project.
(6) Atlanta--MARTA Memorial Drive Bus Rapid Transit.

[[Page 1643]]
119 STAT. 1643

(7) Atlanta--GRTA I-75 Corridor, Downtown Atlanta--Cherokee
County.
(8) Atlanta--Interstate 285 Transit Corridor.
(9) Atlanta--Georgia 400 North Line Corridor Project.
(10) Atlanta--Belt Line C-Loop.
(11) Atlanta--I-20 East Line I-20 Corridor Project.
(12) Atlanta--West Line I-20 Corridor Project.
(13) Austin--San Antonio I-35 Commuter Rail.
(14) Austin--Rapid Bus Project.
(15) Austin--Urban Commuter Rail.
(16) Baltimore Red Line/Green Line Transit Project.
(17) Baton Rouge--Bus Rapid Transit.
(18) Bayonne, New Jersey--Hudson Bergen LRT Extension to NY
Harbor.
(19) Bernalillo-Santa Fe--New Mexico Commuter Rail.
(20) Birmingham, Alabama--Transit Corridor.
(21) Boise--Downtown Circulator.
(22) Boise, Idaho--Valley Regional Transit Rail Corridor
Preservation.
(23) Boston--Assembly Square Orange Line Station.
(24) Boston--Lechmere Transit Improvement to Somerville and
Medford.
(25) Boston--North Shore Corridor and Blue Line Extension.
(26) Boston--North/South Rail Link.
(27) Boston--Urban Ring BRT.
(28) Bridgeport, Connecticut--Bridgeport Intermodal
Facility.
(29) Broward County, Florida--Bus Rapid Transit.
(30) Camden, New Jersey--North Ferry Terminal.
(31) Carrollton, Texas--Regional Intermodal Passenger Rail
Facility Project.
(32) Cedar Rapids, Iowa--River Rail Project.
(33) Central Phoenix--East Valley Corridor LRT Extensions.
(34) Charlotte--Charlotte Multimodal Station.
(35) Charlotte--North Corridor Project.
(36) Charlotte--Northeast Corridor Project.
(37) Charlotte--South Corridor LRT Extension to Rock Hill,
South Carolina.
(38) Charlotte--Southeast Corridor Project.
(39) Charlotte--West Corridor Project.
(40) Charlotte--Center City Streetcar Project.
(41) Chicago--Cermack Road BRT.
(42) Chicago CTA--Red Line Extension.
(43) Chicago CTA--Chicago Transit Hub (Circle Line-Ogden
Streetcar).
(44) Chicago CTA--Orange Line Extension (Midway Airport to
Ford City).
(45) Chicago CTA--Yellow Line Extension (Dempster-Old
Orchard).
(46) Chicago--Ogden Avenue Corridor.
(47) Chicago--Pace Golf Road Bus Rapid Transit.
(48) Chula Vista, California--Bus Rapid Transit.
(49) Clark County, Washington--MAX Extension.
(50) Cleveland-Akron-Canton (Northeast Ohio) Commuter Rail.

[[Page 1644]]
119 STAT. 1644

(51) Columbia, South Carolina--Light Rail.
(52) Columbus--North Corridor LRT Project.
(53) Contra-Costa--BART Extension.
(54) Corpus Christi--Downtown Rail Trolley.
(55) Dallas Area Rapid Transit--Dallas Central Business
District.
(56) Dallas Area Rapid Transit--Rowlett LRT Extension.
(57) Dallas Area Rapid Transit--Beltline to DFW Airport.
(58) Dayton--Aviation Heritage Corridor Streetcar Project.
(59) Dayton--Aviation Heritage Corridor Streetcar Project
Phase I.
(60) Denton County Transportation Authority, Texas--Fixed
Guideway Project.
(61) Denver--Gold Line Extension to Arvada.
(62) Denver--RR Right-of-Way Acquisition.
(63) Denver--United States Route 36 Transit Corridor.
(64) Denver--North Metro Corridor to Thornton.
(65) Denver--East Corridor to DIA Airport.
(66) Denver--I-225 Transit Corridor.
(67) Denver--Southeast Corridor Extension to Lone-Tree/
Ridgegate.
(68) Denver--Southwest Corridor Extension to C470/Lucent
Boulevard.
(69) Detroit--Center City Loop.
(70) Detroit--Woodward Corridor.
(71) District of Columbia--Light Rail Starter Line.
(72) Erie, Pennsylvania--Ferry Acquisition.
(73) Fitchburg, Massachusetts--Commuter Rail Extensions and
Improvements.
(74) Florence-Myrtle Beach, South Carolina--Transit
Corridor.
(75) Fort Lauderdale--Downtown Rail Link.
(76) Fort Lauderdale--Transit Project from NW 215th and 79th
Streets.
(77) Fort Worth--Cottonbelt Commuter Rail to DFW.
(78) Fort Worth--Trinity Railway Express Commuter Rail
Extensions.
(79) Galveston--Rail Trolley Extension.
(80) Glendale, California--Downtown Streetcar.
(81) Grand Rapids--Fixed Guideway Corridor Project.
(82) Guam--Tumon Bay-Airport Light Rail.
(83) Harrisburg, Pennsylvania--Corridor One MOS-2 (East
Mechanicsburg to Carlisle).
(84) Harrison County, Mississippi--Canal Road Intermodal
Connector.
(85) Henderson-Las Vegas-North Las Vegas--Regional Fixed
Guideway Project.
(86) Honolulu--Rapid Transit Project.
(87) Houston--Commuter Rail Service in Harris & Fort Bend
Counties.
(88) Houston--Advanced Transportation Technology System.
(89) Indianapolis--System of Metropolitan Area Rapid
Transit.
(90) Jacksonville--East-Southwest BRT.
(91) Jacksonville--North-Southeast BRT.

[[Page 1645]]
119 STAT. 1645

(92) Kansas City, Missouri-Lawrence, Kansas--Commuter Rail.
(93) Kenosha-Racine-Milwaukee Metra Commuter Rail Extension
(Wisconsin).
(94) Kenosha, Wisconsin Streetcar Expansion Project.
(95) King County, Washington--I-405 Corridor Bus Rapid
Transit.
(96) Lake Tahoe--Passenger Ferry Service.
(97) Lakeville, Minnesota--Cedar Avenue Corridor Bus Rapid
Transit.
(98) Lane County, Oregon--Bus Rapid Transit, Phase 2.
(99) Las Vegas--Boulder Highway MAX Bus Rapid Transit.
(100) Little Rock--River Rail Streetcar Extensions.
(101) Little Rock--West Little Rock Commuter Rail.
(102) Livermore, California--BART Rail Extension to
Livermore.
(103) Long Island Railroad--Nassau Hub.
(104) Lorain-Cleveland Commuter Rail.
(105) LOSSAN Del Mar-San Diego--Rail Corridor Improvements.
(106) Lovejoy to Griffin, Georgia Commuter Rail.
(107) Madison, Wisconsin--Madison Streetcar.
(108) Madison, Wisconsin--Light Rail Transportation.
(109) Madison and Dane Counties, Wisconsin--Transport 2020
Commuter Rail.
(110) Maryland--I-270 Corridor Cities Transitway.
(111) Maryland--Route 5 Corridor to Waldorf.
(112) Maryland--Silver Spring Capacity Improvements.
(113) Massachusetts--Commuter Rail Extensions to Worcester
and New Bedford.
(114) Memphis--Downtown Airport Corridor.
(115) Memphis--Intermodal Terminal.
(116) Memphis Regional Rail Plan.
(117) Metra BNSF Naperville to Aurora Corridor Extension and
Improvements.
(118) Metra South Suburban Airport Commuter Rail Extension.
(119) Metra SouthEast Service Line Commuter Rail.
(120) Metra STAR Line Inter-Suburban Commuter Rail.
(121) Metra UP Northwest Line Core Capacity Upgrades.
(122) Metra UP West Line Core Capacity Upgrades.
(123) Metra-West Line Extension, Elgin to Rockford.
(124) Miami-Dade Transit--Douglas Road Extension.
(125) Miami-Dade Transit--East-West Corridor.
(126) Miami-Dade Transit--Kendall Corridor.
(127) Miami-Dade Transit--Northeast Corridor.
(128) Miami-Dade Transit--South Dade Corridor.
(129) Miami-Dade Transit--Miami Intermodal Center to
Earlington Heights.
(130) Miami--Downtown Streetcar Project.
(131) Middletown-South Fallsburg, New York, Passenger Rail.
(132) Milwaukee--Downtown Dedicated Guideway Transit
Connector.
(133) Minneapolis--Northwest Corridor Busway.
(134) Minneapolis-St. Paul--Central Corridor Transit
Project.

[[Page 1646]]
119 STAT. 1646

(135) Minneapolis-St. Paul-Hinckley, Minnesota--Rush Line
Corridor.
(136) Missouri/Kansas--Interstate 35 Transit Corridor.
(137) Monterey County, California--Commuter Rail.
(138) Montgomery and Prince George's Counties, Maryland--Bi-
County Transitway (Purple Line).
(139) Nashua-Manchester--Commuter Rail Extension.
(140) Nashville--Area Transit Corridors.
(141) Nashville--Southeast Rail Corridor.
(142) Nashville Tennessee Commuter Rail.
(143) Nassau and Queens Counties, New York--LIRR Main Line
Third Track Project.
(144) New Bedford-Fall River, Massachusetts--Commuter Rail
Extension.
(145) New Haven, Connecticut-Hartford, Connecticut-
Springfield, Massachusetts Commuter Line.
(146) New Jersey Trans-Hudson Midtown Corridor.
(147) New Jersey Transit--Northeast Corridor Trans-Hudson
Commuter Rail Improvements.
(148) New Jersey Transit--Morris/Essex/Boonton Trans-Hudson
Commuter Rail Improvements.
(149) New Jersey Transit--New York Susquehanna and Western
RR Commuter Extension.
(150) New Jersey Transit--Phillipsburg Extension.
(151) New Jersey Transit--West Trenton Line Commuter Line
Service Extension.
(152) New Jersey-Pennsylvania Lackawanna Cutoff Rail
Restoration.
(153) New Jersey Urban Core.
(154) New Orleans--Airport-CBD Commuter Rail.
(155) New Orleans--Riverfront Streetcar Downriver Extension.
(156) New Orleans--Riverfront Streetcar Upriver Extension.
(157) New York--Governors Island Transportation Access.
(158) New York--Long Island Sound (Long Island) Ferry
Service.
(159) New York--Long Island Sound (Westchester) Ferry
Service.
(160) New York--NYC Bus Rapid Transit.
(161) New York--NYC Highline.
(162) New York--Penn Station Access Project.
(163) New York--Rockaway-Brooklyn Army Terminal-Manhattan
Ferry Service.
(164) New York--Staten Island to Manhattan High-Speed Ferry
Service Extension.
(165) New York--Stewart Airport Rail Access.
(166) New York--Tappan Zee I-287 Corridor.
(167) New York--West Harlem Waterfront Ferry Improvements.
(168) Newburg, New York--LRT System.
(169) Northern Indiana--Commuter District Line.
(170) Northern Indiana--West Lake Commuter Rail Link (South
Shore Commuter Rail).
(171) Norfolk--Naval Station Corridor.
(172) Norfolk-Petersburg--United States Route 460 Commuter
Rail Project.

[[Page 1647]]
119 STAT. 1647

(173) Northern Virginia--Crystal City Potomac Yards Transit.
(174) Northern Virginia--Columbia Pike Rapid Transit
Project.
(175) Northern Virginia--Dulles Corridor Extension, Phase 2.
(176) Northern Virginia--Richmond Highway (Route 1) Rapid
Transit Project.
(177) Oakland--Telegraph Avenue/International Blvd./East
14th Street BRT.
(178) Ogden--Intermodal-Weber State University Transit
Connection.
(179) Orange County, California--Bus Rapid Transit.
(180) Orlando-Orange County, Florida--Light Rail Project.
(181) Ottawa, Illinois--Illinois Valley Commuter Rail
Extension.
(182) Pawtucket, Rhode Island--Commuter Rail Station.
(183) Philadelphia--Elwyn to Wawa Train Service Restoration.
(184) Philadelphia--Navy Yard Transit Extension.
(185) Philadelphia--52nd Street City Connector Project.
(186) Philadelphia--Route 100 Rapid Trolley Extension.
(187) Philadelphia--Broad Street Subway Line Extension.
(188) Piedmont Authority Regional Transportation--East-West
Rail Transit Corridor Project.
(189) Pinellas Mobility Initiative Bus Rapid Transit.
(190) Pittsburgh--Keystone West Passenger Rail Corridor in
Blair, Cambria, West Moreland, and Allegheny Counties.
(191) Pittsburgh--East-West Corridor Rapid Transit.
(192) Pittsburgh--Martin Luther King, Jr., Busway Extension.
(193) Pittsburgh--Oakland Technology Corridor.
(194) Portland Streetcar Extensions.
(195) Portland-Yarmouth-Brunswick-Lewiston/Auburn Passenger
Rail.
(196) Providence--South County Commuter Rail Phase II.
(197) Provo-Orem Utah--Bus Rapid Transit.
(198) Quakertown-Stoney Creek, Pennsylvania--Rail
Restoration.
(199) Raritan Valley, New Jersey--Commuter Rail.
(200) Reno, Nevada--Virginia Street Bus Rapid Transit
Project.
(201) Riverside County, California--Perris Valley Line
Metrolink Extension.
(202) Roaring Fork Valley, Colorado--Bus Rapid Transit.
(203) Rock Island, Illinois--Quad Cities Rapid Transit
System.
(204) Sacramento--Downtown Streetcar Project.
(205) Sacramento--Regional Rail, Auburn to Oakland.
(206) Sacramento--Downtown/Natomas Airport Transit Corridor.
(207) Salt Lake City--Airport to University LRT.
(208) Salt Lake City--Delta Center to Gateway Intermodal
Center LRT Extension.
(209) Salt Lake City--Draper to Sandy LRT Extension.
(210) Salt Lake-Provo--Commuter Rail Extension.
(211) Salt Lake City--TRAX Capacity Improvements.

[[Page 1648]]
119 STAT. 1648

(212) Salt Lake City--West Valley City LRT Extension.
(213) Salt Lake City--West Valley City 3500 South BRT.
(214) Salt Lake City--West Jordan LRT Extension.
(215) Salt Lake City to South Davis Transit Connection.
(216) San Antonio--Bus Rapid Transit.
(217) San Diego--First Bus Rapid Transit.
(218) San Diego--San Diego Imperial County Mag-Lev Rail
Airport Corridor Project.
(219) San Diego--Sprinter Rail Line Extension Project.
(220) San Francisco--BART Extension to Livermore.
(221) San Francisco--BART Extension to Oakland International
Airport.
(222) San Francisco--MUNI Geary Boulevard Bus Rapid Transit.
(223) San Francisco--Oyster Point Ferry Terminal.
(224) San Francisco--Transbay Terminal/Caltrain Downtown
Extension Project.
(225) San Joaquin, California--Regional Rail Commission
Central Valley Rail Service.
(226) San Joaquin Regional Rail Commission Commuter Rail
(Altamont Commuter Express).
(227) San Juan Tren Urbano--Extension from Rio Piedras to
Carolina.
(228) San Juan--Tren Urbano Minillas Extension.
(229) Santa Fe--El Dorado Rail Link.
(230) Seattle--Monorail Project Post--Green Line Extensions.
(231) Seattle--Link LRT Extensions.
(232) Seattle--Sound Transit Commuter Rail.
(233) Seattle--Sound Transit Regional Express Bus.
(234) Sevierville to Pigeon Ford, Tennessee--Bus Rapid
Transit.
(235) Sonoma/Marin (SMART) Commuter Rail, California.
(236) Southern California High Speed Regional Transit.
(237) Southern New Jersey to Philadelphia Transit Project.
(238) St. Louis Metro Link--Scott AFB to Mid America
Airport.
(239) St. Louis--East/West Gateway.
(240) St. Louis--Metro Link Northside Daniel Boone Project.
(241) St. Louis--Metro South Corridor.
(242) St. Louis--University Downtown Trolley.
(243) St. Paul--Red Rock Corridor Commuter Rail Project.
(244) Stamford, Connecticut--Boston Post Road Intermodal
Center and Capacity Expansion Project.
(245) Stamford, Connecticut--Urban Transitway Phase II.
(246) Tampa--Bus Rapid Transit Improvements.
(247) Tampa--Streetcar Extension to Downtown Tampa.
(248) Toledo, Ohio--CBD to Zoo.
(249) Toledo, Ohio--University Corridor.
(250) Trenton Trolley.
(251) Tri-Rail Dolphin Extension.
(252) Tri-Rail Florida East Coast Commuter Rail Extension.
(253) Tri-Rail Jupiter Extension.
(254) Tri-Rail Scripps Corridor Extension Project.
(255) Tucson--Old Pueblo Trolley Expansion.

[[Page 1649]]
119 STAT. 1649

(256) Vancouver--Interstate MAX Extension to Clark County,
Washington.
(257) Virginia Beach--Bus Rapid Transit.
(258) Virginia Railway Express Capacity Improvements.
(259) Washington, D.C.--Woodrow Wilson Bridge Transit
Projects.
(260) Washington State Ferries and Ferry Facilities.
(261) Washington State--Issaquah Valley Trolley Project.
(262) Williamsburg-Newport News--Peninsula Rail Transit.
(263) Wilmington, Delaware--Commuter Rail to Middletown.
(264) Winston-Salem--Downtown Streetcar System.

(d) Project Authorizations.--Subject to the requirements of sections
5309(d) and 5309(e) of title 49, United States Code, the following
projects are authorized for the following amounts:
(1) Ann Arbor/Downtown Detroit Transit Improvement Project,
$100,000,000.
(2) Baltimore Red Line/Green Line Transit Project,
$102,300,000.
(3) Bernalillo--Santa Fe--New Mexico Commuter Rail,
$75,000,000.
(4) Birmingham-Jefferson Transit Authority--I-65 South BRT,
$100,000,000.
(5) Boston--Assembly Square Orange Line Station,
$25,000,000.
(6) Boston--Silver Line BRT Phase II, $20,000,000.
(7) Bridgeport, Connecticut--Bridgeport Intermodal Transit
Center, $28,000,000.
(8) Dallas Area Rapid Transit--NW/SW Light Rail Transit
Minimal Operable Segment, $260,000,000.
(9) Delaware--Wilmington-Newark Commuter Rail Improvements,
$14,000,000.
(10) Denver Regional Transit District--West Corridor,
$270,000,000.
(11) Grand Rapids--Fixed Guideway Corridor Project,
$14,400,000.
(12) Harrison County, Mississippi HOV/BRT Canal Road
Intermodal Connector, $70,000,000.
(13) Henderson-Las Vegas-North Las Vegas--Regional Fixed
Guideway Project, $32,000,000.
(14) Houston--Advanced Transportation Technology System in
Harris County, $245,000,000.
(15) Kenosha-Racine-Milwaukee Metra Commuter Rail Extension
(Wisconsin), $80,000,000.
(16) Lake Tahoe--Passenger Ferry Service, $8,000,000.
(17) Lane County, Oregon--Bus Rapid Transit, Phase 2,
$31,000,000.
(18) Las Vegas--Boulder Highway MAX Bus Rapid Transit,
$12,000,000.
(19) Las Vegas--Resort Corridor Downtown Extension Project,
$16,000,000.
(20) Long Island Railroad--Nassau Hub, $10,000,000.
(21) Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation
Authority (LACMTA): Mid-City/Exposition Light Rail Transit
Project, $11,000,000.

[[Page 1650]]
119 STAT. 1650

(22) Metro Gold Line Foothill Extension Construction
Authority: Gold Line Foothill Light Rail Transit Project,
$6,000,000.
(23) Miami--Downtown Streetcar Project, $50,000,000.
(24) Minneapolis--North Star Corridor, $80,000,000.
(25) Mississippi--I-69 HOV/BRT, $70,000,000.
(26) Nashville--Commuter Rail, $6,200,000.
(27) New Bedford-Fall River, Massachusetts--Commuter Rail
Extension, $10,000,000.
(28) New Britain-Hartford Busway Project, $55,000,000.
(29) New Jersey Transit/Northeast Corridor Trans-Hudson
Commuter Rail Improvements, $80,000,000.
(30) New Orleans--Airport-CBD Commuter Rail, $5,000,000.
(31) New Orleans--Desire Corridor Streetcar, $69,700,000.
(32) New York--Penn Station Access Project, $15,000,000.
(33) New York--Stewart Airport Rail Access, $40,000,000.
(34) Providence--South County Commuter Rail, Phase II,
$60,000,000.
(35) Providence--South County Commuter Rail, $36,000,000.
(36) Pennsylvania--New Jersey Lackawanna Cutoff Rail
Restoration, $120,000,000.
(37) Philadelphia--Schuylkill Valley Metro, $250,000,000.
(38) Reno, Nevada--Virginia Street Bus Rapid Transit,
$12,000,000.
(39) Sacramento--South Corridor LRT Extension (Phase 2),
Meadowview to Consumnes River College, $11,000,000.
(40) Sacramento Regional Transit District: Downtown Natoma
Airport Transit Corridor, $5,000,000.
(41) San Diego--Mid-Coast Light Rail Transit Extension,
$11,000,000.
(42) San Francisco Muni Third St. Light Rail Transit-Phase
I/II, $15,000,000.
(43) Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority--Silicon
Valley Rapid Transit Corridor Project, $11,000,000.
(44) Santa Fe--El Dorado Rail Link, $5,400,000.
(45) Sonoma Marin Area Rail Transit (SMART) Project,
$5,000,000.
(46) St. Louis--Metro South Corridor Metrolink Light Rail
Extension, $135,000,000.
(47) St. Louis--North Side and Daniel Boone Corridors
Metrolink Light Rail Extensions, $275,000,000.
(48) Stamford, Connecticut Urban Transitway, Phase II,
$22,800,000.
(49) Tampa--Streetcar Extension to Downtown Tampa,
$3,000,000.
(50) Utah--Regional Commuter Rail, $200,000,000.
(51) Washington State Ferries, $25,000,000.
(52) Wilmington, Delaware--Commuter Rail to Middletown,
$24,900,000.

(e) 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

[[Page 1651]]
119 STAT. 1651

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): $1,157,400,426
for fiscal year 2005, $838,360,578 for fiscal year 2006,
$614,405,565 for fiscal year 2007, $424,817,697 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): $165,402,806 for
fiscal year 2005, $544,399,422 for fiscal year 2006,
$826,314,435 for fiscal year 2007, $1,139,182,303 for
fiscal year 2008, and $1,405,329,236 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 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): $115,026,368 for
fiscal year 2005, $120,240,000 for fiscal year 2006, and
$125,280,000 in fiscal year 2007.
(C) Maximum funding levels for 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 preliminary engineering activities: $136,000,000
in fiscal year 2008 and $144,740,000 in fiscal year
2009.

(f) 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''.

[[Page 1652]]
119 STAT. 1652

(g) New Jersey Trans-Hudson Midtown Corridor.--Not later than 90
days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall permit
New Jersey Transit to enter into preliminary engineering on the New
Jersey Trans-Hudson Midtown Corridor project. When evaluating the local
share of such project in the new starts rating process, the Secretary
shall give consideration to project elements of the New Jersey Trans-
Hudson Midtown Corridor advanced with 100 percent non-Federal funds,
including the purchase of bi-level rail equipment and the New Jersey
Transit Light Rail River Line. Based upon the project's evaluations and
ratings required under section 5309(d) of title 49, United States Code,
the Secretary shall give strong consideration to the project for a full
funding grant agreement.
(h) Houston Metro.--
(1) Local share.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, for the purpose of calculating the non-Federal share of the
net project cost of any new fixed guideway capital project
currently included in the Advanced Transit Program (``Metro
Solutions Plan'') sponsored by the Metropolitan Transit
Authority of Harris County, Texas, the Secretary shall include
$324,000,000 in State and local funds expended for the design
and construction of the Red Line Light Rail Transit system that
operates in Harris County, Texas.
(2) Special rule.--No provision of this Act shall be
construed to override or nullify the will of the voters who
approved the Metro Solutions Plan as described on the ballot and
in the accompanying Board resolutions, nor shall any provision
of this Act be construed to override or nullify the terms and
conditions of Metro Board Resolution No. 2003-77 or any
applicable provision of State law or the charter of the City of
Houston as in effect as of the date of enactment of this Act.
(3) Amendment.--Section 178 of Public Law 108-447, division
H (118 Stat. 3230), is amended by striking ``49 USC
5309(e)(1)(A), 23 CFR 771.123, and 49 CFR 611.7.'' and inserting
``49 U.S.C. 5309 and 49 CFR 611.7: Provided, That such projects
shall retain their status in preliminary engineering should bus
rapid transit be chosen as the locally preferred alternative
during that phase.''.

(i) Exemption.--The Metra BNSF Naperville to Aurora Extension
Project authorized under subsection (c) shall be exempted from all
requirements related to criteria for grants for new fixed guideway
capital projects under section 5309(d) of title 49, United States Code,
and from regulations required under that section.
(j) Rail Cars.--The project authorized by subsection (a)(31)
includes an additional 52 rapid rail cars and project scope changes from
amounts authorized by the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century.

SEC. 3044. PROJECTS FOR BUS AND BUS-RELATED FACILITIES AND CLEAN FUELS
GRANT PROGRAM.

(a) Projects.--Of the amounts made available to carry out section
5309(m)(2)(C) of title 49, United States Code, for each of fiscal years
2006 through 2009, the Secretary shall make funds available for the
following projects in not less than the amounts specified for the fiscal
year:

[[Page 1653]]
119 STAT. 1653




----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Project Description               FY 06               FY 07               FY 08               FY 09
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Glendale, CA Purchase of CNG   $88,833             $92,696             $100,420            $104,283
Buses for Glendale Beeline
Transit System.................

2. Detroit Fare Collection        $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
System.........................

3. Lares, PR--Trolley buses--for  $50,762             $52,969             $57,383             $59,590
the purchase of two trolley
buses that will offer
transportation through the
urban zone in the Municipality
of Lares.......................

4. Des Plaines, Wauconda, Cook    $153,824            $160,512            $173,888            $180,576
and Lake Counties, IL Rand Road
Transit Signal Priority........

5. Indianapolis, IN Downtown      $2,691,920          $2,808,960          $3,043,040          $3,160,080
transit center.................

6. Los Angeles, CA, Construction  $151,901            $158,506            $171,714            $178,319
of Intermodal Transit Center at
California State University Los
Angeles........................

7. Columbus, OH--Central Ohio     $1,153,680          $1,203,840          $1,304,160          $1,354,320
Transit Authority Paratransit
Facility.......................

8. Silver Spring, MD Construct    $701,822            $732,336            $793,364            $823,878
Silver Spring Transit Center in
downtown Silver Spring.........

9. Detroit, MI Enclosed heavy-    $865,260            $902,880            $978,120            $1,015,740
duty maintenance facility with
full operational functions for
up to 300 buses................

10. Bronx, NY Wildlife            $84,123             $87,780             $95,095             $98,753
Conservation Society intermodal
transportation facility at the
Bronx Zoo......................

11. Development of Gold Country   $178,882            $186,659            $202,214            $209,992
Stage Transit Transfer Center,
Nevada County, CA..............

12. Hoboken, NJ Rehabilitation    $730,664            $762,432            $825,968            $857,736
of Hoboken Intermodal Terminal.


[[Page 1654]]
119 STAT. 1654


13. Newark, NJ Penn Station       $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Intermodal Improvements
including the rehabilitation of
boarding areas.................

14. Orlando, Florida--LYNX Bus    $173,052            $180,576            $195,624            $203,148
Fleet Expansion Program........

15. Fairfax County, VA Richmond   $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Highway (U.S. Route 1) Public
Transportation Improvements....

16. Portland, OR Renovation of    $19,228             $20,064             $21,736             $22,572
Union Station, including
structural reinforcement and
public safety upgrades.........

17. Davis, CA Davis Multimodal    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Station to improve entrance to
Amtrak Depot and parking lot,
provide additional parking and
improve service................

18. Reno-Sparks, Nevada--         $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Intermodal Transportation
Terminals and Related
Development....................

19. Bar Harbor, ME Purchase new   $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716
buses to enhance commuting near
the Jackson Labs...............

20. Bronx, NY Establish an        $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
intermodal transportation
facility at the Wildlife
Conservation Society Bronx Zoo.

21. Hingham, MA Hingham Marine    $1,730,520          $1,805,760          $1,956,240          $2,031,480
Intermodal Center Improvements:
Enhance public transportation
infrastructure/parking.........


[[Page 1655]]
119 STAT. 1655


22. Philadelphia, PA              $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Philadelphia Zoo Intermodal
Transportation project w/
parking consolidation,
pedestrian walkways, public
transportation complements and
landscape improvements to
surface parking lots...........

23. Construct intermodal          $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
transportation and parking
facility, City of Winter Park,
Florida........................

24. Roma, TX Bus Facility.......  $100,947            $105,336            $114,114            $118,503

25. New York City, NY First       $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Phase Implementation of Bus
Rapid Transit System...........

26. Scottsdale, Arizona--Plan,    $480,700            $501,600            $543,400            $564,300
design, and construct
intermodal center..............

27. Sonoma County, CA Purchase    $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
of CNG buses...................

28. Camden, NJ Construction of    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
the Camden County Intermodal
Facility in Cramer Hill........

29. Sandy Hook, NJ National Park  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Service Construct year-round
ferry dock at Sandy Hook Unit
of Gateway National Recreation
Area...........................

30. Sevier County, Tennessee--    $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
U.S. 441 bus rapid transit.....

31. St. Augustine, Florida--      $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Intermodal Transportation and
Parking Facility...............

32. Torrington, CT Construct bus- $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
related facility (Northwestern
Connecticut Central Transit
District)......................


[[Page 1656]]
119 STAT. 1656


33. Warren, PA--Construct         $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Intermodal Transportation
Center and related pedestrian
and landscape improvements.....

34. Toledo, OH TARTA/ TARPS       $1,442,100          $1,504,800          $1,630,200          $1,692,900
Passenger Intermodal Facility
construction...................

35. Union City, CA Intermodal     $817,190            $852,720            $923,780            $959,310
Station, Phase 1: Modify BART
station........................

36. Los Angeles, CA Wilshire-     $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Vermont subway station
reconstruction.................

37. Lancaster, PA--bus            $182,666            $190,608            $206,492            $214,434
replacement....................

38. Monmouth County, NJ           $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Construction of main bus
facility for Freehold Township,
including a terminal and repair
shop...........................

39. Monrovia, California--        $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Transit Village Project........

40. Duluth, MN Downtown Duluth    $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Area Transit facility
improvements...................

41. Brooklyn, NY New Urban        $184,589            $192,614            $208,666            $216,691
Center--Broadway Junction
Intermodal Center..............

42. Medford, MA Downtown          $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
revitalization featuring
construction of a 200 space
Park and Ride Facility.........

43. Needles, California--El       $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Garces Intermodal Facility.....

44. Bridgeport, Connecticut--     $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Greater Bridgeport Transit
Authority Bus Facility.........

45. Palm Springs, California--    $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Sunline Transit bus purchase...


[[Page 1657]]
119 STAT. 1657


46. National Park Service Design  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
and construct 2.1-mile segment
to complete Sandy Hook multiuse
pathway in Sandy Hook, NJ......

47. Phoenix, AZ Construct City    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
of Phoenix para-transit
facility (Dial-a-Ride).........

48. Project provides for the      $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
engineering and construction of
a transportation center in
Paoli, Chester County..........

49. Columbus, Georgia--Buses and  $186,319            $194,420            $210,622            $218,723
Bus Facilities.................

50. Cleveland, Ohio--University   $1,634,380          $1,705,440          $1,847,560          $1,918,620
Circle intermodal facility.....

51. Cleveland, OH acquisition of  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
buses Greater Cleveland
Regional Transit Authority.....

52. Greensboro, North Carolina--  $1,111,378          $1,159,699          $1,256,341          $1,304,662
Replacement buses..............

53. Johnson Co., KS Bus and bus   $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
related facilities (I-35
corridor), Johnson Co. Transit.

54. City of Alameda, CA Plan,     $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
design, and construct
intermodal facility............

55. New Orleans, LA Intermodal    $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Riverfront Center..............

56. Brooklyn, NY--Rehabilitation  $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
of Bay Ridge 86th Street Subway
Station........................

57. Wilmington, NC Build          $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Intermodal Center..............

58. Yabucoa, Puerto Rico--        $33,649             $35,112             $38,038             $39,501
Trolley buses..................


[[Page 1658]]
119 STAT. 1658


59. Beverly, MA Design and        $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Construct Beverly Depot
Intermodal Transportation
Center.........................

60. Georgia Statewide Bus         $38,456             $40,128             $43,472             $45,144
Program........................

61. Trenton, New Jersey--Trenton  $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Train Station Rehabilitation...

62. Trenton, NJ Reconstruction    $1,345,960          $1,404,480          $1,521,520          $1,580,040
and rehabilitation of the
Trenton Train Station..........

63. Zapata, Texas Purchase Bus    $60,088             $62,700             $67,925             $70,538
vehicles.......................

64. Zanesville, OH--bus system    $15,623             $16,302             $17,661             $18,340
signage and shelters...........

65. York, Pennsylvania--Rabbit    $532,712            $555,873            $602,196            $625,357
Transit facilities and
communications equipment.......

66. Canby, OR bus and bus         $28,842             $30,096             $32,604             $33,858
facilities.....................

67. New Orleans, LA Plan and      $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
construct New Orleans Union
Passenger Terminal intermodal
facilities.....................

68. Northern Neck and Middle      $624,910            $652,080            $706,420            $733,590
Peninsula, Virginia--Bay
Transit Multimodal Facilities..

69. Broward County, FL Buses and  $1,249,820          $1,304,160          $1,412,840          $1,467,180
Bus Facilities.................

70. Palm Springs, California--    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Sunline Transit: CalStart-
Weststart fuel cell bus program

71. San Juan, Puerto Rico--Buses  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720

72. Hammond, Louisiana--          $38,456             $40,128             $43,472             $45,144
Passenger Intermodal facility
at Southeastern University.....


[[Page 1659]]
119 STAT. 1659


73. West Virginia Construct       $4,614,720          $4,815,360          $5,216,640          $5,417,280
Beckley Intermodal Gateway
pursuant to the eligibility
provisions for projects listed
under section 3030(d)(3) of
Public Law 105-178.............

74. Albany-Schenectady, NY Bus    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Rapid Transit Improvements in
NY Route 5 Corridor............

75. Alameda County, CA AC         $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Transit Bus Rapid Transit
Corridor Project...............

76. Baldwin Park, CA Construct    $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
vehicle and bicycle parking lot
and pedestrian rest area at
transit center.................

77. Niagara Falls, NY             $1,076,768          $1,123,584          $1,217,216          $1,264,032
Relocation, Development, and
Enhancement of Niagara Falls
International Railway Station/
Intermodal Transportation
Center.........................

78. Utica, New York--Union        $19,228             $20,064             $21,736             $22,572
Station Boehlert Center siding
track improvements.............

79. Ionia County, MI--Purchase    $113,445            $118,378            $128,242            $133,175
and implementation of
communication equipment
improvements...................

80. Flagler County, Florida--bus  $115,368            $120,384            $130,416            $135,432
facility.......................

81. Easton, Pennsylvania--Design  $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
and construct Intermodal
Transportation Center..........

82. Yamhill County, OR For the    $21,151             $22,070             $23,910             $24,829
construction of bus shelters,
park and ride facilities, and a
sign-age strategy to increase
ridership......................


[[Page 1660]]
119 STAT. 1660


83. Woodland, CA Yolobus          $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
operations, maintenance,
administration facility
expansion and improvements to
increase bus service with
alternative fuel buses.........

84. Sacramento, CA Construct      $1,345,960          $1,404,480          $1,521,520          $1,580,040
intermodal station and related
improvements...................

85. Torrance Transit System, CA   $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Acquisition of EPA and CARB-
certified low emission
replacement buses..............

86. Burlington County, NJ--       $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
BurLink and Burlington County
Transportation System vehicles
and equipment..................

87. Niles, OH Acquisition of bus  $38,456             $40,128             $43,472             $45,144
operational and service
equipment for Niles Trumbull
Transit........................

88. Rockport, MA Rockport         $528,770            $551,760            $597,740            $620,730
Commuter Rail Station
Improvements...................

89. Cincinnati, Ohio--Metro       $177,859            $185,592            $201,058            $208,791
Regional Transit Hub Network
Eastern Neighborhoods..........

90. Buses and bus related         $1,153,680          $1,203,840          $1,304,160          $1,354,320
facilities throughout the State
of Connecticut.................

91. Columbus, GA Bus replacement  $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716

92. Norwalk, CA Transit System    $153,824            $160,512            $173,888            $180,576
Bus Procurement and Los Angeles
World Airport Remote Fly-Away
Facility Project...............

93. Salem, OR bus and bus         $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
facilities.....................


[[Page 1661]]
119 STAT. 1661


94. Ilwaco, WA Procure shuttles   $19,228             $20,064             $21,736             $22,572
for Lewis and Clark National
Historical Park................

95. Gainesville, FL Bus           $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Replacement....................

96. SEPTA Montgomery County       $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Intermodal Improvements at
Glenside and Jenkintown Station
Parking Garages................

97. Fredericksburg, Virginia--    $480,700            $501,600            $543,400            $564,300
Improve and repair
Fredericksburg Station.........

98. Birmingham, AL Expansion of   $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Downtown Intermodal Facility,
Phase II.......................

99. Gresham, Oregon Construct a   $269,192            $280,896            $304,304            $316,008
new light rail station and
transit plaza on Portland MAX
system and serve Gresham Civic
neighborhood...................

100. State of Wisconsin buses     $3,143,778          $3,280,464          $3,553,836          $3,690,522
and bus facilities.............

101. Emeryville, CA Expand and    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Improve Intermodal Transit
Center at Amtrak Station.......

102. Jersey City, NJ Construct    $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
West Entrance to Pavonia-
Newport PATH Station...........

103. Longwood, Florida--          $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Construct Intermodal
Transportation Facility........

104. Marietta, Ohio Construction  $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
of transportation hub to
accommodate regional bus
traffic........................

105. Akron, Ohio--West Market     $124,982            $130,416            $141,284            $146,718
Street transit center and
related pedestrian improvements


[[Page 1662]]
119 STAT. 1662


106. Sandy, Oregon Transit Bus    $134,596            $140,448            $152,152            $158,004
Facility.......................

107. Jacksonville, FL             $865,260            $902,880            $978,120            $1,015,740
Paratransit Vehicles...........

108. Carson, CA Purchase two      $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
tripper buses..................

109. Bloomington, IN--Bus and     $924,867            $965,078            $1,045,502          $1,085,713
transfer facility..............

110. Cobb County, GA Cobb County  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Smart Card Technology/Bus
Facility Improvements..........

111. Construct West Houston and   $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Fort Bend County, Texas--bus
transit corridor...............

112. Mariposa, CA--Yosemite       $480,700            $501,600            $543,400            $564,300
National Park CNG-Hydrogen
transit buses and facilities...

113. Snohomish County, WA         $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Community Transit bus purchases
and facility enhancement.......

114. Geneva, Illinois--Construct  $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
commuter parking deck for Metra
Service........................

115. Rhode Island Statewide Bus   $1,153,680          $1,203,840          $1,304,160          $1,354,320
Fleet..........................

116. Pleasant Hill, CA Construct  $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Diablo Valley College Bus
Transit Center.................

117. Broward, FL Purchase new     $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
articulated buses and bus stop
improvements on State Road 7.
(SR 7) between Golden Glades
Interchange and Glades Road....

118. Attleboro, MA Construction,  $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
engineering, and site
improvements at the Attleboro
Intermodal Center..............


[[Page 1663]]
119 STAT. 1663


119. Burbank, CA CNG Transit      $86,526             $90,288             $97,812             $101,574
Vehicles Purchase for Local
Transit Network Expansion......

120. Dayton Airport Intermodal    $144,210            $150,480            $163,020            $169,290
Rail Feasibility Study.........

121. Los Angeles, CA Improve      $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
transit shelters, sidewalks
lighting and landscaping around
Cedar's-Sinai Medical Center...

122. Baltimore, MD Construct      $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Intercity Bus Intermodal
Terminal.......................

123. Cheltenham, PA Glenside      $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Rail Station Parking Garage
project involving the
construction of a 300-400 space
parking lot at Easton Road and
Glenside Avenue................

124. Haverhill, MA Design and     $1,076,768          $1,123,584          $1,217,216          $1,264,032
Construct Intermodal Transit
Parking Improvements...........

125. Palm Beach County, FL Plan   $672,980            $702,240            $760,760            $790,020
and Construct Belle Glade
Combined Passenger Transit
Facility.......................

126. Pittsburgh, PA Clean Fuel    $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Bus Procurement................

127. San Fernando, CA Purchase    $584,531            $609,946            $660,774            $686,189
CNG buses and related equipment
and construct facilities.......

128. Bayamon, Puerto Rico--bus    $115,368            $120,384            $130,416            $135,432
terminal.......................

129. Bozeman, Montana--Vehicular  $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Parking Facility...............


[[Page 1664]]
119 STAT. 1664


130. Coahoma County, Mississippi  $28,842             $30,096             $32,604             $33,858
Purchase buses for the Aaron E.
Henry Community Health Services
Center, Inc./ DARTS transit
service........................

131. Stonington and Mystic,       $469,163            $489,562            $530,358            $550,757
Connecticut--Intermodal Center
parking facility and
Streetscape....................

132. Carson, CA Purchase one bus  $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430

133. Miami-Dade County, Florida-- $574,917            $599,914            $649,906            $674,903
Transit Security System........

134. Town of Chapel Hill, NC      $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Park and Ride Lot..............

135. Wheaton, IL Pace Suburban    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Bus--Purchase buses............

136. Ocala and Marion County,     $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Florida--replacement buses.....

137. Philadelphia, PA             $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Improvements to the existing
Penn's Landing Ferry Terminal..

138. Long Branch, NJ Design and   $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
construct facilities for ferry
service from Long Branch, NJ to
New York City and other
destinations...................

139. Quincy, MA MBTA Purchase     $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
high speed catamaran ferry for
Quincy Harbor Express Service..

140. Los Angeles, CA Crenshaw     $1,639,764          $1,711,058          $1,853,646          $1,924,940
Bus Rapid Transit..............

141. South Bend, Indiana--        $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Construct South Bend Bus
Operations Center..............


[[Page 1665]]
119 STAT. 1665


142. Arlington County, VA         $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Crystal City--Potomac Yard
Busway, including construction
of bus shelters................

143. Raleigh, NC Purchase         $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
eighteen replacement buses to
replace buses that have reached
their useful life according to
Federal Transit Administration
regulations....................

144. Augusta, GA Buses and Bus    $76,912             $80,256             $86,944             $90,288
Facilities.....................

145. Santa Ana, CA Improve Santa  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Ana transit terminal...........

146. Cooperstown, New York--      $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Intermodal Facility Project....

147. Santa Barbara, CA--          $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716
Expansion of Regional
Intermodal Transit Center......

148. Tampa, FL Purchase buses     $432,630            $451,440            $489,060            $507,870
and construct bus facilities...

149. Yonkers, NY Trolley Bus      $72,105             $75,240             $81,510             $84,645
Acquisition....................

150. Phoenix, AZ Construct        $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
regional heavy bus maintenance
facility.......................

151. Thurston County, WA Replace  $173,052            $180,576            $195,624            $203,148
Thurston County Buses..........

152. San Juan, Puerto Rico--bus   $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
security equipment.............

153. Bryan, TX The District--     $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Bryan Intermodal Transit
Terminal and Parking Facility..

154. City of Greenville, NC       $685,286            $715,081            $774,671            $804,466
Expansion Buses and Greenville
Intermodal Center..............


[[Page 1666]]
119 STAT. 1666


155. City of Livermore, CA        $432,630            $451,440            $489,060            $507,870
Construct Bus Facility for
Livermore Amador Valley Transit
Authority......................

156. Detroit Replacement Buses..  $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600

157. Bealeton, Virginia--         $52,877             $55,176             $59,774             $62,073
Intermodal Station Depot
Refurbishment..................

158. Covina, El Monte, Baldwin    $336,490            $351,120            $380,380            $395,010
Park, Upland, CA Parking and
Electronic Signage Improvements

159. Eugene, OR Lane Transit      $686,714            $716,571            $776,286            $806,143
District, Vehicle Replacement..

160. Kearney, Nebraska--RYDE      $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Transit Bus Maintenance and
Storage Facility...............

161. Revere, MA Intermodal        $346,104            $361,152            $391,248            $406,296
transit improvements in the
Wonderland station (MBTA) area.

162. Brownsville, TX Brownsville  $480,700            $501,600            $543,400            $564,300
Urban System City-Wide Transit
Improvement Project............

163. Normal, Illinois--           $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Multimodal Transportation
Center, including facilities
for adjacent public and
nonprofit uses.................

164. Puerto Rico--Caribbean       $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
National Forest buses and bus
facilities.....................

165. Albany, OR Rehabilitate      $292,998            $305,737            $331,215            $343,954
Building At Multimodal Transit
Station........................

166. Bronx, NY Hebrew Home for    $36,053             $37,620             $40,755             $42,323
the Aged elderly and disabled
transportation support.........


[[Page 1667]]
119 STAT. 1667


167. Denver, CO Denver Union      $1,057,540          $1,103,520          $1,195,480          $1,241,460
Station Intermodal Center......

168. Lane Transit District, Bus   $569,845            $594,621            $644,172            $668,948
Rapid Transit Progressive
Corridor Enhancements..........

169. Delaware--University of      $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Delaware Fuel Cell Bus
Deployment.....................

170. Louisiana--Construct         $195,280            $203,640            $220,360            $228,720
pedestrian walkways between
Caddo St. and Milam St. along
Edwards St. in Shreveport, LA..

171. Riverside, California--RTA   $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Advanced Traveler Information
System.........................

172. Santa Monica, CA Purchase    $721,050            $752,400            $815,100            $846,450
and service LNG buses for Santa
Monica's Big Blue Bus to meet
increased ridership needs and
reduce emissions...............

173. Ontario, CA Construct        $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Omnitrans Transcenter..........

174. Brockton, MA Bus             $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
replacement for the Brockton
Area Transit Authority.........

175. Molalla, OR South Clackamas  $19,228             $20,064             $21,736             $22,572
Transportation District, bus
purchase.......................

176. Boise, ID--Multimodal        $865,260            $902,880            $978,120            $1,015,740
facility.......................

177. Fond du Lac Reservation, MN  $28,842             $30,096             $32,604             $33,858
Purchase buses.................

178. Sandy City, UT Construct     $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
transit hub station and TRAX
station at 9400 South..........


[[Page 1668]]
119 STAT. 1668


179. Cleveland, OH Construct      $165,361            $172,550            $186,930            $194,119
passenger intermodal center
near Dock 32...................

180. Tillamook, OR construction   $19,228             $20,064             $21,736             $22,572
of a transit facility..........

181. Trenton, NJ Development of   $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Trenton Trolley System.........

182. Utica, New York--Union       $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Station rehabilitation and
related infrastructure
improvements...................

183. San Fernando Valley, CA      $115,368            $120,384            $130,416            $135,432
Reseda Blvd. Bus Rapid Transit
Route..........................

184. Richmond, VA Renovation and  $211,508            $220,704            $239,096            $248,292
construction for Main Street
Station........................

185. St. Paul to Hinckley, MN     $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Construct bus amenities along
Rush Line Corridor.............

186. Mattoon, Illinois--Historic  $307,648            $321,024            $347,776            $361,152
railroad depot restoration/
intermodal center..............

187. Columbia County, OR To       $26,919             $28,090             $30,430             $31,601
purchase buses.................

188. Mountain Express, Crested    $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Butte, CO Bus and Bus
Facilities.....................

189. Sacramento, CA Bus           $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
enhancement and improvements-
construct maintenance facility
and purchase clean-fuel buses
to improve transit service.....

190. Calexico, CA Purchase new    $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716
buses for the Calexico Transit
System.........................


[[Page 1669]]
119 STAT. 1669


191. Monterey Park, CA Safety     $307,648            $321,024            $347,776            $361,152
improvements at a bus stop
including creation of bus
loading areas and street
improvements...................

192. Buffalo, NY Intermodal       $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Center Parking Facility........

193. Mukilteo, WA Multimodal      $1,115,224          $1,163,712          $1,260,688          $1,309,176
Terminal.......................

194. Orange County Transit        $1,017,161          $1,061,386          $1,149,834          $1,194,059
Authority, California--Security
surveillance and monitoring
equipment......................

195. Woodland Hills, CA Los       $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Angeles Pierce College Bus
Rapid Transit Station Extension

196. Design Downtown Carrollton,  $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Texas Regional Multimodal
Transit Hub Station............

197. Brooklyn, NY Construct a     $269,192            $280,896            $304,304            $316,008
multimodal transportation
facility.......................

198. Cleveland, Ohio--Euclid      $865,260            $902,880            $978,120            $1,015,740
Avenue University Hospital
intermodal facility............

199. Las Vegas, NV Construct      $1,153,680          $1,203,840          $1,304,160          $1,354,320
Central City Intermodal
Transportation Terminal........

200. Montebello, CA Bus Lines     $134,596            $140,448            $152,152            $158,004
Bus Fleet Replacement Project..

201. Philadelphia, PA Cruise      $672,980            $702,240            $760,760            $790,020
Terminal Transportation Ctr.
Phila. Naval Shipyard..........

202. Cleveland, OH Construct      $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Fare Collection System Project,
Cuyahoga County................


[[Page 1670]]
119 STAT. 1670


203. Tempe, Arizona--Construct    $1,249,820          $1,304,160          $1,412,840          $1,467,180
East Valley Metro Bus Facility.

204. Boysville of Michigan        $646,061            $674,150            $730,330            $758,419
Transportation System..........

205. Woburn, MA Construction of   $346,104            $361,152            $391,248            $406,296
an 89 space, park and ride
facility to be located on
Magazine Hill, in the Heart of
Woburn Square..................

206. Sylvester, GA Intermodal     $38,456             $40,128             $43,472             $45,144
Facility.......................

207. Culver City, CA Purchase     $711,436            $742,368            $804,232            $835,164
compressed natural gas buses
and expand natural gas fueling
facility.......................

208. Eastern Upper Peninsula, MI  $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Ferry Dock and Facility
upgrades for Drummond Island
Ferry Services.................

209. Morristown, New Jersey--     $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Intermodal Historic Station....

210. San Antonio, TX Improve VIA  $1,345,960          $1,404,480          $1,521,520          $1,580,040
bus facility and purchase new
buses..........................

211. Miami-Dade County, Florida-- $1,153,680          $1,203,840          $1,304,160          $1,354,320
buses and bus facilities.......

212. Glendale, CA Construction    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
of Downtown Streetcar Project..

213. Gainesville, FL Bus Rapid    $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Transit Study..................

214. Mount Rainier, MD            $86,526             $90,288             $97,812             $101,574
Intermodal and Pedestrian
Project........................

215.............................  $0                  $0                  $0                  $0

216. Wilsonville, OR South Metro  $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Area Rapid Transit, bus and bus
facilities.....................


[[Page 1671]]
119 STAT. 1671


217. Charlotte, NC Construct      $1,499,784          $1,564,992          $1,695,408          $1,760,616
Charlotte Multimodal Station...

218. Enfield, Connecticut--       $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
intermodal station.............

219. Chicago, IL Feasibility      $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716
Study for intermodal station on
the Metra Rock Island near
Kennedy-King College...........

220. Indianapolis, IN IndySMART   $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
program to relieve congestion,
improve safety and air quality.

221. Chicago, IL Construct        $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
intermodal facility at 35th
Street at Metra Red Line
(Northside)....................

222. Escondido, CA--Construct     $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Bus Maintenance Facility.......

223. Los Angeles, CA Design and   $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
construct improved transit and
pedestrian linkages between Los
Angeles Community College and
nearby MTA rail stop and bus
lines..........................

224. Montgomery County, MD        $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Wheaton CBD Intermodal Access
Program........................

225. Allentown, Pennsylvania--    $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Design and construct Intermodal
Transportation Center..........

226. Champaign, IL--Construct     $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
park and ride lot with attached
daycare facility...............

227. Berkeley, CA Construct Ed    $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Roberts Campus Intermodal
Transit Disability Center......


[[Page 1672]]
119 STAT. 1672


228. Charlotte, North Carolina--  $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Multimodal Station.............

229. Coconino County, Arizona--   $182,666            $190,608            $206,492            $214,434
Bus and bus facilities for the
Sedona Transit System..........

230. Construction of Third Bus    $2,307,360          $2,407,680          $2,608,320          $2,708,640
Depot on Staten Island.........

231. Harrison, Arkansas--Trolley  $7,691              $8,026              $8,694              $9,029
Barn...........................

232. Alexandria, VA Royal Street  $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Bus Garage Replacement.........

233. Intermodal Facilities in     $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Bucks County (Croydon and
Levittown Stations)............

234. Bronx, NY Jacobi Intermodal  $60,088             $62,700             $67,925             $70,538
Center to North Central Bronx
Hospital bus system............

235. Indianapolis, IN Construct   $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
the Ivy Tech State College
Multimodal Facility............

236. Juneau, Alaska--transit bus  $345,000            $360,000            $390,000            $405,000
acquisition and transit center.

237. Knoxville, Tennessee--       $1,961,256          $2,046,528          $2,217,072          $2,302,344
Central Station Transit Center.

238. Levy County, Florida--       $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716
Purchase 2 wheel chair equipped
passenger buses and related
equipment......................

239. Lafayette, Louisiana--       $173,052            $180,576            $195,624            $203,148
Lafayette Transit System bus
replacement program............

240. Nebraska--statewide transit  $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
vehicles, facilities, and
related equipment..............


[[Page 1673]]
119 STAT. 1673


241. Cincinnati, Ohio--Construct  $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Uptown Crossings Joint
Development Transit Project....

242. Des Moines, IA Purchase 40   $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
foot buses.....................

243. New Orleans, LA Regional     $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Planning Commission, bus and
bus facilities.................

244. Orange County, CA Purchase   $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
buses for rapid transit........

245. Bus to provide Yorktown,     $35,572             $37,118             $40,212             $41,758
New York internal circulator to
provide transportation
throughout the Town............

246. Providence, RI Expansion of  $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Elmwood Paratransit Maintenance
Facility.......................

247. Atlanta, GA Intermodal       $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Passenger Facility Improvements

248. Palm Beach, FL Palm Tran     $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
AVL-APC system with smart card
fareboxes......................

249. Grand Rapids, MI--Purchase   $2,816,902          $2,939,376          $3,184,324          $3,306,798
replacement and expansion buses

250. Maywood, IL Purchase buses.  $9,614              $10,032             $10,868             $11,286

251. Redondo Beach, CA Capital    $153,824            $160,512            $173,888            $180,576
Equipment procurement of 12
Compressed Natural Gas (CNG)
Transit vehicles for Coastal
Shuttle Services by Beach
Cities Transit.................

252. Rochester, New York--        $865,260            $902,880            $978,120            $1,015,740
Renaissance Square transit
center.........................


[[Page 1674]]
119 STAT. 1674


253. San Bernardino, CA           $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Implement Santa Fe Depot
improvements in San Bernardino.

254. San Joaquin, California      $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Regional Rail--Altamont
Commuter Express Corridor
intermodal centers.............

255. Albany, GA Multimodal        $153,824            $160,512            $173,888            $180,576
Facility.......................

256. Savannah, GA Bus and Bus     $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Facilities--Chatham Area
Transit........................

257. Newburyport, MA Design and   $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Construct Intermodal Facility..

258. Cleveland, Ohio--Euclid      $1,634,380          $1,705,440          $1,847,560          $1,918,620
Avenue and East 93rd Street
intermodal facility............

259. St. Charles, IL--Intermodal  $865,260            $902,880            $978,120            $1,015,740
Parking Structures.............

260. Gardena, CA Purchase of      $1,178,676          $1,229,923          $1,332,417          $1,383,664
alternative fuel buses for
service expansion, on-board
security system and bus
facility training equipment....

261. Thendra-Webb and Utica, New  $19,228             $20,064             $21,736             $22,572
York--Install handicap lifts in
intermodal centers.............

262.............................  $0                  $0                  $0                  $0

263. Wilmar, AR Develop the       $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Southeast Arkansas Intermodal
Facility.......................

264. Westchester County, NY Bus   $721,050            $752,400            $815,100            $846,450
replacement program............

265. Village of Tinley Park,      $153,824            $160,512            $173,888            $180,576
Illinois, 80th Avenue Commuter
Rail Station reconstruction and
site enhancements..............


[[Page 1675]]
119 STAT. 1675


266. Martinez, CA Intermodal      $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Facility Restoration...........

267. Middletown, CT Construct     $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
intermodal center..............

268. Nashville, TN Construct a    $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
parking garage on the campus of
Lipscomb University, Nashville.

269. New London, Connecticut--    $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Intermodal Transportation
Center and Streetscapes........

270. Vernon, Connecticut--        $1,461,328          $1,524,864          $1,651,936          $1,715,472
Intermodal Center, Parking and
Streetscapes...................

271. Bronx, NY Botanical Garden   $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
metro North Rail station
Intermodal Facility............

272. Bend, Oregon--replacement    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
vans...........................

273. Boston, MA Harbor Park       $240,350            $250,800            $271,700            $282,150
Pavilion and Intermodal Station

274. Philadelphia, PA SEPTA's     $269,192            $280,896            $304,304            $316,008
Market St. Elevated Rail
project in conjunction with
Philadelphia Commercial
Development Corporation for
improvements and assistance to
entities along rail corridor...

275. Jesup, Georgia--Train Depot  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
intermodal center..............

276. Long Beach, CA Museum of     $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Latin American Art, Long Beach,
to build intermodal park and
ride facility..................

277. Shreveport, LA--Intermodal   $644,138            $672,144            $728,156            $756,162
Transit Facility...............


[[Page 1676]]
119 STAT. 1676


278. Arlington County, VA         $672,980            $702,240            $760,760            $790,020
Columbia Pike Bus Improvements.

279. Bronx, NY Establish an       $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
intermodal transportation
facility at the Wildlife
Conservation Society Bronx Zoo.

280. Lowell, MA Implementation    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
of LRTA bus replacement plan...

281. Falls Church, VA Falls       $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Church Intermodal
Transportation Center..........

282. San Diego, CA Completion of  $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
San Diego Joint Transportation
Operations Center (JTOC).......

283. St. Bernard Parish, LA       $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Intermodal facility
improvements...................

284. Cornwall, NY--Purchase Bus.  $16,728             $17,456             $18,910             $19,638

285. Metro Gold Line Foothill     $2,884,200          $3,009,600          $3,260,400          $3,385,800
Extension Light Rail Transit
Project from Pasadena, CA to
Montclair, CA..................

286. Richmond, CA BART Parking    $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Structure......................

287. San Francisco, CA Implement  $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
ITS on Muni Transit System.....

288. Alameda County, CA AC        $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Transit Bus Rapid Transit
Corridor Project...............

289. Town of Warwick, NY Bus      $105,754            $110,352            $119,548            $124,146
Facility Warwick Transit System

290. Galveston, Texas--           $865,260            $902,880            $978,120            $1,015,740
Intermodal center and parking
facility, The Strand...........

291. Joliet, Illinois--Union      $552,805            $576,840            $624,910            $648,945
Station commuter parking
facility.......................


[[Page 1677]]
119 STAT. 1677


292. Cuyahoga County, Ohio--Ohio  $28,842             $30,096             $32,604             $33,858
Department of Transportation
transit improvements...........

293. Muskegon, Michigan--         $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Muskegon Area Transit Terminal
and related improvements.......

294. Orlando, FL Bus Replacement  $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880

295. Long Beach, CA Purchase one  $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
larger (75 passengers) and two
smaller (40 passengers)
ferryboats and construct
related dock work to facilitate
the use and accessibility of
the ferryboats.................

296. Elgin to Rockford,           $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Illinois--Intermodal stations
along planned Metra Union
Pacific West Line extension
alignment, including necessary
alternatives analysis..........

297. Broward County, FL--         $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Purchase Buses and construct
bus facilities.................

298. Thomasville, GA Bus          $38,456             $40,128             $43,472             $45,144
Replacement....................

299. Corvallis, OR Bus            $283,842            $296,183            $320,865            $333,206
Replacement....................

300. Geneva, New York--           $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Multimodal facility--Construct
passenger rail center..........

301. Barry County, MI--Barry      $28,842             $30,096             $32,604             $33,858
County Transit equipment and
dispatching software...........

302. Greensboro, North Carolina-- $2,407,346          $2,512,013          $2,721,347          $2,826,014
Piedmont Authority for Regional
Transportation Multimodal
Transportation Center..........


[[Page 1678]]
119 STAT. 1678


303. Howard County, MD Construct  $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Central Maryland Transit
Operations and Maintenance
Facility.......................

304. Coconino County buses and    $240,350            $250,800            $271,700            $282,150
bus facilities for Flagstaff,
AZ.............................

305. Roanoke, Virginia--          $38,456             $40,128             $43,472             $45,144
Intermodal Facility............

306. Jacksonville, FL Bus         $1,345,960          $1,404,480          $1,521,520          $1,580,040
Replacement....................

307. Los Angeles, CA Improve      $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
safety, mobility and access
between LATTC, Metro line and
nearby bus stops on Grand Ave.
between Washington and 23rd....

308. Miami Dade, FL N.W. 7th      $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Avenue Transit Hub.............

309. Elyria, OH Construct the     $393,789            $410,911            $445,153            $462,275
New York Central Train Station
into an intermodal
transportation hub.............

310. River Parishes, LA South     $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Central Planning and
Development Commission, bus and
bus facilities.................

311. Mammoth Lakes, California--  $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Regional Transit Maintenance
Facility.......................

312. Roanoke, Virginia--Improve   $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Virginian Railway Station......

313. Solana Beach, CA--Construct  $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Intermodal Facility............

314. San Diego, CA Widen          $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716
sidewalks and bus stop
entrance, and provide diagonal
parking, in the Skyline
Paradise Hills neighborhood
(Reo Drive)....................


[[Page 1679]]
119 STAT. 1679


315. Temecula, California--       $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Intermodal Transit Facility....

316. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania-- $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
SEPTA Market Street Elevated
Line parking facility..........

317. Jamestown, NY                $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Rehabilitation of Intermodal
Facility and associated
property.......................

318. Akron, Ohio Construct        $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Downtown Multimodal
Transportation Center..........

319. Detroit Bus Maintenance      $1,730,520          $1,805,760          $1,956,240          $2,031,480
Facility.......................

320. Detroit, MI Bus Replacement  $1,442,100          $1,504,800          $1,630,200          $1,692,900

321. Monterey Park, CA Catch      $61,530             $64,205             $69,555             $72,230
Basins at Transit Stop
Installation...................

322. Oneonta, New York-bus        $28,842             $30,096             $32,604             $33,858
replacement....................

323. Lincoln County, OR bus       $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
purchase.......................

324. Elon, North Carolina--       $230,736            $240,768            $260,832            $270,864
Piedmont Authority for Regional
Transportation buses and bus
facilities.....................

325. Grants Pass, OR Purchase     $39,143             $40,845             $44,248             $45,950
Vehicles For Use By Josephine
Community Transit..............

326. Los Angeles, CA Install      $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
permanent irrigation system and
enhanced landscaping on San
Fernando Valley rapid bus
transitway.....................

327. Cleveland, OH Construct      $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
East Side Transit Center.......


[[Page 1680]]
119 STAT. 1680


328. New Jersey Transit           $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Community Shuttle Buses........

329. Quitman, Clay, Randolph,     $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Stewart Co., GA Bus project....

330. Framingham, MA Local Intra-  $346,104            $361,152            $391,248            $406,296
Framingham Transit System
enhancements...................

331. Gettysburg, Pennsylvania--   $172,860            $180,375            $195,407            $202,922
transit transfer center........

332. Long Beach, CA Park and      $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Ride facility..................

333. Oak Harbor, WA Multimodal    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Facility.......................

334. North Bend, Washington--     $153,824            $160,512            $173,888            $180,576
Park and Ride..................

335. High Point, North Carolina-- $1,153,680          $1,203,840          $1,304,160          $1,354,320
Bus Terminal...................

336. Dallas, TX Bus Passenger     $2,461,184          $2,568,192          $2,782,208          $2,889,216
Facilities.....................

337. Island Transit, WA           $461,472            $481,536            $521,664            $541,728
Operations Base Facilities
Project........................

338. Bronx, NY Intermodal         $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
facility near Exit 6 of the
Bronx River Parkway............

339. East San Diego County,       $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
California--Bus Maintenance
Facility Expansion.............

340. New Jersey Intermodal        $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Facilities and Bus Rolling
Stock..........................

341. San Gabriel Valley, CA--     $1,826,660          $1,906,080          $2,064,920          $2,144,340
Foothill Transit Park and Rides

342. St. Paul, MN Union Depot     $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Multimodal Transit Facility....


[[Page 1681]]
119 STAT. 1681


343. Kings County, NY Construct   $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
a multimodal transportation
facility.......................

344. Gainesville, FL Bus          $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Facility Expansion.............

345. Kansas City, MO Bus Transit  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Infrastructure.................

346. Phoenix, AZ Construct metro  $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
bus facility in Phoenix's West
Valley.........................

347. Eastlake, Ohio--Eastlake     $817,190            $852,720            $923,780            $959,310
Stadium transit intermodal
facility.......................

348. Savannah, Georgia--Water     $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Ferry Riverwalk intermodal
facilities.....................

349. Kent, OH Construct Kent      $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
State University Intermodal
Facility serving students and
the general public.............

350. Milwaukee, WI Rehabilitate   $865,260            $902,880            $978,120            $1,015,740
Intermodal transportation
facility at downtown
Milwaukee's Amtrak Station,
increase parking for bus
passengers.....................

351. Charlotte North Carolina--   $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Eastland Community Transit
Center.........................

352. Oakland, CA Construct        $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
streetscape and intermodal
improvements at BART Station
Transit Villages...............

353. Suffolk County, NY Purchase  $53,838             $56,179             $60,861             $63,202
four handicapped accessible
vans to transport veterans to
and from the VA facility in
Northport......................

354. Norfolk, Virginia--Final     $336,490            $351,120            $380,380            $395,010
Design and Construction
Southside Bus Facility.........


[[Page 1682]]
119 STAT. 1682


355. Albany, GA Bus replacement.  $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716

356. Lafayette, Louisiana--       $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Multimodal center, Final Phase.

357. Athens, GA Buses and Bus     $273,038            $284,909            $308,651            $320,522
Facilities.....................

358. Cicero, Chicago Establish    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Transit Signal Priority, Cicero
Ave., Pace Suburban Bus........

359. Arlington County, VA         $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Pentagon City Multimodal
Improvements...................

360. Richmond, VA Design and      $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
construction for a bus
operations and maintenance
facility for Greater Richmond
Transit Company................

361. Roanoke, Virginia--Roanoke   $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Railway and Link Passenger
facility.......................

362. Akron, OH Construct City of  $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Akron Commuter Bus Transit
Facility.......................

363. Corning, New York--          $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Transportation Center..........

364. Santa Monica, CA Construct   $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
intermodal park-and-ride
facility at Santa Monica
College campus on South Bundy
Drive near Airport Avenue......

365. Pace Suburban Bus, IL South  $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Suburban BRT Mobility Network..

366. Orange County, CA            $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Transportation Projects to
Encourage Use of Transit to
Reduce Congestion..............

