Politics Disad – Jackson-Vanik


Hydrogen Cars – Public Supports



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Hydrogen Cars – Public Supports

General public support hydrogen filling initiatives, including republicans


Max, 12

(National poll shows Americans support carbon emissions regulations By John Max – April 30, 2012 Posted in: Alternative Energy, Environmental, Political, Research, United States http://www.hydrogenfuelnews.com/national-poll-shows-americans-support-carbon-emissions-regulations/853374/)

According to the poll, 75% of Americans support regulating carbon emissions. A significant portion of these people claimed to be Republicans. The poll notes that 63% of Americans support the establishment of an international initiative to reduce greenhouse emissions by 90% by 2050, well beyond the standards set up by most countries. The majority of participants claimed that environmental protection and economic growth were major factors in supporting alternative energy and emissions regulations.

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Mass Transit unpopular with GOP

Republicans oppose mass transit


Denvir, June 21st

(Daniel Denvir, 6/21, staff writer for Philedelphia City Paper and Salon, guardian.co.uk, Thursday 21 June 2012 16.31 EDT “Public transportation: 'Don't like the cuts? Take a hike'”)



Americans have since the second world war built an entire way of life around the automobile. It turns out, however, that our faith was an unsteady one and, in the face of high gas prices and young people's increasing preference for urban living, we are heading back to subways, trains, buses and trolleys in droves. In the first quarter of this year, we took an additional 125.7m trips on mass transit compared with the same time period last year – an increase of 5%. Yet, Republican-led austerity is pushing public transit, like most everything public, into severe fiscal and physical crisis. All at the very moment when we want and need it the most. Nationwide, 80% of mass transit systems either did move to boost fares and cut services or considered doing so in 2010, according to the most recent report from the American Public Transportation Association. Fare hikes and service cuts may be coming to Philadelphia, home to the nation's sixth largest transit system – and the subject of a report I wrote for Thursday's City Paper. The Southeastern PennsylvaniaTransportation Authority (SEPTA) projects a $36m deficit beginning in July 2013 and already lacks the funds necessary to fix crumbling, century-old bridges and electrical equipment. Boston's MBTA proposed "massive fare increases and widespread cuts" to close a $160m deficit in January. On Tuesday, the Massachusetts legislature came through with last-minute funding. The one-year fix, however, ensures that the fiscal crisis will soon return. Political and popular will, however, can still make big projects happens. In Los Angeles, local sales tax hikes have funded an impressive expansion of light-rail lines. But the Metropolitan Transit Authority has also cut more than 650,000 hours of bus service in recent years, a major hardship for the working poor who depend on buses to commute across the sprawling and car-dominated metropolis. The Bus Riders Union accused the agency of having "knowingly discriminated against bus riders of color"; the Federal Transit Administration, which undertook a civil rights investigation, called the cuts "disturbing". Shifting to mass transit is not only critical to staving off an ecological crisis, it is also key to getting out of our economic one: the expansion of rail and bus lines drives development, creating jobs while making it easier for the rest of us to get to our existing ones. The reverse is also true. The dismantling of mass transit has, like cuts to other public services, erected a massive roadblock on the path to economic recovery: 706,000 public sector jobs have been eliminated since the stimulus topped out in April 2009, according to a Wednesday report in the New York Times. While the private sector adds jobs, public sector austerity is driving the American economy off the tracks. Pittsburgh, which is set to cut about half of its bus lines, is a case in point. DialAmerica delayed plans to open a new 150-person call center in the city because the company, according to a recent report in the Wall Street Journal, says they are concerned that employees wouldn't be able to get to work. Pennsylvania Republican Governor Tom Corbett, who signed Grover Norquist's tax pledge during his 2010 campaign, has refused calls from labor and business leaders to raise revenue to deal with the state's infrastructure needs – estimated by his own transportation commission to be $3.5bn in necessary work. When I asked what the governor planned to do about the crisis in Philadelphia, I was told that we were on our own. "It is incumbent upon SEPTA," PennDOT spokeswoman Erin Waters told City Paper, "to meet operational and safety requirements." There was a time when business-minded conservatives understood that, ultimately, government did serve some purpose – if only to create an environment favorable to business. Members of both parties have for decades supported basic funding of the nation's trains and buses. But Corbett's counterparts in Washington now deliver that same heady combination of obliviousness and hostility. The derision of mass transit as a socialist import of European origin, which happens to be perceived also as a welfare subsidy for the black and urban poor, has now seized the entire Republican body politic. Most bizarrely, Tea Party activists around the country have attacked everything from bike lanes to high-speed trains as part of a United Nations conspiracy to create a "one-world order". "Federal transportation and infrastructure policy has traditionally been an area of strong bipartisan agreement," Aaron Naparstek, a Loeb Fellow at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design and founder ofStreetsblog.org told Salon: "Now, it seems, Republicans want to turn cities into a part of the culture wars. Now it's abortion, gay marriage and subways." Earlier this year, House Republicans proposed eliminating the 20% of transportation dollars dedicated to mass transit since Ronald Reagan first signed it into law in 1982. In response, mass transit advocates mobilized suburban Republicans, alongside big business, to oppose the move: mass transit serves as important connective tissue in the large metropolitan economies that drive the economy on a regional and national level. Yet, long-term transit funding is still uncertain, as Republicans now insist that a new transportation bill include an unrelated amendment designed to fast-track approval for the controversial Keystone XL pipeline – together with a move that will save few dollars but sends a potent message to the base: an amendment to bar the use of federal dollars for bike lanes. The last six-year transportation bill expired three years ago, and funding has, since then, been dolled out in three- and six-month increments. Meanwhile, the financial titans who brought us to edge of abyss are profiting from cash-strapped transit agencies, which are paying out millions of dollars every year to Wall Street, thanks to toxic derivatives. In a little-discussed but critical moment of the pre-crash deregulatory fever, transit agencies – along with school districts and city governments – agreed to esoteric "interest-rate swaps" with banks in order to protect against high interest rates on bond payments. The theory was that banks would get paid at a fixed rate, in exchange for them paying transit agencies at the variable rate. But after the financial system went into crisis, the Federal Reserve drove interest rates to rock-bottom levels. As a result, transit agencies and other public entities are now stuck owing billions in interest payments to the very same banks taxpayers had just bailed out. A recent study by the ReFund Transit Coalition found (pdf) that in the 12 regions surveyed – including New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco and Los Angeles – agencies lose more than $529m each year to Wall Street banks. Transit riders and workers will have to organize throughout American cities and suburbs if there is to be any hope – not only of saving mass transit, but of undertaking the large-scale expansion we need for our economic and ecological well-being. Last week, the Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU) and Good Jobs First announced plans to do just that, creating Americans for Transit to fight cuts and help organize rider groups nationwide. "Transit is a major social justice issue of our day," says ATU International president Larry Hanley. "Ridership is the highest in decades, but riders have suffered the worst wave of fare hikes and service cuts in post-war history."

