[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 42 (Wednesday, March 16, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H1392]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
A REALISTIC INFRASTRUCTURE AGENDA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, the tortured Presidential nominating
process continues with generalities and insults, but maybe we could
avert our eyes and attention for a moment and consider some real
challenges that we face closer at hand.
The backdrop in the metropolitan area in Washington, D.C., is that
D.C. Metro has shut down for the entire day to deal with safety
concerns--an unprecedented step. The bigger issue for most people in
the region, for most riders and potential users, is the system's
reliability.
It is a symbol of a lack of resources and a lack of leadership, not
just for Metro, but for the States of Virginia, Maryland, the District
of Columbia, and the Federal Government itself. They have, sadly, been
lacking in leadership, in vision, and providing the resources for this
vital system for a region of approximately 4 million people.
At the same time, we have a looming water and sewer crisis, almost 2
million miles of pipe, in some cases long past its useful life. A water
main breaks every 2 minutes. We have serious problems with system
reliability with sewage.
The city of Flint, Michigan, and its terrible situation with lead in
the drinking water has captured attention, but it has also pointed out
for people who look deeper that this is a problem that afflicts
communities across the country. We have, according to the American
Society of Civil Engineers, an overall grade, as a country, of D
dealing with sewer and water challenges.
What if the major candidates would train their attention on serious
proposals to deal with the infrastructure crisis already upon us? Not
mere generalities, but let's talk about how they would pay for it. What
is their vision to deal with multiple needs, and how would they set
priorities?
It is not really that hard. In a number of very red States,
governments have stepped up to raise the gas tax and fund
transportation. In metropolitan communities across the country, in red
States and blue, people are dealing with their challenges, proposing to
their communities funding and vision to solve the problem.
I have got bipartisan legislation to establish a Federal water
infrastructure trust fund to help start in that regard.
We ought to fix the transportation funding. There is broad support
amongst labor, business, profession AAA truckers to raise the gas tax
and be able to deal with our transportation challenges.
Finally, we should embrace technology in transportation, things from
self-driving, autonomous vehicles, electronic payment for road systems,
a road user charge being experimented on in the State of Oregon. These
are mechanisms that would help us update, modernize, and make these
systems more effective.
And by the way, when you hear all those candidates talking about
strengthening the middle class and the economy, these proposals would
put millions of people to work at family-wage jobs in every community
across America. It would strengthen safety and liveability and bring
people together.
You know, when we have faced up to infrastructure challenges, whether
it is Dwight Eisenhower's interstate freeway system, what we have done
in the past with clean water and clean air, those are things that are
broadly supported by Americans. An infrastructure agenda, a realistic
infrastructure agenda has the potential of bringing people together
while it strengthens America, and it would certainly be a nice change
of pace.
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