367. Palm Beach, FL 20 New Buses  $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
for Palm Tran..................


[[Page 1683]]
119 STAT. 1683


368. Nassau County, NY Conduct    $1,345,960          $1,404,480          $1,521,520          $1,580,040
planning and engineering for
transportation system (HUB)....

369. Norwalk, Connecticut--Pulse  $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Point Joint Development
intermodal facility............

370. Salem, MA Design and         $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Construct Salem Intermodal
Transportation Center..........

371. Las Vegas, NV Construct Las  $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Vegas WestCare Intermodal
Facility.......................

372. Richmond, KY Purchase        $138,442            $144,461            $156,499            $162,518
buses, bus equipment, and
facilities.....................

373. Niagara Frontier             $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Transportation Authority, NY
Replacement Buses..............

374. Metro-Atlanta, GA MARTA      $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Automated Smart-Card Fare
Collection system..............

375. Monterey, CA Purchase bus    $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
equipment......................

376. New York City, NY Purchase   $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Handicapped-Accessible Livery
Vehicles.......................

377. San Francisco, CA Construct  $1,153,680          $1,203,840          $1,304,160          $1,354,320
San Francisco Muni Islais Creek
Maintenance Facility...........

378. Indianapolis, IN Relocate    $2,691,920          $2,808,960          $3,043,040          $3,160,080
and improve intermodal
transportation for pedestrian
to Children's Museum of
Indianapolis...................

379. Ramapo, NY Transportation    $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Safety Field Bus...............


[[Page 1684]]
119 STAT. 1684


380. Columbiana County, OH        $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Construct Intermodal Facility..

381. San Francisco, CA Redesign   $793,155            $827,640            $896,610            $931,095
and renovate intermodal
facility at Glen Park Community

382. San Luis Rey, California--   $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Transit Center Project.........

383. South San Francisco, CA      $913,330            $953,040            $1,032,460          $1,072,170
Construction of Ferry Terminal
at Oyster Point in South San
Francisco to the San Francisco
Bay Area Water Transit
Authority......................

384. Atlanta, GA MARTA Clean      $1,153,680          $1,203,840          $1,304,160          $1,354,320
Fuel Bus Acquisition...........

385. Springfield, OH--City of     $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Springfield Bus Transfer
Station and Associated Parking.

386. Suffolk County, NY Design    $884,488            $922,944            $999,856            $1,038,312
and construction of intermodal
transit facility in Wyandanch..

387. Fresno, CA--Develop program  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
of low-emission transit
vehicles.......................

388. Sylmar, CA Los Angeles       $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Mission College Transit Center
construction...................

389. Lakewood, NJ--Ocean County   $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
Bus service and parking
facilities.....................

390. St. Lucie County, FL         $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Purchase Buses.................

391. Hampton Roads, VA Final      $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
design and construction for a
Hampton Roads Transit Southside
Bus Facility...................


[[Page 1685]]
119 STAT. 1685


392. Oakland, CA Construct Bay    $173,052            $180,576            $195,624            $203,148
Trail between Coliseum BART
station and Martin Luther King,
Jr., Regional Shoreline........

393. South Amboy, NJ              $1,538,240          $1,605,120          $1,738,880          $1,805,760
Construction of improvements to
facilities at South Amboy
Station under S Amboy, NJ
Regional Intermodal Initiative.

394. Hartford, CT Buses and bus-  $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
related facilities.............

395. Ilwaco, WA Construct park    $19,228             $20,064             $21,736             $22,572
and ride.......................

396. Burbank, CA Construction of  $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Empire Area Transit Center near
Burbank Airport................

397. Pottsville, PA Union Street  $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Trade and Transfer Center
Intermodal Facility............

398. Amador County, California--  $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Regional Transit Center........

399. Pasadena, CA ITS             $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Improvements...................

400. South FL Region, FL          $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Regional Universal Automated
Fare Collection System (UAFC)
(for bus system)...............

401. South Pasadena, CA Silent    $173,052            $180,576            $195,624            $203,148
Night Grade Crossing Project...

402. Tampa, FL Establish Transit  $144,210            $150,480            $163,020            $169,290
Emphasis Corridor and
Improvements...................

403. San Francisco, CA Implement  $2,691,920          $2,808,960          $3,043,040          $3,160,080
Transbay Terminal-Caltrain
Downtown Extension Project.....


[[Page 1686]]
119 STAT. 1686


404. Rock Island, IL Improve      $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Rock Island Mass Transit
District Bus Facility..........

405. Las Vegas, NV Construct      $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Boulder Highway BRT system and
purchase vehicles and related
equipment......................

406. Moultrie, GA Intermodal      $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716
facility.......................

407. Carson, CA Purchase one      $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
trolley-bus vehicle............

408. Brooklyn, NY Construct a     $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
multimodal transportation
facility in the vicinity of
Downstate Medical Center.......

409. Alexandria, VA Eisenhower    $480,700            $501,600            $543,400            $564,300
Avenue Intermodal Station
Improvements, including
purchase of buses and
construction of bus shelters...

410. Long Beach, CA Purchase ten  $576,840            $601,920            $652,080            $677,160
clean fuel buses...............

411. Cleveland, OH Construction   $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
of an intermodal facility and
related improvements at
University Hospitals facility
on Euclid Avenue...............

412. Nashville, TN Construct      $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Downtown Nashville Transit
Transfer Facility..............

413. Philadelphia, PA Penn's      $211,508            $220,704            $239,096            $248,292
Landing water shuttle parking
lot expansion and water shuttle
ramp infrastructure
construction...................

414. Hercules, CA Intermodal      $288,420            $300,960            $326,040            $338,580
Rail Station Improvements......


[[Page 1687]]
119 STAT. 1687


415. Purchase Buses and           $432,630            $451,440            $489,060            $507,870
construct bus facilities in
Broward County, FL.............

416. Improve marine intermodal    $3,220,000          $3,360,000          $3,640,000          $3,780,000
facilities in Ketchikan........

417. Indianapolis, Indiana--      $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Childrens Museum Intermodal
Center.........................

418. Windham, New Hampshire--     $711,436            $742,368            $804,232            $835,164
Construction of Park and Ride
Bus facility at Exit 3.........

419. Brooklyn, NY--               $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Rehabilitation of Bay Ridge
86th Street Subway Station.....

420. Purchase Buses and           $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
construct bus facilities in
Broward County, FL.............

421. Bayamon, Puerto Rico--       $163,438            $170,544            $184,756            $191,862
Purchase of Trolley Cars.......

422. C Street Expanded bus        $1,150,000          $1,200,000          $1,300,000          $1,350,000
facility and intermodal parking
garage, Anchorage, AK..........

423. Morris Thompson Cultural     $575,000            $600,000            $650,000            $675,000
and Visitors Center intermodal
parking facility, Fairbanks, AK

424. Sharon, PA--Bus Facility     $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Construction...................

425. CITC Non-profit Services     $690,000            $720,000            $780,000            $810,000
Center intermodal parking
facility, Anchorage, AK........

426. Abilene, TX Vehicle          $76,912             $80,256             $86,944             $90,288
replacement and facility
improvements for transit system

427. Alaska Native Medical        $1,150,000          $1,200,000          $1,300,000          $1,350,000
Center intermodal parking
facility.......................


[[Page 1688]]
119 STAT. 1688


428. Butler, PA--Multimodal       $192,280            $200,640            $217,360            $225,720
Transit Center Construction....

429. Normal, Illinois--           $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Multimodal Transportation
Center.........................

430. Rochester, New York--        $432,630            $451,440            $489,060            $507,870
Renaissance Square transit
center.........................

431. Erie, PA--EMTA Vehicle       $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Acquisition....................

432. Miami-Dade County, Florida-- $769,120            $802,560            $869,440            $902,880
Buses and bus facilities.......

433. Centralia, Illinois--South   $76,912             $80,256             $86,944             $90,288
Central Mass Transit District
Improvements...................

434. Roanoke, VA--Bus             $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
restoration in the City of
Roanoke........................

435. Denver, Colorado--Regional   $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
Transportation District Bus
Replacement....................

436. Intermodal facility          $5,750,000          $6,000,000          $6,500,000          $6,750,000
improvements at the Port of
Anchorage......................

437. American Village/            $76,912             $80,256             $86,944             $90,288
Montevallo, Alabama
construction of closed loop
Access Road, bus lanes and
parking facility...............

438. Corpus Christi, TX Corpus    $480,700            $501,600            $543,400            $564,300
Regional Transit Authority for
maintenance facility
improvements...................

439. Central Florida Commuter     $961,400            $1,003,200          $1,086,800          $1,128,600
Rail intermodal facilities.....

440. Ames, Iowa--Expansion of     $384,560            $401,280            $434,720            $451,440
CyRide Bus Maintenance Facility


[[Page 1689]]
119 STAT. 1689


441. Grand Valley Transit, CO     $96,140             $100,320            $108,680            $112,860
Bus and Bus Facilities.........

442. Albany, OR North Albany      $183,124            $191,086            $207,010            $214,971
Park and Ride..................

443. Los Angeles County           $62,491             $65,208             $70,642             $73,359
Metropolitan Transit Authority,
CA capital funds for facility
improvements to support the Cal
State Northridge tram system...

444. Pueblo Transit, CO Bus and   $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Bus Facilities.................

445. Roaring Fork Transit         $144,210            $150,480            $163,020            $169,290
Authority, CO Bus and Bus
Facilities.....................

446. Steamboat Springs, CO Bus    $144,210            $150,480            $163,020            $169,290
and Bus Facilities.............

447. Town of Telluride, CO Bus    $62,120             $64,821             $70,222             $72,923
and Bus Facilities.............

448. City of Durango, CO Bus and  $48,070             $50,160             $54,340             $56,430
Bus Facilities.................

449. City of Aspen, CO Bus and    $134,596            $140,448            $152,152            $158,004
Bus Facilities.................

450. Town of Snowmass Village,    $57,684             $60,192             $65,208             $67,716
CO Bus and Bus Facilities......

451. Utica, New York Transit      $1,150,000          $1,200,000          $1,300,000          $1,350,000
Multimodal Facilities..........

452. State of Wisconsin Transit   $1,150,000          $1,200,000          $1,300,000          $1,350,000
Intermodal Facilities..........

453. Central Florida Commuter     $690,000            $720,000            $780,000            $810,000
Rail Intermodal Facilities.....

454. Miami-Dade, FL Transit       $460,000            $480,000            $520,000            $540,000
Dadeland South Intermodal
Center.........................

455. Carrollton, Texas Downtown   $230,000            $240,000            $260,000            $270,000
Regional Multimodal Transit Hub


[[Page 1690]]
119 STAT. 1690


456. Altoona Multimodal           $230,000            $240,000            $260,000            $270,000
Transportation Facility Parking
Garage.........................

457. Lancaster County,            $57,500             $60,000             $65,000             $67,500
Pennsylvania Intermodal Center
and Parking Facility...........

458. Hershey, Pennsylvania        $57,500             $60,000             $65,000             $67,500
Intermodal Center and Parking
Facility.......................

459. Transbay Terminal/Caltrain   $4,025,000          $4,200,000          $4,550,000          $4,725,000
Downtown Extension Project.....

460.............................  $0                  $0                  $0                  $0

461. Alabama Institute for Deaf   $115,000            $119,000            $129,000            $137,000
and Blind-Bus project..........

462. Alabama State Port           $4,582,000          $4,760,000          $5,173,000          $5,485,000
Authority-Choctaw Point
Terminal.......................

463. Albany-Schenectady, NY, Bus  $500,000            $800,000            $1,200,000          $1,500,000
Rapid Transit Improvements in
NY Route 5.....................

464. Albuquerque, NM, Ride Bus    $1,500,000          $1,500,000          $1,800,000          $2,100,000
and Bus Facilities.............

465. AMTRAN Altoona, PA-Buses     $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
and Transit System Improvements

466. Anchorage-Transit Needs....  $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000

467. Area Transportation          $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Authority of North Central
Pennsylvania-Vehicle
Replacements...................

468. Atlantic City, NJ Jitney...  $750,000            $750,000            $750,000            $750,000

469. Auburn University-           $916,000            $952,000            $1,035,000          $1,097,000
Intermodal Parking Garage......

470. Bay County, FL-Transit       $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Facility.......................


[[Page 1691]]
119 STAT. 1691


471. Beaver County, PA Transit    $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Authority-Bus Replacement/
Related Equipment Replacement..

472. Berkshire, MA, Berkshire     $50,000             $30,000             $20,000             $0
Regional Transit Authority Bus
Maintenance Facility...........

473. Bi-State Development Agency- $1,145,000          $1,190,000          $1,293,000          $1,372,000
St. Louis Bridge Repair/
Reconstruction, for any
activity eligible under section
5309...........................

474. Bi-State Development Agency- $3,665,000          $3,808,000          $4,139,000          $4,388,000
St. Louis Metro Bus Fare
Collection Program.............

475. Black Hawk County, IA, UNI   $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Multimodal Project.............

476. Bozeman, MT, Intermodal and  $168,000            $171,000            $175,000            $176,000
parking facility...............

477. Brattleborough, VT,          $600,000            $200,000            $200,000            $0
Intermodal Center..............

478. Bridgeport, CT Facility      $350,000            $400,000            $500,000            $750,000
Expansion/Improvement..........

479. Broward County, FL--Bus and  $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Bus Facilities.................

480. Brownsville Urban System,    $916,000            $952,000            $1,035,000          $1,097,000
TX--City-Wide Transit
Improvement Project............

481. Butler Township, PA-         $802,000            $833,000            $905,000            $960,000
Cranbury Area Transit Service..

482. Cambria County, PA Transit   $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Authority-Bus Replacements.....

483. Campobello Park, ME, Bus     $22,000             $34,000             $0                  $0
Acquisition....................

484. Capital Area Transit System- $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Baton Rouge BRT................


[[Page 1692]]
119 STAT. 1692


485. Capital Metropolitan         $2,291,000          $2,380,000          $2,587,000          $2,742,000
Transportation Authority, TX-
Bus Replacements...............

486. CCTA, VT, Bus, Facilities    $300,000            $400,000            $500,000            $800,000
and Equipment..................

487. Central Arkansas Transit     $450,000            $550,000            $750,000            $1,000,000
Authority Facility Upgrades....

488. Central Florida Regional     $1,145,000          $1,190,000          $1,293,000          $1,372,000
Transportation Authority-LYNX
Bus Fleet Expansion Program....

489. Central Ohio Transit         $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Authority-Paratransit and Small
Bus Service Facility...........

490. Charlotte Area Transit       $2,291,000          $2,380,000          $2,587,000          $2,742,000
System/City of Charlotte-
Charlotte Multimodal Station...

491. Chicago, IL, Cermak Road,    $200,000            $250,000            $300,000            $500,000
Bus Rapid Transit..............

492. City of Alexandria, VA/City- $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Wide Transit Improvements......

493. City of Alexandria, VA/      $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Potomac Yard Transit
Improvements...................

494. City of Alexandria, VA/      $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Replace Royal Street Bus Garage

495. City of Alexandria, VA/      $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Valley Pedestrian and Transit..

496. City of Birmingham, AL/      $1,145,000          $1,190,000          $1,293,000          $1,372,000
Birmingham Downtown Intermodal
Terminal, Phase II.............

497. City of El Paso-Sun Metro-   $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Bus Replacements...............

498. City of Gainesville, FL      $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Regional Transit System-
Facility Expansion.............


[[Page 1693]]
119 STAT. 1693


499. City of Gaithersburg,        $112,000            $0                  $0                  $0
Maryland--Bus and paratransit
vehicle for seniors............

500. City of Hazleton, PA/        $321,000            $333,000            $362,000            $384,000
Hazleton Intermodal Center.....

501. City of Huntsville, AL-      $1,145,000          $1,190,000          $1,293,000          $1,372,000
Cummings Park Intermodal Center

502. City of Kalamazoo, MI Bus    $2,500,000          $1,800,000          $1,500,000          $1,400,000
Replacement....................

503. City of Montgomery, AL-ITS   $916,000            $952,000            $1,035,000          $1,097,000
Acquisition and Implementation.

504. City of Montgomery, AL-      $916,000            $952,000            $1,035,000          $1,097,000
Montgomery Airport Intermodal
Center.........................

505. City of Omaha-Creighton      $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
University Intermodal Facility.

506. City of Round Rock, TX-      $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Downtown Intermodal
Transportation Terminal........

507. City of Tuscaloosa, AL/      $1,374,000          $1,428,000          $1,552,000          $1,646,000
Intermodal Facility............

508. Collier County Transit, FL-- $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Transit Facility...............

509. Colorado Association of      $5,956,000          $6,188,000          $6,726,000          $7,130,000
Transit Agencies/Colorado
Transit Coalition-Colorado
Statewide Buses and Bus
Facilities.....................

510. Columbus, Georgia/Phenix     $389,000            $405,000            $440,000            $466,000
City, Alabama-National Infantry
Museum Multimodal Facility.....

511. Commonwealth of Virginia-    $3,436,000          $3,570,000          $3,880,000          $4,114,000
Statewide Bus Capital Program..

512. Corning, NY, Phase II        $350,000            $450,000            $550,000            $650,000
Corning Preserve Transportation
Enhancement Project............


[[Page 1694]]
119 STAT. 1694


513. County of Lackawanna         $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Transit System-Scranton
Intermodal Transportation
Center.........................

514. Cumberland-Dauphin-          $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Harrisburg Transit Authority-
Purchase of Buses and Spare
Units..........................

515. Dallas Area Rapid Transit-   $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Bus passenger Facilities.......

516. Dayton-Wright Stop Plaza...  $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000

517. Delaware Statewide Bus and   $1,750,000          $2,000,000          $2,000,000          $2,250,000
Bus Replacement (with Clean
Fuel (hybrid) vehicles)........

518. Denver Regional Transit      $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
District-Bus Maintenance
Facility.......................

519. Denver Regional Transit      $916,000            $952,000            $1,035,000          $1,097,000
District-Bus Replacements......

520. Denver Regional Transit      $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
District-Denver Union Station
Multimodal Renovations.........

521. Denver Regional Transit      $1,604,000          $1,666,000          $1,811,000          $1,919,000
District-U.S. 36 Corridor BRT..

522. Detroit Department of        $2,000,000          $2,100,000          $2,200,000          $2,300,000
Transportation Bus Replacement.

523. Downtown Middletown, CT,     $2,000,000          $2,150,000          $2,500,000          $2,850,000
Transportation Infrastructure
Improvement Project............

524. Erie, PA Metropolitan        $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Transit Authority-Bus
Acquisitions...................

525. Fairfax County, Virginia-    $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Richmond Highway Initiative....


[[Page 1695]]
119 STAT. 1695


526. Flint, MI, Mass              $750,000            $650,000            $450,000            $150,000
Transportation Authority Bus
Maintenance Facility...........

527. Florida Department of        $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Transportation-Palm Beach
County Replacement Buses.......

528. Gadsden, AL-Community Buses  $115,000            $119,000            $129,000            $137,000

529. Gary, Indiana, Gary Airport  $350,000            $400,000            $450,000            $500,000
Station Modernization and
Shuttle Service Project........

530. Georgia Department of        $2,062,000          $2,142,000          $2,328,000          $2,468,000
Transportation-Georgia
Statewide Bus and Bus
Facilities.....................

531. Grand Rapids, Michigan, The  $1,100,000          $1,100,000          $1,250,000          $1,750,000
Rapid, Bus Replacement.........

532. Greater Richmond Transit,    $1,145,000          $1,190,000          $1,293,000          $1,372,000
VA-Bus Operations/Maintenance
Facility.......................

533. Greenville, SC Transit       $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Authority-City of Greenville
Multimodal Transportation
Center Improvements............

534. Gulf Shores, AL--Community   $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Buses..........................

535. Hampton Roads Transit, VA--  $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Southside Bus Facility.........

536. Harris County-West Houston-  $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Fort Bend Bus Transit Corridor:
Uptown-Westpark Terminal.......

537. High Point, NC--Intermodal   $275,000            $286,000            $310,000            $329,000
Facility.......................

538. Hillsborough Area Regional   $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Transit, FL--Bus Rapid Transit
Improvements...................


[[Page 1696]]
119 STAT. 1696


539. Hillsborough, FL,            $1,000,000          $1,000,000          $1,000,000          $1,000,000
Hillsborough Area Regional
Transit Authority..............

540. Honolulu, HI, Bus            $1,350,000          $1,300,000          $1,300,000          $1,300,000
Facilities.....................

541. Hoonah, AK-Intermodal Ferry  $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Dock...........................

542. Howard County, MD Construct  $250,000            $220,000            $200,000            $200,000
Central Maryland Transit
Operations and Maintenance
Facility.......................

543. Idaho Department of          $344,000            $357,000            $388,000            $411,000
Transportation-Idaho Statewide
ITS for Public Transportation..

544. Indianapolis Downtown        $800,000            $900,000            $1,100,000          $1,200,000
Transit Center.................

545. Iowa Department of           $2,749,000          $2,856,000          $3,104,000          $3,291,000
Transportation-Iowa Statewide
Buses and Bus Replacement......

546. Ivy Tech State College,      $150,000            $200,000            $250,000            $400,000
Indiana Multimodal Center......

547. Jackson State University,    $1,145,000          $1,190,000          $1,293,000          $1,372,000
MS--Busing Project.............

548. Jacksonville Transportation  $1,145,000          $1,190,000          $1,293,000          $1,372,000
Authority, FL--Bus Fleet
Replacement and Equipment......

549. Jacksonville, FL             $350,000            $0                  $0                  $0
Transportation Authority
Paratransit Program............

550. Juneau-Transit Bus           $344,000            $357,000            $388,000            $411,000
Acquisition and Transit Center.

551. Kansas City Area             $2,291,000          $2,380,000          $2,587,000          $2,742,000
Transportation Authority-Bus
Project........................

552. Kansas Department of         $2,749,000          $2,856,000          $3,104,000          $3,291,000
Transportation-Kansas Statewide
Transit Buses, Bus Facilities,
and Bus ITS....................


[[Page 1697]]
119 STAT. 1697


553. Ketchikan, Alaska-Transit    $57,000             $60,000             $65,000             $68,000
Needs..........................

554. Knoxville, TN-Central        $573,000            $595,000            $647,000            $685,000
Station........................

555. Lafayette City-Parish        $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Consolidated Government, LA-
Lafayette Multimodal
Transportation Facility........

556. Lafayette, Indiana, City     $500,000            $550,000            $700,000            $750,000
Bus of Greater Lafayette.......

557. Lake Tahoe, NV MPO Bus       $1,000,000          $1,000,000          $1,000,000          $1,000,000
replacement....................

558. Lakeland Area Mass Transit   $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
District/Citrus Connection-
Capital Funding Needs..........

559. Lancaster, PA-Intermodal     $160,000            $167,000            $181,000            $192,000
Project........................

560. Lansing, MI, Capitol Area    $750,000            $850,000            $950,000            $1,050,000
Transportation Authority, Bus
Replacement and Bus Related ITS

561. Laredo-North Laredo Transit  $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Hub-Bus Maintenance Facility...

562. Las Cruces, NM, Road Runner  $200,000            $250,000            $300,000            $350,000
Bus and Bus Facilities.........

563. Lawrence, MA, Gateway        $600,000            $800,000            $900,000            $1,150,000
Intermodal and Quadrant Area
Reuse Project..................

564. Lehigh and Northampton       $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Transportation Authority, PA-
Allentown Intermodal
Transportation Center..........

565. Lipscomb University, TN-     $344,000            $357,000            $388,000            $411,000
Intermodal Parking Garage......

566. Los Angeles, CA, Fly-Away    $500,000            $550,000            $600,000            $850,000
Bus System Expansion...........


[[Page 1698]]
119 STAT. 1698


567. Los Angeles, CA, LAX         $500,000            $550,000            $600,000            $850,000
Intermodal Transportation
Center Rail and Bus Facilities.

568. Louisiana Department of      $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Transportation and Development-
Statewide Vehicles and
Equipment......................

569. Lowell, MA, Lowell Regional  $600,000            $800,000            $900,000            $1,150,000
Transit........................

570. Maine Department of          $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Transportation-Acadia
Intermodal Facility............

571. MARC Intermodal Odenton and  $368,000            $380,000            $380,000            $418,000
Edgewood Station Improvements..

572. Marquette County, Michigan   $300,000            $300,000            $300,000            $300,000
Transit Authority Bus passenger
facility.......................

573. Maryland Statewide Bus       $5,500,000          $5,750,000          $6,500,000          $7,250,000
Facilities and Buses...........

574. Matsu, Alaska-Transit Needs  $115,000            $119,000            $129,000            $137,000

575. METRO of Harris County-      $2,291,000          $2,380,000          $2,587,000          $2,742,000
Discretionary Bus Program......

576. Metro Regional Transit       $1,604,000          $1,666,000          $1,811,000          $1,919,000
Authority/City of Akron-
Downtown Transit Center, Akron.

577. Metro Transit/Metropolitan   $2,176,000          $2,261,000          $2,457,000          $2,606,000
Council, MN-Bus/Bus Capital....

578. Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid   $2,291,000          $2,380,000          $2,587,000          $2,742,000
Transit Authority-Clean Fuel
Buses..........................

579. Metropolitan Transit         $2,749,000          $2,856,000          $3,104,000          $3,291,000
Authority-Nashville Downtown
Transit Transfer Facility......

580. Miami-Dade Transit, FL--7th  $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Avenue NW Transit Hub..........


[[Page 1699]]
119 STAT. 1699


581. Michigan Department of       $2,000,000          $2,200,000          $2,400,000          $2,600,000
Transportation (MDOT) Bus
Replacement....................

582. Mobile County, AL            $115,000            $119,000            $129,000            $137,000
Commission-Bus project.........

583. Monroe Township, PA/Clarion  $151,000            $157,000            $171,000            $181,000
County Buses...................

584. Montana Department of        $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Transportation/Statewide Bus
Facilities and Buses...........

585. Nassau County, NY, Conduct   $1,000,000          $1,200,000          $1,300,000          $1,500,000
planning, engineering, and
construction for transportation
system (HUB)...................

586. Nebraska Department of       $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Roads/Bus Maintenance and
Storage Facility for RYDE in
Kearney, NE....................

587. Nebraska Department of       $916,000            $952,000            $1,035,000          $1,097,000
Roads-Statewide Vehicles,
Facilities, and Related
Equipment Purchases............

588. New Castle, PA Area Transit  $170,000            $176,000            $191,000            $203,000
Authority-Bus Purchases/Park
and Ride facility..............

589. New Haven, CT Bus            $2,000,000          $2,150,000          $2,500,000          $2,850,000
Maintenance Facility...........

590. New York City, NY, Bronx     $350,000            $450,000            $550,000            $650,000
Zoo Intermodal Facility........

591. New York City, NY, Enhance   $350,000            $450,000            $550,000            $650,000
Transportation Facilities Near
W. 65th Street and Broadway....

592. New York City, NY, Highline  $1,000,000          $1,200,000          $1,300,000          $1,500,000
Project, for Studies, Design,
and Construction...............


[[Page 1700]]
119 STAT. 1700


593. New York, Improvements to    $1,000,000          $1,200,000          $1,300,000          $1,500,000
Moynihan Station...............

594. North Carolina Department    $5,727,000          $5,950,000          $6,467,000          $6,856,000
of Transportation-North
Carolina Statewide Bus and Bus
Facilities.....................

595. North Dakota Department of   $1,000,000          $1,100,000          $1,300,000          $1,600,000
Transportation Statewide Bus...

596. North Slope Borough, AK-     $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Transit Purposes...............

597. North Star Borough, AK-      $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Transit Purposes...............

598. OATS, Incorporated, MO--ITS  $3,894,000          $4,046,000          $4,397,000          $4,663,000
Information and Billing System
and Bus Facilities.............

599. Omaha, NE, Buses and         $610,000            $650,000            $700,000            $740,000
Fareboxes......................

600. Pinellas County, FL          $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Metropolitan Planning
Organization-Pinellas Mobility
Initiative: BRT and Guideway...

601. Port Huron, Michigan, Blue   $1,000,000          $1,250,000          $1,500,000          $1,750,000
Water Area Transportation
Commission, Bus Maintenance
Facility.......................

602. Potomac and Rappahannock     $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Transportation Commission, VA-
Buses for Service Expansion....

603. Regional Transportation      $916,000            $952,000            $1,035,000          $1,097,000
Commission of Southern Nevada-
Central City Intermodal
Transportation Terminal........

604. Rhode Island, RIPTA Elmwood  $1,600,000          $1,700,000          $1,750,000          $1,850,000
Facility Expansion.............

605. Rhode Island, Statewide Bus  $5,250,000          $5,500,000          $6,200,000          $6,400,000
and Van Replacement............


[[Page 1701]]
119 STAT. 1701


606. River Parishes, Louisiana,   $160,000            $180,000            $200,000            $220,000
South Central Planning and
Development Commission, Bus and
Bus Facilities.................

607. Rochester, NY, Renaissance   $1,000,000          $1,400,000          $1,600,000          $2,000,000
Square Intermodal Facility,
Design and Construction........

608. Rock Island, Illinois,       $200,000            $250,000            $300,000            $500,000
Metrolink Transit Maintenance
Facility.......................

609. Rockland County, NY Express  $600,000            $700,000            $800,000            $900,000
Bus............................

610. San Angelo, TX Street        $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Railroad Company-Transit Fleet
Replacement....................

611. San Joaquin Region Transit   $250,000            $250,000            $250,000            $300,000
District, California, Hybrid
Diesel-Electric Replacement
Buses..........................

612. Santa Fe, NM, Trails Bus     $450,000            $500,000            $500,000            $700,000
and Bus Facilities.............

613. Seattle, WA Multimodal       $800,000            $900,000            $1,000,000          $1,100,000
Terminal Redevelopment and
Expansion......................

614. Sevierville County, TN       $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Transportation Board-
Alternative Fuel Buses.........

615. Silver Spring, Maryland,     $7,000,000          $6,000,000          $5,000,000          $0
Transit Center.................

616. Sitka, Alaska-Transit Needs  $57,000             $60,000             $65,000             $68,000

617. South Bend, Indiana,         $800,000            $900,000            $1,100,000          $1,200,000
TRANSPO Bus Operations Center..

618. South Brunswick, NJ Transit  $1,000,000          $1,000,000          $1,000,000          $1,000,000
System.........................

619. South Carolina Department    $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
of Transportation-Transit
Facilities Construction Program


[[Page 1702]]
119 STAT. 1702


620. South Carolina Department    $1,833,000          $1,904,000          $2,069,000          $2,194,000
of Transportation-Vehicle
Acquisition Program............

621. South Dakota Department of   $3,166,000          $3,452,000          $3,785,000          $4,097,000
Transportation--Statewide Buses
and Bus Facilities.............

622. South Florida Regional       $3,436,000          $3,570,000          $3,880,000          $4,114,000
Transportation Authority-Tri-
Rail Improvements, for any
activity eligible under section
5309...........................

623. South Florida Regional       $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Transportation Authority-West
Palm Beach Intermodal Facility.

624. Southeast Missouri           $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Transportation Service-Bus
Project........................

625. Southeastern Louisiana       $300,000            $450,000            $550,000            $700,000
University Intermodal Facility.

626. Southeastern Pennsylvania    $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Transportation Authority-Bucks
County Intermodal (Croydon and
Levittown).....................

627. Southeastern Pennsylvania    $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Transportation Authority-Paoli
Transportation Center..........

628. Southeastern Pennsylvania    $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Transportation Authority-
Villanova-SEPTA Intermodal.....

629. Southern Maryland Commuter   $2,700,000          $2,800,000          $3,000,000          $3,500,000
Initiative.....................

630. Southern Nevada Transit      $300,000            $300,000            $300,000            $100,000
Coalition, Public Transit
Building Acquisition...........

631. Southwest Ohio Regional      $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Transit Authority-Bus
Replacements...................


[[Page 1703]]
119 STAT. 1703


632. Springfield, IL, Multimodal  $800,000            $1,100,000          $1,300,000          $1,800,000
Transit Terminal...............

633. State of Vermont Buses,      $250,000            $350,000            $480,000            $520,000
Facilities and Equipment.......

634. Suburban Mobility Authority  $1,500,000          $1,750,000          $2,000,000          $2,250,000
for Regional Transportation
(SMART) Bus Maintenance
Facility.......................

635. Syracuse, New York,          $800,000            $950,000            $1,100,000          $1,150,000
Syracuse University Connective
Corridor Transit Project.......

636. Tennessee Department of      $2,749,000          $2,856,000          $3,104,000          $3,291,000
Transportation-Statewide
Tennessee Transit ITS and Bus
Replacement Project............

637. Terre Haute, Indiana--       $800,000            $900,000            $1,100,000          $1,200,000
Cherry Street Joint Development
Project........................

638. The District, The            $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Woodlands, TX-Bus Replacement
Program........................

639. Transit Authority of         $916,000            $952,000            $1,035,000          $1,097,000
Lexington, KY--Rehabilitation
of Building for Maintenance and
Administration.................

640. Transit Authority of         $458,000            $476,000            $517,000            $549,000
Northern Kentucky-TANK Bus
Replacement Project............

641. Transit Authority of River   $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
City-New Hybrid Electric Buses.

642. Transit Authority of Warren  $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
County, PA-Impact Warren.......

643. Trenton Intermodal Station.  $5,500,000          $4,250,000          $4,000,000          $4,000,000

644. University of Alabama in     $1,604,000          $1,666,000          $1,811,000          $1,919,000
Birmingham-Intermodal Facility.


[[Page 1704]]
119 STAT. 1704


645. University of Alabama in     $1,374,000          $1,428,000          $1,552,000          $1,646,000
Huntsville-Intermodal Facility.

646. University of Alabama        $2,062,000          $2,142,000          $2,328,000          $2,468,000
Intermodal Facility South......

647. University of Alabama        $344,000            $357,000            $388,000            $411,000
Transit System.................

648. University of Delaware Fuel  $160,000            $165,000            $175,000            $185,000
Cell Bus Program...............

649. University of Memphis-       $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Pedestrian Bridge..............

650. U.S. Space and Rocket        $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Center, AL-Tramway Expansion...

651. Utah Statewide Bus and Bus   $6,882,000          $7,148,000          $7,757,000          $8,234,000
Facilities.....................

652. Valley Regional Transit, ID- $1,329,000          $1,381,000          $1,500,000          $1,590,000
Downtown Boise Multimodal......

653. VIA Metropolitan Transit     $1,145,000          $1,190,000          $1,293,000          $1,372,000
Authority, TX-Bus and Bus
Facility Improvements..........

654. Washington Southworth        $1,000,000          $1,150,000          $1,350,000          $1,500,000
Terminal Redevelopment.........

655. Washington, King Street      $50,000             $60,000             $70,000             $70,000
Transportation Center-Intercity
Bus Terminal Component.........

656. Washoe County, NV Bus and    $1,000,000          $1,500,000          $2,000,000          $2,250,000
Bus Facilities.................

657. Waterbury, CT Bus            $2,000,000          $2,300,000          $2,800,000          $3,400,000
Maintenance Facility...........

658. West Virginia, Statewide     $5,000,000          $5,000,000          $5,000,000          $5,000,000
Bus and Bus Facilities.........

659. Westchester, NY, Bee Line    $450,000            $500,000            $550,000            $650,000
Bus Replacement................

660. Westmoreland County Transit  $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Authority, PA-Bus Replacement..


[[Page 1705]]
119 STAT. 1705


661. Wilkes-Barre Intermodal      $1,374,000          $1,428,000          $1,552,000          $1,646,000
Facility.......................

662. Williamsport, PA Bureau of   $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Transportation-Williamsport
Trade and Transit Centre
Expansion......................

663. Wisconsin, Statewide Buses   $600,000            $610,000            $650,000            $700,000
and Bus Facilities.............

664. Wrangell, AK-Ferry           $229,000            $238,000            $259,000            $274,000
Infrastructure.................

665. Wyoming Department of        $687,000            $714,000            $776,000            $823,000
Transportation-Wyoming
Statewide Bus and Bus Related
Facilities.....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(b) Clean Fuels Grants Program Projects.--
(1) Funding.--Notwithstanding subsection (a), the Secretary
shall make funds available for the projects listed in item
numbers 497, 517, 519, 557, 575, 578, 605, 611, 612, 614, 631,
638, 640, 641, 648, and 659 in the table contained in subsection
(a), in the amounts specified, from amounts made available to
carry out section 5308 of title 49, United States Code.
(2) Purchase of buses under supplemental environmental
project.--With respect to the project numbered 605, purchases of
buses procured under a supplemental environmental project
executed by the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority and the
Environmental Protection Agency are eligible for assistance
under section 5308 of such title.

(c) Special Rule.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
Secretary shall pay the Federal share of the net project cost to a State
or local governmental authority that carries out or has carried out any
part of the bus and bus-related facilities projects numbered 258 and 347
under subsection (a).

SEC. 3045.  NOTE: 49 USC 5308 note.  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

[[Page 1706]]
119 STAT. 1706

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 5 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. 3046.  NOTE: 49 USC 5338 note.  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) Public transportation national security study.--
(A)  NOTE: Deadline. Contracts.  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.
(B) Alternative routes.--For each system described
in subparagraph (A) 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.
(C) 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

[[Page 1707]]
119 STAT. 1707

and evaluation, together with such recommendations as
the Academy considers appropriate.
(D) Funding.--For each of fiscal year 2006 and 2007
$250,000 shall be available to carry out this paragraph.
(2) Center for transit-oriented development.--For each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009, not less than $1,000,000 shall
be made available by the Secretary for establishment and
operation of the Center for Transit-Oriented Development--
(A) to develop standards and definitions for
transit-oriented development adjacent to public
transportation facilities;
(B) 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
(C) to provide research support and technical
assistance to public transportation agencies,
metropolitan planning agencies, and other persons
regarding transit-oriented development.
(3) Transportation equity research program.--For each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009, 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.
(4) Cognitive impairment study.--For fiscal year 2006,
$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.
(5) Transit career ladder training program.--For each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009, 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.
(6) Pilot program for remote infrared audible signs.--
(A) In general.--For each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009, not less than $500,000 shall be made
available by the Secretary to carry out a pilot program
to determine the benefits of remote infrared audible
signage technology for provision of wayfinding and
information to people who are visually, cognitively, or
learning disabled.
(B) Report.--
(i) In general.--Not later than September 30,
2009, the Secretary shall transmit to the
Committee

[[Page 1708]]
119 STAT. 1708

on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House
of Representatives and the Committee on Banking,
Housing, and Urban Affairs of the Senate a report
on the pilot program carried out under this
section.
(ii) Contents.--The report--
(I) shall include--
(aa) an evaluation of the
effect of the pilot program on
multimodal accessibility in
public transportation;
(bb) an evaluation of the
effect of the program on
operators of public
transportation and their
passengers;
(cc) an evaluation of the
effect of making public
transportation accessible to
people with visual, cognitive,
and learning disabilities on
ridership of public
transportation and use of
paratransit; and
(dd) an evaluation of the
effect of the program on the
education, community
integration, work life, and
general quality of life of the
targeted populations.
(7)  NOTE: Pennsylvania.  Hydrogen fuel cell shuttle
deployment demonstration project.--To demonstrate the utility of
hydrogen fuel cell vehicles in daily shuttle service, $800,000
in each of fiscal years 2006 and 2007 shall be provided for
hydrogen fuel cell employee shuttle vans, related equipment,
operations, public education and outreach in Allentown,
Pennsylvania.
(8) Wisconsin supplemental transportation rural assistance
program (strap).--
(A) In general.--For capital projects, operations,
purchase or lease of vehicles, and integration, planning
and coordination of public transportation services in
the State of Wisconsin that will supplement and expand
existing rural and special public transportation
services in that State, $2,000,000 in each of fiscal
years 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009 shall be provided to
the State of Wisconsin Department of Transportation.
(B) Purpose.--Funds received under this program may
be used to supplement public transportation programs for
rural populations for activities authorized under
sections 5310, 5311, and 5316 of title 49, United States
Code. Funds made available under this program are
subject to the requirements of section 5311 of title 49,
United States Code, except that funds may be made
available for up to 80 percent of net operating costs.
In awarding grants made available under this program,
the State shall consider--
(i) rural population in the area to be served
by the applicant;
(ii) extent to which the applicant
demonstrates coordination of existing
transportation services or proposed public
transportation services;
(iii) need for additional services in the area
being serviced by the applicant and the extent to
which the proposed services will address those
needs and provide accessibility for non-ambulatory
recipients;

[[Page 1709]]
119 STAT. 1709

(iv) extent to which the applicant
demonstrates an innovative approach that is
responsive to the identified service needs of the
rural population; and
(v) extent to which the applicant demonstrates
that the communities being served have been
consulted in the planning process.
(9) Human services transportation coordination.--
(A) In general.--For the management of a program to
improve and enhance the coordination of Federal
resources for human services transportation with those
of the Department of Transportation, $1,600,000 in each
of fiscal years 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009 shall be
provided to a national non-profit organization that is
competitively selected by the Secretary. Such
organization shall have demonstrated expertise in issues
of transportation coordination and in providing
technical assistance to local transportation
organizations.
(B)  NOTE: Reports.  Eligible activities.--Under
this program, the organization selected by the Secretary
shall--
(i)  NOTE: Establishment.  establish an
advisory panel consisting of Federal, State, and
local officials and organizations;
(ii) prepare an inventory of human service
transportation agencies operating in the United
States;
(iii) prepare an inventory of Federal
transportation spending;
(iv) develop a program of technical assistance
and training for human services transportation
organizations that shall include on-site technical
assistance, a resource clearinghouse, and
preparation of technical manuals;
(v) prepare an annual report for the Secretary
on activities under this program and make
recommendations for improving coordination.
(10) Portland, oregon streetcar prototype purchase and
deployment.--Not less than $1,000,000 shall be made available in
each of fiscal years 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009 by the Secretary
to TriMet for the purchase and deployment of a domestically
manufactured streetcar.
(11) Public transportation participation pilot program.--
(A) In general.--Of the funds allocated under this
section for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009,
$1,000,000 for each fiscal year shall be made available
by the Secretary to establish a pilot program to support
planning and public participation activities related to
public transportation projects.
(B) Eligible activities.--Activities eligible to be
carried out under the pilot program may include the
following:
(i) Improving data collection analysis and
transportation access for all users of the public
transportation systems.
(ii) Supporting public participation through
the project development phases.
(iii) Using innovative techniques to improve
the coordination of transportation alternatives.
(iv) Enhancing the coordination of public
transportation benefits and services.

[[Page 1710]]
119 STAT. 1710

(v) Contracting with stakeholders to focus on
the delivery of transportation plans and programs.
(vi) Measuring and reporting on the annual
performance of the transportation systems.
(12) Transportation hybrid electric vehicle and fuel cell
research.--$500,000 in each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009
for a transportation hybrid electric vehicle and fuel cell
research program at the University of Alabama.
(13) Trauma care system research and development.--$500,000
in each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 for trauma care system
research and development at the University of Alabama in
Birmingham.
(14) Transportation infrastructure and logistics research.--
$500,000 in each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 for
transportation infrastructure and logistics research at the
University of Alabama in Huntsville.
(15) National bus rapid transit institute.--$1,750,000 in
each of fiscal years 2006 though 2009 for the National Bus Rapid
Transit Institute at the University of South Florida.
(16) Application of information technology to transportation
logistics and security.--$400,000 in each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 for research on the application of information
technology to transportation logistics and security at the
Northern Kentucky University.
(17) Intelligent transportation system pilot project.--
$465,000 in each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 for an
intelligent transportation system pilot project with the
National Consortium on Remote Sensing in Transportation Flows at
the Ohio State University.
(18) Regional public safety training center.--$500,000 in
each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 for a regional public
safety training center at the Lehigh-Carbon Community College.
(19) Transit security training facility.--$750,000 in each
of fiscal years 2006 though 2009 for a transit security training
facility in Chester County, Pennsylvania.
(20) Small urban and rural transit center.--$800,000 in
fiscal year 2006, $800,000 in fiscal year 2007, $1,200,000 in
fiscal year 2008, and $1,200,000 in fiscal year 2009 for the
Small Urban and Rural Transit Center at North Dakota State
University.
(21) Advanced technology bus rapid transit project.--
$500,000 in fiscal year 2006, $540,000 in fiscal year 2007,
$550,000 in fiscal year 2008, and $625,000 in fiscal year 2009
for the Southeastern Connecticut Advanced Technology Bus Rapid
Transit Project.
(22) Greater new haven transit district fuel cell-powered
bus research.--$500,000 in fiscal year 2006, $540,000 in fiscal
year 2007, $550,000 in fiscal year 2008, and $625,000 in fiscal
year 2009 for the Greater New Haven Transit District Fuel Cell-
Powered Bus Research.
(23) Center for advanced transportation initiatives.--
$500,000 in fiscal year 2006, $540,000 in fiscal year 2007,
$540,000 in fiscal year 2008, and $625,000 in fiscal year 2009
for the Rutgers Center for Advanced Transportation Initiatives
(CAIT).

[[Page 1711]]
119 STAT. 1711

(24) Institute of technology's transportation, economic, and
land use system.--$500,000 in fiscal year 2006, $540,000 in
fiscal year 2007, $540,000 in fiscal year 2008, and $625,000 in
fiscal year 2009 for the New Jersey Institute of Technology's
Transportation, Economic, and Land Use System program (TELUS).
(25) Regional transit training consortium pilot program.--
$270,000 in fiscal year 2006, $380,000 in fiscal year 2007,
$380,000 in fiscal year 2008, and $450,000 in fiscal year 2009
for the Southern California Regional Transit Training Consortium
Pilot Program.

(b) Remainder.--After making allocations under subsection (a), the
remainder of funds made available by section 5338(d) of title 49, United
States Code, 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. 3047. FORGIVENESS OF GRANT AGREEMENT.

(a) Lane County Transit District.--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.

(b) Pee Dee Regional Transit Authority.--The debt identified in the
2000 Triennial Review of the Pee Dee Regional Transit Authority as owed
to the Federal Transit Administration by the Pee Dee Regional Transit
Authority does not have to be repaid.

SEC. 3048.  NOTE: Deadline.  COOPERATIVE PROCUREMENT.

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),  NOTE: 49 USC 5307.  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.

SEC. 3049.  NOTE: 5 USC 7905 note.  TRANSPORTATION FRINGE BENEFITS.

(a) Transit Pass Transportation Fringe Benefits.--
(1)  NOTE: Effective date.  In general.--Effective as of
the first day of the next fiscal year beginning after the date
of the enactment of this Act, each covered agency shall
implement a program under which all qualified Federal employees
serving in or under such agency shall be offered transit pass
transportation fringe benefits, as described in paragraph (2).
(2) Benefits described.--The benefits described in this
paragraph are the transit pass transportation fringe benefits
which, under section 2 of Executive Order No. 13150, are
required to be offered by Federal agencies in the National
Capital Region on the date of the enactment of this Act.

[[Page 1712]]
119 STAT. 1712

(3) Definitions.--In this subsection--
(A) the term ``covered agency'' means any agency, to
the extent of its facilities in the National Capital
Region;
(B) the term ``agency'' means any agency (as defined
by 7905(a)(2) of title 5, United States Code), the
Postal Rate Commission, and the Smithsonian Institution;
(C) the term ``National Capital Region'' includes
the District of Columbia and every county or other
geographic area covered by section 2 of Executive Order
No. 13150;
(D) the term ``Executive Order No. 13150'' refers to
Executive Order No. 13150 (5 U.S.C. 7905 note);
(E) the term ``Federal agency'' is used in the same
way as under section 2 of Executive Order No. 13150; and
(F) any determination as to whether or not one is a
``qualified Federal employee'' shall be made applying
the same criteria as would apply under section 2 of
Executive Order No. 13150.
(4) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this subsection shall
be considered to require that a covered agency--
(A) terminate any program or benefits in existence
on the date of the enactment of this Act, or postpone
any plans to implement (before the effective date
referred to in paragraph (1)) any program or benefits
permitted or required under any other provision of law;
or
(B) discontinue (on or after the effective date
referred to in paragraph (1)) any program or benefits
referred to in subparagraph (A), so long as such program
or benefits satisfy the requirements of paragraphs (1)
through (3).

(b) Authority to Transport Federal Employees Between Their Place of
Employment and Mass Transit Facilities.--
(1) In general.--Section 1344 of title 31, United States
Code, is amended--
(A) by redesignating subsections (g) and (h) as
subsections (h) and (i), respectively; and
(B) by inserting after subsection (f) the following:

``(g)(1) If and to the extent that the head of a Federal agency, in
his or her sole discretion, deems it appropriate, a passenger carrier
may be used to transport an officer or employee of a Federal agency
between the officer's or employee's place of employment and a mass
transit facility (whether or not publicly owned) in accordance with
succeeding provisions of this subsection.
``(2) Notwithstanding section 1343, a Federal agency that provides
transportation services under this subsection (including by passenger
carrier) may absorb the costs of such services using any funds available
to such agency, whether by appropriation or otherwise.
``(3) In carrying out this subsection, a Federal agency, to the
maximum extent practicable and consistent with sound budget policy,
should--
``(A) use alternative fuel vehicles for the provision of
transportation services;
``(B) to the extent consistent with the purposes of this
subsection, provide transportation services in a manner that
does not result in additional gross income for Federal income
tax purposes; and

[[Page 1713]]
119 STAT. 1713

``(C) coordinate with other Federal agencies to share, and
otherwise avoid duplication of, transportation services provided
under this subsection.

``(4) For purposes of any determination under chapter 81 of title 5
or chapter 171 of title 28, an individual shall not be considered to be
in the `performance of duty' or `acting within the scope of his or her
office or employment' by virtue of the fact that such individual is
receiving transportation services under this subsection. Nor shall any
time during which an individual uses such services be considered when
calculating the hours of work or employment for that individual for
purposes of title 5 of the United States Code, including chapter 55 of
that title.
``(5)(A)  NOTE: Regulations.  The Administrator of General
Services, after consultation with the appropriate agencies, shall
prescribe any regulations necessary to carry out this subsection.

``(B) Transportation services under this subsection shall be subject
neither to the last sentence of subsection (d)(3) nor to any regulations
under the last sentence of subsection (e)(1).
``(6) In this subsection, the term `passenger carrier' means a
passenger motor vehicle or similar means of transportation that is
owned, leased, or provided pursuant to contract by the United States
Government.''.
(2) Funds for maintenance, repair, etc.--Subsection (a) of
section 1344 of title 31, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following:

``(3) For purposes of paragraph (1), the transportation of an
individual between such individual's place of employment and a mass
transit facility pursuant to subsection (g) is transportation for an
official purpose.''.
(3)  NOTE: 31 USC 1344 note.  Coordination.--The authority
to provide transportation services under section 1344(g) of
title 31, United States Code (as amended by paragraph (1)) shall
be in addition to any authority otherwise available to the
agency involved.

SEC. 3050. COMMUTER RAIL.

(a) In General.--The Federal Transit Administration shall approve
final design for the projects authorized under section
3030(c)(1)(A)(xliv) of the Federal Transit Act of 1998 and section
1214(g) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (16 U.S.C.
668dd note) in the absence of an access agreement with the owner of the
railroad right-of-way.
(b) Timely Resolution of Issues.--The Secretary shall timely resolve
any issues delaying the completion of the projects authorized under
section 1214(g) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century
(16 U.S.C. 668dd note) and section 3030(c)(1)(A)(xliv) of the Federal
Transit Act of 1998.

SEC. 3051. PARATRANSIT SERVICE IN ILLINOIS.

In the State of Illinois, a regional or State agency, or another
transit agency, may be responsible for providing the complementary
paratransit services that would otherwise be provided by a transit
agency under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. Where a
regional or State agency, or another transit agency, undertakes to
provide such services, either by agreement or pursuant to State
legislation, the Secretary may audit the paratransit services provided,
make recommendations, and take appropriate enforcement action directed
to such regional, State, or transit agency providing the services, to
ensure that the requirements of the Americans

[[Page 1714]]
119 STAT. 1714

with Disabilities Act of 1990 are met. Nothing in this Act shall be
construed to conflict with the requirements of the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 and its implementing regulations.

TITLE  NOTE: Motor Carrier Safety Reauthorization Act of 2005. 49 USC
30101.  IV--MOTOR CARRIER SAFETY

SEC. 4001. SHORT TITLE.

This title may be cited as the ``Motor Carrier Safety
Reauthorization Act of 2005''.

Subtitle A--Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety

SEC. 4101. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

(a) Motor Carrier Safety Grants.--Section 31104(a) of title 49,
United States Code, 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) $188,480,000 for fiscal year 2005;
``(2) $188,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
``(3) $197,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
``(4) $202,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
``(5) $209,000,000 for fiscal year 2009.''.

(b) Administrative Expenses.--Section 31104 of such title 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) $254,849,000 for fiscal year 2005;
``(B) $213,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
``(C) $223,000,000 for fiscal year 2007;
``(D) $228,000,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
``(E) $234,000,000 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, 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.

``(j) Availability of Funds; Contract Authority.--
``(1) Period of availability.--The amounts made available
under this section shall remain available until expended.
``(2) Initial date of availability.--Authorizations from the
Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) by this
section 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.

[[Page 1715]]
119 STAT. 1715

``(3) Contract authority.--Approval by the Secretary of a
grant with funds made available under this section 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.''.

(c) 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) Commercial driver's license program improvement
grants.--For commercial driver's license program improvement
grants under section 31313 of title 49, United States Code
$25,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009.
(2) Border enforcement grants.--For border enforcement
grants under section 31107 of such title $32,000,000 for each of
fiscal years 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009.
(3) Performance and registration information system
management grant program.--For the performance and registration
information system management grant program under section 31109
of such title $5,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006, 2007,
2008, and 2009.
(4) Commercial vehicle information systems and networks
deployment.--For carrying out the commercial vehicle information
systems and networks deployment program under section 4126 of
this Act, $25,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through
2009.
(5) Safety data improvement grants.--For safety data
improvement grants under section 4128 of this Act $2,000,000 for
fiscal year 2006 and $3,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2007
through 2009.

(d) Period of Availability.--The amounts made available under
subsection (c) of this section shall remain available until expended.
(e) Initial Date of Availability.--Amounts authorized to be
appropriated from the Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit
Account) by subsection (c) 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.
(f) Contract Authority.--Approval by the Secretary of a grant with
funds made available under subsection (c) 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. 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'';

[[Page 1716]]
119 STAT. 1716

(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;'';
(4) in subparagraph (C) by striking ``$10,000.'' and
inserting ``$25,000; and''; and
(5) 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. 4103. 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
a motor carrier, broker, freight forwarder, or owner or
operator of a commercial motor vehicle subject to part B
of subtitle VI who fails to allow promptly, upon demand,
the Secretary (or an employee designated by the
Secretary) to inspect and copy any record or inspect and
examine equipment, lands, buildings and other property
in accordance with sections 504(c), 5121(c), and
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 amends or
supersedes any remedy available to the Secretary under
section 502(d), section 507(c), or any other provision
of this title.''.

SEC. 4104. REVOCATION OF OPERATING AUTHORITY.

Section 13905(e) of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following:
``(1) Protection of safety.--Notwithstanding subchapter II
of chapter 5 of title 5, the Secretary--
``(A) may suspend the registration of a motor
carrier, a freight forwarder, or a broker for failure to
comply with requirements of the Secretary pursuant to
section 13904(c)

[[Page 1717]]
119 STAT. 1717

or 13906 or an order or regulation of the Secretary
prescribed under those sections; and
``(B) shall revoke the registration of a motor
carrier that has been prohibited from operating in
interstate commerce for failure to comply with the
safety fitness requirements of section 31144.'';
(2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``may suspend a
registration'' and inserting ``shall revoke the registration'';
and
(3) by striking paragraph (3) and inserting the following:
``(3) Notice; period of suspension.--The Secretary may
suspend or revoke under this subsection the registration only
after giving notice of the suspension or revocation to the
registrant. A suspension remains in effect until the registrant
complies with the applicable sections or, in the case of a
suspension under paragraph (2), until the Secretary revokes the
suspension.''.

SEC. 4105. STATE LAWS RELATING TO VEHICLE TOWING.

(a) State Laws Relating to Vehicle Towing.--Section 14501(c) of
title 49, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``(5) Limitation on statutory construction.--Nothing in this
section shall be construed to prevent a State from requiring
that, in the case of a motor vehicle to be towed from private
property without the consent of the owner or operator of the
vehicle, the person towing the vehicle 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.''.

(b) Predatory Tow Truck Operations.--
(1) Study.--The Secretary shall conduct a study--
(A) to identify issues related to the protection of
the rights of individuals whose motor vehicles are
towed;
(B) to establish the scope and geographic reach of
any issues so identified, and
(C) to identify potential remedies for those issues.
(2) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate
and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the
House of Representatives a report on the results of the study.

SEC. 4106. 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 (E) and inserting the
following:
``(E) provides that the total expenditure of amounts of the
State and its political subdivisions (not including amounts of
the Government) for commercial motor vehicle safety programs for
enforcement of commercial motor vehicle size and weight
limitations, drug interdiction, and State traffic safety

[[Page 1718]]
119 STAT. 1718

laws and regulations under subsection (c) of this section will
be maintained at a level at least equal to the average level of
that expenditure for the 3 full fiscal years beginning after
October 1 of the year 5 years prior to the beginning of each
Government fiscal year.'';
(3) by striking subparagraph (Q) and inserting the
following:
``(Q) provides that the State has established a program to
ensure that--
``(i) accurate, complete, and timely motor
carrier safety data is collected and reported to
the Secretary; and
``(ii) the State will participate in a
national motor carrier safety data correction
system prescribed by the Secretary;'';
(4) by aligning subparagraph (R) with subparagraph (S);
(5) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph (S);
(6) by striking the period at the end of subparagraph (T)
and inserting a semicolon; and
(7) 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
noncommercial and commercial motor vehicles;
``(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 operate beyond
the scope of such registration;
``(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;
and
``(X) except in the case of an imminent or obvious safety
hazard, ensures that an inspection of a vehicle transporting
passengers for a motor carrier of passengers is conducted at a
station, terminal, border crossing, maintenance facility,
destination, or other location where a motor carrier may make a
planned stop.''.

(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

[[Page 1719]]
119 STAT. 1719

``(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 motor carrier safety activities
(including roadside safety inspections) conducted in the State
is maintained at a level at least equal to the average level of
such activities conducted in the State in fiscal years 2003,
2004, and 2005; except that the State may not use more than 5
percent of the basic amount the State receives under the grant
under subsection (a) for enforcement activities relating to
noncommercial motor vehicles described in this paragraph unless
the Secretary determines a higher percentage will result in
significant increases in commercial motor vehicle safety.''; 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--
``(1) analyzes commercial motor vehicle safety trends among
the States and documents the most effective commercial motor
vehicle safety programs implemented with grants under this
section; and
``(2) describes the effect of activities carried out with
grants made under this section on commercial motor vehicle
safety.''.

SEC. 4107. HIGH PRIORITY ACTIVITIES AND NEW ENTRANTS AUDITS.

(a) High Priority Activities.--Section 31104 of title 49, United
States Code (as amended by section 4101 of this Act), is amended by
adding at the end the following:
``(k) High-Priority Activities.--
``(1) Criteria.--The Secretary shall establish safety
performance criteria to be used to distribute high priority
program funds under this subsection.
``(2) Set aside.--The Secretary may set aside from amounts
made available by subsection (a) up to $15,000,000 for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 for States, local governments,
and organizations representing government agencies or officials
described in paragraph (3) for carrying out high priority
activities and projects that improve commercial motor vehicle
safety and compliance with commercial motor vehicle safety
regulations (including activities and projects that are national
in scope), increase public awareness and education, demonstrate
new technologies, and reduce the number and rate of accidents
involving commercial motor vehicles.
``(3) Description of recipients.--Amounts set aside under
this subsection shall be allocated by the Secretary only to
State agencies, local governments, and organizations
representing government agencies or officials that use and train

[[Page 1720]]
119 STAT. 1720

qualified officers and employees in coordination with State
motor vehicle safety agencies.
``(4) Limitation.--At least 90 percent of the amounts set
aside for a fiscal year under this subsection shall be awarded
in grants to State agencies and local government agencies.''.

(b) New Entrant Audits.--Section 31104 of such title is amended--
(1) by redesignating the second subsection as subsection
(f); and
(2) by adding at the end of such subsection the following:
``(5) New entrant audits.--
``(A) Grants.--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 and local
governments.
``(B) Set aside.--The Secretary shall set aside from
amounts made available by section 31104(a) up to
$29,000,000 per fiscal year for audits of new entrant
motor carriers conducted pursuant to this paragraph.
``(C) Determination.--If the Secretary determines
that a State or local government is not able to use
government employees to conduct new entrant motor
carrier audits, the Secretary may use the funds set
aside under this paragraph to conduct audits for such
States or local governments.''.

SEC. 4108. DATA QUALITY IMPROVEMENT.

(a) In General.--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.''.

(b) Report on Status of Safety Fitness Rating System Revision.--Not
later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary
shall submit to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation
of the Senate and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of
the House of Representatives a report on the status of revision of the
safety fitness rating system of motor carriers.

SEC. 4109. 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

[[Page 1721]]
119 STAT. 1721

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);
``(B) possess or seek the authority to possess for a
time period no longer than determined reasonable by the
Secretary, to impose sanctions relating to commercial
motor vehicle registration on the basis of a Federal
safety fitness determination; and
``(C) establish and implement a process to cancel
the motor vehicle registration and seize the
registration plates of a vehicle when an employer is
found liable under section 31310(i)(2)(C) for knowingly
allowing or requiring an employee to operate such a
commercial motor vehicle in violation of an out-of-
service order.
``(4) Grants.--From the funds authorized by section
31104(i), the Secretary may make a grant in a fiscal year to a
State to implement the performance and registration information
system management requirements of this subsection.''.

(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

``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).''.
(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. 4110. BORDER ENFORCEMENT GRANTS.

(a) In General.--Chapter 311 of title 49, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by striking the heading for subchapter I  NOTE: 49 USC
31100.  and inserting the following:

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

and
(2) by striking section 31107 and inserting the following:

[[Page 1722]]
119 STAT. 1722

``Sec. 31107. Border enforcement grants

``(a) General Authority.--The Secretary of Transportation may make a
grant in a fiscal year to an entity or 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 or
the Federal Government ending before October 1, 2005, whichever the
State designates.
``(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) Clerical 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. 4111. 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 and motor coach research
and technology program.
``(2) Multiyear plan.--The program must include a multi-year
research plan that focuses on nonredundant innovative research
and shall be coordinated with other research programs or
projects ongoing or planned within the Department of
Transportation, as appropriate.
``(3) Research, development, and technology transfer
activities.--The Secretary may carry out under the program

[[Page 1723]]
119 STAT. 1723

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 the safety and efficiency of
commercial motor vehicles through technological
innovation and 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 and cooperative agreements 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

[[Page 1724]]
119 STAT. 1724

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) Clerical 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. 4112. NEBRASKA CUSTOM HARVESTERS LENGTH EXEMPTION.

(a) In General.--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 a truck tractor
and 2 trailers or semitrailers not in actual lawful operation on
a regular or periodic basis on June 1, 1991, if the length of
the property-carrying units does not exceed 81 feet 6 inches and
such combination is used only to transport equipment utilized by
custom harvesters under contract to agricultural producers to
harvest one or more of wheat, soybeans, and milo during the
harvest months for such crops, as defined by the State of
Nebraska.''.

(b) Conforming Amendment.--Such section 31112(c) is amended by
striking the subsection designation and heading and inserting the
following:
``(c) Special Rules for Wyoming, Ohio, Alaska, Iowa, and Nebraska.--
''.

SEC. 4113. 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

[[Page 1725]]
119 STAT. 1725

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)  NOTE: Deadline.  Regulations.--Not later than 1 year after
the date of enactment of this subsection, 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 such title 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. 4114. INTRASTATE OPERATIONS OF INTERSTATE MOTOR CARRIERS.

(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 record of an owner or operator operating in
interstate commerce and the accident record and safety
inspection record of such owner or operator--
``(A) in operations that affect interstate commerce
within the United States; and
``(B) in operations in Canada and Mexico if the
owner or operator also conducts operations within the
United States;
``(2) periodically update such safety fitness
determinations;
``(3)  NOTE: Public information.  make such final safety
fitness determinations readily available to the public; and
``(4)  NOTE: Regulations.  prescribe by regulation
penalties for violations of this section consistent with section
521.''.

(b) Prohibited Transportation.--The first subsection (c) of section
31144 of such title 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) of this section 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 State.--Section 31144 of such
title is amended--

[[Page 1726]]
119 STAT. 1726

(1) by redesignating subsections (d), (e), and the second
subsection (c) as subsections (e), (f), and (g), respectively;
and
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following:

``(d) Determination of Unfitness by State.--If a State that receives
motor carrier safety assistance program funds under section 31102
determines, by applying the standards prescribed by the Secretary under
subsection (b), that an owner or operator of a commercial motor vehicle
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 vehicle in the State, the
Secretary shall prohibit the owner or operator from operating such
vehicle in interstate commerce until the State determines that the owner
or operator is fit.''.

SEC. 4115. TRANSFER PROVISION.

(a) In General.--Title II of the Motor Carrier Safety Improvement
Act of 1999 (113 Stat. 1748-1773)  NOTE: 49 USC 31136 note.  is
amended by inserting after section 228--
(1) the following:

``SEC. 229. CERTAIN EXEMPTIONS.'';

and
(2) the text of section 345 of the National Highway System
Designation Act of 1995 (49 U.S.C. 31136 note).

(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents for such Act is
amended by inserting after the item relating to section 228 the
following:

``Sec. 229. Certain exemptions.''.

(c) Conforming Amendment.--Section 229  NOTE: 49 USC 31136
note.  of such Act (as added by this section) is amended by striking
subsection (f).

(d) Conforming Repeal.--Section 345 of the National Highway System
Designation Act of 1995 (49 U.S.C. 31136 note; 109 Stat. 613) is
repealed.

SEC. 4116. MEDICAL PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Subchapter III  NOTE: 49 USC 31131.  of chapter
311 of title 49, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following:

``Sec. 31149. Medical program

``(a) Medical Review Board.--
``(1) Establishment and function.--The Secretary of
Transportation shall establish a Medical Review Board to provide
the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration with medical
advice and recommendations on medical standards and guidelines
for the physical qualifications of operators of commercial motor
vehicles, medical examiner education, and medical research.
``(2) Composition.--The Medical Review Board shall be
appointed by the Secretary and shall consist of 5 members
selected from medical institutions and private practice. The
membership shall reflect expertise in a variety of medical
specialties relevant to the driver fitness requirements of the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.