Mass transit policies are unpopular – GOP will block due to electoral demographics


Freemark ‘11

(Yonah – Master of Science in Transportation from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Bachelor of Arts in Architecture, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Yale University with Distinction. Also a freelance journalist who has been published in Planning Magazine; Next American City Magazine; Dissent; The Atlantic Cities; Next American City Online; and The Infrastructurist – He created and continues to write for the website The Transport Politic – The Transport Politic – “Understanding the Republican Party’s Reluctance to Invest in Transit Infrastructure”

January 25th, 2011 – http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2011/01/25/understanding-the-republican-partys-reluctance-to-invest-in-transit-infrastructure/)

Highway funding, on the other hand, has remained relatively stable throughout, and that’s no surprise, either: The middle 50% of congressional districts, representing about half of the American population, features populations that live in neighborhoods of low to moderate densities, fully reliant on cars to get around. It is only in the densest sections of the country that transit (or affordable housing, for instance) is even an issuewhich is why it appears to be mostly of concern to the Democratic Party. Republicans in the House for the most part do not have to answer to voters who are interested in improved public transportation. This situation, of course, should be of significant concern to those who would advocate for better transit. To put matters simply, few House Republicans have any electoral reason to promote such projects, and thus, for the most part they don’t. But that produces a self-reinforcing loop; noting the lack of GOP support for urban needs, city voters push further towards the Democrats. And sensing that the Democratic Party is a collection of urbanites, those from elsewhere push away. It’s hard to know how to reverse this problem.


