This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-09-750 
entitled 'Military Base Realignments And Closures: Transportation 
Impact of Personnel Increases Will Be Significant, but Long-Term Costs 
Are Uncertain and Direct Federal Support Is Limited' which was released 
on September 9, 2009. 

This text file was formatted by the U.S. Government Accountability 
Office (GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part 
of a longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every 
attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of 
the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text 
descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the 
end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided 
but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed 
version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic 
replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail 
your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this 
document to Webmaster@gao.gov. 

This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright 
protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed 
in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work 
may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the 
copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this 
material separately. 

Report to Congressional Committees: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

September 2009: 

Military Base Realignments And Closures: 

Transportation Impact of Personnel Increases Will Be Significant, but 
Long-Term Costs Are Uncertain and Direct Federal Support Is Limited: 

GAO-09-750: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-750, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

As part of the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) round, the 
Department of Defense (DOD) plans to relocate over 123,000 military and 
DOD civilian personnel, thereby increasing the staffing at 18 bases 
nationwide. In addition, DOD and local officials expect thousands of 
dependents and DOD contractor employees to relocate to communities near 
the BRAC 2005 growth bases. These actions will greatly increase traffic 
in the surrounding communities. BRAC recommendations must be 
implemented by September 2011. 

The House and Senate Committees on Appropriations directed GAO to 
assess and report on the impact of BRAC-related growth on 
transportation systems and on the responses of federal, state, and 
local governments. Accordingly, GAO determined the (1) expected impact 
on transportation in communities affected by BRAC decisions, and (2) 
federal, state, and local response to the expected impacts. To perform 
its work, GAO obtained information from the 18 communities with 
expected substantial BRAC growth; visited 8 of these communities; 
interviewed federal civilian and military officials and state and local 
officials; and reviewed DOD data, transportation plans, and 
environmental studies. 

GAO provided copies of this report to the Departments of Defense and 
Transportation for their review. The Departments provided technical 
comments, which GAO incorporated as appropriate. 

What GAO Found: 

Growth resulting from BRAC decisions will have a significant impact on 
transportation systems in some communities, but estimates of the total 
cost to address those impacts are uncertain. In addition to BRAC, other 
defense initiatives will result in growth in communities and also add 
to transportation needs. BRAC growth will result in increased traffic 
in communities ranging from very large metropolitan areas to small 
communities, creating or worsening congested roads at specific 
locations. Traffic impacts can also affect larger relocation decisions, 
and were important in DOD’s decision to acquire an additional site for 
Fort Belvoir, Virginia, an acquisition that DOD estimates will cost 
$1.2 billion. According to a DOD Office of Economic Adjustment (OEA) 
survey, 17 of 18 BRAC growth communities identified transportation as 
one of their top challenges. Near-term transportation projects to 
address these challenges could cost about $2.0 billion, of which about 
$1.1 billion is related to projects in the metropolitan Washington, 
D.C., area. BRAC-related transportation infrastructure costs are 
subject to a number of uncertainties. For example, not all potential 
projects are included in the estimate, military staffing levels at some 
growth installations are in flux and the location decisions of military 
and civilian personnel have not yet been made, and pre-existing, non-
military community growth makes a direct link between transportation 
projects to military growth difficult. 

The federal government has provided limited direct assistance to help 
communities address BRAC transportation impacts, and state and local 
governments have adopted strategies to expedite projects within the 
time frame allowed by BRAC. For example, DOD’s Defense Access Roads 
Program has certified transportation projects for funding at three 
affected communities. Also, OEA has provided planning grants and funded 
traffic studies and local planning positions. While federal highway and 
transit programs can be used for many BRAC-related transportation 
needs, dedicated funds are not available. Instead, BRAC-related 
transportation projects must compete with other proposed transportation 
projects. Communities had identified funding for about $500 million of 
the estimated $2.0 billion needed to address their near term project 
needs. Some state and local governments have adopted strategies to 
expedite highway projects, such as prioritizing short-term high-impact 
projects, because the time frames for completing BRAC personnel moves 
are much shorter than the time frames for such projects. While 
legislation mandates that BRAC growth be completed by 2011, major 
highway and transit projects usually take 9 to 19 years. To complete 
some critical projects before BRAC growth occurs, state and local 
officials are reprioritizing planned projects and implementing those 
that can be completed quickly. For example, Maryland prioritized 
certain lower-cost intersection projects that will improve traffic 
flow. In Texas, officials used an innovative financing approach to 
generate funding quickly for a major highway project at Fort Bliss. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-750] or key 
components. For more information, contact Phillip Herr (202) 512-2834 
or herrp@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Military Growth Will Have a Significant Impact on Transportation in 
Affected Communities, but the Full Extent and Cost of That Impact Are 
Uncertain: 

DOD Funding for Transportation Projects Is Limited, and Projects Must 
Compete for DOT Funds, but State and Local Governments Have Adopted 
Strategies to Expedite Projects: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Sources of Growth at and near Selected Military Bases: 

Table 2: Estimated Growth from All DOD Sources at and near BRAC- 
Affected Military Bases Fiscal Years 2006 through 2012, as of March 
2008: 

Table 3: Typical Time Necessary to Complete a Federally Financed Major 
New Construction Highway Project: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Military Bases Affected by BRAC Growth: 

Figure 2: Current Fort Belvoir and Vicinity: 

Figure 3: Eglin Air Force Base and Vicinity: 

Abbreviations: 

BRAC: Base Realignment and Closure: 

CTB: Commonwealth of Virginia Transportation Board: 

DAR: Defense Access Roads Program: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

EIS: environmental impact statement: 

EUL: enhanced use lease: 

FHWA: Federal Highway Administration: 

FTA: Federal Transit Administration: 

MARC: Maryland Area Regional Commuter Train Service: 

MDOT: Maryland Department of Transportation: 

MPO: metropolitan planning organization: 

OEA: Office of Economic Adjustment: 

SDDC: Military Surface Deployment and Distribution Command: 

VDOT: Virginia Department of Transportation: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

September 9, 2009: 

The Honorable Patty Murray: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Christopher S. Bond: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and 
Related Agencies: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable John W. Olver: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Tom Latham: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and 
Related Agencies: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
House of Representatives: 

As part of the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) process, the 
Department of Defense (DOD) plans to relocate over 123,000 DOD military 
and civilian personnel, thereby increasing the staffing at numerous 
bases nationwide. In addition, other DOD initiatives, such as those 
designed to realign U.S. military capabilities worldwide and increase 
the size of the nation's permanent military forces, are expected to add 
about another 59,000 DOD personnel at these bases. DOD and local 
officials further expect thousands of dependents and DOD contractor 
employees to relocate to communities near these bases. Thus, several 
U.S. bases could each see the addition of more than 10,000 military and 
civilian personnel. While studies indicate that communities surrounding 
these growth bases will realize economic benefits in the long term, the 
expected population growth will greatly increase traffic in the 
surrounding communities. The growth attributable to BRAC and other 
military initiatives will occur quickly because the initiatives are in 
progress and, by law, the BRAC realignments must be completed by 
September 2011. Some of the affected bases are in congested urban areas 
while others are in areas with smaller communities that have limited 
transportation infrastructure. 

State and local governments are largely responsible for determining the 
funding priorities for transportation improvements needed to respond to 
BRAC 2005 and the other military growth initiatives. Some federal 
assistance is, however, available through DOD's Office of Economic 
Adjustment (OEA), which provides guidance and planning grants to 
communities affected by military relocation decisions; DOD's Defense 
Access Roads (DAR) program, which may make some military construction 
funds available for road improvements outside a military base; and the 
Department of Transportation (DOT), which provides federal funds for 
states, transit agencies, and local units of government to use for 
highway and transit improvements that are approved through the 
metropolitan or statewide transportation process. 

The House and Senate Committees on Appropriations, in the House report 
accompanying the fiscal year 2008 Departments of Transportation, and 
Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 
directed that GAO assess and report on the impact of BRAC military 
growth decisions on transportation and the response of the federal, 
state, and local governments.[Footnote 1] Because neither DOD nor 
community planners typically attempt to isolate the impact of BRAC- 
related growth from the impact of other military growth initiatives, 
data are not available for an assessment of the impact of BRAC 
decisions alone. Accordingly, we determined (1) the expected impact of 
military growth on transportation in communities affected by BRAC 
decisions, including the estimated costs, and (2) the federal, state, 
and local response to the expected impact. 

To perform our work, we identified and gathered information from 
communities in the vicinity of the 18 military bases that OEA 
determined will be substantially and seriously affected by growth 
resulting from the BRAC 2005 realignments, visited 8 of these BRAC 
bases and nearby communities, and observed local transportation 
conditions. We selected these eight bases and nearby communities 
because they (1) varied in size, including very large metropolitan 
areas over 1 million, smaller metropolitan areas of 200,000 to 1 
million, and smaller urban areas of less than 200,000; (2) had 
completed environmental studies; and (3) had identified transportation 
as a concern. In addition, we interviewed state and local 
transportation officials and DOD, Army, Navy, and Air Force officials 
about the impact of BRAC decisions on transportation and their 
responses. We also reviewed relevant state and local planning 
documents, such as state transportation improvement plans, local 
transportation plans, and detailed traffic studies. We analyzed 
information OEA collected from affected local governments showing their 
cost estimates and funding available for growth-related projects. 
Finally, we reviewed federal environmental studies on the impact of 
BRAC decisions and the treatment of transportation issues in those 
documents and interviewed Army, Navy, and Air Force officials 
responsible for the oversight of these environmental studies. 

We conducted this performance audit from April 2008 through September 
2009 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. Appendix I 
provides a more detailed description of our scope and methodology. 

