HomeMy WebLinkAbout03-Presentation
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" COALITION
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Less traffic. More jobs. Cleaner air.
Officers
Bob Wolf, President
President. Germania Corporation
Larry Sharp, V ice President
President and CEO. Arrowhead Credit Union
Martin Matich, Treasurer
Chairman, Matich Corporation
Peter Barmack, Secretary
Partner. Best Best and Kriegel' LLP
Members
Bill Johnson
Owner, Johnson Machinery
Dennis Troesh
President and CEO, Robertson's Ready Mix
Randall Lewis
Vice President, Lewis Operating Companies
Steve Ponte II
Founder, De 01'0 Group
Tom Mullen
Former Supervisor, County of Riverside
John lIusing
President, Economics and Politics Inc.
Phillip Eckert
Business Manager, Riverside and San Bel'llardino Counties Building and Comtruction Trades Council,
AFL-C/O
Ex-Officio Members
Paul Hiller
President and CEO, Inland Empire Economic Partnership
Eric Haley
Executive Director, RCTC
Norm King
Executive Director, SANBAG (retired)
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" COALITION
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Less traffic. More jobs. Cleaner air.
Fact Sheet
BACKGROUND: The Inland Empire Transportation Coalition (IETC) is dedicated to helping
solve transportation and mobility issues by promoting private sector
investment in transportation infrastructure, securing equitable federal funding
for Southern California and working cooperatively with regional agencies
and elected officials.
MEMBERSHIP: fETC is a non-profit group made up of noted transportation, business and
economic leaders.
CHALLENGES: ~ The volume of goods moving through Southern California ports, already
the third busiest in the world, is expected to triple in the next 25 years.
~ 70 percent of trade coming through the ports leaves the region on trucks
or trains.
~ 1-10 and 1-15 - major trucking routes - bisect the Inland Empire.
Increased traffic is turning the freeways into chokepoints that stymie the flow
of trade.
~ Southern California must spend $26 billion to improve rail yards,
railroads and highways to keep up with foreign trade. Not doing so could
cost the region $1 billion in annual tax revenue and 500,000 jobs, according
to the LA County Economic Development Corp.
GOAL:
Work cooperatively with federal and state elected officials, regional agencies
and other groups to ensure that Southern California has the infrastructure
needed to relieve congestion and enhance the regional economy.
SOLUTIONS:
~ Greater private sector involvement in funding transportation
improvements / less reliance on state funding.
~ Clear communication with policy makers about the transportation
infrastructure priorities of the Inland Empire and Southern California.
~ Amend State transportation project planning and design guidelines:
Implement design-build and design-sequencing on roads projects to save
time and money by fast-tracking construction.
~ Equitable distribution of federal transportation funding for Southern
California to address impacts of port activity on infrastructure.
REQUEST:
Support upcoming legislative proposals that will allow private sector
investment in transportation infrastructure.
tranDspo~E~~~ation
" COALITION
,
,
Less traffic. More jobs. Cleaner air.
Transportation Solutions Plan
While the Inland Empire Transportation Coalition continues to work with our regional
and national partners to explore innovative transportation funding solutions, the
following is our organization's four-point plan to reduce traffic congestion, clean the air,
and create up to a million new jobs in the logistics and goods movement industry in
Southern California.
1, Private Sector Investment: Encourage private sector
investment in new transportation infrastructure by allowing
companies to receive tax credits and / or issue tax-exempt
bonds in exchange for financing the construction of new
transportation projects.
2. Federal Customs Revenue Utilization: Work with
federal legislators to designate incremental growth in U.S.
customs revenues for regional transportation improvements.
3. Voluntarv Container Fee: Work with federal and state
legislators to enable shipping and transportation companies
that use the nation's seaports to pay voluntary container fees
to help fund regional infrastructure improvements.
4. Universal Project List: Create a vetted transportation
project list that is universally supported by regional
stakeholders, allowing for maximum relevance and support
among federal and state decision-makers.
For more information visit www.ietranscoalition.orq.
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Priority Projects
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Inland Empire Regional
Prlontles
Construct rail-to-rail grade separation lor the at
grade crossing which is the cause of the msol
ColtOll Crossing Grade serious bottleneck between the LNLB ports Increases track. capacity and elirninates an existing rail
Separation and the resl ot the U_S. $150 Baca& Lewis bottleneck, increases safety and security, irl1'roves air quality
Baca, Dreier, Relieves congestion and ifTllroves safety. This interchange in
1-1511.215 Interchange Reconstructiono! 1.151215 Interchange $100 & Lewis Devore is a major gateway 10 the High Desert
Baca& Eliminates bottlenecks, improves salely, this section 011-15 has
1-15- Rt. 6010 1-10 Widen Freeway $100 Calvert fewer lanes thant he sections irrmediately north and south of it.