Public transit legislation drains capital – angers GOP


Freemark ‘10

(Yonah – Master of Science in Transportation from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Bachelor of Arts in Architecture, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Yale University with Distinction. Also a freelance journalist who has been published in Planning Magazine; Next American City Magazine; Dissent; The Atlantic Cities; Next American City Online; and The Infrastructurist – He created and continues to write for the website The Transport Politic – The Transport Politic – “Growing Conservative Strength Puts Transit Improvements in Doubt” – December 1st, 2010 – http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2010/12/01/growing-conservative-strength-puts-transit-improvements-in-doubt/)



The next few years are likely to be difficult for advocates of public transportation because of increased hostility to government investment. 1987, 1991, 1995, 1998, and 2005 share a significant feature: In each of those years, members of Congress were able to come together to pass a multi-year bill that codified how the U.S. government was to collect revenues for and allocate expenditures on transportation. Not coincidentally, in each of those years, one political party controlled both the House and Senate. In the 112th Congress, set to enter office in just one month, Democrats will run the Senate and Republicans the House. This split control will make passing any legislation difficult. Unlike in those aforementioned years, there is little chance that this group of legislators will be able to pass a multi-year transportation bill either in 2011 or 2012. These circumstances, combined with increasingly strident conservative rhetoric about the need to reduce government expenditures, may fundamentally challenge the advances the Obama Administration and the Democratic Congress have been able to make over the past two years in expanding the nation’s intercity rail network, promoting a vision for livable communities, and reinforcing funding for urban transit. Continuing those efforts would require identifying sources of increased revenue and a steadfast commitment to reducing the role of the automobile in American society. But there is little support for increased taxes from any side of the political table and there is a fundamental aversion from the mainstream Republican Party to the investments that have defined the government’s recent transportation strategy. Meanwhile, declining power of the purse resulting from a fuel tax last increased in 1993 means that the existing situation is unacceptable, at least if there is any sense that something must be done to expand investment in transportation infrastructure. Gridlock — and myopic thinking about how to improve mobility in the United States — will ensue.

NIB—Unpopular

Congress hates National Infrastructure Bank, would take huge political capital to pass


Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Press Release 11,

(“NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE BANK WOULD CREATE MORE RED TAPE & FEDERAL BUREAUCRACY,” October 12, 2011, http://transportation.house.gov/news/PRArticle.aspx?NewsID=1421)



“We must use every responsible mechanism possible to move projects and expand our capacity to finance infrastructure maintenance and improvements, but a National Infrastructure Bank is dead on arrival in Congress,” said U.S. Rep. John L. Mica (R-FL), Chairman of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.There are several reasons for this. One is that we do not need to create more federal bureaucracy. In fact, with over 100 separate federal surface transportation programs, we need less bureaucracy. “The federal government also has existing financing programs that serve the same purpose as a National Infrastructure Bank, such as TIFIA, RRIF and others, that we can improve and strengthen. “Another reason a national bank is DOA is because there is already such a bank structure in place at the state level. Thirty-three state infrastructure banks already exist, and we can ensure financing and build upon this foundation without creating a new level of federal bureaucracy. “If the Administration’s goal is to get people to work immediately, a National Infrastructure Bank that will require more than a year to create and $270 million to run is not the answer. That is funding that should be used for infrastructure, but would instead be used to create more red tape. “Unfortunately, the Administration still hasn’t learned that ‘shovel ready’ has become a national joke. Yesterday, the President announced he would expedite 14 infrastructure projects, but this plan only pushes these projects to the front of the line with current red tape and rules, while it pushes back or stalls hundreds of other projects pending federal approval. We must expedite the review process for all projects, not just a handful.”

