Late last week, the United States House of Representatives Transportation and Infrastructure Committee introduced a six-year, $325 billion surface transportation authorization, entitled The Surface Transportation Reauthorization and Reform Act of 2015.
This legislation comes at a time when the current transportation authorization is set to expire at the end of October and is currently working on its 35th continuing resolution to keep funding intact at current levels (see related story here).
House T&I officials said this bill is scheduled for a markup on Thursday, October 22.
They key objectives of this legislation are to improve U.S. infrastructure, reform surface transportation program and refocus those programs on addressing national priorities, maintaining a strong commitment to safety, and innovation focused on making the national transportation system safer and more efficient.
The bill is comprised of particular components related to freight transportation and the supply chain, including:
-facilitating commerce and the movement of goods by modifying the National Highway Freight Network, with total mileage to increase from 27,000 to 41,000;
-refocusing existing funding to create a Nationally Significant Freight and Highway Projects program at $4.5 billion for fiscal years 2016-2021 for large-scale projects of national or regional importance
-dedicate funding specifically for freight projects and establish a competitive grant process to ensure the best projects are awarded funding; and
-a focus on the National Highway System and the nation’s freight needs
Some other key components of the bill include consolidating truck and bus safety grant programs and provide states with the flexibility to focus funding on safety priorities, providing a competitive grant option to address truck and bus facility needs, and accelerate the introduction of new technologies like electronic logging devices.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration also received a fair amount of attention in the bill, with it calling for changes to the CSA (Compliance, Safety and Accountability) program to improve fairness and transparency, as well as reforming the regulatory process by requiting FMCSA to review regulations every five years to ensure they are current, consistent, and uniformly enforced.
Along with the $4.5 billion committed to highway, freight infrastructure, a report in The Hill said that it would spend $261 billion on highways, $55 billion on transit, and roughly $9 billion on safety programs. But as was the case with a Senate bill rolled out this summer called the DRIVE Act, there is only funding currently available for the first three years of the Surface Transportation Reauthorization and Reform Act of 2015.
Funding remains an issue, though, as the federal gasoline tax, the primary funding mechanism for surface transportation, continues to run at a shortfall bringing in about $34 billion per year and the federal government spending $50 billion on transportation projects, with the tax remaining at the same levels since 1993.
The Hill report noted that the Congressional Budget Office has estimated that it will take about $100 billion, coupled with annual gas tax revenues, to fund a six-year bill. And it added that House aides maintain that another short-term continuing resolution is likely in order to give Congress time to conference on a long-term bill.