6.5 rrile project eKlending frornOrange Show Eliminates bo"lenecks, improves safety, represents the major
1-215~-County Road in San Bernardino to the 601911215 Baca, Calvert connecting route between San Bernardino and Riverside
Improvement Project Interchange in Riverside $500 & Lewis Counties, the accident rate is 2.5 times the avg. rate
Elminates bo"lenecks and is the major freeway link near March
1-215 EucalytpustoEast Bono & Air Reserve Base; Improves safety (the accident rate is 34%
Junction Widening from Eucalyptus to East Junction $75 Calvert above the avg. rate)
Eliminates bottlenecks and is the most irTl'ortant trucking link
Reconstruct Interchange and convert SR 60 to between the Coachella Calley and the Inland ErTl'ire: Improves
1-101SR79 Interchange freeway $250 Lewis safety (the accident rate is 46% above the avg. rate)
SR-60 Truck Climbing Elrrinates bo"lenecks, improves salley (the accident rate is 46
Lane through the Badlands Bono & above the avg. rate) and is an important trucking link between
to 1.10 Construct truck climbing lane $26 Calvert Western Riverside County and the Coachella Valley
RlversldeCountyPnonlles
Elirrinates bottlenecks and improves highway connection
between the Banning Pass, Coachella Valley and San
1.101SR79 Interchange Reconstruct Interchange $132 Lewis Jacinto/Hemet area: Improves safety
1-21SNanBuren Calvert&. Needed interchange to serve base re-use efforts and business
Interchange Reconstruct Interchange $65 8000 development at March
Alameda Corridor East Priority grade crossing identified !or Eliminates: 5 hrs of gate downtime/day, 192 vehicle hrs of daily
(ACE): Magnolia improvement as a component 01 $2.4 B driver delay, 6-auto-.-train accidents & whistle noise for 26,447
AvetBNSF Alameda Corridor East $16 Calvert residents
Priority grade crossing identified for Eliminafes: 8 hrs of gate downtime/day, 155 vehicle hrs of daily
Alameda Corridor East improvement as a component 01 $2.4 B driver delay, 1-auto-.-train accident & whistle noise for 27,826
(ACE): Chicago AveIBNS Alameda Corridor East $26 Calvert residents
Alameda Corridor East Priority grade crossing identified for Eliminates. 8 hrs of gate downtimefday, 152 vehicle hrs of daily
(ACE): Columbia improvement as a component of $2.4 B driver delay, 1.auto.train accident & whistle noise lor 14,019
AvefBNSF & UP Alameda Corridor East $18 Calvert residents
Alameda Corridor East Priority grade crossing identified for Elimnates: 5 hrs of gate downtime/day, 517 vehicle hrs of daily
(ACE): McKinley St./BNSF improvement as a component of $2.4 B driver delay, 3-auto-train accidents & whistle noise for 23,053
'UP Alameda Corridor East $17 Calvert residents
Alameda Corridor East Priority grade crossing identified for Eliminates: 8 hrs of gale downtime/day, 267 vehicle hrs of daily
(ACE): Iowa Ave.lBNSF & improvement as a cOrTl'Onent of $2.4 B driver delay, 1-auto-train accident &. whistle noise for 9,849
UP Alameda Corridor East $19 Calvert residents
Priority grade crossing identified for Eliminates: 5 hrs 01 gate downtime/day, 213 vehicle hrs of daily
Alameda Corridor East improvement as a cOrTl'Onent of 52.4 B driver delay, 6-auto-train accidents &. whistle noise for 27,036
(ACE): Adams Sl./BNSF Nameda Corridor East $15 Calvert residents
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Priority Projects
San Bernardino County
Pnonlies
1.101Tippecanoe Key SBlA access 10f base development, 575 daily veh, Hrs_or
Interchange Reconstruct Tippecanoe Avenue Interchange $40 Lewis delay reduced by 2020, irTllrovedsatety
High truck volume interchange, 1,333 daily veh. hrs. of delay
1-101Cherrylnlerchange Reconstruct Cherry Interchange $35 Baea reduced by 2020, improved safely.
1-10/Citrus Ie & Cypress Reconstruct Citrus Interchange & construct High truck volume interchange, 670 daily veh. Hrs.o1delay
DC Cypress Overcrossing $38 Baca reduced by 2020, improved salety
l.l0fRiversideRailroad Reconslruct Riverside Avenue grade Congestion relief, doubles arterial capacity to relieve
Bridge separatiOll soulh 01 1.10 $40 Baca bottleneck
High volume interchange, 401 daily veh hrs. of delay reduced
1-10 Cedar Interchange Reconstruct Cedar interchange $27 Baca by 2020, improved safety
Alameda Corrior East Priority grade crossing identified for
{ACE):Monle improvements w;thin county as COfll)Onent of Eliminates 164 daily vehicle hours 01 delay by 2030, reduces
Vista/Alhambra & LA lines $2.4 billion Alameda Corrior East $1. Dreier noise and pollution, improves safety
Alameda Corrior East Priority grade crossing identified tor
(ACE): MilikenlAlhambra improvements w;thin county as co~nent of Eliminates 239 daily vehicle hours 01 delay by 2030, reduces
Line $2.4 billion Alameda Corrior East $3. Saoa noise andpoilution, improves safety
Alameda Corrior East Priority grade crossing identified for Eliminates 100 daily vehicle hours of delay by 2030 mainline +
(ACE): Hunts LanelYuma improvements w;thin county as COrll>Onent of delay from siding traffic, reduces noise and pollution, improves
Line $2.4 billion Alameda Corrior East $14 Lewis safety
Alameda Corrior East Priority grade crossing identified for
(ACE): State StreeVCaion improvements wthin county as cOfll)Onent of Eliminates 625 daily vehicle hours of delay by 2030, reduces
Line $2.4 billion Alameda Corrior East $17 Saoa noise and pollution, improves safety
Alameda Corrior East Priority grade crossing identified tor
(ACE): Valley Blvd.lSan improvements within county as corrponent of Eliminates 155 daily vehicle hours of delay by 2030, reduces
Bdno. Line $2.4 billion Alameda Corrior East $19 Saoa noise and pollution, improves safety
Priorily grade crossing identified for
Alameda Corrior East improvements within county as corrponent 01 Eliminates 715 daily vehicle hours of delay by 2030, reduces
(ACE): lenwood Avenue $2.4 billion Alameda Corrior East $15 McKeon noise and pollution, improves safety
Alameda Corrior East Priority grade crossing identified for
ACE: Glen Helen/Cajon improvements wthin county as component of Eliminates 314 daily vehicle hours of delay by 2030, reduces
Southern California
Regional Pnonlles
San Bernardino County portion of east-west Baca, Dreier
Dedicated Truck lanes connection between 1.710& 1-15. $1,500 & Miller Relieves congestion and improves safety
Baca, Calvert,
1-15 from Riverside County to Mojave River in Dreier, Lews
Dedicated Truck lanes San Bernardino County $3,500 & McKeon Relieves congestion and improves safety
Route 58 Freight Corridor Widen from 2 to 4 lanes, Kern County to 395
widening and safety and at Hinkley. $182 McKeon Relieves congestion, improves safety on major truck corridor
6-lane expressway on new alignment from 1-15
U.S, 395 realignment and to north of Adelanto, on or near existing McKeon, Relieves congestion, improves safety on major truck corridor.
widening to expressway alignment to Kramer $1,000 Lewis Private/user financing potential
New corridor 'rom LA County to 395, 1-15, and McKeon, ImprOVed access, cOIlgestion relief, safety. Private/user
E-220 High Desert Corridor Apple Valley $1.514 Lewis tinancingpotential
SOUTH(R:>,i(AU'ORNIA
~
Goods Movement in Southern California:
Challenge, Opportunity, Solution
ASSOCIATION of
GOYERNMENTS Summarized by John Husing, Ph.D.
Southern California faces an extraordinary economic opportunity and a frustrating policy
dilernma. The rise of Asian trade through Los Angeles and Long Beach harbors to the nation has
given the area its first true competitive advantage for creating good-paying blue collar jobs since
the rise of aerospace after World War II. A I,OOO,OOO-job economic strategy aimed at providing
entry into the middle class for some of the 44% oflocal adults with no college experience is now
possible. But with San Pedro Bay ports handling 43% of the containers entering the U.S., the
region's communities tind themselves drowning in a sea of trucks and trains and choking on
their exhaust. Can we identity and implement the infrastructure projects, environmental policies
and funding mechanisms to harness this opportunity or must California lose a chance to raise the
prosperity of thousands of its families and improve public health? That is the dilemma facing
today's generation of analysts, activists and leaders.
