A report on the first year’s activities of the public-private National Coalition on Truck Parking presents suggestions from trucking stakeholders from several regional meetings held in 2016 on how best to address truck-parking problems across the country.

Published by the Department of Transportation, the report notes that the coalition launched with a kickoff meeting at DOT in November 2015. Then four regional meetings were held in 2016 to get input from key stakeholders on “creative and innovative approaches” to solve the nation’s truck parking problem.

The meetings were conducted by the Federal Highway Administration with participation by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, the Maritime Administration, and the five core Coalition partners:

Key suggestions developed for each of four discussion areas are described in the report, including the following points:

Parking Capacity

Technology and Data

Funding, Finance and Regulations

State/Regional/Local Coordination

DOT pointed out in the report that “nearly all of the proposed initiatives to address truck parking needs can only be implemented through a collaborative effort among various Coalition member organizations.

“While Federal funding eligibility for truck parking projects has expanded considerably in successive Federal transportation authorization laws over the years,” the agency added, “the USDOT is not an implementing agency for transportation projects and truck parking projects compete for highway funding with other transportation needs such as pavement and bridge maintenance, other safety improvements, and capacity enhancements.”

Therefore, according to DOT, the initiatives discussed by the Coalition and raised in the 2016 regional meetings will “require ongoing collaboration among State Departments of Transportation, the trucking and truck stop industries, law enforcement and highway safety officials, the shippers whose business activities drive the operations of the nation’s trucking industry, and the various public agencies that implement land use regulations at the local level.” 

As for next steps, DOT said that the Coalition’s member organizations identified the following three near-term activities:

  1. The Coalition will convene working groups for each of the four major topic areas (Parking Capacity, Technology & Data, Funding/Finance & Regulation, and State/Regional/Local Government Coordination) in 2017. Work will focus on developing implementation strategies for various initiatives that came out of the regional meetings.
  2. Industry involvement in State and metropolitan planning organization (MPO) freight planning processes can begin immediately and be ongoing, as public agencies develop and update their freight plans.
  3. FHWA intends to conduct a second round of the Jason’s Law Survey on truck parking, as mandated by Section 1401 of MAP-21. The survey is estimated to be administered in 2018.

To read the full DOT report, click here.

 

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