State DOTs Take Home Transportation Awards in Western Regional Competition

The America’s Transportation Awards competition recognizes the very best of America’s transportation projects in three main categories

Transportation projects that upgraded an international port of entry, rehabilitated a freight rail line vital to agricultural communities, and expanded a major highway years early and hundreds of millions of dollars under budget were among the recipients of top honors in the western regional America’s Transportation Awards competition.

“The entries we received this year encompass the broad scope of transportation projects completed every day by state transportation departments,” says Mike Lewis, AASHTO president and director of the Rhode Island Department of Transportation. “The America’s Transportation Awards competition highlights just how state DOTs deliver quality projects with limited transportation dollars. It is through this competition that we honor these projects for excellent stewardship of our tax dollars and the incredible innovations they display.”

Now in its sixth year, the America’s Transportation Awards competition – sponsored by AASHTO, AAA, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce – recognizes the very best of America’s transportation projects in three main categories: Ahead of Schedule, Under Budget, and Best Use of Innovation.

Nine transportation projects from six western states were nominated in those categories.
Two states took home awards in the Ahead of Schedule category. Idaho Transportation Department won in the medium category (projects that cost between $25 million and $200 million) for its U.S. 95, Sand Creek Byway project. Oklahoma Department of Transportation was awarded with the win in the large category (projects costing more than $200 million) for its I-40 Crosstown project.

In the Under Budget category, California Department of Transportation was named winner in the medium category for the Dumbarton Toll Bridge Seismic Retrofit project.

The Best Use of Innovation category included three winners: Arizona Department of Transportation for its Nogales Mariposa Port of Entry project (small category—where projects must cost less than $25 million); South Dakota Department of Transportation for its MRC Railroad Rehabilitation project (medium category); and Utah Department of Transportation for its I-15 Corridor Expansion project (large category).

Winners have been named in three of the four regions throughout the nation, with the final group of winners to be announced at the end of the month. After that announcement, the 10 projects with the highest overall scores will be named and compete for the Grand Prize and People’s Choice Award.

The Grand Prize winner is determined by a panel of transportation experts. The People's Choice Award goes to the transportation project that receives the most online votes from the public. Online voting begins Sept. 4. The winners of both awards will be announced at the AASHTO Annual Meeting in Denver in October.

Click here to learn more information about each of these projects and the competition.

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