[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 98 (Wednesday, June 27, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H4067-H4068]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRANSPORTATION BILL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. There's a transportation agreement rumored to be in
the works that would be shortsighted in the extreme if these rumors
prove to
[[Page H4068]]
be accurate. Our problem was created because for years Congress and the
last two administrations have been unwilling to deal meaningfully with
the large gap of funding for transportation created because we rely on
an outmoded funding system based on the number of gallons of fuel
consumed. With more efficient gas and diesel vehicles augmented by more
hybrids, plug-in hybrids, and electric cars, the transportation trust
fund is locked into an inevitable downward spiral. Like the looming
Social Security deficit, the longer we wait, the worse it will get.
Not this year, but over the next few years, we should temporarily
increase and then replace the gas tax with a system that is based on
the amount of road use. The new legislation should be laying the
foundation for this transition. Unfortunately, it doesn't.
The rumored agreement would also take us backward on enabling
alternative modes of transportation. In the last 20 years of
transportation reform we've used enhancement funding to get more out of
the transportation projects. These include long-neglected and wildly
popular bike and pedestrian safety programs such as Safe Routes to
School. In a recent Princeton survey, 83 percent of the public wanted
these programs maintained or the funding increased. They place an
emphasis on intermodalism so that transportation modes work together
and minimize direct conflict between truckers, rail, and commuters that
can paralyze not just transportation but transportation planning.
From what I hear, efforts to provide incentives to ``fix it first''
are being undercut. It's never as popular to maintain what you've got
in face of the drumbeat of a few focused special interests for a new
particular project. But ``fixing it first'' creates more transportation
jobs, provides more safety, alleviates congestion and pollution, and
has more overall economic impact. And it, of course, alleviates long-
term pressure to create more roads that we can't adequately maintain.
The bill before us also misses an opportunity to reform the system to
have more performance-based environmental protections. We absolutely
can make the process work better and faster. But the answer is not to
gut the protections, which will only create more conflict and
ultimately more delays. Projects take more time when they're not done
right, when citizens are not involved with the plan, and the myriad of
interests aren't working together. Involving the public in the planning
process works.
I'll never forget a conversation with a very conservative Republican
mayor of Phoenix, who told me that it was only when they got the
citizens working together on a balanced transportation program of
transit and roads that they were able to get the resources and the
momentum to go forward.
I will be extremely disappointed if the legislation shatters the
coalition that I have been working for years to develop for the big
picture, the big programs, and proper funding that's going to be
necessary if we're going to be successful. It will be wrong if we have
a scaled-down 2-year extension that will make it harder to give the
American public what they need, adequate resources that are sustainable
over time, more economic opportunity, and more construction and
maintenance employment.
A good transportation program will protect the environment, enhance
the quality of life, making our communities more livable and our
families safer, healthier and more economically secure.
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