We provided copies of this report to the Departments of Defense and 
Transportation for their review and comment. Both provided technical 
comments, which we incorporated into the report, as appropriate. 

Background: 

BRAC 2005 was the fifth round of decisions designed to streamline the 
nation's defense infrastructure. Unlike past BRAC rounds, which have 
generally focused on reducing excess physical infrastructure, this 
round also presents military growth challenges for DOD, states, and 
local governments. Its implementation will increase the numbers of on- 
base personnel, military families, and defense-related contractors at 
and near 18 military bases. Furthermore, because the BRAC realignments 
must, by law, be completed by September 15, 2011,[Footnote 2] these 
community changes will be rapid, as personnel will arrive quickly once 
the bases are readied. Figure 1 shows the 18 bases where BRAC growth 
will affect neighboring communities. Other military growth communities 
exist, but their growth is not a result of BRAC. 

Figure 1: Military Bases Affected by BRAC Growth: 

[See PDF for image: map of the United States] 

Indicated on the map: 

Installation identified transportation as a major challenge: 

Army: 
Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland; 
Fort Belvoir, Virginia; 
Fort Benning, Georgia; 
Fort Bliss, Texas; 
Fort Bragg, North Carolina; 
Fort Carson, Colorado; 
Fort Knox, Kentucky; 
Fort Lee, Virginia; 
Fort Lewis, Washington; 
Fort Meade, Maryland; 
Redstone Arsenal, Alabama; 
Fort Sam Houston, Texas; 
Fort Sill, Oklahoma. 

Air Force: 
Eglin Air Force Base, Florida. 

Marine Corps: 
Camp Lejeune/Air Station Cherry Point/Air Station New River, North 
Carolina; 
Quantico, Virginia. 

Navy: 
National Naval Medical Center, Maryland.  

Installation did not identify transportation as a major challenge: 

Army: 
Fort Riley, Kansas. 

Sources: U.S. Army, U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Navy, U.S. Air Force, 
Office of Economic Adjustment, and Map Resources (map). 

[End of figure] 

Other Military Growth Initiatives: 

While BRAC 2005 is taking place, other major initiatives will increase 
growth at and near some BRAC-affected bases. These include two major 
military reorganizations. First, the Global Defense Posture Realignment 
initiative will move about 70,000 military and civilian personnel from 
overseas to U.S. bases by 2011 to better support current strategies and 
address emerging threats. Second, the Army's force modularity effort 
will restructure the Army from a division-based force to a more readily 
deployable modular, brigade-based force. Some of these brigade units 
will relocate to other existing bases. A third initiative, Grow the 
Force, is not a reorganization but will increase the permanent strength 
of the military to enhance overall U.S. forces. This initiative will 
add about 74,000 soldiers and about 27,000 marines. Finally, troop 
drawdowns from Iraq could increase personnel numbers at some BRAC- 
affected bases. These other military initiatives will also be 
implemented over a longer time frame than BRAC decisions, which are 
scheduled to be completed in 2011.[Footnote 3] 

Though not a major force initiative, DOD's enhanced use lease (EUL) 
activities will also affect growth and development in military 
communities. EULs allow the military to lease its land to private 
developers to build offices and other facilities that generate 
operating income for the military. In some cases, the growth from EUL 
activities may exceed the BRAC-related growth. For example, the EUL at 
Fort Meade, which is planned to include up to 2 million square feet of 
office space, could house up to 10,000 new workers by 2013. This EUL 
activity will generate more new jobs in the Fort Meade area than the 
6,600 additional military and civilian DOD personnel attributable to 
BRAC. 

Because all these initiatives are taking place at the same time, the 
forces driving growth at military bases and the surrounding communities 
are more complex than they would be if they were the result of BRAC 
decisions alone. As table 1 indicates, six of the eight bases we 
visited expect to be affected by various defense initiatives in 
addition to BRAC. 

Table 1: Sources of Growth at and near Selected Military Bases: 

Base: Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.; 
BRAC: Yes; 
Grow the Force: Yes; 
Global Defense Posture Realignment: No; 
Force modularity: No; 
Enhanced use lease: Yes. 

Base: Bethesda National Naval Medical Center, Md.; 
BRAC: Yes; 
Grow the Force: No; 
Global Defense Posture Realignment: No; 
Force modularity: No; 
Enhanced use lease: No. 

Base: Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.; 
BRAC: Yes; 
Grow the Force: No; 
Global Defense Posture Realignment: No; 
Force modularity: No; 
Enhanced use lease: Yes. 

Base: Fort Belvoir, Va.; 
BRAC: Yes; 
Grow the Force: No; 
Global Defense Posture Realignment: No; 
Force modularity: No; 
Enhanced use lease: No. 

Base: Fort Bliss, Tex.; 
BRAC: Yes; 
Grow the Force: Yes; 
Global Defense Posture Realignment: Yes; 
Force modularity: Yes; 
Enhanced use lease: No. 

Base: Fort Carson, Colo.; 
BRAC: Yes; 
Grow the Force: Yes; 
Global Defense Posture Realignment: Yes; 
Force modularity: Yes; 
Enhanced use lease: No. 

Base: Fort Knox, Ky.; 
BRAC: Yes; 
Grow the Force: Yes; 
Global Defense Posture Realignment: No; 
Force modularity: No; 
Enhanced use lease: Yes. 

Base: Fort Meade, Md.; 
BRAC: Yes; 
Grow the Force: No; 
Global Defense Posture Realignment: No; 
Force modularity: No; 
Enhanced use lease: Yes. 

Source: GAO analysis of data from selected bases. 

[End of table] 

During fiscal years 2006 through 2012, the populations of the 
communities in the vicinity of the 18 BRAC bases identified in figure 1 
are expected to increase by an estimated 181,800 military and civilian 
personnel, plus an estimated 173,200 dependents, for a total increase 
of about 355,000 persons, as shown in table 2. At two bases, Fort Bliss 
and Fort Belvoir, DOD has estimated that the on-base populations alone 
will more than double. In addition, defense-related contractors who 
follow and settle near the relocated commands will compound the growth 
and traffic near some bases, and the impact of these contractor 
relocations is not reflected in the military growth figures. For 
example, at Fort Meade, Maryland, DOD has estimated that an additional 
10,000 contractor personnel may relocate near to or on the base. 

Table 2: Estimated Growth from All DOD Sources at and near BRAC- 
Affected Military Bases Fiscal Years 2006 through 2012, as of March 
2008: 

Base: Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 3,400; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
2,200; 
Total population increase: 5,600; 
Current total regional population[A]: 2,512,000. 

Base: Bethesda National Naval Medical Center, Md.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 2,500; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: Not 
available; 
Total population increase: 2,500; 
Current total regional population[A]: 4,331,000. 

Base: Camp Lejeune, Cherry Point, and New River, N.C.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 13,400; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
18,700; 
Total population increase: 32,100; 
Current total regional population[A]: 108,000. 

Base: Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.[B]; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 3,600; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
5,900; 
Total population increase: 9,500; 
Current total regional population[A]: 190,000. 

Base: Fort Belvoir, Va.[C]; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 24,100; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
12,700; 
Total population increase: 36,800; 
Current total regional population[A]: 4,331,000. 

Base: Fort Benning, Ga.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 12,700; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
6,100; 
Total population increase: 18,800; 
Current total regional population[A]: 247,000. 

Base: Fort Bliss, Tex.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 28,000; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
41,700; 
Total population increase: 69,700; 
Current total regional population[A]: 722,000. 

Base: Fort Bragg, N.C.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 18,900; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
17,100; 
Total population increase: 36,000; 
Current total regional population[A]: 301,000. 

Base: Fort Carson, Colo.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 10,400; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
14,400; 
Total population increase: 24,800; 
Current total regional population[A]: 514,000. 

Base: Fort Knox, Ky.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: (2,900); 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
4,500; 
Total population increase: 1,600; 
Current total regional population[A]: 117,000. 

Base: Fort Lee, Va.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 10,200; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
4,600; 
Total population increase: 14,800; 
Current total regional population[A]: 138,000. 

Base: Fort Lewis, Wash.[D]; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 13,500; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
17,400; 
Total population increase: 30,900; 
Current total regional population[A]: 3,422,000. 

Base: Fort Meade, Md.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 7,000; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
4,200; 
Total population increase: 11,200; 
Current total regional population[A]: 2,512,000. 

Base: Fort Sam Houston,Tex.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 10,900; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
6,100; 
Total population increase: 17,000; 
Current total regional population[A]: 1,416,000. 

Base: Fort Sill, Okla.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 3,700; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
(400); 
Total population increase: 3,300; 
Current total regional population[A]: 81,000. 

Base: Fort Riley, Kans.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 10,900; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
15,000; 
Total population increase: 25,900; 
Current total regional population[A]: 109,000. 

Base: Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 3,600; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
1,000; 
Total population increase: 4,600; 
Current total regional population[A]: 202,000. 

Base: Redstone Arsenal, Ala.; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 7,900; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
2,000; 
Total population increase: 9,900; 
Current total regional population[A]: 291,000. 

Base: Total; 
Total change in military and civilian DOD population: 181,800; 
Total change in population of military and civilian DOD dependents: 
173,200; 
Total population increase: 355,000. 

Sources: GAO, Army Stationing and Installation Plan, Air Force BRAC 
Program Office, Navy BRAC Program Office, and DOT's metropolitan 
planning organization (MPO) database. 

Note: The table does not reflect the results of a June 2009 DOD 
announcement removing a combat brigade from both Fort Bliss and Fort 
Carson growth. 

[A] Total regional population based on population of the MPO area, 
except for Fort Riley, Kansas. Fort Riley does not fall within an area 
governed by an MPO. The population statistic shown for Fort Riley is 
for three counties affected by BRAC growth. MPOs are regional 
organizations responsible for developing regional transportation plans. 

