[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 125 (Tuesday, July 25, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H6219]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RAISING THE GAS TAX
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, we begin an unusual week here on Capitol
Hill, although unusual is sort of the new usual in Washington, D.C.
The Senate begins deliberations on an 8-year Republican mission to
repeal the Affordable Care Act, and they don't fully know what it is
exactly they are voting on.
There is uncertainty in the House over both the budget and
appropriations, but, you know, there is an opportunity for Congress to
take a step back, to do something that will make a huge difference for
everybody from coast to coast, something that can bring together a wide
coalition of support and meet unmet needs.
{time} 1015
I am talking about addressing the unmet infrastructure needs for a
country that is falling apart as we fall behind.
We haven't raised the gas tax in 24 years. And in the course of that
24 years, we have watched the value of the Federal gas tax actually
erode 40 percent, due to inflation and increased fuel efficiency, while
our needs continue to go up each and every year.
Congress has put together a series of stopgap measures--gimmicks here
and there--which have not adequately met those needs, and they have
actually increased the budget deficit.
I think back to Ronald Reagan making his Thanksgiving Day speech in
November of 1982, when he called on Congress to come back from their
recess and more than double the gas tax because, he pointed out, it
would put people to work and improve road conditions that were actually
damaging people's cars more than what modest increase they would pay.
Well, Congress did it, and we were better off as a result. I think each
of us would do well to look back at that speech that Ronald Reagan
gave, calling on Congress to step up and do its part.
The States are not sitting back. Since over the last 5 years, more
than half of the individual States have gone ahead and raised their
transportation funding. So far in 2017 alone, California, Indiana,
Montana, Oregon, Tennessee, West Virginia, and South Carolina raised
the gas tax. In fact, South Carolina raised the gas tax by overriding a
Republican Governor's veto.
There are opportunities here for us to be able to step forward and
build on this vast coalition. It really isn't a profile in courage to
support legislation that is endorsed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
the AFL-CIO, contractors, a variety of labor unions, road builders,
engineers, trucking companies, and AAA. The widest coalition of people
supporting any major issue before us deals with increasing the fuel
tax.
And it is interesting, for those who are worried that maybe there is
some political downturn, despite the fact that the States have been
able to summon the courage. The American Road and Transportation
Builders Association did an extensive survey about who were those
intrepid legislators that voted to raise the gas tax since 2012. What
they found is that those legislators who had the courage and the vision
to do what was right for their States were reelected by an over 90
percent rate.
But this shouldn't be about elections. It should be about what is
right for the American people. Stepping up, meeting our obligations, so
that the Federal Government is a full partner, working with State and
local governments, working with the private sector, to be able to meet
the over $1.1 trillion of critical transportation needs between now and
2025 ought to be the order of business.
I would hope that my friends in Republican leadership would allow us
to have just 1 week of hearings on this issue so that we can hear from
the president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the president of the
AFL-CIO, the truckers, AAA, Republican legislators of principle, people
across the country who talk about the need to rebuild and renew
America, make our communities more livable, our families safer,
healthier, and more economically secure.
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