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Source: WorldNetDaily.com
May
4, 2007 -
By Jerome R. Corsi - WorldNetDaily.com A
battle between Texas and the Bush administration is brewing over
construction of the Trans-Texas Corridor after the state legislature
passed a two-year moratorium.
The
Texas House passed HB1892 Wednesday after the Senate last week
approved an earlier version of the moratorium on a project some
critics see as part of a "NAFTA superhighway" system
and ties with Canada and Mexico that threaten U.S. sovereignty.
The bill has been sent to Gov. Rick Perry for signature by May
14, but it passed with veto-proof margins of 27-4 in the Senate
and 139-1 in the House.
The
Bush administration appears determined to fight the moratorium.
WND
reported last week FHWA Chief Counsel James D. Ray wrote a four-page
letter to Michael Behrens, executive director of the Texas Department
of Transportation, threatening the loss of federal highway funds
if the legislature were to pass a two-year moratorium of the
public-private partnership financed by Cintra, an investment
consortium in Spain.
WND previously has reported TTC-35, the nation's first
NAFTA superhighway, is a four-football-field wide car-truck-train-pipeline
toll road the Texas Department of Transportation plans to build
parallel to Interstate 35 from Laredo, Texas, to the Texas-Oklahoma
border south of Oklahoma City.
TTC is a public-private-partnership heavily promoted
on the FHWA website, largely because the corridor will be
financed by Cintra, an investment consortium in Spain that will
manage the toll road under a 50-year lease.
On Tuesday, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson, RTexas,
wrote to the Federal Highway Administration objecting to a threatening
letter the agency recently wrote the Texas Department of Transportation.
Hutchinson wrote J.Richard Capka, the FHWA administrator,
charging that Ray's letter "placed a cloud over current
actions being taken in the Texas Legislature."
Hutchinson further wrote that as "someone who
has worked to increase Texas' share of federal transportation
dollars, I understand the need to make sure that Texas has all
options to leverage funds."
Hutchinson cautioned, "While the administration
plays a valuable role in providing technical guidance and assistance
for states considering legislation which may impact federal funds,
there is a fine line between analysis and advocacy in those deliberations."
Hutchinson invited Capka to take steps to remove the
threatening impression caused by Ray's letter.
In the looming battle, the Bush administration can
expect to find an ally in Rep.
Mike Krusee of Williamson County, Texas.
WND has confirmed a previous report that Ray's letter
was prompted by a request Krusee sent to FHWA asking for an opinion
specifically on HB1892, the version of the moratorium that passed
the Texas House.
WND also previously reported Krusee was a prime mover
of the enabling legislation the Texas legislature passed paving
the way for the TTC project. In November 2006, Krusee barely
won re-election to the Texas legislature, after a campaign in
which his support of TTC development was hotly contested.
In a scathing attack on Krusee, the Texas blog EyeonWilliamson.org
posted charges that Krusee has pursued a private consulting contract
to help consultant Wilbur
Smith Associates, a transportation infrastructure consulting
firm, shepherd a proposal
through the Department of Transportation's "Corridor of
the Future" grant competition.
Wilbur Smith Associates proposes to build a new cross-country
toll road along the Interstate 10. The Wilbur Smith proposal
was designed to meet the "Corridor of the Future" emphasis
on public-private partnerships of the type Krusee has pushed
for years through the Texas legislature.
On Feb. 1, Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters
announced
that the Interstate-10 proposal was among the eight "Corridor
of the Future" finalists.
Krusee was also invited
Feb. 9 to speak at an invitation-only White House "Transportation
Leadership Summit," which EyeonWilliamson.org took to
be "evidence of Krusee's ever-increasing favor with the
Bush administration.
WND contacted Krusee's office and asked a series of
specific questions, including whether Krusee had a business relationship
with Wilbur Smith Associates, as charged by EyeonWilliamson.org.
Instead of answering the specific questions, James
Walpole, a spokesman for Krusee, e-mailed to WND a press release.
The statement affirmed Krusee had asked FHWA for an
opinion on the moratorium bill
"Since I had questions about whether the tollway
moratorium now passed by the Senate would jeopardize precious
federal highway funding," the press release read, "I
asked the federal highway administration to give its opinion."
WND
also has reported the Texas ports of Houston and Corpus Christi
are planning to accommodate megaships from China that will pass
through an expanded Panama Canal. Both ports are working with
the Texas Department of Transportation to connect with TTC projects
for the Chinese containers to be transported inland.
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=55534
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