Exhibit 1.-Port Container Traffic
Ports of Los Angeles & Long Beach, 1990-2030 (millions of TEUs)
2004
43% U.s. Imported Containers
23% U.S. Exported Containers
-Port Import!Export Reporting Senices-
pI' ",' ",'\0 ","> ,,~ "," "," "'~ ",'" "," "," ",' ",'\0 ","> ,,<>' ," r6' ","
,OJ ,OJ ,OJ ,OJ , ,OJ ,OJ ,OJ ,OJ ,OJ <t' <t' <t' '\0" '); '\0" '\0" <t'
TEU'=20 foot equivalent container units
Source: Ports of Los Angeles & Long Beach, SCAG
The Opportunity. Southern California's new competitive advantage starts with the fact that
countless manufacturers now find that Asia's labor costs are a fraction of those in the U.S. Price
competition among retailers like Wal-Mart, Costco and Home Depot has forced them to
increasingly rely on Asian producers to stock their shelves. In Southern California, this has
caused soaring container volume at Los Angeles and Long Beach harbors. In 2000, 9.5 million
total TEV's (20-fi)()t equivalent container units) were processed (imports, exports, empties). In
2004, it was 13.1 million, up 37.9% (Exhibit I). By 2030, the ports forecast that volurne could
reach 44.7 million, triple today's figure.
Meanwhile, the 2004 total volume figure included 6.8 million TEU's of the 15.8 million
imported containers entering the U.S., a 43.0% share. It also included \.8 million exported
containers or 22.9% of the nation's total. On the import side, several relatively obvious factors
have created competitive advantages for retailers to move goods through Southern California
(Imperial, Kern. Los Angeles, Orange. Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego. Ventura counties):
. Its ports are on the West Coast nearer to Asia.
. Its January 2005 population of2\.9 million constitutes a huge internal market.
. Its huge port operations handle triple the volume of Oakland-SF, Seattle-Tacoma,
Portland & Vancouver combined (5.1 million rEU's). A Mexican port is still theoretical.
1
. As giant post-Panamax ships (8,200-TEU ships & up) come on-line, Oakland cannot
accommodate them as San Francisco Bay is too shallow.
. The landside rail and freeway connections to U.S. markets from Seattle-Tacoma and
Vancouver are limited cornpared to Southern California as is their internlOdal capability
and access to goods trans loading, consolidation and storage facilities.
. Ocean carriers like to drop cargo going to Southern California's huge internal market and
off-load containers headed throughout the U.S. before they visit other West Coast ports.
Less obvious is why large high value retailers with multiple U.S. markets prefer to ship to
Southern California's ports and use local warehouses to consolidate and transload goods on to
relatively expensive trucks or trains for nationwide delivery. Their option: Use inexpensive
ships to take their goods to multiple U.S. ports nearer those hubs. While the alternative would
save on transportation costs, the Leachman Port & Modal Elasticitv Studv commissioned by
SCAG' showed that retailers save 18% to 20% by operating from the Southland for 3 reasons:
. . For national retailers, the wider the gap between when sales forecasts are made at their
hubs and the arrival of goods, the larger the inventories they must order to cover
forecasting errors. If they ship directly to each hub via multiple ports, inventory
decisions must be made while the goods are in Asia, 4-7 weeks before delivery. If they
ship to Southern California and manage their inventories from here, those decisions are
made 1-2 weeks before delivery, cutting the risk of error and reducing the size and cost
of inventories.
. If a national retailer sends goods directly to multiple hubs from Asia and a container
misses a ship, one destination hub will get no goods while the retailer's other hubs will be
fully stocked. By shipping to Southern California and using local consolidation facilities,
the firm can elect to reduce each hub's supplies by the amount of any missing cargo.
This spreads the risk and reduces the "safety" inventory that it rnust buy.
. High value retailers are the most likely to ship to Southern California and create jobs by
managing their inventories via local trans loading, warehousing and consolidation because
inventory eosts are magnified for expensive goods. It thus costs more for these retailers
to buy extra inventory to both guard against sales forecasting errors if they ship directly
from Asia and guard against supply chain disruptions.
Speed and reliability are crucial to Southern California's competitive edge. This was nearly lost
in 2004 when 93 ships were tied up in San Pedro Bay because the ports could not unload them or
efficiently move freight out their gates. It happened in 1996, when Union Pacific's purchase of
Southern Pacific slowed freight movements, and again in 2005 when heavy rains and landslides
disrupted rail traffic. Freeway congestion is an issue, slowing interstate trucks that go from the
ports through Cajon (/-15) and San Gorgonio (/-10) passes. Meanwhile, growing neighborhood
opposition to port, rail and freeway expansion due to diesel fumes, noise and lack of grade
separations threatens to prevent needed infrastructure expansion to combat these delays. As a
result, some retailers have built facilities elsewhere to guard against this region's emerging
difficulties.
The Potential Benefits. If Southern California can maintain its competitive advantage for
handling the growing volume of goods movement and solve the issues of congestion, diesel
emissions and community impacts, significant benefits will flow to its labor force as well as the
firms invofved in goods movement and the people living near transportation facilities.
I Port & Modal Elasticity Studv, Dr. Rob Leachman, Leachman & Associates LLC, September 2005.
2
Labor Force Benefits. The SCAG funded Husing labor force stud/ showed that in 2003 some
44.6% of Southern California's adults had stopped their formal educations with a high school
diploma or less (Exhibit 2). It was half or nearly half the population of Kern, San Bernardino,
Riverside and Los Angeles counties.3 It was over one-third of the population in San Diego,
Orange and Ventura counties. Historically, manufacturing allowed this population to achieve
upward economic mobility via high entry-levcl pay and on-thc-job learning. However, the sector
lost 324,800 jobs in California frorn 2000-2004 (17.5%) rnostly due to rising Asian competition.
Exhibit 2.-Share of Adults With High School or Less Education
Population 25 & Over, 2003
45%
K'rn
San Bernardino Riverside Los Angeles So. Calir. San Diego
Source: American Community SurvCl)' by U.S. Census. 2005
Orange
Ventura
Today, the logistics industry offers the possibility of replacing manufacturing as a source of
rising incomes for workers with these educational levels. These sectors are involved in
receiving, processing, storing and moving goods. In 2003, this included 38,706 firms with
548,278 workers (Exhibit 3). Importantly, the median and average pay levels in logistics are a
little over $2,000 above manufacturing and $4,000 above construction, the other major blue
collar sectors.