``(b) Chief Medical Examiner.--The Secretary shall appoint a chief
medical examiner who shall be an employee of the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration and who shall hold a position

[[Page 1727]]
119 STAT. 1727

under section 3104 of title 5, United States Code, relating to
employment of specially qualified scientific and professional personnel,
and shall be paid under section 5376 of title 5, United States Code,
relating to pay for certain senior-level positions.
``(c) Medical Standards and Requirements.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary, with the advice of the
Medical Review Board and the chief medical examiner, shall--
``(A) establish, review, and revise--
``(i) medical standards for operators of
commercial motor vehicles that will ensure that
the physical condition of operators of commercial
motor vehicles is adequate to enable them to
operate the vehicles safely; and
``(ii) requirements for periodic physical
examinations of such operators performed by
medical examiners who have, at a minimum, self-
certified that they have completed training in
physical and medical examination standards and are
listed on a national registry maintained by the
Department of Transportation;
``(B) require each such operator to have a current
valid medical certificate;
``(C) conduct periodic reviews of a select number of
medical examiners on the national registry to ensure
that proper examinations of such operators are being
conducted;
``(D) develop, as appropriate, specific courses and
materials for medical examiners listed in the national
registry established under this section, and require
those medical examiners to, at a minimum, self-certify
that they have completed specific training, including
refresher courses, to be listed in the registry;
``(E) require medical examiners to transmit the name
of the applicant and numerical identifier, as determined
by the Administrator of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, for any completed medical examination
report required under section 391.43 of title 49, Code
of Federal Regulations, electronically to the chief
medical examiner on monthly basis; and
``(F) periodically review a representative sample of
the medical examination reports associated with the name
and numerical identifiers of applicants transmitted
under subparagraph (E) for errors, omissions, or other
indications of improper certification.
``(2) Monitoring performance.--The Secretary shall
investigate patterns of errors or improper certification by a
medical examiner. If the Secretary finds that a medical examiner
has issued a medical certificate to an operator of a commercial
motor vehicle who fails to meet the applicable standards at the
time of the examination or that a medical examiner has falsely
claimed to have completed training in physical and medical
examination standards as required by this section, the Secretary
may remove such medical examiner from the registry and may void
the medical certificate of the applicant or holder.

``(d)  NOTE: Establishment.  National Registry of Medical
Examiners.--The Secretary, acting through the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administra- tion--

[[Page 1728]]
119 STAT. 1728

``(1) shall establish and maintain a current national
registry of medical examiners who are qualified to perform
examinations and issue medical certificates;
``(2) shall remove from the registry the name of any medical
examiner that fails to meet or maintain the qualifications
established by the Secretary for being listed in the registry or
otherwise does not meet the requirements of this section or
regulation issued under this section;
``(3) shall accept as valid only medical certificates issued
by persons on the national registry of medical examiners; and
``(4) may make participation of medical examiners in the
national registry voluntary if such a change will enhance the
safety of operators of commercial motor vehicles.

``(e) Regulations.--The Secretary shall issue such regulations as
may be necessary to carry out this section.''.
(b) Medical Examiners.--Section 31136(a)(3) of such title is amended
to read as follows:
``(3) the physical condition of operators of commercial
motor vehicles is adequate to enable them to operate the
vehicles safely and the periodic physical examinations required
of such operators are performed by medical examiners who have
received training in physical and medical examination standards
and, after the national registry maintained by the Department of
Transportation under section 31149(d) is established, are listed
on such registry; and''.

(c) Definition of Medical Examiner.--Section 31132 of such title is
amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (6) through (10) as
paragraphs (7) through (11), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (5) the following:
``(6) `medical examiner' means an individual licensed,
certified, or registered in accordance with regulations issued
by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration as a medical
examiner.''.

(d)  NOTE: 49 USC 31104 note.  Funding.--Amounts made available
pursuant to section 31104(i) of title 49, United States Code, shall be
used by the Secretary to carry out section 31149 of title 49, United
States Code.

(e) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such subchapter is amended
by inserting after the item relating to section 31148 the following:

``31149. Medical program.''.

(f)  NOTE: 49 USC 31149 note.  Effective Date.--The amendment made
by subsection (a) shall take effect on the 365th day following the date
of enactment of this Act.

SEC. 4117. SAFETY PERFORMANCE HISTORY SCREENING.

(a) In General.--Subchapter III of chapter 311 of title 49, United
States Code (as amended by section 4116 of this Act), is amended by
adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 31150. Safety performance history screening

``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Transportation 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.

[[Page 1729]]
119 STAT. 1729

``(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 Driver-Related Safety Violation Defined.--In this
section, the term `serious driver-related violation' means a violation
by an operator of a commercial motor vehicle that the Secretary
determines will result in the operator being prohibited from continuing
to operate a commercial motor vehicle until the violation is
corrected.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such subchapter (as
amended by section 4116 of this Act) is amended by adding at the end the
following:

``31150. Safety performance history screening.''.

SEC. 4118. ROADABILITY.

(a) In General.--Subchapter III of chapter 311 of title 49, United
States Code (as amended by sections 4116 and 4117 of this Act) is
amended by adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 31151. Roadability

``(a) Inspection, Repair, and Maintenance of Intermodal Equipment.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Not later than 1 year
after the date of enactment of this section, the Secretary of
Transportation, after providing notice and opportunity for
comment, shall issue regulations establishing a program to
ensure that intermodal equipment used to transport intermodal
containers is safe and systematically maintained.
``(2) Intermodal equipment safety regulations.--The
Secretary shall issue the regulations under this section as a
subpart of the Federal motor carrier safety regulations.
``(3) Contents.--The regulations issued under this section
shall include, at a minimum--

[[Page 1730]]
119 STAT. 1730

``(A) a requirement to identify intermodal equipment
providers responsible for the inspection and maintenance
of intermodal equipment that is interchanged or intended
for interchange to motor carriers in intermodal
transportation;
``(B) a requirement to match intermodal equipment
readily to an intermodal equipment provider through a
unique identifying number;
``(C) a requirement that an intermodal equipment
provider identified under subparagraph (A)
systematically inspect, repair, and maintain, or cause
to be systematically inspected, repaired, and
maintained, intermodal equipment described in
subparagraph (A) that is intended for interchange with a
motor carrier;
``(D) a requirement to ensure that each intermodal
equipment provider identified under subparagraph (A)
maintains a system of maintenance and repair records for
such equipment;
``(E) requirements that--
``(i) a specific list of intermodal equipment
components or items be identified for the visual
or audible inspection of which a driver is
responsible before operating the equipment over
the road; and
``(ii) the inspection under clause (i) be
conducted as part of the Federal requirement in
effect on the date of enactment of this Act that a
driver be satisfied that the intermodal equipment
components are in good working order before the
equipment is operated over the road;
``(F) a requirement that a facility at which an
intermodal equipment provider regularly makes intermodal
equipment available for interchange have an operational
process and space readily available for a motor carrier
to have an equipment defect identified pursuant to
subparagraph (E) repaired or the equipment replaced
prior to departure;
``(G) a program for the evaluation and audit of
compliance by intermodal equipment providers with
applicable Federal motor carrier safety regulations;
``(H) 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
``(I) a prohibition on intermodal equipment
providers from placing intermodal equipment in service
on the public highways to the extent such providers or
their equipment are found to pose an imminent hazard;
``(J) a process by which motor carriers and agents
of motor carriers shall be able to request the Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration to undertake an
investigation of an intermodal equipment provider
identified under subparagraph (A) that is alleged to be
not in compliance with the regulations under this
section;
``(K) a process by which equipment providers and
agents of equipment providers shall be able to request
the Administration to undertake an investigation of a
motor

[[Page 1731]]
119 STAT. 1731

carrier that is alleged to be not in compliance with the
regulations issued under this section;
``(L) a process by which a driver or motor carrier
transporting intermodal equipment is required to report
to the intermodal equipment provider or the provider's
designated agent any actual damage or defect in the
intermodal equipment of which the driver or motor
carrier is aware at the time the intermodal equipment is
returned to the intermodal equipment provider or the
provider's designated agent;
``(M) a requirement that any actual damage or defect
identified in the process established under subparagraph
(L) be repaired before the equipment is made available
for interchange to a motor carrier and that repairs of
equipment made pursuant to the requirements of this
subparagraph and reports made pursuant to the
subparagraph (L) process be documented in the
maintenance records for such equipment; and
``(N) a procedure under which motor carriers,
drivers and intermodal equipment providers may seek
correction of their motor carrier safety records through
the deletion from those records of violations of safety
regulations attributable to deficiencies in the
intermodal chassis or trailer for which they should not
have been held responsible.
``(4) Deadline for rulemaking proceeding.--Not later than
120 days after the date of enactment of this section, the
Secretary shall initiate a rulemaking proceeding for issuance of
the regulations under this section.

``(b) 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.
``(c) Out-of-Service Until Repair.--Any intermodal equipment that is
determined under this section to fail to comply with applicable Federal
safety regulations may be placed out of service by the Secretary or a
Federal, State, or government official designated by the Secretary and
may not be used on a public highway until the repairs necessary to bring
such equipment into compliance have been completed. Repairs of equipment
taken out of service shall be documented in the maintenance records for
such equipment.
``(d) Preemption Generally.--Except as provided in subsection (e), a
law, regulation, order, or other requirement of a State, a political
subdivision of a State, or a tribal organization relating to commercial
motor vehicle safety is preempted if such law, regulation, order, or
other requirement exceeds or is inconsistent with a requirement imposed
under or pursuant to this section.
``(e) Pre-Existing State Requirements.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), a
State requirement for the periodic inspection of intermodal
chassis by intermodal equipment providers that was in effect on
January 1, 2005, shall remain in effect only until the date on
which requirements prescribed under this section take effect.
``(2) Nonpreemption determinations.--
``(A) In general.--Notwithstanding subsection (d), a
State requirement described in paragraph (1) is not
preempted by a Federal requirement prescribed under this

[[Page 1732]]
119 STAT. 1732

section if the Secretary determines that the State
requirement is as effective as the Federal requirement
and does not unduly burden interstate commerce.
``(B) Application required.--Subparagraph (A)
applies to a State requirement only if the State applies
to the Secretary for a determination under this
paragraph with respect to the requirement before the
date on which the regulations issued under this section
take effect.  NOTE: Deadline.  The Secretary shall
make a determination with respect to any such
application within 6 months after the date on which the
Secretary receives the application.
``(C) Amended state requirements.--Any amendment to
a State requirement not preempted under this subsection
because of a determination by the Secretary under
subparagraph (A) may not take effect unless--
``(i) it is submitted to the Secretary before
the effective date of the amendment; and
``(ii) the Secretary determines that the
amendment would not cause the State requirement to
be less effective than the Federal requirement and
would not unduly burden interstate commerce.

``(f) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions
apply:
``(1) Intermodal equipment.--The term `intermodal equipment'
means trailing equipment that is used in the intermodal
transportation of containers over public highways in interstate
commerce, including trailers and chassis.
``(2) Intermodal equipment interchange agreement.--The term
`intermodal equipment interchange agreement' means the Uniform
Intermodal Interchange and Facilities Access Agreement or any
other written document executed by an intermodal equipment
provider or its agent and a motor carrier or its agent, the
primary purpose of which is to establish the responsibilities
and liabilities of both parties with respect to the interchange
of the intermodal equipment.
``(3) Intermodal equipment provider.--The term `intermodal
equipment provider' means any person that interchanges
intermodal equipment with a motor carrier pursuant to a written
interchange agreement or has a contractual responsibility for
the maintenance of the intermodal equipment.
``(4) Interchange.--The term `interchange'--
``(A) means the act of providing intermodal
equipment to a motor carrier pursuant to an intermodal
equipment interchange agreement 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; but
``(B) does not include the leasing of equipment to a
motor carrier for primary use in the motor carrier's
freight hauling operations.''.

(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such subchapter (as
amended by sections 4116 and 4117 of this Act) is amended by adding at
the end the following:

``31151. Roadability.''.

[[Page 1733]]
119 STAT. 1733

SEC. 4119. 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, commercial motor
vehicle, driver, and highway safety by such means as exchanging
information, conducting research, and examining needs, best practices,
and new technology.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended by
adding at the end the following:

``SUBCHAPTER IV--MISCELLANEOUS

``31161. International cooperation.''.

SEC. 4120. FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR PRIVATE MOTOR CARRIERS.

(a) Transportation of Passengers.--
(1) General requirement.--Section 31138(a) of title 49,
United States Code, is amended--
(A) by striking ``for compensation''; and
(B) by inserting ``commercial'' before ``motor
vehicle''.
(2) Other persons.--Section 31138(c) of such title is
amended by adding at the end the following:
``(4) Other persons.--The Secretary may require a person,
other than a motor carrier (as defined in section 13102),
transporting passengers by commercial motor vehicle to file with
the Secretary the evidence of financial responsibility specified
in subsection (c)(1) in an amount not less than the greater of
the amount required by subsection (b)(1) or the amount required
for such person to transport passengers under the laws of the
State or States in which the person is operating; except that
the amount of the financial responsibility must be sufficient to
pay not more than the amount of the financial responsibility for
each final judgment against the person for bodily injury to, or
death of, an individual resulting from the negligent operation,
maintenance, or use of the commercial motor vehicle, or for loss
or damage to property, or both.''.

(b) Transportation of Property.--Section 31139 of such title is
amended--
(1) in subsection (b)(1)--
(A) by striking ``for compensation''; and
(B) by inserting ``commercial'' before ``motor
vehicle'';
(2) by redesignating subsections (c) through (g) as
subsections (d) through (h), respectively; and
(3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following:

``(c) Filing of Evidence of Financial Responsibility.--The Secretary
may require a motor private carrier (as defined in section 13102) to
file with the Secretary the evidence of financial responsibility
specified in subsection (b) in an amount not less than the greater of
the minimum amount required by this section or the amount required for
such motor private carrier to transport property under the laws of the
State or States in which the motor private

[[Page 1734]]
119 STAT. 1734

carrier is operating; except that the amount of the financial
responsibility must be sufficient to pay not more than the amount of the
financial responsibility for each final judgment against the motor
private carrier for bodily injury to, or death of, an individual
resulting from negligent operation, maintenance, or use of the
commercial motor vehicle, or for loss or damage to property, or both.''.

SEC. 4121. 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. 4122. CDL LEARNER'S PERMIT PROGRAM.

Chapter 313 of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in section 31302 by inserting ``and may have only one
learner's permit at any time'' after ``time'';
(2) in section 31308--
(A) by inserting after ``license'' the first place
it appears ``and learner's permits'';
(B) by striking ``licenses.'' and inserting
``licenses and permits.'';
(C) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as
paragraphs (3) and (4), respectively; and
(D) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
``(2) before a commercial driver's license learner's permit
may be issued to an individual, the individual must pass a
written test, that complies with the minimum standards
prescribed by the Secretary under section 31305(a), on the
operation of the commercial motor vehicle that the individual
will be operating under the permit;''; and
(E) in paragraphs (3) and (4) of section 31308 (as
so redesignated) and in section 31309 (b) by inserting
after ``license'' each place it appears ``or learner's
permit''.

SEC. 4123. COMMERCIAL DRIVER'S LICENSE INFORMATION SYSTEM MODERNIZATION.

(a) Modernization Plan.--Section 31309 of title 49, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
``(e) Modernization Plan.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline. Publication.  In general.--Not
later than 120 days after the date of enactment of this
subsection, the Secretary shall develop and publish a
comprehensive national plan to modernize the information system
under this section that--
``(A) complies with applicable Federal information
technology security standards;
``(B) provides for the electronic exchange of all
information including the posting of convictions;
``(C) contains self auditing features to ensure that
data is being posted correctly and consistently by the
States;
``(D) integrates the commercial driver's license and
the medical certificate; and
``(E) provides a schedule for modernization of the
system.
``(2) Consultation.--The plan shall be developed in
consultation with representatives of the motor carrier industry,

[[Page 1735]]
119 STAT. 1735

State safety enforcement agencies, and State licensing agencies
designated by the Secretary.
``(3) State funding of future efforts.--The plan shall
specify that States will fund future efforts to modernize the
commercial driver's information system.
``(4) Deadline for state participation.--
``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall establish in
the plan a date by which all States must be operating
commercial driver's license information systems that are
compatible with the modernized information system under
this section.
``(B) Factors to consider.--In establishing the date
under subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall consider the
following:
``(i) Availability and cost of technology and
equipment needed to comply with subparagraph (A).
``(ii) Time necessary to install, and test the
operation of, such technology and equipment.
``(5) Implementation.--The Secretary shall implement the
plan developed under subsection (a) and modernize the
information system under this section to meet the requirements
of the plan.

``(f) Funding.--At the Secretary's discretion, a State may use the
funds made available to the State under section 31318 to modernize its
commercial driver's license information system to be compatible with the
modernized information system under this section.''.
(b) State Participations.--Section 31311(a) of such title is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (15) by striking ``(g)(1)(A), and (g)(2)''
and inserting ``(i)(1)(A) and (i)(2)'';
(2) in paragraph (17) by striking ``section 31310(h)'' and
inserting ``as 31310(j)''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(21) By the date established by the Secretary under
section 31309(e)(4), the State shall be operating a commercial
driver's license information system that is compatible with the
modernized commercial driver's license information system under
section 31309.''.

(c)  NOTE: 49 USC 31309 note.  Grants.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary may make a grant to a State
or organization representing agencies and officials of a State
in a fiscal year to modernize the commercial driver's license
information system of the State to be compatible with the
modernized commercial driver's license information system under
section 31309 of title 49, United States Code, if the State is
in substantial compliance with the requirements of section 31311
of such title and this section, as determined by the Secretary.
(2) Criteria.--The Secretary shall establish criteria for
the distribution of grants and notify each State annually of
such criteria.
(3) Use of grant.--A State may use a grant under this
subsection only to implement improvements that are consistent
with the modernization plan developed by the Secretary.
(4) Government share.--A grant under this subsection to a
State or organization may not be for more than 80 percent

[[Page 1736]]
119 STAT. 1736

of the costs incurred by the State or organization in a fiscal
year in modernizing the commercial driver's license information
system of the State to be compatible with the modernized
commercial driver's license information system under section
31309 of title 49, United States Code. In determining these
costs, the Secretary shall include in-kind contributions of the
State.

(d) Funding.--There are authorized to be appropriated from the
Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) to carry out
this section--
(1) $5,000,000 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.

(e) Contract Authority and Availability.--
(1) Period of availability.--The amounts made available
under subsection (d) 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 (d) 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 (d) 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.

(f)  NOTE: Deadline.  Baseline Audit.--Not later than 1 year after
the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary, in consultation with
the Inspector General of the Department of Transportation, shall perform
a baseline audit of the information system maintained under section
31309 of title 49, United States Code. The audit shall include--
(1) an assessment of the validity of data in the information
system on a State-by-State basis;
(2) an assessment of the extent to which convictions are
validly posted on a driver's record;
(3) recommendations to the Secretary on how to update the
baseline audit annually to ensure that any shortcomings in the
information system are addressed, and a methodology for
conducting the update;
(4) identification, on a State-by-State basis, of any
actions that the Inspector General finds necessary to improve
the integrity of data collected by the system and to ensure the
proper posting of convictions; and
(5) an analysis of amounts and use of the revenues derived
from fees charged for use of the commercial driver's license
information system.

SEC. 4124. 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:

[[Page 1737]]
119 STAT. 1737

``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 making a good
faith effort toward 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) In general.--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.
``(B) Priority.--In making grants under paragraph
(1)(B), the Secretary shall give priority to States that
will use such grants to achieve compliance with the
requirements of the Motor Carrier Safety Improvement Act
of 1999, including the amendments made by such Act.
``(3) Application.--In order to receive a grant under this
section, a State shall 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 driver's 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 this section.
``(5) Government share.--The Secretary shall reimburse a
State under a grant made under this subsection an amount that is
not more than 100 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

[[Page 1738]]
119 STAT. 1738

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.

``(c) Emerging Issues.--The Secretary may designate up to 10 percent
of the amounts made available to carry out this section for a fiscal
year for allocation to a State agency, local government, or other person
at the discretion of the Secretary to address emerging issues relating
to commercial driver's license improvements.
``(d) Apportionment.--Except as otherwise provided in subsection
(c), all amounts made available to carry out this section for a fiscal
year shall be apportioned to States according to criteria prescribed by
the Secretary.''.
(b) Clerical 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. 4125. 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. 4126. 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 vehicle operations, including commercial
vehicle, 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

[[Page 1739]]
119 STAT. 1739

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)  NOTE: Certification.  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 Federal sources shall not exceed 80 percent.

[[Page 1740]]
119 STAT. 1740

(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,

[[Page 1741]]
119 STAT. 1741

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.

SEC. 4127. 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. The final annual report shall be submitted not later
than September 30, 2009.
(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 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009 to carry out this
section (other than subsection (f)).

[[Page 1742]]
119 STAT. 1742

(f)  NOTE: Reports. Deadline.  Study.--The Comptroller General
shall update the Government Accountability Office's evaluation of the
``Share the Road Safely'' program to determine if it has achieved
reductions in the number and severity of commercial motor vehicle
crashes, including reductions in the number of deaths and the severity
of injuries sustained in these crashes and shall report its updated
evaluation to Congress no later than June 30, 2006.

SEC. 4128. SAFETY DATA IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.

(a)  NOTE: Grants.  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) Federal Share.--The Federal share of a grant under this section
shall be 80 percent of the cost of the activities for which the grant is
made.
(d) Biennial Report.--Not later than 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. 4129. OPERATION OF COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLES BY INDIVIDUALS WHO USE
INSULIN TO TREAT DIABETES MELLITUS.

(a)  NOTE: Deadline.  Revision of Final Rule.--Not later than 90
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall
begin revising the final rule published in the Federal Register on
September 3, 2003, relating to persons with diabetes, to allow
individuals who use insulin to treat their diabetes to operate
commercial motor vehicles in interstate commerce. The revised final rule
shall provide for the individual assessment of applicants who use
insulin to treat their diabetes and who are, except for their use of
insulin, otherwise qualified under the Federal motor carrier safety
regulations.  NOTE: Applicability.  The revised final rule shall be
consistent with the criteria described in section 4018 of the
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (49 U.S.C. 31305 note)
and shall conclude the rulemaking process in the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration docket relating to qualifications of drivers with
diabetes.

(b) No Period of Commercial Driving While Using Insulin Required for
Qualification.--After the earlier of the date of issuance of the revised
final rule under subsection (a) or the 90th day following the date of
enactment of this Act, 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.

[[Page 1743]]
119 STAT. 1743

(c) Minimum Period of Insulin Use.--Subject to subsection (b), 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. Such demonstration shall be consistent with the
findings reported in July 2000, by the expert medical panel established
by the Secretary, in ``A Report to Congress on the Feasibility of a
Program to Qualify Individuals with Insulin-Treated Diabetes Mellitus to
Operate Commercial Motor Vehicles in Interstate Commerce as Directed by
the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century''. 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.
(d) 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. 4130. OPERATORS OF VEHICLES TRANSPORTING AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES
AND FARM SUPPLIES.

(a) Agricultural Exemption.--Section 229(a)(1) of the Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Improvement Act of 1999  NOTE: 49 USC 31136 note.  (as
added by section 4115 of this Act), is amended to read as follows:
``(1) Transportation of agricultural commodities and farm
supplies.--Regulations prescribed by the Secretary under
sections 31136 and 31502 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 229(c) of such Act is amended
by striking ``paragraph (2)'' and inserting ``paragraph (1), (2), or
(4)''.
(c) Definitions.--Section 229(e) of such Act is amended by adding at
the end the following:
``(7) Agricultural commodity.--The term `agricultural
commodity' means any agricultural commodity, non-processed 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.''.

[[Page 1744]]
119 STAT. 1744

SEC. 4131. MAXIMUM HOURS OF SERVICE FOR OPERATORS OF GROUND WATER WELL
DRILLING RIGS.

Section 229(a)(2) of the Motor Carrier Safety Improvement Act of
1999 (as added by section 4115 of this Act),  NOTE: 49 USC 31136
note.  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. 4132. HOURS OF SERVICE FOR OPERATORS OF UTILITY SERVICE VEHICLES.

Section 229 of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Improvements Act of
1999 (as added by section 4115 of this Act),  NOTE: 49 USC 31136
note.  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 two 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.''; and
(2) in subsection (b) by striking ``Nothing'' and inserting
``Except as provided in subsection (a)(4), nothing''.

SEC. 4133.  NOTE: 49 USC 31136 note.  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. 4134.  NOTE: 49 USC 31301 note.  GRANT PROGRAM FOR COMMERCIAL
MOTOR VEHICLE OPERATORS.

(a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a grant program
for persons to train 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 vehicles.
(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 through 2009 to carry out this
section.

SEC. 4135.  NOTE: 49 USC 31301 note.  CDL TASK FORCE.

(a) In General.--The Secretary shall convene a task force to study
and address current impediments and foreseeable challenges to the
commercial driver's license program's effectiveness

[[Page 1745]]
119 STAT. 1745

and measures needed to realize the full safety potential of the
commercial driver's license program, including such issues as--
(1) State enforcement practices;
(2) operational procedures to detect and deter fraud;
(3) needed improvements for seamless information sharing
between States;
(4) effective methods for accurately sharing electronic data
between States;
(5) adequate proof of citizenship;
(6) updated technology; and
(7) timely notification from judicial bodies concerning
traffic and criminal convictions of commercial driver's license
holders.

(b) Membership.--Members of the task force should include State
motor vehicle administrators, organizations representing government
agencies or officials, members of the Judicial Conference,
representatives of the trucking industry, representatives of labor
organizations, safety advocates, and other significant stakeholders.
(c) Report.--Not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of
this Act, the Secretary, on behalf of the task force, shall complete a
report of the task forces findings and recommendations for legislative,
regulatory, and enforcement changes to improve the commercial drivers
license program and submit such the report to the Committee on Commerce,
Science, and Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives.
(d) Funding.--From the funds amounts made available by section
4101(c)(1), $200,000 shall be available for each of fiscal years 2006
and 2007 to carry out this section.

SEC. 4136.  NOTE: 49 USC 31136 note.  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. 4137. DECALS.

The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance may not restrict the sale of
any inspection decal to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
unless the Administration fails to meet its responsibilities under its
memorandum of understanding with the Alliance (other than a failure due
to the Administration's compliance with Federal law).

SEC. 4138.  NOTE: 49 USC 31144 note.  HIGH RISK CARRIER COMPLIANCE
REVIEWS.

From the funds authorized by section 31104(i) of title 49, United
States Code, the Secretary shall ensure that compliance reviews are
completed on motor carriers that have demonstrated through performance
data that they pose the highest safety risk. At a minimum, a compliance
review shall be conducted whenever a motor carrier is rated as category
A or B for 2 consecutive months.

SEC. 4139. FOREIGN COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLES.

(a) Operating  NOTE: 49 USC 31100 note.  Authority Enforcement
Assistance for States.--
(1) Training and outreach.--Not  NOTE: Deadline.  later
than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the
Administrator

[[Page 1746]]
119 STAT. 1746

of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration shall conduct
outreach and provide training as necessary to State personnel
engaged in the enforcement of Federal motor carrier safety
regulations to ensure their awareness of the process to be used
for verification of the operating authority of motor carriers,
including motor carriers of passengers, and to ensure proper
enforcement when motor carriers are found to be in violation of
operating authority requirements.
(2) Assessment.--The Inspector General of the Department of
Transportation may periodically assess the implementation and
effectiveness of the training and outreach program.

(b) Study of Foreign Commercial Motor Vehicles.--
(1) Review.--Not  NOTE: Deadline.  later than 1 year after
the date of enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall
conduct a review to determine the degree to which Canadian and
Mexican commercial motor vehicles, including motor carriers of
passengers, currently operating or expected to operate in the
United States comply with the Federal motor vehicle safety
standards.
(2) Reports.--Not later than 1 year after the date of
enactment, the Administrator shall submit a report to the
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate
and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the
House of Representatives containing the findings and conclusions
of the review. Not later than 4 months after the date on which
the report is submitted to the Committees, the Inspector General
of the Department shall provide comments and observations to the
Committees on the scope and methodology of the review.

SEC. 4140. SCHOOL BUS DRIVER QUALIFICATIONS AND ENDORSEMENT KNOWLEDGE
TEST.

(a) Recognition of Test.--The Secretary shall recognize any driver
who passes a test approved by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration as meeting the knowledge test requirement for a school
bus endorsement under section 383.123 of title 49, Code of Federal
Regulations.
(b) Driver Qualifications.--Section 383.123  NOTE: Effective
date. Termination date.  of such title (as in effect on the date of
enactment of this Act) shall not be in effect during the period
beginning on the date of enactment of this Act and ending on September
30, 2006.

SEC. 4141. DRIVEAWAY SADDLEMOUNT VEHICLES.

(a) Definition.--Section 31111(a) title 49, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end 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:

[[Page 1747]]
119 STAT. 1747

``(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. 4142. 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 such title 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.''.

(c) Brokers.--Section 13904(a) of such title is amended--
(1) by striking ``The Secretary'' and inserting the
following:

``(1) Household Goods.--The Secretary'';
(2) by inserting ``of household goods'' after ``broker'';
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 broker (other than a broker 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. 4143. AUTHORITY TO STOP COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLES.

(a) In General.--Chapter 2 of title 18, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 39. Commercial motor vehicles required to stop for inspections

``(a) A driver of a commercial motor vehicle (as defined in section
31132 of title 49) shall stop and submit to inspection of the vehicle,
driver, cargo, and required records when directed to do so by an
authorized employee of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
of the Department of Transportation, at or in the vicinity of an
inspection site. The driver shall not leave the inspection site until
authorized to do so by an authorized employee.
``(b)  NOTE: Penalty.  A driver of a commercial motor vehicle, as
defined in subsection (a), who knowingly fails to stop for inspection
when directed to do so by an authorized employee of the Administration
at or in the vicinity of an inspection site, or leaves the inspection
site without authorization, shall be fined under this title or
imprisoned not more than 1 year, or both.''.

[[Page 1748]]
119 STAT. 1748

(b) Authority of FMCSA.--Chapter 203 of such title is amended by
adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 3064. Powers of Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration

``Authorized employees of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration may direct a driver of a commercial motor vehicle (as
defined in section 31132 of title 49) to stop for inspection of the
vehicle, driver, cargo, and required records at or in the vicinity of an
inspection site.''.
(c) Clerical Amendments.--
(1) The analysis for chapter 2 of such title is amended by
inserting after the item relating to section 38 the following:

``39. Commercial motor vehicles required to stop for inspections.''.

(2) The analysis for chapter 203 of such title is amended by
inserting after the item relating to section 3063 the following:

``3064. Powers of Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.''.

SEC. 4144.  NOTE: 49 USC 31100 note.  MOTOR CARRIER SAFETY ADVISORY
COMMITTEE.

(a) Establishment and Duties.--The Secretary shall establish in the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration a motor carrier safety
advisory committee. The committee shall--
(1) provide advice and recommendations to the Administrator
of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration about needs,
objectives, plans, approaches, content, and accomplishments of
the motor carrier safety programs carried out by the
Administration; and
(2) provide advice and recommendations to the Administrator
on motor carrier safety regulations.

(b) Members, Chairman, Pay, and Expenses.--
(1) In general.--The committee shall be composed of not more
than 20 members appointed by the Administrator from among
individuals who are not employees of the Administration and who
are specially qualified to serve on the committee because of
their education, training, or experience. The members shall
include representatives of the motor carrier industry, safety
advocates, and safety enforcement officials. Representatives of
a single enumerated interest group may not constitute a majority
of the members of the advisory committee.
(2) Chairman.--The Administrator shall designate the
chairman of the committee.
(3) Pay.--A member of the committee shall serve without pay;
except that the Administrator may allow a member, when attending
meetings of the committee or a subcommittee of the committee,
expenses authorized under section 5703 of title 5, relating to
per diem, travel, and transportation expenses.

(c) Support Staff, Information, and Services.--The Administrator
shall provide support staff for the committee. On request of the
committee, the Administrator shall provide information, administrative
services, and supplies that the Administrator considers necessary for
the committee to carry out its duties and powers.
(d) Termination Date.--Notwithstanding the Federal Advisory
Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.), the advisory committee shall terminate on
September 30, 2010.

[[Page 1749]]
119 STAT. 1749

SEC. 4145. 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. 4146.  NOTE: Grapes. Applicability. Effective date. Termination
date. New York.  EXEMPTION DURING HARVEST PERIODS.

Regulations issued by the Secretary under sections 31136 and 31502
of title 49, United States Code, regarding maximum driving and on-duty
time for a driver used by a motor carrier, shall not apply, beginning on
the date of enactment of this Act and ending at the end of fiscal year
2009, for the transportation of grapes west of Interstate 81 in the
State of New York if such transportation--
(1) is during a harvesting period, as determined by the
State; and
(2) is limited to a 150-air mile radius from where the
grapes are picked or distributed.

SEC. 4147.  NOTE: 49 USC 31136 note.  EMERGENCY CONDITION REQUIRING
IMMEDIATE RESPONSE.

Section 229 of the Motor Carrier Safety Improvement Act of 1999 (as
added and amended by section 4115 of this Act) is amended by adding at
the end the following:
``(f) Emergency Condition Requiring Immediate Response.--
``(1) Propane or pipeline emergency.--A regulation
prescribed under section 31136 or 31502 of title 49, United
States Code, shall not apply to a driver of a commercial motor
vehicle which is used primarily in the transportation of propane
winter heating fuel or a driver of a motor vehicle used to
respond to a pipeline emergency if such regulations would
prevent the driver from responding to an emergency condition
requiring immediate response.
``(2) Definition.--An emergency condition requiring
immediate response is any condition that, if left unattended, is
reasonably likely to result in immediate serious bodily harm,
death, or substantial damage to property. In the case of propane
such conditions shall include (but are not limited to) the
detection of gas odor, the activation of carbon monoxide alarms,
the detection of carbon monoxide poisoning, and any real or
suspected damage to a propane gas system following a severe
storm or flooding. An `emergency condition requiring an
immediate response' does not include requests to re-fill empty
gas tanks. In the case of pipelines such conditions include (but
are not limited to) indication of an abnormal pressure event,
leak, release or rupture.''.

[[Page 1750]]
119 STAT. 1750

SEC. 4148. SUBSTANCE ABUSE PROFESSIONALS.

The Secretary shall conduct a rulemaking to permit a State licensed
or certified marriage and family therapist, to act as a substance abuse
professional under subpart O of part 40 of title 49, Code of Federal
Regulations.

SEC. 4149. OFFICE OF INTERMODALISM.

Section 5503 of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (e) by inserting ``Amounts reserved under
section 5504(d) not awarded to States as grants may be used by
the Director to provide technical assistance under this
subsection.'' after ``organizations.'';
(2) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (h); and
(3) by inserting after subsection (e) the following:

``(f) National Intermodal System Improvement Plan.--
``(1) In general.--The Director, in consultation with the
advisory board established under section 5502 and other public
and private transportation interests, shall develop a plan to
improve the national intermodal transportation system. The plan
shall include--
``(A) an assessment and forecast of the national
intermodal transportation system's impact on mobility,
safety, energy consumption, the environment, technology,
international trade, economic activity, and quality of
life in the United States;
``(B) an assessment of the operational and economic
attributes of each passenger and freight mode of
transportation and the optimal role of each mode in the
national intermodal transportation system;
``(C) a description of recommended intermodal and
multimodal research and development projects;
``(D) a description of emerging trends that have an
impact on the national intermodal transportation system;
``(E) recommendations for improving intermodal
policy, transportation decision-making, and financing to
maximize mobility and the return on investment of
Federal spending on transportation;
``(F) an estimate of the impact of current Federal
and State transportation policy on the national
intermodal transportation system; and
``(G) specific near and long-term goals for the
national intermodal transportation system.
``(2) Progress reports.--The Director shall submit an
initial report on the plan to improve the national intermodal
transportation system 2 years after the date of enactment of the
Surface Transportation Safety Improvement Act of 2005, and a
follow-up report 2 years after that, to the Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate and the
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives. The progress report shall--
``(A) describe progress made toward achieving the
plan's goals;
``(B) describe challenges and obstacles to achieving
the plan's goals;
``(C) update the plan to reflect changed
circumstances or new developments; and

[[Page 1751]]
119 STAT. 1751

``(D) make policy and legislative recommendations
the Director believes are necessary and appropriate to
achieve the goals of the plan.
``(3) Plan development funding.--Such sums as may be
necessary from the administrative expenses of the Research and
Innovative Technology Administration shall be reserved by the
Secretary of Transportation each year for the purpose of
completing and updating the plan to improve the national
intermodal transportation plan.

``(g) Impact Measurement Methodology; Impact Review.--The Director
and the Director of the Bureau of Transportation Statistics shall
jointly--
``(1) develop, in consultation with the modal
administrations, and State and local planning organizations,
common measures to compare transportation investment decisions
across the various modes of transportation; and
``(2) formulate a methodology for measuring the impact of
intermodal transportation on--
``(A) the environment;
``(B) public health and welfare;
``(C) energy consumption;
``(D) the operation and efficiency of the
transportation system;
``(E) congestion, including congestion at the
Nation's ports; and
``(F) the economy and employment.

``(h) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary of Transportation such sums as may be
necessary for fiscal years 2006 through 2009 to carry out this
chapter.''.

Subtitle B--Household  NOTE: Household Goods Mover Oversight
Enforcement and Reform Act of 2005. 49 USC 10101 note.  Goods
Transportation

SEC. 4201. SHORT TITLE.

This subtitle may be cited as the ``Household Goods Mover Oversight
Enforcement and Reform Act of 2005''

SEC. 4202. DEFINITIONS; APPLICATION OF PROVISIONS.

(a) Terms Used in This Chapter.--In  NOTE: 49 USC 13102
note.  this subtitle, the terms ``carrier'', ``household goods'',
``motor carrier'', ``Secretary'', and ``transportation'' have the
meaning given to such terms in section 13102 of title 49, United States
Code.

(b) Household Goods Motor Carrier and Individual Shipper in Part B
of Subtitle IV of Title 49.--Section 13102 of title 49, United States
Code (as amended by section 4141 of this Act) is amended by
redesignating paragraphs (12) through (24) as paragraphs (14) through
(26) and by inserting after paragraph (11) the following:
``(12) Household goods motor carrier.--
``(A) In general.--The term `household goods motor
carrier' means a motor carrier that, in the ordinary
course of its business of providing transportation of
household goods, offers some or all of the following
additional services:
``(i) Binding and nonbinding estimates.
``(ii) Inventorying.

[[Page 1752]]
119 STAT. 1752

``(iii) Protective packing and unpacking of
individual items at personal residences.
``(iv) Loading and unloading at personal
residences.
``(B) Inclusion.--The term includes any person that
is considered to be a household goods motor carrier
under regulations, determinations, and decisions of the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration that are in
effect on the date of enactment of the Household Goods
Mover Oversight Enforcement and Reform Act of 2005.
``(C) Limited service exclusion.--The term does not
include a motor carrier when the motor carrier provides
transportation of household goods in containers or
trailers that are entirely loaded and unloaded by an
individual (other than an employee or agent of the motor
carrier).
``(13) Individual shipper.--The term `individual shipper'
means any person who--
``(A) is the shipper, consignor, or consignee of a
household goods shipment;
``(B) is identified as the shipper, consignor, or
consignee on the face of the bill of lading;
``(C) owns the goods being transported; and
``(D) pays his or her own tariff transportation
charges.''.

(c) Application of  NOTE: 49 USC 13102 note.  Certain Provisions
of Law.--The provisions of title 49, United States Code, and this
subtitle (including any amendments made by this subtitle), that relate
to the transportation of household goods apply only to a household goods
motor carrier (as defined in section 13102 of title 49, United States
Code).

SEC. 4203. PAYMENT OF RATES.

Section 13707(b) of title 49, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following:
``(3) Shipments of household goods.--
``(A) In general.--A carrier providing
transportation of a shipment of household goods shall
give up possession of the household goods being
transported at the destination upon payment of--
``(i) 100 percent of the charges contained in
a binding estimate provided by the carrier;
``(ii) not more than 110 percent of the
charges contained in a nonbinding estimate
provided by the carrier; or
``(iii) in the case of a partial delivery of
the shipment, the prorated percentage of the
charges calculated in accordance with subparagraph
(B).
``(B) Calculation of prorated charges.--For purposes
of subparagraph (A)(iii), the prorated percentage of the
charges shall be the percentage of the total charges due
to the carrier as described in clause (i) or (ii) of
subparagraph (A) that is equal to the percentage of the
weight of that portion of the shipment delivered to the
total weight of the shipment.
``(C) Post-contract services.--Subparagraph (A) does
not apply to additional services requested by a shipper
after the contract of service is executed that were not
included in the estimate.
``(D) Impracticable operations.--Subparagraph (A)
does not apply to impracticable operations, as defined
by

[[Page 1753]]
119 STAT. 1753

the applicable carrier tariff, except that the charges
collected at delivery for such operations shall not
exceed 15 percent of all  NOTE: Deadline.  other
charges due at delivery. Any remaining charges due shall
be paid within 30 days after the carrier presents its
freight bill.''.

SEC. 4204. ADDITIONAL REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS FOR MOTOR CARRIERS OF
HOUSEHOLD GOODS.

Section 13902(a) of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking paragraphs (2) and (3);
(2) by redesignating paragraph (4) as paragraph (5);
(3) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
``(2) Additional registration requirements for household
goods motor carriers.--In addition to meeting the requirements
of paragraph (1), the Secretary may register a person to provide
transportation of household goods as a household goods motor
carrier only after that person--
``(A) provides evidence of participation in an
arbitration program and provides a copy of the notice of
the arbitration program as required by section
14708(b)(2);
``(B) identifies its tariff and provides a copy of
the notice of the availability of that tariff for
inspection as required by section 13702(c);
``(C) provides evidence that it has access to, has
read, is familiar with, and will observe all applicable
Federal laws relating to consumer protection,
estimating, consumers' rights and responsibilities, and
options for limitations of liability for loss and
damage; and
``(D) discloses any relationship involving common
stock, common ownership, common management, or common
familial relationships between that person and any other
motor carrier, freight forwarder, or broker of household
goods within 3 years of the proposed date of
registration.
``(3) Consideration of evidence; findings.--The Secretary
shall consider, and to the extent applicable, make findings on
any evidence demonstrating that the registrant is unable to
comply with any applicable requirement of paragraph (1) or, in
the case of a registrant to which paragraph (2) applies,
paragraph (1) or (2).
``(4) Withholding.--If the Secretary determines that a
registrant under this section does not meet, or is not able to
meet, any requirement of paragraph (1) or, in the case of a
registrant to which paragraph (2) applies, paragraph (1) or (2),
the Secretary shall withhold registration.''; and
(4) by adding at the end of paragraph (5) (as redesignated
by paragraph (2) of this section) ``In the case of a
registration for the transportation of household goods as a
household goods motor carrier, the Secretary may also hear a
complaint on the ground that the registrant fails or will fail
to comply with the requirements of paragraph (2) of this
subsection.''.

SEC. 4205. HOUSEHOLD GOODS CARRIER OPERATIONS.

Section 14104(b) of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph (3); and
(2) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following:
``(1) Required to be in writing.--

[[Page 1754]]
119 STAT. 1754

``(A) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in
this subsection, every motor carrier providing
transportation of household goods described in section
13102(10)(A) as a household goods motor carrier and
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. The written estimate
shall be based on a physical survey of the
household goods if the household goods are located
within a 50-mile radius of the location of the
carrier's household goods agent preparing the
estimate.
``(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.
``(2) Other information.--At the time that a motor carrier
provides the written estimate required by paragraph (1), the
motor carrier shall provide the shipper a copy of the Department
of Transportation publication FMCSA-ESA-03-005 (or its successor
publication) entitled `Ready to Move?'. Before the execution of
a contract for service, the motor carrier shall provide the
shipper copy of the Department of Transportation publication OCE
100, entitled `Your Rights and Responsibilities When You Move'
required by section 375.213 of title 49, Code of Federal
Regulations (or any successor regulation).''.

SEC. 4206. ENFORCEMENT OF REGULATIONS RELATED 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 Federal Law With Respect to Interstate Household
Goods Carriers.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 147 of such title is amended by
adding at the end the following:

[[Page 1755]]
119 STAT. 1755

``Sec. 14710. Enforcement of Federal laws and regulations with respect
to transportation of household goods

``(a) Enforcement by States.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
this title, a State authority may enforce the consumer protection
provisions of this title that apply to individual shippers, as
determined by the Secretary, and are related to the delivery and
transportation of household goods in interstate commerce. Any fine or
penalty imposed on a carrier in a proceeding under this subsection shall
be paid, notwithstanding any other provision of law, to and retained by
the State.
``(b) Notice.--The State shall serve written notice to the Secretary
or the Board, as the case may be, of any civil action under subsection
(a) prior to initiating such civil action. The notice shall include a
copy of the complaint to be filed to initiate such civil action, except
that if it is not feasible for the State to provide such prior notice,
the State shall provide the notice immediately upon instituting such
civil action.
``(c) Enforcement Assistance Outreach Plan.--The Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Administration shall implement an outreach plan to
enhance the coordination and effective enforcement of Federal laws and
regulations with respect to transportation of household goods between
and among Federal and State law enforcement and consumer protection
authorities. The outreach shall include, as appropriate, local law
enforcement and consumer protection authorities.
``(d) State Authority Defined.--In this section, the term `State
authority' means an agency of a State that has authority under the laws
of the State to regulate the intrastate movement of household goods.

``Sec. 14711. Enforcement by State attorneys general

``(a) In General.--A State, as parens patriae, may bring a civil
action on behalf of its residents in an appropriate district court of
the United States to enforce the consumer protection provisions of this
title that apply to individual shippers, as determined by the Secretary,
and are related to the delivery and transportation of household goods by
a household goods motor carrier subject to jurisdiction under subchapter
I of chapter 135 or regulations or orders of the Secretary or the Board
issued under such provisions or to impose the civil penalties authorized
by this part or such regulations or orders, 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 carrier or broker providing transportation subject to
jurisdiction under subchapter I or III of chapter 135 or a foreign motor
carrier providing transportation that is registered under section 13902
and is engaged in household goods transportation that violates this part
or a regulation or order of the Secretary or Board, as applicable,
issued under this part.
``(b) Notice and Consent.--
``(1) In general.--The State shall serve written notice to
the Secretary or the Board, as the case may be, of any civil
action under subsection (a) prior to initiating such civil
action. The notice shall include a copy of the complaint to be
filed to initiate such civil action.
``(2) Conditions.--The Secretary or the Board--

[[Page 1756]]
119 STAT. 1756

``(A) shall review the initiation of a civil action
under this section by a State if--
``(i) the carrier or broker that is the
subject of the action is not registered with the
Department of Transportation;
``(ii) the license of the carrier or broker
for failure to file proof of required bodily
injury or cargo liability insurance is pending, or
the license has been revoked for any other reason
by the Department;
``(iii) the carrier is not rated or has
received a conditional or unsatisfactory safety
rating by the Department; or
``(iv) the carrier or broker has been licensed
with the Department for less than 5 years; and
``(B) may review if the carrier or broker fails to
meet criteria developed by the Secretary that are
consistent with this section.
``(3) Congressional notification.--The Secretary shall
notify the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation,
of the Senate and the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives of any criteria
developed by the Secretary under paragraph (2)(B).
``(4) 60-day deadline.--The Secretary or the Board shall be
considered to have consented to any civil action of a State
under this section if the Secretary or the Board has taken no
action with respect to the notice within 60 calendar days after
the date on which the Secretary or the Board received notice
under paragraph (1).

``(c) Authority to Intervene.--Upon receiving the notice required by
subsection (b), the Secretary or board may intervene in a civil action
of a State under this section and upon intervening--
``(1) be heard on all matters arising in such civil action;
and
``(2) file petitions for appeal of a decision in such civil
actions.

``(d) Construction.--For purposes of bringing any civil action under
subsection (a), nothing in this section shall--
``(1) convey a right to initiate or maintain a class action
lawsuit in the enforcement of a Federal law or regulation; or
``(2) prevent the attorney general of a State 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.

``(e) Venue; Service of Process.--In a civil action brought under
subsection (a)--
``(1) the venue shall be a Federal judicial district in
which--
``(A) the carrier, foreign motor carrier, or broker
operates;
``(B) the carrier, foreign motor carrier, or broker
was authorized to provide transportation at the time the
complaint arose; or
``(C) where the defendant in the civil action is
found;
``(2) process may be served without regard to the
territorial limits of the district or of the State in which the
civil action is instituted; and

[[Page 1757]]
119 STAT. 1757

``(3) a person who participated with a carrier or broker in
an alleged violation that is being litigated in the civil action
may be joined in the civil action without regard to the
residence of the person.

``(f) Enforcement of State Law.--Nothing contained in this section
shall prohibit an authorized State official from proceeding in State
court to enforce a criminal statute of such State.''.
(c) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter 147 is
amended by inserting after the item relating to section 14709 the
following:

``14710. Enforcement of Federal laws and regulations with respect to
transportation of household goods.
``14711. Enforcement by State attorneys general.''.

SEC. 4207. LIABILITY OF CARRIERS UNDER RECEIPTS AND BILLS OF LADING.

Section 14706(f) of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``A carrier'' and inserting the following:
``(1) In general.--A carrier''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:
``(2) Full value protection obligation.--Unless the carrier
receives a waiver in writing under paragraph (3), a carrier's
maximum liability for household goods that are lost, damaged,
destroyed, or otherwise not delivered to the final destination
is an amount equal to the replacement value of such goods,
subject to a maximum amount equal to the declared value of the
shipment and to rules issued by the Surface Transportation Board
and applicable tariffs.
``(3) Application of rates.--The released rates established
by the Board under paragraph (1) (commonly known as `released
rates') shall not apply to the transportation of household goods
by a carrier unless the liability of the carrier for the full
value of such household goods under paragraph (2) is waived, in
writing, by the shipper.''.

SEC. 4208. 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 shippers for
transportation and services related to 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 in last sentence--
(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 subparagraph (B) as subparagraph (C);
and
(2) by striking ``(3)(A) a decision resolving the dispute
was not'' and inserting the following:

[[Page 1758]]
119 STAT. 1758

``(3)(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;
``(B) a decision resolving the dispute was not''.

SEC. 4209. 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. 4210. PENALTIES 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. Penalties for failure to give up possession of household
goods

``(a) Civil Penalty.--
``(1) In general.--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.
``(2) Each day, a separate violation.--Each day a carrier is
found to have failed to give up possession of household goods
may constitute a separate violation.
``(3) Suspension.--If the person found holding a shipment
hostage is a carrier or broker, the Secretary may suspend for a
period of not less than 12 months nor more than 36 months the
registration of such carrier or broker under chapter 139. The
force and effect of such suspension of a carrier or broker shall
extend to and include any carrier or broker having the same
ownership or operational control as the suspended carrier or
broker.

``(b) Criminal Penalty.--Whoever has been convicted of having failed
to give up possession of household goods shall be fined under title 18
or imprisoned for not more than 2 years, or both.
``(c) Failure To Give Up Possession of Household Goods Defined.--For
purposes of this section, the term `failed to give up possession of
household goods' means the knowing and willful failure, in violation of
a contract, to deliver to, or unload at, the destination of a shipment
of household goods that is subject to jurisdiction under subchapter I or
III of chapter 135 of this title,

[[Page 1759]]
119 STAT. 1759

for which charges have been estimated by the motor carrier providing
transportation of such goods, and for which the shipper has tendered a
payment described in clause (i), (ii), or (iii) of section
13707(b)(3)(A).''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended by
adding at the end the following:

``14915. Penalties for failure to give up possession of household
goods.''.

SEC. 4211.  NOTE: Deadline.  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. 4212.  NOTE: Deadline. Regulations.  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 4211 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. 4213.  NOTE: 49 USC 14710 note.  WORKING GROUP FOR DEVELOPMENT OF
PRACTICES AND PROCEDURES TO ENHANCE FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS.

(a) In General.--Not  NOTE: Deadline.  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, the public, and other interested parties.
(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. 4214.  NOTE: 49 USC 14701 note.  CONSUMER COMPLAINT INFORMATION.

(a) Establishment of System.--Not  NOTE: Deadline.  later than 1
year after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall--

[[Page 1760]]
119 STAT. 1760

(1) establish (A) a system for filing and logging consumer
complaints relating to household goods motor carriers for the
purpose of compiling or linking complaint information gathered
by the Department of Transportation and the States with regard
to such carriers, (B) a database of the complaints, and (C) a
procedure for the public to have access, subject to section
552(a) of title 5, United States Code, to aggregated information
and for carriers to challenge duplicate or fraudulent
information in the database;
(2)  NOTE: Regulations.  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; and
(3) develop a procedure to forward a complaint, including
the motor carrier bill of lading number, if known, related to
the complaint to a motor carrier named in such complaint and to
an appropriate State authority (as defined in section 14710(d)
of title 49, United States Code) in the State in which the
complainant resides.

(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. 4215.  NOTE: 49 USC 14706 note. Deadline. Regulations.  REVIEW OF
LIABILITY OF CARRIERS.

(a) Review.--Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of
this Act, the Surface Transportation Board shall complete a review of
the current Federal regulations regarding the level of liability
protection provided by motor carriers that provide transportation of
household goods and revise such regulations, if necessary, to provide
enhanced protection in the case of loss or damage.
(b) Determinations.--The review required by subsection (a) shall
include a determination of--
(1) whether the current regulations provide adequate
protection;
(2) the benefits of purchase by a shipper of insurance to
supplement the carrier's limitations on liability; and
(3) whether there are abuses of the current regulations that
leave the shipper unprotected in the event of loss and damage to
a shipment of household goods.

SEC. 4216. 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

[[Page 1761]]
119 STAT. 1761

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.

Subtitle C--Unified  NOTE: Unified Carrier Registration Act of
2005.  Carrier Registration Act of 2005

SEC. 4301.  NOTE: 49 USC 10101 note.  SHORT TITLE.

This subtitle may be cited as the ``Unified Carrier Registration Act
of 2005''.

SEC. 4302.  NOTE: 49 USC 13902 note.  RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER LAWS.

Except as provided in section 14504 of title 49, United States Code,
and sections 14504a and 14506 of title 49, United States Code, as added
by this subtitle, this subtitle is not intended to prohibit any State or
any political subdivision of any State from enacting, imposing, or
enforcing any law or regulation with respect to a motor carrier, motor
private carrier, broker, freight forwarder, or leasing company that is
not otherwise prohibited by law.

SEC. 4303. INCLUSION OF MOTOR PRIVATE AND EXEMPT CARRIERS.

(a) Persons Registered To Provide Transportation or Service as a
Motor Carrier or Motor Private Carrier.--Section 13905 of title 49,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (b), (c), (d), and (e) as
subsections (c), (d), (e), and (f), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (a) the following:

``(b) Person Registered With Secretary.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), any
person having registered with the Secretary to provide

[[Page 1762]]
119 STAT. 1762

transportation or service as a motor carrier or motor private
carrier under this title, as in effect on January 1, 2005, but
not having registered pursuant to section 13902(a), shall be
treated, for purposes of this part, to be registered to provide
such transportation or service for purposes of sections 13908
and 14504a.
``(2) Exclusively intrastate operators.--Paragraph (1) does
not apply to a motor carrier or motor private carrier (including
a transporter of waste or recyclable materials) engaged
exclusively in intrastate transportation operations.''.

(b) Security Requirement.--Section 13906(a) of such title is
amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as paragraphs
(3) and (4), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
``(2) Security requirement.--Not  NOTE: Deadline.  later
than 120 days after the date of enactment of the Unified Carrier
Registration Act of 2005, any person, other than a motor private
carrier, registered with the Secretary to provide transportation
or service as a motor carrier under section 13905(b) shall file
with the Secretary a bond, insurance policy, or other type of
security approved by the Secretary, in an amount not less than
required by sections 31138 and 31139.''.

(c) Termination of Transition Rule.--Section 13902 of such title is
amended--
(1) by adding at the end of subsection (d) the following:
``(3) Termination.--This subsection shall cease to be in
effect on the transition termination date.''; and
(2) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (g), and
inserting after subsection (e) the following:

``(f) Modification of Carrier Registration.--
``(1) In general.--On and after the transition termination
date, the Secretary--
``(A) may not register a motor carrier under this
section as a motor common carrier or a motor contract
carrier;
``(B) shall register applicants under this section
as motor carriers; and
``(C) shall issue any motor carrier registered under
this section after that date a motor carrier certificate
of registration that specifies whether the holder of the
certificate may provide transportation of persons,
household goods, other property, or any combination
thereof.
``(2) Pre-existing certificates and permits.--The Secretary
shall redesignate any motor carrier certificate or permit issued
before the transition termination date as a motor carrier
certificate of registration. On and after the transition
termination date, any person holding a motor carrier certificate
of registration redesignated under this paragraph may provide
both contract carriage (as defined in section 13102(4)(B)) and
transportation under terms and conditions meeting the
requirements of section 13710(a)(1). The Secretary may not,
pursuant to any regulation or form issued before or after the
transition termination date, make any distinction among holders
of motor carrier certificates of registration on the basis of
whether the holder would have been classified as a common
carrier or as a contract carrier under--

[[Page 1763]]
119 STAT. 1763

``(A) subsection (d) of this section, as that
section was in effect before the transition termination
date; or
``(B) any other provision of this title that was in
effect before the transition termination date.
``(3) Transition termination date defined.--In this section,
the term `transition termination date' means the first day of
January occurring more than 12 months after the date of
enactment of the Unified Carrier Registration Act of 2005.''.

(d) Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading for section 13906.--Section 13906 of such title
is amended by striking the section designation and heading and
inserting the following:

``Sec. 13906. Security of motor carriers, motor private carriers,
brokers, and freight forwarders''.

(2) Chapter analysis.--The analysis for chapter 139 of such
title is amended by striking the item relating to section 13906
and inserting the following:

``13906. Security of motor carriers, motor private carriers, brokers,
and freight forwarders.''.

SEC. 4304. UNIFIED CARRIER REGISTRATION SYSTEM.

Section 13908 of title 49, United States Code, is amended to read as
follows:

``Sec. 13908. Registration and other reforms

``(a) Establishment of  NOTE: Regulations. Deadline.  Unified
Carrier Registration System.--The Secretary, in cooperation with the
States, representatives of the motor carrier, motor private carrier,
freight forwarder, and broker industries and after notice and
opportunity for public comment, shall issue within 1 year after the date
of enactment of the Unified Carrier Registration Act of 2005 regulations
to establish an online Federal registration system, to be named the
`Unified Carrier Registration System', to replace--
``(1) the current Department of Transportation
identification number system, the single State registration
system under section 14504;
``(2) the registration system contained in this chapter and
the financial responsibility information system under section
13906; and
``(3) the service of process agent systems under sections
503 and 13304.

``(b) Role as Clearinghouse and Depository of Information.--The
Unified Carrier Registration System shall serve as a clearinghouse and
depository of information on, and identification of, all foreign and
domestic motor carriers, motor private carriers, brokers, freight
forwarders, and others required to register with the Department of
Transportation, including information with respect to a carrier's safety
rating, compliance with required levels of financial responsibility, and
compliance with the provisions of section 14504a. The Secretary shall
ensure that Federal agencies, States, representatives of the motor
carrier industry, and the public have access to the Unified Carrier
Registration System, including the records and information contained in
the System.
``(c) Procedures for  NOTE: Regulations. Deadline.  Correcting
Information.--Not later than 60 days after the effective date of this
section, the Secretary shall prescribe regulations establishing
procedures that enable a

[[Page 1764]]
119 STAT. 1764

motor carrier to correct erroneous information contained in any part of
the Unified Carrier Registration System.
``(d) Fee System.--The Secretary shall establish, under section 9701
of title 31, a fee system for the Unified Carrier Registration System
according to the following guidelines:
``(1) Registration and filing evidence of financial
responsibility.--The fee for new registrants shall as nearly as
possible cover the costs of processing the registration but
shall not exceed $300.
``(2) Evidence of financial responsibility.--The fee for
filing evidence of financial responsibility pursuant to this
section shall not exceed $10 per filing. No fee shall be charged
for a filing for purposes of designating an agent for service of
process or the filing of other information relating to financial
responsibility.
``(3) Access and retrieval fees.--
``(A) In general.--Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), the fee system shall include a nominal
fee for the access to or retrieval of information from
the Unified Carrier Registration System to cover the
costs of operating and upgrading the System, including
the personnel costs incurred by the Department and the
costs of administration of the unified carrier
registration agreement.
``(B) Exceptions.--There shall be no fee charged
under this paragraph--
``(i) to any agency of the Federal Government
or a State government or any political subdivision
of any such government for the access to or
retrieval of information and data from the Unified
Carrier Registration System for its own use; or
``(ii) to any representative of a motor
carrier, motor private carrier, leasing company,
broker, or freight forwarder (as each is defined
in section 14504a) for the access to or retrieval
of the individual information related to such
entity from the Unified Carrier Registration
System for the individual use of such entity.

``(e) Application to Certain Intrastate Operations.--Nothing in this
section requires the registration of a motor carrier, a motor private
carrier of property, or a transporter of waste or recyclable materials
operating exclusively in intrastate transportation not otherwise
required to register with the Secretary under another provision of this
title.''.

SEC. 4305. REGISTRATION OF MOTOR CARRIERS BY STATES.

(a) Termination of Registration Provisions.--Section 14504, and the
item relating to such section in the analysis for chapter 145, of title
49, United States Code, are repealed effective on the first January 1st
occurring more than 12 months after the date of enactment of this Act.
(b) Unified Carrier Registration System Plan and Agreement.--Chapter
145 of title 49, United States Code, is amended by inserting after
section 14504 the following:

``Sec. 14504a. Unified Carrier Registration System plan and agreement

``(a) Definitions.--In this section and section 14506, the following
definitions apply:

[[Page 1765]]
119 STAT. 1765

``(1) Commercial motor vehicle.--
``(A) In general.--Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), the term `commercial motor vehicle'
has the meaning such term has under section 31101.
``(B) Exception.--With respect to a motor carrier
required to make any filing or pay any fee to a State
with respect to the motor carrier's authority or
insurance related to operation within such State, the
motor carrier shall have the option to include, in
addition to commercial motor vehicles as defined in
subparagraph (A), any self-propelled vehicle used on the
highway in commerce to transport passengers or property
for compensation regardless of the gross vehicle weight
rating of the vehicle or the number of passengers
transported by such vehicle.
``(2) Base-state.--
``(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B), the
term `base-State' means, with respect to a unified
carrier registration agreement, a State--
``(i) that is in compliance with the
requirements of subsection (e); and
``(ii) in which the motor carrier, motor
private carrier, broker, freight forwarder, or
leasing company to which the agreement applies
maintains its principal place of business.
``(B) Designation of base-state.--A motor carrier,
motor private carrier, broker, freight forwarder, or
leasing company may designate another State in which it
maintains an office or operating facility to be its
base-State in the event that--
``(i) the State in which the motor carrier,
motor private carrier, broker, freight forwarder,
or leasing company maintains its principal place
of business is not in compliance with the
requirements of subsection (e); or
``(ii) the motor carrier, motor private
carrier, broker, freight forwarder, or leasing
company does not have a principal place of
business in the United States.
``(3) Intrastate fee.--The term `intrastate fee' means any
fee, tax, or other type of assessment, including per vehicle
fees and gross receipts taxes, imposed on a motor carrier or
motor private carrier for the renewal of the intrastate
authority or insurance filings of such carrier with a State.
``(4) Leasing company.--The term `leasing company' means a
lessor that is engaged in the business of leasing or renting for
compensation motor vehicles without drivers to a motor carrier,
motor private carrier, or freight forwarder.
``(5) Motor carrier.--The term `motor carrier' includes all
carriers that are otherwise exempt from this part under
subchapter I of chapter 135 or exemption actions by the former
Interstate Commerce Commission under this title.
``(6) Participating state.--The term `participating State'
means a State that has complied with the requirements of
subsection (e).
``(7) SSRS.--The term `SSRS' means the single state
registration system in effect on the date of enactment of this
section.

[[Page 1766]]
119 STAT. 1766

``(8) Unified carrier registration agreement.--The terms
`unified carrier registration agreement' and `UCR agreement'
mean the interstate agreement developed under the unified
carrier registration plan governing the collection and
distribution of registration and financial responsibility
information provided and fees paid by motor carriers, motor
private carriers, brokers, freight forwarders, and leasing
companies pursuant to this section.
``(9) Unified carrier registration plan.--The terms `unified
carrier registration plan' and `UCR plan' mean the organization
of State, Federal, and industry representatives responsible for
developing, implementing, and administering the unified carrier
registration agreement.
``(10) Vehicle registration.--The term `vehicle
registration' means the registration of any commercial motor
vehicle under the International Registration Plan (as defined in
section 31701) or any other registration law or regulation of a
jurisdiction.

``(b) Applicability of Provisions to Freight Forwarders.--A freight
forwarder that operates commercial motor vehicles and is not required to
register as a carrier pursuant to section 13903(b) shall be subject to
the provisions of this section as if the freight forwarder is a motor
carrier.
``(c) Unreasonable Burden.--For purposes of this section, it shall
be considered an unreasonable burden upon interstate commerce for any
State or any political subdivision of a State, or any political
authority of two or more States--
``(1) to enact, impose, or enforce any requirement or
standards with respect to, or levy any fee or charge on, any
motor carrier or motor private carrier providing transportation
or service subject to jurisdiction under subchapter I of chapter
135 (in this section referred to as an `interstate motor
carrier' and an `interstate motor private carrier',
respectively) in connection with--
``(A) the registration with the State of the
interstate operations of the motor carrier or motor
private carrier;
``(B) the filing with the State of information
relating to the financial responsibility of the a motor
carrier or motor private carrier pursuant to sections
31138 or 31139;
``(C) the filing with the State of the name of the
local agent for service of process of the motor carrier
or motor private carrier pursuant to sections 503 or
13304; or
``(D) the annual renewal of the intrastate
authority, or the insurance filings, of the motor
carrier or motor private carrier, or other intrastate
filing requirement necessary to operate within the State
if the motor carrier or motor private carrier is--
``(i) registered under section 13902 or
section 13905(b); and
``(ii) in compliance with the laws and
regulations of the State authorizing the carrier
to operate in the State in accordance with section
14501(c)(2)(A); except with respect to--
``(I) intrastate service provided by
motor carriers of passengers that is not
subject to the preemption provisions of
section 14501(a);

[[Page 1767]]
119 STAT. 1767

``(II) motor carriers of property,
motor private carriers, brokers, or
freight forwarders, or their services or
operations, that are described in
subparagraphs (B) and (C) of section
14501(c)(2).
``(III) the intrastate
transportation of waste or recyclable
materials by any carrier; or
``(2) to require any interstate motor carrier or motor
private carrier that also performs intrastate operations to pay
any fee or tax which a carrier engaged exclusively in interstate
operations is exempt.