[B] Data for Eglin Air Force Base is for the beginning of fiscal year 
2013. 

[C] The number of dependents moving to the Fort Belvoir area is 
difficult to estimate due to the location of some personnel to a site 
in Alexandria, Virginia, and the fact that some personnel moving to 
Fort Belvoir already live within commuting distance of the base. 

[D] Fort Lewis's regional population includes figures for two MPOs. 

[End of table] 

OEA is DOD's primary source for assisting communities adversely 
affected by defense program changes, including base closures or 
realignments. OEA provides guidance and assistance to growth 
communities through growth management planning grants, guidance, and 
expertise to help communities with significantly adverse consequences 
as a result of BRAC decisions. OEA has identified those communities 
that are expected to be impacted by BRAC-related growth and that have 
expressed a need for planning assistance. As part of this assistance, 
OEA has provided support to communities to hire planners or consultants 
to perform studies identifying infrastructure needs created by military 
growth. Additionally, DOD's Defense Access Roads (DAR) Program may 
allow Military Construction funds to help address highway needs created 
by military activities. The focus of DAR is not typical traffic growth, 
which should be addressed through normal federal, state, and local 
transportation programs, but rather unusual changes and military 
necessity. 

Federal Transportation Funding Available to Help Address Impact of 
Military Growth: 

National security is one of the explicit goals of the Federal-Aid 
Highway Program; however, DOT does not have special programs to deal 
with military growth. Nevertheless, many federal transportation grant 
programs provide state and local governments with funding that they can 
use to help address BRAC-related transportation challenges. The Federal-
Aid Highway program consists of seven core formula grant programs and 
several smaller formula and discretionary grant programs.[Footnote 4] 
Broad flexibility provisions allow for states to transfer funds between 
core programs and also to eligible transit projects. Federal capital 
transit programs include formula grants to transit agencies and states. 
[Footnote 5] Additionally, transit capital investment grants provide 
discretionary funds for the construction and extension of fixed-
guideway systems such as rail or bus rapid transit lines. Federal 
transportation programs also require states to set their own priorities 
for addressing transportation needs. 

Traffic Impacts Can Be Identified through Level of Service Measures: 

Traffic growth impacts can be analyzed by the effect of the addition of 
automobiles on traffic flow. Generally, traffic flow on roadways is 
measured by "level of service," a qualitative grading system. The 
Transportation Research Board defines service levels for roadways using 
"A through F" grades. Service level "A" defines roadways with no delays 
and unimpeded traffic flow at posted speed limits. Service level "F" is 
defined as a failing service level and describes roadways with traffic 
conditions that most drivers consider to be unacceptable. Drivers on 
these roadways experience long delays and poor to nonexistent traffic 
flow. Even small increases in traffic can have a large impact when 
roads are already congested. 

Military Growth Will Have a Significant Impact on Transportation in 
Affected Communities, but the Full Extent and Cost of That Impact Are 
Uncertain: 

Affected communities expect BRAC and other military growth initiatives 
to have a significant impact on local transportation. In response to an 
OEA survey, nearly all BRAC growth communities identified 
transportation as a top growth challenge. Transportation studies done 
in communities of varying size show how BRAC-related growth is expected 
to result in a deterioration of traffic conditions. Affected 
communities identified about $2 billion in expected costs for 
transportation projects that they consider needed to address military 
growth in the near term, before the September 2011 deadline. The costs 
of longer-term projects to address the impact of military growth on 
transportation in these communities beyond the BRAC deadline are 
uncertain. 

Impact of Military Growth on Transportation Is Significant, but Will 
Vary across Communities: 

Many communities affected by BRAC growth recognize that changes 
resulting from that growth will place additional demands on their 
transportation systems. In 2007, OEA asked growth communities, 
including 18 current BRAC growth communities,[Footnote 6] to determine 
which of the problems they would face as a result of military growth 
would create the greatest challenges.[Footnote 7] Of 18 current BRAC- 
growth communities,[Footnote 8] 17 identified transportation as one of 
their top three priorities. These 17 communities ranged in size from 
very large metropolitan areas to relatively small communities, and the 
extent of the impact depended in part on the size of the affected 
community. 

Very Large Metropolitan Areas: 

Some BRAC growth bases are located in metropolitan areas with 
populations of well over 1 million. In these areas, the military growth 
may be small relative to the community's total population, but the 
community nevertheless anticipates localized effects on already 
congested urban roadways. At the National Naval Medical Center, for 
example--a BRAC growth base located in Bethesda, Maryland, a densely 
populated Washington suburb--a planned consolidation with Walter Reed 
Army Medical Center, located in Washington, D.C., will create 
additional traffic not only from 2,500 additional hospital employees, 
but also from patients and visitors, resulting in an about 1,900 
estimated additional trips to the hospital campus per day. While small 
compared to the regional population, these additional employees, 
patients, and visitors will travel to the base using either the 
Washington Metrorail system or by bus or auto on an already congested 
roadway system. The medical center is located near two major arterial 
roads, two state highways, and an Interstate highway (I-495, the 
Capitol Beltway). It is also located across from the National 
Institutes of Health, where over 18,000 personnel are employed. 
According to Maryland transportation planners, the additional traffic 
resulting from the BRAC action will lead to further deterioration of 
traffic conditions in the area. Specifically, without intersection 
improvements, the number of intersections with failing conditions is 
projected to increase from three to five. In addition, traffic 
conditions may deteriorate at 10 other intersections, but not to the 
point of failure. Traffic analyses done for DOD as part of an 
environmental impact statement (EIS)[Footnote 9] reviewed 27 major 
intersections in the vicinity and estimated that with no improvements, 
the increases in traffic would result in failing or deteriorating 
service levels at 15 of those intersections during peak periods, 
compared with current conditions. Such declining service levels mean 
significant delays will occur, likely increasing base employees' and 
others' commute times. 

Fort Belvoir is located in Fairfax County, Virginia, where employment 
and development have grown rapidly and transportation improvements have 
not kept pace with growth. The planned net addition of 24,100 personnel 
at the base will increase congestion on the already congested 
Interstate highway (I-95). Local planners anticipate additional BRAC- 
related congestion on a number of other nearby Interstate, federal, and 
local highways (I-395, I-495, U.S. Route 1, and the Fairfax County 
Parkway). The physical layout of Fort Belvoir also complicates commuter 
access, in that the base is situated on two major land parcels--the 
main post and the Engineer Proving Ground--separated by a busy highway 
(see fig. 2). In addition, gate and road closures after the September 
11, 2001, terrorist attacks have already concentrated traffic near the 
base. The BRAC Fort Belvoir EIS estimated that, with the planned 
increase in personnel, the number of failing intersections near the 
base would increase from 2 to 6 during the morning peak period, and the 
level of service would deteriorate by at least one level at 13 
intersections. 

Figure 2: Current Fort Belvoir and Vicinity: 

[See PDF for image: illustrated map] 

Source: DOD. 

[End of figure] 

Traffic and development density problems at Fort Belvoir identified 
during the environmental review process were so severe that DOD decided 
to acquire and develop an additional site, at an estimated cost of $1.2 
billion, to accommodate about 6,400 employees of DOD's Washington 
Headquarters Services and additional organizations. DOD officials told 
us, for example, that they would have had to construct a parking 
structure separate from the potential office site on the other side of 
U.S. Route 1, as well as an additional pedestrian bridge structure 
across the highway, estimated to cost $90 million. Army officials also 
determined that the existing Engineer Proving Ground location at Fort 
Belvoir was not large enough to accommodate office space and parking 
for so many additional personnel. However, even with the acquisition of 
the new site, congestion will grow on roadways near the current base, 
and local officials estimate that initial transportation improvements 
to address the impact of growth, including an additional access ramp to 
Interstate 95, could cost as much as $458 million. Over the longer 
term, state and local officials expect the costs of transportation 
improvements to address congestion to be much higher. 

Fort Meade, Maryland, located in the corridor between Washington, D.C., 
and Baltimore, is also located in a region of significant growth. 
Traffic delays are already prevalent at many intersections near the 
base, where drivers have few roadway alternatives, and county officials 
expect the growth at Fort Meade to exacerbate these conditions. Given 
the planning cycle for major highway construction and the state's large 
backlog of transportation projects, the state will likely be precluded 
from addressing these needs before BRAC 2005 actions are completed. The 
EIS concluded that significant adverse effects on area roadways would 
be expected during and after 2011. For example, it concluded that the 
growth at Fort Meade would cause failing traffic conditions on 12 
sections of road near the base, potentially resulting in significant 
delays. 

The effects of BRAC decisions, however, cannot be isolated from the 
effects of other transportation challenges that the region around Fort 
Meade will face, especially the challenges resulting from the 
construction of an EUL facility at the base. This facility is designed 
to include about 2 million square feet of office space and could house 
up to 10,000 new workers by 2013. EUL activities could generate more 
new jobs in the Fort Meade area than the military growth initiatives 
that are scheduled to bring about 7,000 additional military and 
civilian DOD personnel to the area. Although Maryland transportation 
planners have not separately estimated the effects of BRAC and the EUL 
on transportation, they said that the EUL is planned to be constructed 
at about the same time as the BRAC decision is to be implemented and 
they expected the EUL to contribute significantly to the new traffic. 