NIB unpopular in Congress


Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Press Release 11

(“NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE BANK WOULD CREATE MORE RED TAPE & FEDERAL BUREAUCRACY,” October 12, 2011, http://transportation.house.gov/news/PRArticle.aspx?NewsID=1421)

I, for one, do not support setting up a new bureaucracy in Washington where political appointees would decide which transportation projects are the most worthy to receive a Federal loan,” said U.S. Rep. John J. Duncan, Jr. (R-TN), Chairman of the Highways and Transit Subcommittee. “That is why Congress already established the State Infrastructure Bank program. Current law allows a state to use their Federal-aid funding to capitalize a State Infrastructure Bank and provide loans and loan guarantees to appropriate transportation projects that the state deems most important. “The Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act program, or TIFIA, was established in 1998 to provide loans and loan guarantees to surface transportation projects. In fact, the TIFIA program is so popular it received 14 times the amount of project funding requests in FY11 than the program has available to distribute. “Why not give these established programs more funding in order for them to reach their full potential? “This proposal is simply just another distraction as Congress pushes for a long-term surface transportation reauthorization bill. The Administration should be focused on helping Congress pass this much overdue legislation and give the states some long-term funding certainty that a National Infrastructure Bank would most certainly not accomplish.”

NIB lacks necessary bipartisan support necessary to pass


Orski 11

(Ken, writer for newgeography.com, “INFRASTRUCTURE BANK: LOSING FAVOR WITH THE WHITE HOUSE?” August 30, 2010, http://www.newgeography.com/content/002408-infrastructure-bank-losing-favor-with-white-house)



President Obama was expected to include the infrastructure bank among his recommended stimulus measures when he lays out his new job-creation plan before the congressional deficit reduction committee in early September. But lately, he seems to have put the idea on the back burner and turned his attention to more traditional "shovel-ready" highway investments using existing financing programs. His advisers may have concluded that the Bank will do little to stimulate immediate job creation--- and that the proposal will find little support among congressional Democrats and Republicans alike. If so, check off the Infrastructure Bank as an idea whose time had come and gone.

NIB faces bipartisan dissent in Congress


Orski 11

(Ken, writer for newgeography.com, “INFRASTRUCTURE BANK: LOSING FAVOR WITH THE WHITE HOUSE?” August 30, 2010, http://www.newgeography.com/content/002408-infrastructure-bank-losing-favor-with-white-house)



But today, the idea is on life support. Neither the Senate nor the House have seen fit to include the Bank in their proposed transportation bills. Congressional Democrats and Republicans alike are in agreement that decision making control over major federal investments should not be ceded to a group of "unelected bureaucrats." Rather than creating a new federal bureaucracy, they think the focus should be placed on expanding federal credit assistance tools already in place, such as the Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (TIFIA) and the Railroad Rehabilitation & Improvement Financing Program (RRIF). There are other reasons for congressional skepticism. House Republicans are suspicious that the Obama-proposed Bank is nothing more than a vehicle for more stimulus spending, disguised as "capital investment." They want the Administration to be more specific about its proposal: how the Bank would be funded, what kind of investments it would fund and how the $30 billion capital would be repaid. "If this is more of the same stimulus spending, we won’t support it," Kevin Smith, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) has been quoted as saying. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee chairman John Mica (R-FL) thinks state-level infrastructure banks would be a more appropriate means of financing major transportation projects at the state and local level. Decentralized infrastructure financing would "keep the federal financing bureaucracy at a minimum and maximize states’ financial capabilities," according to the House transportation reauthorization proposal. Senate Democrats, while not necessarily opposed to another fiscal stimulus, want quick results. They fear that a centralized Infrastructure Bank, with its complex governance structure and layers of bureaucratic conditions, requirements and approvals would be far too slow and cumbersome to be an effective job generator. One or two years could pass before large-scale projects appropriate for Bank financing would get evaluated, selected, approved and under construction, one Senate aide told us. What is more, there is a lack of agreement on how the proposed Infrastructure Bank should function. The Administration wants a mechanism that would serve several different purposes. In the words of Undersecretary for Transportation Policy Roy Kienitz who testified at a September 21, 2010 hearing of the Senate Banking Committee, "We need a financing institution that can provide a range of financing options— grants for projects that by their nature cannot generate revenue, and loans and loan guarantees for projects that can pay for their construction costs out of a revenue stream. In short, we need the Infrastructure Bank that the President has proposed." But, "banks don’t give out grants, they give out loans. There is already a mechanism for giving out federal transportation grants — it’s called the highway bill," countered Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK), ranking member of the Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee. If the proposed entity is to be a true bank – as proposed in a recent bill sponsored by Senators John Kerry (D-MA) and Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) and endorsed by the AFL-CIO and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce– its scope would be confined to projects that can repay interest and principal on their loans with a dedicated stream of revenue — in other words, the Bank could finance only income-generating facilities such as toll roads and bridges. By all estimates, such projects will constitute only a small fraction of the overall inventory of transportation improvements needed to be financed in the years ahead, the bulk of which will be reconstruction of existing toll-free Interstate highways. Hence, a true Infrastructure Bank would be of limited help in creating jobs and reviving the economy, critics argue. "A national infrastructure bank must garner broad bipartisan support to move forward," says Michael Likosky, Director of NYU's Center on Law & Public Finance and author of a recent book, Obama's Bank:Financing a Durable New Deal. "This means no grants, a multi-sector reach and a realistic idea of what projects will benefit straight away."