Exhibit 3.-Wage & Salary Employment, Logistics Group
By Sector, SCAG Region, 2003
Wholesale trade (naics 42)
352,373
Truck transportation (naics 484)
54,504
52,662
Support activities for transportation (naics 488)
Non-Local Couriers (oaics 492110)
General warehousing & storage (naics 493)
Air transportation (oaics 481)
Rail Transportation (naics 482) 2,952
Water transportation (naics 483) 1,789
Logistics Group
,278
Source: Quarterly Census of Employment Wages, CA Employment Development Department. 2004
Research by SCAG's staff found that by building the infrastructure to accommodate the growth
of trade and cleaning up its worst environmental side-effects, 1,381,000 Southern California jobs
can be created. Of these, 325,000 would be in logistics as the sector follows its normal growth
path, plus another 95,000 due to the transportation system's added efficiency. Building and
maintaining the new infrastructure would add 277,000 construction jobs, while phase I of the
2 Logistics and Distribution: An Answer to Uoward Social MobiIitv, Dr. John Husing, Economics & Politics. Inc.
June 2004 hlto:/ /www.scag.ca. gov/ goodsmove/od f/H usingLogisticsReoort. od f
3 Note: Imperial County data unavailable for 2003. The figure was 62.9% in 2000.
3
Maglev system from LAX to Ontario International Airport would add another 91,000. Expanded
transportation efficiency would cause the general economy to expand, adding 83,000 jobs. The
multiplier impacts of all this investment spending would provide the other 5 I 0,000 (Exhibit 4).
-
Exhibit 4.-Logistics Investment, Job Creation, 2005-2030
Activity Job Creation
Logistics Natural Growth 325,000
Logistics: Additional Gro\\1h Due To System Efficiency 95,000
Rail Capacity, Grade Separation. Truckway 277,000
Rest of Economy Growth: System Efficiency 83,000
Maglev LAX-ONT 91,000
Multiplier Impacts 510,000
TOTAL 1,381,000
Transportation Sector Benefits. The infrastructure to allow the expansion of Southern
California's logistics sector will not be built unless the region's goods movement companies find
it will increase the speed and reliability of their operations in substantial and measurable ways.
That is the message that emerged from extensive roundtable discussions between the shippers
and the agencies concerned with improving the system.4
To calculate this, SCAG's staff created metrics to measure potential improvements via a Speed
& Reliabilitv Studv. It assumed a conservative $73 per hour cost for moving cargo by freeway
and modeled anticipated delays from congestion and accidents at various times of the day. The
study found that if dedicated truck ways and expanded railroad infrastructure were built, and tolls
and fees later charged to use them, shipping would cost less than without such a system. These
results are being presented to industry for peer review. One example, in moving containers to
Ontario from the ports:
. Shippers would have a time-cost savings of $76 per load without allowing for
unexpected congestion delays.
. Shippers would have a time-cost savmgs of $233 per load if they do allow for
unexpected congestion delays.
Environmental Benefits. In California, it is axiomatic that major infrastructure projects will not
be built unless the environmental community is satisfied that they will, at worst, do no harm, and
at best, decrease health risks. For the logistics infrastructure needed to energize Southern
California's blue collar job growth, the key will be the strategy's ability to seriously reduce NOx
(nitrogen oxides) and fine particulate matter from diesel fumes at the ports and intermodal yards
as well as along freeways and rail lines. Also, rail grade separations will be necessary so trains
do not divide cities, slow emergency vehicles, tie up traffic and increase noise pollution.
One strategy is to speed up investment in Tier III lower diesef-ernitting railroad engines and
similar engines for trucks, to reduce port and intermodal rail yard ernissions. Also, the oldest and
dirtiest trucks could be bought and retired, and newer trucks retrofitted. In harbor areas, several
strategies could reduce emissions from ships burning low-grade bunker fuel. "Cold ironing"
could be applied at the docks so ships are powered off the electrical grid not their diesel engines.
Ships entering port areas could be required to move at slower speeds to bum less fuel. The U.S.
Senate could ratify the MARPOL Annex VI (marine pollution treaty) and support formation of a
North American Sulfur Emission Control Area requiring ships entering the ports to use lower-
sulfur fuel.
4 Roundtable meetings were convened by SCAG in February. May, and August 2005.
4
To reduce freeway congestion and emissions, PierPASS has instituted its OffPeak program with
an $80 container fee waived for trucks moving in evening and weekend hours. Some 30% are
doing so, reducing the big rig impact on peak-time congestion and idling. To help this effort, an
Inland Empire truck port is under diseussion. At it, loads would be left at night and distributed
the next day. Also being implemented is computerized matching of in and outbound container
loads to stop empties from returning to the ports after an import delivery, only to return as
empties to the same area for an export load. And, the Alameda Corridor Transportation
Authority is studying the economics of using short haul rail for sorne of the 1.24 million
containers going to the Inland Empire each year.5 Local trucks will haul them to warehouses
from an inland rail port. Meanwhile, given rail's key roles to any emissions solution, the
Alameda Corridor East projects are essential to eliminate the many at-grade rail crossings from
the Alameda Corridor's terminus to the descrts.
The Solution. Fortunately, a path to solving the issues described here is becoming evident.
Projects. It begins by dctailing thc projects needed if the transportation system is to have the
efficiency and reliability that shippers need to continue expanding and crcating local jobs.
SCAG region stakeholders have helped develop an unprioritized $26.2 billion goods movernent
project list.6 To develop further detail and priorities, the Multi-Countv Goods Movement Action
Plan is underway. It is being funded by county transportation commissions, Caltrans and SCAG.
Environmental. fn addition, it is essential that the region set aside funds and develop the
environmental strategy to accornpany them. Cost estimates to mitigate the impacts of freight-
related diesel usage on public health and the environment vary widely. No rnatter what, the
region must come into attainment of health-based air quality standards and address other
environmental impacts of goods movement. Investments in environmental mitigation strategies
can and should be financed side by side with infrastructure investments.