Finally, Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Maryland, consists of about 72,000 
acres--including 33,000 acres of water--primarily within Harford 
County, Maryland, north of Baltimore. The base is located on the 
northwestern shore of Chesapeake Bay, and most of the base is located 
on two peninsulas--one to the north and one to the south. The number of 
military and civilian personnel working at the base is scheduled to 
increase by about 3,400 through 2012. According to Army officials, the 
Army also has entered into an EUL agreement with a developer to build 
up to 3 million square feet of office space within the base for up to 
3,000 additional workers. Transportation planners expect this growth to 
aggravate traffic conditions on area roadways, which include a major 
Interstate highway, federal and state highways, and county roads. For 
example, the EIS completed for this base examined 17 off-post 
intersections and found that without improvements to roadways and 
greater use of bus and rail systems by base personnel, levels of 
service would deteriorate at seven intersections near the base and 
would fail at three intersections. At the time of the EIS, none of 
these intersections had failing service levels. 

Smaller Metropolitan Areas: 

Military growth may also affect transportation in metropolitan areas 
with populations of less than 1 million. While the additional traffic 
may cause congestion, these communities generally do not face the same 
physical constraints as the largest metropolitan areas. Military growth 
bases may be located in or adjacent to these areas, but also extend far 
outside the built-up urban sections. Colorado Springs, Colorado, 
bordering Fort Carson, and El Paso, Texas, bordering Fort Bliss, were 
growing rapidly before the BRAC 2005 decisions. 

Fort Carson is located to the south of Colorado Springs, and Interstate 
25, two state highways, and a major county road are the major routes to 
the base. In Colorado Springs, a study by the Pikes Peak Area Council 
of Governments found that traffic around Fort Carson will increase by 
at least 20 percent over 2005 levels by 2015, largely because of an 
influx of about 24,800 troops and dependents. Fort Carson officials 
estimate that over 24,000 vehicles will pass through one major base 
gate every day by 2012, an increase of about 150 percent or 14,600 
additional vehicles per day. Vehicles must approach the gate from a 
highway interchange where traffic is already congested. Local officials 
are concerned that the increased traffic near the gate and at the 
interchange will lead to more accidents. 

In El Paso, Texas, where Fort Bliss is located, officials identified a 
need for new roads to address mobility problems in the rapidly growing 
region, including increased congestion on I-10, the only Interstate 
highway serving the city. BRAC and other military growth initiatives 
will bring almost 70,000 additional military personnel and dependents 
to the base, significantly increasing El Paso's population. Local 
officials expect that many of the new personnel at Fort Bliss who will 
live off-base will choose to live in east and northeast El Paso. To 
accommodate the expected increases in traffic on roadways connecting 
east and northeast El Paso and Fort Bliss, the state of Texas worked 
with a private developer to construct a 7.4 mile roadway--Spur 601-- 
connecting east and northeast El Paso to the base. State and local 
officials expect the new roadway to provide base personnel with easy 
access to base gates and reduce congestion for all commuters in the 
vicinity. 

Smaller Urban Areas: 

Military growth may also affect transportation in less heavily 
populated communities. Here, road networks are less extensive than road 
networks in metropolitan areas, forcing the additional traffic onto 
roadways such as two lane rural roads not always designed for higher 
traffic levels. In addition, smaller urban areas affected by BRAC 
growth are also less likely to have transit options--rail transit is 
generally not available and bus transit can be limited. 

For example, in Radcliff, Kentucky, the community adjacent to Fort 
Knox, one highway serves the community's business district and also 
provides access to all three gates at the base. As many as 48,000 
vehicles travel over portions of this road between Elizabethtown, 
Kentucky, and Fort Knox each day, causing traffic congestion. In 
addition, some military and civilian personnel at Fort Knox commute to 
the base using two-lane rural roads. Even though Fort Knox expects to 
see a net reduction of about 2,900 personnel, changing demographics at 
the base will greatly increase congestion on the main highway. For 
example, as part of BRAC 2005, Fort Knox will lose military trainees 
who live and largely remain on-base, but gain civilian employees who 
will live off-base, along with their dependents. A 2007 study of 
traffic conditions near Fort Knox performed for a local metropolitan 
planning organization concluded that without significant improvements, 
the existing roadway system would be incapable of providing the 
capacity required to accommodate traffic increases caused by the change 
in personnel at the base. The study also concluded that the BRAC 
personnel changes would cause travel conditions on the roadway to 
deteriorate greatly. Furthermore, while Radcliff, Kentucky, has a 
transit provider--a social agency offering dial-a-ride and vanpool 
services including vanpools to the base--this provider does not offer 
regularly scheduled bus service. According to transit agency officials, 
the provider hopes to move toward regular service that could transport 
commuters to the base. Conditions at Radcliff, Kentucky, illustrate how 
growth can have a more severe impact on traffic than the change in the 
net number of base personnel would indicate. 

Similarly, at Eglin Air Force Base, a limited roadway network serving 
the 724 square-mile facility channels traffic along relatively few 
major roads and causes congestion. The base spans three counties in 
northwest Florida, and some communities along the coast are constricted 
by the base (see fig. 3). According to local officials, improving 
transportation is the main growth-related challenge facing communities 
near Eglin Air Force Base. Local and regional transportation studies 
have focused primarily on the impact of growth on the major roadways 
that accommodate most of the traffic in the area and serve as hurricane 
evacuation routes for area residents. Three main roads traverse the 
base from north to south. One major road, bracketed by the base and the 
Gulf of Mexico, runs east to west along the base's southern boundary. 
With the planned increase of 3,600 personnel and without transportation 
improvements, traffic conditions will decline during peak traffic 
hours, with failing levels of service projected at 17 locations, 
compared with 9 now. 

Figure 3: Eglin Air Force Base and Vicinity: 

[See PDF for image: illustrated map] 

Source: DOD. 

[End of figure] 

Near-Term Projects to Address Growth Are Estimated to Cost $2.0 
Billion; Longer-Term Project Costs and Impacts Are Uncertain: 

Using community estimates, OEA projected that the cost of addressing 
the most immediate effects of military growth on transportation in the 
affected communities would be about $2.0 billion. This estimate 
includes transportation projects that had to meet four criteria: the 
project had to (1) be clearly and substantially linked to military 
growth, (2) have detailed cost estimates and funding sources that were 
specific and could be validated, (3) have a demonstrated gap in 
funding, and (4) be essential to prepare for military growth by 
September 2011. Many projects were largely designed to improve 
intersections and to widen and extend roadways near growth bases. Over 
half of these costs are for transportation improvements concentrated 
near three bases in the metropolitan Washington, D.C., area--Bethesda 
National Naval Medical Center, Fort Belvoir, and Fort Meade. 
Communities near these three bases have identified 11 critical 
transportation projects estimated to cost over $1.1 billion. 

The impact of military growth on transportation could be greater than 
the affected communities have estimated thus far, and the costs of 
projects to address those impacts are still uncertain for several 
reasons. First, some potential projects are not included in the $2.0 
billion estimate, and, if built, will result in additional costs beyond 
the $2.0 billion estimate. Texas Department of Transportation officials 
told us they had identified additional projects designed, at least in 
part, to address military growth, which they estimate will cost about 
$327 million. However, according to El Paso officials, the community is 
able to fund the projects and, although the number of military 
personnel arriving in El Paso is very substantial, it is not a large 
percentage of the existing community's population. In some cases 
uncertainty remains regarding the transportation impacts. For example, 
officials at growth-affected communities near Camp Lejeune, North 
Carolina, were still identifying what levels of growth would occur and 
the impact of military growth on transportation. Additionally, some 
communities were unsure where arriving personnel and contractors would 
choose to live. For example, officials from Fort Belvoir were unsure 
how many personnel would relocate near the base, and officials at Fort 
Knox did not know if some new personnel would choose to commute from 
the Louisville area. Finally, many communities anticipate future growth 
anyway, and it is not always clear whether its impact on transportation 
is clearly and substantially linked to military growth. Studies and 
other evidence clearly linking projects to military growth are not 
always available. For example, OEA officials told us they have no 
evidence available to link three costly potential longer-term projects 
to military growth. These three projects, which are not included in the 
$2.0 billion estimate and which OEA officials said are among the four 
costliest unfunded longer-term projects that affected communities 
identified, are estimated to cost a total of about $1.6 billion and 
include expanding public transit in the Washington, D.C., area. OEA 
officials expect to complete an updated assessment of military growth 
projects, costs, and funding needs in late 2009. 

DOD Funding for Transportation Projects Is Limited, and Projects Must 
Compete for DOT Funds, but State and Local Governments Have Adopted 
Strategies to Expedite Projects: 

The federal response to the expected impact of military growth on 
transportation includes helping with planning, estimating project 
costs, and providing some funding for projects. Both DOD and DOT have 
programs that can help states and localities; however, projects to 
address the impact of military growth must compete with other projects 
for funding. State and local officials are prioritizing highway 
projects that can be completed with existing funding and identifying 
alternative transportation approaches, such as transit and biking, to 
help address the growth expected in their communities. 

OEA Provides Planning Assistance to Communities, but DOD Funding for 
Transportation Projects Is Limited and BRAC-Related Projects Must 
Compete with Other State Transportation Priorities under DOT Programs: 

OEA is DOD's primary source of assistance for communities adversely 
affected by Defense program changes. OEA provides technical and 
financial assistance to help communities address adverse consequences 
of BRAC decisions. However, as we have previously reported, OEA is not 
at an appropriate organizational level within DOD to coordinate the 
assistance from multiple federal and other government agencies that 
affected communities need. Accordingly, we recommended that DOD provide 
high-level agency leadership to ensure interagency and 
intergovernmental coordination.[Footnote 10] DOD agreed with this 
recommendation. 