NIB—Bipart

NIB has bipartisan support


Compton 11

(Matt, Deputy Director of Online Content for the Office of Digital Strategy, “Five Facts About a National Infrastructure Bank”, November 3rd, 2011, http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/03/five-facts-about-national-infrastructure-bank)

Yesterday, with the Key Bridge, which connects Washington, DC with Arlington, Virginia, as a backdrop, President Obama discussed the ways that the American Jobs Act will invest in the nation's highways, airports, roads, and bridges -- and create new jobs for construction workers. Today, the Senate is set to take up one idea that the President touted -- the creation of a national infrastructure bank. Here's how it would work: 1) Congress would appropriate an initial $10 billion in startup money to capitalize the bank. 2) The new bank would identify transportation, energy, and water infrastructure projects that lack funding, offer a clear benefit for taxpayers, and are worth at least $100 million or $25 million for rural projects. 3) Loans made by the bank would then be matched by private sector investments or money from local governments -- so that the infrastructure bank provides half or less than half the total funding. 4) Each project would generate its own revenues to help ensure repayment of the loan. 5) Decisions would be made by a seven-person board of governors -- of whom, no more than four could be from the same political party -- and a CEO chosen by the President. One bonus fact: The legislation that would create the bank has serious bipartisan backing -- and the support of both the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the AFL-CIO

Both media and congress support NIB


Schweitzer, Alderman and Bayh 11

(Howard, Mark and Evan; Opinions contributors for the Washington Post. “We already have the infrastructure bank we need.” September 29, 2011, http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/we-already-have-the-infrastructure-bank-we-need/2011/09/27/gIQA59TI8K_story.html)

In the American Jobs Act, President Obama reiterated his call for a national infrastructure bank, building on bipartisan legislation introduced in March by Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.), Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Tex.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.). The media are awash with calls to pass legislation creating a government bank to support private-sector investment in projects that would revitalize our domestic infrastructure, which most experts agree is in disrepair

NIB—Obama Likes

Obama favors jobs’ bill and National Infrastructure Bank, urging suggests


Everett & Snider 6/15

(Burgess and Adam, writers for Politico, “Scope of conference rears its head - Is it all up to Boehner? - TCC ads embolden GOP - Keystone simmers on backburner.” June 15, 2012, http://www.politico.com/morningtransportation/0612/morningtransportation164.html)

INFRASTRUCTURE RERUN: President Obama again went out on an infrastructure limb during an economic speech in Cleveland, although you may have heard some of these ideas before — and Congress certainly has. “Now is not the time to saddle American businesses with crumbling roads and bridges. Now is the time to rebuild America. So my plan would take half the money we’re no longer spending on war — let’s use it to do some nation-building here at home. Let’s put some folks to work right here at home.” The president also referred to his national infrastructure bank. “My plan sets up an independent fund to attract private dollars and issue loans for new construction projects based on two criteria: How badly are they needed and how much good will they do for the economy.”