Elasticity Study. As stated, the Leachman Port & Modal Elasticitv Study showed that national
retailers save 18%-20% on their inventory costs by shipping their high-value products to
Southern California and using local warehouses to manage, consolidate and transload cargo
before rail or truck delivery to various U.S. hubs. This process cuts weeks off the lag between
hub level sales predictions and the arrival of the goods, lowering the inventories nceded to cover
forecasting errors. Centralized warehousing also reduces the inventory needed to cover the risk
that some cargo deliveries will be interrupted along the supply chain.
Using data on the economics of shipping decisions provided by national retailers, the Elasticitv
Studv also looked at the impact on container volumes at Southern California's ports if an
expanded goods movement nctwork was built and, afterwards, shippers amortized their
investments through a schedulc of fees and tolls to use the system and retire its construction debt.
The conclusion was that under such an arrangement, the system's added speed and reliability
would lure 12.5% more high-value cargo that creates jobs as it is handled by Southern
California's logistics operations. It would also chase away low-value cargo that just passes
through the region without creating jobs, freeing rail and frecway capacity for high-value
shippers.
Return On Private Sector Investment. Combining the results of the Speed & Reliabilitv Studv
to thosc of the Elasticitv Study yields scrious lessons for strategies to finance Southern
California's logistics system. Earlier, it was indicated that the Speed & Reliabilitv Studv found
significant cost savings to shippers of having access to a dedicated truckway. If a small portion
, Alameda Corridor Transportation Authority, Consolidation Activitv ill SOl/them Califomia Area, BST Associates
6 Southern California Regional Strategv for Goods Movement: A Plan for Action, February 2005, Table 2, SCAG,
hUo:llwww.scog.ca. gov/goodsmovc/od f/Goodsmovc Pooer0305 .od f
5
of those savings were paid as a toll to help retire the $16.5 billion debt from building the
truckway, shippers would pro tit frorn the system. For example, towing a container via truckway
from the ports to Ontario:
. Shippers would have a $76 time-cost saving with no allowance for unexpected delays.
Using a truckway toll of 86~ per mile, the trip cost would be $32. The truck tollway
would cause bottom-line profits to increase by $44 per trip.
. Shippers would save $233 in time-cost saving when allowances for unexpected delays
are included. At a truck way toll of 86~ per mile, the trip cost would be $32. The truck
tollway would cause bottom-line profits to increase $201 per trip.
The study found that the time-cost savings from expanding the region's rail system to be even
more dramatic. Again, this research is being presented to the shipping industry for peer review.
Financial Feasibility. Southern California faces difficult infrastructure financing questions.
Can it pay for the $26.2 billion in highway and rail improvements that will generate over I
million logistics related jobs? Can it also finance the billions needed for environmental projects?
After the system is finished, can it institute a fee schedule to repay the construction financing and
stay within the limit where the Elasticitv Study finds the maximum trade bene tit?
In each case, the answer is YES. The funding strategies in Exhibit 5 row 5 use an 86~ per mile
truckway toll with a $160-$170 container fee. Together, they are generally below or about equal
to the threshold from the Elasticitv Study and raise the needed $36.2 billion.
Exhibit 5.-Potential Goods Movement System Financing Options
~----- ---
Project Capital Cost Fee Structure Fee Ranges & Assumptions
1 No Proiect $0 None None
Container Fees & $60 to $70 Contaioer Fee
2 Truckway Onlv $16.5 Billion Truch\lay Toll 86~ per Mile Truckway Toll
(f.evel debt lii15%. 30-35 }'ears)
$15 to $30 Container Fee
3 Rail Improvements On Iv $3.5 Billion Container Fees (Low Fee: lax credit instnmzent)
(lIiflh Fee: 5%, ascendinf! debt: 20 Years)
$120 to $130 Container Fee
4 Totalllighway & $26.2 Billion Container Fees & 86~ per Mile Truckway Toll
Rail Improvements Onlv Truck\,,'ay Toll (Roads: level debt@5%. 30}'r, 35}'r. -IO}'r)
(Rail: tax credit & ascendinr! debt for rail)
Total Highway & $160 to $170 Container Fee
Rail Improvements & Container Fees & 86t per Mile Trackway Toll
5 SlOB Environmental S36.2 Billion Truckway Toll (Highway/Environmental: Level debt@5%,
30Yr, 35Yr & 40Yr)
Mitigation (Rail: tax credit instrument & ascending debt)
The Next Steps. Southern California has cornpetitive advantages that will allow it to create
over 1,000,000 in middle-class jobs related to the logistics sector if it undertakes the
infrastructure and environmental projects necessary to allow those jobs to be created. The jobs
are needed, given that 44.6% of the region's adults have no college experience. Shippers will
find that their financial benefits from an expanded goods movement system's increased speed
and reliability will more than offset their costs to use it. The tolls and user fees needed to re-pay
the strategy's $36.2 billion price tag will generally be below or at the $100 per TEU (2005
prices) that could hurt the region's trade. What remains? To undertake the measures to move
this strategy forward:
. Creation of a Southern California Institution to Execute Infrastructure Construction.
No existing institution, under its current authorities, can manage the building of the wide
range of infrastructure and environmental projects needed to implement the logistics-based
6
economic strategy region-wide. Such an institution must be able to pnontlze projects,
undertake bidding, establish budgets, raise and repay funds and manage construction in all
counties. The creation of such a Southern California-based institution may require
legislation.
. Peer Review. The research conducted on this issue needs to undergo peer review by the
retailers, shipping companies and others with a financial stake in the system. If their analysts
find that the system will serve their corporate interests, they will become the crucial link in
convincing government entities to move forward with funding and implementation strategies.
If they do not support it, thc system will likcly nevcr bc built.
. Federal and State Legislation For Infrastructure Financing Tools. In column 5 of
Exhibit 5, there is a list of the credit instruments that could be used to lower the cost of
funding the highway, rail and environmental measures needed for a logistics-based Southern
California economic strategy. These include federal tax credit equity financing and state
authorization of public/private infrastructure financing. To speed project processing and
lowcr costs, state approval of dcsign-build construction project processing is needed.
. Private Sector Leadership. Ultimately, the devclopmcnt of the wide-ranging political and
economic agenda required to move the strategy forward will requirc the leadership of private
sector individuals with a vision for Southern California's future. Their foresight and energy
will be needed in encouraging federal, state, and local institutions and political leaders to
make the decisions that can make a program of this irnportance a reality.
. Environmental Cooperation. To begin improving public hcalth, the rnost cost-effective
environmental improvement strategies need to be identified, prioritized, and funded
promptly. Numerous local, state and federal environmental agencies have begun to realize
the extraordinary challenges posed by the aceclcrating flow of international goods through
Southern California and the lack of infrastructure, financing and environmental measures to
handle it. They need to follow through on their expressed interest in cooperating on this
issue. A memorandum of understanding that pledges cooperation and outlines how each can
help bring an infrastructure and environrnental strategy to fruition would be a helpful first
step.
