WTI

Rural matters: Roads that work for people should work for the environment, too.

What is Rural Transportation?

"Rural" means different things to different people. To someone who lives in a big city, any town of 50,000 people or less would seem rural. But to someone who lives on a remote farm or in a very small town, a city of 50,000 might be a major destination for shopping, recreation or medical care.*

At WTI we have studied rural transportation issues for more than 15 years. In that time we have come to understand "rural" as a context within which to understand the common characteristics and challenges met by travelers moving within and through rural areas:

By understanding the nature of rural travel, WTI can develop integrated solutions that tackle fundamental issues and critical needs.

Rural Matters

Why do these issues matter? If you think that traveling on rural roads only affects a small number of Americans, think again. Our nation’s transportation network is an integrated system with each segment, rural and urban, necessary to the whole, and accompanied with its own issues and needs.

According to the Federal Highway Administration:

Most of us use rural roads at least some of the time, if not on a daily basis. It is in everyone's best interest for our rural travel to be timely, efficient, and safe.

* For information about how the U.S. DOT defines "rural" for transportation purposes, go to: http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/Planning/rural/planningfortrans/2ourrts.html