NIB—Obama doesn’t care

NIB unimportant to Obama right now—lack of interest proves


Orski 11

(Ken, writer for newgeography.com, “INFRASTRUCTURE BANK: LOSING FAVOR WITH THE WHITE HOUSE?” August 30, 2010, http://www.newgeography.com/content/002408-infrastructure-bank-losing-favor-with-white-house)



President Obama was expected to include the infrastructure bank among his recommended stimulus measures when he lays out his new job-creation plan before the congressional deficit reduction committee in early September. But lately, he seems to have put the idea on the back burner and turned his attention to more traditional "shovel-ready" highway investments using existing financing programs. His advisers may have concluded that the Bank will do little to stimulate immediate job creation--- and that the proposal will find little support among congressional Democrats and Republicans alike. If so, check off the Infrastructure Bank as an idea whose time had come and gone.

NIB—GOP hates

Republicans reject Obama’s NIB, see it as excess spending


Orski 11

(Ken, writer for newgeography.com, “INFRASTRUCTURE BANK: LOSING FAVOR WITH THE WHITE HOUSE?” August 30, 2010, http://www.newgeography.com/content/002408-infrastructure-bank-losing-favor-with-white-house)

House Republicans are suspicious that the Obama-proposed Bank is nothing more than a vehicle for more stimulus spending, disguised as "capital investment." They want the Administration to be more specific about its proposal: how the Bank would be funded, what kind of investments it would fund and how the $30 billion capital would be repaid. "If this is more of the same stimulus spending, we won’t support it," Kevin Smith, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) has been quoted as saying. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee chairman John Mica (R-FL) thinks state-level infrastructure banks would be a more appropriate means of financing major transportation projects at the state and local level.

Republicans dislike NIB, questioning its impact on the econ


Jaffe 10

(staffwriter for ABCnews.com, “Another Bank? President Obama Pushing National Infrastructure Bank.” September 8, 2010, http://abcnews.go.com/Business/bank-president-obama-pushing-national-infrastructure-bank/story?id=11584294#.T-z8VrVfGVo)

No sooner had Obama outlined his proposal than Rep. Eric Cantor, the House Republican Whip, accused the administration of "blindly throwing darts at the board and hoping for a bulls-eye." "Reports from across the country show that dollars intended for infrastructure improvement in the President's first stimulus are being wasted, so how will his latest be any different?" asked Cantor. "Additionally, federal infrastructure projects are typically slow to commence on the ground, meaning that this new effort will do little in the immediate future to kick start the economy."

NIB—Americans Support

Americans overwhelmingly support National Infrastructure Bank, poll shows


Senate Fact Sheet 11

(“Fact Sheet: Rebuild America Jobs Act” (October 21, 2011, http://democrats.senate.gov/2011/10/21/fact-sheet-rebuild-america-jobs-act/)

CNN/ORC Poll: 72% of Americans, 54% of Republicans Support Rebuilding Our Infrastructure. According to a recent CNN/ORC Poll, 72% of Americans support “increasing federal spending to build and repair roads, bridges and schools,” while only 28% oppose. This is up from 64% from September of this year. 70% of Independents and 54% of Republicans support funding our infrastructure. [CNN/ORC Poll, 10/17/11] Rockefeller Foundation: 72% of Americans Support Infrastructure Bank. The Rockefeller Foundation infrastructure survey, conducted in February 2011, found that 72% of Americans support “Creating a National Infrastructure Bank that helps finance transportation projects that are important to the whole nation or large regions and that funds projects based on merit, not politics.” [Rockefeller Foundation, 2/14/11]

NIB—Dems Hates

Dems dislike NIB, disagreement on function and time


Orski 11,

(Ken, writer for newgeography.com, “INFRASTRUCTURE BANK: LOSING FAVOR WITH THE WHITE HOUSE?” (August 30, 2010, http://www.newgeography.com/content/002408-infrastructure-bank-losing-favor-with-white-house)



Senate Democrats, while not necessarily opposed to another fiscal stimulus, want quick results. They fear that a centralized Infrastructure Bank, with its complex governance structure and layers of bureaucratic conditions, requirements and approvals would be far too slow and cumbersome to be an effective job generator. One or two years could pass before large-scale projects appropriate for Bank financing would get evaluated, selected, approved and under construction, one Senate aide told us. What is more, there is a lack of agreement on how the proposed Infrastructure Bank should function.