``(d) Unified Carrier Registration Plan.--
``(1) Board of directors.--
``(A) Governance of plan; establishment.--The
unified carrier registration plan shall have a board of
directors consisting of representatives of the
Department of Transportation, participating States, and
the motor carrier industry. The Secretary shall
establish the board.
``(B) Composition.--The board shall consist of 15
directors appointed by the Secretary as follows:
``(i) Federal motor carrier safety
administration.--One director from each of the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's 4
service areas (as those areas were defined by the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration on
January 1, 2005) from among the chief
administrative officers of the State agencies
responsible for overseeing the administration of
the UCR agreement.
``(ii) State agencies.--Five directors from
the professional staffs of State agencies
responsible for overseeing the administration of
the UCR agreement in their respective States.
Nominees for these 5 directorships shall be
submitted to the Secretary by the national
association of professional employees of the State
agencies responsible for overseeing the
administration of the UCR agreement in their
respective States.
``(iii) Motor carrier industry.--Five
directors from the motor carrier industry. At
least 1 of the appointees under this clause shall
be a representative of a national trade
association representing the general motor carrier
of property industry. At least 1 of the appointees
under this clause shall represent a motor carrier
that falls within the smallest fleet fee bracket.
``(iv) Department of transportation.--The
Deputy Administrator of the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration, or such other presidential
appointee from the Department, as the Secretary
may appoint.
``(C) Chairperson and vice-chairperson.--The
Secretary shall designate 1 director as chairperson and
1 director as vice-chairperson of the board. The
chairperson and vice-chairperson shall serve in such
capacity for the term of their appointment as directors.
``(D) Terms.--
``(i) Initial terms.--In appointing the
initial board, the Secretary shall designate 5 of
the appointed directors for initial terms of 3
years, 5 of the appointed

[[Page 1768]]
119 STAT. 1768

directors for initial terms of 2 years, and 5 of
the appointed directors for initial terms of 1
year.
``(ii) Thereafter.--After the initial term,
all directors shall be appointed for terms of 3
years; except that the term of the Deputy
Administrator or other individual designated by
the Secretary under subparagraph (B)(iv) shall be
at the discretion of the Secretary.
``(iii) Succession.--A director may be
appointed to succeed himself or herself.
``(iv) End of service.--A director may
continue to serve on the board until his or her
successor is appointed.
``(2) Rules and regulations governing the ucr agreement.--
The board of directors shall issue rules and regulations to
govern the UCR agreement. The rules and regulations shall--
``(A) prescribe uniform forms and formats, for--
``(i) the annual submission of the information
required by a base-State of a motor carrier, motor
private carrier, leasing company, broker, or
freight forwarder;
``(ii) the transmission of information by a
participating State to the Unified Carrier
Registration System;
``(iii) the payment of excess fees by a State
to the designated depository and the distribution
of fees by the depository to those States so
entitled; and
``(iv) the providing of notice by a motor
carrier, motor private carrier, broker, freight
forwarder, or leasing company to the board of the
intent of such entity to change its base-State,
and the procedures for a State to object to such a
change under subparagraph (C);
``(B) provide for the administration of the unified
carrier registration agreement, including procedures for
amending the agreement and obtaining clarification of
any provision of the Agreement;
``(C) provide procedures for dispute resolution
under the agreement that provide due process for all
involved parties; and
``(D) designate a depository.
``(3) Compensation and expenses.--
``(A) In general.--Except for the representative of
the Department appointed under paragraph (1)(B)(iv), no
director shall receive any compensation or other
benefits from the Federal Government for serving on the
board or be considered a Federal employee as a result of
such service.
``(B) Expenses.--All directors shall be reimbursed
for expenses they incur attending meetings of the board.
In addition, the board may approve the reimbursement of
expenses incurred by members of any subcommittee or task
force appointed under paragraph (5) for carrying out the
duties of the subcommittee or task force. The
reimbursement of expenses to directors and subcommittee
and task force members shall be under subchapter II of
chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code, governing
reimbursement of expenses for travel by Federal
employees.

[[Page 1769]]
119 STAT. 1769

``(4) Meetings.--
``(A) In general.--The board shall meet at least
once per year. Additional meetings may be called, as
needed, by the chairperson of the board, a majority of
the directors, or the Secretary.
``(B) Quorum.--A majority of directors shall
constitute a quorum.
``(C) Voting.--Approval of any matter before the
board shall require the approval of a majority of all
directors present at the meeting.
``(D) Open meetings.--Meetings of the board and any
subcommittees or task forces appointed under paragraph
(5) shall be subject to the provisions of section 552b
of title 5.
``(5) Subcommittees.--
``(A) Industry advisory subcommittee.--The
chairperson shall appoint an industry advisory
subcommittee. The industry advisory subcommittee shall
consider any matter before the board and make
recommendations to the board.
``(B) Other subcommittees.--The chairperson shall
appoint an audit subcommittee, a dispute resolution
subcommittee, and any additional subcommittees and task
forces that the board determines to be necessary.
``(C) Membership.--The chairperson of each
subcommittee shall be a director. The other members of
subcommittees and task forces may be directors or
nondirectors.
``(D) Representation on subcommittees.--Except for
the industry advisory subcommittee (the membership of
which shall consist solely of representatives of
entities subject to the fee requirements of subsection
(f)), each subcommittee and task force shall include
representatives of the participating States and the
motor carrier industry.
``(6) Delegation of authority.--The board may contract with
any person or any agency of a State to perform administrative
functions required under the unified carrier registration
agreement, but may not delegate its decision or policy-making
responsibilities.
``(7) Determination of fees.--
``(A) Recommendation by board.--The board shall
recommend to the Secretary the initial annual fees to be
assessed carriers, leasing companies, brokers, and
freight forwarders under the unified carrier
registration agreement. In making its recommendation to
the Secretary for the level of fees to be assessed in
any agreement year, and in setting the fee level, the
board and the Secretary shall consider--
``(i) the administrative costs associated with
the unified carrier registration plan and the
agreement;
``(ii) whether the revenues generated in the
previous year and any surplus or shortage from
that or prior years enable the participating
States to achieve the revenue levels set by the
board; and
``(iii) the provisions governing fees under
subsection (f)(1).

[[Page 1770]]
119 STAT. 1770

``(B) Setting fees.--The Secretary shall set the
initial annual fees for the next agreement year and any
subsequent adjustment of those fees--
``(i)  NOTE: Deadline.  within 90 days after
receiving the board's recommendation under
subparagraph (A); and
``(ii)  NOTE: Notification. Public
information.  after notice and opportunity for
public comment.
``(8) Liability protections for directors.--No individual
appointed to serve on the board shall be liable to any other
director or to any other party for harm, either economic or non-
economic, caused by an act or omission of the individual arising
from the individual's service on the board if--
``(A) the individual was acting within the scope of
his or her responsibilities as a director; and
``(B) the harm was not caused by willful or criminal
misconduct, gross negligence, reckless misconduct, or a
conscious, flagrant indifference to the right or safety
of the party harmed by the individual.
``(9) Inapplicability of federal advisory committee act.--
The Federal Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) shall not
apply to the unified carrier registration plan, the board, or
its committees.
``(10) Certain fees not affected.--This section does not
limit the amount of money a State may charge for vehicle
registration or the amount of any fuel use tax a State may
impose pursuant to the International Fuel Tax Agreement (as
defined in section 31701).

``(e) State Participation.--
``(1) State plan.--No State shall be eligible to participate
in the unified carrier registration plan or to receive any
revenues derived under the UCR agreement, unless the State
submits to the Secretary, not later than 3 years after the date
of enactment of the Unified Carrier Registration Act of 2005, a
plan--
``(A) identifying the State agency that has or will
have the legal authority, resources, and qualified
personnel necessary to administer the agreement in
accordance with the rules and regulations promulgated by
the board of directors; and
``(B) demonstrating that an amount at least equal to
the revenue derived by the State from the unified
carrier registration agreement shall be used for motor
carrier safety programs, enforcement, or the
administration of the UCR plan and UCR agreement.
``(2) Amended plans.--A State that submits a plan under this
subsection may change the agency designated in the plan by
filing an amended plan with the Secretary and the chairperson of
the board of directors.
``(3) Withdrawal of plan.--If a State withdraws, or notifies
the Secretary that it is withdrawing, the plan it submitted
under this subsection, the State may no longer participate in
the unified carrier registration agreement or receive any
portion of the revenues  NOTE: Notification.  derived under
the agreement. The Secretary shall notify the chairperson upon
receiving notice from a State that it is withdrawing its plan or
withdrawing from the agreement, or both.

[[Page 1771]]
119 STAT. 1771

``(4) Termination of eligibility.--If a State fails to
submit a plan to the Secretary in accordance with paragraph (1)
or withdraws its plan under paragraph (3), the State may not
submit or resubmit a plan or participate in the agreement.
``(5) Provision of  NOTE: Deadline.  plan to
chairperson.--The Secretary shall provide a copy of each plan
submitted under this subsection to the chairperson of the board
of directors not later than 10 days after date of submission of
the plan.

``(f) Contents of Unified Carrier Registration Agreement.--The
unified carrier registration agreement shall provide the following:
``(1) Fees.--(A) Fees charged--
``(i) to a motor carrier, motor private carrier, or
freight forwarder in connection with the filing of proof
of financial responsibility under the UCR agreement
shall be based on the number of commercial motor
vehicles owned or operated by the motor carrier, motor
private carrier, or freight forwarder; and
``(ii) to a broker or leasing company in connection
with such a filing shall be equal to the smallest fee
charged to a motor carrier, motor private carrier, and
freight forwarder or under this paragraph.
``(B) The fees shall be determined by the Secretary based
upon the recommendation of the board under subsection (d)(7).
``(C) The board shall develop for purposes of charging fees
no more than 6 and no less than 4 brackets of carriers
(including motor private carriers) based on the size of fleet.
``(D) The fee scale shall be progressive in the amount of
the fee.
``(E) The board may ask the Secretary to adjust the fees
within a reasonable range on an annual basis if the revenues
derived from the fees--
``(i) are insufficient to provide the revenues to
which the States are entitled under this section; or
``(ii) exceed those revenues.
``(2) Determination of ownership or operation.--For purposes
of this subsection, a commercial motor vehicle is owned or
operated by a motor carrier, motor private carrier, or freight
forwarder if the vehicle is registered under Federal law or
State law, or both, in the name of the motor carrier, motor
private carrier, or freight forwarder or is controlled by the
motor carrier, motor private carrier, or freight forwarder under
a long term lease during a vehicle registration year.
``(3) Calculation of number of commercial motor vehicles
owned or operated.--The number of commercial motor vehicles
owned or operated by a motor carrier, motor private carrier, or
freight forwarder for purposes of paragraph (1) shall be based
either on the number of commercial motor vehicles the motor
carrier, motor private carrier, or freight forwarder has
indicated it operates on its most recently filed MCS-150 or the
total number of such vehicles it owned or operated for the 12-
month period ending on June 30 of the year immediately prior to
the registration year of the Unified Carrier Registration
System. A motor carrier may include in the calculation of its
fleet size for purposes of paragraph (1) any commercial motor
vehicle. Motor carriers and motor private carriers in the
calculation of their fleet size for purposes of

[[Page 1772]]
119 STAT. 1772

paragraph (1) may elect not to include commercial motor vehicles
used exclusively in the intrastate transportation of property,
waste, or recyclable material.
``(4) Payment of fees.--Motor carriers, motor private
carriers, leasing companies, brokers, and freight forwarders
shall pay all fees required under this section to their base-
State pursuant to the UCR Agreement.

``(g) Payment of Fees.--Revenues derived under the UCR Agreement
shall be allocated to participating States as follows:
``(1) A State that participated in the SSRS in the last
registration year under the SSRS ending before the date of
enactment of the Unified Carrier Registration Act of 2005 and
complies with subsection (e) is entitled to receive under this
section a portion of the revenues generated under the UCR
agreement equivalent to the revenues it received under the SSRS
in such last registration year, as long as the State continues
to comply with subsection (e).
``(2) A State that collected intrastate registration fees
from interstate motor carriers, interstate motor private
carriers, or interstate exempt carriers and complies with
subsection (e) is entitled to receive under this section an
additional portion of the revenues generated under the UCR
agreement equivalent to the revenues it received from such
carriers in the last calendar year ending before the date of
enactment of the Unified Carrier Registration Act of 2005, as
long as the State continues to comply with subsection (e).
``(3) States that comply with subsection (e) but did not
participate in SSRS during such last registration year shall be
entitled under this section to an annual allotment not to exceed
$500,000 from the revenues generated under the UCR agreement, as
long as the State continues to comply with the provisions of
subsection (e).
``(4) The amount of revenues generated under the UCR
agreement to which a State is entitled under this section shall
be calculated by the board and approved by the Secretary.

``(h) Distribution of UCR Agreement Revenues.--
``(1) Eligibility.--Each State that is in compliance with
subsection (e) shall be entitled under this section to a portion
of the revenues derived from the UCR Agreement in accordance
with subsection (g).
``(2) Entitlement to revenues.--A State that is in
compliance with subsection (e) may retain an amount of the gross
revenues it collects from motor carriers, motor private
carriers, brokers, freight forwarders and leasing companies
under the UCR agreement equivalent to the portion of revenues to
which the State is entitled under subsection (g). All revenues a
participating State collects in excess of the amount to which
the State is so entitled shall be forwarded to the depository
designated by the board under subsection (d)(2)(D).
``(3) Distribution of funds from depository.--The excess
funds deposited in the depository shall be distributed by the
board of directors as follows:
``(A) On a pro rata basis to each participating
State that did not collect revenues under the UCR
agreement equivalent to the amount such State is
entitled under subsection (g), except that the sum of
the gross revenues collected under the UCR agreement by
a participating State

[[Page 1773]]
119 STAT. 1773

and the amount distributed to it from the depository
shall not exceed the amount to which the State is
entitled under subsection (g).
``(B) After all distributions under subparagraph (A)
have been made, to pay the administrative costs of the
UCR plan and the UCR agreement.
``(4) Retention of certain excess funds.--Any excess funds
held by the depository after distributions and payments under
paragraphs (3)(A) and (3)(B) shall be retained in the
depository, and the fees charged under the UCR agreement to
motor carriers, motor private carriers, leasing companies,
freight forwarders, and brokers for the next fee year shall be
reduced by the Secretary accordingly.

``(i) Enforcement.--
``(1) Civil actions.--Upon request by the Secretary, the
Attorney General may bring a civil action in the United States
district court described in paragraph (2) to enforce an order
issued to require compliance with this section and with the
terms of the UCR agreement.
``(2) Venue.--An action under this section may be brought
only in a United States district court in the State in which
compliance with the order is required.
``(3) Relief.--Subject to section 1341 of title 28, the
court, on a proper showing shall issue a temporary restraining
order or a preliminary or permanent injunction requiring that
the State or any person comply with this section.
``(4) Enforcement by states.--Nothing in this section--
``(A) prohibits a participating State from issuing
citations and imposing reasonable fines and penalties
pursuant to the applicable laws and regulations of the
State on any motor carrier, motor private carrier,
freight forwarder, broker, or leasing company for
failure to--
``(i) submit information documents as required
under subsection (d)(2); or
``(ii) pay the fees required under subsection
(f); or
``(B) authorizes a State to require a motor carrier,
motor private carrier, or freight forwarder to display
as evidence of compliance any form of identification in
excess of those permitted under section 14506 on or in a
commercial motor vehicle.

``(j) Application to Intrastate Carriers.--Notwithstanding any other
provision of this section, a State may elect to apply the provisions of
the UCR agreement to motor carriers and motor private carriers and
freight forwarders subject to its jurisdiction that operate solely in
intrastate commerce within the borders of the State.''.
(c) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended by
inserting after the item relating to section 14504 the following:

``14504a. Unified Carrier Registration System plan and agreement.''.

SEC. 4306. IDENTIFICATION OF VEHICLES.

(a) In General.--Chapter 145 of title 49, United States Code; is
amended by adding at the end the following:

[[Page 1774]]
119 STAT. 1774

``Sec. 14506. Identification of vehicles

``(a) Restriction on Requirements.--No State, political subdivision
of a State, interstate agency, or other political agency of two or more
States may enact or enforce any law, rule, regulation standard, or other
provision having the force and effect of law that requires a motor
carrier, motor private carrier, freight forwarder, or leasing company to
display any form of identification on or in a commercial motor vehicle
(as defined in section 14504a), other than forms of identification
required by the Secretary of Transportation under section 390.21 of
title 49, Code of Federal Regulations.
``(b) Exception.--Notwithstanding subsection (a), a State may
continue to require display of credentials that are required--
``(1) under the International Registration Plan under
section 31704;
``(2) under the International Fuel Tax Agreement under
section 31705;
``(3) under a State law regarding motor vehicle license
plates or other displays that the Secretary determines are
appropriate;
``(4) in connection with Federal requirements for hazardous
materials transportation under section 5103; or
``(5) in connection with the Federal vehicle inspection
standards under section 31136.''.

(b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is amended by
inserting after the item relating to section 14505 the following:

``14506. Identification of vehicles.''.

SEC. 4307. USE OF UCR AGREEMENT REVENUES AS MATCHING FUNDS.

(a) In General.--Section 31103(a) of title 49, United States Code,
is amended--
(1) by striking ``31102(b)(1)(D)'' inserting
``31102(b)(1)(E)''; and
(2) by inserting ``Amounts generated under the unified
carrier registration agreement under section 14504a and received
by a State and used for motor carrier safety purposes may be
included as part of the State's share not provided by the United
States.'' after ``United States Government.''.

(b) Technical Correction.--Sections 31102(b)(3) of such title is
amended by striking ``paragraph (1)(D)'' and inserting ``paragraph
(1)(E)''.

SEC. 4308.  NOTE: 49 USC 13902 note.  REGULATIONS.

The Secretary may issue such regulations as the Secretary determines
are necessary to carry out this subtitle and the amendments made by this
subtitle.

Subtitle D--Miscellaneous Provisions

SEC. 4401. TECHNICAL ADJUSTMENT.

(a) Definitions.--In this section the following definitions:
(1) The term ``Administrator'' means the Administrator of
General Services.
(2) The term ``donee'' means the corporation to which the
Administrator donated the vessel.

[[Page 1775]]
119 STAT. 1775

(3) The term ``vessel'' means the vessel with Unit
Identification number 13862.

(b) Transfer.--Not  NOTE: Deadline.  later than 30 days after the
date of enactment of this Act, the donee shall transfer all of the
rights, title, and interest of the donee in and to the vessel to the
Administrator.

(c) Future Conveyance.--Within 30  NOTE: Deadline.  days after the
transfer of the vessel under subsection (b), the Administrator shall
remove the vessel to a Federal facility. Within 60 days after the date
of the transfer of the vessel under subsection (b), the Administrator
shall sell the vessel for fair market value. The Administrator shall
require as a condition of any conveyance of the vessel that the vessel
shall not be used within the United States, as defined in section
2101(44) of title 46, United States Code, or within the territorial sea
of the United States as described in Presidential Proclamation No. 5928
of December 27, 1988. The donee shall not be required to pay any amounts
for removing the vessel to a Federal facility under this subsection.

(d) Effect on Pending Lawsuits.--Nothing in this section shall have
any effect on any lawsuit relating to transfer or use of the vessel.
(e) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary $4,000,000 for a grant to the donee. The
Secretary shall transfer any funds appropriated under this subsection to
the Secretary of the Interior, who shall obligate such funds through
instruments and procedures that are equivalent to the instruments and
procedures required to be used by the Bureau of Indian Affairs pursuant
to title IV of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance
Act (25 U.S.C. 458aa et seq.). Amounts paid to the donee under this
section shall be treated as revenues originating from the Alaska Native
Fund for purposes of section 21(a) of the Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act (43 U.S.C. 1602(a)).

SEC. 4402. TRANSFER.

Section 407(b) of the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 1998 (112
Stat. 3430) is amended--
(1) by striking ``made--'' and all that follows through
``(1) subject'' and inserting ``made subject''; and
(2) by striking ``; and'' and all that follows and inserting
a period.

SEC. 4403. EXTENSION OF ASSISTANCE.

Section 206(c) of Public Law 89-702 (16 U.S.C. 1166(c)) is amended--
(1) by striking ``for fiscal years 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
and 2005'' the first place it it appears; and
(2) in paragraph (1) by inserting ``, for fiscal years 2001,
2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007'' after ``subsection
(a)''.

SEC. 4404.  NOTE: Alaska. Hawaii.  DESIGNATIONS.

(a) Designation.--In the States of Alaska and Hawaii, members of the
State legislature may serve on the policy board of a metropolitan
planning organization designated under section 134 of title 23, United
States Code, if such service is allowed by State law.
(b) Redesignation.--In the States of Alaska and Hawaii, a
metropolitan planning organization designated under section 134 of title
23, United States Code, may be redesignated as a result

[[Page 1776]]
119 STAT. 1776

of changes in State law that define new requirements for the
metropolitan planning organization policy board.

SEC. 4405. LIMITED EXCEPTION.

Section 44704(a) of title 49, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``The'' the first place it
appears and inserting ``Issuance, investigations, and tests.--
The'';
(2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``The'' and inserting
``Specifications.--The'';
(3) in paragraph (3) by striking ``If'' and inserting
``Special rules for new aircraft and appliances.--Except as
provided in paragraph (4), if'';
(4) by adding at the end the following:
``(4) Limitation for aircraft manufactured before
august 5, 2004.--Paragraph (3) shall not apply to a
person who began the manufacture of an aircraft before
August 5, 2004, and who demonstrates to the satisfaction
of the Administrator that such manufacture began before
August 5, 2004, if the name of the holder of the type
certificate for the aircraft does not appear on the
airworthiness certificate or identification plate of the
aircraft. The holder of the type certificate for the
aircraft shall not be responsible for the continued
airworthiness of the aircraft. A person may invoke the
exception provided by this paragraph with regard to the
manufacture of only one aircraft.'';
(5) by indenting paragraph (1); and
(6) by aligning the left margin of paragraphs (1), (2), and
(3) with the left margin of paragraph (4) (as added by paragraph
(4) of this section).

SEC. 4406.  NOTE: Alaska.  AIRPORT LAND AMENDMENT.

(a) Release of Reverter Condition.--The Secretary of the Interior
shall execute such instruments as are necessary to release the condition
on a portion of land situated adjacent to the community of Beaver,
Alaska, conveyed pursuant to Patent No. 50-69-0130 and dated August 23,
1968, requiring that such land reverts to the United States if the land
is not used for airport purposes. The Secretary shall ensure that the
release executed pursuant to this subsection--
(1) applies only to approximately 33 acres of land
identified as tracts II through VI of the Beaver Airport, a part
of U.S. Survey No. 3798, Alaska (referred to in this section as
the ``community expansion land'');
(2) is without any requirement for receipt of fair market
value for the release and conveyance of the conditions otherwise
applicable to the community expansion land; and
(3) is contingent on the conveyance by the State of Alaska
of the community expansion land to the Beaver Kwit'chin
Corporation, the Village Corporation of the village of Beaver,
Alaska.

(b) Reconveyance.--The Beaver Kwit'chin Corporation--
(1) shall reconvey to any individual who currently occupies
a portion of the land referred to in subsection (a) or successor
in interest to such an individual, all right, title, and
interest of the Kwit'chin Corporation in and to such land as is
currently occupied;
(2) may subsequently--

[[Page 1777]]
119 STAT. 1777

(A) convey the remaining land to other individuals
or persons for community expansion purposes; or
(B) retain the remaining land in whole or in part
for community uses.

SEC. 4407.  NOTE: Enactment.  RIGHTS-OF-WAY.

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the reciprocal rights-
of-way and easements identified on the map numbered 92337 and dated June
15, 2005, are hereby enacted into law.

SEC. 4408.  NOTE: California.  RIALTO MUNICIPAL AIRPORT.

(a) Findings.--Congress finds that--
(1) Rialto Municipal Airport/Art Scholl Memorial Airport
(Rialto Municipal Airport) is a general aviation airport located
within a 20-mile radius of 10 other general aviation airports;
(2) Rialto Municipal Airport is located approximately 8.5
nautical miles from the former Norton Air Force Base which was
selected for closure by the Base Realignment and Closure
Commission in 1988 and was closed in 1994;
(3) there has been a significant decline in based aircraft
and aviation operations at Rialto Municipal Airport due to the
unexpected impact of increased capacity in the immediate
vicinity of the airport;
(4) the transfer of Rialto Municipal Airport's operations,
assets and liabilities is supported by the general aviation
operators at the airport and will not compromise service or
safety; and
(5) the closure of Rialto Municipal Airport shall be in
compliance with applicable Federal laws and regulations.

(b) In General.--Notwithstanding any law, regulation or grant
assurance, but subject to the requirements of this section, the United
States shall release all restrictions, conditions, and limitations on
the use, encumbrance, conveyance, or closure of the Rialto Municipal
Airport, in Rialto, California, to the extent such restrictions,
conditions, and limitations are enforceable by the United States.
(c) Conditions.--A release under subsection (b) shall be subject to
the following conditions:
(1) Upon conveyance of the land or transfer of any interest
or rights of use or occupancy of the land--
(A) the City of Rialto will pay the United States 45
percent of the current fair market value of the
property, and this amount shall be used for projects
eligible under chapter 471 of title 49, United States
Code, at a commercial airport--
(i) for which a certificate is issued under
part 139 of title 14, Code of Federal Regulations;
(ii) that is located within 10 nautical miles
of Rialto Municipal Airport; and
(iii) that was included on the Department of
Defense base closure list of 1988;
(B) the remaining 55 percent of the fair market
value referred to in subparagraph (A) shall be retained
by the City of Rialto;
(C) the city shall pay to the United States 90
percent of the unamortized portion of any Federal
development grant for airport facilities other than
land, amortized over a 20-year term, with interest.
These funds shall be payable

[[Page 1778]]
119 STAT. 1778

over a period of 5 years and deposited into the Airport
and Airway Trust Fund and available for projects
eligible under chapter 471 of title 49, United States
Code.
(2) The United States will not be responsible for any
environmental cleanup of any land with respect to which such
release is made.
(3) All airport and aviation-related equipment located at
Rialto Municipal Airport and owned by the City of Rialto before
the date of the release will be transferred to a commercial
airport referred to in paragraph (1)(A).

SEC. 4409. CONFORMING AMENDMENTS.

Section 218 of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a) by striking ``prior to the date of the
enactment of the reauthorization of the Transportation Equity
Act for the 21st Century''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:

``(c)  NOTE: Alaska.  For purposes of this section, the term
`Alaska Marine Highway System' includes all existing or planned
transportation facilities and equipment in Alaska, including the lease,
purchase, or construction of vessels, terminals, docks, floats, ramps,
staging areas, parking lots, bridges and approaches thereto, and
necessary roads.''.

SEC. 4410.  NOTE: Alaska.  RALPH M. BARTHOLOMEW VETERANS' MEMORIAL
BRIDGE.

(a) Designation.--The bridge joining the Island of Gravina to the
community of Ketchican, Alaska, constructed pursuant to section
144(g)(1)(E) of title 23, United States Code, is designated as the
``Ralph M. Bartholomew Veterans' Memorial Bridge''.
(b) References.--Any reference in law, map, regulation, document,
paper, or other record of the United States to the bridge referred to in
subsection (a) shall be deemed to be a reference to the ``Ralph M.
Bartholomew Veterans' Memorial Bridge''.

SEC. 4411.  NOTE: Alaska. Bridge.  DON YOUNG'S WAY.

(a) Designation.--The Knik Arm bridge in Alaska to be planned,
designed, and constructed pursuant to section 117 of title 23, United
States Code, as high priority project number 2465 under section 1702 of
this Act, is designated as ``Don Young's Way''.
(b) References.--Any reference in law, map, regulation, document,
paper, or other record of the United States to the bridge referred to in
subsection (a) shall be deemed to be a reference to ``Don Young's Way''.

SEC. 4412. QUALITY BANK ADJUSTMENTS.

(a) Definition of TAPS Quality Bank Adjustments.--In this section,
the term ``TAPS quality bank adjustments'' means monetary adjustments
paid by or to a shipper of oil on the Trans Alaska Pipeline System
through the operation of a quality bank to compensate for the value of
the oil of the shipper that is commingled in the Pipeline.
(b) Proceedings.--
(1) In general.--In a proceeding commenced before the date
of enactment of this Act, the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission may not order retroactive changes in TAPS quality
bank adjustments for any period before February 1, 2000.
(2) Proceedings commenced after the date of enactment.--In a
proceeding commenced after the date of enactment

[[Page 1779]]
119 STAT. 1779

of this Act, the Commission may not order retroactive changes in
TAPS quality bank adjustments for any period that exceeds the
15-month period immediately preceding the earliest date of the
first order of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission imposing
quality bank adjustments in the proceeding.

(c) Deadline for Claims.--
(1) In general.--A claim relating to a quality bank under
this section shall be filed with the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission not later than 2 years after the date on which the
claim arose.
(2) Final order.--Not later than 15 months after the date on
which a claim is filed under paragraph (1), the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission shall issue a final order with respect to
the claim.

SEC. 4413. TECHNICAL AMENDMENT.

Section 5006(d) of Public Law 101-380  NOTE: 33 USC 2736.  is
amended by inserting ``annual'' before ``amount''.

TITLE V--RESEARCH

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 5201,
5203, 5204, 5309, 5501, 5502, 5503, 5504, 5506, 5511, 5512, and
5513 of this title $196,400,000 for each of fiscal years 2005
through 2009 shall be available.
(2) Training and education.--To carry out section 504 of
title 23, United States Code, and section 5502 of this Act
$26,700,000 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, $27,000,000 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,
$69,700,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
(5) Intelligent transportation systems (its) research.--To
carry out subtitle C of this title, and section 511 of title 23,
United States Code, $110,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005
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), $122,000,000 for fiscal year 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

[[Page 1780]]
119 STAT. 1780

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 section 5101(a) of this Act
shall be $410,888,888 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 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 1 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) 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'';

[[Page 1781]]
119 STAT. 1781

and
(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 chapter, the Secretary shall award, to the

[[Page 1782]]
119 STAT. 1782

maximum extent practicable, all grants, contracts, and
cooperative agreements for research and development under this
chapter 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.  NOTE: Public information.  All evaluations
shall be made readily available to the public.
``(8) Technological innovation.--The programs and activities
carried out under this section shall be consistent with the
surface transportation research and technology development
strategic plan developed under section 508.''.

(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 and cooperative agreements 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,
or 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, and grants as
the agent for all participating parties in carrying out
such research, development, or technology transfer
activities.''.

(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:

[[Page 1783]]
119 STAT. 1783

``(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)) 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 addresses
longer-term, higher-risk research with potentially dramatic
breakthroughs for improving the durability, efficiency,
environmental impact, productivity, and safety (including
bicycle and pedestrian safety) aspects of highway and intermodal
transportation systems. 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.''.

[[Page 1784]]
119 STAT. 1784

(h) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a) of
this Act, $14,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall
be available to carry out section 502(e) of such title.
(i) 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 continue to carry out,
through September 30, 2009, tests, monitoring, and data analysis
under the long-term pavement 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 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, $10,120,000 for each of fiscal years
2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 502(f)
of such title.

(j) Seismic Research.--
(1) In general.--Section 502(g) of such title (as
redesignated by subsection (b) of this section) is amended to
read as follows:

``(g) Seismic Research.--The Secretary shall--
``(1) in consultation and cooperation with Federal agencies
participating in the National Earthquake Hazards Reduction
Program established by section 5 of the Earthquake Hazards
Reduction Act of 1977 (42 U.S.C. 7704), coordinate the conduct
of seismic research;
``(2) take such actions as are necessary to ensure that the
coordination of the research is consistent with--
``(A) planning and coordination activities of the
National Institute of Standards and Technology under
section 5(b)(1) of that Act (42 U.S.C. 7704(b)(1)); and
``(B) the plan developed by the Director of the
National Institute of Standards and Technology under
section 8(b) of that Act (42 U.S.C. 7705b(b)); and
``(3) in cooperation with the Center for Civil Engineering
Research at the University of Nevada, Reno, and the National
Center for Earthquake Engineering Research at the University of
Buffalo, carry out a seismic research program--
``(A) to study the vulnerability of the Federal-aid
system and other surface transportation systems to
seismic activity;
``(B) to develop and implement cost-effective
methods to reduce the vulnerability; and
``(C) to conduct seismic research and upgrade
earthquake simulation facilities as necessary to carry
out the program.''.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $2,500,000 for each of fiscal years 2005

[[Page 1785]]
119 STAT. 1785

through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 502(g) of
such title.

(k) Infrastructure Investment Needs Report.--Section 502 of such
title is further amended by adding at the end the following:
``(h) Infrastructure Investment Needs Report.--
``(1) In general.--Not later than July 31, 2006, and July 31
of every second year thereafter, the Secretary shall submit to
the Committee on Environment and Public Works of the Senate and
the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House
of Representatives a report that describes--
``(A) estimates of the future highway, transit, and
bridge needs of the United States; and
``(B) the backlog of current highway, transit, and
bridge needs.
``(2) Comparison with prior reports.--Each report under
paragraph (1) shall provide the means, including all necessary
information, to relate and compare the conditions and service
measures used in the previous biennial reports.''.

(l) Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center.--Section 502 of such
title 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.''.

(m) Biobased Transportation Research.--Of the amounts made available
by section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $12,500,000 for each of fiscal years
2006 through 2009, equally divided and available, shall be available to
carry out biobased research of national importance at the National
Biodiesel Board and at research centers identified in section 9011 of
the Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 (7 U.S.C. 8109).

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;

[[Page 1786]]
119 STAT. 1786

``(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, $7,750,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 502(j) of
such title.

(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, $13,100,000 for each of
fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to
carry out section 503(b) of such title.
(B) High-performance concrete bridge technology
research and deployment.--The Secretary shall obligate
$4,125,000 of the amount described in subparagraph (A)
for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 to conduct
research and deploy technology related to high-
performance concrete bridges.

(c) High  NOTE: 23 USC 503 note.  Performing Steel Bridge Research
and Technology Transfer.--

[[Page 1787]]
119 STAT. 1787

(1) In general.--The Secretary shall carry out a program to
demonstrate the application of high-performing steel in the
construction and rehabilitation of bridges.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $4,100,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out this subsection.

(d) Steel  NOTE: 23 USC 503 note.  Bridge Testing.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall carry out a program to
test steel bridges using a nondestructive technology that is
able to detect growing cracks, including subsurface flaws as
small as 0.010 inches in length or depth, in the bridges.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $1,250,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out this subsection.
(3) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of
activities carried out in accordance with this subsection shall
be 80 percent.

SEC. 5203. 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
may 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.--

[[Page 1788]]
119 STAT. 1788

``(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 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 from funds
made available to carry out this subsection, $4,100,000 to
conduct research to improve asphalt pavement, $4,100,000 to
conduct research to improve concrete pavement, $4,100,000 to
conduct research to improve alternative materials used in
highways (including alternative materials used in highway
drainage applications), and $2,450,000 to conduct research to
improve aggregates used in highways on the National Highway
System.''.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $22,625,000 for each of fiscal years
2006 through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 503(c)
of such title.

(c) Safety Innovation Deployment Program.--
(1) In general.--Section 503 of such title is further
amended by adding at the end 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

[[Page 1789]]
119 STAT. 1789

``(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 to the Secretary an application at such
time and containing 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 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, $12,750,000 for each of fiscal years
2006 through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 503(d)
of such title.

(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) Demonstration Projects and Studies.--
(1) Wood composite materials demonstration project.--Of the
funds made available by section 5101(a)(1) of this Act,
$1,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 and 2007 shall be made
available for conducting a demonstration at the University of
Maine of the durability and potential effectiveness of wood
composite materials in multimodal transportation facilities.
(2) Asphalt reclamation study.--Of the funds made available
by section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $1,500,000 for fiscal year
2006 shall be available for asphalt and asphalt-related
reclamation research at the South Dakota School of Mines.
(3) Alkali silica reactivity.--Of the funds made available
by section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $2,450,000 shall be made
available by the Secretary for each of fiscal years 2006 through
2009 for further development and deployment of techniques to
prevent and mitigate alkali silica reactivity.
(4) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of the
projects--
(A) under paragraph (1) shall be 100 percent; and

[[Page 1790]]
119 STAT. 1790

(B) under paragraphs (2) and (3) shall be the share
applicable under section 120(b) of such title unless
otherwise specified or determined by the Secretary.

(f) Turner-Fairbank Facility.--Of the funds made available by
section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $625,000 shall be available for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 to provide for physical demonstrations of
the ongoing work at the Turner-Fairbank facility with respect to ultra-
high performance concrete with ductility.

SEC. 5204. TRAINING AND EDUCATION.

(a) National Highway Institute.--
(1) Courses.--Section 504(a)(3) of title 23, United States
Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(3) Courses.--
``(A) In general.--The Institute shall--
``(i) develop or update existing courses in
asset management, including courses that include
such components as--
``(I) the determination of life-
cycle costs;
``(II) the valuation of assets;
``(III) benefit-to-cost ratio
calculations; and
``(IV) objective decisionmaking
processes for project selection; and
``(ii) continually develop courses relating to
the application of emerging technologies for--
``(I) transportation infrastructure
applications and asset management;
``(II) intelligent transportation
systems;
``(III) operations (including
security operations);
``(IV) the collection and archiving
of data;
``(V) expediting the planning and
development of transportation projects;
and
``(VI) the intermodal movement of
individuals and freight.
``(B) Additional courses.--In addition to the
courses developed under subparagraph (A), the Institute,
in consultation with State transportation departments,
metropolitan planning organizations, and the American
Association of State Highway and Transportation
Officials, may develop courses relating to technology,
methods, techniques, engineering, construction, safety,
maintenance, environmental mitigation and compliance,
regulations, management, inspection, and finance.
``(C) Revision of courses offered.--The Institute
shall periodically--
``(i) review the course inventory of the
Institute; and
``(ii) revise or cease to offer courses based
on course content, applicability, and need.''.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section
5101(a)(2) of this Act, $9,600,000 for each of fiscal years 2005
through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 504(a) of
such title.

(b) Local Technical Assistance Program.--Section 504(b) of such
title is amended to read as follows:
``(b) Local Technical Assistance Program.--

[[Page 1791]]
119 STAT. 1791

``(1) Authority.--The Secretary shall carry out a local
technical assistance program that will provide access to surface
transportation technology to--
``(A) highway and transportation agencies in
urbanized and rural areas;
``(B) contractors that perform work for the
agencies; and
``(C) infrastructure security staff.
``(2) Grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts.--The
Secretary may make grants and enter into cooperative agreements
and contracts to provide education and training, technical
assistance, and related support services to--
``(A) assist rural, local transportation agencies
and tribal governments, and the consultants and
construction personnel working for the agencies and
governments, to--
``(i) develop and expand expertise in road and
transportation areas (including pavement, bridge,
concrete structures, intermodal connections,
safety management systems, intelligent
transportation systems, incident response,
operations, and traffic safety countermeasures);
``(ii) improve roads and bridges;
``(iii) enhance--
``(I) programs for the movement of
passengers and freight; and
``(II) intergovernmental
transportation planning and project
selection; and
``(iv) deal effectively with special
transportation-related problems by preparing and
providing training packages, manuals, guidelines,
and technical resource materials;
``(B) develop technical assistance for tourism and
recreational travel;
``(C) identify, package, and deliver transportation
technology and traffic safety information to local
jurisdictions to assist urban transportation agencies in
developing and expanding their ability to deal
effectively with transportation-related problems
(particularly the promotion of regional cooperation);
``(D) operate, in cooperation with State
transportation departments and universities--
``(i) local technical assistance program
centers designated to provide transportation
technology transfer services to rural areas and to
urbanized areas; and
``(ii) local technical assistance program
centers designated to provide transportation
technical assistance to tribal governments; and
``(E) allow local transportation agencies and tribal
governments, in cooperation with the private sector, to
enhance new technology implementation.
``(3) Federal share.--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.''.

(c) Funding.--Of the funds made available by section 5101(a)(2) of
this Act, $11,100,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall
be available to carry out section 504(b) of such title.

[[Page 1792]]
119 STAT. 1792

(d) Garrett A. Morgan Technology and Transportation Education
Program.--
(1) In general.--Section 504 of such title, 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  NOTE: Women. Minorities.  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  NOTE: Grants.  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 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 educational agencies and
State educational agencies, which may enter into a
partnership agreement with institutions of higher
education, businesses, or other entities, shall be
eligible to apply for grants under this subsection.
``(4) Definitions.--In this subsection, the following
definitions apply:
``(A) Institution of higher education.--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) Local educational agency.--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).
``(C) State educational agency.--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, $1,250,000 for each of fiscal years 2006

[[Page 1793]]
119 STAT. 1793

through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 504(d) of
such title.
(3) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of
activities carried out in accordance with this section 504(d) of
such title shall be 100 percent.

(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  NOTE: Grants.  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

[[Page 1794]]
119 STAT. 1794

as business administration, economics, information
technology, environmental science, and law;
``(E) programs or curricula in nontraditional
departments that train professionals for work in the
transportation field, such as materials, information
technology, environmental science, urban planning, and
industrial technology; and
``(F) the commitment of industry or a State's
department of transportation to the program.
``(3) Limitations.--The amount of a grant under this
subsection shall not exceed $300,000 per year. After a recipient
has received 3 years of Federal funding under this subsection,
Federal funding may equal not more than 75 percent of a
grantee's program costs.''.

(f) Funding.--
(1) In general.--Of the amounts made available by section
5101(a)(2) of this Act, $1,875,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 504(f) of
such title.
(2) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of
activities carried out in accordance with section 504(f) of such
title shall be 100 percent.

(g) Transportation  NOTE: 23 USC 502 note.  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 by section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, for each of fiscal years 2005 through
2009 $4,200,000 shall be available to carry out paragraph (1)
and $1,000,000 shall be available to carry out paragraph (2).

(h) Freight Planning Capacity Building.--
(1) 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,

[[Page 1795]]
119 STAT. 1795

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) 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.
``(6) Use of 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 or to and enter into contracts and
cooperative agreements 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.''.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section
5101(a)(2) of this Act, $875,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out section 504(g) of
such title.

(i) Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship Program.--Of the amounts
made available by section 5101(a)(2) of this Act, $2,200,000 for each of
fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be available to carry out section
504(c)(2) of such title.

SEC. 5205. STATE PLANNING AND RESEARCH.

Section 505 of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a) by adding at the end the following--
``(7) The conduct of activities relating to the planning of
real-time monitoring elements.''; and
(2) in subsection (d) by striking ``for the same'' and all
that follows through the period and inserting the following:
``for the period described in section 118(b)(2).''.

SEC. 5206. INTERNATIONAL HIGHWAY TRANSPORTATION OUTREACH PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Section 506 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:

[[Page 1796]]
119 STAT. 1796

``Sec. 506. International highway transportation outreach program

``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary may establish an international
highway transportation outreach program--
``(1) to inform the United States highway community of
technological innovations in foreign countries that could
significantly improve highway transportation in the United
States;
``(2) to promote United States highway transportation
expertise, goods, and services in foreign countries; and
``(3) to increase transfers of United States highway
transportation technology to foreign countries.

``(b) Activities.--Activities carried out under the program may
include--
``(1) the development, monitoring, assessment, and
dissemination in the United States of information about highway
transportation innovations in foreign countries that could
significantly improve highway transportation in the United
States;
``(2) research, development, demonstration, training, and
other forms of technology transfer and exchange;
``(3) the provision to foreign countries, through
participation in trade shows, seminars, expositions, and other
similar activities, of information relating to the technical
quality of United States highway transportation goods and
services;
``(4) the offering of technical services of the Federal
Highway Administration that cannot be readily obtained from
private sector firms in the United States for incorporation into
the proposals of those firms undertaking highway transportation
projects outside the United States, if the costs of the
technical services will be recovered under the terms of the
project;
``(5) the conduct of studies to assess the need for, or
feasibility of, highway transportation improvements in foreign
countries; and
``(6) the gathering and dissemination of information on
foreign transportation markets and industries.

``(c) Cooperation.--The Secretary may carry out this section in
cooperation with any appropriate--
``(1) Federal, State, or local agency;
``(2) authority, association, institution, or organization;
``(3) for-profit or nonprofit corporation;
``(4) national or international entity;
``(5) foreign country; or
``(6) person.

``(d) Funds.--
``(1) Contributions.--Funds available to carry out this
section shall include funds deposited by any cooperating
organization or person into a special account of the Treasury
established for this purpose.
``(2) Eligible uses of funds.--The funds deposited into the
account, and other funds available to carry out this section,
shall be available to cover the cost of any activity eligible
under this section, including the cost of--
``(A) promotional materials;
``(B) travel;
``(C) reception and representation expenses; and
``(D) salaries and benefits.

[[Page 1797]]
119 STAT. 1797

``(3) Reimbursements for salaries and benefits.--
Reimbursements for salaries and benefits of Department employees
providing services under this section shall be credited to the
account.

``(e) Report.--For each fiscal year, the Secretary shall submit to
the Committee on Environment and Public Works of the Senate and the
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives a report that describes the destinations and individual
trip costs of international travel conducted in carrying out activities
described in this section.''.
(b) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) of
this Act, $300,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall be
available to carry out section 506 of such title.

SEC. 5207. 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-environmental cooperative research
program

``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish and carry out a
surface transportation-environmental cooperative research program.
``(b) Contents.--The program carried out under this section may
include research--
``(1) to develop more accurate models for evaluating
transportation control measures and transportation system
designs that are appropriate for use by State and local
governments (including metropolitan planning organizations) in
designing implementation plans to meet Federal, State, and local
environmental requirements;
``(2) to improve understanding of the factors that
contribute to the demand for transportation;
``(3) to develop indicators of economic, social, and
environmental performance of transportation systems to
facilitate analysis of potential alternatives;
``(4) to meet additional priorities as determined by the
Secretary in the strategic planning process under section 508;
and
``(5) to refine, through the conduct of workshops, symposia,
and panels, and in consultation with stakeholders (including the
Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency, and
other appropriate Federal and State agencies and associations)
the scope and research emphases of the program.

``(c) Program Administration.--The Secretary shall--
``(1) administer the program established under this section;
and
``(2) ensure, to the maximum extent practicable, that--
``(A) the best projects and researchers are selected
to conduct research in the priority areas described in
subsection (b)--
``(i) on the basis of merit of each submitted
proposal; and
``(ii) through the use of open solicitations
and selection by a panel of appropriate experts;

[[Page 1798]]
119 STAT. 1798

``(B) a qualified, permanent core staff with the
ability and expertise to manage a large multiyear budget
is used;
``(C) the stakeholders are involved in the
governance of the program, at the executive, overall
program, and technical levels, through the use of expert
panels and committees; and
``(D) there is no duplication of research effort
between the program established under this section and
the new strategic highway research program established
under section 510.

``(d) National Academy of Sciences.--The Secretary may make grants
to, and enter into cooperative agreements with, the National Academy of
Sciences to carry out such activities relating to the research,
technology, and technology transfer activities described in subsections
(b) and (c) as the Secretary determines to be appropriate.''.
(b) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) of
this Act, $16,875,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall
be available to carry out section 507 of such title.
(c) 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.''.

SEC. 5208. TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIC PLANNING.

(a) In General.--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  NOTE: Deadline.  later than 1
year after the date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, 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

[[Page 1799]]
119 STAT. 1799

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
nonprofit 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) Annual Report.--The Secretary shall submit to appropriate
committees of Congress an annual report, in conjunction with the
President's annual budget request as set forth in section 1105 of title
31, 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  NOTE: Contracts.  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 this section;
``(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 relating to section 508 and inserting
the following:

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

[[Page 1800]]
119 STAT. 1800

SEC. 5209. NATIONAL COOPERATIVE FREIGHT TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Chapter 5 of title 23, United States Code, is
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, the 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.

[[Page 1801]]
119 STAT. 1801

``(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 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.
``(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.
``(3) Period of availability.--Amounts made available to
carry out this section shall remain available until expended.''.

(b) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) of
this Act, $3,750,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be
available to carry out section 509 of such title.
(c) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is further
amended by adding at the end the following:

``509. National cooperative freight transportation research program.''.

SEC. 5210. 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 section as the
Secretary determines are appropriate.
``(c) 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:

[[Page 1802]]
119 STAT. 1802

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.

``(d) 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.

``(e) 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;

[[Page 1803]]
119 STAT. 1803

``(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.

``(f) 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.

``(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,

[[Page 1804]]
119 STAT. 1804

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 to carry out
this section for making payments under this paragraph.''.

(b) Programmatic Evaluations.--Not  NOTE: Deadline.  later than 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 to the program.
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 that have not yet been addressed.

(c) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) of
this Act, $51,250,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009, shall
be available to carry out section 510 of such title.
(d) 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.''.

SEC. 5211. MULTISTATE CORRIDOR OPERATIONS AND MANAGEMENT.

(a) In General.--Chapter 5 of title 23, United States Code, is
further amended by adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 511. Multistate corridor operations and management

``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall encourage multistate
cooperative agreements, coalitions, or other arrangements to promote
regional cooperation, planning, and shared project implementation for
programs and projects to improve transportation system management and
operations.
``(b) Interstate Route 95 Corridor Coalition Transportation Systems
Management  NOTE: Grants.  and Operations.--The Secretary shall make
grants under this subsection to States to continue intelligent
transportation system management and operations in the Interstate Route
95 corridor coalition region initiated under the Intermodal Surface
Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (Public Law 102-240).''.

(b) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section 5101(a)(5)
of this Act $7,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 shall
be available to carry out section 511 of such title.
(c) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is further
amended by adding at the end the following:

``511. Multistate corridor operations and management.''.

Subtitle C--Intelligent Transportation System Research

SEC. 5301. NATIONAL ITS PROGRAM PLAN.

(a) In General.--Chapter 5 of title 23, United States Code, is
further amended by adding at the end the following:

[[Page 1805]]
119 STAT. 1805

``Sec. 512. National ITS program plan

``(a) In General.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  Updates.--Not later than 1 year
after the date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, the Secretary, in
consultation with interested stakeholders (including State
transportation departments) shall develop a 5-year National
Intelligent Transportation System (in this section referred to
as `ITS') program plan.
``(2) Scope.--The National ITS program plan shall--
``(A) specify the goals, objectives, and milestones
for the research and deployment of intelligent
transportation systems in the contexts of--
``(i) major metropolitan areas;
``(ii) smaller metropolitan and rural areas;
and
``(iii) commercial vehicle operations;
``(B) specify the manner in which specific programs
and projects will achieve the goals, objectives, and
milestones referred to in subparagraph (A), including
consideration of a 5-year timeframe for the goals and
objectives;
``(C) identify activities that provide for the
dynamic development, testing, and necessary revision of
standards and protocols to promote and ensure
interoperability in the implementation of intelligent
transportation system technologies, including actions
taken to establish standards; and
``(D) establish a cooperative process with State and
local governments for--
``(i) determining desired surface
transportation system performance levels; and
``(ii) developing plans for accelerating the
incorporation of specific intelligent
transportation system capabilities into surface
transportation systems.

``(b) Reporting.--The National ITS program plan shall be submitted
and biennially updated as part of the transportation research and
development strategic plan developed under section 508.''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is further
amended by adding at the end the following:

``512. National ITS Program Plan.''.

SEC. 5302. USE OF FUNDS.

(a) In General.--Chapter 5 of title 23, United States Code, is
further amended by adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 513. Use of funds for ITS activities

``(a) In General.--For each fiscal year, not more than $250,000 of
the funds made available to carry out this subtitle C of title V of the
SAFETEA-LU shall be used for intelligent transportation system outreach,
public relations, displays, tours, and brochures.
``(b) Applicability.--Subsection (a) shall not apply to intelligent
transportation system training, scholarships, or the publication or
distribution of research findings, technical guidance, or similar
documents.''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such chapter is further
amended by adding at the end the following:

``513. Use of funds for ITS activities.''.

[[Page 1806]]
119 STAT. 1806

SEC. 5303.  NOTE: 23 USC 512 note.  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 and 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, 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 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 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. 5304.  NOTE: 23 USC 512 note.  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

[[Page 1807]]
119 STAT. 1807

critically necessary to the implementation of an intelligent
transportation system project.

SEC. 5305.  NOTE: 23 USC 512 note.  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 to provide technical assistance in the
nationwide application of those 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 firms 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 sections 552 and 555 of title
5, United States Code.

(h) Advisory  NOTE: Establishment.  Committee.--

[[Page 1808]]
119 STAT. 1808

(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 nonprofit 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.

[[Page 1809]]
119 STAT. 1809

(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, United States Code.

SEC. 5306.  NOTE: 23 USC 512 note.  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) address traffic management, incident management, transit
management, toll collection traveler information, or highway
operations systems with goals of--
(A) reducing metropolitan congestion by not less
than 5 percent by 2010;
(B) ensuring that a national, interoperable 5-1-1
system, along with a national traffic information system
that includes a user-friendly, comprehensive website, is
fully implemented for use by travelers throughout the
United States by September 30, 2010; and
(C)(i) improving incident management response,
particularly in rural areas, so that rural emergency

[[Page 1810]]
119 STAT. 1810

response times are reduced by an average of 10 minutes;
and
(ii) improving communication between emergency care
providers and trauma centers;
(4) incorporate research on the impact of environmental,
weather, and natural conditions on intelligent transportation
systems, including the effects of cold climates;
(5) enhance intermodal use of intelligent transportation
systems for diverse groups, including for emergency and health-
related services;
(6) enhance safety through improved crash avoidance and
protection, crash and other notification, commercial motor
vehicle operations, and infrastructure-based or cooperative
safety systems; and
(7) 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.

SEC. 5307.  NOTE: 23 USC 512 note.  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.--Not later than
September 30, 2007, 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,

[[Page 1811]]
119 STAT. 1811

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. 5308.  NOTE: 23 USC 512 note.  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

[[Page 1812]]
119 STAT. 1812

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) of this Act,
$5,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be
available to carry out this section.

SEC. 5309.  NOTE: 23 USC 512 note.  CENTERS FOR SURFACE TRANSPORTATION
EXCELLENCE.

(a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish 4 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, surface
transportation safety, rural safety, and project finance.
(c) Role of Centers.--To achieve the goals set forth in subsection
(b), the Secretary shall establish the 4 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) Surface transportation safety.--To develop and
disseminate advanced transportation safety techniques and
innovations in both rural areas and urban communities. The
center will use a controlled access highway with state-of-the-
art features, to test safety devices and techniques that enhance
driver performance, examine advanced pavement and lighting
systems, and develop techniques to address older driver and
fatigue driver issues.
(3) 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.

[[Page 1813]]
119 STAT. 1813

(4) 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) Funding.--
(1) In general.--Of the amounts made available by section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $3,750,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available 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) $1,250,000 to establish the Center for
Environmental Excellence.
(B) $750,000 to establish the Center for Excellence
in Surface Transportation Safety at the Virginia Tech
Transportation Institute.
(C) $875,000 to establish the Center for Excellence
in Rural Safety at the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute,
Minnesota.
(D) $875,000 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 subsections (d)(2)(A) and (d)(2)(D) 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.  NOTE: Deadline.  Such plans shall be submitted
to the Secretary by January 1, 2006, and each year
thereafter.

SEC. 5310.  NOTE: 23 USC 512 note.  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,
photonics, communications, or information processing used

[[Page 1814]]
119 STAT. 1814

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 an 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 pro-
mote--
(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 title 23,
United States Code.

Subtitle D--University  NOTE: Grants.  Transportation Research;
Scholarship Opportunities

SEC. 5401. 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 significant transportation research on critical

[[Page 1815]]
119 STAT. 1815

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 following:
``(1) University of Alaska.
``(2) Marshall University, West Virginia, on behalf of a
consortium of West Virginia colleges and universities.
``(3) University of Minnesota.
``(4) University of Missouri, Rolla.
``(5) Northwestern University.
``(6) Oklahoma Transportation Center.
``(7) Portland State University, in partnership with the
University of Oregon, Oregon State University, and the Oregon
Institute of Technology.
``(8) University of Vermont.
``(9) Western Transportation Institute at Montana State
University.
``(10) University of Wisconsin.

``(d) Grants.--The Secretary shall make a grant under this section
to each eligible nonprofit institution of higher learning in an amount
$2,000,000 in fiscal year 2005 and $3,500,000 in each of fiscal years
2006 through 2009 to carry out this section.''.
(b) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(4) of
this Act, $20,000,000 for fiscal year 2005 and $35,000,000 for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be available to carry out section
5505 of such title.
(c) 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. 5402. 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.

[[Page 1816]]
119 STAT. 1816

``(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) Regional and tier i 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--
``(A) 10 regional university transportation centers;
and
``(B) 10 Tier I university transportation centers.
``(2) Tier ii centers.--
``(A) For each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009,
the Secretary shall make grants under subsection (a) to
nonprofit institutions of higher learning to establish
and operate 22 Tier II university transportation
centers.
``(B) The tier II centers consist of the following:
``(i) University of Arkansas, Mack-Blackwell
Rural Transportation Center.
``(ii) University of California, Davis.
``(iii) California State University, San
Bernardino.
``(iv) Cleveland State University, Work Zone
Safety Institute.
``(v) University of Connecticut.
``(vi) University of Delaware in Newark.
``(vii) University of Detroit Mercy (including
the coalition partners of the university).
``(viii) George Mason University.
``(ix) Hampton University, Eastern Seaboard
Intermodal Transportation Applications Center
(ESITAC).
``(x) Kansas State University.
``(xi) Louisiana State University, LTRC-TTEC.
``(xii) University of Massachusetts Amherst.
``(xiii) Michigan Technological University.
``(xiv) University of Nevada Las Vegas.
``(xv) North Carolina State University, Center
for Transportation and the Environment.
``(xvi) Northwestern University.
``(xvii) Ohio Higher Education Transportation
Consortium University of Akron.
``(xviii) University of Rhode Island.
``(xix) University of Toledo.
``(xx) Utah State University.
``(xxi) Youngstown State University.
``(xxii) University of Memphis.
``(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 subsection (c)(1), a nonprofit institution of higher
learning shall submit to the Secretary an application that is

[[Page 1817]]
119 STAT. 1817

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 subsection (c)(1) 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  NOTE: Deadlines.  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 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) demonstrates 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 each 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

[[Page 1818]]
119 STAT. 1818

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 2005 and 2006.--For
fiscal years 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 grants by
the Secretary under this section in July 1999 to operate
regional university transportation centers.
``(5) Amount of grants.--The Secretary shall make a grant to
a nonprofit institution of higher learning to establish and
operate a regional university transportation center of--
``(A) $1,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
``(B) $2,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006
through 2008; and
``(C) $2,225,000 for fiscal year 2009.

``(f) Tier I University Transportation Centers.--
``(1) Competition.--Not  NOTE: Deadline.  later than June
30, 2006, and not later than June 30 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 2005 and 2006.--For
fiscal years 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

[[Page 1819]]
119 STAT. 1819

awards by the Secretary under this section in May 2002 to
operate university transportation centers (other than regional
centers).
``(5) Amount of grants.--The Secretary shall make a grant of
$1,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 to a
nonprofit institution of higher learning to establish and
operate a Tier I university transportation center.

``(g) Tier II University Transportation Centers.--
``(1) Selection.--The Secretary shall make grants to the
nonprofit institutions of higher learning to establish and
operate the 22 Tier II university transportation centers
referred to in subsection (c)(2)(B).
``(2) Amount of grants.--The Secretary shall make a grant of
$500,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 to a
nonprofit institution of higher learning to establish and
operate a Tier II university transportation center.

``(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
not more than $400,000 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 and section 5505.

[[Page 1820]]
119 STAT. 1820

``(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) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(4) of
this Act, the following amounts shall be available to carry out section
5506 of such title.
(1) $20,400,000 for fiscal year 2005.
(2) $41,400,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2008.
(3) $43,900,000 for fiscal year 2009.

(c) 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.''.

Subtitle E--Other Programs

SEC. 5501. 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  NOTE: 23 USC 502 note.  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 funding.--Of the amounts made available by
section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $1,000,000 for fiscal years 2006
and 2007 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. 5502.  NOTE: 23 USC 502 note.  SURFACE TRANSPORTATION CONGESTION
RELIEF SOLUTIONS RESEARCH INITIATIVE.

(a) Establishment.--The Secretary 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.--

[[Page 1821]]
119 STAT. 1821

(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
Efficiency 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 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 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 section 5101(a)(1) of
this Act, $9,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be
available to carry out subsections (a) and (b) of this section. Of the
amounts made available by section 5101(a)(2), $750,000 for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be available to carry out
subsection (c) of this subsection.

SEC. 5503.  NOTE: 23 USC 509 note.  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.

[[Page 1822]]
119 STAT. 1822

(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 submit to
Congress an annual report on the programs and activities carried out
under this section.
(e) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section 5101(a)(1)
of this Act, the Secretary shall make available $1,250,000 to the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration for each of fiscal years
2006 through 2009 to carry out this section.

SEC. 5504.  NOTE: Urban and rural areas. 23 USC 504 note.  CENTER FOR
TRANSPORTATION ADVANCEMENT AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT.

(a) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a Center for
Transportation Advancement and Regional Development (referred to in this
section as the ``Center'') 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  NOTE: Grants. Contracts.  carry
out this section, the Secretary shall make a grant to, or enter into a
cooperative agreement or contract with the National Association of
Development Organizations.

(d) Funding.--
(1) In general.--Of the amounts made available by section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $625,000 shall be available for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 to carry out this section.
(2) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost of
activities carried out in accordance with this subsection shall
be 100 percent.

SEC. 5505.  NOTE: 23 USC 504 note.  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.

[[Page 1823]]
119 STAT. 1823

(2) Partnership.--The Secretary may establish the program in
partnership with appropriate nongovernmental institutions.

(b) Participation.--An operating administration of the Department
and the Office of Inspector General may participate in the scholarship
program.
(c) Funding.--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 for the purpose of
carrying out this section.

SEC. 5506.  NOTE: 23 USC 502 note.  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 a consortium of university research centers.
(d) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) of
this Act, $7,750,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be
available to carry out this section.

SEC. 5507. 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 the
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;

[[Page 1824]]
119 STAT. 1824

(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 90 through rural Wisconsin, southern
Minnesota, northern Iowa, and South Dakota;
(2) Interstate Route 20 through Alabama, Mississippi, and
northern Louisiana;
(3) Interstate Route 91 through Vermont, New Hampshire, and
Massachusetts; and
(4) any other rural corridor the Secretary considers
appropriate.

(d) Report to Congress.--Not later than September 30, 2007, the
Secretary shall submit to Congress a report on the results of the study,
including any recommendations of the Secretary.
(e) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of the study shall
be 100 percent.
(f) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section 5101(a)(5)
of this Act, $1,000,000 shall be available for fiscal year 2006, and
$2,000,000 shall be available for fiscal year 2007 to carry out this
section.

SEC. 5508. TRANSPORTATION TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION AND DEMONSTRATION
PROGRAM.

Section 5117(b) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century (112 Stat 449; 112 Stat. 864; 115 Stat. 2330)  NOTE: 23 USC 502
note.  is amended by striking paragraph (3) and inserting the
following:
``(3) Intelligent transportation infrastructure.--
``(A) Definitions.--In this paragraph:
``(i) Congested area.--The term `congested
area' means a metropolitan area that experiences
significant traffic congestion, as determined by
the Secretary on an annual basis, including the
metropolitan areas of Albany, Atlanta, Austin,
Burlington, Charlotte, Columbus, Greensboro,
Hartford, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Louisville,
Milwaukee, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Nashville, New
Orleans, Norfolk, Raleigh, Richmond, Sacramento,
San Jose, Tuscson, and Tulsa.
``(ii) Deployment area.--The term `deployment
area' means any of the metropolitan areas of
Baltimore, Birmingham, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland,
Dallas/Fort Worth, Denver, Detroit, Houston,
Indianapolis, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, New
York/Northern New Jersey, Northern Kentucky/
Cincinnati, Oklahoma City, Orlando, Philadelphia,
Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Portland,

[[Page 1825]]
119 STAT. 1825

Providence, Salt Lake, San Diego, San Francisco,
St. Louis, Seattle, Tampa, and Washington,
District of Columbia.
``(iii) Metropolitan area.--The term
`metropolitan area', including a major
transportation corridor serving a metropolitan
area, means any area that--
``(I) has a population exceeding
300,000; and
``(II) meets criteria established by
the Secretary in conjunction with the
intelligent vehicle highway systems
corridors program.
``(iv) Original contract.--The term `original
contract' means the Department of Transportation
contract numbered DTTS 59-99-D-00445 T020013.
``(v) Program.--The term `program' means the
2-part intelligent transportation infrastructure
program carried out under this paragraph.
``(vi) State transportation department.--The
term `State transportation department' means--
``(I) a State transportation
department (as defined in section 101 of
title 23, United States Code); and
``(II) a designee of a State
transportation department (as so
defined) for the purpose of entering
into contracts.
``(vii) Uncommitted funds.--The term
`uncommitted funds' means the total amount of
funds that, as of the date that is 180 days after
the date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, remain
uncommitted under the original contract.
``(B) Intelligent transportation infrastructure
program.--
``(i) In general.--The Secretary shall carry
out a 2-part intelligent transportation
infrastructure program in accordance with this
paragraph to advance the deployment of an
operational intelligent transportation
infrastructure system, through measurement of
various transportation system activities, to
simultaneously--
``(I) aid in transportation planning
and analysis; and
``(II) make a significant
contribution to the ITS program under
this title.
``(ii) Objectives.--The objectives of the
program are--
``(I) to build or integrate an
infrastructure of the measurement of
various transportation system metrics to
aid in planning, analysis, and
maintenance of the Department of
Transportation, including the buildout,
maintenance, and operation of greater
than 40 metropolitan area systems with a
total cost not to exceed $2,000,000 for
each metropolitan area;
``(II) to provide private technology
commercialization initiatives to
generate revenues that will be
reinvested in the intelligent
transportation infrastructure system;

[[Page 1826]]
119 STAT. 1826

``(III) to aggregate data into
reports for multipoint data distribution
techniques; and
``(IV) with respect to part I of the
program under subparagraph (C), to use
an advanced information system designed
and monitored by an entity with
experience with the Department of
Transportation in the design and
monitoring of high-reliability, mission-
critical voice and data systems.
``(C) Part I.--
``(i) In general.--In carrying out part I of
the program, the Secretary shall permit the entity
to which the original contract was awarded to use
uncommitted funds to deploy intelligent
transportation infrastructure systems that have
been accepted by the Secretary--
``(I) in accordance with the terms
of the original contract; and
``(II) in any deployment area, with
the consent of the State transportation
department for the deployment area.
``(ii) Applicable conditions.--The same asset
ownership, maintenance, fixed price contract, and
revenue sharing model, and the same competitively
selected consortium leader, as were used for the
deployment of intelligent transportation
infrastructure systems under the original contract
before the date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU
shall apply to each deployment carried out under
clause (i).
``(iii) Deployment in congested areas.--If the
entity referred to in clause (i) is unable to use
the uncommitted funds by deploying intelligent
transportation infrastructure systems in
deployment areas, as determined by the Secretary,
the entity may deploy the systems in accordance
with this paragraph in one or more congested
areas, with the consent of the State
transportation departments for the congested
areas.
``(D) Part  NOTE: Contracts.  II.--
``(i) In general.--In carrying out part II of
the program, the Secretary shall award, on a
competitive basis, contracts for the deployment of
intelligent transportation infrastructure systems
that have been accepted by the Secretary in
congested areas, with the consent of the State
transportation departments for the congested
areas.
``(ii) Requirements.--The Secretary shall
award contracts under clause (i)--
``(I) for individual congested areas
among entities that seek to deploy
intelligent transportation
infrastructure systems in the congested
areas; and
``(II) on the condition that the
terms of each contract awarded requires
the entity deploying such system to
ensure that the deployed system is
compatible (as determined by the
Secretary) with systems deployed in
other congested areas under this
paragraph.

