[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 108 (Monday, July 13, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H5092]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SHORT-TERM HIGHWAY FUND EXTENSIONS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
the District of Columbia (Ms. Norton) for 5 minutes.
Ms. NORTON. Mr. Speaker, 2-year short-term highway fund extensions
have become one of Congress' most costly habits. Kudos to the Senate
Committee on Environment and Public Works, which has marked up the
highway portion and may come to the floor this week with a 6-year bill.
That bill is not yet paid for, but the Senate is at least making
progress toward a 6-year bill, the kind that is needed to make a dent
in the backlog of our construction projects in the States.
We should not be deterred by the likelihood of another short-term
bill, perhaps going to the end of the year. The goal before the year is
out must be a long-term bill.
Congress has taken to authorizing the highway trust fund for 2 years,
knowing full well that the trust fund, collecting gas user fees at 1993
levels, would run out even before those 2 years are out; then the waltz
begins with endless short-term bills.
The States are disgusted and exhausted. MAP-21 ran out before the end
of its 2-year lifetime. The last short-term bill extension was so
useless that it has lasted longer than expected because the States
could not apply the funds to the backlog of now endless rescheduled
projects; 6-month extensions have yielded 6-month projects, usually
only patchwork.
This poster goes beyond showing that the short-term extensions have
been useless to the States. These short term bills and extensions are
having negative effects on the pocketbooks of our constituents. The
highway user fee, which has not been raised for 22 years, costs drivers
$97 a year. The bad roads that are the result cost those same drivers
$515 per year.
Find your State for the cost to your constituents. Here is a random
sample: Louisiana, $514 per year; Oklahoma, $763 per year; New Jersey,
$685 per driver; Ohio, $446 per driver; California, $762 per driver;
and Pennsylvania, $471 per driver.
All the figures are high, regardless of State or region of the
country, and those high dollar amounts go out of the pockets of our
constituents to patch bad roads, instead of putting the funds into
fixing those roads, bridges, and transit.
Congress' short-term attention to our roads, highways, transit and
bridges is breaking the bank, not for the Federal Government, but for
our constituents. It is no longer the old adage ``you can't get
something for nothing'' rather, not funding the highway trust fund for
6 years costs the people we represent not nothing, but $515 per driver.
We have got to fund our transportation projects or ask our
constituents to pay for their bad roads. The costs to the American
people make our options clear what the best thing to do is.
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