[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 29, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H5598-H5599]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RICKETY PATCHWORK
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
the District of Columbia (Ms. Norton) for 5 minutes.
[[Page H5599]]
Ms. NORTON. Mr. Speaker, work on the Nation's bridges, highways, and
transit has all but stopped because of 34 patch extensions that keep
everything--except patchwork--on hold.
Today, the House is rushing out of town early, leaving a new 3-month
patch. This time, though, the Republican House is scrambling out of the
Capitol, literally, to get away from the Republican Senate, which had
been trying for a 6-year bill. The Republican House's ``my way or the
highway'' was addressed to the Republican Senate, and the public be
damned--and it worked. The Republican Senate has given up on the
Nation's infrastructure, too. The Republican Senate announced this
morning that it will accept the House's 3-month patch. Six months of
control of the House and Senate by the Republicans has made Congress
even more dysfunctional.
The new House 3-month patch has nothing to do with roads and bridges.
Who knows what will get done this time? House Republicans see political
goals at the end of their 3-month road, when the must-pass highway bill
could serve their purposes, such as the usual, if dangerous, dispute
over an extension of the debt ceiling.
Yet, Republican and Democratic States alike keep meeting their
obligations under the State-Federal partnership. Eighteen States and
the District of Columbia have raised their gas user fees, going as high
as 10-cent increases in Iowa and in Wyoming; but the roads, bridges,
and transit remain stalled because the Federal partner keeps dropping
out. More than half of the funds for a nationwide system that connects
our States with one another comes from the Federal trust fund.
During the 34 patch delays, not a lick of work on a final bill has
been done except the Senate's current try at a 6-year bill. There have
been no serious talks here on alternatives to the gas user fee,
although it long ago was swallowed by today's hard-won fuel efficiency
that leaves the transit trust fund thirsty for a refill after a year
and a half or so.
Democrats, however, have offered four alternatives to the current
user fee, which is the legacy of the Eisenhower years. House
Republicans have offered none. Congress has refused to raise the
Federal user fee since 1992, adding to the woes of the 1950's method we
use to pay for our roads.
The Republican House runs out of town today to hide from the
Republican Senate. As they run home, I can only hope they run into the
arms of their own angry constituents on their own rickety roads. House
Republicans can run, but they can't hide from the broken down bridges,
roads, and transit they will use back home.
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