[[Page 1827]]
119 STAT. 1827

``(iii) Provisions in contracts.--The
Secretary shall require that each contract for the
deployment of an intelligent transportation
infrastructure system under this subparagraph
contain such provisions relating to asset
ownership, maintenance, fixed price, and revenue
sharing as the Secretary considers to be
appropriate.
``(E) Use of funds for undeployed systems.--
``(i) In general.--If, under part I or part II
of the program, a State transportation department
for a deployment area or congested area does not
consent by the later of the date that is 180 days
after the date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, or
another date determined jointly by the State
transportation department and the deployment area
or congested area, to participate in the
deployment of an intelligent transportation
infrastructure system in the deployment area or
congested area, upon application by any other
deployment area or congested area that has
consented by that date to participate in the
deployment of such a system, the Secretary shall
distribute any such unused funds to any other
deployment or congested area that has consented by
that date to participate in the deployment of such
a system.
``(ii) No inclusion in cost limitation.--Costs
paid using funds provided through a distribution
under clause (i) shall not be considered in
determining the limitation on maximum cost
described in subparagraph (F)(ii).
``(F) Federal share; limits on costs of systems for
metropolitan areas.--
``(i) Federal share.--Subject to clause (ii),
the Federal share of the cost of any project or
activity carried out under the program shall be 80
percent.
``(ii) Limit on costs of system for each
metropolitan area.--
``(I) In general.--Not more than
$2,000,000 may be provided under this
paragraph for deployment of an
intelligent transportation
infrastructure system for a metropolitan
area.
``(II) Funding under each part.--A
metropolitan area in which an
intelligent transportation
infrastructure system is deployed under
part I or part II under subparagraphs
(C) and (D), respectively, including
through a distribution of funds under
subparagraph (E), may not receive any
additional deployment under the other
part of the program.
``(G) Use of rights-of-way.--
``(i) In general.--An intelligent
transportation system project described in this
paragraph or paragraph (6) that involves privately
owned intelligent transportation system components
and is carried out using funds made available from
the Highway Trust Fund shall not be subject to any
law (including a regulation) of a State or
political subdivision of a State prohibiting or
regulating commercial activities in the

[[Page 1828]]
119 STAT. 1828

rights-of-way of a highway for which Federal-aid
highway funds have been used for planning, design,
construction, or maintenance for the project, if
the Secretary determines that such use is in the
public interest.
``(ii) Effect of subparagraph.--Nothing in
this subparagraph affects the authority of a State
or political subdivision of a State--
``(I) to regulate highway safety; or
``(II) under sections 253 and
332(c)(7) of the Communications Act of
1934 (47 U.S.C. 253, 332(c)(7)).
``(H) Authorization of appropriations.--There is
authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be
necessary for each of fiscal years 2005 through 2009 to
carry out this paragraph.''.

SEC. 5509. REPEAL.

Effective October 1 of 2005, sections 5208 and 5209 of 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. 5510.  NOTE: 49 USC 102 note.  NOTICE.

(a) Notice of Reprogramming.--If any funds authorized for carrying
out this title or the amendments made by this title are subject to a
reprogramming action that requires notice to be provided to the
Committees on Appropriations, Transportation and Infrastructure, and
Science of the House of Representatives and the Committees on
Appropriations and Environment and Public Works of the Senate, notice of
that action shall be concurrently provided to the Committee of
Transportation and Infrastructure and the Committee on Science of the
House of Representatives and the Committee on Environment and Public
Works of the Senate.
(b) Notice of Reorganization.--On or before the 15th day preceding
the date of any major reorganization of a program, project, or activity
of the Department for which funds are authorized by this title or the
amendments made by this title, the Secretary shall provide notice of the
reorganization to the Committees on Transportation and Infrastructure
and Science of the House of Representatives and the Committee on
Environment and Public Works of the Senate.

SEC. 5511. MOTORCYCLE CRASH CAUSATION STUDY GRANTS.

(a) Grants.--The Secretary shall provide grants to the Oklahoma
Transportation Center for the purpose of conducting a comprehensive, in-
depth motorcycle crash causation study that employs the common
international methodology for in-depth motorcycle accident investigation
of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
(b) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section 5101(a)(1)
of this Act, $1,408,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 and 2007 shall be
available to carry out this section.

SEC. 5512.  NOTE: 23 USC 135 note.  ADVANCED TRAVEL FORECASTING
PROCEDURES PROGRAM.

(a) Continuation and Acceleration of TRANSIMS Deployment.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall accelerate the
deployment of the advanced transportation model known as the

[[Page 1829]]
119 STAT. 1829

``Transportation Analysis Simulation System'' (in this section
referred to as ``TRANSIMS''), developed by the Los Alamos
National Laboratory.
(2) Program appreciation.--The purpose of the program is to
assist State departments of transportation and metropolitan
planning organizations--
(A) to implement TRANSIMS;
(B) to develop methods for TRANSIMS applications to
transportation planning, air quality analysis,
regulatory compliance, and response to natural disasters
and other transportation disruptions; and
(C) to provide training and technical assistance for
the implementation of TRANSIMS.

(b) Required Activities.--The Secretary shall use funds made
available to carry out this section 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 local, metropolitan, statewide
transportation planning, including integrating highway and
transit operational considerations into the transportation
Planning process, and estimating the effects of induced travel
demand and transit ridership in making transportation conformity
determinations where applicable;
(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;
(4) to further develop TRANSIMS for additional applications,
including--
(A) congestion analyses;
(B) major investment studies;
(C) economic impact analyses;
(D) alternative analyses;
(E) freight movement studies;
(F) emergency evacuation studies;
(G) port studies;
(H) airport access studies;
(I) induced demand studies; and
(J) transit ridership analysis.

(c) Eligible Activities.--The program may support the development of
methods to plan for the transportation response to chemical and
biological terrorism and other security concerns.
(d) 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).
(e) Funding.--Of the amounts made available by section 5101(a)(1) of
this Act, $2,625,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be
available to carry out this section.

SEC. 5513. RESEARCH GRANTS.

(a) Thermal  NOTE: 23 USC 502 note.  Imaging.--

[[Page 1830]]
119 STAT. 1830

(1) In general.--The Secretary shall make a grant to carry
out a demonstration project that uses a thermal imaging
inspection system (TIIS) that leverages state-of-the-art thermal
imagery technology, integrated with signature recognition
software, providing the capability to identify, in real time,
faults and failures in tires, brakes and bearings mounted on
commercial motor vehicles.
(2) Use of funds.--Funds shall be used--
(A) to employ a TIIS in a field environment, along
the Interstate, to further assess the system's ability
to identify faults in tires, brakes, and bearings
mounted on commercial motor vehicles;
(B) to establish, through statistical analysis, the
probability of failure for each component; and
(C) to develop and integrate a predictive tool into
the TIIS, which identifies an impending tire, brake, or
bearing failure and provides the use of a time frame in
which this failure may occur.
(3) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $2,000,000 in fiscal year 2006 shall be
available to carry out this subsection.

(b) Transportation Injury Research.--
(1) Grant.--The Secretary shall make a grant to maintain a
center for transportation injury research at the Calspan
University of Buffalo Research Center, through the North Campus
facility located in Amherst, New York, and affiliated with the
State University of New York at Buffalo.
(2) Recoup costs.--Notwithstanding current law, Federal
regulations, or Office of Management and Budget circulars or
guidance, the Center shall be permitted to recoup direct and
indirect costs and apply a 7 percent fee to the grant made under
this subsection.
(3) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $1,250,000 in each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out this subsection.

(c) Technology Transfer Grant.--
(1) Grant.--The Secretary shall make grants to the Argonne
National Laboratory-Advanced Transportation Technology Center
for the purpose of conducting transportation research and
demonstration projects that would lead to the exchange of
research results with the private sector and collaboration with
universities at a centralized location conducive for technology
transfer.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $4,000,000 in each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out this subsection.

(d) Appalachian Regional Commission.--
(1) Grant.--The Secretary shall make a grant to the
Appalachian Regional Commission to conduct a feasibility study
for the creation of a system of inland ports and distribution
centers in Appalachia.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $500,000 in fiscal year 2006 shall be
available to carry out this subsection.

(e) Automobile Accident Injury Research.--

[[Page 1831]]
119 STAT. 1831

(1) Grants.--The Secretary shall make a grant to the Forsyth
Institute for research and technology development for preventing
and minimizing head, craniofacial, and spinal cord injuries
resulting from automobile accidents.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $500,000 in each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out this subsection.

(f) Rural Transportation Research.--
(1) Grants.--The Secretary shall make grants to the New
England Transportation Institute in White River Junction,
Vermont for rural transportation research.
(2) Funding.--
(A) In general.--Of the amounts made available by
section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $1,000,000 for fiscal
year 2006 shall be available to carry out this
subsection and shall remain available until expended.
(B) Cost-sharing.--
(i) Federal share.--The Federal share of the
cost of activities carried out under this
subsection shall be 80 percent.
(ii) Non-federal share.--The fair market value
of any materials or services provided by the non-
Federal sponsor for activities under this
subsection shall be credited to the non-Federal
share.

(g) Rural Transportation Research Initiative.--
(1) Grants.--For each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009, the
Secretary shall provide a grant to the Upper Great Plains
Transportation Institute at North Dakota State University for
use in carrying out the Rural Transportation Research
Initiative.
(2) Funding.--
(A) In general.--Of the amounts made available by
section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $500,000 for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be available to
carry out this subsection, and shall remain available
until expended.
(B) Cost-sharing.--
(i) Federal share.--The Federal share of the
cost of the activities carried out under this
subsection shall be 80 percent.
(ii) Non-federal share.--The fair market value
of any materials or services provided by the non-
Federal project sponsor for any activity under
this subsection shall be credited to the non-
Federal share.

(h) Hydrogen-Powered Transportation Research Initiative.--
(1) Grants.--For each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009, the
Secretary shall provide a grant to the University of Montana for
use in carrying out the Hydrogen-Powered Transportation Research
Initiative.
(2) Funding.--
(A) In general.--Of the amounts made available by
section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $750,000 for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be available to
carry out this subsection, and shall remain available
until expended.
(B) Cost-sharing.--

[[Page 1832]]
119 STAT. 1832

(i) Federal share.--The Federal share of the
cost of the activities carried out under this
subsection shall be 80 percent.
(ii) Non-federal share.--The fair market value
of any materials or services provided by the non-
Federal project sponsor for an activity under this
subsection shall be credited to the non-Federal
share.

(i) Cold Region and Rural Transportation Research, Maintenance, and
Operations.--
(1) Grants.--The Secretary shall provide grants to the
Western Transportation Institute at Montana State University,
for use in developing a research facility in Lewistown, Montana,
for basic and applied research and testing on surface
transportation issues facing rural and cold regions.
(2) Funding.--
(A) In general.--Of the amounts made available by
section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $1,000,000 for each of
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be available to
carry out this subsection, to remain available until
expended.
(B) Cost-sharing.--
(i) Federal share.--The Federal share of the
cost of the activities carried out under this
subsection shall be 80 percent.
(ii) Non-federal share.--The fair market value
of any materials or services provided by the non-
Federal project sponsor for an activity under this
section shall be credited to the non-Federal
share.

(j) Advanced Vehicle Technology.--
(1) Grant.--The Secretary shall make a grant to the
University of Kansas Transportation Research Institute for
research and development of advanced vehicle technology
concepts, focused on vehicle emissions, fuel cells and catalytic
processes, and intelligent transportation systems.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $2,500,000 in each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out this subsection.

(k) Asphalt Research Consortium.--
(1) Grant.--The Secretary shall make a grant to the asphalt
research consortium lead by the Western Research Institute to
research flexible pavement and extending the life-cycle of
asphalts.
(2) Funding.--Of the amounts made available under section
5101(a)(1) of this Act, $7,500,000 in each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009 shall be available to carry out this subsection.

(l) Renewable Transportation Systems Research.--
(1) Grants.--The Secretary shall make grants to the
University of Vermont for research, development and field
testing of hydrogen fuel cell and biofuel transportation
technology.
(2) Funding.--
(A) In general.--Of the amounts made available for
section 5101(a)(1) of this Act, $1,000,000 for fiscal
year 2006 to remain available until expended.
(B) Cost-sharing.--

[[Page 1833]]
119 STAT. 1833

(i) Federal share.--The Federal Share of the
cost of activities carried out under this section
shall be 80 percent.
(ii) Non-federal share.--The fair market value
of any materials or services provided by the non-
Federal sponsor for activities under this section
shall be credited to the non-Federal share.

(m) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost of activities
carried out in accordance with this section shall be 80 percent unless
otherwise expressly provided by this section or otherwise determined by
the Secretary.

SEC. 5514.  NOTE: Deadline.  COMPETITION FOR SPECIFICATION OF
ALTERNATIVE TYPES OF CULVERT PIPES.

Notwithstanding any contrary interpretation of appendix A of subpart
D of section 635.411 of volume 23, Code of Federal Regulations (as in
existence on the date of enactment of this Act), not later than 180 days
after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall ensure that
States provide for competition with respect to the specification of
alternative types of culvert pipes through requirements that are
commensurate with competition requirements for other construction
materials, as determined by the Secretary.

Subtitle F--Bureau of Transportation Statistics

SEC. 5601. BUREAU OF TRANSPORTATION STATISTICS.

(a) In General.--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 of Transportation.
``(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

[[Page 1834]]
119 STAT. 1834

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) Transportation statistics.--Collecting, 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
(e);
``(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 developed under Executive Order No. 12906,
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 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.
``(8) Review sources and reliability of statistics.--
Reviewing and reporting to the Secretary on the sources and
reliability of the statistics proposed by the heads of the
operating administrations of the Department to measure outputs

[[Page 1835]]
119 STAT. 1835

and outcomes as required by the Government Performance and
Results Act of 1993 (Public Law 103-62; 107 Stat. 285), and the
amendments made by such Act, and carrying 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.
``(9) Making statistics accessible.--Making the statistics
published under this subsection readily accessible to the
public.

``(d) Information  NOTE: Deadlines. Contracts. Publication.  Needs
Assessment.--
``(1) In general.--Not later than 60 days after the date of
enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, the Secretary shall enter into an
agreement 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 submitted to the Secretary and the
appropriate committees of Congress not later than 24 months
after such agreement is entered into.
``(2) Content.--The assessment shall--
``(A) identify, in order of priority, the
transportation data that is not being collected by the
Bureau, operating administrations of the Department, or
other Federal, State, or local entities, but is needed
to improve transportation decisionmaking at the Federal,
State, and local levels 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 of a
higher priority than data currently being collected;
``(C) identify any data the Bureau or other Federal,
State, or local entity 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, or local entity 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 180 days after the
date on which the National Research Council submits the
assessment under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall submit 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);

[[Page 1836]]
119 STAT. 1836

``(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 Database.--
``(1) In general.--In consultation with the Under Secretary
for Policy, the Assistant Secretaries, and the heads of the
operating administrations of the Department, the Director shall
establish and maintain a transportation database for all modes
of transportation.
``(2) Use.--The database shall be suitable for analyses
carried out by the Federal Government, the States, and
metropolitan planning organizations.
``(3) Contents.--The database 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)(9).
``(3) Coordination.--The Director shall work with other
transportation libraries and transportation information
providers, both public and private, to achieve the goal
specified in paragraph (2).

``(g) National Transportation Atlas Database.--
``(1) In general.--The Director shall develop and maintain a
national transportation atlas database that is comprised of
geospatial databases 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 databases shall be
able to support intermodal network analysis.

[[Page 1837]]
119 STAT. 1837

``(h) Mandatory  NOTE: Penalty.  Response Authority for Freight
Data Collection.--Whoever, being the owner, official, agent, person in
charge, or assistant to the person in charge of any freight 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 the individual's
knowledge all questions relating to the corporation, company, business,
institution, establishment, or other organization, or to make available
records or statistics in the individual's 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 the
individual willfully gives a false answer to such a question, the
individual 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 coordinate 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 database under subsection (g)
and the National Spatial Data Infrastructure.

``(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 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).
``(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

[[Page 1838]]
119 STAT. 1838

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.
``(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 who is requested or required to supply the data or
information of the nonstatistical purpose.

``(l) Transportation Statistics Annual Report.--The Director shall
submit 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 possessing the
information 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 shall establish an
advisory council on transportation statistics.
``(2) Function.--The function of the advisory council
established under this subsection is to--
``(A) advise the Director on the quality,
reliability, consistency, objectivity, and relevance of
transportation statistics and analyses collected,
supported, or disseminated by the Bureau and the
Department;
``(B) provide input to and review the report to
Congress under subsection (d)(4); and
``(C) advise the Director on methods to encourage
cooperation and interoperability of transportation data
collected by the Bureau, the operating administrations
of

[[Page 1839]]
119 STAT. 1839

the Department, 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) In general.--Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), members of the advisory council shall
be appointed to staggered terms not to exceed 3 years. A
member may be renominated for 1 additional 3-year term.
``(B) Current members.--Members serving on the
Advisory Council on Transportation Statistics as of the
date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU 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.''.

TITLE VI--TRANSPORTATION PLANNING AND PROJECT DELIVERY

SEC. 6001. TRANSPORTATION PLANNING.

(a) In General.--Sections 134 and 135 of title 23, United States
Code, are amended to read as follows:

``Sec. 134. Metropolitan transportation planning

``(a) Policy.--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 subsection (h) and section
135(d).

``(b) Definitions.--In this section and section 135, 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 subsection (e).

[[Page 1840]]
119 STAT. 1840

``(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 subsection (d).
``(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 subsection (j).
``(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.

``(c) General Requirements.--
``(1) Development of long-range plans and tips.--To
accomplish the objectives in subsection (a), metropolitan
planning organizations designated under subsection (d), 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.

``(d) Designation of Metropolitan Planning Organizations.--
``(1) In general.--To  NOTE: Urban and rural areas.  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;

[[Page 1841]]
119 STAT. 1841

``(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.

``(e) 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 the SAFETEA-

[[Page 1842]]
119 STAT. 1842

LU, 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 (d)(5).
``(5) New metropolitan planning areas in nonattainment.--In
the case of an urbanized area designated after the date of
enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, 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 (d)(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.

``(f) 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.
``(2) Interstate compacts.--The consent of Congress is
granted to any two 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 135.
``(C)
Interstate  NOTE: California. Nevada.  compact.--
``(i) In general.--Subject to clause (ii), and
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

[[Page 1843]]
119 STAT. 1843

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 for the Lake Tahoe
region under other provisions of this
title and under chapter 53 of title 49,
1 percent of the funds allocated under
section 202 shall 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, be
funded using funds allocated under section 202.
``(4) Reservation of rights.--The right to alter, amend, or
repeal interstate compacts entered into under this subsection is
expressly reserved.

``(g) 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 of title 49, 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 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

[[Page 1844]]
119 STAT. 1844

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 of
title 49;
``(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.

``(h) Scope of Planning Process.--
``(1) In general.--The metropolitan planning process for a
metropolitan planning area under this section shall provide for
consideration of projects and strategies that will--
``(A) support the economic vitality of the
metropolitan area, especially by enabling global
competitiveness, productivity, and efficiency;
``(B) increase the safety of the transportation
system for motorized and nonmotorized users;
``(C) increase the security of the transportation
system for motorized and nonmotorized users;
``(D) increase the accessibility and mobility of
people and for freight;
``(E) 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;
``(F) enhance the integration and connectivity of
the transportation system, across and between modes, for
people and freight;
``(G) promote efficient system management and
operation; and
``(H) 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 this title or chapter 53 of title 49, 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.

``(i) Development of Transportation Plan.--
``(1) In general.--Each metropolitan planning organization
shall prepare and update 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

[[Page 1845]]
119 STAT. 1845

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 5 years unless the metropolitan planning organization
elects to update more frequently.
``(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) Identification of transportation facilities.--
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 (h) as such factors relate to a 20-year
forecast period.
``(B) Mitigation activities.--
``(i) In general.--A long-range transportation
plan shall include a discussion of types of
potential environmental mitigation activities and
potential areas to carry out these activities,
including activities that may have the greatest
potential to restore and maintain the
environmental functions affected by the plan.
``(ii) Consultation.--The discussion shall be
developed in consultation with Federal, State, and
tribal wildlife, land management, and regulatory
agencies.
``(C) Financial plan.--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.
``(D) Operational and management strategies.--
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.
``(E) Capital investment and other strategies.--
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.

[[Page 1846]]
119 STAT. 1846

``(F) Transportation and transit enhancement
activities.--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) Consultation.--
``(A) In general.--In each metropolitan area, the
metropolitan planning organization shall consult, as
appropriate, with State and local agencies responsible
for land use management, natural resources,
environmental protection, conservation, and historic
preservation concerning the development of a long-range
transportation plan.
``(B) Issues.--The consultation shall involve, as
appro- priate--
``(i) comparison of transportation plans with
State conservation plans or maps, if available; or
``(ii) comparison of transportation plans to
inventories of natural or historic resources, if
available.
``(5) Participation by interested parties.--
``(A) In general.--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.
``(B) Contents of participation plan.--A
participation plan--
``(i) shall be developed in consultation with
all interested parties; and
``(ii) shall provide that all interested
parties have reasonable opportunities to comment
on the contents of the transportation plan.
``(C) Methods.--In carrying out subparagraph (A),
the metropolitan planning organization shall, to the
maximum extent practicable--
``(i) hold any public meetings at convenient
and accessible locations and times;
``(ii) employ visualization techniques to
describe plans; and
``(iii) make public information available in
electronically accessible format and means, such
as the World Wide Web, as appropriate to afford
reasonable opportunity for consideration of public
information under subparagraph (A).
``(6) Publication.--A transportation plan involving Federal
participation shall be published or otherwise made readily
available by the metropolitan planning organization for public

[[Page 1847]]
119 STAT. 1847

review, including (to the maximum extent practicable) in
electronically accessible formats and means, such as the World
Wide Web, approved by the metropolitan planning organization and
submitted for information purposes to the Governor at such times
and in such manner as the Secretary shall establish.
``(7) Selection of projects from illustrative list.--
Notwithstanding paragraph (2)(C), 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)(C).

``(j) 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 an opportunity
for participation by interested parties in the
development of the program, in accordance with
subsection (i)(5).
``(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.
``(3) Included projects.--
``(A) Projects under this title and chapter 53 of
title 49.--A TIP developed under this subsection for a
metropolitan area shall include the projects within the

[[Page 1848]]
119 STAT. 1848

area that are proposed for funding under chapter 1 of
this title and chapter 53 of title 49.
``(B) Projects under chapter 2.--
``(i) Regionally significant projects.--
Regionally significant projects proposed for
funding under chapter 2 shall be identified
individually in the transportation improvement
program.
``(ii) Other projects.--Projects proposed for
funding under chapter 2 that are not determined to
be regionally significant shall be grouped in one
line item or identified individually in the
transportation improvement program.
``(C) Consistency with long-range transportation
plan.--Each project shall be consistent with the long-
range transportation plan developed under subsection (i)
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 an opportunity for participation by interested parties
in the development of the program, in accordance with subsection
(i)(5).
``(5) Selection of projects.--
``(A) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (k)(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
this title, the State; and
``(II) in the case of projects under
chapter 53 of title 49, 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.

[[Page 1849]]
119 STAT. 1849

``(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, including investments in
pedestrian walkways and bicycle transportation
facilities, for which Federal funds have been obligated
in the preceding year shall be published or otherwise
made available by the cooperative effort of the State,
transit operator, and metropolitan planning organization
for public review. The listing shall be consistent with
the categories identified in the TIP.

``(k) 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
this title and chapter 53 of title 49 through the use of travel
demand reduction and operational management strategies. The
Secretary shall establish an appropriate phase-in schedule for
compliance with the requirements of this section but no sooner
than 1 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 this title (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 of title 49 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

[[Page 1850]]
119 STAT. 1850

the National Highway System and projects carried out
within such boundaries under the bridge program or the
Interstate maintenance program under this title 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 this title and chapter 53 of
title 49.
``(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.

``(l) 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.

[[Page 1851]]
119 STAT. 1851

``(m) Additional Requirements for Certain Nonattainment Areas.--
``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provisions of
this title or chapter 53 of title 49, 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 (e).

``(n) 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 this title or chapter 53 of
title 49.
``(o) Funding.--Funds set aside under section 104(f) of this title
or section 5305(g) of title 49 shall be available to carry out this
section.
``(p) Continuation of Current Review Practice.--Since plans and TIPs
described in this section are subject to a reasonable opportunity for
public comment, since 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 since 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. 135. Statewide transportation planning

``(a) General Requirements.--
``(1) Development of plans and programs.--To accomplish the
objectives stated in section 134(a), each State shall develop a
statewide transportation plan and a statewide transportation
improvement program for all areas of the State, subject to
section 134.
``(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 134(a), 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--

[[Page 1852]]
119 STAT. 1852

``(1) coordinate planning carried out under this section
with the transportation planning activities carried out under
section 134 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.).

``(c) Interstate Agreements.--
``(1) In general.--The consent of Congress is granted to two
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.

``(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 of the transportation
system for motorized and nonmotorized users;
``(C) increase the security of the transportation
system for motorized and nonmotorized users;
``(D) increase the accessibility and mobility of
people and freight;
``(E) 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;
``(F) enhance the integration and connectivity of
the transportation system, across and between modes
throughout the State, for people and freight;
``(G) promote efficient system management and
operation; and
``(H) 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 this title or chapter 53 of title 49, 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;

[[Page 1853]]
119 STAT. 1853

``(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 134.
``(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.
``(D) Consultation, comparison, and consideration.--
``(i) In general.--The long-range
transportation plan shall be developed, as
appropriate, in consultation with State, tribal,
and local agencies responsible for land use
management, natural resources, environmental
protection, conservation, and historic
preservation.
``(ii) Comparison and consideration.--
Consultation under clause (i) shall involve
comparison of transportation plans to State and
tribal conservation plans or maps, if available,
and comparison of transportation plans to
inventories of natural or historic resources, if
available.
``(3) Participation by interested parties.--
``(A) In general.--In developing the statewide
transportation plan, the State shall 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.
``(B) Methods.--In carrying out subparagraph (A),
the State shall, to the maximum extent practicable--

[[Page 1854]]
119 STAT. 1854

``(i) hold any public meetings at convenient
and accessible locations and times;
``(ii) employ visualization techniques to
describe plans; and
``(iii) make public information available in
electronically accessible format and means, such
as the World Wide Web, as appropriate to afford
reasonable opportunity for consideration of public
information under subparagraph (A).
``(4) Mitigation activities.--
``(A) In general.--A long-range transportation plan
shall include a discussion of potential environmental
mitigation activities and potential areas to carry out
these activities, including activities that may have the
greatest potential to restore and maintain the
environmental functions affected by the plan.
``(B) Consultation.--The discussion shall be
developed in consultation with Federal, State, and
tribal wildlife, land management, and regulatory
agencies.
``(5) 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.
``(6) 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 (5).
``(7) 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.
``(8) Publication of long-range transportation plans.--Each
long-range transportation plan prepared by a State shall be
published or otherwise made available, including (to the maximum
extent practicable) in electronically accessible formats and
means, such as the World Wide Web.

``(g) Statewide Transportation Improvement Program.--
``(1) Development.--Each State shall develop a statewide
transportation improvement program for all areas of the State.
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) 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 134.

[[Page 1855]]
119 STAT. 1855

``(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) Listing of projects.--An annual listing of
projects for which funds have been obligated in the
preceding year in each metropolitan planning area shall
be published or otherwise made available by the
cooperative effort of the State, transit operator, and
the metropolitan planning organization for public
review. The listing shall be consistent with the funding
categories identified in each metropolitan
transportation improvement program.
``(C) Projects under chapter 2.--
``(i) Regionally significant projects.--
Regionally significant projects proposed for
funding under chapter 2 shall be identified
individually in the transportation improvement
program.
``(ii) Other projects.--Projects proposed for
funding under chapter 2 that are not determined to
be regionally significant shall be grouped in one
line item or identified individually in the
transportation improvement program.
``(D) 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, if the project is carried
out in an area designated as nonattainment for
ozone, particulate matter, or carbon monoxide
under such Act.
``(E) Requirement of anticipated full funding.--The
transportation improvement program shall include a

[[Page 1856]]
119 STAT. 1856

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.
``(F) 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.
``(G) Selection of projects from illustrative
list.--
``(i) No required selection.--Notwithstanding
subparagraph (F), a State shall not be required to
select any project from the illustrative list of
additional projects included in the financial plan
under subparagraph (F).
``(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 (F) for
inclusion in an approved transportation
improvement program.
``(H) Priorities.--The transportation improvement
program shall reflect the priorities for programming and
expenditures of funds, including transportation
enhancement activities, required by this title and
chapter 53 of title 49.
``(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 this title or under sections 5310, 5311, 5316, and
5317 of title 49), 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 this title or under sections 5310, 5311, 5316, and
5317 of title 49 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.

[[Page 1857]]
119 STAT. 1857

``(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 134.
``(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.--Funds set aside pursuant to section 104(f) of this
title and section 5305(g) of title 49, 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 134, and sections
5303 and 5304 of title 49, State laws, rules, or regulations pertaining
to congestion management systems or programs may constitute the
congestion management process under this section and section 134, and
sections 5303 and 5304 of title 49, if the Secretary finds that the
State laws, rules, or regulations are consistent with, and fulfill the
intent of, the purposes of this section and section 134 and sections
5303 and 5304 of title 49, 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)  NOTE: Guidelines. 23 USC 134 note.  Schedule for
Implementation.--The Secretary shall issue guidance on a schedule for
implementation of the changes made by this section, taking into
consideration the established planning update cycle for States and
metropolitan planning organizations. The Secretary shall not require a
State or metropolitan planning organization to deviate from its
established planning update cycle to implement changes made by this
section.  NOTE: Effective date.  Beginning July 1, 2007, State or
metropolitan planning organization plan or program updates shall reflect
changes made by this section.

(c) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 1 of such title
is amended by striking the items relating to sections 134 and 135 and
inserting the following:

``134. Metropolitan transportation planning.
``135. Statewide transportation planning.''.

SEC. 6002. EFFICIENT ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEWS FOR PROJECT DECISIONMAKING.

(a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 1 of title 23, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 138 the following:

[[Page 1858]]
119 STAT. 1858

``Sec. 139. Efficient environmental reviews for project decisionmaking

``(a) Definitions.--In this section, 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 `environmental review
process' 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 this title or
chapter 53 of title 49 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.--
``(1) In general.--The project development procedures in
this section are applicable to all projects for which an
environmental impact statement is prepared under the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 and 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.
``(2) Flexibility.--Any authorities granted in this section
may be exercised for a project, class of projects, or program of
projects.

``(c) Lead Agencies.--

[[Page 1859]]
119 STAT. 1859

``(1) Federal lead agency.--The Department of Transportation
shall be the Federal lead agency in the environmental review
process for a project.
``(2) Joint lead agencies.--Nothing in this section
precludes another agency from being a joint lead agency in
accordance with regulations under the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969.
``(3) Project sponsor as joint lead agency.--Any project
sponsor that is a State or local governmental entity receiving
funds under this title or chapter 53 of title 49 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 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.
``(4) 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.
``(5) 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.
``(6) Roles and responsibility of lead agency.--With respect
to the environmental review process for any project, the lead
agency shall have authority and responsibility--
``(A) to take such actions as are necessary and
proper, within the authority of the lead agency, to
facilitate the expeditious resolution of the
environmental review process for the project; and
``(B) to prepare or ensure that any required
environmental impact statement or other document
required to be completed under the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 is completed in
accordance with this section and applicable Federal law.

``(d) 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.

[[Page 1860]]
119 STAT. 1860

``(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.
``(7) Concurrent reviews.--Each Federal agency shall, to the
maximum extent practicable--
``(A) carry out obligations of the Federal agency
under other applicable law concurrently, and in
conjunction, with the review required under the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.), unless doing so would impair the ability of the
Federal agency to carry out those obligations; and
``(B)  NOTE: Procedures.  formulate and implement
administrative, policy, and procedural mechanisms to
enable the agency to ensure completion of the
environmental review process in a timely, coordinated,
and environmentally responsible manner.

``(e)  NOTE: Notification.  Project Initiation.--The project
sponsor shall notify the Secretary 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 necessary for the proposed
project, for the purpose of informing the Secretary that the
environmental review process should be initiated.

``(f) 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;

[[Page 1861]]
119 STAT. 1861

``(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.
``(4) Alternatives analysis.--
``(A) 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.
``(B) 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.
``(C) 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.
``(D) 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.

``(g) Coordination and Scheduling.--
``(1) Coordination plan.--
``(A) In general.--The lead agency shall establish a
plan for coordinating public and agency participation in
and comment on the environmental review process for a
project or category of projects. The coordination plan
may be incorporated into a memorandum of understanding.
``(B) Schedule.--
``(i) In general.--The lead agency may
establish as part of the coordination plan, after
consultation with each participating agency for
the project and with the State in which the
project is located (and, if the State is not the
project sponsor, with the project sponsor), a
schedule for completion of the environmental
review process for the project.
``(ii) Factors for consideration.--In
establishing the schedule, the lead agency shall
consider factors such as--
``(I) the responsibilities of
participating agencies under applicable
laws;
``(II) resources available to the
cooperating agencies;
``(III) overall size and complexity
of the project;
``(IV) the overall schedule for and
cost of the project; and

[[Page 1862]]
119 STAT. 1862

``(V) the sensitivity of the natural
and historic resources that could be
affected by the project.
``(C) Consistency with other time periods.--A
schedule under subparagraph (B) shall be consistent with
any other relevant time periods established under
Federal law.
``(D) Modification.--The lead agency may--
``(i) lengthen a schedule established under
subparagraph (B) for good cause; and
``(ii) shorten a schedule only with the
concurrence of the affected cooperating agencies.
``(E) Dissemination.--A copy of a schedule under
subparagraph (B), and of any modifications to the
schedule, shall be--
``(i) provided to all participating agencies
and to the State transportation department of the
State in which the project is located (and, if the
State is not the project sponsor, to the project
sponsor); and
``(ii) made available to the public.
``(2) Comment deadlines.--The lead agency shall establish
the following deadlines for comment during the environmental
review process for a project:
``(A)  NOTE: Federal Register, publication.  For
comments by agencies and the public on a draft
environmental impact statement, a period of not more
than 60 days after publication in the Federal Register
of notice of the date of public availability of such
document, unless--
``(i) a different deadline is established by
agreement of the lead agency, the project sponsor,
and all participating agencies; or
``(ii) the deadline is extended by the lead
agency for good cause.
``(B) 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--
``(i) a different deadline is established by
agreement of the lead agency, the project sponsor,
and all participating agencies; or
``(ii) the deadline is extended by the lead
agency for good cause.
``(3) Deadlines for decisions under other laws.--In any case
in which a decision under any Federal law relating to a project
(including the issuance or denial of a permit or license) is
required to be made by the later of the date that is 180 days
after the date on which the Secretary made all final decisions
of the lead agency with respect to the project, or 180 days
after the date on which an application was submitted for the
permit or license, the Secretary shall submit to the Committee
on Environment and Public Works of the Senate and the Committee
on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives--
``(A)  NOTE: Notice.  as soon as practicable after
the 180-day period, an initial notice of the failure of
the Federal agency to make the decision; and

[[Page 1863]]
119 STAT. 1863

``(B)  NOTE: Notice.  every 60 days thereafter
until such date as all decisions of the Federal agency
relating to the project have been made by the Federal
agency, an additional notice that describes the number
of decisions of the Federal agency that remain
outstanding as of the date of the additional notice.
``(4) Involvement of the public.--Nothing in this subsection
shall reduce any time period provided for public comment in the
environmental review process under existing Federal law,
including a regulation.

``(h) 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.--
``(A) Meeting of participating agencies.--At any
time upon request of a project sponsor or the Governor
of a State in which the project is located, the lead
agency shall promptly convene a meeting with the
relevant participating agencies, the project sponsor,
and the Governor (if the meeting was requested by the
Governor) to 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.
``(B)  NOTE: Deadline. Federal Register,
publication.  Notice that resolution cannot be
achieved.--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 participating agencies, the
project sponsor, the Governor, the Committee on
Environment and Public Works of the Senate, the
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the
House of Representatives, and the Council on
Environmental Quality, and shall publish such
notification in the Federal Register.

``(i) Performance Measurement.--The Secretary shall establish a
program to measure and report on progress toward improving and
expediting the planning and environmental review process.
``(j) Assistance to Affected State and Federal Agencies.--

[[Page 1864]]
119 STAT. 1864

``(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 this title
or chapter 53 of title 49, the Secretary may approve a request
by the State to provide funds so made available under this title
or such chapter 53 to affected Federal agencies (including the
Department of Transportation), State agencies, and Indian tribes
participating in the environmental review process for the
projects in that State or participating in a State process that
has been approved by the Secretary for that State. Such funds
may be provided only to support activities that directly and
meaningfully contribute to expediting and improving
transportation project planning and delivery for projects in
that State.
``(2) Activities eligible for funding.--Activities for which
funds may be provided under paragraph (1) include transportation
planning activities that precede the initiation of the
environmental review process, dedicated staffing, training of
agency personnel, information gathering and mapping, and
development of programmatic agreements.
``(3) Use of federal lands highway funds.--The Secretary may
also use funds made available under section 204 for a project
for the purposes specified in this subsection with respect to
the environmental review process for the project.
``(4) 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.
``(5) 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.

``(k) Judicial Review and Savings Clause.--
``(1) Judicial review.--Except as set forth under subsection
(l), nothing in this section shall affect the reviewability of
any final Federal agency action in a court of the United States
or in the court of any State.
``(2) Savings clause.--Nothing in this section shall be
construed as superseding, amending, or modifying the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 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.

``(l)  NOTE: Deadlines. Notices. Federal Register,
publication.  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

[[Page 1865]]
119 STAT. 1865

for a highway or public transportation capital project shall be
barred unless it is filed within 180 days after publication of a
notice in the Federal Register announcing that 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
180 days after the date of publication of a notice in the
Federal Register announcing such action.''.

(b)  NOTE: 23 USC 139 note.  Existing Environmental Review
Process.--Nothing in this section affects any existing State
environmental review process, program, agreement, or funding arrangement
approved by the Secretary under section 1309 of the Transportation
Equity Act for the 21st Century (112 Stat. 232; 23 U.S.C. 109 note) as
such section was in effect on the day preceding the date of enactment of
the SAFETEA-LU.

(c) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for such subchapter is
amended by inserting after the item relating to section 138 the
following:

``139. Efficient environmental reviews for project decisionmaking.''.

(d) Repeal.--Section 1309 of the Transportation Equity Act for the
21st Century (112 Stat. 232)  NOTE: 23 USC 109 note.  is repealed.

SEC. 6003. STATE ASSUMPTION OF RESPONSIBILITIES FOR CERTAIN PROGRAMS AND
PROJECTS.

(a) In General.--Chapter 3 of title 23, United States Code, is
amended by inserting after section 324 the following:

``Sec. 325. 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 the SAFETEA-LU,
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

[[Page 1866]]
119 STAT. 1866

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).

``(b) Agreements.--
``(1)  NOTE: Memorandum.  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)  NOTE: Deadlines.  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.
``(5) Sole responsibility.--A State that assumes
responsibility under subsection (a)(2) with respect to a Federal
law shall be solely responsible and solely liable for complying
with and carrying out that law, and the Secretary shall have no
such responsibility or liability.
``(6) Acceptance of jurisdiction.--In a memorandum of
understanding, the State shall consent to accept the
jurisdiction of the Federal courts for the compliance,
discharge, and enforcement of any responsibility of the
Secretary that the State assumes.

``(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)  NOTE: Certification.  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)  NOTE: Federal Register,
publication.  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

[[Page 1867]]
119 STAT. 1867

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 chapter 3 of title 23,
United States Code,  NOTE: 23 USC 301.  is amended by adding after the
item relating to section 324 the following:

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

SEC. 6004. STATE ASSUMPTION OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR CATEGORICAL
EXCLUSIONS.

(a) In General.--Chapter 3 of title 23, United States Code, is
further amended by inserting after section 325 the following:

``Sec. 326. State assumption of responsibility for categorical
exclusions

``(a) Categorical Exclusion Determinations.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary may assign, and a State may
assume, responsibility for determining whether certain
designated activities are included within classes of action
identified in regulation by the Secretary that are categorically
excluded from requirements for environmental assessments or
environmental impact statements pursuant to regulations
promulgated by the Council on Environmental Quality under part
1500 of title 40, Code of Federal Regulations (as in effect on
October 1, 2003).
``(2) Scope of authority.--A determination described in
paragraph (1) shall be made by a State in accordance with
criteria established by the Secretary and only for types of
activities specifically designated by the Secretary.
``(3) Criteria.--The criteria under paragraph (2) shall
include provisions for public availability of information
consistent with section 552 of title 5 and the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).

``(b) Other Applicable Federal Laws.--
``(1) In general.--If a State assumes responsibility under
subsection (a), the Secretary may also assign and the State may
assume all or part of the responsibilities of the Secretary for
environmental review, consultation, or other related actions

[[Page 1868]]
119 STAT. 1868

required under any Federal law applicable to activities that are
classified by the Secretary as categorical exclusions, with the
exception of government-to-government consultation with Indian
tribes, subject to the same procedural and substantive
requirements as would be required if that responsibility were
carried out by the Secretary.
``(2) Sole responsibility.--A State that assumes
responsibility under paragraph (1) with respect to a Federal law
shall be solely responsible and solely liable for complying with
and carrying out that law, and the Secretary shall have no such
responsibility or liability.

``(c) Memoranda of Understanding.--
``(1)  NOTE: Public information. Notice.  In general.--The
Secretary and the State, after providing public notice and
opportunity for comment, shall enter into a memorandum of
understanding setting forth the responsibilities to be assigned
under this section and the terms and conditions under which the
assignments are made, including establishment of the
circumstances under which the Secretary would reassume
responsibility for categorical exclusion determinations.
``(2) Term.--A memorandum of understanding--
``(A) shall have a term of not more than 3 years;
and
``(B) shall be renewable.
``(3) Acceptance of jurisdiction.--In a memorandum of
understanding, the State shall consent to accept the
jurisdiction of the Federal courts for the compliance,
discharge, and enforcement of any responsibility of the
Secretary that the State assumes.
``(4) Monitoring.--The Secretary shall--
``(A) monitor compliance by the State with the
memorandum of understanding and the provision by the
State of financial resources to carry out the memorandum
of understanding; and
``(B) take into account the performance by the State
when considering renewal of the memorandum of
understanding.

``(d) Termination.--The Secretary may terminate any assumption of
responsibility under a memorandum of understanding on a determination
that the State is not adequately carrying out the responsibilities
assigned to the State.
``(e) State Agency Deemed to Be Federal Agency.--A State agency that
is assigned a responsibility under a memorandum of understanding shall
be deemed to be a Federal agency for the purposes of the Federal law
under which the responsibility is exercised.''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for  NOTE: 23 USC
301.  chapter 3 of title 23, United States Code, is further amended by
adding after the item relating to section 325 the following:

``326. State assumption of responsibility for categorical exclusions.''.

SEC. 6005. SURFACE TRANSPORTATION PROJECT DELIVERY PILOT PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Chapter 3 of title 23, United States Code, is
further amended by inserting after section 326 the following:

[[Page 1869]]
119 STAT. 1869

``Sec. 327. Surface transportation project delivery pilot program

``(a) Establishment.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall carry out a surface
transportation project delivery pilot program (referred to in
this section as the `program').
``(2) Assumption of responsibility.--
``(A) In general.--Subject to the other provisions
of this section, with the written agreement of the
Secretary and a State, which may be in the form of a
memorandum of understanding, the Secretary may assign,
and the State may assume, the responsibilities of the
Secretary with respect to one or more highway projects
within the State under the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
``(B) Additional responsibility.--If a State assumes
responsibility under subparagraph (A)--
``(i) the Secretary may assign to the State,
and the State may assume, all or part of the
responsibilities of the Secretary for
environmental review, consultation, or other
action required under any Federal environmental
law pertaining to the review or approval of a
specific project; but
``(ii) the Secretary may not assign--
``(I) responsibility for any
conformity determination required under
section 176 of the Clean Air Act (42
U.S.C. 7506); or
``(II) any responsibility imposed on
the Secretary by section 134 or 135.
``(C) Procedural and substantive requirements.--A
State shall assume responsibility under this section
subject to the same procedural and substantive
requirements as would apply if that responsibility were
carried out by the Secretary.
``(D) Federal responsibility.--Any responsibility of
the Secretary not explicitly assumed by the State by
written agreement under this section shall remain the
responsibility of the Secretary.
``(E) No effect on authority.--Nothing in this
section preempts or interferes with any power,
jurisdiction, responsibility, or authority of an agency,
other than the Department of Transportation, under
applicable law (including regulations) with respect to a
project.

``(b) State Participation.--
``(1) Number of participating states.--The Secretary may
permit not more than 5 States (including the States of Alaska,
California, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Texas) to participate in the
program.
``(2)  NOTE: Deadline. Regulations.  Application.--Not
later than 270 days after the date of enactment of this section,
the Secretary shall promulgate regulations that establish
requirements relating to information required to be contained in
any application of a State to participate in the program,
including, at a minimum--
``(A) the projects or classes of projects for which
the State anticipates exercising the authority that may
be granted under the program;

[[Page 1870]]
119 STAT. 1870

``(B) verification of the financial resources
necessary to carry out the authority that may be granted
under the program; and
``(C) evidence of the notice and solicitation of
public comment by the State relating to participation of
the State in the program, including copies of comments
received from that solicitation.
``(3) Public notice.--
``(A)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Each State
that submits an application under this subsection shall
give notice of the intent of the State to participate in
the program not later than 30 days before the date of
submission of the application.
``(B) Method of notice and solicitation.--The State
shall provide notice and solicit public comment under
this paragraph by publishing the complete application of
the State in accordance with the appropriate public
notice law of the State.
``(4) Selection criteria.--The Secretary may approve the
application of a State under this section only if--
``(A) the regulatory requirements under paragraph
(2) have been met;
``(B) the Secretary determines that the State has
the capability, including financial and personnel, to
assume the responsibility; and
``(C) the head of the State agency having primary
jurisdiction over highway matters enters into a written
agreement with the Secretary described in subsection
(c).
``(5) Other federal agency views.--If a State applies to
assume a responsibility of the Secretary that would have
required the Secretary to consult with another Federal agency,
the Secretary shall solicit the views of the Federal agency
before approving the application.

``(c) Written Agreement.--A written agreement under this section
shall--
``(1) be executed by the Governor or the top-ranking
transportation official in the State who is charged with
responsibility for highway construction;
``(2) be in such form as the Secretary may prescribe;
``(3) provide that the State--
``(A) agrees to assume all or part of the
responsibilities of the Secretary described in
subsection (a);
``(B) expressly consents, on behalf of the State, to
accept the jurisdiction of the Federal courts for the
compliance, discharge, and enforcement of any
responsibility of the Secretary assumed by the State;
``(C) certifies that State laws (including
regulations) are in effect that--
``(i) authorize the State to take the actions
necessary to carry out the responsibilities being
assumed; and
``(ii) are comparable to section 552 of title
5, including providing that any decision regarding
the public availability of a document under those
State laws is reviewable by a court of competent
jurisdiction; and
``(D) agrees to maintain the financial resources
necessary to carry out the responsibilities being
assumed.

[[Page 1871]]
119 STAT. 1871

``(d) Jurisdiction.--
``(1) In general.--The United States district courts shall
have exclusive jurisdiction over any civil action against a
State for failure to carry out any responsibility of the State
under this section.
``(2) Legal standards and requirements.--A civil action
under paragraph (1) shall be governed by the legal standards and
requirements that would apply in such a civil action against the
Secretary had the Secretary taken the actions in question.
``(3) Intervention.--The Secretary shall have the right to
intervene in any action described in paragraph (1).

``(e) Effect of Assumption of Responsibility.--A State that assumes
responsibility under subsection (a)(2) shall be solely responsible and
solely liable for carrying out, in lieu of the Secretary, the
responsibilities assumed under subsection (a)(2), until the program is
terminated as provided in subsection (i).
``(f) Limitations on Agreements.--Nothing in this section permits a
State to assume any rulemaking authority of the Secretary under any
Federal law.
``(g) Audits.--
``(1) In general.--To ensure compliance by a State with any
agreement of the State under subsection (c) (including
compliance by the State with all Federal laws for which
responsibility is assumed under subsection (a)(2)), for each
State participating in the program under this section, the
Secretary shall conduct--
``(A) semiannual audits during each of the first 2
years of State participation; and
``(B) annual audits during each subsequent year of
State participation.
``(2) Public availability and comment.--
``(A) In general.--An audit conducted under
paragraph (1) shall be provided to the public for
comment.
``(B)  NOTE: Deadline.  Response.--Not later than
60 days after the date on which the period for public
comment ends, the Secretary shall respond to public
comments received under subparagraph (A).

``(h) Report to Congress.--The Secretary shall submit to Congress an
annual report that describes the administration of the program.
``(i) Termination.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
program shall terminate on the date that is 6 years after the
date of enactment of this section.
``(2) Termination by secretary.--The Secretary may terminate
the participation of any State in the program if--
``(A) the Secretary determines that the State is not
adequately carrying out the responsibilities assigned to
the State;
``(B) the Secretary provides to the State--
``(i) notification of the determination of
noncompliance; and
``(ii) a period of at least 30 days during
which to take such corrective action as the
Secretary determines is necessary to comply with
the applicable agreement; and

[[Page 1872]]
119 STAT. 1872

``(C) the State, after the notification and period
provided under subparagraph (B), fails to take
satisfactory corrective action, as determined by
Secretary.''.

(b) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for  NOTE: 23 USC
301.  chapter 3 of title 23, United States Code, is further amended by
adding after the item relating to section 326 the following:

``327. Surface transportation project delivery pilot program.''.

SEC. 6006. ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION AND POLLUTION ABATEMENT; CONTROL OF
NOXIOUS WEEDS AND AQUATIC NOXIOUS WEEDS AND ESTABLISHMENT OF
NATIVE SPECIES.

(a) Modification to NHS/STP for Environmental Restoration, Pollution
Abatement, Control of Noxious Weeds and Aquatic Noxious Weeds.--
(1) Modifications to national highway system.--Section
103(b)(6) of title 23, United States Code, is amended by adding
at the end the following:
``(Q) Environmental restoration and pollution
abatement in accordance with section 328.
``(R) Control of noxious weeds and aquatic noxious
weeds and establishment of native species in accordance
with section 329.''.
(2) Modifications to surface transportation program.--
Section 133(b) of title 23, is amended by striking paragraph
(14) and inserting the following:
``(14) Environmental restoration and pollution abatement in
accordance with section 328.
``(15) Control of noxious weeds and aquatic noxious weeds
and establishment of native species in accordance with section
329.''.

(b) Eligible Activities.--Chapter 3 of title 23, United States Code,
is further amended by adding after section 327 the following:

``Sec. 328. Eligibility for environmental restoration and pollution
abatement

``(a) In General.--Subject to subsection (b), environmental
restoration and pollution abatement to minimize or mitigate the impacts
of any transportation project funded under this title (including
retrofitting and construction of stormwater treatment systems to meet
Federal and State requirements under sections 401 and 402 of the Federal
Water Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1341; 1342)) may be carried out
to address water pollution or environmental degradation caused wholly or
partially by a transportation facility.
``(b) Maximum Expenditure.--In a case in which a transportation
facility is undergoing reconstruction, rehabilitation, resurfacing, or
restoration, the expenditure of funds under this section for
environmental restoration or pollution abatement described in subsection
(a) shall not exceed 20 percent of the total cost of the reconstruction,
rehabilitation, resurfacing, or restoration of the facility.

``Sec. 329. Eligibility for control of noxious weeds and aquatic noxious
weeds and establishment of native species

``(a) In General.--In accordance with all applicable Federal law
(including regulations), funds made available to carry out this

[[Page 1873]]
119 STAT. 1873

section may be used for the following activities if such activities are
related to transportation projects funded under this title:
``(1) Establishment of plants selected by State and local
transportation authorities to perform one or more of the
following functions: abatement of stormwater runoff,
stabilization of soil, and aesthetic enhancement.
``(2) Management of plants which impair or impede the
establishment, maintenance, or safe use of a transportation
system.

``(b) Included Activities.--The establishment and management under
subsection (a)(1) and (a)(2) may include--
``(1) right-of-way surveys to determine management
requirements to control Federal or State noxious weeds as
defined in the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.) or
State law, and brush or tree species, whether native or
nonnative, that may be considered by State or local
transportation authorities to be a threat with respect to the
safety or maintenance of transportation systems;
``(2) establishment of plants, whether native or nonnative
with a preference for native to the maximum extent possible, for
the purposes defined in subsection (a)(1);
``(3) control or elimination of plants as defined in
subsection (a)(2);
``(4) elimination of plants to create fuel breaks for the
prevention and control of wildfires; and
``(5) training.

``(c) Contributions.--
``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), an activity
described in subsection (a) may be carried out concurrently
with, in advance of, or following the construction of a project
funded under this title.
``(2) Condition for activities conducted in advance of
project construction.--An activity described in subsection (a)
may be carried out in advance of construction of a project only
if the activity is carried out in accordance with all applicable
requirements of Federal law (including regulations) and State
transportation planning processes.''.

(c) Conforming Amendment.--The analysis for  NOTE: 23 USC
301.  chapter 3 of title 23 is further amended by adding after the item
relating to section 327 the following:

``328. Eligibility for environmental restoration and pollution
abatement.
``329. Eligibility for control of noxious weeds and aquatic noxious
weeds and establishment of native species.''.

SEC. 6007. 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 or elements of
the Interstate System are listed on, or eligible for
listing on, the National Register of Historic Places.

[[Page 1874]]
119 STAT. 1874

``(B) Individual elements.--Subject to subparagraph
(C), the Secretary shall determine, through the
administrative process established for exempting the
Interstate System from section 106 of the National
Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470f), those
individual elements of the Interstate System that
possess national or exceptional historic significance
(such as a historic bridge or a highly significant
engineering feature). Such elements 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 (16 U.S.C. 470f).''.

SEC. 6008. INTEGRATION OF NATURAL RESOURCE CONCERNS INTO TRANSPORTATION
PROJECT PLANNING.

Section 109(c)(2) of title 23, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``consider the results'' and inserting
``con- sider--
``(A) the results'';
(2) by striking the period at the end and inserting a
semicolon; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(B) the publication entitled `Flexibility in
Highway Design' of the Federal Highway Administration;
``(C) `Eight Characteristics of Process to Yield
Excellence and the Seven Qualities of Excellence in
Transportation Design' developed by the conference held
during 1998 entitled `Thinking Beyond the Pavement
National Workshop on Integrating Highway Development
with Communities and the Environment while Maintaining
Safety and Performance'; and
``(D) any other material that the Secretary
determines to be appropriate.''.

SEC. 6009. PARKS, RECREATION AREAS, WILDLIFE AND WATERFOWL REFUGES, AND
HISTORIC SITES.

(a) Programs and Projects With De Minimis Impacts.--
(1) Title 23.--Section 138 of title 23, United States Code,
is amended--
(A) in the first sentence, by striking ``it is
hereby'' and inserting the following: ``(a) Declaration
of Policy.--It is''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following:

``(b) De Minimis Impacts.--
``(1) Requirements.--
``(A) Requirements for historic sites.--The
requirements of this section shall be considered to be
satisfied with respect to an area described in paragraph
(2) if the Secretary determines, in accordance with this
subsection, that a transportation program or project
will have a de minimis impact on the area.

[[Page 1875]]
119 STAT. 1875

``(B) Requirements for parks, recreation areas, and
wildlife or waterfowl refuges.--The requirements of
subsection (a)(1) shall be considered to be satisfied
with respect to an area described in paragraph (3) if
the Secretary determines, in accordance with this
subsection, that a transportation program or project
will have a de minimis impact on the area. The
requirements of subsection (a)(2) with respect to an
area described in paragraph (3) shall not include an
alternatives analysis.
``(C) Criteria.--In making any determination under
this subsection, the Secretary shall consider to be part
of a transportation program or project any avoidance,
minimization, mitigation, or enhancement measures that
are required to be implemented as a condition of
approval of the transportation program or project.
``(2) Historic sites.--With respect to historic sites, the
Secretary may make a finding of de minimis impact only if--
``(A) the Secretary has determined, in accordance
with the consultation process required under section 106
of the National Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C.
470f), that--
``(i) the transportation program or project
will have no adverse effect on the historic site;
or
``(ii) there will be no historic properties
affected by the transportation program or project;
``(B) the finding of the Secretary has received
written concurrence from the applicable State historic
preservation officer or tribal historic preservation
officer (and from the Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation if the Council is participating in the
consultation process); and
``(C) the finding of the Secretary has been
developed in consultation with parties consulting as
part of the process referred to in subparagraph (A).
``(3) Parks, recreation areas, and wildlife or waterfowl
refuges.--With respect to parks, recreation areas, or wildlife
or waterfowl refuges, the Secretary may make a finding of de
minimis impact only if--
``(A)  NOTE: Notice.  the Secretary has
determined, after public notice and opportunity for
public review and comment, that the transportation
program or project will not adversely affect the
activities, features, and attributes of the park,
recreation area, or wildlife or waterfowl refuge
eligible for protection under this section; and
``(B) the finding of the Secretary has received
concurrence from the officials with jurisdiction over
the park, recreation area, or wildlife or waterfowl
refuge.''.
(2) Title 49.--Section 303 of title 49, United States Code,
is amended--
(A) by striking ``(c) The Secretary'' and inserting
the following:

``(c) Approval of Programs and Projects.--Subject to subsection (d),
the Secretary''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following:

``(d) De Minimis Impacts.--
``(1) Requirements.--
``(A) Requirements for historic sites.--The
requirements of this section shall be considered to be
satisfied with respect to an area described in paragraph
(2) if the

[[Page 1876]]
119 STAT. 1876

Secretary determines, in accordance with this
subsection, that a transportation program or project
will have a de minimis impact on the area.
``(B) Requirements for parks, recreation areas, and
wildlife or waterfowl refuges.--The requirements of
subsection (c)(1) shall be considered to be satisfied
with respect to an area described in paragraph (3) if
the Secretary determines, in accordance with this
subsection, that a transportation program or project
will have a de minimis impact on the area. The
requirements of subsection (c)(2) with respect to an
area described in paragraph (3) shall not include an
alternatives analysis.
``(C) Criteria.--In making any determination under
this subsection, the Secretary shall consider to be part
of a transportation program or project any avoidance,
minimization, mitigation, or enhancement measures that
are required to be implemented as a condition of
approval of the transportation program or project.
``(2) Historic sites.--With respect to historic sites, the
Secretary may make a finding of de minimis impact only if--
``(A) the Secretary has determined, in accordance
with the consultation process required under section 106
of the National Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C.
470f), that--
``(i) the transportation program or project
will have no adverse effect on the historic site;
or
``(ii) there will be no historic properties
affected by the transportation program or project;
``(B) the finding of the Secretary has received
written concurrence from the applicable State historic
preservation officer or tribal historic preservation
officer (and from the Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation if the Council is participating in the
consultation process); and
``(C) the finding of the Secretary has been
developed in consultation with parties consulting as
part of the process referred to in subparagraph (A).
``(3) Parks, recreation areas, and wildlife or waterfowl
refuges.--With respect to parks, recreation areas, or wildlife
or waterfowl refuges, the Secretary may make a finding of de
minimis impact only if--
``(A)  NOTE: Notice.  the Secretary has
determined, after public notice and opportunity for
public review and comment, that the transportation
program or project will not adversely affect the
activities, features, and attributes of the park,
recreation area, or wildlife or waterfowl refuge
eligible for protection under this section; and
``(B) the finding of the Secretary has received
concurrence from the officials with jurisdiction over
the park, recreation area, or wildlife or waterfowl
refuge.''.

(b)  NOTE: 23 USC 138 note.  Clarification of Existing
Standards.--
(1)  NOTE: Deadline. Regulations.  In general.--Not later
than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the
Secretary shall (in consultation with affected agencies and
interested parties) promulgate regulations that clarify the
factors to be considered and the standards to be applied in
determining the prudence and feasibility of alternatives under
section 138 of title 23 and section 303 of title 49, United
States Code.
(2) Requirements.--The regulations--

[[Page 1877]]
119 STAT. 1877

(A) shall clarify the application of the legal
standards to a variety of different types of
transportation programs and projects depending on the
circumstances of each case; and
(B) may include, as appropriate, examples to
facilitate clear and consistent interpretation by agency
decisionmakers.

(c) Implementation Study.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall--
(A) conduct a study on the implementation of this
section and the amendments made by this section; and
(B) commission an independent review of the study
plan and methodology, and any associated conclusions, by
the Transportation Research Board of the National
Academy of Sciences.
(2) Components.--In conducting the study, the Secretary
shall evaluate--
(A) the processes developed under this section and
the amendments made by this section and the efficiencies
that may result;
(B) the post-construction effectiveness of impact
mitigation and avoidance commitments adopted as part of
projects conducted under this section and the amendments
made by this section; and
(C) the quantity of projects with impacts that are
considered de minimis under this section and the
amendments made by this section, including information
on the location, size, and cost of the projects.
(3) Report requirement.--The Secretary shall prepare--
(A) not earlier than the date that is 3 years after
the date of enactment of this Act, a report on the
results of the study conducted under this subsection;
and
(B) not later than March 1, 2010, an update on the
report required under subparagraph (A).
(4) Report recipients.--The Secretary shall--
(A) submit the report, review of the report, and
update required under paragraph (3) to--
(i) the appropriate committees of Congress;
(ii) the Secretary of the Interior; and
(iii) the Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation; and
(B) make the report and update available to the
public.

SEC. 6010.  NOTE: 23 USC 512 note.  ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES
THAT SUPPORT DEPLOYMENT OF INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION
SYSTEMS.

(a)  NOTE: Regulations. Deadline.  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. 4332) in compliance
with the standards for categorical exclusions established by that Act.

(b) Nationwide Programmatic Agreement.--

[[Page 1878]]
119 STAT. 1878

(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
subtitle C of title V of this Act.

SEC. 6011. TRANSPORTATION CONFORMITY.

(a) Conformity Redeterminations.--Section 176(c)(2) of the Clean Air
Act (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)(2)) is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``(E) The appropriate metropolitan planning
organization shall redetermine conformity of existing
transportation plans and programs not later than 2 years
after the date on which the Administrator--
``(i) finds a motor vehicle emissions budget
to be adequate in accordance with section
93.118(e)(4) of title 40, Code of Federal
Regulations (as in effect on October 1, 2004);
``(ii) approves an implementation plan that
establishes a motor vehicle emissions budget if
that budget has not yet been determined to be
adequate in accordance with clause (i); or
``(iii) promulgates an implementation plan
that establishes or revises a motor vehicle
emissions budget.''.

(b) Frequency of Conformity Determination Updates.--Section
176(c)(4)(B)(ii) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)(4)(B)(ii)) is
amended to read as follows:
``(ii) address the appropriate frequency for making
conformity determinations, but the frequency for making
conformity determinations on updated transportation plans and
programs shall be every 4 years, except in a case in which--
``(I) the metropolitan planning organization elects
to update a transportation plan or program more
frequently; or
``(II) the metropolitan planning organization is
required to determine conformity in accordance with
paragraph (2)(E); and''.

(c) Time Horizon for Conformity Determinations in Nonattainment
Areas.--Section 176(c) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)) is
amended by adding at the end the following:
``(7) Conformity horizon for transportation plans.--
``(A) In general.--Each conformity determination
required under this section for a transportation plan
under

[[Page 1879]]
119 STAT. 1879

section 134(i) of title 23, United States Code, or
section 5303(i) of title 49, United States Code, shall
require a demonstration of conformity for the period
ending on either the final year of the transportation
plan, or at the election of the metropolitan planning
organization, after consultation with the air pollution
control agency and solicitation of public comments and
consideration of such comments, the longest of the
following periods:
``(i) The first 10-year period of any such
transportation plan.
``(ii) The latest year in the implementation
plan applicable to the area that contains a motor
vehicle emission budget.
``(iii) The year after the completion date of
a regionally significant project if the project is
included in the transportation improvement program
or the project requires approval before the
subsequent conformity determination.
``(B) Regional emissions analysis.--The conformity
determination shall be accompanied by a regional
emissions analysis for the last year of the
transportation plan and for any year shown to exceed
emission budgets by a prior analysis, if such year
extends beyond the applicable period as determined under
subparagraph (A).
``(C) Exception.--In any case in which an area has a
revision to an implementation plan under section 175A(b)
and the Administrator has found the motor vehicles
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 on October 1,
2004), or has approved the revision, the demonstration
of conformity at the election of the metropolitan
planning organization, after consultation with the air
pollution control agency and solicitation of public
comments and consideration of such comments, shall be
required to extend only through the last year of the
implementation plan required under section 175A(b).
``(D) Effect of election.--Any election by a
metropolitan planning organization under this paragraph
shall continue in effect until the metropolitan planning
organization elects otherwise.
``(E) Air pollution control agency defined.--In this
paragraph, the term `air pollution control agency' means
an air pollution control agency (as defined in section
302(b)) that is responsible for developing plans or
controlling air pollution within the area covered by a
transportation plan.''.

(d) Substitution of Transportation Control Measures.--Section 176(c)
of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)) (as amended by subsection (c))
is amended by inserting after paragraph (7) the following:
``(8) Substitution of transportation control measures.--
``(A) In general.--Transportation control measures
that are specified in an implementation plan may be
replaced or added to the implementation plan with
alternate or additional transportation control
measures--

[[Page 1880]]
119 STAT. 1880

``(i) if the substitute measures achieve
equivalent or greater emissions reductions than
the control measure to be replaced, as
demonstrated with an emissions impact analysis
that is consistent with the current methodology
used for evaluating the replaced control measure
in the implementation plan;
``(ii) if the substitute control measures are
imple- mented--
``(I) in accordance with a schedule
that is consistent with the schedule
provided for control measures in the
implementation plan; or
``(II) if the implementation plan
date for implementation of the control
measure to be replaced has passed, as
soon as practicable after the
implementation plan date but not later
than the date on which emission
reductions are necessary to achieve the
purpose of the implementation plan;
``(iii) if the substitute and additional
control measures are accompanied with evidence of
adequate personnel and funding and authority under
State or local law to implement, monitor, and
enforce the control measures;
``(iv) if the substitute and additional
control measures were developed through a
collaborative process that included--
``(I) participation by
representatives of all affected
jurisdictions (including local air
pollution control agencies, the State
air pollution control agency, and State
and local transportation agencies);
``(II) consultation with the
Administrator; and
``(III)  NOTE: Notice.  reasonable
public notice and opportunity for
comment; and
``(v) if the metropolitan planning
organization, State air pollution control agency,
and the Administrator concur with the equivalency
of the substitute or additional control measures.
``(B) Adoption.--(i) Concurrence by the metropolitan
planning organization, State air pollution control
agency and the Administrator as required by subparagraph
(A)(v) shall constitute adoption of the substitute or
additional control measures so long as the requirements
of subparagraphs (A)(i), (A)(ii), (A)(iii) and (A)(iv)
are met.
``(ii) Once adopted, the substitute or additional
control measures become, by operation of law, part of
the State implementation plan and become federally
enforceable.
``(iii)  NOTE: Deadline.  Within 90 days of its
concurrence under subparagraph (A)(v), the State air
pollution control agency shall submit the substitute or
additional control measure to the Administrator for
incorporation in the codification of the applicable
implementation plan. Nothwithstanding any other
provision of this Act, no additional State process shall
be necessary to support such revision to the applicable
plan.
``(C) No requirement for express permission.--The
substitution or addition of a transportation control
measure

[[Page 1881]]
119 STAT. 1881

in accordance with this paragraph and the funding or
approval of such a control measure shall not be
contingent on the existence of any provision in the
applicable implementation plan that expressly permits
such a substitution or addition.
``(D) No requirement for new conformity
determination.--The substitution or addition 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 implementation plan.
``(E) Continuation of control measure being
replaced.--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 by the State pursuant to subparagraph (B).
``(F) Effect of adoption.--Adoption of a substitute
control measure shall constitute rescission of the
previously applicable control measure.''.