OEA has funded local coordinator positions to assist in coordinating 
local activities responding to BRAC, including transportation-related 
activities. For example, Harford County, Maryland, established a BRAC 
Planning Commission for Aberdeen Proving Ground. This Commission, with 
OEA funding, helped establish the Chesapeake Science and Security 
Corridor Consortium, which includes eight jurisdictions in three 
states--Delaware, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. With Harford County as 
the lead agency, the Chesapeake Science and Security Corridor Regional 
BRAC Office administer grants and coordinates regional BRAC responses. 

OEA also has funded studies, such as traffic studies, which help states 
and local communities define the impact of military growth on 
transportation. For example, OEA has provided transportation planning 
grants to Maryland and Virginia. According to local officials, OEA also 
has funded transportation studies for communities near several of the 
bases we visited, including those near Eglin Air Force Base and Fort 
Knox. These studies can provide communities with more detailed, precise 
information about the transportation impact of military growth than the 
initial environmental studies performed by DOD. 

Defense Access Roads Program Has Provided Limited Funding for Community 
Transportation Needs: 

Under the DAR program, administered by the Military Surface Deployment 
and Distribution Command (SDDC), DOD may pay for public highway 
improvements needed to address the impact on traffic of sudden or 
unusual defense-related actions. DAR enables DOD to help pay indirectly 
for improvements to highways DOD designates as important to the 
national defense. Under DAR, DOD can use funds provided in military 
construction appropriations to pay for all or part of the cost of 
constructing and maintaining roads designated as "defense access 
roads." However, proposals for funding these roads must compete with 
proposals for funding all other military construction projects, and 
projects must meet specific criteria. 

Local government and military base officials we interviewed said they 
considered DAR funding difficult to obtain because of the program's 
narrow eligibility criteria.[Footnote 11] For example, if a road is 
already heavily used or congested, traffic may not double as a result 
of military growth even though traffic may increase significantly. In 
addition, the DAR criteria do not specifically refer to transit-related 
improvements. The DAR program has not funded large numbers of defense 
access road projects. From 2000 to 2009, the program received 
applications to certify of 27 projects. Of those, 17 have been 
certified and funded, 6 have been certified and are pursuing funding, 3 
are currently being evaluated for certification, and 1 did not met the 
funding criteria. Since 2005, the program has provided about $22 
million annually for transportation improvements, including projects 
that are not BRAC-related. 

In 2008, we reported that for 11 bases whose populations were scheduled 
to increase by at least 25 percent, DOD had certified and requested 
funding for one DAR project--$36.0 million for access ramps and a 
parkway at Fort Belvoir, Virginia.[Footnote 12] Since that time, DOD 
has approved and provided funds for additional projects at two BRAC 
growth bases: $8.3 million for access roads at Fort Carson, Colorado, 
and $21.8 million for a road-widening project at Fort Bragg, North 
Carolina. 

In October 2008, DOD reported to the Senate Committee on Armed Services 
addressing DAR criteria. The report concluded that the current DAR 
criteria provide flexibility for addressing communities' concerns about 
the impact of traffic. However, the report also recognized the 
difficulty in linking safety issues to the criteria and acknowledged 
that the impact of DOD growth on safety is a particular concern. 
Consequently, DOD was considering expanding or modifying the criteria 
to make projects eligible for DAR certification when population growth 
at a base increases traffic congestion to the point that it presents a 
public safety risk. DOD directed SDDC to provide by December 2009 an 
independent study on the merits of specific criteria to address safety 
issues related to growth. The study will be coordinated with DOT. 

BRAC-Related Transportation Projects Must Compete for DOT Funds with 
Other State and Regional Transportation Priorities: 

DOT does not have special programs to address BRAC growth. However, a 
number of existing federal transportation grant programs provide 
funding that state and local governments can use to help address BRAC- 
related transportation challenges. Federal laws and requirements 
specify an overall approach for transportation planning agencies to use 
in planning and selecting projects for federal funding. Under this 
process, localities--acting through metropolitan planning 
organizations[Footnote 13]--and states develop long-range plans and 
short-range programs to identify transportation needs and projects. 
BRAC-related projects must be incorporated into metropolitan area long- 
range transportation plans and transportation improvement programs-- 
for improvements located in metropolitan area--as well as state 
transportation improvement programs, before federal funding may be 
used. Decisions about which projects are to be funded take place at the 
state and local level. As a result, BRAC-related projects must compete 
with other state, regional, and local transportation priorities. 

Communities Lack Funding and Time to Complete Major Transportation 
Projects before BRAC Growth Occurs: 

Because of the short BRAC growth time frames, communities near the 
affected bases have estimated that they have less funding than they 
need for critical, short-term, growth-related transportation projects. 
According to our analysis of the data 17 growth communities provided to 
OEA, these communities had identified, as of August 2008, sources for 
about $0.5 billion of the $2.0 billion they indicated they would need 
for 46 short-term transportation projects.[Footnote 14] Transportation 
projects constituted about 93 percent of the short-term infrastructure 
funding needs identified by communities. 

Since February 2009, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 
(the Recovery Act) has provided additional funding for transportation 
projects.[Footnote 15] Recovery Act funds may be used for BRAC-related 
projects, but the projects already need to be advanced in the normal 
development cycle, because these funds must be obligated very quickly 
or states risk losing them. The act requires that DOT obligate for each 
state, by June 30, 2009, 50 percent of the highway funds made available 
to each state, and 100 percent of these funds by March 1, 2010. If 
these requirements are not met for a state, the unobligated funds are 
to be redistributed to other states.[Footnote 16] Thus, even though 
BRAC transportation projects ideally should be completed more quickly 
than typical highway projects, the time frames for using Recovery Act 
funds may be too short for some BRAC projects. However, states are 
using Recovery Act funds for BRAC-related transportation projects at 
two of the eight bases we visited--Eglin Air Force Base and Fort 
Belvoir. Florida is using $46 million in Recovery Act funds for an 
intersection grade separation project near Eglin Air Force Base and 
Virginia is using about $60 million in Recovery Act funds for its 
Fairfax County Parkway project. Texas and Maryland officials did not 
report applying Recovery Act funds for any of the 46 transportation 
projects OEA officials identified as related to military growth. 
However, they reasoned that applying Recovery Act funds for highway 
projects or to transit agencies generally could help improve mobility 
in the region. DOT is continuing to obligate Recovery Act funds, and 
the total amount of these funds that ultimately will be used to respond 
to BRAC transportation needs is not known at this time. 

According to community and state transportation planners, communities 
that will be affected by BRAC growth will often not be able to complete 
major transportation projects designed to address that growth before it 
occurs. The BRAC growth time frame is shorter than the average time 
frame for developing significant new infrastructure projects. As noted, 
legislation mandates that BRAC actions be completed by September 2011, 
6 years from the date the President submitted his approval of the 
recommendations to Congress. According to the Maryland Department of 
Transportation, major roadway improvement and construction projects 
typically take 10 to 15 years to plan, fund, design, and construct. As 
shown in table 3, Federal Highway Administration data suggest similar 
time frames for completing major highway construction projects. 

Table 3: Typical Time Necessary to Complete a Federally Financed Major 
New Construction Highway Project: 

Phase: Planning; 
Time to complete, in years: 4-5. 

Phase: Preliminary design and environmental review; 
Time to complete, in years: 1-5. 

Phase: Final design and right-of-way acquisition; 
Time to complete, in years: 2-3. 

Phase: Construction; 
Time to complete, in years: 2-6. 

Phase: Total; 
Time to complete, in years: 9-19. 

Source: FHWA. 

Note: The durations of the phases are approximate. The preliminary 
design/environmental review steps and the final design/right-of-way 
acquisition steps often overlap. 

[End of table] 

Some state and local governments have encountered difficulties in 
responding to transportation needs before the BRAC moves take place. 

* Kentucky state and local governments will not complete a key 
"connector" road designed to alleviate traffic near Fort Knox until 
2013--2 years after the deadline for completing the BRAC realignment. 

* Texas state and local government officials do not expect to finish 
widening a major road to better accommodate increased traffic on the 
perimeter of Fort Bliss or constructing a new freeway allowing traffic 
to more directly access the base until at least 4 years after growth at 
the base occurs. 

In commenting on a draft of this report, the Federal Transit 
Administration (FTA) observed that transit operational improvements 
such as increasing the frequency of service can be implemented in less 
time than is required for construction of new transportation 
facilities. In addition, Urbanized Area Formula grants administered by 
the FTA can be used for near-term service extensions as a stopgap 
measure to meet a surge in demand, but not as an alternative to a long- 
term capital project. 

State and Local Governments Are Employing Several Strategies to 
Complete Some Critical Projects before BRAC Growth Occurs: 

Given the estimated shortfall in affected communities' funding for 
critical near-term projects and the difficulties posed by the Recovery 
Act's short obligation time frames, local officials are adopting 
various strategies to complete some projects before the BRAC 2005 
implementation deadline. In particular, officials are reprioritizing 
planned projects, assigning higher priorities to projects that will 
help mitigate the impact of BRAC growth on transportation, and 
immediately implementing projects that they can complete before or 
during BRAC growth. 

Three Maryland Bases: Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Fort Meade, and 
Bethesda National Naval Medical Center: 

Three Maryland bases--Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Fort Meade, and the 
Bethesda National Naval Medical Center--are expected to grow by over 
12,000 personnel as a result of BRAC. These three bases are located 
within large metropolitan areas. Officials expect the growth to have a 
severe impact on intersections and roadways near all three bases. 

State government in Maryland has taken the lead role in responding to 
BRAC growth within the state. For example, the governor created a BRAC 
subcabinet, which coordinates the responses of several state agencies, 
including the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT). In 
addition, MDOT has responded to time and funding constraints for 
addressing the impact of growth at the three bases by implementing a 
strategy to identify lower-cost improvements for immediate 
implementation while continuing to plan higher-dollar, higher-capacity 
projects that take longer to plan, engineer, and construct. 