. Establishment of Federal Infrastructure Financing Related to International Trade. A
crucial player in the long-term funding of the infrastructure and environmental projects
needed for this Southern California economic strategy must be the federal government.
Federal economic and trade policies are a major reason for the flood of goods now entering
the U.S. Yet there is no federal financing structure tied to the landside issues of the port, rail
and truck infrastructure needed to handle the movement of this trade. Whether it is port-
related container fees, the dedication of a portion of tariffs to the goods movement
infrastructure or sorne other mechanism, the federal government needs to begin playing a
significant role in infrastructure financing.
. Political Leadership. Southern California's state and federal delegations include several
crucial committee chairpersons. They should be able to bring considerable influence to bear
on acquiring financing, developing financial tools, and undertaking legislative initiatives that
can move the stratcgy forward. Given the wide range of pressures on these officials, the
region's private sector leaders and its agencies must ensure that its legislative delegations are
aware of the issue, the emerging lines of strategies, and how they can use their influence to
help craft solutions.
Summary. The goods movement issue presents Southern California with its greatest economic
opportunity in decades to create upward economic mobility for its workforce. This report has
7
outlined the challenges, explained the opportunities and underscored the potential benefits of a
logistics-based economic and environmental strategy. It has also laid out a route to
implementing such a strategy and ended by explaining the steps that now need to be taken to
move ahead. In many respects, the future outlined by this research is ours to grasp or let slip
away.
Dr. John Husing is the Vice President of Economics and Politics, Inc.
This essay is a condensed version of a longer paper prepared by Dr. Husing for SCAG that could be
accessed at htto:llscaa. ca. aovlaoodsmovelodflGoodsmovePaoer0905. odf
8
:./~.........
TlrB-'p'RE SS- ENTE RPRlS E)
FRIDAY
,{ OCTOBER 21, 2005
Private bucks must move traills, trucks
ANALYSIS: A former state
transportation official;
says government alone
cannot pay for roads.
UY MARK KAWAU
THEPRESs-ENTERPRlSE
The California Department of
Transportation has predicted
that the state's truck traffic will
double In the next 20 years. The
San. Bernardino Associated
Governments predicts a dou-
bling of Inland-area train traffic
dUling.the same period.
But local infrastructure will
not be able to handle the growth
without help from the private
sector, a former state trans-
portation official said.
Robert Wolf, undersecretary
of the California' Business,
Transportation and Housing
Agency under Gov. Pete Wil-
son, told an audience at UC
Riverside on Thursday that gov-
ernment is .not up to the task of
providing needed roads, rail
and other transportation infra-
structure by itself.
"Somebody needs to bring
new money to the table," said
Wolf, now a developer based in
Moreno Valley, "I submit to y.ou
that it should be the private
sector."
He suggested that trucking
companies and the businesses
they supply lose so much money
from California's traffic con-
gestion that it is in their best
interests to help fund construc-
tion of roads, grade crossings
and other transportation
projects, such as trucl,-only
roads.
Companies could recoup
their investments through tolls
.on the new roads, from a por-
tion of government-collected
'container fees or from the effi-
ciencies that they realize ITom
more-reliable goods movement,
he said.
He also recommended that
the federal government provide'
tax credits to private companies
tliat invest in infrastructure.
Marlon Boarnet, chair of the
Department of Policy, Planning
and Design at DC Irvine, cri-
tiqued Wolfs ideas after he
presented -them at the Randall
Lewis Seminar Series.
"Our transportation agencies
would have to evolve," said
Boarnet, "from construction
agencies, to regulatory bodies"
if the private sector were to tal,e
the lead in building infrastruc-
ture.
But, he added, "we need to
unlearn the notion that all
transportation infrastructure
should be financed through
public funds."
California has had a love-hate
relationship with the type of
public-private transportation
projects Wolf suggested.
Private investors built and
operated toll lanes on the 91
freeway in 1995, but the state
took the road in 2003 because it
wanted more control over fu-
ture improvements.
In Southern California, there.
are tolls for the 73, 133, 241 and
261 freeways - far fewer toll
roads than in Northeastern
states.
That may be changing. In'
July, Congress passed a bill
designed to stimulate the con-
struction of toll roads by ex-
empting bonds issued by pri-
vate .companies to pay for toll
. roads from federal taxes.
"The bottom line is, you can
build (infrastructure) and they
will come," said Wolf. "Or you
cim not build it, and they'll come
anyway. ..
Reach Mark Kawar at (909) 806-3052 or
mkawar@pe.com
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Trucks
continued from page A 1
60 percent of'imports from Asia, and most of
those products pass through the Inland Empire
on their way to stores and businesses through-
out the country, said Ty Schuiling, director of
planning"nd programming for San Bernardi-
no Associated Governments, or Sanbag, the
county's transportation agency:
Schuiling made the presentntion to.the full
Sanbag board of directors Wednesday. .
As the area positions itself to be the na-j.:t;.r::'
tion's major shipping hub and create well~
paying blue collar jobs, the region will bene-
fit, .';". . as long as we can mitigate the im.
pacts," Schuiling said..
Norm King, executive director of Sanb,ag,
has long argued that goods movement is the
biggest challenge fncing the region, and find-
ing a way to help trucks .and trains. move more
efficiently is critical. .
"1 think this issue has the most positive or
negative impact on our economy.' and our
quality oflife," he said. .
Some have been concerned that imposing a
fee on the big boxes used to move goods by
truck and train would send them to other
ports.
The study, done for the Southern California
Association of Governments, a regional plan-
ning agency, indicates that worsening conges-
tion is just 'as likely to divert traffic away from
the Los Angeles ports. .
Over the next 25 years, train traffic through-
the Inland Empire is expected to nearly dou-
ble from fewer than 200 trains per day. to
about 390, which will dramatically slow rail
traffic, and lead to long waits for motorists at
rail crossings where there are no underpasses
or overpasses.
. The number of cuntainers will more than
triple, from the equivalent of 13.2 million
20-foot containers to 44.7 million by 2030.
Mee of up to $200 per 40-foot container if
used for improvements to help the traffic
fiow, would .actually allow for an increase in
the number of containers shipped, according
to the study, Schuiling said.
Shippers would .have to be convinced any
such fee would provide a tangible benefit in
efficiency and cost, Jeff Lustaarten a
k 0 ,
spa esman for Southern California Associat-
ed Government, said. by telephone after the
meeting.
