 
     Andrew Bardin Williams looks at how a political stalemate and a series of short-term fixes is undermining America’s highway funding and curtailing long-term planning.    
     
It was a week before the deadline to renew funding for the Highway Trust Fund, and the clock was ticking. The House had passed a five-month extension with plans to wrap reauthorisation with budget and debt ceiling talks at the end of the year, but Senate leadership was hopeful that a six-year bi-partisan bill would finally halt the string of short-term fixes that had been the norm for years. Staunch liberal Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) had broken with her party to push the long-term fix with Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY).
     
It was a rare reconfiguration of the political order. House Republicans, Senate Democrats and the White House on one side with Senate Republicans, Senator Boxer and a few rank and file Democrats on the other. Senate Democrats eventually stopped McConnell’s and Boxer’s long-term fix, and Boxer actually voted against her own bill with the rest of her party once it was apparent it was dead in the water. 
     
Hours later with the deadline just days away, the Senate took up the House’s new short-term fix—but with a twist. McConnell tacked on an amendment to the must-pass bill that would defund the Affordable Care Act—aka Obamacare—long a target of the Republican majority. You can guess what happened next, because the same thing happens every time. Long-term solutions to the nation’s infrastructure crisis were voted down with partisan fervour and a three-month extension landed on the President’s desk hours before expiration.
     
So go the days in the US capital.
It wasn’t always this way. Infrastructure spending had traditionally been a non-partisan affair with members of Congress relishing the opportunity to show constituents back home that they could bring home federal money that was proven to create jobs.
Highway funding authorisation would come up, delegations would take a piece of the pie for their home states (often by seniority rather than need) and in the recess congress members would return home to crow about their accomplishments.
While inefficient and open to the potential for fraud, the consistency of reauthorisation kept construction projects humming—along with the jobs and economic activity the funding stimulated. State DOTs, the recipients of the money, knew that the pipeline would continue, giving them the confidence to continue the critical long-term infrastructure planning vital to growth in their region. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, every $1 of infrastructure spending in the US results in $2 of economic growth.
More  recently, partisan bickering has resulted in a string of short-term  fixes which have caused budget shortfalls and uncertainty. According to  the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the Highway Trust Fund has spent  $50 billion more than it paid out over the past 10 years, and the  federal gas tax, the main revenue source for the trust fund, hasn’t been  raised since 1993 and sits at $0.04/lit ($0.18/gallon) According to the  CBO, inflation and rising construction costs mean the purchasing power  of the gas tax has declined by 40% over that time.
     
“This  extension after extension process is hurting a lot of small businesses  and state departments of transportation which are, quite frankly, afraid  to make a long-term commitment on large projects that span multiple  years,” said Roger Wentz, president and CEO of the American Traffic  Safety Services Association (ATSSA) in a written statement to ITS  International.
     
This  funding shortfall and the lack of a long-term solution are not helping  our crumbling infrastructure. According to the American Road and  Transportation Builders’ Association, there are 60,000  structurally-deficient bridges in the US and 65% of roads are in less  than good state. 
     
The impact on drivers is devastating. According to ATSSA, more than 32,000 people are killed on U.S. roads each year—many as a result of unsafe roads. In addition, the 2015 Urban Mobility Scorecard from the Texas A&M Transportation Institute found that Americans waste more than 3 billion gallons of fuel and spend 7 billion additional hours in the car as a result of traffic congestion each year. Collectively this costs the country $160 billion (or $960 per commuter) each year.
The impact on  the economy is just as startling. According to the  American Society of  Civil Engineers, the country’s GDP will  underperform by $897 billion if  funding is kept status quo through  2020. Costs to businesses from poor  infrastructure will reach $430  billion, and the average American  family’s budget will be impacted by  $1,060.
     
“Congress  has  repeatedly punted [on reauthorization], passing short-term  extensions  that have drained the Highway Trust Fund, failed to increase   investment, jeopardized hundreds of thousands of jobs and created   economic uncertainty in our states,” said Representative Peter DeFazio   (D-OR), the ranking Democrat on the House Transportation and   Infrastructure committee.
What  will it take to fix the US’s infrastructure  problem and how much  investment is needed? Estimates range from  hundreds of billions of  dollars just to maintain existing service  levels to trillions more to  rebuild the road transportation network  that was once the envy of the  world. Instead, the politicisation of  transportation funding is draining  productivity out of the economy and  creating major security and safety  concerns for drivers. 
   
Non-Partisan
Congress   wants to invest in infrastructure. Pressure from industry groups such   as Associated General Contractors of America (AGC), American Public   Transportation Association (APTA) and American Trucking Association   (ATA) continue to lobby congress to pass a long-term solution. Groups as   diverse as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the American Federation of   Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) are teaming  up  to put pressure on Congress. Even among lawmakers, bridging the  Highway  Trust Fund shortfall and investing in road infrastructure is  universally  supported.
     
