|
Dec. 16, 2009 -- By a vote of
217-212 the House
passed H.R. 2847 -- Jobs for Main
Street Act of 2010 -- intended to stimulate job growth, reports
the Associated General Contractors. Included in the bill are funds
for
various infrastructure investments including $37.3 billion for
transportation programs, of which $27.5 billion is for highways
(freight and passenger rail and port projects are also eligible for
these funds), $8.4 billion is for transit, $500 million is for Airport
Improvement Program grants and $800 million for Amtrak fleet
modernization. The highway funds will be
distributed to states by the
same formula that was used to distribute stimulus funds previously
provided in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). States
are not required to provide any matching dollars to be eligible to
receive these funds. States would be required to have 50 percent of
the funds under contract within 90 days or lose the remaining funds (to
be redistributed to states that have met this requirement). The second 50 percent must be under contract within one year or be lost to other successful states. This is a far more stringent requirement than ARRA which required funds to be “obligated” rather than under contract. Many of the other provisions related to the use of ARRA funds are included. These funds are provided on top of funding that comes through the traditional program. Also included in the bill is an
extension of highway and transit program authorization through
Sept. 30, 2010 at current levels and provides additional Highway
Trust Fund revenue to fund these programs. Since SAFETEA-LU expired on
Sept. 30, 2009 these programs have been extended on a short-term
basis at a funding level that is significantly below the FY 2009
authorized level. H.R. 2847 will increase funding by $10.7 billion,
nearly to the FY 2009 authorized level. The bill also includes
provisions to stabilize the Highway Trust Fund. It restores $19.5
billion in interest payments foregone on the HTF’s previous cash
balances, and restores authority for HTF balances to receive interest
payments in the future. The bill alters the way in which long-standing
fuel tax exemptions provided to state and local governments are
accounted for which are projected to increase HTF balances by about
$1.7 billion annually, for a total of $9.8 billion over six years. In
addition, as with the stimulus dollars, the legislation waives the
requirement that states provide matching revenue to receive these funds. END
|
Copyright 2010 by The Expressways Publishing Project