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10865 III (1944)

handle is hein.usccsset/usconset23085 and id is 1 raw text is: 






MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT


To the Congress of the United States:
  On  April 14, 1941, I appointed a committee, known as the National
Interregional Highway  Committee,  to investigate the need for a
limited system of national highways to improve  the facilities now
available for interregional transportation, and to advise the Federal
Works  Administrator as to the desirable character of such improve-
ment,  and the possibility of utilizing some of the manpower and
industrial capacity expected to be available at the end of the war.
  The  committee, with  the aid of a staff provided by the Public
Roads  Administration, made  careful and extended  studies of the
subject, and has submitted to me its final report which I transmit
herewith and commend  to the favorable consideration of the Congress.
The  report recommends  the designation and improvement  to high
standards of a national system of rural and urban highways totaling
approximately 34,000 miles and  interconnecting the principal geo-
graphic regions of the country.
  The  recommended  system follows in general the routes of existing
Federal-aid highways, and when fully improved will meet to optimum
degree the needs of interregional and intercity highway transportation.
Its development  also will establish a transcontinental network of
modern  roads essential to the future economic welfare and defense
of the Nation.
  While  the annual rate of expenditure to accomplish the improve-
ment of the rural and urban sections of the system over a reasonable
period of years will be dependent upon the availability of manpower
and materials, and upon  other factors, the required expenditure is
estimated  at $750,000,000  annually. The   over-all expenditures
would  be approximately equally divided between  urban and  rural
sections of the system.
  The improvement  of a limited mileage of the most heavily traveled
highways obviously represents a major segment of the road replace-
ment  and modernization program which  will confront the Nation in
post-war years, in rural and urban communities alike. The committee
found that the national network outlined in its report comprises only
1 percent of the total road mileage of the United States but carries 20
percent of the total travel.
  Continued  development  of the vast network of rural secondary
roads and city thoroughfares, which serve as feeder lines and provide
land-access service, likewise has an important place in the over-all
program, together with the repair or reconstruction of a large mileage
of Federal and  State primary highways  not embraced  within the
interregional network.
  I commend   especially to the consideration of the Congress the
recommendation  that minimum  standards of design and construction
be established cooperatively with the States for all projects embraced
within a designated interregional system. This, it seems to me, is
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