(e) Lapse of Conformity.--Section 176(c) of the Clean Air Act (42
U.S.C. 7506(c)) (as amended by subsections (c) and (d)) is amended by
inserting after paragraph (8) the following:
``(9)  NOTE: Deadline.  Lapse of conformity.--If a
conformity determination required under this subsection for a
transportation plan under section 134(i) of title 23, United
States Code, or section 5303(i) of title 49, United States Code,
or a transportation improvement program under section 134(j) of
such title 23 or under section 5303(j) of such title 49 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.--In this subsection, 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.''.

(f) Conforming Amendments.--Section 176(c)(4) of the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C. 7506(c)(4)) (as amended by subsection (b)) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subparagraphs (B), (C), and (D) as
subparagraphs (D), (E), and (F), respectively;
(2) by striking ``(4)(A) No later than one year after the
date of enactment of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, the
Administrator shall promulgate'' and inserting the following:
``(4) Criteria and procedures for determining conformity.--
``(A) In general.--The Administrator shall
promulgate, and periodically update,'';
(3) in the second sentence of subparagraph (A)--
(A) by striking ``No later than one year after such
date of enactment, the Administrator, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of Transportation, shall
promulgate'' and inserting the following:

[[Page 1882]]
119 STAT. 1882

``(B) Transportation plans, programs, and
projects.--The Administrator, with the concurrence of
the Secretary of Transportation, shall promulgate, and
periodically update,''; and
(B) in the third sentence, by striking ``A suit''
and inserting the following:
``(C) Civil action to compel promulgation.--A civil
action''; and
(4) by striking subparagraph (E) (as redesignated by
paragraph (1)) and inserting the following:
``(E)  NOTE: Deadline.  Inclusion of criteria and
procedures in sip.--Not later than 2 years after the
date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU the procedures under
subparagraph (A) shall include a requirement that each
State include in the State implementation plan criteria
and procedures for consultation required by subparagraph
(D)(i), and enforcement and enforceability (pursuant to
sections 93.125(c) and 93.122(a)(4)(ii) of title 40,
Code of Federal Regulations) in accordance with the
Administrator's criteria and procedures for
consultation, enforcement and enforceability.''.

(g)  NOTE: Deadline. 42 USC 7506 note.  Regulations.--Not later
than 2 years after the date of enactment of this Act, the Administrator
of the Environmental Protection Agency shall promulgate revised
regulations to implement the changes made by this section.

SEC. 6012. FEDERAL REFERENCE METHOD.

(a) In General.--Section 6102(e) of the Transportation Equity Act
for the 21st Century (42 U.S.C. 7407 note; 112 Stat. 464-465) is amended
to read as follows:
``(e)  NOTE: Deadline.  Field Study.--Not later than 2 years after
the date of enactment of the SAFETEA-LU, the Administrator shall--
``(1) conduct a field study of the ability of the
PM INF 2.5 /INF  Federal Reference Method to differentiate those
particles that are larger than 2.5 micrometers in diameter;
``(2) develop a Federal reference method to measure directly
particles that are larger than 2.5 micrometers in diameter
without reliance on subtracting from coarse particle
measurements those particles that are equal to or smaller than
2.5 micrometers in diameter;
``(3) develop a method of measuring the composition of
coarse particles; and
``(4)  NOTE: Reports.  submit a report on the study and
responsibilities of the Administrator under paragraphs (1)
through (3) to--
``(A) the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the
House of Representatives; and
``(B) the Committee on Environment and Public Works
of the Senate.''.

SEC. 6013. AIR QUALITY MONITORING DATA INFLUENCED BY EXCEPTIONAL EVENTS.

(a) In General.--Section 319 of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7619)
is amended--
(1) by striking the section heading and all that follows
through ``after notice and opportunity for public hearing'' and
inserting the following:

[[Page 1883]]
119 STAT. 1883

``SEC. 319. AIR QUALITY MONITORING.

``(a)  NOTE: Notice.  In General.--After notice and opportunity
for public hearing''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:

``(b) Air Quality Monitoring Data Influenced by Exceptional
Events.--
``(1) Definition of exceptional event.--In this section:
``(A) In general.--The term `exceptional event'
means an event that--
``(i) affects air quality;
``(ii) is not reasonably controllable or
preventable;
``(iii) is an event caused by human activity
that is unlikely to recur at a particular location
or a natural event; and
``(iv) is determined by the Administrator
through the process established in the regulations
promulgated under paragraph (2) to be an
exceptional event.
``(B) Exclusions.--In this subsection, the term
`exceptional event' does not include--
``(i) stagnation of air masses or
meteorological inversions;
``(ii) a meteorological event involving high
temperatures or lack of precipitation; or
``(iii) air pollution relating to source
noncompliance.
``(2)  NOTE: Deadlines.  Regulations.--
``(A)  NOTE: Federal Register,
publication.  Proposed regulations.--Not later than
March 1, 2006, after consultation with Federal land
managers and State air pollution control agencies, the
Administrator shall publish in the Federal Register
proposed regulations governing the review and handling
of air quality monitoring data influenced by exceptional
events.
``(B) Final regulations.--Not later than 1 year
after the date on which the Administrator publishes
proposed regulations under subparagraph (A), and after
providing an opportunity for interested persons to make
oral presentations of views, data, and arguments
regarding the proposed regulations, the Administrator
shall promulgate final regulations governing the review
and handling or air quality monitoring data influenced
by an exceptional event that are consistent with
paragraph (3).
``(3) Principles and requirements.--
``(A) Principles.--In promulgating regulations under
this section, the Administrator shall follow--
``(i) the principle that protection of public
health is the highest priority;
``(ii) the principle that timely information
should be provided to the public in any case in
which the air quality is unhealthy;
``(iii) the principle that all ambient air
quality data should be included in a timely
manner, an appropriate Federal air quality
database that is accessible to the public;
``(iv) the principle that each State must take
necessary measures to safeguard public health
regardless of the source of the air pollution; and
``(v) the principle that air quality data
should be carefully screened to ensure that events
not likely to

[[Page 1884]]
119 STAT. 1884

recur are represented accurately in all monitoring
data and analyses.
``(B) Requirements.--Regulations promulgated under
this section shall, at a minimum, provide that--
``(i) the occurrence of an exceptional event
must be demonstrated by reliable, accurate data
that is promptly produced and provided by Federal,
State, or local government agencies;
``(ii) a clear causal relationship must exist
between the measured exceedances of a national
ambient air quality standard and the exceptional
event to demonstrate that the exceptional event
caused a specific air pollution concentration at a
particular air quality monitoring location;
``(iii) there is a public process for
determining whether an event is exceptional; and
``(iv) there are criteria and procedures for
the Governor of a State to petition the
Administrator to exclude air quality monitoring
data that is directly due to exceptional events
from use in determinations by the Administrator
with respect to exceedances or violations of the
national ambient air quality standards.
``(4)  NOTE: Applicability.  Interim provision.--Until the
effective date of a regulation promulgated under paragraph (2),
the following guidance issued by the Administrator shall
continue to apply:
``(A) Guidance on the identification and use of air
quality data affected by exceptional events (July 1986).
``(B) Areas affected by PM-10 natural events, May
30, 1996.
``(C) Appendices I, K, and N to part 50 of title 40,
Code of Federal Regulations.''.

SEC. 6014. FEDERAL PROCUREMENT OF RECYCLED COOLANT.

(a)  NOTE: Deadline.  In General.--Not later than 90 days after
the date of enactment of this Act, the President shall conduct a review
of Federal procurement policy of recycled coolant.

(b)  NOTE: President.  Elements.--In conducting the review under
subsection (a), the President shall consider recycled coolant produced
from processes that--
(1) are energy efficient;
(2) generate no hazardous waste (as defined in section 1004
of the Solid Waste Disposal Act (42 U.S.C. 6903));
(3) produce no emissions of air pollutants;
(4) present lower health and safety risks to employees at a
plant or facility; and
(5) recover at least 97 percent of the glycols from used
antifreeze feedstock.

SEC. 6015.  NOTE: 42 USC 16091a.  CLEAN SCHOOL BUS PROGRAM.

(a) Definitions.--In this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Administrator.--The term ``Administrator'' means the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.
(2) Alternative fuel.--The term ``alternative fuel'' means--
(A) liquefied natural gas, compressed natural gas,
liquefied petroleum gas, hydrogen, or propane;

[[Page 1885]]
119 STAT. 1885

(B) methanol or ethanol at no less than 85 percent
by volume; or
(C) biodiesel conforming with standards published by
the American Society for Testing and Materials as of the
date of enactment of this Act.
(3) Clean school bus.--The term ``clean school bus'' means a
school bus with a gross vehicle weight of greater than 14,000
pounds that--
(A) is powered by a heavy duty engine; and
(B) is operated solely on an alternative fuel or
ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel.
(4) Eligible recipient.--
(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B), the
term ``eligible recipient'' means--
(i) one or more local or State governmental
entities responsible for providing school bus
service to one or more public school systems or
the purchase of school buses;
(ii) one or more contracting entities that
provide school bus service to one or more public
school systems; or
(iii) a nonprofit school transportation
association.
(B)  NOTE: Notice.  Special requirements.--In the
case of eligible recipients identified under clauses
(ii) and (iii) of subparagraph (A), the Administrator
shall establish timely and appropriate requirements for
notice and may establish timely and appropriate
requirements for approval by the public school systems
that would be served by buses purchased or retrofit
using grant funds made available under this section.
(5) Retrofit technology.--The term ``retrofit technology''
means a particulate filter or other emissions control equipment
that is verified or certified by the Administrator or the
California Air Resources Board as an effective emission
reduction technology when installed on an existing school bus.
(6) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary
of Energy.
(7) Ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel.--The term ``ultra-low
sulfur diesel fuel'' means diesel fuel that contains sulfur at
not more than 15 parts per million.

(b) Program for Retrofit or Replacement of Certain Existing School
Buses With Clean School Buses.--
(1) Establishment.--
(A) In general.--The Administrator, in consultation
with the Secretary and other appropriate Federal
departments and agencies, shall establish a program for
awarding grants on a competitive basis to eligible
recipients for the replacement of, retrofit (including
repowering, aftertreatment, and remanufactured engines)
of, or purchase of alternative fuels for, certain
existing school buses. The awarding of grants for the
purchase of alternative fuels should be consistent with
the historic funding levels of the program for such
purchase.
(B) Balancing.--In awarding grants under this
section, the Administrator shall achieve, to the maximum
extent practicable, achieve an appropriate balance
between awarding grants--

[[Page 1886]]
119 STAT. 1886

(i) to replace school buses;
(ii) to install retrofit technologies; and
(iii) to purchase and use alternative fuel.
(2) Priority of grant applications.--
(A) Replacement.--In the case of grant applications
to replace school buses, the Administrator shall give
priority to applicants that propose to replace school
buses manufactured before model year 1977.
(B) Retrofitting.--In the case of grant applications
to retrofit school buses, the Administrator shall give
priority to applicants that propose to retrofit school
buses manufactured in or after model year 1991.
(3) Use of school bus fleet.--
(A) In general.--All school buses acquired or
retrofitted with funds provided under this section shall
be operated as part of the school bus fleet for which
the grant was made for not less than 5 years.
(B) Maintenance, operation, and fueling.--New school
buses and retrofit technology shall be maintained,
operated, and fueled according to manufacturer
recommendations or State requirements.
(4) Retrofit grants.--The Administrator may award grants
under this section for up to 100 percent of the retrofit
technologies and installation costs.
(5) Replacement grants.--
(A) Eligibility for 50 percent grants.--The
Administrator may award grants under this section for
replacement of school buses in the amount of up to one-
half of the acquisition costs (including fueling
infrastructure) for--
(i) clean school buses with engines
manufactured in model year 2005 or 2006 that emit
not more than--
(I) 1.8 grams per brake horsepower-
hour of non-methane hydrocarbons and
oxides of nitrogen; and
(II) .01 grams per brake horsepower-
hour of particulate matter; or
(ii) clean school buses with engines
manufactured in model year 2007, 2008, or 2009
that satisfy regulatory requirements established
by the Administrator for emissions of oxides of
nitrogen and particulate matter to be applicable
for school buses manufactured in model year 2010.
(B) Eligibility for 25 percent grants.--The
Administrator may award grants under this section for
replacement of school buses in the amount of up to one-
fourth of the acquisition costs (including fueling
infrastructure) for--
(i) clean school buses with engines
manufactured in model year 2005 or 2006 that emit
not more than--
(I) 2.5 grams per brake horsepower-
hour of non-methane hydrocarbons and
oxides of nitrogen; and
(II) .01 grams per brake horsepower-
hour of particulate matter; or
(ii) clean school buses with engines
manufactured in model year 2007 or thereafter that
satisfy regulatory

[[Page 1887]]
119 STAT. 1887

requirements established by the Administrator for
emissions of oxides of nitrogen and particulate
matter from school buses manufactured in that
model year.
(6) Ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel.--
(A) In general.--In the case of a grant recipient
receiving a grant for the acquisition of ultra-low
sulfur diesel fuel school buses with engines
manufactured in model year 2005 or 2006, the grant
recipient shall provide, to the satisfaction of the
Administrator--
(i) documentation that diesel fuel containing
sulfur at not more than 15 parts per million is
available for carrying out the purposes of the
grant; and
(ii) a commitment by the applicant to use that
fuel in carrying out the purposes of the grant.
(7) Deployment and distribution.--The Administrator, to the
maximum extent practicable, shall--
(A) achieve nationwide deployment of clean school
buses through the program under this section; and
(B) ensure a broad geographic distribution of grant
awards, with no State receiving more than 10 percent of
the grant funding made available under this section
during a fiscal year.
(8) Annual report.--
(A) In general.--Not later than January 31 of each
year, the Administrator shall submit to Congress a
report that--
(i) evaluates the implementation of this
section; and
(ii) describes--
(I) the total number of grant
applications received;
(II) the number and types of
alternative fuel school buses, ultra-low
sulfur diesel fuel school buses, and
retrofitted buses requested in grant
applications;
(III) grants awarded and the
criteria used to select the grant
recipients;
(IV) certified engine emission
levels of all buses purchased or
retrofitted under this section;
(V) an evaluation of the in-use
emission level of buses purchased or
retrofitted under this section; and
(VI) any other information the
Administrator considers appropriate.

(c) Education.--
(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Not later than 90 days
after the date of enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall
develop an education outreach program to promote and explain the
grant program.
(2) Coordination with stakeholders.--The outreach program
shall be designed and conducted in conjunction with national
school bus transportation associations and other stakeholders.
(3) Components.--The outreach program shall--
(A) inform potential grant recipients on the process
of applying for grants;

[[Page 1888]]
119 STAT. 1888

(B) describe the available technologies and the
benefits of the technologies;
(C) explain the benefits of participating in the
grant program; and
(D) include, as appropriate, information from the
annual report required under subsection (b)(8).

(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to the Administrator to carry out this section, to remain
available until expended--
(1) $55,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 and 2007; and
(2) such sums as are necessary for each of fiscal years
2008, 2009, and 2010.

SEC. 6016.  NOTE: Oklahoma.  SPECIAL DESIGNATION.

For the purpose of any applicable program under title 23, United
States Code, the city of Norman, Oklahoma, shall be considered to be
part of the Oklahoma City urbanized area.

SEC. 6017. INCREASED USE OF RECOVERED MINERAL COMPONENT IN FEDERALLY
FUNDED PROJECTS INVOLVING PROCUREMENT OF CEMENT OR CONCRETE.

(a) In General.--Subtitle F of the Solid Waste Disposal Act (42
U.S.C. 6961 et seq.) is amended by adding at the end the following:

``SEC. 6005.  NOTE: 42 USC 6966a.  INCREASED USE OF RECOVERED MINERAL
COMPONENT IN FEDERALLY FUNDED PROJECTS INVOLVING PROCUREMENT
OF CEMENT OR CONCRETE.

``(a) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Agency head.--The term `agency head' means--
``(A) the Secretary of Transportation; and
``(B) the head of each other Federal agency that on
a regular basis procures, or provides Federal funds to
pay or assist in paying the cost of procuring, material
for cement or concrete projects.
``(2) Cement or concrete project.--The term `cement or
concrete project' means a project for the construction or
maintenance of a highway or other transportation facility or a
Federal, State, or local government building or other public
facility that--
``(A) involves the procurement of cement or
concrete; and
``(B) is carried out in whole or in part using
Federal funds.
``(3) Recovered mineral component.--The term `recovered
mineral component' means--
``(A) ground granulated blast furnace slag other
than lead slag;
``(B) coal combustion fly ash;
``(C) blast furnace slag aggregate other than lead
slag aggregate;
``(D) silica fume; and
``(E) any other waste material or byproduct
recovered or diverted from solid waste that the
Administrator, in consultation with an agency head,
determines should be treated as recovered mineral
component under this section

[[Page 1889]]
119 STAT. 1889

for use in cement or concrete projects paid for, in
whole or in part, by the agency head.

``(b) Implementation of Requirements.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Not later than 1 year
after the date of enactment of this section, the Administrator
and each agency head shall take such actions as are necessary to
implement fully all procurement requirements and incentives in
effect as of the date of enactment of this section (including
guidelines under section 6002) that provide for the use of
cement and concrete incorporating recovered mineral component in
cement or concrete projects.
``(2) Priority.--In carrying out paragraph (1) an agency
head shall give priority to achieving greater use of recovered
mineral component in cement or concrete projects for which
recovered mineral components historically have not been used or
have been used only minimally.
``(3) Conformance.--The Administrator and each agency head
shall carry out this subsection in accordance with section 6002.

``(c) Full Implementation Study.--
``(1) In general.--The Administrator, in cooperation with
the Secretary of Transportation and the Secretary of Energy,
shall conduct a study to determine the extent to which current
procurement requirements, when fully implemented in accordance
with subsection (b), may realize energy savings and
environmental benefits attainable with substitution of recovered
mineral component in cement used in cement or concrete projects.
``(2) Matters to be addressed.--The study shall--
``(A) quantify the extent to which recovered mineral
components are being substituted for Portland cement,
particularly as a result of current procurement
requirements, and the energy savings and environmental
benefits associated with that substitution;
``(B) identify all barriers in procurement
requirements to greater realization of energy savings
and environmental benefits, including barriers resulting
from exceptions from current law; and
``(C)(i) identify potential mechanisms to achieve
greater substitution of recovered mineral component in
types of cement or concrete projects for which recovered
mineral components historically have not been used or
have been used only minimally;
``(ii) evaluate the feasibility of establishing
guidelines or standards for optimized substitution rates
of recovered mineral component in those cement or
concrete projects; and
``(iii) identify any potential environmental or
economic effects that may result from greater
substitution of recovered mineral component in those
cement or concrete projects.
``(3) Report.--Not later than 30 months after the date of
enactment of this section, the Administrator shall submit to
Congress a report on the study.

``(d) Additional Procurement Requirements.--Unless the study
conducted under subsection (c) identifies any effects or other problems
described in subsection (c)(2)(C)(iii) that warrant further

[[Page 1890]]
119 STAT. 1890

review or delay, the Administrator and each agency head shall, not later
than 1 year after the release of the report in accordance with
subsection (c)(3), take additional actions authorized under this Act to
establish procurement requirements and incentives that provide for the
use of cement and concrete with increased substitution of recovered
mineral component in the construction and maintenance of cement or
concrete projects, so as to--
``(1) realize more fully the energy savings and
environmental benefits associated with increased substitution;
and
``(2) eliminate barriers identified under subsection (c).

``(e) Effect of Section.--Nothing in this section affects the
requirements of section 6002 (including the guidelines and
specifications for implementing those requirements).''.
(b) Table of Contents Amendment.--The table of contents in section
1001 of the Solid Waste Disposal Act (42 U.S.C. prec. 6901) is amended
by adding after the item relating to section 6004 the following:

``Sec. 6005. Increased use of recovered mineral component in federally
funded projects involving procurement of cement or
concrete.''.

SEC. 6018. USE OF GRANULAR MINE TAILINGS.

(a) In General.--Subtitle F of the Solid Waste Disposal Act (42
U.S.C. 6961 et seq.) (as amended by section 6017(a)) is amended by
adding at the end the following:

``SEC. 6006.  NOTE: Oklahoma. 42 USC 6966b.  USE OF GRANULAR MINE
TAILINGS.

``(a) Mine Tailings.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Not later than 180
days after the date of enactment of this section, the
Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary of
Transportation and heads of other Federal agencies, shall
establish criteria (including an evaluation of whether to
establish a numerical standard for concentration of lead and
other hazardous substances) for the safe and environmentally
protective use of granular mine tailings from the Tar Creek,
Oklahoma Mining District, known as `chat', for--
``(A) cement or concrete projects; and
``(B) transportation construction projects
(including transportation construction projects
involving the use of asphalt) that are carried out, in
whole or in part, using Federal funds.
``(2) Requirements.--In establishing criteria under
paragraph (1), the Administrator shall consider--
``(A) the current and previous uses of granular mine
tailings as an aggregate for asphalt; and
``(B) any environmental and public health risks and
benefits derived from the removal, transportation, and
use in transportation projects of granular mine
tailings.
``(3) Public participation.--In establishing the criteria
under paragraph (1), the Administrator shall solicit and
consider comments from the public.
``(4) Applicability of criteria.--On the establishment of
the criteria under paragraph (1), any use of the granular mine
tailings described in paragraph (1) in a transportation project
that is carried out, in whole or in part, using Federal funds,
shall meet the criteria established under paragraph (1).

[[Page 1891]]
119 STAT. 1891

``(b) Effect of Sections.--Nothing in this section or section 6005
affects any requirement of any law (including a regulation) in effect on
the date of enactment of this section.''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--The table of contents in section 1001 of
the Solid Waste Disposal Act (42 U.S.C. prec. 6901) (as amended by
section 6017(b)) is amended by adding after the item relating to section
6005 the following:

``Sec. 6006. Use of granular mine tailings.''.

TITLE  NOTE: Hazardous Materials Transportation Safety and Security
Reauthorization Act of 2005. 49 USC 5101 note.  VII--HAZARDOUS
MATERIALS TRANSPORTATION

SEC. 7001. SHORT TITLE.

This title may be cited as the ``Hazardous Materials Transportation
Safety and Security Reauthorization Act of 2005''.

SEC. 7002. 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.

Subtitle A--General Authorities on Transportation of Hazardous Materials

SEC. 7101. FINDINGS AND PURPOSE.

(a)  NOTE: 49 USC 5101 note.  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, secure, 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) 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; and
(5) 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.--Section 5101  NOTE: 49 USC 5101.  is amended by
striking ``The purpose'' and all that follows through the period at the
end and inserting the following: ``The purpose of this chapter is to
protect

[[Page 1892]]
119 STAT. 1892

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. 7102. DEFINITIONS.

Section 5102 is amended as follows:
(1) Commerce.--Paragraph (1) is amended--
(A) by striking ``or'' after the semicolon in
subparagraph (A);
(B) by striking ``State.'' in subparagraph (B) and
inserting ``State; or''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following:
``(C) on a United States-registered aircraft.''.
(2) Hazmat employee.--Paragraph (3)(A) is amended--
(A) by striking clause (i) and inserting the
following:
``(i) who--
``(I) is employed on a full time,
part time, or temporary basis by a
hazmat employer; or
``(II) is self-employed (including
an owner-operator of a motor vehicle,
vessel, or aircraft) transporting
hazardous material in commerce; and'';
(B) in clause (ii)--
(i) by striking ``course of employment'' and
inserting ``course of such full time, part time,
or temporary employment, or such self
employment,''; and
(ii) by adding ``and'' after the semicolon;
(C) by striking subparagraph (B) and redesignating
subparagraph (C) as subparagraph (B); and
(D) in subparagraph (B), as so redesignated--
(i) by striking ``employed by a hazmat
employer,'' and inserting ``employed on a full
time, part time, or temporary basis by a hazmat
employer, or self employed,''; and
(ii) by striking clause (ii) and inserting the
following:
``(ii) designs, manufactures, fabricates,
inspects, marks, maintains, reconditions, repairs,
or tests a package, container, or packaging
component that is represented, marked, certified,
or sold as qualified for use in transporting
hazardous material in commerce;''.
(3) Hazmat employer.--Paragraph (4) is amended to read as
follows:
``(4) `hazmat employer'--
``(A) means a person--
``(i) who--
``(I) employs or uses at least 1
hazmat employee on a full time, part
time, or temporary basis; or
``(II) is self-employed (including
an owner-operator of a motor vehicle,
vessel, or aircraft) transporting
hazardous material in commerce; and
``(ii) who--
``(I) transports hazardous material
in commerce;
``(II) causes hazardous material to
be transported in commerce; or

[[Page 1893]]
119 STAT. 1893

``(III) designs, manufactures,
fabricates, inspects, marks, maintains,
reconditions, repairs, or tests a
package, container, or packaging
component that is represented, marked,
certified, or sold as qualified for use
in transporting hazardous material in
commerce; and
``(B) includes a department, agency, or
instrumentality of the United States Government, or an
authority of a State, political subdivision of a State,
or Indian tribe, carrying out an activity described in
clause (ii).''.
(4) Imminent hazard.--Paragraph (5) is amended by inserting
``relating to hazardous material'' after ``of a condition''.
(5) Motor carrier.--Paragraph (7) is amended to read as
follows:
``(7) `motor carrier'--
``(A) means a motor carrier, motor private carrier,
and freight forwarder as those terms are defined in
section 13102; but
``(B) does not include a freight forwarder, as so
defined, if the freight forwarder is not performing a
function relating to highway transportation.''.
(6) National response team.--Paragraph (8) is amended--
(A) by striking ``national response team'' both
places it appears and inserting ``National Response
Team''; and
(B) by striking ``national contingency plan'' and
inserting ``National Contingency Plan''.
(7) Person.--Paragraph (9)(A) is amended to read as follows:
``(A) includes a government, Indian tribe, or
authority of a government or tribe that--
``(i) offers hazardous material for
transportation in commerce;
``(ii) transports hazardous material to
further a commercial enterprise; or
``(iii) designs, manufactures, fabricates,
inspects, marks, maintains, reconditions, repairs,
or tests a package, container, or packaging
component that is represented, marked, certified,
or sold as qualified for use in transporting
hazardous material in commerce; but''.
(8) Secretary of transportation.--Section 5102 is further
amended--
(A) by redesignating paragraphs (11), (12), and (13)
as paragraphs (12), (13), and (14), respectively; and
(B) by inserting after paragraph (10) the following:
``(11) `Secretary' means the Secretary of Transportation
except as otherwise provided.''.

SEC. 7103. GENERAL REGULATORY AUTHORITY.

(a) Designating Material as Hazardous.--Section 5103(a) is amended--
(1) by striking ``etiologic agent'' and all that follows
through ``corrosive material,'' and inserting ``infectious
substance, flammable or combustible liquid, solid, or gas,
toxic, oxidizing, or corrosive material,''; and
(2) by striking ``decides'' and inserting ``determines''.

[[Page 1894]]
119 STAT. 1894

(b) Regulations for Safe Transportation.--Section 5103(b)(1)(A) is
amended to read as follows:
``(A) apply to a person who--
``(i) transports hazardous material in
commerce;
``(ii) causes hazardous material to be
transported in commerce;
``(iii) designs, manufactures, fabricates,
inspects, marks, maintains, reconditions, repairs,
or tests a package, container, or packaging
component that is represented, marked, certified,
or sold as qualified for use in transporting
hazardous material in commerce;
``(iv) prepares or accepts hazardous material
for transportation in commerce;
``(v) is responsible for the safety of
transporting hazardous material in commerce;
``(vi) certifies compliance with any
requirement under this chapter; or
``(vii) misrepresents whether such person is
engaged in any activity under clause (i) through
(vi); and''.

(c) Technical Amendment Regarding Consultation.--Section 5103 is
amended--
(1) by striking subsection (b)(1)(C); and
(2) by adding at the end the following:

``(c) Consultation.--When prescribing a security regulation or
issuing a security order that affects the safety of the transportation
of hazardous material, the Secretary of Homeland Security shall consult
with the Secretary of Transportation.''.

SEC. 7104. LIMITATION ON ISSUANCE OF HAZMAT LICENSES.

(a) Covered Hazardous Materials.--Section 5103a(b) is amended by
striking ``with respect to--'' and all that follows and inserting ``with
respect to any material defined as hazardous material by the Secretary
for which the Secretary requires placarding of a commercial motor
vehicle transporting that material in commerce.''.
(b) Recommendations on Chemical or Biological Materials.--Section
5103a is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (c), (d), and (e) as
subsections (d), (e), and (f), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following:

``(c) Recommendations on Chemical and Biological Materials.--The
Secretary of Health and Human Services shall recommend to the Secretary
of Transportation any chemical or biological material or agent for
regulation as a hazardous material under section 5103(a) if the
Secretary of Health and Human Services determines that such material or
agent poses a significant risk to the health of individuals.''.
(c) Conforming Amendment.--Section 5103a(a)(1) is amended by
striking ``subsection (c)(1)(B),'' and inserting ``subsection
(d)(1)(B),''.

SEC. 7105. BACKGROUND CHECKS FOR DRIVERS HAULING HAZARDOUS MATERIALS.

Section 5103a is further amended by adding at the end the following:
``(g) Background Checks for Drivers Hauling Hazardous Materials.--

[[Page 1895]]
119 STAT. 1895

``(1) In general.--
``(A)  NOTE: Deadline.  Employer notification.--
Not later than 90 days after the date of enactment of
this subsection, the Director of the Transportation
Security Administration, after receiving comments from
interested parties, shall develop and implement a
process for notifying hazmat employers designated by an
applicant of the results of the applicant's background
record check, if--
``(i) such notification is appropriate
considering the potential security implications;
and
``(ii) the Director, in a final notification
of threat assessment, served on the applicant
determines that the applicant does not meet the
standards set forth in regulations issued to carry
out this section.
``(B) Relationship to other background records
checks.--
``(i) Elimination of redundant checks.--An
individual with respect to whom the Transportation
Security Administration--
``(I) has performed a security
threat assessment under this section;
and
``(II) has issued a final
notification of no security threat,
is deemed to have met the requirements of any
other background check that is required for
purposes of any Federal law applicable to
transportation workers if that background check is
equivalent to, or less stringent than, the
background check required under this section.
``(ii)  NOTE: Deadline.  Determination by
director.--Not later than 60 days after the date
of issuance of the report under paragraph (5), but
no later than 120 days after the date of enactment
of this Act, the Director shall initiate a
rulemaking proceeding, including notice and
opportunity for comment, to determine which
background checks required for purposes of Federal
laws applicable to transportation workers are
equivalent to, or less stringent than, those
required under this section.
``(iii) Future rulemakings.--The Director
shall make a determination under the criteria
established under clause (ii) with respect to any
rulemaking proceeding to establish or modify
required background checks for transportation
workers initiated after the date of enactment of
this subsection.
``(2) Appeals process for more stringent state procedures.--
If a State establishes its own standards for applicants for a
hazardous materials endorsement to a commercial driver's
license, the State shall also provide--
``(A) an appeals process similar to and to the same
extent as the process provided under part 1572 of title
49, Code of Federal Regulations, by which an applicant
denied a hazardous materials endorsement to a commercial
driver's license by that State may appeal that denial;
and
``(B) a waiver process similar to and to the same
extent as the process provided under part 1572 of title
49, Code of Federal Regulations, by which an applicant
denied a

[[Page 1896]]
119 STAT. 1896

hazardous materials endorsement to a commercial driver's
license by that State may apply for a waiver.
``(3) Clarification of term defined in regulations.--The
term `transportation security incident', as defined in part 1572
of title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, does not include a
work stoppage or other nonviolent employee-related action
resulting from an employer-employee
dispute.  NOTE: Deadline.  Not later than 30 days after the
date of enactment of this subsection, the Director shall modify
the definition of that term to reflect the preceding sentence.
``(4)  NOTE: Deadline. Reports.  Background check
capacity.--Not later than October 1, 2005, the Director shall
transmit to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation of the Senate and the Committees on
Transportation and Infrastructure and Homeland Security of the
House of Representatives a report on the implementation of
fingerprint-based security threat assessments and the adequacy
of fingerprinting locations, personnel, and resources to
accomplish the timely processing of fingerprint-based security
threat assessments for individuals holding commercial driver's
licenses who are applying to renew hazardous materials
endorsements.
``(5) Report.--
``(A) In general.--Not later than 60 days after the
date of enactment of this subsection, the Director shall
transmit to the committees referred to in paragraph (4)
a report on the Director's plans to reduce or eliminate
redundant background checks for holders of hazardous
materials endorsements performed under this section.
``(B) Contents.--The report shall--
``(i) include a list of background checks and
other security or threat assessment requirements
applicable to transportation workers under Federal
laws for which the Department of Homeland Security
is responsible and the process by which the
Secretary of Homeland Security will determine
whether such checks or assessments are equivalent
to, or less stringent than, the background check
performed under this section; and
``(ii) provide an analysis of how the Director
plans to reduce or eliminate redundant background
checks in a manner that will continue to ensure
the highest level of safety and security.

``(h) Commercial Motor Vehicle Operators Registered to Operate in
Mexico or Canada.--
``(1)  NOTE: Effective date.  In general.--Beginning on
the date that is 6 months after the date of enactment of this
subsection, a commercial motor vehicle operator registered to
operate in Mexico or Canada shall not operate a commercial motor
vehicle transporting a hazardous material in commerce in the
United States until the operator has undergone a background
records check similar to the background records check required
for commercial motor vehicle operators licensed in the United
States to transport hazardous materials in commerce.
``(2) Extension.--The Director of the Transportation
Security Administration may extend the deadline established by
paragraph (1) for a period not to exceed 6 months if the
Director determines that such an extension is necessary.

[[Page 1897]]
119 STAT. 1897

``(3) Commercial motor vehicle defined.--In this subsection,
the term `commercial motor vehicle' has the meaning given that
term by section 31101.''.

SEC. 7106. REPRESENTATION AND TAMPERING.

(a) Representation.--Section 5104(a)(1) is amended--
(1) by striking ``a container,'' and all that follows
through ``packaging) for'' and inserting ``a package, component
of a package, or packaging for''; and
(2) by striking ``the container'' and all that follows
through ``packaging) meets'' and inserting ``the package,
component of a package, or packaging meets''.

(b) Tampering.--Section 5104(b) is amended--
(1) by striking ``A person may not'' and inserting ``No
person may''; and
(2) in paragraph (2) by inserting ``component of a package,
or packaging,'' after ``package,''.

SEC. 7107. TECHNICAL AMENDMENTS.

Section 5105 is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (d); and
(2) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (d).

SEC. 7108. TRAINING OF CERTAIN EMPLOYEES.

Section 5107 is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (e) and inserting the following:

``(e) Training Grants.--
``(1) In general.--Subject to the availability of funds
under section 5128(c), the Secretary shall make grants under
this subsection--
``(A) for training instructors to train hazmat
employees; and
``(B) to the extent determined appropriate by the
Secretary, for such instructors to train hazmat
employees.
``(2) Eligibility.--A grant under this subsection shall be
made to a nonprofit hazmat employee organization that dem-
onstrates--
``(A) expertise in conducting a training program for
hazmat employees; and
``(B) the ability to reach and involve in a training
program a target population of hazmat employees.'';
(2) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections
(g) and (h), respectively;
(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 and familiarization training and safety training pursuant to
section 172.704 of title 49, Code of Federal Regulations.''; and
(4) in subsection (g)(2) (as redesignated by paragraph (2)
of this subsection) by striking ``sections 5106, 5108(a)-(g)(1)
and (h), and 5109 of this title'' and inserting ``section
5106''.

SEC. 7109. REGISTRATION.

(a) Persons Required to File.--
(1) Requirement to file.--Section 5108(a)(1)(B) is amended
by striking ``class A or B explosive'' and inserting ``Division
1.1, 1.2, or 1.3 explosive material''.

[[Page 1898]]
119 STAT. 1898

(2) Authority to require to file.--Section 5108(a)(2)(B) is
amended to read as follows:
``(B) a person designing, manufacturing, fabricating,
inspecting, marking, maintaining, reconditioning, repairing, or
testing a package, container, or packaging component that is
represented, marked, certified, or sold as qualified for use in
transporting hazardous material in commerce.''.
(3) No transportation without filing.--Section 5108(a)(3) is
amended by striking ``manufacture,'' and all that follows
through ``package or'' and inserting ``design, manufacture,
fabricate, inspect, mark, maintain, recondition, repair, or test
a package, container packaging component, or''.

(b) Form and Content of Filings.--Section 5108(b)(1)(C) is amended
by striking ``the activity.'' and inserting ``any of the activities.''.
(c) Filing.--Section 5108(c) is amended to read as follows:
``(c) Filing.--Each person required to file a registration statement
under subsection (a) shall file the statement in accordance with
regulations prescribed by the Secretary.''.
(d)  NOTE: Records. 49 USC 5108 note.  Registration.--As soon as
practicable, the Administrator of the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration 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.

(e) Relationship to Other Laws.--Section 5108(i)(2)(B) is amended by
inserting ``an Indian tribe,'' after ``subdivision of a State,''.
(f) 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 costs incurred by
the Secretary in processing registration statements filed by
such persons.''.

SEC. 7110. SHIPPING PAPERS AND DISCLOSURE.

(a) Disclosure Considerations and Requirements.--Section 5110 is
amended--
(1) by striking ``under subsection (b) of this section.'' in
subsection (a) and inserting ``in regulations.'';
(2) by striking subsection (b); and
(3) by redesignating subsections (c), (d), and (e) as
subsections (b), (c), and (d), respectively.

(b) Retention of Papers.--Subsection (d) of section 5110, as
redesignated by subsection (a)(3) of this section, is amended to read as
follows:
``(d) Retention of Papers.--
``(1)  NOTE: Records.  Shippers.--The person who provides
the shipping paper under this section shall retain the paper, or
an electronic format of it, for a period of 2 years after the
date that the

[[Page 1899]]
119 STAT. 1899

shipping paper is provided to the carrier, with the paper or
electronic format to be accessible through the shipper's
principal place of business.
``(2)  NOTE: Records.  Carriers.--The carrier required to
keep the shipping paper under this section, shall retain the
paper, or an electronic format of it, for a period of 1 year
after the date that the shipping paper is provided to the
carrier, with the paper or electronic format to be accessible
through the carrier's principal place of business.
``(3) Availability to government agencies.--Any person
required to keep a shipping paper under this subsection shall,
upon request, make it available to a Federal, State, or local
government agency at reasonable times and locations.''.

SEC. 7111. RAIL TANK CARS.

Section 5111, and the item relating to section 5111 in the analysis
for chapter 51,  NOTE: 49 USC 5101.  are repealed.

SEC. 7112. UNSATISFACTORY SAFETY RATINGS.

(a) In General.--The text of section 5113 is amended to read as
follows: ``A violation of section 31144(c)(3) shall be considered a
violation of this chapter, and shall be subject to the penalties in
sections 5123 and 5124.''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--The first subsection (c) of section
31144, relating to prohibited transportation, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``sections 521(b)(5)(A) and
5113'' and inserting ``section 521(b)(5)(A)''; and
(2) by adding at the end of paragraph (3) the following: ``A
violation of this paragraph by an owner or operator transporting
hazardous material shall be considered a violation of chapter
51, and shall be subject to the penalties in sections 5123 and
5124.''.

(c) Technical Correction.--The second subsection (c) of section
31144, relating to safety reviews of new operators, is redesignated as
subsection (f).

SEC. 7113. TRAINING CURRICULUM FOR THE PUBLIC SECTOR.

(a) In General.--Section 5115(a) is amended by striking the
subsection designation and all that follows through the period at the
end of the first sentence and inserting the following:
``(a) In General.--In coordination with the Director of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency, the Chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency,
the Secretaries of Labor, Energy, and Health and Human Services, and the
Director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, and
using existing coordinating mechanisms of the National Response Team
and, for radioactive material, the Federal Radiological Preparedness
Coordinating Committee, the Secretary of Transportation shall maintain,
and update periodically, a current curriculum of courses necessary to
train public sector emergency response and preparedness teams in matters
relating to the transportation of hazardous material.''.
(b) Requirements.--Section 5115(b) is amended--
(1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1) by striking
``developed'' and inserting ``maintained and updated''; and
(2) in paragraph (1)(C) by striking ``under other United
States Government grant programs, including those'' and

[[Page 1900]]
119 STAT. 1900

inserting ``with Federal financial assistance, including
programs''.

(c) 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 of Transportation determines
appropriate''.
(d) 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 maintained and updated under this
section and of any programs utilizing such courses''.

SEC. 7114. PLANNING AND TRAINING GRANTS; HAZARDOUS MATERIALS EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS FUND.

(a) Maintenance of Effort.--Sections 5116(a)(2)(A) and 5116(b)(2)(A)
are amended by striking ``2 fiscal years'' and inserting ``5 fiscal
years''.
(b) Monitoring and Technical Assistance.--Section 5116(f) is amended
by striking ``national response team'' and inserting ``National Response
Team''.
(c) Delegation of Authority.--Section 5116(g) is amended by striking
``Government grant programs'' and inserting ``Federal financial
assistance''.
(d) Hazardous Materials Emergency Preparedness Fund.--
(1) Name of fund.--Section 5116(i) is amended by inserting
after ``an account in the Treasury'' the following: ``(to be
known as the `Hazardous Materials Emergency Preparedness
Fund')''.
(2) Publication of emergency response guide.--Section
5116(i) is further amended--
(A) by striking ``collects under section
5108(g)(2)(A) of this title and'';
(B) by striking ``and'' after the semicolon in
paragraph (2);
(C) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (4);
(D) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following:
``(3) to publish and distribute an emergency response guide;
and''; and
(E) in paragraph (4) (as redesignated by
subparagraph (C) of this paragraph) by striking ``10
percent'' and inserting ``2 percent''.
(3) Conforming amendment.--Section 5108(g)(2)(C) is amended
by striking ``the account the Secretary of the Treasury
establishes'' and inserting ``the Hazardous Materials Emergency
Preparedness Fund established''.

(e) Reports.--Section 5116(k) is amended--

[[Page 1901]]
119 STAT. 1901

(1) by striking the first sentence and inserting the
following: ``The Secretary shall submit annually to the
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives and the Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation of the Senate and make available to the public
information on the allocation and uses of the planning grants
allocated under subsection (a), training grants under subsection
(b), and grants under subsection (j) of this section and under
section 5107.''; and
(2) by striking ``Such report'' in the second sentence and
inserting ``The report''.

SEC. 7115. SPECIAL PERMITS AND EXCLUSIONS.

(a) Section Heading.--
(1) In general.--Section 5117 is amended by striking the
section designation 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 successive periods of not more than 4
years each or, in the case of a special permit relating to section 5112,
for an additional period of not more than 2 years.''.
(e) Applications.--Section 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''.

(h) Repeal of Section 5118.--Section 5118, and the item relating to
such section in the analysis for chapter 51, are repealed.

SEC. 7116. UNIFORM FORMS AND PROCEDURES.

Section 5119 is amended to read as follows:

[[Page 1902]]
119 STAT. 1902

``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 develop 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 for the
working group to employ in developing recommendations for the Secretary
to 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)  NOTE: Deadline.  Regulations.--Not later than 18 months
after the date the working group's report is delivered to the Secretary,
the Secretary shall issue regulations to carry out such recommendations
of the working group as the Secretary considers appropriate. In
developing such regulations, the Secretary shall consider the State
needs associated with the transition to and implementation of a uniform
forms and procedures program.

``(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. 7117. 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. 7118. ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITY.

(a) General Authority.--Section 5121(a) is amended--

[[Page 1903]]
119 STAT. 1903

(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 prescribed, or an 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 tester, 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 tester, 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.

[[Page 1904]]
119 STAT. 1904

``(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 and prompt 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 (h), 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 a violation
of a provision of this chapter, or a regulation prescribed under
this chapter, or an unsafe condition or practice, constitutes or
is causing an imminent hazard, the Secretary may issue or impose
emergency restrictions, prohibitions, recalls, or out-of-service
orders, without notice or an opportunity for a hearing, but only
to the extent necessary to abate the imminent hazard.
``(2) Written orders.--The action of the Secretary under
paragraph (1) shall be in a written emergency order that--
``(A) describes the violation, condition, or
practice that constitutes or is causing the imminent
hazard;
``(B) states the restrictions, prohibitions,
recalls, or out-of-service orders issued or imposed; and
``(C) describes the standards and procedures for
obtaining relief from the order.
``(3)  NOTE: Deadline.  Opportunity for review.--After
taking action under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall provide
for review of the action under section 554 of title 5 if a
petition for review is filed within 20 calendar days of the date
of issuance of the order for the action.
``(4) Expiration of effectiveness of order.--If a petition
for review of an action is filed under paragraph (3) and the
review under that paragraph is not completed by the end of the
30-day period beginning on the date the petition is filed, the
action shall cease to be effective at the end of such period
unless the Secretary determines, in writing, that the imminent
hazard providing a basis for the action continues to exist.
``(5) Out-of-service order defined.--In this subsection, the
term `out-of-service order' means a requirement that an
aircraft, vessel, motor vehicle, train, railcar, locomotive,
other vehicle, transport unit, transport vehicle, freight
container, potable tank, or other package not be moved until
specified conditions have been met.

``(e) Regulations.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  Temporary regulations.--Not later
than 60 days after the date of enactment of the Hazardous
Materials

[[Page 1905]]
119 STAT. 1905

Transportation Safety and Security Reauthorization Act of 2005,
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)  NOTE: Deadline.  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) Grants and Cooperative Agreements.--Section 5121 is amended by
inserting after subsection (f) (as redesignated by subsection (d)(1) of
this section) the following:
``(g) Grants and Cooperative Agreements.--The Secretary may enter
into grants and cooperative agreements with a person, agency, or
instrumentality of the United States, a unit of State or local
government, an Indian tribe, a foreign government (in coordination with
the Department of State), an educational institution, or other
appropriate entity--
``(1) to expand risk assessment and emergency response
capabilities with respect to the security of transportation of
hazardous material;
``(2) to enhance emergency communications capacity as
determined necessary by the Secretary, including the use of
integrated, interoperable emergency communications technologies
where appropriate;
``(3) to conduct research, development, demonstration, risk
assessment, and emergency response planning and training
activities; or
``(4) to otherwise carry out this chapter.''.

(f) Report.--Section 5121(h) (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''.

SEC. 7119. ENFORCEMENT.

(a) In General.--Section 5122(a) is amended--
(1) in the first sentence by striking ``chapter or a
regulation prescribed or order'' and inserting ``chapter or a
regulation prescribed or order, special permit, or approval'';
and
(2) by striking the second sentence and inserting the
following: ``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. 7120. CIVIL PENALTY.

(a) Penalty.--Section 5123(a) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--

[[Page 1906]]
119 STAT. 1906

(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 (4); 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.
``(3) If the violation is related to training, paragraph (1) shall
be applied by substituting `$450' for `$250'.''.
(b) Hearing Requirement.--Section 5123(b) is amended by striking
``regulation prescribed'' and inserting ``regulation prescribed or
order, special permit, or approval issued''.
(c) Civil Actions to Collect.--Section 5123(d) is amended by
striking ``section.'' and inserting ``section and any accrued interest
on the civil penalty as calculated in accordance with section 1005 of
the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (33 U.S.C. 2705). In the civil action, the
amount and appropriateness of the civil penalty shall not be subject to
review.''.
(d)  NOTE: Applicability. 49 USC 5123 note.  Effective Dates.--
(1) Hearing requirement.--The amendment made by subsection
(b) shall take effect on the date of enactment of this Act, and
shall apply with respect to violations described in section
5123(a) of title 49, United States Code (as amended by this
section), that occur on or after that date.
(2) Civil actions to collect.--The amendment made by
subsection (c) shall apply with respect to civil penalties
imposed on violations described in section 5123(a) of title 49,
United States Code (as amended by this section), that occur on
or after the date of enactment of this Act.

SEC. 7121. 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.

[[Page 1907]]
119 STAT. 1907

``(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. 7122. PREEMPTION.

(a) Substantive Differences.--Section 5125(b) is amended--
(1) by striking subparagraph (E) of paragraph (1) and
inserting the following:
``(E) the designing, manufacturing, fabricating, inspecting,
marking, maintaining, reconditioning, repairing, or testing a
package, container, or packaging component that is represented,
marked, certified, or sold as qualified for use in transporting
hazardous material in commerce.''; and
(2) by striking ``prescribes after November 16, 1990.
However, the'' in paragraph (2) and inserting ``prescribes.
The''.

(b) Decisions on Preemption.--Section 5125(d)(1) is amended in the
first sentence by inserting before the period at the end ``or section
5119(e)''.
(c) Waiver of Preemption.--Section 5125(e) is amended in the first
sentence by inserting before the period at the end ``or section
5119(b)''.
(d) Standards.--Section 5125 is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``(h) Application of Each Preemption Standard.--Each standard for
preemption in subsection (b), (c)(1), or (d), and in section 5119(b), is
independent in its application to a requirement of a State, political
subdivision of a State, or Indian tribe.
``(i) Non-Federal Enforcement Standards.--This section does not
apply to any procedure, penalty, required mental state, or other
standard utilized by a State, political subdivision of a State, or
Indian tribe to enforce a requirement applicable to the transportation
of hazardous material.''.

SEC. 7123. JUDICIAL REVIEW.

(a) Repeal.--Section 5125 (as amended by section 7122 of this Act)
is further amended--
(1) by striking subsection (f);
(2) by redesignating subsections (g), (h), and (i) as
subsections (f), (g), and (h), respectively; 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

[[Page 1908]]
119 STAT. 1908

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.  NOTE: Deadline.  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.  NOTE: Records.  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.
``(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. 7124. RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER LAWS.

Section 5126(a) is amended--
(1) by striking ``or causes to be transported hazardous
material,'' and inserting ``hazardous material, or causes
hazardous material to be transported,'';
(2) by striking ``manufactures,'' and all that follows
through ``or sells'' and inserting ``designs, manufactures,
fabricates, inspects, marks, maintains, reconditions, repairs,
or tests a package, container, or packaging component that is
represented'';
(3) by striking ``must'' and inserting ``shall''; and
(4) by striking ``manufacturing,'' and all that follows
through ``testing'' and inserting ``designing, manufacturing,
fabricating, inspecting, marking, maintaining, reconditioning,
repairing, or testing''.

SEC. 7125. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

Section 5128 (as redesignated by section 7123(b) of this Act) 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, $24,940,000.
``(2) For fiscal year 2006, $29,000,000.
``(3) For fiscal year 2007, $30,000,000.
``(4) For fiscal year 2008, $30,000,000.

``(b) Hazardous Materials 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 2008 the
following:

[[Page 1909]]
119 STAT. 1909

``(1) To carry out section 5115, $200,000.
``(2) To carry out sections 5116(a) and (b), $21,800,000 to
be allocated as follows:
``(A) $5,000,000 to carry out section 5116(a).
``(B) $7,800,000 to carry out section 5116(b).
``(C) Of the amount provided for by this paragraph
for a fiscal year in excess of the suballocations in
subparagraphs (A) and (B)--
``(i) 35 percent shall be used to carry out
section 5116(a); and
``(ii) 65 percent shall be used to carry out
section 5116(b),
except that the Secretary may increase the proportion to
carry out section 5116(b) and decrease the proportion to
carry out section 5116(a) if the Secretary determines
that such reallocation is appropriate to carry out the
intended uses of these funds as described in the
applications submitted by States and Indian tribes.
``(3) To carry out section 5116(f), $150,000.
``(4) To publish and distribute the Emergency Response
Guidebook under section 5116(i)(3), $625,000.
``(5) To carry out section 5116(j), $1,000,000.

``(c) Hazmat Training Grants.--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 2008.
``(d) 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.
``(e) 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.
``(f) Availability of Amounts.--Amounts made available by or under
this section remain available until expended.''.

SEC. 7126.  NOTE: 49 USC 5102, 5103, 5103a, 5105-5110, 5112, 5114-5117,
5120-5123, 5125.  REFERENCES TO THE SECRETARY OF
TRANSPORTATION.

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) and in sections 5102(11), 5103(c), 5103a(c), 5115(a),
5115(c)(3), 5116(i), and 5120(a)) and inserting ``Secretary''.

SEC. 7127. CRIMINAL MATTERS.

Section 845(a)(1) of title 18, United States Code, is amended to
read as follows:
``(1) aspects of the transportation of explosive materials
via railroad, water, highway, or air that pertain to safety,
including security, and are regulated by the Department of
Transportation or the Department of Homeland Security;''.

SEC. 7128. ADDITIONAL CIVIL AND CRIMINAL PENALTIES.

(a) Title 49 Penalties.--Section 46312 is amended--
(1) by striking ``part--'' in subsection (a) and inserting
``part or chapter 51--''; and
(2) by inserting ``or chapter 51'' in subsection (b) after
``under this part''.

[[Page 1910]]
119 STAT. 1910

(b) Title 18 Penalties.--Section 3663(a)(1)(A) of title 18, United
States Code, is amended by inserting ``5124,'' before ``46312,''.

SEC. 7129. HAZARDOUS MATERIAL TRANSPORTATION PLAN REQUIREMENT.

(a) In General.--Subpart I of part 172 of the Department of
Transportation's regulations (49 CFR 172.800 et seq.), or any subsequent
Department of Transportation regulation in pari materia, does not apply
to the surface transportation activities of a farmer that are--
(1) in direct support of the farmer's farming operations;
and
(2) conducted within a 150-mile radius of those operations.

(b) Farmer Defined.--In this section, the term ``farmer'' means a
person--
(1) actively engaged in the production or raising of crops,
poultry, livestock, or other agricultural commodities; and
(2) whose gross receipts from the sale of such agricultural
commodities or products do not exceed $500,000 annually.

SEC. 7130. DETERMINING AMOUNT OF UNDECLARED SHIPMENTS OF HAZARDOUS
MATERIALS ENTERING THE UNITED STATES.

(a) Study.--The Comptroller General shall review existing options
and determine additional options for discovering 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. 7131. 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 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 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, $1,250,000 for each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009 shall be
available to carry out this section.

[[Page 1911]]
119 STAT. 1911

SEC. 7132. 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 is authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary to carry out this section $2,500,000 for
each of fiscal years 2005 through 2008.

SEC. 7133. 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.

Subtitle  NOTE: Sanitary Food Transportation Act of 2005. 21 USC 301
note.  B--Sanitary Food Transportation

SEC. 7201. SHORT TITLE.

This subtitle may be cited as the ``Sanitary Food Transportation Act
of 2005''.

SEC. 7202. RESPONSIBILITIES OF SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES.

(a) Unsanitary Transport Deemed Adulteration.--Section 402 of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 342) is amended by
adding at the end the following:
``(i) If it is transported or offered for transport by a shipper,
carrier by motor vehicle or rail vehicle, receiver, or any other person
engaged in the transportation of food under conditions that are not in
compliance with regulations promulgated under section 416.''.
(b)  NOTE: 21 USC 350e.  Sanitary Transportation Requirements.--
Chapter IV of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 341 et
seq.) is amended by adding at the end the following:

``SEC. 416. SANITARY TRANSPORTATION PRACTICES.

``(a) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Bulk vehicle.--The term `bulk vehicle' includes a tank
truck, hopper truck, rail tank car, hopper car, cargo tank,
portable tank, freight container, or hopper bin, and any other
vehicle in which food is shipped in bulk, with the food coming
into direct contact with the vehicle.
``(2) Transportation.--The term `transportation' means any
movement in commerce by motor vehicle or rail vehicle.

[[Page 1912]]
119 STAT. 1912

``(b) Regulations.--The Secretary shall by regulation require
shippers, carriers by motor vehicle or rail vehicle, receivers, and
other persons engaged in the transportation of food to use sanitary
transportation practices prescribed by the Secretary to ensure that food
is not transported under conditions that may render the food
adulterated.
``(c) Contents.--The regulations under subsection (b) shall--
``(1) prescribe such practices as the Secretary determines
to be appropriate relating to--
``(A) sanitation;
``(B) packaging, isolation, and other protective
measures;
``(C) limitations on the use of vehicles;
``(D) information to be disclosed--
``(i) to a carrier by a person arranging for
the transport of food; and
``(ii) to a manufacturer or other person
that--
``(I) arranges for the
transportation of food by a carrier; or
``(II) furnishes a tank vehicle or
bulk vehicle for the transportation of
food; and
``(E) recordkeeping; and
``(2) include--
``(A) a list of nonfood products that the Secretary
determines may, if shipped in a bulk vehicle, render
adulterated food that is subsequently transported in the
same vehicle; and
``(B) a list of nonfood products that the Secretary
determines may, if shipped in a motor vehicle or rail
vehicle (other than a tank vehicle or bulk vehicle),
render adulterated food that is simultaneously or
subsequently transported in the same vehicle.

``(d) Waivers.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary may waive any requirement
under this section, with respect to any class of persons,
vehicles, food, or nonfood products, if the Secretary determines
that the waiver--
``(A) will not result in the transportation of food
under conditions that would be unsafe for human or
animal health; and
``(B) will not be contrary to the public interest.
``(2)  NOTE: Federal Register,
publication.  Publication.--The Secretary shall publish in the
Federal Register any waiver and the reasons for the waiver.

``(e) Preemption.--
``(1) In general.--A requirement of a State or political
subdivision of a State that concerns the transportation of food
is preempted if--
``(A) complying with a requirement of the State or
political subdivision and a requirement of this section,
or a regulation prescribed under this section, is not
possible; or
``(B) the requirement of the State or political
subdivision as applied or enforced is an obstacle to
accomplishing and carrying out this section or a
regulation prescribed under this section.

[[Page 1913]]
119 STAT. 1913

``(2) Applicability.--This subsection applies to
transportation that occurs on or after the effective date of the
regulations promulgated under subsection (b).

``(f) Assistance of Other Agencies.--The Secretary of
Transportation, the Secretary of Agriculture, the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency, and the heads of other Federal
agencies, as appropriate, shall provide assistance on request, to the
extent resources are available, to the Secretary for the purposes of
carrying out this section.''.
(c) Inspection of Transportation Records.--
(1) Requirement.--Section 703 of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 373) is amended--
(A) by striking the section heading and all that
follows through ``For the purpose'' and inserting the
following:

``SEC. 703. RECORDS.

``(a) In General.--For the purpose''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following:

``(b) Food Transportation Records.--A shipper, carrier by motor
vehicle or rail vehicle, receiver, or other person subject to section
416 shall, on request of an officer or employee designated by the
Secretary, permit the officer or employee, at reasonable times, to have
access to and to copy all records that the Secretary requires to be kept
under section 416(c)(1)(E).''.
(2) Conforming amendment.--Subsection (a) of section 703 of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (as designated by
paragraph (1)(A)) is amended by striking ``carriers.'' and
inserting ``carriers, except as provided in subsection (b).''.

(d) Prohibited Acts; Records Inspection.--Section 301(e) of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 331(e)) is amended by
inserting ``416,'' before ``504,'' each place it appears.
(e) Unsafe Food Transportation.--Section 301 of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 331) is amended by adding at the end
the following:
``(hh) The failure by a shipper, carrier by motor vehicle or rail
vehicle, receiver, or any other person engaged in the transportation of
food to comply with the sanitary transportation practices prescribed by
the Secretary under section 416.''.

SEC. 7203. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION REQUIREMENTS.

Chapter 57 is amended to read as follows:

``CHAPTER 57--SANITARY FOOD TRANSPORTATION

``5701. Food Transportation safety inspections.

``Sec. 5701.  NOTE: 49 USC 5701.  Food transportation safety
inspections

``(a) Inspection Procedures.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary of Transportation, in
consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services and
the Secretary of Agriculture, shall establish procedures for
transportation safety inspections for the purpose of identifying
suspected incidents of contamination or adulteration of--
``(A) food in violation of regulations promulgated
under section 416 of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act;
``(B) a carcass, part of a carcass, meat, meat food
product, or animal subject to detention under section
402 of the Federal Meat Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 672);
and

[[Page 1914]]
119 STAT. 1914

``(C) poultry products or poultry subject to
detention under section 19 of the Poultry Products
Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 467a).
``(2) Training.--
``(A) In general.--The Secretary of Transportation
shall develop and carry out a training program to
conduct enforcement of this chapter and regulations
prescribed under this chapter or compatible State laws
and regulations.
``(B) Conduct.--In carrying out this paragraph, the
Secretary of Transportation shall train inspectors,
including Department of Transportation personnel, State
employees described under subsection (c), or personnel
paid with funds authorized under sections 31102 and
31104, in the recognition of adulteration problems
associated with the transportation of cosmetics,
devices, drugs, food, and food additives and in the
procedures for obtaining assistance of the appropriate
departments, agencies, and instrumentalities of the
Government and State authorities to support the
enforcement.
``(3) Applicability.--The procedures established under
paragraph (1) shall apply, at a minimum, to Department of
Transportation personnel that perform commercial motor vehicle
or railroad safety inspections.

``(b) Notification of Secretary of Health and Human Services or
Secretary of Agriculture.--The Secretary of Transportation shall
promptly notify the Secretary of Health and Human Services or the
Secretary of Agriculture, as applicable, of any instances of potential
food contamination or adulteration of a food identified during
transportation safety inspections.
``(c) Use of State Employees.--The means by which the Secretary of
Transportation carries out subsection (b) may include inspections
conducted by State employees using funds authorized to be appropriated
under sections 31102 through 31104.''.

SEC. 7204.  NOTE: 21 USC 331 note.  EFFECTIVE DATE.

This subtitle takes effect on October 1, 2005.

Subtitle C--Research and Innovative Technology Administration

SEC. 7301. ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITY.

Section 112 is amended by adding at the end the following:
``(e) Administrative Authorities.--The Administrator may enter into
grants and cooperative agreements with Federal agencies, State and local
government agencies, other public entities, private organizations, and
other persons--
``(1) to conduct research into transportation service and
infrastructure assurance; and
``(2) to carry out other research activities of the
Administration.''.

[[Page 1915]]
119 STAT. 1915

TITLE VIII--TRANSPORTATION DISCRETIONARY SPENDING GUARANTEE

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

(a) Limits.--Redesignate paragraphs (2) through (9) of section
251(c) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of
1985  NOTE: 2 USC 901.  as paragraphs (6) through (13), respectively,
and strike paragraph (1) of such section 251(c) and insert the following
new paragraphs:
``(1) with respect to fiscal year 2005--
``(A) for the highway category: $31,277,000,000 in
outlays;
``(B) for the mass transit category: $955,792,000 in
new budget authority and $6,674,000,000 in outlays;
``(2) with respect to fiscal year 2006--
``(A) for the highway category: $33,942,000,000 in
outlays;
``(B) for the mass transit category: $1,643,000,000
in new budget authority and $7,359,000,000 in outlays;
``(3) with respect to fiscal year 2007--
``(A) for the highway category: $36,960,000,000 in
outlays;
``(B) for the mass transit category: $1,712,000,000
in new budget authority and $8,120,000,000 in outlays;
``(4) with respect to fiscal year 2008--
``(A) for the highway category: $39,123,000,000 in
outlays;
``(B) for the mass transit category: $1,858,000,000
in new budget authority and $8,742,000,000 in outlays;
``(5) with respect to fiscal year 2009--
``(A) for the highway category: $40,660,000,000 in
outlays;
``(B) for the mass transit category: $1,977,500,000
in new budget authority and $9,180,000,000 in
outlays;''.

(b) Definitions.--Section 250(c)(4) of the Balanced Budget and
Emergency Deficit Control Act  NOTE: 2 USC 900.  of 1985 is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (B)--
(A) by striking ``the Transportation Equity Act for
the 21st Century'' and all that follows through the
colon and inserting: ``the Safe, Accountable, Flexible,
Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for
Users:''; and
(B) by adding at the end thereof the following new
clauses:
``(v) 69-8362-0-7-401 (National Driver
Registry).
``(vi) 69-8159-0-7-401 (Motor Carrier Safety
Operations and Programs).
``(vii) 06-8158-0-7-401 (Motor Carrier Safety
Grants).''; and
(2) by striking subparagraph (C) and inserting the
following:
``(C) Mass transit category.--The term `mass transit
category' means the following budget accounts, or
portions of the accounts, that are subject to the
obligation limitations on contract authority provided in
the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A

[[Page 1916]]
119 STAT. 1916

Legacy for Users or for which appropriations are
provided in accordance with authorizations contained in
that Act:
``(i) 69-1120-0-1-401 (Administrative
Expenses).
``(ii) 69-1134-0-1-401 (Capital Investment
Grants).
``(iii) 69-8191-0-7-401 (Discretionary
Grants).
``(iv) 69-1129-0-1-401 (Formula Grants).
``(v) 69-1127-0-1-401 (Interstate Transfer
Grants--Transit).
``(vi) 69-1125-0-1-401 (Job Access and Reverse
Commute).
``(vii) 69-1122-0-1-401 (Miscellaneous Expired
Accounts).
``(viii) 69-1121-0-1-401 (Research, Training
and Human Resources).
``(ix) 69-8350-0-7-401 (Trust Fund Share of
Expenses).
``(x) 69-1137-0-1-401 (Transit Planning and
Research).
``(xi) 69-1136-0-1-401 (University
Transportation Research).
``(xii) 69-1128-0-1-401 (Washington
Metropolitan Area Transit Authority).''.

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

Subparagraphs (B) through (E) of section 251(b)(1)  NOTE: 2 USC
901.  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 8003 of
the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
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.

[[Page 1917]]
119 STAT. 1917

``(II) The estimated level of highway receipts for
the purposes of this clause are--
``(aa) for fiscal year 2005, $31,562,000,000;
``(bb) for fiscal year 2006, $33,712,000,000;
``(cc) for fiscal year 2007, $34,623,000,000
``(dd) for fiscal year 2008, $35,449,000,000;
and
``(ee) for fiscal year 2009, $36,220,000,000.
``(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 8003 of the Safe, Accountable, Flexible,
Efficient 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 2007, 2008, 2009, or 2010, OMB shall adjust the
estimates made in clause (i) by the adjustments by
subparagraphs (B) and (C).
``(E)  NOTE: Reports.  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.  NOTE: 2 USC 901 note.  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 2005, $35,164,292,000;
(2) for fiscal year 2006, $37,220,843,903;
(3) for fiscal year 2007, $39,460,710,516;
(4) for fiscal year 2008, $40,824,075,404; and
(5) for fiscal year 2009, $42,469,970,178.

(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 2005, $7,646,336,000;
(2) for fiscal year 2006, $8,622,931,000;
(3) for fiscal year 2007, $8,974,775,000;
(4) for fiscal year 2008, $9,730,893,000; and
(5) for fiscal year 2009, $10,338,065,000.

[[Page 1918]]
119 STAT. 1918

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 ``section 8103 of the Transportation Equity
Act for the 21st Century'' and inserting ``section 8003 of the
Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient 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 Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient 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 Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient 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 TRANSPORTATION

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

[[Page 1919]]
119 STAT. 1919

(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,  NOTE: 49 USC 26101.  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.''.
(c) Definition.--Section 26105(1) of title 49, United States Code,
is amended by striking ``and cooperative agreements'' and inserting ``,
cooperative agreements, and other transactions''.

SEC. 9002. CAPITAL GRANTS FOR RAIL LINE RELOCATION PROJECTS.