MDOT officials consider improvements to key intersections near the 
three bases as critical short-term BRAC projects but are concerned that 
the improvements may not be completed before growth occurs. State and 
local transportation officials determined the potential impact of 
military growth on traffic at the three bases within the next 5 to 7 
years and identified 58 intersections where they expect traffic 
conditions to fail during that time because of this growth. In 
addition, the officials identified intersection improvements, such as 
additional turn lanes and other minor projects, to maintain acceptable 
traffic conditions near the bases in the short term. MDOT prioritized 
these improvements based on level of service, cost of improvements, 
environmental and socio-economic impact, and proximity to the bases, 
giving highest priority to improvements at 16 intersections. State and 
local government officials said they plan to fund and complete these 
improvements but are uncertain whether they will have sufficient funds 
to do so. For example, the state has programmed: 

* $31.6 million for improvements to six intersections near Fort Meade, 
but another $65 million to $100 million may be needed to complete the 
projects; 

* $31.9 million for improvements to six intersections near Aberdeen 
Proving Ground, but $90 million to $155 million more may be needed to 
complete the projects; and: 

* $31.3 million for improvements to four intersections near Bethesda 
National Naval Medical Center, but $160 million to $215 million more 
may be needed to complete the projects. 

These shortfalls reflect a broader difficulty in funding Maryland's 
transportation capital program. The state has deferred over $2.2 
billion in transportation projects as transportation revenues have 
declined. Partially offsetting this shortfall is $610 million in 
Recovery Act funds for highways and transit. However, according to an 
MDOT official, Recovery Act funds are not a good fit for the BRAC- 
related intersection improvements because the projects are not ready 
for funds to be obligated, and the Recovery Act has tight obligation 
deadlines for highway and transit funds. 

MDOT also initiated evaluations of how direct commuter and local bus 
and shuttle services could be expanded to help accommodate growth at 
the three bases. Furthermore, according to an MDOT official, MDOT is 
exploring the possibility of obtaining a discretionary grant under the 
Recovery Act for a maintenance and storage facility to help support and 
grow local bus service to the Fort Meade area. MDOT officials are also 
exploring other short-term projects to address the growth, including 
bicycle and pedestrian path improvements, better access to transit 
systems, and efforts to promote car-and vanpools, teleworking, and 
transit systems. 

MDOT's long-term projects to address growth at the bases include rail 
improvements. Maryland officials had identified these projects before 
the 2005 BRAC decisions to address regional growth, but the projects 
are also needed to improve access to the bases, since growth will 
create additional demand for rail and transit services. State officials 
plan to invest $201.3 million from 2008 through 2013 to increase 
capacity and improve service on the Maryland Area Regional Commuter 
(MARC) system statewide. 

Finally, a key project for addressing the transportation impact of 
growth at Bethesda National Naval Medical Center is improved access to 
the Medical Center Metrorail station. Roads in this community are 
already at or near capacity, and with no room for significant roadway 
expansion; local and state officials expect a significant portion of 
the commuters to use the Metrorail system. The Washington Metropolitan 
Area Transit Authority has studied five alternatives, including 
improving the existing street crossing, two pedestrian tunnel designs, 
a pedestrian bridge design and a new elevator entrance. Cost estimates 
for these options varied from $700,000 for the improving the existing 
crossing to $59.4 million for the elevator entrance option. A preferred 
alternative has not been selected. Maryland state officials told us 
that they are working with transit authority officials to plan the 
project. In May 2008, Bethesda National Naval Medical Center officials 
requested that DOD provide $21 million for the project through the DAR 
program. 

Fort Belvoir, Virginia: 

As discussed, Fort Belvoir will gain about 24,100 military and civilian 
personnel. Fairfax County, where Fort Belvoir is located, is within the 
Washington, D.C., metropolitan area--one of the most congested 
transportation regions in the nation. Because of traffic and other 
development issues at Fort Belvoir, the Army acquired additional 
property for the base in Alexandria, Virginia, and 6,400 of the new 
personnel will re-locate there. 

State and local officials also identified and addressed their highest- 
priority transportation projects immediately while recognizing that 
longer-term projects may not be completed before BRAC growth occurs at 
Fort Belvoir. In total, the officials estimated $390 million in costs 
for five short-term projects that they consider critical for responding 
to BRAC growth at Fort Belvoir. In addition, they identified about $1.6 
billion in costs for short-term and longer-term projects not included 
in the $2 billion estimate of nationwide project costs. Virginia has 
thus far allocated about $96 million in Recovery Act funds to BRAC- 
related projects. Of this sum, the Virginia Department of 
Transportation (VDOT) has allocated about $60 million to extend the 
Fairfax County Parkway near Fort Belvoir. This Recovery Act funding, 
together with funding from other sources, has enabled VDOT to allocate 
the estimated $175 million needed to complete this road. However, VDOT 
has not been able to obtain any of the estimated $165 million needed to 
complete the two other short-term projects near the base--constructing 
a traffic interchange and widening Interstate 95. In Virginia, as in 
Maryland, transportation revenues have fallen. Specifically, the 
projected funding for projects listed in Virginia's 6-year 
transportation improvement plan has declined by almost 40 percent since 
2007.[Footnote 17] According to VDOT officials, this decrease in 
projected funding is mainly due to a 2007 Virginia Supreme Court 
decision disallowing the Northern Virginia Transportation Authority's 
imposition of taxes and user fees to obtain revenue for transportation 
projects.[Footnote 18] 

In addition to highways, several transit systems serve Fairfax County, 
including the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority bus and 
Metrorail, Fairfax County bus services, and Virginia Rail Express. 
However, transit access to the base itself is limited, and there is no 
rail connection. Likewise, the new base location in Alexandria does not 
have a direct rail connection. Some local officials see an extension of 
Metrorail to the Fort Belvoir area as a way to address the 
transportation impact of growth near the base. 

Fort Carson, Colorado: 

About 10,400 Army personnel, plus an additional 14,400 dependents, were 
expected to relocate to Fort Carson. However, a June 2009 DOD decision 
not to locate a combat brigade there will lower this estimate.[Footnote 
19] Fort Carson is located in El Paso County, Colorado, adjacent to the 
city of Colorado Springs. Colorado state and local officials expect the 
growth to have a significant impact on traffic conditions throughout El 
Paso County and in adjacent counties. 

After learning about planned BRAC-related military, civilian, and 
contractor personnel increases at Fort Carson, local transportation 
officials reprioritized their planned transportation projects during 
2006 and 2007. This reprioritization allowed them to include projects 
designed to address the impact of military growth among their planned 
short-term projects. Although state and local officials have completed 
two key projects, they lack sufficient funding to complete other growth-
related projects before the growth occurs. 

State and local officials used a combination of state and local funds 
to complete needed improvements to Interstate and state highways and to 
a major roadway near the base. However, local transportation officials 
estimate that additional projects designed to address the impact of 
military growth could cost as much as $1 billion. The officials told us 
that although they have made BRAC growth-related projects a priority, 
additional projects will not be completed before September 2011 because 
of funding constraints. Local transportation agencies obtain their 
funding mainly from sales and fuel tax receipts, and local officials 
noted that these tax receipts are declining. The officials also told us 
that the fiscal year 2010 state transportation budget could be reduced 
by over $400 million from the fiscal year 2009 funding level, further 
reducing the funding available for projects designed to address the 
growth at Fort Carson. The officials told us that, should the fiscal 
year 2010 funding be reduced, the state's transportation funding would 
be at its lowest level in 10 years. 

Officials for Mountain Metro Transit, the transit services provider for 
Colorado Springs, told us that their agency does not provide service 
inside the gates at Fort Carson. They stated that most buildings at the 
base are not within a reasonable walking distance from the entrance and 
exit gates and that providing transit service would necessitate 
creating an on-base shuttle system from the gates to several buildings 
on base. City and transit officials told us that funding for transit 
services could be cut by 10 percent, further limiting the agency's 
ability to address the transportation effects of growth. In addition, 
Fort Carson officials told us that demand for transit services is low 
among base personnel. 

Fort Bliss, Texas: 

As a result of the BRAC 2005 legislation and other initiatives, about 
28,000 personnel were to relocate to Fort Bliss in El Paso County, 
Texas, by 2011. However, a June 2009 DOD decision not to relocate a 
combat brigade there will lower this number. State and local officials 
expect the growth to adversely affect conditions on local roadways and 
transit systems. However, the officials added that they do not consider 
the impact of military growth to be significant because the additional 
personnel represent a small percentage of the city's total population 
of about 750,000. 

Local officials have identified 31 road projects and four transit 
projects that will help address the impact of military growth at Fort 
Bliss. According to their estimate, the total cost of these projects 
will be between $623 million and $830 million.[Footnote 20] The 
officials told us that they are capable of funding most of these 
projects within 5 years. They added that most of the projects that will 
address the impact of military growth will also address nonmilitary 
growth and were planned before the decisions to increase personnel at 
Fort Bliss. However, they told us that they will not be able to 
complete a major road-widening project until at least 4 years after the 
growth occurs. 

Officials in Texas used an innovative financing approach to generate 
funding sufficient to complete a critical BRAC growth-related project 
within a short time frame. This approach, which El Paso city officials 
worked on with Texas Department of Transportation officials, will 
provide funding to construct Spur 601, a $367 million highway project 
that will ease access to Fort Bliss and relieve congestion in east and 
northeast El Paso. The financing approach, "pass through" financing, 
will repay a project developer to finance (through the Camino Real 
Regional Mobile Authority), design, acquire the right-of-way for, and 
construct the highway over several years. The regional authority will 
use state highway funds to repay the private developer, based on miles 
traveled by vehicles on the highway. 

