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House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Passes Surface Transportation Reauthorization Bill

With the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (FAST) Act set to expire on September 30,  the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee marked up and passed the Investing in a New Vision for the Environment and Surface Transportation in America (INVEST in America) Act this week. The five-year reauthorization provides $494 billion in direct investments for our nation’s highway, transit, and rail systems in addition to supporting passenger and commercial vehicle safety. Committee members debated the legislation over several days, with over 300 amendments considered before the Committee voted 35-25 to pass the legislation.

At the onset of the markup Republicans offered an alternative reauthorization proposal, the STARTER Act. While quickly voted down by Democrats on the Committee, the  legislation would maintain FAST Act programs at current funding levels for an additional five years; establish a new connected vehicle deployment program, a national VMT pilot program, and a highway resilience program; and requires federal agencies to develop a single permitting timetable for environmental review.

One rare glimpse of bipartisanship during the markup occurred when the Committee approved an en bloc amendment package that:

As the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee was still meeting, the House Ways and Means Committee released a comprehensive framework of policy considerations that will be included in the revenue title to the INVEST in America Act on Thursday. While the framework does include many of ASCE’s financing priorities, including Build America Bonds, advanced refunding, and private activity bonds, the outline falls short of addressing a long-term revenue solution for the Highway Trust Fund.

Finally, while the INVEST in America Act includes many provisions that ASCE supports, we remain concerned that the legislation’s lack of bipartisan support makes Congressional action before the expiration of the FAST Act on September 30 difficult. Therefore, we urge both the House and Senate to work together, in a bipartisan manner, to ensure that surface transportation programs do not expire later this year.