Highway bill gets extension; now let’s get a long-term solution

March 3, 2011
The U.S. House yesterday passed a seven-month extension of the multi-year surface transportation bill (SAFETEA-LU), aka the highway bill, to keep funding highway, safety and transit programs through Sept. 30, 2011. The multi-year surface ...

The U.S. House yesterday passed a seven-month extension of the multi-year surface transportation bill (SAFETEA-LU), aka the highway bill, to keep funding highway, safety and transit programs through Sept. 30, 2011.

The multi-year surface transportation bill expired in September 2009 and has since been extended several times to keep funds flowing and projects moving forward. A long-term authorization, however, has been elusive due to a variety of factors, including party politics.

The extension the House passed, by a vote of 421-4, needs to be approved by the Senate before the current extension expires tomorrow. According to U.S. Rep. Nick J. Rahall (D-WV), the ranking Democrat on the House Transportation & Infrastructure Committee (T&I), if an extension is not agreed to, nearly $800 million in highway reimbursements to states could be in danger next week.

But Rahall comments on the passage of this short-term bill identifies some of the problems that lie ahead to get a long-term authorization approved.

“Extending these programs is critical to keeping our economy on the road to recovery, and I strongly support this bill – as did my colleagues on both sides of the aisle – when we passed it out of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee two weeks ago under unanimous consent,” he said. “What I cannot support, however, are Republican attempts to gut investments that grow our economy, such as those in the Republican spending bill that passed two weeks ago. What I cannot support is dangerous and draconian cuts to investments in America’s future just as our economy is turning the corner. What I cannot support is cutting the job-creating muscle of our budget when we should be focusing on trimming the fat.”

House T&I Chairman John Mica (R-FL), along with other members of the committee, has been barnstorming the country in recent weeks to gain feedback from industry stakeholders and the public on how a future authorization bill should look. How much of that input will go into the final bill, though, will probably depend as much on party politics as funding possibilities.

If a long-term bill is not completed by September, and Mica has said it is a priority to get one passed by then, we could be looking at two more years of extensions as we enter a presidential election cycle. Very few member of Congress - Republicans or Democrats, Representatives or Senators - are going to want to wade into a massive funding bill that is sure to be criticized by nearly everyone that has a stake in transportation just before an important election.

For everyone’s sake, let’s hope this is the last extension for quite some time.

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of FleetOwner, create an account today!

Sponsored Recommendations

Take Control of Your Finances: A Practical Guide for Carriers in Trucking

This guide is designed to help you navigate these challenges, featuring strategies for automation, examples of effective tools, and a real-world success story from Phoenix Cargo...

Report: The 2024-2025 State Of Heavy-Duty Repair

Fullbay's fifth annual State of Heavy-Duty Repair compiles insights from almost 1,000 experts and over 3,500 shops. If you aren't leveraging these proven data points, your competition...

Guide For Managing Maintenance

The Guide for Managing Maintenance is a comprehensive resource designed to help fleet managers improve their maintenance operations, reduce downtime, and lower overall fleet costs...

The Road Ahead: 2025 Trucking and Fleet Insights

Discover how fleet operators are impacted by challenges like driver onboarding delays and complex compliance, and the critical need for technology to boost efficiency and cut ...