(a) Establishment of Program.--
(1) Program requirements.--Chapter 201 of title 49, United
States Code,  NOTE: 49 USC 20101.  is amended by adding at the
end of subchapter II the following:

``Sec. 20154. Capital grants for rail line relocation projects

``(a) Establishment of Program.--The Secretary of Transportation
shall carry out a grant program to provide financial assistance for
local rail line relocation and improvement projects.
``(b) Eligibility.--A State is eligible for a grant under this
section for any construction project for the improvement of the route or
structure of a rail line that either--
``(1) is carried out for the purpose of mitigating the
adverse effects of rail traffic on safety, motor vehicle traffic
flow, community quality of life, or economic development; or
``(2) involves a lateral or vertical relocation of any
portion of the rail line.

``(c) Considerations for Approval of Grant Applications.--In
determining whether to award a grant to an eligible State under this
section, the Secretary shall consider the following factors:
``(1) The capability of the State to fund the rail line
relocation project without Federal grant funding.
``(2) The requirement and limitation relating to allocation
of grant funds provided in subsection (d).
``(3) Equitable treatment of the various regions of the
United States.
``(4) The effects of the rail line, relocated or improved as
proposed, on motor vehicle and pedestrian traffic, safety,
community quality of life, and area commerce.
``(5) The effects of the rail line, relocated as proposed,
on the freight and passenger rail operations on the rail line.

``(d) Allocation Requirements.--At least 50 percent of all grant
funds awarded under this section out of funds appropriated for a fiscal
year shall be provided as grant awards of not more than $20,000,000
each. The $20,000,000 amount shall be adjusted

[[Page 1920]]
119 STAT. 1920

by the Secretary to reflect inflation for fiscal years beginning after
fiscal year 2006.
``(e) Non-Federal Share.--
``(1) Percentage.--A State or other non-Federal entity shall
pay at least 10 percent of the shared costs of a project that is
funded in part by a grant awarded under this section.
``(2) Forms of contributions.--The share required by
paragraph (1) may be paid in cash or in kind.
``(3) In-kind contributions.--The in-kind contributions that
are permitted to be counted under paragraph (2) for a project
for a State or other non-Federal entity are as follows:
``(A) A contribution of real property or tangible
personal property (whether provided by the State or a
person for the State).
``(B) A contribution of the services of employees of
the State or other non-Federal entity, calculated on the
basis of costs incurred by the State or other non-
Federal entity for the pay and benefits of the
employees, but excluding overhead and general
administrative costs.
``(C) A payment of any costs that were incurred for
the project before the filing of an application for a
grant for the project under this section, and any in-
kind contributions that were made for the project before
the filing of the application, if and to the extent that
the costs were incurred or in-kind contributions were
made, as the case may be, to comply with a provision of
a statute required to be satisfied in order to carry out
the project.
``(4) Financial contribution from private entities.--
``(A)  NOTE: Reports.  The Secretary shall require
a State to submit a description of the anticipated
public and private benefits associated with each rail
line relocation or improvement project described in
subsection (a). The determination of such benefits shall
be developed in consultation with the owner and user of
the rail line being relocated or improved or other
private entity involved in the project.
``(B) The Secretary shall consider the feasibility
of seeking financial contributions or commitments from
private entities involved with the project in proportion
to the expected benefits determined under subparagraph
(A) that accrue to such entities from the project.

``(f) Agreements To Combine Amounts.--Two or more States (not
including political subdivisions of States) may, pursuant to an
agreement entered into by the States, combine any part of the amounts
provided through grants for a project under this section if--
``(1) the project will benefit each of the States entering
into the agreement; and
``(2) the agreement is not a violation of a law of any such
State.

``(g) Regulations.--The Secretary shall prescribe regulations for
carrying out this section.
``(h) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Construction.--The term `construction' means the
supervising, inspecting, actual building, and incurrence of all
costs incidental to the construction or reconstruction of a
project described under subsection (b)(1) of this section,
including bond costs and other costs relating to the issuance of
bonds or other

[[Page 1921]]
119 STAT. 1921

debt financing instruments and costs incurred by the State in
performing project related audits, and includes--
``(A) locating, surveying, and mapping;
``(B) track installation, restoration, and
rehabilitation;
``(C) acquisition of rights-of-way;
``(D) relocation assistance, acquisition of
replacement housing sites, and acquisition and
rehabilitation, relocation, and construction of
replacement housing;
``(E) elimination of obstacles and relocation of
utilities; and
``(F) other activities defined by the Secretary.
``(2) Quality of life.--The term `quality of life' includes
first responders' emergency response time, the environment,
noise levels, and other factors as determined by the Secretary.
``(3) State.--The term `State' includes, except as otherwise
specifically provided, a political subdivision of a State, and
the District of Columbia.

``(i) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary for use in carrying out this section
$350,000,000 for each of the fiscal years 2006 through 2009.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The chapter analysis for such
chapter  NOTE: 49 USC 20101.  is amended by adding at the end
the following:

``20154. Capital grants for rail line relocation projects.''.

(b)  NOTE: Deadlines. 49 USC 21054 note.  Regulations.--
(1) Temporary regulations.--Not later than April 1, 2006,
the Secretary of Transportation shall issue temporary
regulations to implement the grant program under section 20154
of title 49, United States Code, as added by subsection (a).
Subchapter II of chapter 5 of title 5, United States Code, shall
not apply to the issuance of a temporary regulation under this
subsection or of any amendment of such a temporary regulation.
(2) Final regulations.--Not later than October 1, 2006, the
Secretary shall issue final regulations implementing the
program.

SEC. 9003. REHABILITATION AND IMPROVEMENT FINANCING.

(a) Definition.--Section 102(7) of the Railroad Revitalization and
Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 802(7)) is amended to read as
follows:
``(7) `railroad' has the meaning given that term in section
20102 of title 49, United States Code; and''.

(b) General Authority.--Section 502(a) of the Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 822(a)) is
amended to read as follows:
``(a) General Authority.--The Secretary shall provide direct loans
and loan guarantees to--
``(1) State and local governments;
``(2) interstate compacts consented to by Congress under
section 410(a) of the Amtrak Reform and Accountability Act of
1997 (49 U.S.C. 24101 note);
``(3) government sponsored authorities and corporations;
``(4) railroads;
``(5) joint ventures that include at least one railroad; and
``(6) solely for the purpose of constructing a rail
connection between a plant or facility and a second rail
carrier, limited

[[Page 1922]]
119 STAT. 1922

option rail freight shippers that own or operate a plant or
other facility that is served by no more than a single
railroad.''.

(c) Priority Projects.--Section 502(c) of the Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 822(c)) is
amended--
(1) by striking ``or'' after the semicolon in paragraph (5);
(2) by striking ``areas.'' in paragraph (6) and inserting
``areas;''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(7) enhance service and capacity in the national rail
system; or
``(8) would materially alleviate rail capacity problems
which degrade the provision of service to shippers and would
fulfill a need in the national transportation system.''.

(d) Extent of Authority.--Section 502(d) of the Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 822(d)) is
amended--
(1) by striking ``$3,500,000,000'' and inserting
``$35,000,000,000'';
(2) by striking ``$1,000,000,000'' and inserting
``$7,000,000,000''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following ``The Secretary shall
not establish any limit on the proportion of the unused amount
authorized under this subsection that may be used for 1 loan or
loan guarantee.''.

(e) Cohorts of Loans.--Section 502(f) of the Railroad Revitalization
and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 822(f)) is amended--
(1) by striking ``and'' after the semicolon in subparagraph
(D) of paragraph (2);
(2) by redesignating subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) as
subparagraph (F);
(3) by adding after subparagraph (D) of paragraph (2) the
following:
``(E) the size and characteristics of the cohort of
which the loan or loan guarantee is a member; and''; and
(4) by adding at the end of paragraph (4) the following: ``A
cohort may include loans and loan guarantees. The Secretary
shall not establish any limit on the proportion of a cohort that
may be used for 1 loan or loan guarantee.''.

(f) Conditions of Assistance.--
(1) Assurances.--Section 502(h) of the Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C.
822(h)) is amended--
(A) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``The Secretary'';
(B) by redesignating paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) as
subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C); and
(C) by adding at the end the following:

``(2) The Secretary shall not require an applicant for a direct loan
or loan guarantee under this section to provide collateral. Any
collateral provided or thereafter enhanced shall be valued as a going
concern after giving effect to the present value of improvements
contemplated by the completion and operation of the project. The
Secretary shall not require that an applicant for a direct loan or loan
guarantee under this section have previously sought the financial
assistance requested from another source.

[[Page 1923]]
119 STAT. 1923

``(3) The Secretary shall require recipients of direct loans or loan
guarantees under this section to comply with--
``(A) the standards of section 24312 of title 49, United
States Code, as in effect on September 1, 2002, with respect to
the project in the same manner that the National Railroad
Passenger Corporation is required to comply with such standards
for construction work financed under an agreement made under
section 24308(a) of that title; and
``(B) the protective arrangements established under section
504 of this Act, with respect to employees affected by actions
taken in connection with the project to be financed by the loan
or loan guarantee.''.
(2) Technical correction.--Section 502 of the Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 822)
is amended by striking ``offered;'' in subsection (f)(2)(A) and
inserting ``offered, if any;''.

(g) Time Limit and Repayment Schedules.--Section 502 of the Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 822) is
amended by adding at the end the following:
``(i) Time Limit for Approval or Disapproval.--Not later than 90
days after receiving a complete application for a direct loan or loan
guarantee under this section, the Secretary shall approve or disapprove
the application.
``(j) Repayment Schedules.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish a repayment
schedule requiring payments to commence not later than the sixth
anniversary date of the original loan disbursement.
``(2) Accrual.--Interest shall accrue as of the date of
disbursement, and shall be amortized over the remaining term of
the loan beginning at the time the payments begin.''.

(h) Evaluation Charge.--Section 503(k) of the Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 823(k)) is
amended--
(1) in the subsection heading, by striking ``Investigation''
and inserting ``Evaluation'';
(2) by inserting ``the cost of evaluating the application,
including'' after ``reasonable charge for''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following: ``Amounts collected
under this subsection shall be credited directly to the Safety
and Operations account of the Federal Railroad Administration,
and shall remain available until expended to pay for the
evaluation costs described in this subsection.''.

(i) Fees and Charges.--Section 503 of the Railroad Revitalization
and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 823) is amended by adding
at the end the following new subsection:
``(l) Fees and Charges.--Except as provided in this title, the
Secretary may not assess any fees, including user fees, or charges in
connection with a direct loan or loan guarantee provided under section
502.''.
(j)  NOTE: Deadlines. Federal Register, publication. Internet. 45
USC 822 note.  Substantive Criteria and Standards.--Not later than 30
days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Transportation shall publish in the Federal Register and post on the
Department of Transportation Web site the substantive criteria and
standards used by the Secretary to determine whether to approve or
disapprove applications submitted under section 502 of the Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976

[[Page 1924]]
119 STAT. 1924

(45 U.S.C. 822).  NOTE: Procedures. Guidelines.  The Secretary of
Transportation shall ensure adequate procedures and guidelines are in
place to permit the filing of complete applications within 30 days of
such publication.

SEC. 9004. REPORT REGARDING IMPACT ON PUBLIC SAFETY OF TRAIN TRAVEL IN
COMMUNITIES WITHOUT GRADE SEPARATION.

(a) Study.--The Secretary of Transportation shall, in consultation
with State and local government officials, conduct a study of the impact
of blocked highway-railroad grade crossings on the ability of emergency
responders to perform public safety and security duties.
(b) Report on the Impact of Blocked Highway-Railroad Grade Crossings
on Emergency Responders.--Not later than 1 year after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit the results of the
study and recommendations for reducing the impact of blocked crossings
on emergency response to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation and the House of Representatives Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure.

SEC. 9005. WELDED RAIL AND TANK CAR SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS.

(a) Track Standards.--Section 20142 of title 49, United States Code,
is amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(e) Track Standards.--
``(1)  NOTE: Deadline.  In general.--Within 90 days after
the date of enactment of this subsection, the Federal Railroad
Administration shall--
``(A) require each track owner using continuous
welded rail track to include procedures (in its
procedures filed with the Administration pursuant to
section 213.119 of title 49, Code of Federal
Regulations) to improve the identification of cracks in
rail joint bars;
``(B) instruct Administration track inspectors to
obtain copies of the most recent continuous welded rail
programs of each railroad within the inspectors' areas
of responsibility and require that inspectors use those
programs when conducting track inspections; and
``(C) establish a program to review continuous
welded rail joint bar inspection data from railroads and
Administration track inspectors periodically.
``(2) Inspection.--Whenever the Administration determines
that it is necessary or appropriate, the Administration may
require railroads to increase the frequency of inspection, or
improve the methods of inspection, of joint bars in continuous
welded rail.''.

(b) Tank Car Standards.--
(1) Amendment.--Subchapter II of chapter 201 of title 49,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new section:

``Sec. 20155. Tank cars

``(a)  NOTE: Deadlines.  Standards.--The Federal Railroad
Administration shall--
``(1) validate a predictive model to quantify the relevant
dynamic forces acting on railroad tank cars under accident
conditions within 1 year after the date of enactment of this
section; and

[[Page 1925]]
119 STAT. 1925

``(2) initiate a  NOTE: Regulations.  rulemaking to
develop and implement appropriate design standards for
pressurized tank cars within 18 months after the date of
enactment of this section.

``(b) Older Tank Car Impact Resistance Analysis and Report.--Within
1 year after the date of enactment of this section the Federal Railroad
Administration shall conduct a comprehensive analysis to determine the
impact resistance of the steels in the shells of pressure tank cars
constructed before 1989. Within 6 months after completing that analysis
the Administration shall transmit a report, including recommendations
for reducing any risk of catastrophic fracture and separation of such
cars, to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the
Senate and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the
House of Representatives.''.
(2) Table of sections amendment.--The table of sections for
subchapter II of chapter 201 of title 49, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new item:

``20155. Tank cars.''.

SEC. 9006.  NOTE: 45 USC 1207 note.  ALASKA RAILROAD.

(a) Grants.--The Secretary shall make grants to the Alaska Railroad
for capital rehabilitation and improvements benefiting its passenger
operations.
(b) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to carry out this section such sums as may be necessary.

SEC. 9007. STUDY OF RAIL TRANSPORTATION AND REGULATION.

(a)  NOTE: Deadline.  Requirement.--Not later than 180 days after
the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Transportation shall
enter into an arrangement with the Transportation Research Board of the
National Academy of Sciences to conduct a comprehensive study of the
Nation's railroad transportation system since the enactment of the
Staggers Rail Act of 1980. The study shall address and make
recommendations on--
(1) the performance of the Nation's major railroads
regarding service levels, service quality, and rates;
(2) the projected demand for freight transportation over the
next two decades and the constraints limiting the railroads'
ability to meet that demand;
(3) the effectiveness of public policy in balancing the need
for railroads to earn adequate returns with those of shippers
for reasonable rates and adequate service; and
(4) the future role of the Surface Transportation Board in
regulating railroad rates, service levels, and the railroads'
common carrier obligations, particularly as railroads may become
revenue adequate.

(b) Report to Congress.--Not later than 1 year after the Secretary
and the Transportation Research Board enter into the arrangement for the
study, the Secretary shall transmit the results of the study conducted
under subsection (a) to the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and the Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate.
(c) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary of Transportation $1,000,000

[[Page 1926]]
119 STAT. 1926

for fiscal year 2006 and $800,000 for fiscal year 2007 to carry out this
section. Such sums are to remain available until expended.

SEC. 9008. HAWAII PORT INFRASTRUCTURE EXPANSION PROGRAM.

(a) In General.--Amounts appropriated or otherwise made available
for any fiscal year for an intermodal or marine facility comprising a
component of the Hawaii Port Infrastructure Expansion Program, and any
non-Federal contributions made available for that program, shall be--
(1) transferred to and administered by the Administrator of
the Maritime Administration; and
(2) subject only to such conditions and requirements as may
be required by the Maritime Administration.

(b) Intermodal Authorizations.--
(1) Intermodal centers.--Notwithstanding any other provision
of law, an intermodal or marine facility described in subsection
(a) is eligible for funding under section 5309(m)(1)(C) of title
49, United States Code.
(2) Intermodal surface freight transfer facility
eligibility.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an
intermodal or marine facility described in subsection (a) is
deemed to be eligible to be an intermodal surface freight
transfer facility for the purposes of section 181(9)(D) of title
23, United States Code.

(c) Authorization of Appropriations.--
(1) In general.--There are authorized to be appropriated to
the Secretary of Transportation such sums as may be necessary to
carry out this section.
(2) No limitation.--Nothing in paragraph (1) shall be
construed--
(A) to limit or prevent the transfer or
administration under subsection (a) of any funds
appropriated or otherwise made available pursuant to any
other authorization of appropriations or by any
appropriations Act; or
(B) to limit the application of subsection (b) to
title 49, United States Code.

TITLE X--MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

Subtitle  NOTE: Sportfishing and Recreational Boating Safety Act of
2005.  A--Sportfishing and Recreational Boating Safety

SEC. 10101.  NOTE: 16 USC 777 note.  SHORT TITLE.

This subtitle may be cited as the ``Sportfishing and Recreational
Boating Safety Act of 2005''.

CHAPTER 1--DINGELL-JOHNSON SPORT FISH RESTORATION ACT AMENDMENTS

SEC. 10111. AMENDMENT OF DINGELL-JOHNSON SPORT FISH RESTORATION ACT.

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

[[Page 1927]]
119 STAT. 1927

of the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act (16 U.S.C. 777 et
seq.).

SEC. 10112. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

(a) In General.--Section 3 (16 U.S.C. 777b) is amended--
(1) by striking ``the succeeding fiscal year.'' in the third
sentence and inserting ``succeeding fiscal years.''; and
(2) by striking ``in carrying on the research program of the
Fish and Wildlife Service in respect to fish of material value
for sport and recreation.'' and inserting ``to supplement the 57
percent of the balance of each annual appropriation to be
apportioned among the States, as provided for in section
4(c).''.

(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) In general.--The first sentence of section 3 (16 U.S.C.
777b) is amended--
(A) by striking ``Sport Fish Restoration Account''
and inserting ``Sport Fish Restoration and Boating Trust
Fund''; and
(B) by striking ``that Account'' and inserting
``that Trust Fund, except as provided in section 9504(c)
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986''.
(2)  NOTE: 16 USC 777b note.  Effective date.--The
amendments made by paragraph (1) take effect on October 1, 2005.

SEC. 10113. DIVISION OF ANNUAL APPROPRIATIONS.

Section 4 (16 U.S.C. 777c) is amended--
(1) by striking subsections (a) through (c) and
redesignating subsections (d), (e), (f), and (g) as subsections
(b), (c), (d), and (e), respectively;
(2) by inserting before subsection (b), as redesignated by
paragraph (1), the following:

``(a) In General.--For each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009, the
balance of each annual appropriation made in accordance with the
provisions of section 3 remaining after the distributions for
administrative expenses and other purposes under subsection (b) and for
multistate conservation grants under section 14 shall be distributed as
follows:
``(1) Coastal wetlands.--An amount equal to 18.5 percent to
the Secretary of the Interior for distribution as provided in
the Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection, and Restoration Act
(16 U.S.C. 3951 et seq.).
``(2) Boating safety.--An amount equal to 18.5 percent to
the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is
operating for State recreational boating safety programs under
section 13106 of title 46, United States Code.
``(3) Clean vessel act.--An amount equal to 2.0 percent to
the Secretary of the Interior for qualified projects under
section 5604(c) of the Clean Vessel Act of 1992 (33 U.S.C. 1322
note).
``(4) Boating infrastructure.--An amount equal to 2.0
percent to the Secretary of the Interior for obligation for
qualified projects under section 7404(d) of the Sportfishing and
Boating Safety Act of 1998 (16 U.S.C. 777g-1(d)).
``(5) National outreach and communications.--An amount equal
to 2.0 percent to the Secretary of the Interior for the National
Outreach and Communications Program under section 8(d) of this
Act. Such amounts shall remain available

[[Page 1928]]
119 STAT. 1928

for 3 fiscal years, after which any portion thereof that is
unobligated by the Secretary for that program may be expended by
the Secretary under subsection (c) of this section.'';
(3) by striking (b)(1)(A), as redesignated by paragraph (1),
and inserting the following:
``(A) Set-aside for administration.--From the annual
appropriation made in accordance with section 3, for
each of fiscal years 2006 through 2009, the Secretary of
the Interior may use no more than the amount specified
in subparagraph (B) for the fiscal year for expenses for
administration incurred in the implementation of this
Act, in accordance with this section and section 9. The
amount specified in subparagraph (B) for a fiscal year
may not be included in the amount of the annual
appropriation distributed under subsection (a) for the
fiscal year.'';
(4) by striking ``Secretary of the Interior, after the
distribution, transfer, use, and deduction under subsections
(a), (b), (c), and (d), respectively, and after deducting
amounts used for grants under section 14, shall apportion the
remainder'' in subsection (c), as redesignated by paragraph (1),
and inserting ``Secretary, for each of fiscal years 2006 through
2009, after the distribution, transfer, use and deduction under
subsection (b), and after deducting amounts used for grants
under section 14 of this title, shall apportion 57 percent of
the balance'';
(5) by striking ``per centum'' each place it appears in
subsection (c), as redesignated by paragraph (1), and inserting
``percent'';
(6) by striking ``subsections (a), (b)(3)(A), (b)(3)(B), and
(c)'' in paragraph (1) of subsection (e), as redesignated by
paragraph (1), and inserting ``paragraphs (1), (3), (4), and (5)
of subsection (a)''; and
(7) by adding at the end the following:

``(f) Transfer of Certain Funds.--Amounts available under paragraphs
(3) and (4) of subsection (a) that are unobligated by the Secretary of
the Interior after 3 fiscal years shall be transferred to the Secretary
of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating and shall be
expended for State recreational boating safety programs under section
13106(a) of title 46, United States Code.''.

SEC. 10114. MAINTENANCE OF PROJECTS.

Section 8 (16 U.S.C. 777g) is amended--
(1) by striking ``in carrying out the research program of
the Fish and Wildlife Service in respect to fish of material
value for sport or recreation.'' in subsection (b)(2) and
inserting ``to supplement the 57 percent of the balance of each
annual appropriation to be apportioned among the States under
section 4(c).''; and
(2) by striking ``subsection (c) or (d)'' in subsection
(d)(3) and inserting ``subsection (a)(5) or subsection (b)''.

SEC. 10115. BOATING INFRASTRUCTURE.

Section 7404(d)(1) of the Sportfishing and Boating Safety Act of
1998 (16 U.S.C. 777g-1(d)(1)) is amended by striking ``section
4(b)(3)(B) of the Act entitled `An Act to provide that the United States
shall aid the States in fish restoration and management projects, and
for other purposes,' approved August 9, 1950, as

[[Page 1929]]
119 STAT. 1929

amended by this Act,'' and inserting ``section 4(a)(4) of the Dingell-
Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act''.

SEC. 10116. REQUIREMENTS AND RESTRICTIONS CONCERNING USE OF AMOUNTS FOR
EXPENSES FOR ADMINISTRATION.

Section 9 (16 U.S.C. 777h) is amended--
(1) by striking ``section 4(d)(1)'' in subsection (a) and
inserting ``section 4(b)''; and
(2) by striking ``section 4(d)(1)'' in subsection (b)(1) and
inserting ``section 4(b)''.

SEC. 10117. PAYMENTS OF FUNDS TO AND COOPERATION WITH PUERTO RICO, THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, GUAM, AMERICAN SAMOA, THE COMMONWEALTH
OF THE NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS, AND THE VIRGIN ISLANDS.

Section 12 (16 U.S.C. 777k) is amended by striking ``in carrying on
the research program of the Fish and Wildlife Service in respect to fish
of material value for sport or recreation.'' and inserting ``to
supplement the 57 percent of the balance of each annual appropriation to
be apportioned among the States under section 4(b) of this Act.''.

SEC. 10118. MULTISTATE CONSERVATION GRANT PROGRAM.

Section 14 (16 U.S.C. 777m) is amended--
(1) by striking so much of subsection (a) as precedes
paragraph (2) and inserting the following:

``(a) In General.--
``(1) Amount for grants.--For each of fiscal years 2006
through 2009, not more than $3,000,000 of each annual
appropriation made in accordance with the provisions of section
3 shall be distributed to the Secretary of the Interior for
making multistate conservation project grants in accordance with
this section.'';
(2) by striking ``section 4(e)'' each place it appears in
subsection (a)(2)(B) and inserting ``section 4(c)''; and
(3) by striking ``Of the balance of each annual
appropriation made under section 3 remaining after the
distribution and use under subsections (a), (b), and (c) of
section 4 for each fiscal year and after deducting amounts used
for grants under subsection (a)--'' in subsection (e) and
inserting ``Of amounts made available under section 4(b) for
each fiscal year--''.

SEC. 10119. EXPENDITURE OF REMAINING BALANCE IN BOAT SAFETY ACCOUNT.

The Act is amended by redesignating section 15 (16 U.S.C. 777 note)
as section 16, and by inserting after section 14 the following:

``SEC. 15.  NOTE: 16 USC 777n.  EXPENDITURE OF REMAINING BALANCE IN
BOAT SAFETY ACCOUNT.

``Amounts remaining in the Boat Safety Account on October 1, 2005,
and amounts thereafter credited to the Account under section 9602(b) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, shall be available, without further
appropriation, for making expenditures before October 1, 2010, to carry
out the purposes of this section and shall be distributed as follows:
``(1) In fiscal year 2006, $28,155,000 shall be
distributed--

[[Page 1930]]
119 STAT. 1930

``(A) under section 4 of this Act in the following
manner:
``(i) $11,200,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (a)(2) of that section;
``(ii) $1,245,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (a)(3) of that section;
``(iii) $1,245,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (a)(4) of that section;
``(iv) $1,245,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (a)(5) of that section;
and
``(v) $12,800,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (b) of that section;
and
``(B) under section 14 of this Act, $420,000, to be
added to funds available under subsection (a)(1) of that
section.
``(2) In fiscal year 2007, $22,419,000 shall be
distributed--
``(A) under section 4 of this Act in the following
manner:
``(i) $8,075,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (a)(2) of that section;
``(ii) $713,000 to be added to funds available
under subsection (a)(3) of that section;
``(iii) $713,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (a)(4) of that section;
``(iv) $713,000 to be added to funds available
under subsection (a)(5) of that section; and
``(v) $11,925,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (b) of this Act; and
``(B) under section 14 of this Act, $280,000 to be
added to funds available under subsection (a)(1) of that
section.
``(3) In fiscal year 2008, $17,139,000 shall be
distributed--
``(A) under section 4 of this Act in the following
manner:
``(i) $6,800,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (a)(2) of that section;
``(ii) $333,000 to be added to funds available
under subsection (a)(3) of that section;
``(iii) $333,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (a)(4) of that section;
``(iv) $333,000 to be added to funds available
under subsection (a)(5) of that section; and
``(v) $9,200,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (b) of that section;
and
``(B) under section 14 of this Act, $140,000, to be
added to funds available under subsection (a)(1) of that
section.
``(4) In fiscal year 2009, $12,287,000 shall be
distributed--
``(A) under section 4 of this Act in the following
manner:
``(i) $5,100,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (a)(2) of that section;
``(ii) $48,000 to be added to funds available
under subsection (a)(3) of that section;
``(iii) $48,000 to be added to funds available
under subsection (a)(4) of that section;
``(iv) $48,000 to be added to funds available
under subsection (a)(5) of that section; and
``(v) $6,900,000 to be added to funds
available under subsection (b) of that section;
and
``(B) under section 14 of this Act, $143,000, to be
added to funds available under subsection (a)(1) of that
section.

[[Page 1931]]
119 STAT. 1931

``(5) In fiscal year 2010, all remaining funds in the
Account shall be distributed under section 4 of this Act in the
following manner:
``(A) one-third to be added to funds available under
subsection (b); and
``(B) two-thirds to be added to funds available
under subsection (h).''.

CHAPTER 2--CLEAN VESSEL ACT OF 1992 AMENDMENTS

SEC. 10131. GRANT PROGRAM.

Section 5604(c)(2) of the Clean Vessel Act of 1992 (33 U.S.C. 1322
note) is amended--
(1) by striking subparagraph (A);
(2) by redesignating subparagraphs (B) and (C) as
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively; and
(3) in subparagraph (A), as so redesignated, by striking
``receptions'' and inserting ``reception''.

CHAPTER 3--RECREATIONAL BOATING SAFETY PROGRAM AMENDMENTS

SEC. 10141. TECHNICAL CORRECTION.

Section 13102(a) of title 46, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``the Boat Safety Account'' and inserting ``the Sport Fish
Restoration and Boating Trust Fund''.

SEC. 10142. AVAILABILITY OF ALLOCATIONS.

Section 13104(a) of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``2 years'' in paragraph (1) and inserting
``3 years''; and
(2) by striking ``2-year'' in paragraph (2) and inserting
``3-year''.

SEC. 10143. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR STATE RECREATIONAL
BOATING SAFETY PROGRAMS.

Section 13106 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)(1) by striking ``the amount
appropriated from the Boat Safety Account for that fiscal year''
and inserting ``the amount made available from the Boat Safety
Account for that fiscal year under section 10119 of the
Sportfishing and Recreational Boating Safety Act of 2005'';
(2) in subsection (a)(1) by striking ``section 4(b) of the
Act of August 9, 1950 (16 U.S.C. 777c(b))'' and inserting
``subsection (a)(2) of section 4 of the Dingell-Johnson Sport
Fish Restoration Act (16 U.S.C. 777c(a)(2))'';
(3) in subsection (a)(2) by striking ``not less than one
percent and'';
(4) in subsection (c)(1)--
(A) by striking ``Secretary of Transportation under
paragraph (5)(C) of section 4(b)'' and inserting
``Secretary under subsection (a)(2) of section 4'';
(B) by striking ``(16 U.S.C. 777c(b))'' and
inserting ``(16 U.S.C. 777c(a)(2)'';
(C) by striking ``$3,333,336'' and inserting
``$4,266,666'';
(D) by striking ``$1,333,336'' and inserting ``not
less than $2,083,333''; and

[[Page 1932]]
119 STAT. 1932

(5) in subsection (c)(3) by striking ``until expended.'' and
inserting ``during the 2 succeeding fiscal years. Any amount
that is unexpected or unobligated at the end of the 3-year
period during which it is available shall be withdrawn by the
Secretary and allocated to the States in addition to any other
amounts available for allocation in the fiscal year in which
they are withdrawn or the following fiscal year.''.

Subtitle B--Other Miscellaneous Provisions

SEC. 10201.  NOTE: 15 USC 657g note.  NOTICE REGARDING PARTICIPATION
OF SMALL BUSINESS CONCERNS.

The Secretary shall notify each State or political subdivision of a
State to which the Secretary awards a grant or other Federal funds of
the criteria for participation by a small business concern in any
program or project that is funded, in whole or in part, by the Federal
Government under section 155 of the Small Business Reauthorization and
Manufacturing Assistance Act of 2004 (15 U.S.C. 567g).

SEC. 10202.  NOTE: 42 USC 300d-4.  EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES.

(a) Federal Interagency Committee on Emergency Medical Services.--
(1) Establishment.--The Secretary of Transportation, the
Secretary of Health and Human Services, and the Secretary of
Homeland Security, acting through the Under Secretary for
Emergency Preparedness and Response, shall establish a Federal
Interagency Committee on Emergency Medical Services.
(2) Membership.--The Interagency Committee shall consist of
the following officials, or their designees:
(A) The Administrator, National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration.
(B) The Director, Preparedness Division, Directorate
of Emergency Preparedness and Response of the Department
of Homeland Security.
(C) The Administrator, Health Resources and Services
Administration, Department of Health and Human Services.
(D) The Director, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Department of Health and Human Services.
(E) The Administrator, United States Fire
Administration, Directorate of Emergency Preparedness
and Response of the Department of Homeland Security.
(F) The Administrator, Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human
Services.
(G) The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and
Readiness.
(H) The Director, Indian Health Service, Department
of Health and Human Services.
(I) The Chief, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Federal Communications Commission.
(J) A representative of any other Federal agency
appointed by the Secretary of Transportation or the
Secretary of Homeland Security through the Under
Secretary

[[Page 1933]]
119 STAT. 1933

for Emergency Preparedness and Response, in consultation
with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, as
having a significant role in relation to the purposes of
the Interagency Committee.
(K) A State emergency medical services director
appointed by the Secretary.
(3) Purposes.--The purposes of the Interagency Committee are
as follows:
(A) To ensure coordination among the Federal
agencies involved with State, local, tribal, or regional
emergency medical services and 9-1-1 systems.
(B) To identify State, local, tribal, or regional
emergency medical services and 9-1-1 needs.
(C) To recommend new or expanded programs, including
grant programs, for improving State, local, tribal, or
regional emergency medical services and implementing
improved emergency medical services communications
technologies, including wireless 9-1-1.
(D) To identify ways to streamline the process
through which Federal agencies support State, local,
tribal or regional emergency medical services.
(E) To assist State, local, tribal or regional
emergency medical services in setting priorities based
on identified needs.
(F) To advise, consult, and make recommendations on
matters relating to the implementation of the
coordinated State emergency medical services programs.
(4) Administration.--The Administrator of the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, in cooperation with the
Administrator of the Health Resources and Services
Administration of the Department of Health and Human Services
and the Director of the Preparedness Division, Directorate of
Emergency Preparedness and Response of the Department of
Homeland Security, shall provide administrative support to the
Interagency Committee, including scheduling meetings, setting
agendas, keeping minutes and records, and producing reports.
(5) Leadership.--The members of the Interagency Committee
shall select a chairperson of the Committee each year.
(6) Meetings.--The Interagency Committee shall meet as
frequently as is determined necessary by the chairperson of the
Committee.
(7) Annual reports.--The Interagency Committee shall prepare
an annual report to Congress regarding the Committee's
activities, actions, and recommendations.

SEC. 10203. 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

[[Page 1934]]
119 STAT. 1934

1986, within Alaska, Hawaii, or any
territory or possession of the United
States outside the 48 contiguous
States.''.

SEC. 10204. CATASTROPHIC HURRICANE EVACUATION PLANS.

(a) In General.--The Secretary and the Secretary of Homeland
Security (referred to in this section as the ``Secretaries''), in
coordination with the Gulf Coast States and contiguous States, shall
jointly review and assess Federal and State evacuation plans for
catastrophic hurricanes impacting the Gulf Coast Region and report its
findings and recommendations to Congress.
(b) Consultation.--In carrying out this section, the Secretaries
shall consult with appropriate Federal, State, and local transportation
and emergency management agencies.
(c) Contents.--In conducting the review, the Secretaries shall
consider, at a minimum--
(1) all practical modes of transportation available for
evacuations;
(2) the extent to which evacuation plans are coordinated
with neighboring States;
(3) methods of communicating evacuation plans and preparing
citizens in advance of evacuations; and
(4) methods of coordinating communication with evacuees
during plan execution.

(d) Report.--The Secretaries shall submit to Congress a report of
their findings under this section and recommendations not later than
October 1, 2006.

SEC. 10205. INTERMODAL TRANSPORTATION FACILITY EXPANSION.

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

SEC. 10206.  NOTE: 16 USC 1855 note.  ELIGIBILITY TO PARTICIPATE IN
WESTERN ALASKA COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT QUOTA PROGRAM.

A community shall 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 to participate in such
program by the National Marine Fisheries Service on April 19,
1999.

SEC. 10207.  NOTE: Alabama.  RAIL REHABILITATION AND BRIDGE REPAIR.

There are authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary of
Transportation for rail rehabilitation and bridge repair in the State of
Alabama for the period encompassing fiscal years 2006 through 2010 such
sums as may be necessary, for work on--
(1) the Luxapalila Valley Railroad from the Mississippi and
Alabama State line east to Belk, Alabama;
(2) the Meridian and Bigbee Railroad from the Mississippi
and Alabama State line east to Burkeville, Alabama;
(3) the Three Notch Railroad from Georgiana, Alabama, to
Andalusia, Alabama;

[[Page 1935]]
119 STAT. 1935

(4) the Wiregrass Railroad in Alabama;
(5) the Alabama and Gulf Coast Railroad from the Mississippi
and Alabama State line southeast to Mobile and Atmore in
Alabama; and
(6) the railroad bridge that spans the Coosa River,
connecting the east and west sides of the City of Gadsden,
Alabama.

SEC. 10208. RENTED OR LEASED MOTOR VEHICLES.

(a) In General.--Subchapter I  NOTE: 49 USC 30101.  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,

[[Page 1936]]
119 STAT. 1936

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.''.

SEC. 10209. MIDWAY ISLAND.

(a) Grants.--In order to provide for both the safety of commercial
and military aviation operations and the support of resource management
in the remote Pacific, the Commandant of the Coast Guard, in
consultation with the Secretary of Transportation and the Undersecretary
of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere, shall develop such memoranda of
understanding as may be necessary, and to make grants or otherwise
provide funding, to provide for the operation of the Midway Airport, the
rightsizing of necessary infrastructure and support facilities, the
maintenance and development of the Airport, and other related matters.
(b) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to the United States Coast Guard, the Department of
Transportation, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
such sums as may be necessary to carry out this section for fiscal years
2006 through 2009.

SEC. 10210. DEMONSTRATION OF DIGITAL PROJECT SIMULATION.

(a) In General.--
(1) Digital project simulation demonstration project.--The
Secretary shall establish a demonstration initiative using
digital project simulation to plan, design, and construct the
project listed in item 459 designated in section 1934 of the
SAFETEA-LU.
(2) Cooperation.--To be eligible to receive funds made
available for the project referred to in paragraph (1), the
project sponsor, including private entities working with the
project sponsor on the project, and the State shall enter into
an agreement to work cooperatively with the Secretary to use
digital project simulation for such project and to evaluate the
effectiveness of using such simulation.

(b) Simulation Program Development.--
(1) In general.--In establishing the demonstration
initiative under subsection (a), the Secretary shall provide, to
the extent practicable, that--
(A) the planning, design, and construction of the
project is carried out by using digital project
simulation to achieve savings and efficiency in
investment planning, project delivery coordination, and
facility management; and
(B) in constructing such project, the project
sponsor use digital lifecycle management techniques,
including the use of embedded electronics and software
to monitor performance of the infrastructure and provide
safety and security information to the project sponsor.
(2) Collaboration.--The Secretary, the State, and the
project sponsor may consult with technology companies and

[[Page 1937]]
119 STAT. 1937

educational institutions that strive to develop and enhance
technologies, including digital project simulation, that save
money and time by using efficient methods of design,
construction, and operation for transportation infrastructure
projects.

(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after completion of
the project described in subsection (a), 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 detailed report comparing the
application of digital project simulation for such project to
more traditional approaches to planning, design, and
construction.
(2) Performance measures and recommendations.--The report
shall also include--
(A) a description of the performance measures
applied, including cost comparisons and length of
construction; and
(B) recommendations, if any, for administrative or
legislative action.

(d) Definition.--For purposes of this section, the term ``digital
project simulation'' means computer-assisted three-dimensional
technology and digital lifecycle management.

SEC. 10211. ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS.

(a) Oklahoma.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (referred to in
this section as the ``Administrator'') determines that a regulatory
program submitted by the State of Oklahoma for approval by the
Administrator under a law administered by the Administrator meets
applicable requirements of the law, and the Administrator approves the
State to administer the State program under the law with respect to
areas in the State that are not Indian country, on request of the State,
the Administrator shall approve the State to administer the State
program in the areas of the State that are in Indian country, without
any further demonstration of authority by the State.
(b) Treatment as State.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
the Administrator may treat an Indian tribe in the State of Oklahoma as
a State under a law administered by the Administrator only if--
(1) the Indian tribe meets requirements under the law to be
treated as a State; and
(2) the Indian tribe and the agency of the State of Oklahoma
with federally delegated program authority enter into a
cooperative agreement, subject to review and approval of the
Administrator after notice and opportunity for public hearing,
under which the Indian tribe and that State agency agree to
treatment of the Indian tribe as a State and to jointly plan
administer program requirements.

SEC. 10212. RESCISSION OF UNOBLIGATED BALANCES.

(a) In General.--On September 30, 2009, $8,543,000,000 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,

[[Page 1938]]
119 STAT. 1938

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 $8,543,000,000 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 (2) or
(3) of section 133(d) of that title, section 144 of that title,
section 149 of that title, or section 1404 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

[[Page 1939]]
119 STAT. 1939

safety programs, transportation enhancement activities, and division
between urbanized areas of over 200,000 population and other areas.

SEC. 10213. TRIBAL LAND.

Section 707(a) of Public Law 106-568 (25 U.S.C. 1041e(a)) is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1) by striking ``(1) In general.--''; and
(2) by striking paragraph (2).

Subtitle C--Specific Vehicle Safety-related Rulings

SEC. 10301. VEHICLE ROLLOVER PREVENTION AND CRASH MITIGATION.

(a) In General.--Subchapter II of chapter 301 is amended by adding
at the end the following:

``Sec. 30128.  NOTE: 49 USC 30128.  Vehicle rollover prevention and
crash mitigation

``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall initiate rulemaking
proceedings, for the purpose of establishing rules or standards that
will reduce vehicle rollover crashes and mitigate deaths and injuries
associated with such crashes for motor vehicles with a gross vehicle
weight rating of not more than 10,000 pounds.
``(b) Rollover Prevention.--One of the rulemaking proceedings
initiated under subsection (a) shall be to establish performance
criteria to reduce the occurrence of rollovers consistent with stability
enhancing technologies.  NOTE: Deadlines.  The Secretary shall issue a
proposed rule in this proceeding by rule by October 1, 2006, and a final
rule by April 1, 2009.

``(c)  NOTE: Deadlines.  Occupant Ejection Prevention.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall also initiate a
rulemaking proceeding to establish performance standards to
reduce complete and partial ejections of vehicle occupants from
outboard seating positions. In formulating the standards the
Secretary shall consider various ejection mitigation systems.
The Secretary shall issue a final rule under this paragraph no
later than October 1, 2009.
``(2) Door locks and door retention.--The Secretary shall
complete the rulemaking proceeding initiated to upgrade Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 206, relating to door locks
and door retention, no later than 30 months after the date of
enactment of this section.

``(d) Protection of Occupants.--One of the rulemaking proceedings
initiated under subsection (a) shall be to establish performance
criteria to upgrade Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 216
relating to roof strength for driver and passenger sides. The Secretary
may consider industry and independent dynamic tests that realistically
duplicate the actual forces transmitted during a rollover crash. The
Secretary shall issue a  NOTE: Deadlines.  proposed rule by December
31, 2005, and a final rule by July 1, 2008.

``(e) Deadlines.--If the Secretary determines that the deadline for
a final rule under this section cannot be met, the Secretary shall--

[[Page 1940]]
119 STAT. 1940

``(1)  NOTE: Notification.  notify the Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation and the House of
Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce and explain why
that deadline cannot be met; and
``(2) establish a new deadline.''.

SEC. 10302.  NOTE: 49 USC 30101 note.  SIDE-IMPACT CRASH PROTECTION
RULEMAKING.

(a) Rulemaking.--The Secretary shall complete a rulemaking
proceeding under chapter 301 of title 49, United States Code, to
establish a standard designed to enhance passenger motor vehicle
occupant protection, in all seating positions, in side impact crashes.
The  NOTE: Deadline.  Secretary shall issue a final rule by July 1,
2008.

(b) Deadlines.--If the Secretary determines that the deadline for a
final rule under this section cannot be met, the Secretary shall--
(1)  NOTE: Notification.  notify the Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation and the House of
Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce and explain why
that deadline cannot be met; and
(2) establish a new deadline.

SEC. 10303.  NOTE: Deadlines. Reports.  TIRE RESEARCH.

Within 2 years after the date of enactment of this Act, the
Secretary shall transmit a report to the Senate Committee on Commerce,
Science, and Transportation and the House of Representatives Committee
on Energy and Commerce on research conducted to address tire aging. The
report shall include a summary of any Federal agency findings,
activities, conclusions, and recommendations concerning tire aging and
recommendations for potential rulemaking regarding tire aging.
(a) Conforming Amendment.--The chapter analysis for chapter 301 is
amended by inserting after the item relating to section 30127 the
following:

``30128. Vehicle accident ejection protection.''.

SEC. 10304.  NOTE: 49 USC 30101 note.  VEHICLE BACKOVER AVOIDANCE
TECHNOLOGY STUDY.

(a) In General.--The Administrator of the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration shall conduct a study of effective methods for
reducing the incidence of injury and death outside of parked passenger
motor vehicles with a gross vehicle weight rating of not more than
10,000 pounds attributable to movement of such
vehicles.  NOTE: Reports. Deadlines.  The Administrator shall complete
the study within 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act and
report its findings to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation and the House of Representatives Committee on Energy and
Commerce not later than 15 months after the date of enactment of this
Act.

(b) Specific Issues To Be Covered.--The study required by subsection
(a) shall--
(1) include an analysis of backover prevention technology;
(2) identify, evaluate, and compare the available
technologies for detecting people or objects behind a motor
vehicle with a gross vehicle weight rating of not more than
10,000 pounds for their accuracy, effectiveness, cost, and
feasibility for installation; and

[[Page 1941]]
119 STAT. 1941

(3) provide an estimate of cost savings that would result
from widespread use of backover prevention devices and
technologies in motor vehicles with a gross vehicle weight
rating of not more than 10,000 pounds, including savings
attributable to the prevention of--
(A) injuries and fatalities; and
(B) damage to bumpers and other motor vehicle parts
and damage to other objects.

SEC. 10305.  NOTE: 49 USC 30101 note.  NONTRAFFIC INCIDENT DATA
COLLECTION.

(a) In General.--In conjunction with the study required in section
10304, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration shall
establish a method to collect and maintain data on the number and types
of injuries and deaths involving motor vehicles with a gross vehicle
weight rating of not more than 10,000 pounds in non-traffic incidents.
(b) Data Collection and Publication.--The Secretary of
Transportation shall publish the data collected under subsection (a) no
less frequently than biennially.

SEC. 10306. STUDY OF SAFETY BELT USE TECHNOLOGIES.

The Secretary shall conduct a review of safety belt use technologies
to consider possible revisions in strategies for achieving further gains
in safety belt use. The Secretary shall complete the study by July 1,
2008.

SEC. 10307. AMENDMENT OF AUTOMOBILE INFORMATION DISCLOSURE ACT.

(a) Safety Labeling Requirement.--Section 3 of the Automobile
Information Disclosure Act (15 U.S.C. 1232) is amended--
(1) by striking ``and'' after the semicolon in subsection
(e);
(2) by inserting ``and'' after the semicolon in subsection
(f)(3);
(3) by striking ``(3).'' in subsection (f)(4) and inserting
``(3);''; and
(4) by adding at the end the following:

``(g) if one or more safety ratings for such automobile have been
assigned and formally published or released by the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration under the New Car Assessment Program,
information about safety ratings that--
``(1) includes a graphic depiction of the number of stars,
or other applicable rating, that corresponds to each such
assigned safety rating displayed in a clearly differentiated
fashion indicating the maximum possible safety rating;
``(2) refers to frontal impact crash tests, side impact
crash tests, and rollover resistance tests (whether or not such
automobile has been assigned a safety rating for such tests);
``(3) contains information describing the nature and meaning
of the crash test data presented and a reference to additional
vehicle safety resources, including http://www.safecar.gov; and
``(4) is presented in a legible, visible, and prominent
fashion and covers at least--
``(A) 8 percent of the total area of the label; or
``(B) an area with a minimum length of 4\1/2\ inches
and a minimum height of 3\1/2\ inches; and

[[Page 1942]]
119 STAT. 1942

``(h) if an automobile has not been tested by the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration under the New Car Assessment Program, or
safety ratings for such automobile have not been assigned in one or more
rating categories, a statement to that effect.''.
(b)  NOTE: Deadline. 15 USC 1232 note.  Regulations.--The
Secretary of Transportation shall issue regulations to ensure that the
labeling requirements under subsections (g) and (h) of section 3 of the
Automobile Information Disclosure Act, as added by subsection (a), are
implemented by September 1, 2007.

(c) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary of Transportation, to accelerate the
testing processes and increasing the number of vehicles tested under the
New Car Assessment Program of the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration--
(1) $15,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(2) $8,134,065 for fiscal year 2007;
(3) $8,418,760 for fiscal year 2008;
(4) $8,713,410 for fiscal year 2009; and
(5) $9,018,385 for fiscal year 2010.

SEC. 10308. POWER WINDOW SWITCHES.

The Secretary shall upgrade Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard
118 to require that power windows in motor vehicles not in excess of
10,000 pounds have switches that raise the window only when the switch
is pulled up or out.  NOTE: Deadline.  The Secretary shall issue a
final rule implementing this section by April 1, 2007.

SEC. 10309.  NOTE: 49 USC 30117.  15-PASSENGER VAN SAFETY.

(a) Testing.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Transportation shall
require the testing of 15-passenger vans as part of the rollover
resistance program of the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration's new car assessment program.
(2) 15-passenger van defined.--In this subsection, the term
``15-passenger van'' means a vehicle that seats 10 to 14
passengers, not including the driver.

(b)  NOTE: 49 USC 30112.  Prohibition of Purchase, Rental, or
Lease of Noncomplying 15-Passenger Vans for School Use.--Section
30112(a) is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``Except as provided''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:

``(2) Except as provided in this section, sections 30113 and 30114
of this title, and subchapter III of this chapter, a school or school
system may not purchase or lease a new 15-passenger van if it will be
used significantly by, or on behalf of, the school or school system to
transport preprimary, primary, or secondary school students to or from
school or an event related to school, unless the 15-passenger van
complies with the motor vehicle standards prescribed for school buses
and multifunction school activity buses under this title. This paragraph
does not apply to the purchase or lease of a 15-passenger van under a
contract executed before the date of enactment of this paragraph.''.
(c)  NOTE: 49 USC 30165.  Penalty.--Section 30165(a) is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph (3); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
``(2) School buses.--

[[Page 1943]]
119 STAT. 1943

``(A) In general.--Notwithstanding paragraph (1),
the maximum amount of a civil penalty under this
paragraph shall be $10,000 in the case of--
``(i) the manufacture, sale, offer for sale,
introduction or delivery for introduction into
interstate commerce, or importation of a school bus or
school bus equipment (as those terms are defined in
section 30125(a) of this title) in violation of section
30112(a)(1) of this title; or
``(ii) a violation of section 30112(a)(2) of this
title.
``(B) Related series of violations.--A separate
violation occurs for each motor vehicle or item of motor
vehicle equipment and for each failure or refusal to
allow or perform an act required by that section. The
maximum penalty under this paragraph for a related
series of violations is $15,000,000.''.

SEC. 10310. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

There are authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary to carry
out this subtitle, chapter 301 of title 49, and part C of subtitle VI of
title 49, United States Code--
(1) $136,000,000 for fiscal year 2006;
(2) $142,800,000 for fiscal year 2007;
(3) $149,900,000 for fiscal year 2008; and
(4) $157,400,000 for fiscal year 2009.

TITLE XI--HIGHWAY REAUTHORIZATION AND EXCISE TAX SIMPLIFICATION

SEC. 11100. AMENDMENT OF 1986 CODE.

Except as otherwise expressly 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, the reference shall be considered to
be made to a section or other provision of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986.

Subtitle A--Trust Fund Reauthorization

SEC. 11101. EXTENSION OF HIGHWAY-RELATED TAXES AND TRUST FUNDS.

(a) Extension of Taxes.--
(1) In general.--The following provisions are each amended
by striking ``2005'' each place it appears and inserting
``2011'':
(A) Section 4041(a)(1)(C)(iii)(I)  NOTE: 26 USC
4041.  (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).

[[Page 1944]]
119 STAT. 1944

(F) Section 4081(d)(1) (relating to termination of
tax on gasoline, diesel fuel, and kerosene).
(2) Extension of tax, etc., on use of certain heavy
vehicles.--The following provisions are each amended by striking
``2006'' each place it appears and inserting ``2011'':
(A) Section 4481(f) (relating to period tax in
effect).
(B) Section 4482(c)(4) (relating to taxable period).
(C) Section 4482(d) (relating to special rule for
taxable period in which termination date occurs).
(3) Floor stocks refunds.--Section 6412(a)(1) (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.--
(1) Certain tax-free sales.--Section 4221(a) (relating to
certain tax-free sales) is amended by striking ``2005'' and
inserting ``2011''.
(2) Termination of exemptions for highway use tax.--Section
4483(h) (relating to termination of exemptions for highway use
tax) is amended by striking ``2006'' and inserting ``2011''.

(c) Extension of Transfers of Certain Taxes.--
(1) In general.--Paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (b),
and paragraphs (2) and (3) of subsection (c), of section 9503
(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.--Subparagraph (A) of section
9503(c)(5) is 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
``2011'', and
(ii) by striking ``2004'' each place it
appears and inserting ``2012''.

(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 to read as follows:
``(1) Federal-aid highway program.--Except as provided in
subsection (e), amounts in the Highway Trust Fund shall be
available, as provided by appropriation Acts, for making
expenditures before September 30, 2009 (October 1, 2009, in the
case of expenditures for administrative expenses), to meet those
obligations of the United States heretofore or hereafter
incurred which are authorized to be paid out of the Highway
Trust Fund under the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users or any other
provision of law which was referred to in this paragraph before

[[Page 1945]]
119 STAT. 1945

the date of the enactment of such Act (as such Act and
provisions of law are in effect on the date of the enactment of
such Act).''.
(B) Mass transit account.--Paragraph (3) of section
9503(e) of such Code is amended to read as follows:
``(3) Expenditures from account.--Amounts in the Mass
Transit Account shall be available, as provided by appropriation
Acts, for making capital or capital related expenditures
(including capital expenditures for new projects) before October
1, 2009, in accordance with the Safe, Accountable, Flexible,
Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users or any
other provision of law which was referred to in this paragraph
before the date of the enactment of such Act (as such Act and
provisions of law are in effect on the date of the enactment of
such Act).''.
(C) Exception to limitation on transfers.--
Subparagraph (B) of section 9503(b)(6) is amended by
striking ``July 31, 2005'' and inserting ``September 30,
2009 (October 1, 2009, in the case of expenditures for
administrative expenses)''.
(2) Aquatic resources trust fund.--
(A) Sport fish restoration account.--Paragraph (2)
of section 9504(b) is amended by striking ``Surface
Transportation Extension Act of 2005, Part V'' each
place it appears and inserting ``Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy
for Users''.
(B) Exception to limitation on transfers.--Paragraph
(2) of section 9504(d) is amended by striking ``July 31,
2005'' and inserting ``October 1, 2009''.

(e)  NOTE: 26 USC 4041 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this
Act.

SEC. 11102. MODIFICATION OF ADJUSTMENTS OF APPORTIONMENTS.

(a) In General.--Section 9503(d) (relating to adjustments for
apportionments) is amended--
(1) by striking ``24-month'' in paragraph (1)(B) and
inserting ``48-month'', and
(2) by striking ``2 years' '' in the heading for paragraph
(3) and inserting ``4 years' ''.

(b) Measurement of Net Highway Receipts.--Section 9503(d) is amended
by redesignating paragraph (6) as paragraph (7) and by inserting after
paragraph (5) the following new paragraph:
``(6) Measurement of net highway receipts.--For purposes of
making any estimate under paragraph (1) of net highway receipts
for periods ending after the date specified in subsection
(b)(1), the Secretary shall treat--
``(A) each expiring provision of subsection (b)
which is related to appropriations or transfers to the
Highway Trust Fund to have been extended through the end
of the 48-month period referred to in paragraph (1)(B),
and
``(B) with respect to each tax imposed under the
sections referred to in subsection (b)(1), the rate of
such tax during the 48-month period referred to in
paragraph (1)(B) to be the same as the rate of such tax
as in effect on the date of such estimate.''.

(c)  NOTE: 26 USC 9503 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this
Act.

[[Page 1946]]
119 STAT. 1946

Subtitle B--Excise Tax Reform and Simplification

PART 1--HIGHWAY EXCISE TAXES

SEC. 11111. MODIFICATION OF GAS GUZZLER TAX.

(a) Uniform Application of Tax.--Subparagraph (A) of section
4064(b)(1) (defining automobile) is amended by striking the second
sentence.
(b)  NOTE: 26 USC 4064 note.  Effective Date.--The amendment made
by this section shall take effect on October 1, 2005.

SEC. 11112. EXCLUSION FOR TRACTORS WEIGHING 19,500 POUNDS OR LESS FROM
FEDERAL EXCISE TAX ON HEAVY TRUCKS AND TRAILERS.

(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 4051 (relating to
imposition of tax) is amended by redesignating paragraph (4) as
paragraph (5) and by inserting after paragraph (3) the following new
paragraph:
``(4) Exclusion for tractors weighing 19,500 pounds or
less.--The tax imposed by paragraph (1) shall not apply to
tractors of the kind chiefly used for highway transportation in
combination with a trailer or semitrailer if--
``(A) such tractor has a gross vehicle weight of
19,500 pounds or less (as determined by the Secretary),
and
``(B) such tractor, in combination with a trailer or
semitrailer, has a gross combined weight of 33,000
pounds or less (as determined by the Secretary).''.

(b)  NOTE: 26 USC 4051 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to sales after September 30, 2005.

SEC. 11113. VOLUMETRIC EXCISE TAX CREDIT FOR ALTERNATIVE FUELS.

(a) Imposition of Tax.--
(1) In general.--Section 4041(a)(2)(B) (relating to rate of
tax) is amended--
(A) by adding ``and'' at the end of clause (i),
(B) by striking clauses (ii) and (iii),
(C) by striking the last sentence, and
(D) by adding after clause (i) the following new
clause:
``(ii) in the case of liquefied natural gas,
any liquid fuel (other than ethanol and methanol)
derived from coal (including peat), and liquid
hydrocarbons derived from biomass (as defined in
section 29(c)(3)), 24.3 cents per gallon.''.
(2) Treatment of compressed natural gas.--Section 4041(a)(3)
(relating to compressed natural gas) is amended--
(A) by striking ``48.54 cents per MCF (determined at
standard temperature and pressure)'' in subparagraph (A)
and inserting ``18.3 cents per energy equivalent of a
gallon of gasoline'', and
(B) by striking ``MCF'' in subparagraph (C) and
inserting ``energy equivalent of a gallon of gasoline''.
(3) New reference.--The heading for paragraph (2) of section
4041(a) is amended by striking ``Special motor fuels'' and
inserting ``Alternative fuels''.

[[Page 1947]]
119 STAT. 1947

(b) Credit for Alternative Fuel and Alternative Fuel Mixtures.--
(1) In general.--Section 6426(a) (relating to allowance of
credits) is amended to read as follows:

``(a) Allowance of Credits.--There shall be allowed as a credit--
``(1) against the tax imposed by section 4081 an amount
equal to the sum of the credits described in subsections (b),
(c), and (e), and
``(2) against the tax imposed by section 4041 an amount
equal to the sum of the credits described in subsection (d).

No credit shall be allowed in the case of the credits described in
subsections (d) and (e) unless the taxpayer is registered under section
4101.''.
(2) Alternative fuel and alternative fuel mixture credit.--
Section 6426 (relating to credit for alcohol fuel and biodiesel
mixtures) is amended by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as
subsections (f) and (g) and by inserting after subsection (c)
the following new subsections:

``(d) Alternative Fuel Credit.--
``(1) In general.--For purposes of this section, the
alternative fuel credit is the product of 50 cents and the
number of gallons of an alternative fuel or gasoline gallon
equivalents of a nonliquid alternative fuel sold by the taxpayer
for use as a fuel in a motor vehicle or motorboat, or so used by
the taxpayer.
``(2) Alternative fuel.--For purposes of this section, the
term `alternative fuel' means--
``(A) liquefied petroleum gas,
``(B) P Series Fuels (as defined by the Secretary of
Energy under section 13211(2) of title 42, United States
Code),
``(C) compressed or liquefied natural gas,
``(D) liquefied hydrogen,
``(E) any liquid fuel derived from coal (including
peat) through the Fischer-Tropsch process, and
``(F) liquid hydrocarbons derived from biomass (as
defined in section 29(c)(3)).
Such term does not include ethanol, methanol, or biodiesel.
``(3) Gasoline gallon equivalent.--For purposes of this
subsection, the term `gasoline gallon equivalent' means, with
respect to any nonliquid alternative fuel, the amount of such
fuel having a Btu content of 124,800 (higher heating value).
``(4) Termination.--This subsection shall not apply to any
sale or use for any period after September 30, 2009 (September
30, 2014, in the case of any sale or use involving liquefied
hydrogen).

``(e) Alternative Fuel Mixture Credit.--
``(1) In general.--For purposes of this section, the
alternative fuel mixture credit is the product of 50 cents and
the number of gallons of alternative fuel used by the taxpayer
in producing any alternative fuel mixture for sale or use in a
trade or business of the taxpayer.
``(2) Alternative fuel mixture.--For purposes of this
section, the term `alternative fuel mixture' means a mixture of
alternative fuel and taxable fuel (as defined in subparagraph
(A), (B), or (C) of section 4083(a)(1)) which--

[[Page 1948]]
119 STAT. 1948

``(A) is sold by the taxpayer producing such mixture
to any person for use as fuel, or
``(B) is used as a fuel by the taxpayer producing
such mixture.
``(3) Termination.--This subsection shall not apply to any
sale or use for any period after September 30, 2009 (September
30, 2014, in the case of any sale or use involving liquefied
hydrogen).''.
(3) Conforming amendments.--
(A) The section heading for section 6426 is amended
by striking ``alcohol fuel and biodiesel'' and inserting
``alcohol fuel, biodiesel, and alternative fuel''.
(B) The table of sections for subchapter B of
chapter 65 is amended by striking ``alcohol fuel and
biodiesel'' in the item relating to section 6426 and
inserting ``alcohol fuel, biodiesel, and alternative
fuel''.
(C) Section 6427(e) is amended--
(i) by inserting ``or the alternative fuel
mixture credit'' after ``biodiesel mixture
credit'' in paragraph (1),
(ii) by redesignating paragraph (2) as
paragraph (3) and paragraph (4) as paragraph (5),
(iii) by inserting after paragraph (1) the
following new paragraph:
``(2) Alternative fuel.--If any person sells or uses an
alternative fuel (as defined in section 6426(d)(2)) for a
purpose described in section 6426(d)(1) in such person's trade
or business, the Secretary shall pay (without interest) to such
person an amount equal to the alternative fuel credit with
respect to such fuel.'',
(iv) by striking ``under paragraph (1) with
respect to any mixture'' in paragraph (3) (as
redesignated by clause (ii)) and inserting ``under
paragraph (1) or (2) with respect to any mixture
or alternative fuel'',
(v) by inserting after paragraph (3) (as so
redesignated) the following new paragraph:
``(4) Registration requirement for alternative fuels.--The
Secretary shall not make any payment under this subsection to
any person with respect to any alternative fuel credit or
alternative fuel mixture credit unless the person is registered
under section 4101.'',
(vi) by striking ``and'' at the end of
paragraph (5)(A) (as redesignated by clause (ii)),
(vii) by striking the period at the end of
paragraph (5)(B) (as so redesignated) and
inserting a comma,
(viii) by adding at the end of paragraph (5)
(as so redesignated) the following new
subparagraphs:
``(C) except as provided in subparagraph (D), any
alternative fuel or alternative fuel mixture (as defined
in subsection (d)(2) or (e)(3) of section 6426) sold or
used after September 30, 2009, and
``(D) any alternative fuel or alternative fuel
mixture (as so defined) involving liquefied hydrogen
sold or used after September 30, 2014.'', and
(ix) by striking ``or Biodiesel Used to
Produce Alcohol Fuel and Biodiesel Mixtures'' in
the

[[Page 1949]]
119 STAT. 1949

heading and inserting ``, Biodiesel, or
Alternative Fuel''.

(c) Additional Registration Requirements.--Section 4101(a)(1)
(relating to registration) is amended by striking ``4041(a)(1)'' and
inserting ``4041(a)''.
(d)  NOTE: 26 USC 4041 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to any sale or use for any period after
September 30, 2006.

PART 2--AQUATIC EXCISE TAXES

SEC. 11115. ELIMINATION OF AQUATIC RESOURCES TRUST FUND AND
TRANSFORMATION OF SPORT FISH RESTORATION ACCOUNT.

(a) Simplification of Funding for Boat Safety Account.--
(1) In general.--Paragraph (4) of section 9503(c) (relating
to transfers from Trust Fund for motorboat fuel taxes) is
amended--
(A) by striking so much of that paragraph as
precedes subparagraph (D),
(B) by redesignating subparagraphs (D) and (E) as
subparagraphs (C) and (D), respectively, and
(C) by inserting before subparagraph (C) (as so
redesignated) the following:
``(4) Transfers from the trust fund for motorboat fuel
taxes.--
``(A) Transfer to land and water conservation
fund.--
``(i) In general.--The Secretary shall pay
from time to time from the Highway Trust Fund into
the land and water conservation fund provided for
in title I of the Land and Water Conservation Fund
Act of 1965 amounts (as determined by the
Secretary) equivalent to the motorboat fuel taxes
received on or after October 1, 2005, and before
October 1, 2011.
``(ii) Limitation.--The aggregate amount
transferred under this subparagraph during any
fiscal year shall not exceed $1,000,000.
``(B) Excess funds transferred to sport fish
restoration and boating trust fund.--Any amounts in the
Highway Trust Fund--
``(i) which are attributable to motorboat fuel
taxes, and
``(ii) which are not transferred from the
Highway Trust Fund under subparagraph (A),
shall be transferred by the Secretary from the Highway
Trust Fund into the Sport Fish Restoration and Boating
Trust Fund.''.
(2) Conforming amendment.--Paragraph (5) of section 9503(c)
is amended by striking ``Account in the Aquatic Resources'' in
subparagraph (A) and inserting ``and Boating''.

(b) Merging of Accounts.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (a) of section 9504 is amended
to read as follows:

``(a) Creation of Trust Fund.--There is hereby established in the
Treasury of the United States a trust fund to be known as the `Sport
Fish Restoration and Boating Trust Fund'. Such

[[Page 1950]]
119 STAT. 1950

Trust Fund shall consist of such amounts as may be appropriated,
credited, or paid to it as provided in this section, section 9503(c)(4),
section 9503(c)(5), or section 9602(b).''.
(2) Conforming amendments.--
(A) Subsection (b) of section 9504, as amended by
section 11101 of this Act, is amended--
(i) by striking ``Account'' in the heading
thereof and inserting ``and Boating Trust Fund'',
(ii) by striking ``Account'' both places it
appears in paragraphs (1) and (2) and inserting
``and Boating Trust Fund'', and
(iii) by striking ``account'' both places it
appears in the headings for paragraphs (1) and (2)
and inserting ``trust fund''.
(B) Subsection (d) of section 9504, as amended by
section 11101 of this Act, is amended--
(i) by striking ``Aquatic Resources'' in the
heading thereof,
(ii) by striking ``any Account in the Aquatic
Resources'' in paragraph (1) and inserting ``the
Sport Fish Restoration and Boating'', and
(iii) by striking ``any such Account'' in
paragraph (1) and inserting ``such Trust Fund''.
(C) Subsection (e) of section 9504 is amended by
striking ``Boat Safety Account and Sport Fish
Restoration Account'' and inserting ``Sport Fish
Restoration and Boating Trust Fund''.
(D) Section 9504 is amended by striking ``aquatic
resources'' in the heading thereof and inserting ``sport
fish restoration and boating''.
(E) The item relating to section 9504 in the table
of sections for subchapter A of chapter 98 is amended by
striking ``aquatic resources'' and inserting ``sport
fish restoration and boating''.
(F) Paragraph (2) of section 1511(e) of the Homeland
Security Act of 2002 (6 U.S.C. 551(e)) is amended by
striking ``Aquatic Resources Trust Fund of the Highway
Trust Fund'' and inserting ``Sport Fish Restoration and
Boating Trust Fund''.

