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Meeting Highway Users’ Needs. For the American Dream Coalition. By Greg Cohen, President American Highway Users Alliance April 18, 2009. American Support for Federal Infrastructure Investment. 94% of Americans are concerned about the condition of our nation’s infrastructure
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Meeting Highway Users’ Needs For the American Dream Coalition By Greg Cohen, PresidentAmerican Highway Users Alliance April 18, 2009
American Support for Federal Infrastructure Investment • 94% of Americans are concerned about the condition of our nation’s infrastructure • “Roads and bridges” rank #2 in top things the public supports • 84% support spending more; • 81% are willing to pay 1% more in taxes for it • Strong majorities among both Dems & Repubs.
Government Accountability is the Voters’ Single Highest Priority • 61% of Americans concerned about accountability • How can Congress address this concern? • CLEAR NATIONAL PRIORITIES • REFORMING THE OUTDATED “TEA” PROGRAMS • FINANCIAL INCENTIVES FOR RESULTS • INCREASING ACCOUNTABILITY FOR FAILURES
REAL NATIONAL PRIORITIES 2009 Authorization Bill • CONGESTION RELIEF • Creation of a $3 billion “core” congestion relief program for the National Highway System. • States that achieve benchmarks on NHS routes receive bonus funds and greater program flexibility • ECONOMIC GROWTH / FREIGHT • New Freight Fund firewalled from the Highway Trust Fund • Truck-specific user fees would be spent on highway freight capacity, operations, and traveler information systems.
REAL NATIONAL PRIORITIES 2009 Authorization Bill • Safety • Save 200,000 lives over the next 20 years by cutting annual fatalities in half • Spend 10% of FHWA funds on safety • Provide safety programs with a separate “obligation limit” • Every state must meet its proportional share of lives saved over a four-year period or face higher obligation requirements. • Tax incentives for purchasing commercial vehicle safety equipment
REAL NATIONAL PRIORITIES 2009 Authorization Bill • Aging National Hwy System Roads • Pavement Management System • Bridge Management System • Currently 25% of bridges obsolete or stucturally deficient • Our target for 2020 < 2% deficient < 5% obsolete
REAL NATIONAL PRIORITIES 2009 Authorization Bill • ENVIRONMENTAL STREAMLINING & STEWARDSHIP • Congestion relief projects should be recognized for their air quality benefits • Firmer, shorter deadlines for interagency project reviews • DOT accountability for timely advancement of projects coordinated with other agencies • Expand streamlining pilot programs • FUNDING & THE AILING HIGHWAY TRUST FUND • Increase transparency, accountability • Reduce waste & diversion of both traditional highway user fees and new revenue sources • Protect revenue generated by taxes, tolls, congestion pricing, and all user fees – spend these only on critical highway needs
Signs of TroubleRoads were about 3.5% of the stimulus bill’s cost • Many people believe roads were a major piece of the stimulus. They weren’t! • If stimulus doesn’t work, people may believe that much-ballyhooed road investments were not successful in growing the economy • If public support for highway then falters, it could doom the use of highway investments as economic solutions.
FY2010 Budget: Obama-Administration Budget Framework: • Eliminates “contract authority”, an 87-year old budgetary treatment for hwy programs that helps fund multi-year projects • No mention of the President’s supposed support for roads & bridges from campaign speeches. • Little room for growth in highway funding • High speed rail boondongle sucking all the oxygen – “downpayment” of $13B just the beginning
Longer-term issues • Obama team focused exclusively on “high speed” rail and “livable communities” – (Smart growth). This focus could turn the highway bill into the “anti-highway bill”. • Many in Congress are unaware of the long-term solvency problems and think the trust fund was “fixed” with the $8 billion in restored user fees in September ‘08 • A number of challenges (time, money, staff burden, policy changes, competing interests) likely to doom 2009 authorization bill.
Obama’s High-Speed Rail • $13 billion “down payment” is just the nose under the tent • No cost-estimates for completion • No alternatives analysis – i.e. buses • No examination of subsidy per pass.mile • Displacement of freight rail much worse environmental policy than addition of train passengers
Potential disasters for mobility • Clean Air Act Endangerment Finding for Greenhouse Gases • How onerous will the Clean Air Act be to control GHG emissions? • Will highway funds be withheld if states want to build roads? • Who will have more leverage: DOT or EPA? • Cap-And-Trade legislation • Waxman In; Boxer remains leading Senate force -- What does that mean for: • Mandatory VMT-reduction proposals? * (chart next) • EPA exercising new duplicative authority over State and Metro Plans? • Opportunities for hwy projects to compete with transit for cap-and-trade funding? • Streamlining project reviews over? More planning requirements? • Will the new DOT support current efforts to streamline reviews? • Will the Bush Executive Order on streamlining priority projects be kept in place?
Correlation of VMT to GDP • 0.9942 R-squared correlation since 1950 • Weakest correlation is during recessions but it is still over 0.96
Other Moving Parts • Funding and Financing Issues • Highway Users Fee Increases: Leadership needed. Support depends on avoiding new diversions. • Competing bonding proposals vs. traditional user “pay-as-you-go” user fees. • Is transition to debt-financing the sign of the times? • National Capital Infrastructure Bank • Obama-endorsed plan for large project financing – funding source unclear. More debt certain. • Public-Private Partnerships and Tolling and Pricing • Use of revenue – diversion? • Benefits or harm to motorists? • Impact on interstate commerce?
Key Facts • In 25 years, we’ve added only 4% new road miles while driving has increased 100%. We’re NOT investing in congestion relief. • Outdated, inadequate roads lead to more than 13,000 lost lives each year. • 1/2 of our roads are not in “good” condition • 35% of major urban roads are congested
More Key Facts • Freight to Double by 2035 • Trade will account for 35% of GDP by 2020 (up from 13% in 1990) • Congestion reduction reduces wasted fuel and carbon emissions by 77% at major bottlenecks • Congestion reduction could be achieved in medium-sized urban areas through changes in planning priorities. But 24 out of 26 areas planning to make congestion worse!* * See upcoming join AHUA & Reason Foundation study by Dr. Hartgen - UNC
This Conference Is Critical • Grassroots organization is critical for political will to improve and reformed transportation programs. • Transit advocates and bicyclists are better organized, more passionate and much better funded than mobility advocates • Right now, it looks like Congress will either fail to act or create something horrific – and yet the fiscal crisis may force people to swallow really bad policies
Targets: Politicians & Media • Rural Democrats who will not benefit from shifts from highways to transit & bikes • Senators in States that lose funding under a higher transit to highway split • Those frustrated with highway project delays caused by NIMBYs • Sunbelt growth States. • Swing states
Thank you! You can make a difference!Success requires YOUR personal involvement and actions from YOU, YOUR FRIENDS, YOUR EMPLOYEES, & YOUR RELATIVESFor more information:gregcohen@highways.orgwww.highways.org