November
17,
2003
CONTACT:
Claudia Keith/Marc Littman
MTA MEDIA RELATIONS
(213) 922-3007/922-2700
Robyn Ritter Simon
L.A. Area Chamber of Commerce
(213) 580-7532
www.metro.net/press/pressroom
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MTA, L.A. Area Chamber of Commerce and The Auto Club
Call for United Effort to Secure Funding at Second Mobility 21 Transportation
Summit
NIMBYs, Cutting Red Tape and Creative Financing Among
Breakout Session Topics
| Schedule |
| 8:30:
Opening keynote speakers 10:00: Media availability for key speakers/attendees (interviews can be arranged for any time) 9:45 to 11:45: Concurrent breakout sessions 11:45 to 1:45: Lunch and legislative panel 1:45 to 5:30: Breakout sessions/closing remarks Location: Westin Bonaventure Hotel, 404 South Figueroa St., downtown Los Angeles (Parking is available at the hotel and at the ARCO Plaza, 400 South Flower) |
Traffic congestion and transportation funding will be the
focus of the day on Nov. 17 when MTA and the Los Angeles Area Chamber of
Commerce, in partnership with the Automobile Club of Southern California, host
the second annual Mobility 21 transportation summit at the Westin Bonaventure
Hotel in downtown Los Angeles. Mobility 21: LA County Moving Together is
aimed at bringing together leaders from the public and private sectors,
including elected officials, transportation providers, business and labor
leaders, as well as academic and community representatives, to develop solutions
to the region's traffic woes.
"The need to work together to tackle our very challenging
traffic problems has never been greater," said Zev Yaroslavsky, Los Angeles
County Supervisor and MTA Board Chairman. "The latest study by the Texas
Transportation Institute showed that Los Angeles has the worst traffic
congestion of any area in the nation - for the sixteenth year in a row.
"Traffic congestion affects our economy, our environment
and ultimately our quality of life," Yaroslavsky added. "We need adequate
funding from the federal government and Sacramento, and we need to explore local
funding sources if we are to build the public transit and highway system needed
to address these problems."
In addition to
the MTA, LA. Area Chamber of Commerce and the Auto Club, participating agencies
and organizations will include the Federal Highway Administration, Caltrans, Bay
Area Rapid Transit District, Southern California Association of Nonprofit
Housing, Los Angeles Community Redevelopment Agency, Unified Western Grocers,
USC Annenberg School of Journalism, Loyola Marymount and others.
"We face some big challenges ahead that will impact the
future of our transportation system," said MTA CEO Roger Snoble. "There will
be stiff competition for funding of projects and the coalition will need to show
that we are united in achieving a shared vision for Los Angeles County."
The opening session will include addresses by several
speakers including Jim Parker, vice chairman and CEO, Southwest Airlines, Los
Angeles Area Chamber President and CEO Rusty Hammer and MTA CEO Roger Snoble. A
legislative panel of Los Angeles County congressional, senate and assembly
representatives and local city councilmembers will address the session during
lunch. The closing session will include an address by U.S. Congressman Earl
Blumenauer (D-Oregon).
"Transportation and the ability to get to work and move
goods is at the heart of our economy, "said Los Angeles Area Chamber of
Commerce President and CEO Rusty Hammer. "That is why the business community
is leading the Mobility 21 effort along with other partners. We realize the
importance of continuing the work we started last year to bring the
transportation dollars from Washington and Sacramento that the Los Angeles area
is due."
According to Auto Club President and CEO Thomas V. McKernan,
"The new administration in Sacramento has an opportunity to end legislative
gridlock and begin unclogging our traffic congestion throughout the state.
Transportation needs insightful leadership to bring about the long-term planning
and funding that will help address our traffic congestion crisis."
A wide range of topics will be part of the breakout
sessions including NIMBYs (Not In My Backyard) and building support for
projects, creative local funding ideas, cutting red tape for faster projects,
balancing growth and development, building transit through partnerships, getting
to and from the airport and goods movement.
Moderators for the breakout sessions will include Julie
Bornstein, director of the Keston Infrastructure Institute at the University of
Southern California Lusk Center for Real Estate; Arthur Bauer, principal of
Arthur Bauer & Associates, a Sacramento-based consulting firm; Martha
Welborne, managing director, Grand Avenue Committee; Geoffrey Yarema, partner,
Nossaman, Guthner, Knox & Elliot; Dr. Fernando Guerrra, director of the
Center for the Study of Los Angeles, Loyola Marymount University; Tom Gilmore,
president, Gilmore Associates; Donald Brackenbush, Goodell Brackenbush, Beatrice
Proo, Pico Rivera mayor and MTA board member and Jon Beaupre, award winning
journalist and Cal State Los Angeles professor.
Mobility 21 executive co-chairs include Congressman David
Dreier, Los Angeles Mayor and MTA Board Member James Hahn, Los Angeles Area
Chamber of Commerce President and Board Chairman George Kieffer, Congresswoman
Juanita Millender-McDonald, Senator Kevin Murray, Chair, California State Senate
Transportation Committee, Lancaster Mayor and MTA Board Member Frank Roberts,
Congresswoman Lucille Roybal-Allard and Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
and MTA Board Chair Zev Yaroslavsky.
Sponsors for Mobility 21 include: Antelope Valley Transit
Authority, Arcadia Transit, Claremont Transit Services, Commerce Municipal Bus
Lines, Los Angeles Department of Transportation, Culver City Bus, Foothill
Transit, Gardena Municipal Bus Lines, Long Beach Transit, Montebello Bus Lines,
Norwalk Transit System, Redondo Beach Wave, Santa Clarita Transit, Santa Monica
Big Blue Bus, Torrance Transit System, Port of Los Angeles, URS Corporation, The
Gas Company, a Sempra Energy Utility, Carter & Burgess, Inc., Golden State
Gateway Coalition, Laidlaw Educational Services, Mercury Air Group, Port of Long
Beach, Southwest Airlines and the Alameda Corridor Transportation Authority.
MTA-179