El Paso city officials plan to develop new bus services near Fort Bliss 
and citywide as part of their plans to address the transportation 
effects of military and nonmilitary growth. However, Fort Bliss 
officials told us that demand for transit services is low among base 
personnel because the base encompasses a large geographic area, the 
base gates are not within walking distance of most buildings, and the 
base does not have a shuttle service to transport transit customers 
from the gates to their on-base destinations. Fort Bliss officials 
added that they attempted to establish an on-base bus service but 
discontinued it because of low demand for the service. 

Fort Knox, Kentucky: 

Fort Knox officials expect the base to gain about 1,600 military and 
civilian personnel and dependents by September 2011; however, the 
military-related population living off-base will grow by about 5,000. A 
local metropolitan planning organization study of traffic conditions 
near Fort Knox concludes that without significant improvements, the 
existing roadway system will be incapable of providing the capacity 
required to accommodate traffic increases caused by the change in 
personnel at the base. 

Likewise, Kentucky state and local officials said they completed a 
roadway improvement project that they considered essential to 
addressing the transportation impact of expected BRAC organizational 
changes at Fort Knox, but they do not have sufficient funding to 
complete other projects designed to address that impact before the 
changes occur. State and local officials report that the transportation 
projects needed to address the impact of growth at Fort Knox will cost 
about $244 million. Shortly after state and local officials learned 
about the planned changes at Fort Knox, state officials prioritized the 
widening of a roadway that provides access to the base. According to a 
state official, the state completed the $13 million improvement project 
in March 2008. Since then, state officials have been able to set aside 
an additional $50 million in bond funds for the remaining projects. 
Local officials told us that state law leaves them with few other 
revenue-raising options for transportation improvements. For example, 
the Kentucky constitution prohibits the state General Assembly from 
granting city and county governments the authority to levy sales taxes, 
thus limiting their options to fund growth-related transportation 
improvements.[Footnote 21] Accordingly, local officials said the state 
government must fund most transportation improvements. The officials 
told us that the state must use most available funds for roadway 
maintenance and does not have sufficient funds remaining to address 
growth-related projects at Fort Knox before 2011. 

Local officials are working to increase park-and-ride services to 
reduce anticipated roadway congestion but do not have the financial 
capacity to purchase additional buses and expand service. Local 
officials consider expanding key roadway capacity a higher priority 
than expanding transit services. Local transit services are limited, 
and the transit provider does not have the capacity to significantly 
expand services and help address the transportation impact of adding 
about 5,000 people to the off-base population. The Transit Authority of 
Central Kentucky provides bus and vanpool services for the communities 
near Fort Knox. According to transit authority officials, their bus and 
vanpool system provides services for about 135 passengers each day. 
Despite their limited ability to address the effects of the expected 
growth at Fort Knox, authority officials plan to operate larger buses 
and provide increased service as demand for transit services increases. 

State officials do not expect to complete key projects until 2013 or 
2014--2 to 3 years after the growth occurs. The projects include a 
bypass roadway to improve traffic conditions on a major roadway leading 
to the base and a new roadway serving residential areas where local 
officials expect most of the new personnel to reside. 

Eglin Air Force Base, Florida: 

Eglin Air Force Base, located in Okaloosa, Walton, and Santa Rosa 
counties, will gain about 3,600 military and civilian personnel and 
5,900 dependents by September 2011. State, local, and Air Force 
officials expect congestion on major roadways to worsen with this 
growth. As noted, a limited roadway network serving the 724 square-mile 
facility channels traffic along relatively few major roads and causes 
congestion. 

Like officials in Maryland and Virginia, Florida state and local 
officials are prioritizing transportation projects and initially 
funding projects that they can complete before planned BRAC growth at 
Eglin Air Force Base occurs. Local and state officials have not 
estimated the total costs needed to address the impact of growth, but 
they have identified short-and long-term projects they consider 
critical to addressing the impact. State and county officials are 
initially funding some projects that address immediate needs of the 
communities that will be affected by the growth. These projects are 
considered critical to accommodating increased traffic levels and 
maintaining access to the base without unreasonable delays, including 
widening major roads near the base from four to six lanes. Another 
critical but currently unfunded project is construction of an overpass 
to allow personnel to access a nearby airfield without stopping traffic 
on a state highway. 

Florida state and local officials told us that they do not have the 
funding necessary to complete planned long-term projects. They added 
that long-term projects include improving and constructing roadways in 
and near several communities that will be affected by the growth and 
expanding transit services. Expanding transit services could be 
important to accommodate growth-related traffic increases because 
environmental concerns preclude widening several key roadway segments 
near the installation. 

Agency Comments: 

We provided copies of this report to the Departments of Defense and 
Transportation for their review and comment. Both provided technical 
comments, which we incorporated into the report, as appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to other interested congressional 
committees and the Secretaries of Defense, Transportation, the Army, 
the Air Force, and the Navy and the Commandant of the Marine Corps. 
Copies are available to others at no cost on GAO's Web Site at 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-2834, or herrp@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. GAO staff who made key contributions to 
this report are listed in appendix II. 

Signed by: 

Phillip Herr: 
Director, Physical Infrastructure Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To determine the expected impact of military growth on transportation 
in communities affected by the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) 
decisions, we reviewed the 18 military bases identified by the Office 
of Economic Adjustment (OEA) that will be substantially and seriously 
affected by growth resulting from the BRAC 2005 realignments. We 
analyzed relevant OEA reports, including reports that identified 
projects designed to address the impact of growth. We reviewed 
environmental impact statements and assessments for the 16 of these 
bases that had completed environmental documents at the time of our 
review. To obtain more detailed information on how community 
transportation likely would be affected, we selected 8 of the 18 bases, 
and their nearby communities, to visit. We selected these locations 
based on several of factors. We classified bases into three groups, 
including very large metropolitan areas of over 1 million people, 
smaller metropolitan areas of 200,000 to 1 million people, and smaller 
urban areas of under 200,000 people, and selected communities within 
each grouping, considering whether the environmental study was 
complete, and whether community officials identified transportation as 
a concern. The bases selected are listed in table 1 of this report. We 
interviewed Army, Navy, and Air Force officials responsible for 
implementing the BRAC decisions about the expected growth at these 
installations and the impact of the growth on transportation in the 
communities. For the eight communities, we analyzed state and community 
participation in the environmental review processes, and relevant 
studies to determine the transportation effects of growth, including 
state transportation improvement plans, local transportation plans, and 
detailed traffic studies, where available. We did not independently 
assess the transportation models used in these traffic studies, or 
independently calculate employment or population growth in the 
communities. In addition, we interviewed state and local transportation 
and other local officials responsible for addressing the impact of 
military growth about how that growth would affect transportation in 
these communities. We also observed conditions on roadways local 
officials expect to be affected by BRAC growth in the selected 
communities. 

To determine the estimated costs to address the transportation impact 
of military growth and the status of their efforts to fund growth- 
related projects, we analyzed information OEA collected from affected 
local governments showing their cost estimates and funding available 
for growth-related projects. We interviewed OEA project managers 
responsible for coordinating data gathering from affected local 
governments and local government officials about the effort and the 
process and standards for including projects as part of OEA's 
assessment. We also analyzed the data to determine the total costs of 
both the critical short-term projects and the longer-term projects. We 
also compared projects included in the data with projects identified in 
the environmental studies DOD conducted for the growth locations to 
establish a link between the proposed projects and military growth 
actions. 

To determine the federal, state, and local response to the expected 
impact of BRAC growth on transportation, we reviewed DOD's Defense 
Access Roads (DAR) program guidance and interviewed base and DOD 
Military Surface Deployment and Distribution Command officials to 
determine which BRAC growth-related projects base commanders had 
submitted for program funding and the amount of program funding 
committed. We also interviewed OEA officials on the role OEA provides 
in supporting BRAC-affected communities. In addition, to obtain 
information on how military resources would help address the impact of 
growth on transportation, we interviewed Army, Navy, and Air Force 
officials responsible for implementing individual bases' efforts to 
help state and local governments address that impact. We interviewed 
Federal Highway Administration and Federal Transit Administration 
officials about their agencies' roles in helping affected communities 
address the impact of military growth on transportation and about the 
funding available to affected communities to address that impact. We 
reviewed local and state short-and long-term transportation improvement 
plans for the selected communities to identify transportation projects 
planned to address BRAC growth, communities' prioritization of these 
projects, and communities' strategies for funding and completing the 
projects. We also interviewed state and local officials at the eight 
selected communities about their strategies for addressing that impact, 
including how they would prioritize BRAC-related projects with other 
transportation projects, obtain needed funding, and coordinate with DOD 
and other federal officials, and their views on the environmental 
impact process. 

We conducted this performance audit from April 2008 through September 
2009 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Phillip Herr, Director (202) 512-2834 or herrp@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Robert Ciszewski, Catherine 
Colwell, Steve Cohen, Elizabeth Eisenstadt, Brian Lepore, Les Locke, 
Mike Mgebroff, and Stephanie Purcell made key contributions to this 
report. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Military High Level Leadership Needed to Help Guam Address Challenges 
Caused by DOD-Related Growth. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-500R]. Washington, D.C.: April 9, 
2009. 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: DOD Faces Challenges in 
Implementing Recommendations on Time and Is Not Consistently Updating 
Savings Estimates. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-217]. 
Washington, D.C.: January 30, 2009. 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: Army Is Developing Plans to 
Transfer Functions from Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, to Aberdeen Proving 
Ground, Maryland, but Challenges Remain. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1010R]. Washington, D.C.: August 13, 
2008. 

Defense Infrastructure: High-Level Leadership Needed to Help 
Communities Address Challenges Caused by DOD-Related Growth. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-665]. Washington, D.C.: 
June 17, 2008. 