“I   can tell you from our experiences on Capitol Hill that there is a    desire by elected officials—on both sides of the aisle—to reach an    agreement on a long-term highway bill,” ATSSA’s Wentz said. “I cannot    name one elected official who we have come in contact with who opposes    making our roadways safer and reducing fatalities and serious injuries.    
     
They all want to do the right thing—it’s just a matter of bringing  them   all together to achieve a long-term transportation bill that   emphasises  roadway safety.”
Several   long-term bills (some bi-partisan) are expected to be in the   discussion  when Congress returns from recess. Representative Jim   Renacci (R-OH) is  leading a group in the House on the Bridge to   Sustainable Infrastructure  Act—a bill that will tie the gas tax to   inflation and task a  bipartisan, bicameral commission to study and   recommend alternative  revenue sources.
     
 If a solution isn’t found, the   gas tax will immediately  rise to a level where it can sustain current   expenditures—a burden on  taxpayers that neither side wants to be   enacted.
Other  bills have  proposed alternative funding  sources—tax revenue from  repatriated  corporate revenue from overseas, a  one-time sell off of some  of the  nation’s oil reserves, replacing the  gas tax with a barrel tax  and  reapportioning budget from other  agencies are suggestions on the  table.  Many in Congress, however, see  these as budgetary gimmicks rather  that  a long term solution.
  
Going Local
Another    group of transportation organisations led by Transportation for   America  (T4A) proposes that the feds take a backseat to local   governments when  it comes to transportation funding. According to Beth   Osborne, a senior  policy advisor with T4A, the idea is that local   governments are closer  to the taxpayer and are better at identifying   transportation needs and  communicating those needs to citizens.
     
“The    Federal government is divorced from the taxpayer process. States  are    more transparent when it comes to listing public projects and  showing    people where their money is going,” Osborne said.
     
T4A     has authored legislation to give local governments more say in how     transportation funding is allocated, working with Rodney Davis (R-IL)  in    the House and Corey Booker (D-NJ) in the Senate. The Innovation in     Surface Transportation Act is currently in committee.
States    aren’t waiting for Congress. Many are passing  bills in their own    legislatures to raise state gas taxes to help  mitigate the federal    budget shortfall. According to a tally by the  Associated Press, 16    states have increased transportation funding in  the past year—either by    raising the gas tax, selling bonds or  shifting budget from other    departments. T4A’s website has a list of  local transportation funding    efforts.
 
Q&A
         
We asked industry insiders and members of congress two questions about the future of the Highway Trust Fund. 
             
What needs to happen to reverse the politicisation of transportation funding?
         
“Congress needs to get serious about passing a multi-year, adequately-paid-for highway bill.”  – Representative Jim Renacci        
         
“Congress      cannot continue to ignore the serious need for a long-term,     well-funded  surface transportation reauthorization and continue to     devolve Federal  responsibility by default.”  –Representative Peter DeFazio        
         
“Leaders      in Congress must gather the political courage needed to fully fund     [the  Senate Drive Act]. The business community demands it. Labour     demands  it. The American people demand it.” – Roger Wentz, ATSSA
         
“There needs to be more local control and consideration when it comes to transportation funding.” – Beth Osborne, 
         
 What do you think will happen in the coming months concerning a long-term bill?
         
“Unfortunately,      we have started down a path where Congress relies on budget   gimmickry    and raiding other revenue streams unrelated to highways to   cover some   of  the costs. This has made paying for a long-term bill   nearly   impossible.  I will not accept the status quo, so I will   continue to   inform my  colleagues and the American people about my   long-term   bipartisan  solution.”  – Representative Jim Renacci        
         
“The      policy portion of a transportation bill can come together quickly,    but   the crystal ball remains murky when it comes to how we will pay    for   necessary investments.” –Representative Peter DeFazio        
         
“We      can only hope that our elected officials—after all the years  they’ve     heard from ATSSA members on Capitol Hill talking to them  about the     advantages of making roadways safer for all motorists—will  vote from     their heart to help reduce the number of accidents and  injuries on our     nation’s roadways by passing a long-term  transportation bill.” – Roger Wentz, ATSSA        
         
“We’re      going to get a dramatic bill from the House that fundamentally    changes   how we fund transportation in this country. Congress knows it    needs to   do something.” – Beth Osborne, Transportation for America  
After Congress’s three-month extension, the Highway Trust Fund will expire on 31 October. At that time, both parties in Congress and the White House are expected to discuss a long-term transportation funding bill in the context of next year’s budget and the debt ceiling debate. Most industry insiders are hopeful that a solution will be found, but in an upcoming election year, anything is possible. Politics continues to trump policy.
 
     
        



