Ports to Plains Corridor

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ports_to_Plains_Corridor an entity of type: Thing

The Ports-To-Plains Corridor, also known as National Highway System High Priority Corridor 38, is a highway corridor between the United States Mexico border at Laredo, Texas and Denver, Colorado. It is the southern third of the Ports-to-Plains Alliance. The reason for proposed improvements to this corridor is to expedite the transportation of goods and services from Mexico in the United States and vice versa. The Ports-To-Plains Corridor starts in South Texas and traverses through Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and ends in Denver, Colorado. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ports to Plains Corridor
rdf:langString High Priority Corridor 38
rdf:langString Ports-To-Plains Corridor
rdf:langString Ports-To-Plains Corridor
xsd:integer 12799268
xsd:integer 1123675143
rdf:langString High Priority Corridor 38
rdf:langString USA
rdf:langString South
rdf:langString North
xsd:integer 1998
rdf:langString
rdf:langString in Amarillo
rdf:langString in Denver, CO
rdf:langString in Laredo, Texas
rdf:langString at Limon, CO
rdf:langString at Sonora, TX
rdf:langString in Big Spring, TX
rdf:langString in Lubbock, TX
rdf:langString none
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Mexico-United States border in Laredo, TX
rdf:langString in Denver, CO
rdf:langString ISTEA
rdf:langString The Ports-To-Plains Corridor, also known as National Highway System High Priority Corridor 38, is a highway corridor between the United States Mexico border at Laredo, Texas and Denver, Colorado. It is the southern third of the Ports-to-Plains Alliance. The reason for proposed improvements to this corridor is to expedite the transportation of goods and services from Mexico in the United States and vice versa. The Ports-To-Plains Corridor starts in South Texas and traverses through Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and ends in Denver, Colorado. The Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 made the Ports-to-Plains Corridor National Highway System High Priority Corridor 38 in 1998. The High Priority designation, which applies to 90 routes or groups of routes nationally, does not create any additional design requirements and does not have a separate federal funding source.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString from Amarillo, TX to Limon, CO
rdf:langString from Botines, TX to Carrizo Springs, TX
rdf:langString from Carrizo Springs, TX to San Angelo, TX
rdf:langString from Dumas, TX to Raton, NM
rdf:langString from Laredo, TX to Botines, TX
rdf:langString from Limon, CO to Denver, CO
rdf:langString from Midland, TX to Lamesa, TX
rdf:langString from San Angelo, TX to Dumas, TX
rdf:langString from Sterling, TX to Midland, TX
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12515
xsd:string North
xsd:string South
xsd:string ISTEA

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