| Transportation links us to family and friends, work, and health care; delivers
food and goods to our store shelves, and provides access to our favorite
vacation spots. Our communities are located along transportation corridors such
as highways and rivers or near transportation hubs such as airports, ports, and
highway intersections. Of the 939 incorporated communities in Missouri,
two-thirds have a population less than 1,000 people. Linking these communities
and people is a big job and requires more than 32,000 miles of state-maintained
roadway.
The Missouri Department of Transportation
works with regional planning groups and communities around the state to ensure
that the needed transportation is provided. A high quality transportation system
enhances the growth and social and economic stability of communities.
Our state economy is also closely tied to
transportation. Missouri's three biggest industries -- agriculture,
manufacturing, and tourism -- are all dependent on transportation. Between 1980
and 1992, total sales increased the state's economy by over 22% to $116 billion.
Transportation, in some form, provided for this economic activity. There is
indeed a dynamic connection between our quality of life and the quality of our
transportation system.
Executive Order 12898 addressing environmental
justice, signed by President Clinton in 1994, directs state agencies to ensure
that there are no disproportionate adverse impacts borne by low-income and
minority populations due to transportation projects. To fulfill the intentions
of this order, MoDOT conducts preliminary field studies in a potential project
area to assess the nature of the population likely to benefit or be impacted by
the project. People who might be impacted by a MoDOT project are encouraged to
become involved with the project through their MoDOT district office. Public
involvement in project development is key to ensuring that citizens are provided
the service they need.
MoDOT offers a relocation assistance program
to ensure that people who are impacted by a transportation project receive fair
compensation. Property required for highway construction is subject to the
provisions of the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition
Policies Act, as amended. This ensures that people, businesses, farms, and
nonprofit organizations are provided with comparable replacement properties and
that the relocation process is equitable and nondiscriminatory.
The Missouri Department of Transportation
provides transportation facilities in the form of roadways, ports, airports,
pedestrian and bike facilities, and rail lines and bus service. This
transportation infrastructure is provided with consideration of the range of
social and economic issues involved. MoDOT recognizes that the quality of life
is related to the quality of our transportation system and works to improve
both.
For more information on communities and growth
in the State of Missouri, try this link: OSEDA |