Defense Infrastructure: DOD Funding for Infrastructure and Road 
Improvements Surrounding Growth Installations. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-602R]. Washington, D.C.: April 1, 
2008. 

Surface Transportation: Restructured Federal Approach Needed for More 
Focused, Performance-Based, and Sustainable Programs. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-400]. Washington, D.C.: March 6, 
2008. 

Defense Infrastructure: Army and Marine Corps Grow the Force 
Construction Projects Generally Support the Initiative. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-375]. Washington, D.C.: March 6, 
2008. 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: Higher Costs and Lower Savings 
Projected for Implementing Two Key Supply-Related BRAC Recommendations. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-315]. Washington, D.C.: 
March 5, 2008. 

Defense Infrastructure: Realignment of Air Force Special Operations 
Command Units to Cannon Air Force Base, New Mexico. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-244R]. Washington, D.C.: January 18, 
2008. 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: Estimated Costs Have Increased 
and Estimated Savings Have Decreased. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-341T]. Washington, D.C.: December 
12, 2007. 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: Cost Estimates Have Increased 
and Are Likely to Continue to Evolve. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-159]. Washington, D.C.: December 11, 
2007. 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: Impact of Terminating, 
Relocating, or Outsourcing the Services of the Armed Forces Institute 
of Pathology. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-20]. 
Washington, D.C.: November 9, 2007. 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: Transfer of Supply, Storage, 
and Distribution Functions from Military Services to Defense Logistics 
Agency. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-121R]. 
Washington, D.C.: October 26, 2007. 

Defense Infrastructure: Challenges Increase Risks for Providing Timely 
Infrastructure Support for Army Installations Expecting Substantial 
Personnel Growth. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-1007]. 
Washington, D.C.: September 13, 2007. 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: Plan Needed to Monitor 
Challenges for Completing More Than 100 Armed Forces Reserve Centers. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-1040]. Washington, D.C.: 
September 13, 2007. 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: Observations Related to the 
2005 Round. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-1203R]. 
Washington, D.C.: September 6, 2007. 

Military Base Closures: Projected Savings from Fleet Readiness Centers 
Are Likely Overstated and Actions Needed to Track Actual Savings and 
Overcome Certain Challenges. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-304]. Washington, D.C.: June 29, 
2007. 

Military Base Closures: Management Strategy Needed to Mitigate 
Challenges and Improve Communication to Help Ensure Timely 
Implementation of Air National Guard Recommendations. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-641]. Washington, D.C.: May 16, 
2007. 

Military Base Closures: Opportunities Exist to Improve Environmental 
Cleanup Cost Reporting and to Expedite Transfer of Unneeded Property. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-166]. Washington, D.C.: 
January 30, 2007. 

Military Bases: Observations on DOD's 2005 Base Realignment and Closure 
Selection Process and Recommendations. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-905]. Washington, D.C.: July 18, 
2005. 

Military Bases: Analysis of DOD's 2005 Selection Process and 
Recommendations for Base Closures and Realignments. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-785]. Washington, D.C.: July 1, 
2005. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] H.R. 110-238, at 61 (2007). 

[2] BRAC 2005 requires DOD to complete the implementation of the BRAC 
2005 recommendations for closing or realigning bases within a 6-year 
time frame, which ends September 15, 2011. National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991, Pub. L. No. 101-510, title 
XXIX, § 2904(a)(5), 104 Stat. 1485, 1812 Nov. 5, 1990 (as amended). 

[3] Because of these military growth initiatives, some bases that are 
not BRAC growth bases will nevertheless see personnel increases. 

[4] The majority of highway infrastructure funding is distributed 
through seven core highway programs. These programs are the National 
Highway System, Surface Transportation Program, Interstate Maintenance, 
Highway Bridge Replacement and Rehabilitation Program, Highway Safety 
Improvement Program, Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement 
Program, and Equity Bonus Program. The Federal Highway Administration 
(FHWA) also administers a number of smaller discretionary grants 
programs to provide federal highway infrastructure assistance to the 
states. 

[5] The formula and bus grants provide capital and operating assistance 
to transit agencies and states through a combination of seven 
relatively large and five smaller formula and discretionary programs. 
The largest of these programs is the Urbanized Area Formula Grants 
program. 

[6] OEA does not differentiate in how they support the communities 
impacted by BRAC and those affected by other DOD activities. OEA is 
currently providing assistance to 25 local areas, plus the Territory of 
Guam, affected by DOD mission growth. 

[7] The categories of projects included communications, education, 
energy and utilities, planning and zoning, social, transportation, 
water and sewer, and workforce. 

[8] We defined the communities in the vicinity of each affected base as 
a single community. Thus, a "community" may be a county, city, or 
several smaller localities near an affected base. 

[9] The EIS is detailed assessment of environmental impacts. It 
describes the project, characterizes the surrounding environment, 
analyzes the environmental impact of a range of project alternatives, 
and indicates plans for complying with environmental laws and 
mitigating any environmental damage caused by the project. 

[10] GAO, Defense Infrastructure: High-Level Leadership Needed to Help 
Communities Address Challenges Caused by DOD-Related Growth, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-665] (Washington, D.C.: 
June 17, 2008). 

[11] Projects are eligible for funding if they meet one of the 
following criteria: (1) the installation needs a new access road to 
accommodate a defense action, (2) a defense action causes traffic to 
double, (3) the installation needs a new or improved access road to 
accommodate a temporary surge in traffic to or from the installation 
due to a defense action, (4) the installation needs a new or improved 
access road to accommodate special military vehicles such as heavy 
equipment transport vehicles, or (5) the installation needs a road to 
replace one closed because of military necessity. 

[12] GAO, Defense Infrastructure: DOD Funding for Infrastructure and 
Road Improvements Surrounding Growth Installations, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-602R] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 1, 
2008). The 11 installations with 25 percent growth were Fort Benning, 
Georgia; Fort Belvoir, Virginia; Fort Bliss, Texas; Fort Bragg; North 
Carolina; Fort Carson, Colorado; Fort Lee, Virginia; Fort Lewis, 
Washington; Fort Riley, Kansas; Fort Sam Houston, Texas; Marine Corps 
Base Quantico, Virginia; and National Navy Medical Center, Maryland. 

[13] Metropolitan planning organizations are regional transportation 
policy bodies made up of representatives from various governmental and 
other organizations. The Federal Highway Act of 1970 required the 
development of such agencies in areas with populations of 50,000 or 
greater to carry out cooperative planning at the metropolitan level. 

[14] One of the 18 communities had not yet submitted the data. OEA is 
in the process of updating this information. According to OEA officials 
and preliminary data, overall transportation project costs and 
available funding both appear to have declined for short-term 
transportation projects, but available funding has declined more 
sharply. As a result, the funding gap may have risen. 

[15] Pub. L. No. 111-5, 123 Stat.115 (Feb. 17, 2009). 

[16] GAO, Recovery Act: States' and Localities' Current and Planned 
Uses of Funds While Facing Fiscal Stresses, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-829] (Washington, D.C.: June 17, 
2008). 

[17] The Commonwealth of Virginia Transportation Board (CTB) maintains 
a 6-year transportation improvement plan, which allocates funds for 
transportation projects proposed for construction, development, or 
study. 

[18] The Virginia Supreme Court held that the Virginia General Assembly 
did not have the authority to delegate its power of taxation to a 
nonelected body such as the Northern Virginia Transportation Authority. 
Marshall v. Northern Va. Transp. Auth., 657 S.E. 2d 71 (2008). 

[19] Currently, a combat brigade typically contains about 3,800 
soldiers. 

[20] As of March 2009, El Paso officials had not provided an estimate 
of short-term projects to OEA. Thus, these potential projects are not 
included in the estimated $2 billion in short-term BRAC-related 
transportation projects. 

[21] KY. CONST. § 181. 

[End of section] 

GAO's Mission: 

The Government Accountability Office, the audit, evaluation and 
investigative arm of Congress, exists to support Congress in meeting 
its constitutional responsibilities and to help improve the performance 
and accountability of the federal government for the American people. 
GAO examines the use of public funds; evaluates federal programs and 
policies; and provides analyses, recommendations, and other assistance 
to help Congress make informed oversight, policy, and funding 
decisions. GAO's commitment to good government is reflected in its core 
values of accountability, integrity, and reliability. 

Obtaining Copies of GAO Reports and Testimony: 

The fastest and easiest way to obtain copies of GAO documents at no 
cost is through GAO's Web site [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. Each 
weekday, GAO posts newly released reports, testimony, and 
correspondence on its Web site. To have GAO e-mail you a list of newly 
posted products every afternoon, go to [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov] 
and select "E-mail Updates." 

Order by Phone: 

The price of each GAO publication reflects GAO’s actual cost of
production and distribution and depends on the number of pages in the
publication and whether the publication is printed in color or black and
white. Pricing and ordering information is posted on GAO’s Web site, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/ordering.htm]. 

Place orders by calling (202) 512-6000, toll free (866) 801-7077, or
TDD (202) 512-2537. 

Orders may be paid for using American Express, Discover Card,
MasterCard, Visa, check, or money order. Call for additional 
information. 

To Report Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in Federal Programs: 

Contact: 

Web site: [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm]: 
E-mail: fraudnet@gao.gov: 
Automated answering system: (800) 424-5454 or (202) 512-7470: 

Congressional Relations: 

Ralph Dawn, Managing Director, dawnr@gao.gov: 
(202) 512-4400: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street NW, Room 7125: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: 

Public Affairs: 

Chuck Young, Managing Director, youngc1@gao.gov: 
(202) 512-4800: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street NW, Room 7149: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: