[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 103 (Thursday, June 25, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4634-S4635]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HIGHWAY BILL
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I have one more topic I would like to
speak about today, and that is the fact that we have a looming
deadline. In 36 days, the highway trust fund is going to be at zero--
empty. In 36 days as of today, if we do not act together, there will be
a shutdown of the highway trust fund, which will have a ripple effect
through the entire economy and harm businesses and workers and families
in every single one of our States coast to coast. The harm will be felt
equally--Republicans, Democrats, Independents, people who don't
participate in the political process, people who do. Everybody will
suffer if we cannot come together and address the highway trust fund.
If this happens, Congress fails in its responsibility.
With all due respect, I have to say that it falls right on the
majority because we have been saying and will
[[Page S4635]]
continue to say that we want to work together on a bipartisan basis to
get this done.
There was a time when it was not a partisan issue, when Republicans
were leaders on building our infrastructure. In fact, President
Eisenhower said in 1952: ``A network of modern roads is as necessary to
our national defense as it is to our national economy and our personal
safety.''
What is interesting is that tomorrow is the day when it is 59 years--
tomorrow, 59 years ago, Congress approved the Federal Highway Act,
connecting all of our country for commerce, for farmers, for families.
The rollcall, interestingly, was almost unanimous. Only one Senator
voted no. Everybody else voted yes. Ninety-nine voted yes. Then it
passed in the House on a voice vote.
Think about all the discussions we are having today. The Federal
Highway Act passed on a voice vote in the House. Only one person in the
Senate voted no. It was signed by President Eisenhower 3 days later. It
was the biggest public works project in our Nation's history. It could
not have happened if not for a triumph of bipartisanship. A Republican
President working with a Democratic Congress got this done.
When we look at who benefited from taking that dirt road, paving it,
and being able to go across our country, it certainly was colleagues in
the West, colleagues in the South. It wasn't just the cities. In fact,
they probably had roads already. It was everybody else, as we moved
across the country. So this should not be regional. It should not be
partisan. It doesn't make any sense for us not to come together and get
this done.
Behind the teamwork at the time, after they worked together to pass
this, construction began on a system of 40,000 miles of highways,
enough to circle the globe 1\1/2\ times. That is what was done when
people worked together to build the strong infrastructure of the 20th
century.
It didn't take long before the economic impact was felt. By the late
1950s, our interstate highways were responsible for 31 percent of the
annual growth of the economy. Over 30 percent of the growth in the
economy came from that one act, developing the infrastructure to move
goods and services and people across our country.
The people of this country were getting to their destinations faster,
more safely than ever before. Every rural community was flourishing
just as our urban communities had been.
Thanks to President Eisenhower's leadership and a Democratic-
controlled Congress, our roads in the mid-21st century were the envy of
the world. Other nations noticed. Those nations aspired to be like us,
to be like America in a global economy.
They now are making huge investments in their infrastructure, from
China, at 9 percent of their GDP--four times more than we are--to
Brazil.
I have said before that when I was in China a couple of years ago,
they rolled out 20 new international airports--20 international
airports. That didn't count anything else they were doing.
In Brazil they rolled out for us--when I was there with the Secretary
of Agriculture--their new rail system and road system that was going to
get agricultural commodities to the ports and move people around their
country so they could move forward as a global, economic power.
Today our European competitors spend twice as much as we do, and now
it is time for America to step forward because, unfortunately, we are
now playing catchup. The World Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness
Report for 2014 and 2015 ranks America 16th in the world in the quality
of our roads. America is one spot behind Luxembourg and just one spot
ahead of Croatia, as I said before. Yay, we are beating Croatia. It is
an embarrassment, and it is not what our people need or our businesses
need or what our farmers need or what our workers need.
In 2002, that same report had us at No. 5--the fifth best
transportation system. Now we are 16th, and the American Society of
Civil Engineers has given America a D. And how many of us would be
satisfied if our children came home from school with a D? I know I
wouldn't be.
It also said that 32 percent of America's major roads are in poor or
mediocre condition. We know what has happened when bridges have fallen.
We know what happens. I have seen it in Michigan and heard the stories
of people driving under overpasses and cement falls down on the car.
People's lives are threatened. People's lives have been taken.
Driving on bad roads costs motorists $109 billion in road repairs a
year. I talked to one colleague who told me that he had to replace all
four tires on his car when he went through one pothole not long ago,
and that in the last year he had bought seven new tires for his car,
which is way more than he would have been paying if we had created a
way to fund our roads on a long-term basis that made sense.
It is not right for Congress to neglect our responsibility to
maintain and, in fact, strengthen our infrastructure. In fact, we, as
individuals and business people driving on roads, driving across
bridges, and moving across our country, are paying for the fact that we
have not come together with a long-term plan. We cannot expect our
workers and companies to compete in the 21st century global marketplace
if we are forced to use 20th century roads and bridges.
So I would say, in conclusion, that we have 36 days left to act. Now,
when we want to, we can act pretty quickly.
I commend colleagues from the EPW Committee who have come forward
with a 6-year bill. We have in front of us a policy passed by the
committee.
I congratulate Senator Inhofe and Senator Boxer for coming forward
with a proposal that will increase the funding over time, and I believe
and hope we will do it in an even more robust way. They put forth
policies that will, in the long term, create the economic stability for
our businesses and the jobs for our workers and our families that they
need. The DRIVE Act, as we call it, is an important step forward. I
commend the chairman of the Finance Committee for holding hearings on
how we finance that, because that is our responsibility.
I say, again, we have enough time to get this done because President
Eisenhower, over 50 years ago tomorrow, with a Democratic Congress, got
it done. Thirty-six days is enough time for us to meet the expectations
of the American people on this issue.
Thank you.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I have been interested in how the Democrats
are constantly pushing to get moneys for the Federal highway system.
All of us are. Every one of us in this body wants to do everything we
can for the highway system. However, they are talking in such big terms
that the only way you could possibly reach those kinds of moneys would
be with further tax increases.
Now, my experience here is that when our friends on the other side
call for tax increases, it is so they can spend. Frankly, I would tell
you, if we raised the amount of money they are asking for in tax
increases, I could tell you all of the projects that are going to be
done, and many of them are not the crucial projects in this country.
All I can say is that we are going to try to find the moneys, but we
don't want to raise taxes, and we certainly don't want to raise the gas
tax at this time. We will find enough moneys to do, hopefully, a
multiyear approach toward the highway plan. I am dedicated to try to
find that way.
The other committee, the Environment and Public Works Committee, is,
I believe, the committee that has passed a bill calling for a 6-year
highway program. I hope that it would meet my highest goal, if we could
do that, but I don't think we would be able to do that under the
current monetary and economic systems that we have today.
But, nevertheless, I am going to do my best to try to help to get the
highway bill through and to do it the right way.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that Senator Hatch
be recognized following my remarks.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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