Solutions such as expanded rai1lines, and
separate truck lanes.on majorroules including ,
HIghway 60 and Interstate 15 to Barstow..",
would cost hillions of dollars. ~ i :
Fontm;a ~ayor Mark Nuaimi asked duri~g' .
~e.meeting.if the federal government is I'r~
vl!ling help to local governments in dealing
WIth tbe effects of increasing trade.
Schuiling said federal officials have been
made. aware of.the problem and seem interest-
ed in helping. He expects formal agreements
down the road between local, state and feder-
al officials to cooperate on solutions.
But (Vowth is quickly outpacing solutions,
and a~tion needs to be taken quickly, Schuil-
mg Send.
"This needs to be done in a decade, not two
or three decades as is typical/' he said. .
Contact writer Andrew Silva at 19091 386-3879 or via
e-mail atandrew.silva@sbsun.com.
TttE""'P'RE sS- ENTE RPRI S E!
SUNDAY OCTOBER 16,2005
Pull your own freight
Southern California's ports hum with foreign
trade, but I?ost ofthose imports trav~l.through
. Wand reglOns to other places, strammg local
freeways arid railroads in the process: .
. \ .
Moving freight smoothly business will go elsewhere..
furough Southern Californiare. But doing nothing about
quires billions of dollars opocal. freight traffic tie.ups will
transportation improvements, chase shipping away even
and cargo interests should pay wifuout a fee on cargo.'
fueir share of fuat cost. Consider: About 43 percent
A study dated last month of the nation's cargo container
and prepared for fue Soufuern trade flows through Los Ange-
. California Association of Gov- les and Long Beach ports. But
ernnients has found it practical 75 percent of that freight moves
to bill cargo for its effects on on outside the region, usually
area transportation networks. on Inland roads or rails. And
The study, by a DC Berkeley the port activity is projected to \
professor; says a $200 fee per triple within 25 years. .
40'foot container' shipped, Southern California trans-
through the ports of Los Ange- portation planners already pro- I
les and Long Beach would ease pose $26 billion of projects to
congestion without driving ease that flow of cargo. Because
commerce to other ports. SCAG. most of those goods go els'e-
estimates .such a fee could en- where, residents here should
able as much as $36 billion in not be stuck with fuat bill. .
Southern California transpor- Without a freightfee to ease
tation and air quality projects. the shipping congestion, South-
The tradeoff only works if ern California's import trade
the m9ney actually cuts con- will slump, while area residents
gestion; otherwise shipping wait endlessly in traffic.
.~' ,
October 1. 7 ~ 2005
r
The Business Press
Who will pay to build
bigger highways?
VOL: 11 NO.5
CAROL PARK I Federal dollars are limited, too,
CPARJ(@1HEBlZPRESS.COM according to speakers at a Sept.
California highways need up to i 23 transportation. summIt. Feder.
$30 billion over the neX120 years al dollars are bemg dIverted to
to maintain and handle the in. disaster relief efforts and the war
flux of cargo from the ports of in Iraq, so fun,ds are li,:,ited and
Long Beach}and Los Angeles. probably w?n t be avaIlable for
More than 30 million contain- transportation costs.
ers will pass t1irough the ports of The logistics industry could
Long Beach and Los Angeles by employ more than 1 million
2025, according to a report by workers in the region by 2020
regional economistJohn-Husing. because of the influx of cargo.
Container imports flood local But that potential is endangered
highways with trucks carrying i by the lack of adequate trans-
cargo bound for distribution cen- : portalion infrastructure, accord-
ters and rail yards. Those trucks ing to Husing's report
dog freeways and tear up roads. -
Federal and state taxes are sup-
posed to maintain and construct
new highways to acco=odate
growth.
"But those taxes are being used
to only maintain the roads and
not fur new construction, where
years ago that was not the case,"
said Norm King. San Bernardino
Associated Governments execu-
tive director.
The San Bernardino Associated
Governments is the transporta-
tion planning agency fur San
Bernardino County.
The Califurnia Department of
Transportation will spend $79.3
million to fix and maintain high.
ways in Riverside and San Bernar-
dino counties by the end of June
2006. The department has an
additional $91 million fur emer.
gency repairs and projects in the
Inland Empire.
Statewide, $1.8 billion is avail.
able in transportation funds. Cal-
trans has the funding it needs to
maintain highways in San Ber~
nardino and Riverside counties
for the rest of fiscal 2005-2006.
But the rising cost of construc-
tion materials is hampering ef-
forts to accurately identify future
costs. A month ago Caltrans paid
$60 ~ ton for asphalt:_ ~ month
,
Who will foot the bill?
Local truckers believe federal
and state government should
cough up the money and use gas
taxes to fuot the cost of maintain.
ing and building new highways.
"We are taxed on everything,"
said John Vlasic .n, Best Delivery
Il.C president. 'We pay a tax on
diesel fue!, a revenue tax, and
licensing fees when we register a
truck,"
Located in Rancho Cuca-
monga, Best Delivery operates 12
tiudcs and has 41 employees.
Vlasic pays up to $1,800 per
truck in licensing fees and spends
about $6,500 a week to fuel his
trudcs.
Taxes should be levied on
freight importers and not on the
truckers. Vlasic said. "Why tax
the truckers?"
For trude companies in Califor-
nia, turning more than a 3%
profit is difficult, so taxing truck-
ers more would lead to higher
prices for customers, Valerie
Liese, Jade Jones Trucking Inc.
president, said. Jack Jones Truck-
ing is located in Chino and
employs more than 100 workers.
"The state is stealing trans-
portation funds and putting it
into the general fund," liese said.
"They'll try and tax us more but
taxing {truckers] is not the way.
The state needs to look at toll
roads and truck-only lanes and
widen the roads,"
The Southern California Assc>-
ciation of Governments, a met-
ropolitan planning organization,
believes that public and private
cooperation is needed to fund.
highway improvements and re-
lieve traffic congestion fur goods
movement. spokesman Jeff Lust.
garten said.
Pl.BASE SEE ROADS, PAGE 31
October 17. 2005
...;-,..
The Business l'ress
VOL. 11 NO. 5
CARINO CASAS ITHE BUSINESS PRESS
volume of trucks on Interstate 10 in Fontana will only inCl'ease as
-egion IS logistics industry grows.
Roads
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 18
Temporary programs such as
Pier Pass, which allows for the
movement of cargo at the ports
during off-peak hours, will help
relieve highway congestion and
save the roads. But long-term
public and private partnerships
must be established to fund
railroad grade separations.
highway lane widening and
improvements in order to
accommodate growth.