(c) Phaseout of Boat Safety Account.--Subsection (c) of section 9504
is amended to read as follows:
``(c) Expenditures From Boat Safety Account.--Amounts remaining in
the Boat Safety Account on October 1, 2005, and amounts thereafter
credited to the Account under section 9602(b), shall be available,
without further appropriation, for making expenditures before October 1,
2010, to carry out the purposes of section 15 of the Dingell-Johnson
Sport Fish Restoration Act (as in effect on the date of the enactment of
the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A
Legacy for Users). For purposes of section 9602, the Boat Safety Account
shall be treated as a Trust Fund established by this subchapter.''.
(d)  NOTE: 6 USC 551 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall take effect on October 1, 2005.

SEC. 11116. REPEAL OF HARBOR MAINTENANCE TAX ON EXPORTS.

(a) In General.--Subsection (d) of section 4462 (relating to
definitions and special rules) is amended to read as follows:

[[Page 1951]]
119 STAT. 1951

``(d) Nonapplicability of Tax to Exports.--The tax imposed by
section 4461(a) shall not apply to any port use with respect to any
commercial cargo to be exported from the United States.''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Section 4461(c)(1) is amended by adding ``or'' at the
end of subparagraph (A), by striking subparagraph (B), and by
redesignating subparagraph (C) as subparagraph (B).
(2) Section 4461(c)(2) is amended by striking ``imposed--''
and all that follows through ``in any other case,'' and
inserting ``imposed''.

(c)  NOTE: 26 USC 4461 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall take effect before, on, and after the date of the
enactment of this Act.

SEC. 11117. CAP ON EXCISE TAX ON CERTAIN FISHING EQUIPMENT.

(a) In General.--Paragraph (1) of section 4161(a) (relating to sport
fishing equipment) is amended to read as follows:
``(1) Imposition of tax.--
``(A) In general.--There is hereby imposed on the
sale of any article of sport fishing equipment by the
manufacturer, producer, or importer a tax equal to 10
percent of the price for which so sold.
``(B) Limitation on tax imposed on fishing rods and
poles.--The tax imposed by subparagraph (A) on any
fishing rod or pole shall not exceed $10.''.

(b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 4161(a)(2) is amended by
striking ``paragraph (1)'' both places it appears and inserting
``paragraph (1)(A)''.
(c)  NOTE: 26 USC 4161 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to articles sold by the manufacturer,
producer, or importer after September 30, 2005.

PART 3--AERIAL EXCISE TAXES

SEC. 11121. CLARIFICATION OF EXCISE TAX EXEMPTIONS FOR AGRICULTURAL
AERIAL APPLICATORS AND EXEMPTION FOR FIXED-WING AIRCRAFT
ENGAGED IN FORESTRY OPERATIONS.

(a) No Waiver by Farm Owner, Tenant, or Operator Necessary.--
Subparagraph (B) of section 6420(c)(4) (relating to certain farming use
other than by owner, etc.) is amended to read as follows:
``(B) if the person so using the gasoline is an
aerial or other applicator of fertilizers or other
substances and is the ultimate purchaser of the
gasoline, then subparagraph (A) of this paragraph shall
not apply and the aerial or other applicator shall be
treated as having used such gasoline on a farm for
farming purposes.''.

(b) Exemption Includes Fuel Used Between Airfield and Farm.--Section
6420(c)(4), as amended by subsection (a), is amended by adding at the
end the following new flush sentence:
``In the case of an aerial applicator, gasoline shall be treated
as used on a farm for farming purposes if the gasoline is used
for the direct flight between the airfield and one or more
farms.''.

(c) Exemption From Tax on Air Transportation of Persons for Forestry
Purposes Extended to Fixed-Wing Aircraft.--

[[Page 1952]]
119 STAT. 1952

Subsection (f) of section 4261 (relating to tax on air transportation of
persons) is amended to read as follows:
``(f) Exemption for Certain Uses.--No tax shall be imposed under
subsection (a) or (b) on air transportation--
``(1) by helicopter for the purpose of transporting
individuals, equipment, or supplies in the exploration for, or
the development or removal of, hard minerals, oil, or gas, or
``(2) by helicopter or by fixed-wing aircraft for the
purpose of the planting, cultivation, cutting, or transportation
of, or caring for, trees (including logging operations),

but only if the helicopter or fixed-wing aircraft does not take off
from, or land at, a facility eligible for assistance under the Airport
and Airway Development Act of 1970, or otherwise use services provided
pursuant to section 44509 or 44913(b) or subchapter I of chapter 471 of
title 49, United States Code, during such use. In
the  NOTE: Applicability.  case of helicopter transportation described
in paragraph (1), this subsection shall be applied by treating each
flight segment as a distinct flight.''.

(d)  NOTE: 26 USC 4261 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to fuel use or air transportation after
September 30, 2005.

SEC. 11122. MODIFICATION OF RURAL AIRPORT DEFINITION.

(a) In General.--Section 4261(e)(1)(B) (defining rural airport) is
amended--
(1) by inserting ``(in the case of any airport described in
clause (ii)(III), on flight segments of at least 100 miles)''
after ``by air'' in clause (i), and
(2) by striking ``or'' at the end of subclause (I) of clause
(ii), by striking the period at the end of subclause (II) of
clause (ii) and inserting ``, or'', and by adding at the end of
clause (ii) the following new subclause:
``(III) is not connected by paved
roads to another airport.''.

(b)  NOTE: 26 USC 4261 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall take effect on October 1, 2005.

SEC. 11123. EXEMPTION FROM TAXES ON TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED BY
SEAPLANES.

(a) In General.--Section 4261 (relating to imposition of tax) is
amended by redesignating subsection (i) as subsection (j) and by
inserting after subsection (h) the following new subsection:
``(i) Exemption for Seaplanes.--No tax shall be imposed by this
section or section 4271 on any air transportation by a seaplane with
respect to any segment consisting of a takeoff from, and a landing on,
water, but only if the places at which such takeoff and landing occur
have not received and are not receiving financial assistance from the
Airport and Airways Trust Fund.''.
(b) Rate of Fuel Tax for Seaplanes Subject to Exemption.--Subsection
(b) of section 4083 is amended by striking ``section 4261(h)'' and
inserting ``subsection (h) or (i) of section 4261''.
(c)  NOTE: 26 USC 4083 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to transportation beginning after September
30, 2005.

SEC. 11124. CERTAIN SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS EXEMPT FROM TAXES ON AIR
TRANSPORTATION.

(a) In General.--Section 4281 (relating to small aircraft on
nonestablished lines) is amended by adding at the end the following

[[Page 1953]]
119 STAT. 1953

new sentence: ``For purposes of this section, an aircraft shall not be
considered as operated on an established line at any time during which
such aircraft is being operated on a flight the sole purpose of which is
sightseeing.''.
(b)  NOTE: 26 USC 4281 note.  Effective Date.--The amendment made
by this section shall apply with respect to transportation beginning
after September 30, 2005, but shall not apply to any amount paid before
such date for such transportation.

PART 4--TAXES RELATING TO ALCOHOL

SEC. 11125. REPEAL OF SPECIAL OCCUPATIONAL TAXES ON PRODUCERS AND
MARKETERS OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES.

(a) Repeal of Occupational Taxes.--
(1) In general.--The following provisions of part II of
subchapter A of chapter 51 (relating to occupational taxes) are
hereby repealed:
(A)  NOTE: 26 USC 5081.  Subpart A (relating to
proprietors of distilled spirits plants, bonded wine
cellars, etc.).
(B)  NOTE: 26 USC 5091-5093. 26 USC 5111-
5113, 5117. 26 USC 5121-5123.  Subpart B (relating to
brewer).
(C) Subpart D (relating to wholesale dealers) (other
than sections 5114 and 5116).
(D) Subpart E (relating to retail dealers) (other
than section 5124).
(E)  NOTE: 26 USC 5141, 5147-5149.  Subpart G
(relating to general provisions) (other than sections
5142, 5143, 5145, and 5146).
(2) Nonbeverage domestic drawback.--Section 5131 is amended
by striking ``, on payment of a special tax per annum,''.
(3) Industrial use of distilled spirits.--Section 5276 is
hereby repealed.

(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1)(A) The heading for part II of subchapter A of chapter 51
and the table of subparts for such part are amended to read as
follows:

``PART II--MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

``Subpart A. Manufacturers of stills.
``Subpart B. Nonbeverage domestic drawback claimants.
``Subpart C. Recordkeeping by dealers.
``Subpart D. Other provisions.''.

(B) The table of parts for such subchapter A is amended by
striking the item relating to part II and inserting the
following new item:

``Part II. Miscellaneous provisions.''.

(2) Subpart C of part II of such subchapter (relating to
manufacturers of stills) is redesignated as subpart A.
(3)(A) Subpart F of such part II (relating to nonbeverage
domestic drawback claimants) is redesignated as subpart B and
sections 5131 through 5134 are redesignated as sections 5111
through 5114, respectively.
(B) The table of sections for such subpart B, as so
redesignated, is amended--
(i) by redesignating the items relating to sections
5131 through 5134 as relating to sections 5111 through
5114, respectively, and

[[Page 1954]]
119 STAT. 1954

(ii) by striking ``and rate of tax'' in the item
relating to section 5111, as so redesignated.
(C) Section 5111, as redesignated by subparagraph (A), is
amended--
(i) by striking ``and rate of tax'' in the section
heading,
(ii) by striking the subsection heading for
subsection (a), and
(iii) by striking subsection (b).
(4) Part II of subchapter A of chapter 51 is amended by
adding after subpart B, as redesignated by paragraph (3), the
following new subpart:

``Subpart C--Recordkeeping and Registration by Dealers

``Sec. 5121. Recordkeeping by wholesale dealers.
``Sec. 5122. Recordkeeping by retail dealers.
``Sec. 5123. Preservation and inspection of records, and entry of
premises for inspection.
``Sec. 5124. Registration by dealers.''.

(5)(A) Section 5114 (relating to records) is moved to
subpart C of such part II and inserted after the table of
sections for such subpart.
(B) Section 5114 is amended--
(i) by striking the section heading and inserting
the following new heading:

``SEC. 5432. RECORDKEEPING BY WHOLESALE DEALERS.'';

and
(ii) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection
(d) and by inserting after subsection (b) the following
new subsection:

``(c) Wholesale Dealers.--For purposes of this part--
``(1) Wholesale dealer in liquors.--The term `wholesale
dealer in liquors' means any dealer (other than a wholesale
dealer in beer) who sells, or offers for sale, distilled
spirits, wines, or beer, to another dealer.
``(2) Wholesale dealer in beer.--The term `wholesale dealer
in beer' means any dealer who sells, or offers for sale, beer,
but not distilled spirits or wines, to another dealer.
``(3) Dealer.--The term `dealer' means any person who sells,
or offers for sale, any distilled spirits, wines, or beer.
``(4) Presumption in case of sale of 20 wine gallons or
more.--The sale, or offer for sale, of distilled spirits, wines,
or beer, in quantities of 20 wine gallons or more to the same
person at the same time, shall be presumptive evidence that the
person making such sale, or offer for sale, is engaged in or
carrying on the business of a wholesale dealer in liquors or a
wholesale dealer in beer, as the case may be. Such presumption
may be overcome by evidence satisfactorily showing that such
sale, or offer for sale, was made to a person other than a
dealer.''.
(C) Paragraph (3) of section 5121(d), as so redesignated, is
amended by striking ``section 5146'' and inserting ``section
5123''.

[[Page 1955]]
119 STAT. 1955

(6)(A) Section 5124 (relating to records) is moved to
subpart C of part II of subchapter A of chapter 51 and inserted
after section 5121.
(B) Section 5124 is amended--
(i) by striking the section heading and inserting
the following new heading:

``SEC. 5122. RECORDKEEPING BY RETAIL DEALERS.'',

(ii)  NOTE: 26 USC 5122.  by striking ``section 5146'' in
subsection (c) and inserting ``section 5123'', and
(iii)  NOTE: 26 USC 5122.  by redesignating subsection (c)
as subsection (d) and inserting after subsection (b) the
following new subsection:

``(c) Retail Dealers.--For purposes of this section--
``(1) Retail dealer in liquors.--The term `retail dealer in
liquors' means any dealer (other than a retail dealer in beer or
a limited retail dealer) who sells, or offers for sale,
distilled spirits, wines, or beer, to any person other than a
dealer.
``(2) Retail dealer in beer.--The term `retail dealer in
beer' means any dealer (other than a limited retail dealer) who
sells, or offers for sale, beer, but not distilled spirits or
wines, to any person other than a dealer.
``(3) Limited retail dealer.--The term `limited retail
dealer' means any fraternal, civic, church, labor, charitable,
benevolent, or ex-servicemen's organization making sales of
distilled spirits, wine or beer on the occasion of any kind of
entertainment, dance, picnic, bazaar, or festival held by it, or
any person making sales of distilled spirits, wine or beer to
the members, guests, or patrons of bona fide fairs, reunions,
picnics, carnivals, or other similar outings, if such
organization or person is not otherwise engaged in business as a
dealer.
``(4) Dealer.--The term `dealer' has the meaning given such
term by section 5121(c)(3).''.
(7) Section 5146 is moved to subpart C of part II of
subchapter A of chapter 51, inserted after section 5122, and
redesignated as section 5123.
(8) Subpart C of part II of subchapter A of chapter 51, as
amended by paragraph (7), is amended by adding at the end the
following new section:

``SEC. 5124. REGISTRATION BY DEALERS.

``Every dealer who is subject to the recordkeeping requirements
under section 5121 or 5122 shall register with the Secretary such
dealer's name or style, place of residence, trade or business, and the
place where such trade or business is to be carried on. In the case of a
firm or company, the names of the several persons constituting the same,
and the places of residence, shall be so registered.''.
(9) Section 7012 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (4)
and (5) as paragraphs (5) and (6), respectively, and by
inserting after paragraph (3) the following new paragraph:
``(4) For provisions relating to registration by dealers in
distilled spirits, wines, and beer, see section 5124.''.
(10) Part II of subchapter A of chapter 51 is amended by
inserting after subpart C the following new subpart:

[[Page 1956]]
119 STAT. 1956

``Subpart D--Other Provisions

``Sec. 5131. Packaging distilled spirits for industrial uses.
``Sec. 5132. Prohibited purchases by dealers.''.

(11) Section 5116 is moved to subpart D of part II of
subchapter A of chapter 51, inserted after the table of
sections, redesignated as section 5131, and amended by inserting
``(as defined in section 5121(c))'' after ``dealer'' in
subsection (a).
(12) Subpart D of part II of subchapter A of chapter 51 is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:

``SEC. 5132. PROHIBITED PURCHASES BY DEALERS.

``(a) In General.--Except as provided in regulations prescribed by
the Secretary, it shall be unlawful for a dealer to purchase distilled
spirits for resale from any person other than a wholesale dealer in
liquors who is required to keep the records prescribed by section 5121.
``(b) Limited Retail Dealers.--A limited retail dealer may lawfully
purchase distilled spirits for resale from a retail dealer in liquors.
``(c) Penalty and Forfeiture.--

``For penalty and forfeiture provisions applicable to violations of
subsection (a), see sections 5687 and 7302.''.

(13) Subsection (b) of section 5002 is amended--
(A) by striking ``section 5112(a)'' and inserting
``section 5121(c)(3)'',
(B) by striking ``section 5112'' and inserting
``section 5121(c)'', and
(C) by striking ``section 5122'' and inserting
``section 5122(c)''.
(14) Subparagraph (A) of section 5010(c)(2) is amended by
striking ``section 5134'' and inserting ``section 5114''.
(15) Subsection (d) of section 5052 is amended to read as
follows:

``(d) Brewer.--For purposes of this chapter, the term `brewer' means
any person who brews beer or produces beer for sale. Such term shall not
include any person who produces only beer exempt from tax under section
5053(e).''.
(16) The text of section 5182 is amended to read as follows:

``For provisions requiring recordkeeping by wholesale liquor dealers,
see section 5112, and by retail liquor dealers, see section
5122.''.

(17) Subsection (b) of section 5402 is amended by striking
``section 5092'' and inserting ``section 5052(d)''.
(18) Section 5671 is amended by striking ``or 5091''.
(19)(A) Part V of subchapter J of chapter 51  NOTE: 26 USC
5691.  is hereby repealed.
(B) The table of parts for such subchapter J is amended by
striking the item relating to part V.
(20)(A) Sections 5142, 5143, and 5145 are moved to
subchapter D of chapter 52, inserted after section 5731,
redesignated as sections 5732, 5733, and 5734, respectively, and
amended by striking ``this part'' each place it appears and
inserting ``this subchapter''.
(B) Section 5732, as redesignated by subparagraph (A), is
amended by striking ``(except the tax imposed by section 5131)''
each place it appears.

[[Page 1957]]
119 STAT. 1957

(C) Paragraph (2) of section 5733(c), as redesignated by
subparagraph (A), is amended by striking ``liquors'' both places
it appears and inserting ``tobacco products and cigarette papers
and tubes''.
(D) The table of sections for subchapter D of chapter 52 is
amended by adding at the end the following:

``Sec. 5732. Payment of tax.
``Sec. 5733. Provisions relating to liability for occupational taxes.
``Sec. 5734. Application of State laws.''.

(E) Section 5731 is amended by striking subsection (c) and
by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (c).
(21) Subsection (c) of section 6071 is amended by striking
``section 5142'' and inserting ``section 5732''.
(22) Paragraph (1) of section 7652(g) is amended--
(A) by striking ``subpart F'' and inserting
``subpart B'', and
(B) by striking ``section 5131(a)'' and inserting
``section 5111''.

(c)  NOTE: 26 USC 5002 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall take effect on July 1, 2008, but shall not apply
to taxes imposed for periods before such date.

SEC. 11126. INCOME TAX CREDIT FOR DISTILLED SPIRITS WHOLESALERS AND FOR
DISTILLED SPIRITS IN CONTROL STATE BAILMENT WAREHOUSES FOR
COSTS OF CARRYING FEDERAL EXCISE TAXES ON BOTTLED DISTILLED
SPIRITS.

(a) In General.--Subpart A of part I of subchapter A of chapter 51
(relating to gallonage and occupational taxes) is amended by adding at
the end the following new section:

``SEC. 5011. INCOME TAX CREDIT FOR AVERAGE COST OF CARRYING EXCISE TAX.

``(a) In General.--For purposes of section 38, the amount of the
distilled spirits credit for any taxable year is the amount equal to the
product of--
``(1) in the case of--
``(A) any eligible wholesaler, the number of cases
of bottled distilled spirits--
``(i) which were bottled in the United States,
and
``(ii) which are purchased by such wholesaler
during the taxable year directly from the bottler
of such spirits, or
``(B) any person which is subject to section 5005
and which is not an eligible wholesaler, the number of
cases of bottled distilled spirits which are stored in a
warehouse operated by, or on behalf of, a State or
political subdivision thereof, or an agency of either,
on which title has not passed on an unconditional sale
basis, and
``(2) the average tax-financing cost per case for the most
recent calendar year ending before the beginning of such taxable
year.

``(b) Eligible Wholesaler.--For purposes of this section, the term
`eligible wholesaler' means any person which holds a permit under the
Federal Alcohol Administration Act as a wholesaler of distilled spirits
which is not a State or political subdivision thereof, or an agency of
either.
``(c) Average Tax-Financing Cost.--

[[Page 1958]]
119 STAT. 1958

``(1) In general.--For purposes of this section, the average
tax-financing cost per case for any calendar year is the amount
of interest which would accrue at the deemed financing rate
during a 60-day period on an amount equal to the deemed Federal
excise tax per case.
``(2) Deemed financing rate.--For purposes of paragraph (1),
the deemed financing rate for any calendar year is the average
of the corporate overpayment rates under paragraph (1) of
section 6621(a) (determined without regard to the last sentence
of such paragraph) for calendar quarters of such year.
``(3) Deemed federal excise tax per case.--For purposes of
paragraph (1), the deemed Federal excise tax per case is $25.68.

``(d) Other Definitions and Special Rules.--For purposes of this
section--
``(1) Case.--The term `case' means 12 80-proof 750-
milliliter bottles.
``(2) Number of cases in lot.--The number of cases in any
lot of distilled spirits shall be determined by dividing the
number of liters in such lot by 9.''.

(b) Credit Treated as Part of General Business Credit.--Section
38(b) (relating to current year business credit) is amended by striking
``plus'' at the end of paragraph (18), by striking the period at the end
of paragraph (19), and inserting ``, plus'', and by adding at the end
the following new paragraph:
``(20) the distilled spirits credit determined under section
5011(a).''.

(c) Conforming Amendment.--The table of sections for subpart A of
part I of subchapter A of chapter 51 is amended by adding at the end the
following new item:

``Sec. 5011. Income tax credit for average cost of carrying excise
tax.''.

(d)  NOTE: 26 USC 38 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to taxable years beginning after September
30, 2005.

SEC. 11127. QUARTERLY EXCISE TAX FILING FOR SMALL ALCOHOL EXCISE
TAXPAYERS.

(a) In General.--Subsection (d) of section 5061 (relating to time
for collecting tax on distilled spirits, wines, and beer) is amended by
redesignating paragraphs (4) and (5) as paragraphs (5) and (6),
respectively, and by inserting after paragraph (3) the following new
paragraph:
``(4) Taxpayers liable for taxes of not more than $50,000.--
``(A) In general.--In the case of any taxpayer who
reasonably expects to be liable for not more than
$50,000 in taxes imposed with respect to distilled
spirits, wines, and beer under subparts A, C, and D and
section 7652 for the calendar year and who was liable
for not more than $50,000 in such taxes in the preceding
calendar year, the last day for the payment of tax on
withdrawals, removals, and entries (and articles brought
into the United States from Puerto Rico) under bond for
deferred payment shall be the 14th day after the last
day of the calendar quarter during which the action
giving rise to the imposition of such tax occurs.
``(B)  NOTE: Deadline.  No application after limit
exceeded.--Subparagraph (A) shall not apply to any
taxpayer for any

[[Page 1959]]
119 STAT. 1959

portion of the calendar year following the first date on
which the aggregate amount of tax due under subparts A,
C, and D and section 7652 from such taxpayer during such
calendar year exceeds $50,000, and any tax under such
subparts which has not been paid on such date shall be
due on the 14th day after the last day of the
semimonthly period in which such date occurs.
``(C) Calendar quarter.--For purposes of this
paragraph, the term `calendar quarter' means the three-
month period ending on March 31, June 30, September 30,
or December 31.''.

(b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 5061(d)(6), as redesignated by
subsection (a), is amended by striking ``paragraph (4)'' and inserting
``paragraph (5)''.
(c)  NOTE: 26 USC 5061 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply with respect to quarterly periods beginning
on and after January 1, 2006.

PART 5--SPORT EXCISE TAXES

SEC. 11131. CUSTOM GUNSMITHS.

(a) Small Manufacturers Exempt From Firearms Excise Tax.--Section
4182 (relating to exemptions) is amended by redesignating subsection (c)
as subsection (d) and by inserting after subsection (b) the following
new subsection:
``(c) Small Manufacturers, Etc.--
``(1) In general.--The tax imposed by section 4181 shall not
apply to any pistol, revolver, or firearm described in such
section if manufactured, produced, or imported by a person who
manufactures, produces, and imports less than an aggregate of 50
of such articles during the calendar year.
``(2) Controlled groups.--All persons treated as a single
employer for purposes of subsection (a) or (b) of section 52
shall be treated as one person for purposes of paragraph (1).''.

(b)  NOTE: 26 USC 4182 note.  Effective Date.--
(1) In general.--The amendments made by this section shall
apply to articles sold by the manufacturer, producer, or
importer after September 30, 2005.
(2) No inference.--Nothing in the amendments made by this
section shall be construed to create any inference with respect
to the proper tax treatment of any sales before the effective
date of such amendments.

Subtitle C--Miscellaneous Provisions

SEC. 11141.  NOTE: 26 USC 4081 note.  MOTOR FUEL TAX ENFORCEMENT
ADVISORY COMMISSION.

(a) Establishment.--There is established a Motor Fuel Tax
Enforcement Advisory Commission (in this section referred to as the
``Commission'').
(b) Function.--The Commission shall--
(1) review motor fuel revenue collections, historical and
current;
(2) review the progress of investigations with respect to
motor fuel taxes;
(3) develop and review legislative proposals with respect to
motor fuel taxes;

[[Page 1960]]
119 STAT. 1960

(4) monitor the progress of administrative regulation
projects relating to motor fuel taxes;
(5) review the results of Federal and State agency
cooperative efforts regarding motor fuel taxes;
(6) review the results of Federal interagency cooperative
efforts regarding motor fuel taxes; and
(7) evaluate and make recommendations to the President and
Congress regarding--
(A) the effectiveness of existing Federal
enforcement programs regarding motor fuel taxes,
(B) enforcement personnel allocation, and
(C) proposals for regulatory projects, legislation,
and funding.

(c) Membership.--
(1) Appointment.--The Commission shall be composed of the
following representatives appointed by the Chairmen and the
Ranking Members of the Committee on Finance of the Senate and
the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives:
(A) At least one representative from each of the
following Federal entities: the Department of Homeland
Security, the Department of Transportation--Office of
Inspector General, the Federal Highway Administration,
the Department of Defense, and the Department of
Justice.
(B) At least one representative from the Federation
of State Tax Administrators.
(C) At least one representative from any State
department of transportation.
(D) Two representatives from the highway
construction industry.
(E) Six representatives from industries relating to
fuel distribution--refiners (two representatives),
distributors (one representative), pipelines (one
representative), and terminal operators (two
representatives).
(F) One representative from the retail fuel
industry.
(G) Two representatives from the staff of the
Committee on Finance of the Senate and two
representatives from the staff of the Committee on Ways
and Means of the House of Representatives.
(2) Terms.--Members shall be appointed for the life of the
Commission.
(3) Vacancies.--A vacancy in the Commission shall be filled
in the manner in which the original appointment was made.
(4) 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.
(5) Chairman.--The Chairman of the Commission shall be
elected by the members.

(d) Funding.--Such sums as are necessary shall be available from the
Highway Trust fund for the expenses of the Commission.
(e) Consultation.--Upon request of the Commission, representatives
of the Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service shall
be available for consultation to assist the Commission in carrying out
its duties under this section.

[[Page 1961]]
119 STAT. 1961

(f) Obtaining Data.--The Commission may secure directly from any
department or agency of the United States, information (other than
information required by any law to be kept confidential by such
department or agency) necessary for the Commission to carry out its
duties under this section. Upon request of the Commission, the head of
that department or agency shall furnish such nonconfidential information
to the Commission. The Commission shall also gather evidence through
such means as it may deem appropriate, including through holding
hearings and soliciting comments by means of Federal Register notices.
(g) Termination.--The Commission shall terminate as of the close of
September 30, 2009.

SEC. 11142. NATIONAL SURFACE TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE FINANCING
COMMISSION.

(a) Establishment.--There is established a National Surface
Transportation Infrastructure Financing Commission (in this section
referred to as the ``Commission''). The Commission shall hold its first
meeting within 90 days of the appointment of the eighth individual to be
named to the Commission.
(b) Function.--
(1) In general.--The Commission shall, with respect to the
period beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act and
ending before 2016--
(A) make a thorough investigation and study of
revenues flowing into the Highway Trust Fund under
current law, including the individual components of the
overall flow of such revenues;
(B) consider whether the amount of such revenues is
likely to increase, decline, or remain unchanged, absent
changes in the law, particularly by taking into account
the impact of possible changes in public vehicular
choice, fuel use, or travel alternatives that could be
expected to reduce or increase revenues into the Highway
Trust Fund;
(C) consider alternative approaches to generating
revenues for the Highway Trust Fund, and the level of
revenues that such alternatives would yield;
(D) consider highway and transit needs and whether
additional revenues into the Highway Trust Fund, or
other Federal revenues dedicated to highway and transit
infrastructure, would be required in order to meet such
needs;
(E) consider a program that would exempt all or a
portion of gasoline or other motor fuels used in a State
from the Federal excise tax on such gasoline or other
motor fuels if such State elects not to receive all or a
portion of Federal transportation funding, including--
(i) whether such State should be required to
increase State gasoline or other motor fuels taxes
by the amount of the decrease in the Federal
excise tax on such gasoline or other motor fuels;
(ii) whether any Federal transportation
funding should not be reduced or eliminated for
States participating in such program; and
(iii) whether there are any compliance
problems related to enforcement of Federal
transportation-related excise taxes under such
program; and

[[Page 1962]]
119 STAT. 1962

(F) study such other matters closely related to the
subjects described in the preceding subparagraphs as it
may deem appropriate.
(2) Preparation of report.--Based on such investigation and
study, the Commission shall develop a final report, with
recommendations and the bases for those recommendations,
indicating policies that should be adopted, or not adopted, to
achieve various levels of annual revenue for the Highway Trust
Fund and to enable the Highway Trust Fund to receive revenues
sufficient to meet highway and transit needs. Such
recommendations shall address, among other matters as the
Commission may deem appropriate--
(A) what levels of revenue are required by the
Federal Highway Trust Fund in order for it to meet needs
to maintain and improve the condition and performance of
the Nation's highway and transit systems;
(B) what levels of revenue are required by the
Federal Highway Trust Fund in order to ensure that
Federal levels of investment in highways and transit do
not decline in real terms; and
(C) the extent, if any, to which the Highway Trust
Fund should be augmented by other mechanisms or funds as
a Federal means of financing highway and transit
infrastructure investments.

(c) Membership.--
(1) Appointment.--The Commission shall be composed of 15
members, appointed as follows:
(A) Seven members appointed by the Secretary of
Transportation, in consultation with the Secretary of
the Treasury.
(B) Two members appointed by the Chairman of the
Committee on Ways and Means of the House of
Representatives.
(C) Two members appointed by the Ranking Minority
Member of the Committee on Ways and Means of the House
of Representatives.
(D) Two members appointed by the Chairman of the
Committee on Finance of the Senate.
(E) Two members appointed by the Ranking Minority
Member of the Committee on Finance of the Senate.
(2) Qualifications.--Members appointed pursuant to paragraph
(1) shall be appointed from among individuals knowledgeable in
the fields of public transportation finance or highway and
transit programs, policy, and needs, and may include
representatives of interested parties, such as State and local
governments or other public transportation authorities or
agencies, representatives of the transportation construction
industry (including suppliers of technology, machinery, and
materials), transportation labor (including construction and
providers), transportation providers, the financial community,
and users of highway and transit systems.
(3) Terms.--Members shall be appointed for the life of the
Commission.
(4) Vacancies.--A vacancy in the Commission shall be filled
in the manner in which the original appointment was made.

[[Page 1963]]
119 STAT. 1963

(5) 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.
(6) Chairman.--The Chairman of the Commission shall be
elected by the members.

(d) Staff.--The Commission may appoint and fix the pay of such
personnel as it considers appropriate.
(e) Funding.--Funding for the Commission shall be provided by the
Secretary of the Treasury and by the Secretary of Transportation, out of
funds available to those agencies for administrative and policy
functions.
(f) Staff of Federal Agencies.--Upon request of the Commission, the
head of any department or agency of the United States may detail any of
the personnel of that department or agency to the Commission to assist
in carrying out its duties under this section.
(g) Obtaining Data.--The Commission may secure directly from any
department or agency of the United States, information (other than
information required by any law to be kept confidential by such
department or agency) necessary for the Commission to carry out its
duties under this section. Upon request of the Commission, the head of
that department or agency shall furnish such nonconfidential information
to the Commission. The Commission shall also gather evidence through
such means as it may deem appropriate, including through holding
hearings and soliciting comments by means of Federal Register notices.
(h) Report.--Not later than 2 years after the date of its first
meeting, the Commission shall transmit its final report, including
recommendations, to the Secretary of Transportation, the Secretary of
the Treasury, and the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of
Representatives, the Committee on Finance of the Senate, the Committee
on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives,
the Committee on Environment and Public Works of the Senate, and the
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of the Senate.
(i) Termination.--The Commission shall terminate on the 180th day
following the date of transmittal of the report under subsection (h).
All records and papers of the Commission shall thereupon be delivered to
the Administrator of General Services for deposit in the National
Archives.

SEC. 11143. TAX-EXEMPT FINANCING OF HIGHWAY PROJECTS AND RAIL-TRUCK
TRANSFER FACILITIES.

(a) Treatment as Exempt Facility Bond.--Subsection (a) of section
142 (relating to exempt facility bond) is amended by striking ``or'' at
the end of paragraph (13), by striking the period at the end of
paragraph (14) and inserting ``, or'', and by adding at the end the
following new paragraph:
``(15) qualified highway or surface freight transfer
facilities.''.

(b) Qualified Highway or Surface Freight Transfer Facilities.--
Section 142 is amended by adding at the end the following:
``(m) Qualified Highway or Surface Freight Transfer Facilities.--

[[Page 1964]]
119 STAT. 1964

``(1) In general.--For purposes of subsection (a)(15), the
term `qualified highway or surface freight transfer facilities'
means--
``(A) any surface transportation project which
receives Federal assistance under title 23, United
States Code (as in effect on the date of the enactment
of this subsection),
``(B) any project for an international bridge or
tunnel for which an international entity authorized
under Federal or State law is responsible and which
receives Federal assistance under title 23, United
States Code (as so in effect), or
``(C) any facility for the transfer of freight from
truck to rail or rail to truck (including any temporary
storage facilities directly related to such transfers)
which receives Federal assistance under either title 23
or title 49, United States Code (as so in effect).
``(2) National limitation on amount of tax-exempt financing
for facilities.--
``(A) National limitation.--The aggregate amount
allocated by the Secretary of Transportation under
subparagraph (C) shall not exceed $15,000,000,000.
``(B) Enforcement of national limitation.--An issue
shall not be treated as an issue described in subsection
(a)(15) if the aggregate face amount of bonds issued
pursuant to such issue for any qualified highway or
surface freight transfer facility (when added to the
aggregate face amount of bonds previously so issued for
such facility) exceeds the amount allocated to such
facility under subparagraph (C).
``(C) Allocation by secretary of transportation.--
The Secretary of Transportation shall allocate the
amount described in subparagraph (A) among qualified
highway or surface freight transfer facilities in such
manner as the Secretary determines appropriate.
``(3) Expenditure of proceeds.--An issue shall not be
treated as an issue described in subsection (a)(15) unless at
least 95 percent of the net proceeds of the issue is expended
for qualified highway or surface freight transfer facilities
within the 5-year period beginning on the date of issuance. If
at least 95 percent of such net proceeds is not expended within
such 5-year period, an issue shall be treated as continuing to
meet the requirements of this paragraph if the issuer uses all
unspent proceeds of the issue to redeem bonds of the issue
within 90 days after the end of such 5-year period. The
Secretary, at the request of the issuer, may extend such 5-year
period if the issuer establishes that any failure to meet such
period is due to circumstances beyond the control of the issuer.
``(4) Exception for current refunding bonds.--Paragraph (2)
shall not apply to any bond (or series of bonds) issued to
refund a bond issued under subsection (a)(15) if--
``(A) the average maturity date of the issue of
which the refunding bond is a part is not later than the
average maturity date of the bonds to be refunded by
such issue,
``(B) the amount of the refunding bond does not
exceed the outstanding amount of the refunded bond, and

[[Page 1965]]
119 STAT. 1965

``(C) the refunded bond is redeemed not later than
90 days after the date of the issuance of the refunding
bond.
For purposes of subparagraph (A), average maturity shall be
determined in accordance with section 147(b)(2)(A).''.

(c) Exemption From General State Volume Caps.--Paragraph (3) of
section 146(g) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (relating to
exception for certain bonds) is amended by striking ``or (14)'' and all
that follows through the end of the paragraph and inserting ``(14), or
(15) of section 142(a), and''.
(d)  NOTE: 26 USC 142 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section apply to bonds issued after the date of the enactment of
this Act.

SEC. 11144. TREASURY STUDY OF HIGHWAY FUELS USED BY TRUCKS FOR NON-
TRANSPORTATION PURPOSES.

(a) Study.--The Secretary of the Treasury shall conduct a study
regarding the use of highway motor fuel by trucks that is not used for
the propulsion of the vehicle. As part of such study--
(1) in the case of vehicles carrying equipment that is
unrelated to the transportation function of the vehicle--
(A) the Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation
with the Secretary of Transportation, and with public
notice and comment, shall determine the average annual
amount of tax-paid fuel consumed per vehicle, by type of
vehicle, used by the propulsion engine to provide the
power to operate the equipment attached to the highway
vehicle, and
(B) the Secretary of the Treasury shall review the
technical and administrative feasibility of exempting
such nonpropulsive use of highway fuels from the highway
motor fuels excise taxes, and, if such exemptions are
technically and administratively feasible, shall propose
options for implementing such exemptions for--
(i) mobile machinery (as defined in section
4053(8) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986)
whose nonpropulsive fuel use exceeds 50 percent,
and
(ii) any highway vehicle which consumes fuel
for both transportation and non-transportation-
related equipment, using a single motor,
(2) in the case where non-transportation equipment is run by
a separate motor--
(A) the Secretary of the Treasury shall determine
the annual average amount of fuel exempted from tax in
the use of such equipment by equipment type, and
(B) the Secretary of the Treasury shall review
issues of administration and compliance related to the
present-law exemption provided for such fuel use, and
(3) the Secretary of the Treasury shall--
(A) estimate the amount of taxable fuel consumed by
trucks and the emissions of various pollutants due to
the long-term idling of diesel engines, and
(B) determine the cost of reducing such long-term
idling through the use of plug-ins at truck stops,
auxiliary power units, or other technologies.

[[Page 1966]]
119 STAT. 1966

(b) Report.--Not later than January 1, 2007, the Secretary of the
Treasury shall report the findings of the study required under
subsection (a) to the Committee on Finance of the Senate and the
Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives.

SEC. 11145. DIESEL FUEL TAX EVASION REPORT.

Not later than 360 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue shall report to the Committees
on Finance and Environment and Public Works of the Senate and the
Committees on Ways and Means and Transportation and Infrastructure of
the House of Representatives on--
(1) the availability of new technologies, including forensic
or chemical molecular markers, that can be employed to enhance
collections of the excise tax on diesel fuel and the plans of
the Internal Revenue Service to employ such technologies,
(2) the design of a test to place forensic or chemical
molecular markers in any excluded liquid (as defined in section
48.4081-1(b) of title 26, Code of Federal Regulations),
(3) the design of a test, in consultation with the
Department of Defense, to place forensic or chemical molecular
markers in all nonstrategic bulk fuel deliveries of diesel fuel
to the military, and
(4) the design of a test to place forensic or chemical
molecular markers in all diesel fuel bound for export utilizing
the Gulf of Mexico.

SEC. 11146.  NOTE: 26 USC 115 note.  TAX TREATMENT OF STATE OWNERSHIP
OF RAILROAD REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST.

(a) In General.--If a State owns all of the outstanding stock of a
corporation--
(1) which is a real estate investment trust on the date of
the enactment of this Act,
(2) which is a non-operating class III railroad, and
(3) substantially all of the activities of which consist of
the ownership, leasing, and operation by such corporation of
facilities, equipment, and other property used by the
corporation or other persons for railroad transportation and for
economic development purposes for the benefit of the State and
its citizens, then, to the extent such activities are of a type
which are an essential governmental function within the meaning
of section 115 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, income
derived from such activities by the corporation shall be treated
as accruing to the State for purposes of section 115 of such
Code.

(b) Gain or Loss not Recognized on Conversion.--Notwithstanding
section 337(d) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986--
(1) no gain or loss shall be recognized under section 336 or
337 of such Code, and
(2) no change in basis of the property of such corporation
shall occur, because of any change of status of a corporation to
a tax-exempt entity by reason of the application of subsection
(a).

(c) Tax-Exempt Financing.--

[[Page 1967]]
119 STAT. 1967

(1) In general.--Any obligation issued by a corporation
described in subsection (a) at least 95 percent of the net
proceeds (as defined in section 150(a) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986) of which are to be used to provide for the
acquisition, construction, or improvement of railroad
transportation infrastructure (including railroad terminal
facilities)--
(A) shall be treated as a State or local bond
(within the meaning of section 103(c) of such Code), and
(B) shall not be treated as a private activity bond
(within the meaning of section 103(b)(1) of such Code)
solely by reason of the ownership or use of such
railroad transportation infrastructure by the
corporation.
(2) No inference.--Except as provided in paragraph (1),
nothing in this subsection shall be construed to affect the
treatment of the private use of proceeds or property financed
with obligations issued by the corporation for purposes of
section 103 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and part IV of
subchapter B of such Code.

(d) Definitions.--For purposes of this section:
(1) Real estate investment trust.--The term ``real estate
investment trust'' has the meaning given such term by section
856(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
(2) Non-operating class iii railroad.--The term ``non-
operating class III railroad'' has the meaning given such term
by part A of subtitle IV of title 49, United States Code (49
U.S.C. 10101 et seq.), and the regulations thereunder.
(3) State.--The term ``State'' includes--
(A) the District of Columbia and any possession of
the United States, and
(B) any authority, agency, or public corporation of
a State.

(e) Applicability.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), this
section shall apply on and after the date on which a State
becomes the owner of all of the outstanding stock of a
corporation described in subsection (a) through action of such
corporation's board of directors.
(2) Exception.--This section shall not apply to any State
which--
(A) becomes the owner of all of the voting stock of
a corporation described in subsection (a) after December
31, 2003, or
(B) becomes the owner of all of the outstanding
stock of a corporation described in subsection (a) after
December 31, 2006.

SEC. 11147. LIMITATION ON TRANSFERS TO THE LEAKING UNDERGROUND STORAGE
TANK TRUST FUND.

(a) In General.--Section 9508 is amended by adding at the end the
following new subsection:
``(e) Limitation on Transfers to Leaking Underground Storage Tank
Trust Fund.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), no
amount may be appropriated to the Leaking Underground Storage
Tank Trust Fund on and after the date of any expenditure from
the Leaking Underground Storage Tank Trust Fund which is not
permitted by this section. The determination of

[[Page 1968]]
119 STAT. 1968

whether an expenditure is so permitted shall be made without
regard to--
``(A) any provision of law which is not contained or
referenced in this title or in a revenue Act, and
``(B) whether such provision of law is a
subsequently enacted provision or directly or indirectly
seeks to waive the application of this paragraph.
``(2) Exception for prior obligations.--Paragraph (1) shall
not apply to any expenditure to liquidate any contract entered
into (or for any amount otherwise obligated) before October 1,
2011, in accordance with the provisions of this section.''.

(b)  NOTE: 26 USC 9508 note.  Effective Date.--The amendment made
by this section shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this
Act.

Subtitle D--Highway-Related Technical Corrections

SEC. 11151. HIGHWAY-RELATED TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS.

(a) Amendments Related to Section 301 of the American Jobs Creation
Act of 2004.--Section 6427 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) 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) 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--''.
(3) Section 6421(f)(2) is amended--
(A) by striking ``noncommercial aviation (as defined
in section 4041(c)(2))'' in subparagraph (A) and
inserting ``aviation which is not commercial aviation
(as defined in section 4083(b))'', and
(B) by striking ``aviation which is not
noncommercial aviation'' in subparagraph (B) and
inserting ``commercial aviation''.

(c) Amendment Related to Section 9005 of the Transportation Equity
Act for the 21st Century.--The last sentence of paragraph (2) of section
9504(b) is amended by striking ``subparagraph (B)'', and inserting
``subparagraph (C)''.
(d) Amendment Related to Section 1306 of the Energy Policy Act of
2005.--
(1) Subsection (b) of section 1306 of the Energy Tax
Incentives Act of 2005  NOTE: 26 USC 38.  is amended by
striking ``Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users'' and
inserting ``Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users''.
(2)  NOTE: Effective date. 26 USC 38 note.  If the Energy
Policy Act of 2005 is enacted before the date of the enactment
of this Act, for purposes of executing

[[Page 1969]]
119 STAT. 1969

any amendments made by the Energy Policy Act of 2005 to section
38(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, the amendments made
by section 11126(b) of this Act shall be treated as having been
executed before such amendments made by the Energy Policy Act of
2005.

(e) Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Subparagraph (A) of section 9504(b)(2) is amended by
striking ``the Act entitled `An Act to provide that the United
States shall aid the States in fish restoration and management
projects, and for other purposes', approved August 9, 1950'' and
inserting ``the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act''.
(2) Sections 6426(d)(2)(F) and 4041(a)(2)(B)(ii) are both
amended by striking ``section 29(c)(3)'' and inserting ``section
45K(c)(3)''.

(f) Effective Dates.--
(1)  NOTE: 26 USC 4081 note.  American jobs creation act
of 2004.--The amendments made by subsections (a) and (b) shall
take effect as if included in the provisions of the American
Jobs Creation Act of 2004 to which they relate.
(2)  NOTE: 26 USC 9504 note.  Transportation equity act
for the 21st century.--The amendment made by subsection (c)
shall take effect as if included in the provision of the
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century to which it
relates.
(3)  NOTE: 26 USC 38 note.  Energy policy act of 2005.--
The amendments made by subsections (d)(1) and (e)(2) shall take
effect as if included in the provision of the Energy Tax
Incentives Act of 2005 to which they relate.

Subtitle E--Preventing Fuel Fraud

SEC. 11161. TREATMENT OF KEROSENE FOR USE IN AVIATION.

(a) All Kerosene Taxed at Highest Rate.--
(1) In general.--Section 4081(a)(2)(A) (relating to rates of
tax) is amended by adding ``and'' at the end of clause (ii), by
striking ``, and'' at the end of clause (iii) and inserting a
period, and by striking clause (iv).
(2) Exception for use in aviation.--Subparagraph (C) of
section 4081(a)(2) is amended to read as follows:
``(C) Taxes imposed on fuel used in aviation.--In
the case of kerosene which is removed from any refinery
or terminal directly into the fuel tank of an aircraft
for use in aviation, the rate of tax under subparagraph
(A)(iii) shall be--
``(i) in the case of use for commercial
aviation by a person registered for such use under
section 4101, 4.3 cents per gallon, and
``(ii) in the case of use for aviation not
described in clause (i), 21.8 cents per gallon.''.
(3) Applicable rate in case of certain refueler trucks,
tankers, and tank wagons.--Section 4081(a)(3) (relating to
certain refueler trucks, tankers, and tank wagons treated as
terminals) is amended--
(A) by striking ``a secured area of'' in
subparagraph (A)(i), and
(B) by adding at the end the following new
subparagraph:

[[Page 1970]]
119 STAT. 1970

``(D) Applicable rate.--For purposes of paragraph
(2)(C), in the case of any kerosene treated as removed
from a terminal by reason of this paragraph--
``(i) the rate of tax specified in paragraph
(2)(C)(i) in the case of use described in such
paragraph shall apply if such terminal is located
within a secured area of an airport, and
``(ii) the rate of tax specified in paragraph
(2)(C)(ii) shall apply in all other cases.''.
(4) Conforming amendments.--
(A) Sections 4081(a)(3)(A) and 4082(b) are amended
by striking ``aviation-grade'' each place it appears.
(B) Section 4081(a)(4) is amended by striking
``paragraph (2)(C)'' and inserting ``paragraph
(2)(C)(i)''.
(C) The heading for paragraph (4) of section 4081(a)
is amended by striking ``aviation-grade''.
(D) Section 4081(d)(2) is amended by striking so
much as precedes subparagraph (A) and inserting the
following:
``(2) Aviation fuels.--The rates of tax specified in
subsection (a)(2)(A)(ii) and (a)(2)(C)(ii) shall be 4.3 cents
per gallon--''.
(E) Subsection (e) of section 4082 is amended--
(i) by striking ``aviation-grade'',
(ii) by striking ``section 4081(a)(2)(A)(iv)''
and inserting ``section 4081(a)(2)(A)(iii)'',
(iii) by adding at the end the following new
sentence: ``For purposes of this subsection, any
removal described in section 4081(a)(3)(A) shall
be treated as a removal from a terminal but only
if such terminal is located within a secure area
of an airport.'', and
(iv) by striking ``Aviation-grade Kerosene''
in the heading thereof and inserting ``Kerosene
Removed Into an Aircraft''.

(b) Reduced Rate for Use of Certain Liquids in Aviation.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (c) of section 4041 (relating to
imposition of tax) is amended--
(A) by striking ``aviation-grade kerosene'' in
paragraph (1) and inserting ``any liquid for use as a
fuel other than aviation gasoline'',
(B) by striking ``aviation-grade kerosene'' in
paragraph (2) and inserting ``liquid for use as a fuel
other than aviation gasoline'',
(C) by striking paragraph (3) and inserting the
following new paragraph:
``(3) Rate of tax.--The rate of tax imposed by this
subsection shall be 21.8 cents per gallon (4.3 cents per gallon
with respect to any sale or use for commercial aviation).'', and
(D) by striking ``Aviation-grade Kerosene'' in the
heading thereof and inserting ``Certain Liquids Used as
a Fuel in Aviation''.
(2) Partial refund of full rate.--
(A) In general.--Paragraph (2) of section 6427(l)
(relating to nontaxable uses of diesel fuel, kerosene
and aviation fuel) is amended to read as follows:
``(2) Nontaxable use.--For purposes of this subsection, the
term `nontaxable use' means any use which is exempt

[[Page 1971]]
119 STAT. 1971

from the tax imposed by section 4041(a)(1) other than by reason
of a prior imposition of tax.''.
(B) Refunds for noncommercial aviation.--Section
6427(l) (relating to nontaxable uses of diesel fuel,
kerosene and aviation fuel) is amended by redesignating
paragraph (5) as paragraph (6) and by inserting after
paragraph (4) the following new paragraph:
``(5) Refunds for kerosene used in noncommercial aviation.--
``(A) In general.--In the case of kerosene used in
aviation not described in paragraph (4)(A) (other than
any use which is exempt from the tax imposed by section
4041(c) other than by reason of a prior imposition of
tax), paragraph (1) shall not apply to so much of the
tax imposed by section 4081 as is attributable to--
``(i) the Leaking Underground Storage Tank
Trust Fund financing rate imposed by such section,
and
``(ii) so much of the rate of tax specified in
section 4081(a)(2)(A)(iii) as does not exceed the
rate specified in section 4081(a)(2)(C)(ii).
``(B) Payment to ultimate, registered vendor.--The
amount which would be paid under paragraph (1) with
respect to any kerosene shall be paid only to the
ultimate vendor of such kerosene. A payment shall be
made to such vendor if such vendor--
``(i) is registered under section 4101, and
``(ii) meets the requirements of subparagraph
(A), (B), or (D) of section 6416(a)(1).''.
(3) Conforming amendments.--
(A) Section 4041(a)(1)(B) is amended by striking the
last sentence.
(B) The heading for subsection (l) of section 6427
is amended by striking ``, Kerosene and Aviation Fuel''
and inserting ``and Kerosene''.
(C) Section 4082(d)(2)(B) is amended by striking
``section 6427(l)(5)(B)'' and inserting ``section
6427(l)(6)(B)''.
(D) Section 6427(i)(4)(A) is amended--
(i) by striking ``paragraph (4)(B) or (5)''
both places it appears and inserting ``paragraph
(4)(B), (5), or (6)'', and
(ii) by striking ``subsection (b)(4) and
subsection (l)(5)'' in the last sentence and
inserting ``subsections (b)(4), (l)(5), and
(l)(6)''.
(E) Paragraph (4) of section 6427(l) is amended--
(i) by striking ``aviation-grade'' in
subparagraph (A),
(ii) by striking ``section 4081(a)(2)(A)(iv)''
and inserting ``section 4081(a)(2)(iii)'',
(iii) by striking ``aviation-grade kerosene''
in subparagraph (B) and inserting ``kerosene used
in commercial aviation as described in
subparagraph (A)'', and
(iv) by striking ``aviation-grade kerosene''
in the heading thereof and inserting ``kerosene
used in commercial aviation''.

[[Page 1972]]
119 STAT. 1972

(F) Section 6427(l)(6)(B), as redesignated by
paragraph (2)(B), is amended by striking ``aviation-
grade kerosene'' and inserting ``kerosene used in
aviation''.

(c) Transfers From Highway Trust Fund of Taxes on Fuels Used in
Aviation to Airport and Airway Trust Fund.--
(1) In general.--Section 9503(c) (relating to expenditures
from Highway Trust Fund) is amended by adding at the end the
following new paragraph:
``(7)  NOTE: Effective date. Termination date.  Transfers
from the trust fund for certain aviation fuel taxes.--The
Secretary shall pay at least monthly from the Highway Trust Fund
into the Airport and Airway Trust Fund amounts (as determined by
the Secretary) equivalent to the taxes received on or after
October 1, 2005, and before October 1, 2011, under section 4081
with respect to so much of the rate of tax as does not exceed--
``(A) 4.3 cents per gallon of kerosene with respect
to which a payment has been made by the Secretary under
section 6427(l)(4), and
``(B) 21.8 cents per gallon of kerosene with respect
to which a payment has been made by the Secretary under
section 6427(l)(5).
Transfers under the preceding sentence shall be made on the
basis of estimates by the Secretary, and proper adjustments
shall be made in the amounts subsequently transferred to the
extent prior estimates were in excess of or less than the
amounts required to be transferred. Any amount allowed as a
credit under section 34 by reason of paragraph (4) or (5) of
section 6427(l) shall be treated for purposes of subparagraphs
(A) and (B) as a payment made by the Secretary under such
paragraph.''.
(2) Conforming amendments.--
(A) Section 9502(a) is amended by striking
``appropriated or credited to the Airport and Airway
Trust Fund as provided in this section or section
9602(b)'' and inserting ``appropriated, credited, or
paid into the Airport and Airway Trust Fund as provided
in this section, section 9503(c)(7), or section
9602(b)''.
(B) Section 9502(b)(1) is amended--
(i) by striking ``subsections (c) and (e) of
section 4041'' in subparagraph (A) and inserting
``section 4041(c)'', and
(ii) by striking ``and aviation-grade
kerosene'' in subparagraph (C) and inserting ``and
kerosene to the extent attributable to the rate
specified in section 4081(a)(2)(C)''.
(C) Section 9503(b) is amended by striking paragraph
(3).

(d) Certain Refunds not Transferred From Airport and Airway Trust
Fund.--
(1) Section 9502(d)(2) (relating to transfers from Airport
and Airway Trust Fund on account of certain refunds) is amended
by inserting ``(other than subsection (l)(4) and (l)(5)
thereof)'' after ``or 6427 (relating to fuels not used for
taxable purposes)''.
(2) The text of section 9502(d)(3) (relating to transfers
from Airport and Airway Trust Fund on account of certain

[[Page 1973]]
119 STAT. 1973

section 34 credits) is amended by inserting ``(other than
payments made by reason of paragraph (4) or (5) of section
6427(l))'' after ``section 34''.

(e)  NOTE: 26 USC 4041 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to fuels or liquids removed, entered, or
sold after September 30, 2005.

SEC. 11162. REPEAL OF ULTIMATE VENDOR REFUND CLAIMS WITH RESPECT TO
FARMING.

(a) In General.--Subparagraph (A) of section 6427(l)(6) (relating to
registered vendors to administer claims for refund of diesel fuel or
kerosene sold to farmers and State and local governments), as
redesignated by section 11161, is amended to read as follows:
``(A) In general.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to
diesel fuel or kerosene used by a State or local
government.''.

(b) Conforming Amendment.--The heading of paragraph (6) of section
6427(l), as so redesignated, is amended by striking ``farmers and''.
(c)  NOTE: 26 USC 6427 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to sales after September 30, 2005.

SEC. 11163. REFUNDS OF EXCISE TAXES ON EXEMPT SALES OF FUEL BY CREDIT
CARD.

(a) Registration of Person Extending Credit on Certain Exempt Sales
of Fuel.--Section 4101(a) (relating to registration) is amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) Registration of persons extending credit on certain
exempt sales of fuel.--The Secretary shall require registration
by any person which--
``(A) extends credit by credit card to any ultimate
purchaser described in subparagraph (C) or (D) of
section 6416(b)(2) for the purchase of taxable fuel upon
which tax has been imposed under section 4041 or 4081,
and
``(B) does not collect the amount of such tax from
such ultimate purchaser.''.

(b) Refunds of Tax on Gasoline.--
(1) In general.--Paragraph (4) of section 6416(a) (relating
to condition to allowance) is amended--
(A) by inserting ``except as provided in
subparagraph (B),'' after ``For purposes of this
subsection,'' in subparagraph (A),
(B) by redesignating subparagraph (B) as
subparagraph (C) and by inserting after subparagraph (A)
the following new subparagraph:
``(B) Credit card issuer.--For purposes of this
subsection, if the purchase of gasoline described in
subparagraph (A) (determined without regard to the
registration status of the ultimate vendor) is made by
means of a credit card issued to the ultimate purchaser,
paragraph (1) shall not apply and the person extending
the credit to the ultimate purchaser shall be treated as
the person (and the only person) who paid the tax, but
only if such person--
``(i) is registered under section 4101,
``(ii) has established, under regulations
prescribed by the Secretary, that such person--

[[Page 1974]]
119 STAT. 1974

``(I) has not collected the amount
of the tax from the person who purchased
such article, or
``(II) has obtained the written
consent from the ultimate purchaser to
the allowance of the credit or refund,
and
``(iii) has so established that such person--
``(I) has repaid or agreed to repay
the amount of the tax to the ultimate
vendor,
``(II) has obtained the written
consent of the ultimate vendor to the
allowance of the credit or refund, or
``(III) has otherwise made
arrangements which directly or
indirectly provides the ultimate vendor
with reimbursement of such tax.
If clause (i), (ii), or (iii) is not met by such person
extending the credit to the ultimate purchaser, then
such person shall collect an amount equal to the tax
from the ultimate purchaser and only such ultimate
purchaser may claim such credit or payment.'',
(C) by striking ``subparagraph (A)'' in subparagraph
(C), as redesignated by paragraph (2), and inserting
``subparagraph (A) or (B)'',
(D) by inserting ``or credit card issuer'' after
``vendor'' in subparagraph (C), as so redesignated, and
(E) by inserting ``or credit card issuer'' after
``vendor'' in the heading thereof.
(2) Conforming amendment.--Section 6416(b)(2) is amended by
adding at the end the following new sentence: ``Subparagraphs
(C) and (D) shall not apply in the case of any tax imposed on
gasoline under section 4081 if the requirements of subsection
(a)(4) are not met.''.

(c) Diesel Fuel or Kerosene.--Paragraph (6) of section 6427(l)
(relating to nontaxable uses of diesel fuel and kerosene), as
redesignated by section 11161, is amended--
(1) by striking ``The amount'' in subparagraph (C) and
inserting ``Except as provided in subparagraph (D), the
amount'', and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(D) Credit card issuer.--For purposes of this
paragraph, if the purchase of any fuel described in
subparagraph (A) (determined without regard to the
registration status of the ultimate vendor) is made by
means of a credit card issued to the ultimate purchaser,
the Secretary shall pay to the person extending the
credit to the ultimate purchaser the amount which would
have been paid under paragraph (1) (but for subparagraph
(A)), but only if such person meets the requirements of
clauses (i), (ii), and (iii) of section 6416(a)(4)(B).
If such clause (i), (ii), or (iii) is not met by such
person extending the credit to the ultimate purchaser,
then such person shall collect an amount equal to the
tax from the ultimate purchaser and only such ultimate
purchaser may claim such amount.''.

(d) Conforming Penalty Amendments.--
(1) Section 6206 (relating to special rules applicable to
excessive claims under sections 6420, 6421, and 6427) is
amended--

[[Page 1975]]
119 STAT. 1975

(A) by striking ``Any portion'' in the first
sentence and inserting ``Any portion of a refund made
under section 6416(a)(4) and any portion'',
(B) by striking ``payments under sections 6420'' in
the first sentence and inserting ``refunds under section
6416(a)(4) and payments under sections 6420'',
(C) by striking ``section 6420'' in the second
sentence and inserting ``section 6416(a)(4), 6420'', and
(D) by striking ``sections 6420, 6421, and 6427'' in
the heading thereof and inserting ``certain sections''.
(2) Section 6675(a) is amended by inserting ``section
6416(a)(4) (relating to certain sales of gasoline),'' after
``made under''.
(3) Section 6675(b)(1) is amended by inserting
``6416(a)(4),'' after ``under section''.
(4) The item relating to section 6206 in the table of
sections for subchapter A of chapter 63 is amended by striking
``sections 6420, 6421, and 6427'' and inserting ``certain
sections''.

(e)  NOTE: 26 USC 4101 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to sales after December 31, 2005.

SEC. 11164. REREGISTRATION IN EVENT OF CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP.

(a) In General.--Section 4101(a) (relating to registration) is
amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) Reregistration in event of change in ownership.--Under
regulations prescribed by the Secretary, a person (other than a
corporation the stock of which is regularly traded on an
established securities market) shall be required to reregister
under this section if after a transaction (or series of related
transactions) more than 50 percent of ownership interests in, or
assets of, such person are held by persons other than persons
(or persons related thereto) who held more than 50 percent of
such interests or assets before the transaction (or series of
related transactions).''.

(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Civil penalty.--Section 6719 (relating to failure to
register) is amended--
(A) by inserting ``or reregister'' after
``register'' each place it appears,
(B) by inserting ``or Reregister'' after
``Register'' in the heading for subsection (a), and
(C) by inserting ``or reregister'' after
``register'' in the heading thereof.
(2) Criminal penalty.--Section 7232 (relating to failure to
register under section 4101, false representations of
registration status, etc.) is amended--
(A) by inserting ``or reregister'' after
``register'',
(B) by inserting ``or reregistration'' after
``registration'', and
(C) by inserting ``or reregister'' after
``register'' in the heading thereof.
(3) Additional civil penalty.--Section 7272 (relating to
penalty for failure to register) is amended--
(A) by inserting ``or reregister'' after ``failure
to register'' in subsection (a), and
(B) by inserting ``or reregister'' after
``register'' in the heading thereof.

[[Page 1976]]
119 STAT. 1976

(4) Clerical amendments.--The item relating to section 6719
in the table of sections for part I of subchapter B of chapter
68,  NOTE: 26 USC 6671.  the item relating to section 7232 in
the table of sections for part II of subchapter A of  NOTE: 26
USC 7231.  chapter 75, and the item relating to section 7272 in
the table of sections for subchapter B of chapter 75  NOTE: 26
USC 7261.  are each amended by inserting ``or reregister''
after ``register''.

(c)  NOTE: 26 USC 4101 note.  Effective Date.--The amendments made
by this section shall apply to actions, or failures to act, after the
date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 11165. RECONCILIATION OF ON-LOADED CARGO TO ENTERED CARGO.

(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 343 of the Trade Act of
2002  NOTE: 19 USC 2071 note.  is amended by inserting at the end the
following new paragraph:
``(4)  NOTE: Deadlines.  Transmission of data.--Pursuant
to paragraph (2), not later than 1 year after the date of
enactment of this paragraph, the Secretary of Homeland Security,
after consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury, shall
establish an electronic data interchange system through which
the United States Customs and Border Protection shall transmit
to the Internal Revenue Service information pertaining to
cargoes of any taxable fuel (as defined in section 4083 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986) that the United States Customs
and Border Protection has obtained electronically under its
regulations adopted in accordance with paragraph (1). For this
purpose, not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of
this paragraph, all filers of required cargo information for
such taxable fuels (as so defined) must provide such information
to the United States Customs and Border Protection through such
electronic data interchange system.''.

(b)  NOTE: 19 USC 2071 note.  Effective Date.--The amendment made
by this section shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this
Act.

SEC. 11166. TREATMENT OF DEEP-DRAFT VESSELS.

(a)  NOTE: 26 USC 4101 note.  In General.--On and after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Treasury shall
require that a vessel described in section 4042(c)(1) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 be considered a vessel for purposes of the
registration of the operator of such vessel under section 4101 of such
Code, unless such operator uses such vessel exclusively for purposes of
the entry of taxable fuel.

(b) Exemption for Domestic Bulk Transfers by Deep-Draft Vessels.--
(1) In general.--Subparagraph (B) of section 4081(a)(1)
(relating to tax on removal, entry, or sale) is amended to read
as follows:
``(B) Exemption for bulk transfers to registered
terminals or refineries.--
``(i) In general.--The tax imposed by this
paragraph shall not apply to any removal or entry
of a taxable fuel transferred in bulk by pipeline
or vessel to a terminal or refinery if the person
removing or entering the taxable fuel, the
operator of such pipeline or vessel (except as
provided in clause (ii)), and the operator of such
terminal or refinery are registered under section
4101.

[[Page 1977]]
119 STAT. 1977

``(ii) Nonapplication of registration to
vessel operators entering by deep-draft vessel.--
For purposes of clause (i), a vessel operator is
not required to be registered with respect to the
entry of a taxable fuel transferred in bulk by a
vessel described in section 4042(c)(1).''.
(2)  NOTE: 26 USC 4081 note.  Effective date.--The
amendment made by this subsection shall take effect on the date
of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 11167. PENALTY WITH RESPECT TO CERTAIN ADULTERATED FUELS.

(a) In General.--Part I of subchapter B of chapter 68 (relating to
assessable penalties) is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:

``SEC. 6720A. PENALTY WITH RESPECT TO CERTAIN ADULTERATED FUELS.

``(a) In General.--Any person who knowingly transfers for resale,
sells for resale, or holds out for resale any liquid for use in a
diesel-powered highway vehicle or a diesel-powered train which does not
meet applicable EPA regulations (as defined in section 45H(c)(3)), shall
pay a penalty of $10,000 for each such transfer, sale, or holding out
for resale, in addition to the tax on such liquid (if any).
``(b) Penalty in the Case of Retailers.--Any person who knowingly
holds out for sale (other than for resale) any liquid described in
subsection (a), shall pay a penalty of $10,000 for each such holding out
for sale, in addition to the tax on such liquid (if any).''.
(b) Dedication of Revenue.--Paragraph (5) of section 9503(b)
(relating to certain penalties) is amended by inserting ``6720A,'' after
``6719,''.
(c) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections for part I of
subchapter B of chapter 68 is amended by adding at the end the following
new item:

``Sec. 6720A. Penalty with respect to certain adulterated fuels.''.

[[Page 1978]]
119 STAT. 1978

(d)  NOTE: 26 USC 6720A note.  Effective Date.--The amendments
made by this section shall apply to any transfer, sale, or holding out
for sale or resale occurring after the date of the enactment of this
Act.

Approved August 10, 2005.

LEGISLATIVE HISTORY--H.R. 3 (S. 732):
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

HOUSE REPORTS: Nos. 109-12 and Pt. 2 (both from Comm. on Transportation
and Infrastructure) and 109-203 (Comm. of Conference).
SENATE REPORTS: No. 109-53 accompanying S. 732 (Comm. on Environment and
Public Works).
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, Vol. 151 (2005):
Mar. 9, 10, considered and passed House.
Apr. 26-28, May 9-13, 16, 17, considered and passed Senate,
amended.
July 29, House and Senate agreed to conference report.
WEEKLY COMPILATION OF PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS, Vol. 41 (2005):
Aug. 10, Presidential remarks and statement.