Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE IX— MULTIMODAL FREIGHT TRANSPORTATION › Chapter 701— MULTIMODAL FREIGHT POLICY › § 70103
Create a National Multimodal Freight Network to help states and the federal government move goods better. The network must guide where to send money, help plan freight transportation, and check that federal investments meet national freight goals. The Assistant Secretary must get public input from users, carriers, ports, airports, railroads, local and state planners, and others. The network should improve connections between modes and use measurable data about where freight starts, ends, and how it moves in supply chains. When picking routes and facilities, the Assistant Secretary will look at things like origins and destinations, volume and value of freight, access to border crossings, ports, airports, and pipelines, economic effects, access to manufacturing, farms or energy areas, intermodal connections, choke points that cause big delays, impacts on all freight types, important regional facilities, and major distribution or intermodal centers. States can propose extra designations after consulting local planning groups and facility owners and must show they fit state plans. States may label certain rural roads or corridors as critical if they serve energy, agriculture, mining, forestry, intermodal facilities, connect to international ports of entry, or are vital to the State’s economy. State additions cannot exceed 30 percent of the Network mileage in that State. A federal official will accept a State’s additions only if they meet the rules. The network must be reviewed and redesignated every 5 years.
Full Legal Text
Transportation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
49 U.S.C. § 70103
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60