[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 64 (Thursday, April 30, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H2659]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IT IS TIME TO STOP STALLING ON THE HIGHWAY TRUST FUND
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, on May 31, a looming deadline, the
highway trust fund extension expires. I actually could have dusted off
the speech I gave last summer, arguing against this ill-advised measure
to slide it into this spring.
As I pointed out then, we will be right back in the same spot. We
will be stuck. We won't have a long-term proposal. We won't have a
short-term proposal. We will look at another extension.
Mr. Speaker, it is time for us to stop the stalling. Everyone ought
to make a commitment that this will be the last extension that we take
before we give America what it needs, a robust 6-year reauthorization
of the critical highway trust fund.
Please focus on making sure this does not slide beyond the end of
this Federal fiscal year because Congress doesn't act absent some sort
of deadline, and do instead what we do best: stall, study, and
sidestep.
If we would actually start working now, the 5 months until the
expiration of this Federal fiscal year, we can actually give the people
legislation they deserve. It is not that hard; except if you never
start, if you don't know how big the program is going to be, if you
don't get down to business, it is difficult.
Now, I hear that the simplest approach, the most direct approach--
raising the gas tax for the first time in 22 years--is somehow too
hard, too difficult for Congress. It has been pronounced dead on
arrival. It is off the table, according to our distinguished majority
leader and the chair of the Committee on Ways and Means.
Why exactly is it off the table? Why is this too hard for Congress?
If it was good enough for Dwight Eisenhower to start the Interstate
Highway System, if it was good enough for Ronald Reagan to call
Congress to come back during his Thanksgiving Day speech, November 29,
1982, to more than double the gas tax, if it is good enough for 19
States--including, this year, five Republican States--to raise the gas
tax, why is it too hard for us? Maybe it is because we have never given
the people who care deeply about this a chance to make their case.
The Republicans have been in charge for 52 months. We have not had a
single hearing on Ways and Means on transportation finance. What if we
allowed the Chamber of Commerce, the AFL-CIO, the American Trucking
Association, contractors, local governments, engineers,
environmentalists, mayors to come in and make the case why they support
raising the gas tax?
Maybe if Congress did its job, if it listened to the people, if it
allowed the broadest coalition you have seen on Capitol Hill on any
major idea to come in, take a couple days, work with Congress, explain
the issues, dive into the details, actually show politicians that even
the public supports it, maybe we could do our job, maybe we could have
a 6-year reauthorization, maybe we could put hundreds of thousands of
people to work at family-wage jobs all across America, making our
families safer, healthier, and more economically secure.
Deadline, September 30--get down to work; have some hearings; do our
job; produce the bill, and America will be better off.
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