Lustgarten said.
"Knowing the need is there, we
are worldng to capture every
buck we can to meet the
Itransportation] need," Angstrom
. said. "We are looking to work
with anybody, local or private,
that will help us improve the
highway transportation system
in the inland Empire:
The Federal government
provided a $400 million loan fur
the Alameda Corridor project on
the condition that the loan was
paid back with user fees. The
corridor consolidated 90 miles of
branch line tracks into one
'We are looking to
work with anybody
that will help us
improve hig1:r-way
transportation. "
Jeff Lustgarten
Southern California Association
of Governments .
ZD-mile corridor and eliminated I
traffic conflicts at nearly 200
at-grade highway crossings ofrail
tracks in Los Angeles County.
Although the Alameda
Corridor has been successful, it
still needs to be expanded east
and funding fur that project
needs to be raised.
"That 1$400 million] loan lfur
the Alameda Corridor] has been .
paid back 28 years in advance,"
Lustgarten said. "We need to do
similar private and public
cooperation projects in the
Inland Empire and the San
Gabriel Valley. That's .the next
step that will help solve the goods
movement problem." -
Friday, .Jan. 6"', 2006
The 8B 81m
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Friday, Jail. 20"',2006 The SB Sml'
I.E. . breathers worst off!
Analysis: Area's pollution
most dangerous in nation
By Andrew Sliva
Staff Writer
The most dangerous form of
air pollution is thicker in the In-
land Empire than any place in
the country, according to an
. analysiS by an cnviromncntal
group released Thursday.
That carne at the same time
officials from the governor's of-
.fice were in Riverside to talk
about the air pollution compo-
nent of the ambitious $222 bil-
lion plan to improve California's
roads, ports, rail lines and
schools.
.The governor's plan includes
$2 billion just for reducing air
pollution from the continuing
growth in traffic, especially
truck and train traffic.
There are no specifics yet on
how that money will be spent,
but it does reflect Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger's commitment
to reduce-smog even as the plan
seeks to ease congestion, said
Cindy Tuck, assistant secretary
of the California Environmental
Protection Agency.
All the hub for all products
moving east from the Pacific
Rim through the ports of Los .
Angeles and Long Beach, the In-
land Empire is enduring explo-
sive growth in the number of
trains and tractor-trailers passing
through, and in the toxic pollu- .
!ants those vehicles pump out.
" Trucks and trains are the big-
gest . uSers of diese~ which
creates' dangerous particulate
pollution, tiny specks of dust
See POLLUTION I Page 82
-
Plagued by pollution .
.. 1 .
A look at the average annual fine particle pollution villues for
large metropolttan areas in 2004. The annual federal Standard'
is 15 micrograms per cu!:.ic meter of air.. \.
Rank Metropolitan area Average annual fine
particle value
(mk:tograms per cubic meter of air)
1 Sen Bernardlno-OntBrio-Rlverslde, CA 22.09
--
5 Cleveland-Elyrla-Mentor,OH . - 17.53
, I
Source: Environment Call1ornla Research & Policy Center
Staff graphIc.
'.'"
.. ;;: ,., ~Fl'iday, Jail. 20"',2006
The SB Sun
.';.-." "..'
Pollution
continued from page B 1
and chemicals that have been
linked to lung problems. asth-
ma attacks, heart problems
and thousands of premature
deaths.
The San Bernardino-
Riverside county .area has the
worst particulate pollution in
the nation, the analysis of pol-
lution monitors in all 50 states
and Washington, D.C.,.found.
. The more scientists. study
the health effects of partic-
ulates; the more. they see the
tiny particles as the most dan-
gerous component of smog.
The report was released
just ~ scientists and activists
are pressuring. the Bush ad-
ministration to toughen stan-
danls for particulate pollution.
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agericy recently'
'disregarded its' own scientific
, experts and proposed tlghten-'
ing rules for particulates, but
not enough for many experts.
"The Bush administration
is shirking its responsibility
and walking away from it . . .
This is the mostimportant de~ .
cision affecting.' public
. health." said Moira Chapin, a
field organizer with .Environ-
ment California,. which pre-
pared the report called
"Plagued by Pollution: Unsafe
. Levels of Soot Pollution' in
2004."
Tougher regulations would
save thousands of ' lives per
year, many experts agree.
A monitoring site in Rubi~
doux in Riverside County. re~
f. .
~' ~
The Bush administration is shirking its
responsibility and walking away from it . . ,
This is the most important decision
affecting public health.'
MOIRA CHAPIN
Reid organizer with En~ronrnent California
corded the nation's highest
annual average reading, with a
site in San Bernardino close
behind.
Those average readings are
roughly. '50 percent higher
than the cuttent federal stan-
dard. The Rubidoux and San
Bernardino sites had readings
of about 22 micrograms' per
cubic meter 'of air, compared
to the federal standard of IS.
That's.for the smallest and
most dang~rous particles., cal1~
ed PM2.5. or only 2.5 microns
in diameter. roughly one-
thirtieth the thickness of a hu~
man hair. A micron is one~.
millionth of a .meter, or about
one-thousandth the. thickness
ofa dime.
... The highest one-day read- .
ing in Southern California
came at the San Bernardino
site with 93.~ micrograms.
Those particles can pene"
trate deep into human lungs,
bypassing the usual defenses
of fine hairs and mucus. -Such
particles can even get into the
blood and travel to other or-
'gans, researchers have found.
The Bush administrati~n
has proposed leaving the an-
nual average standard of IS
ONUNE IEXTRA
SBSUN.COM
>' Read,the report on area
soot pollUtion, .
micrograms per cubic meter
of air untouched, but has also
proposed cutting the cmrent
one-day. limit of ,65 micro-
grams to.35.
Cutting' the maximum al-
lowed in any. 24-bour period
sbould bring down the aver-
age anyway, said John Millett,
a spokesinan for the U.S. En-
vironmental Protection Agen-
cy in Washington, D.C.
A letter sent last month to
the . EP A director calls for,
even tougher standards and
was signed by 1.00 sCientists,
doctors and health profession-
als. .
. Local smo.g regulators re-
main frustrated that the big-
gest sources :of pollution,
namely trucks, trains and
ships. are ui,der federal juris-
diction.
"We really need a bigger
role from the feds in reducing
emissions from federally con-
trolled sources," Tuck said.
Contact writer Andrew Sliva at
(909) 386.3856 or via ..mall at
andrew.sllva@sbsun.com.