NIB—Dems Love

Democrats strongly support NIB


Jaffe 10

(staffwriter for ABCnews.com, “Another Bank? President Obama Pushing National Infrastructure Bank.” (September 8, 2010, http://abcnews.go.com/Business/bank-president-obama-pushing-national-infrastructure-bank/story?id=11584294#.T-z8VrVfGVo)

But across the political aisle Democrats quickly threw their support behind the President's new proposal. Said Senate Banking Committee chairman Chris Dodd, "A significant investment in our ailing national infrastructure will create jobs, boost long-term economic growth, and improve safety. With a National Infrastructure Bank we could leverage state, local, and private funds to ensure our infrastructure systems are equipped to meet the demands of the 21st century." Over in the House of Representatives, Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-CT, has proposed legislation that would place the infrastructure bank under the purview of the Treasury Department and allow it to make loans much like the World Bank currently does. "This is the kind of initiative we need to support the economy and produce long-term job growth," DeLauro said. "The National Infrastructure Bank is a concept which has garnered broad support from governors, mayors, the business and labor communities, as well as others. For such a bank to succeed, it should function as an independent entity and leverage private dollars to make objective investments in transportation, environmental, energy, and telecommunications projects of regional and national significance."

Port Security - Unpopular

House Against Port Security- Already rejected twice


(Targeted News Service 6/8/12 http://posttrib.suntimes.com/news/13061943-418/how-they-voted.html)

PORT SECURITY GRANTS: The House rejected an amendment sponsored by Rep. Janice Hahn, D-Calif., to the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act (H.R. 5855). The amendment would have increased funding for state and local port security grants by the Federal Emergency Management Agency by $75 million. Hahn said: “This amendment will ensure that the ports receive the funding they need in order to address the lingering gaps in port security of which there are many.” An opponent, Rep. Robert B. Aderholt, R-Ala., said the amendment would eliminate funding for the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility, and therefore endanger “our research capacity into pathogens that afflict animals and our food chain and, by extension, human beings.” The vote, on June 6, was 144 yeas to 273 nays. Votes: Donnelly, yea; Visclosky, nay ANTI-TERRORISM INITIATIVES: The House rejected an amendment sponsored by Rep. Brian Higgins, D-N.Y., to the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act (H.R. 5855). The amendment would have provided a $58 million increase in funding for anti-terrorism initiatives in 36 urban areas from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Higgins said: “We should be doing everything that we can to empower these communities to protect themselves from these threats.” An opponent, Rep. Robert B. Aderholt, R-Ala., said the amendment would discourage fiscal discipline and cut investment in critical science and technology research and development programs at the Department of Homeland Security. The vote, on June 6, was 150 yeas to 266 nays.


Port Security—Bipart

Port Security with Bipartisanship- Passed in House


(Marroquin 6/28/12 Staff writer at daily breeze http://www.dailybreeze.com/news/ci_20964828/hahns-bill-addressing-security-gaps-at-seaports-approved)

A South Bay lawmaker's bill directing the Department of Homeland Security to examine security gaps in the nation's seaports was approved Thursday by the House of Representatives. House Resolution 4005, authored by Rep. Janice Hahn, D-San Pedro, also directs the DHS to prepare a plan to address security problems, including the fact that less than 3 percent of the cargo coming into ports is scanned for weapons. The measure, approved on a 411-9 vote, now goes to the U.S. Senate for consideration. While the Port of Los Angeles is not in Hahn's current 36th Congressional District, it was part of the area she represented for 10 years on the Los Angeles City Council. She is running against Rep. Laura Richardson in the new 44th Congressional District, which includes the port. "We will be able to better protect our ports and their contributions to our economy if we know where the weaknesses are and have a plan to address them. Therefore, I'm very pleased this bipartisan and common-sense piece of legislation has passed," Hahn said. - Art Marroquin

Ports unpopular - public

Ports unpopular—public dislikes funding mechanism


Stein, 12

(Perry Stein, staff writer/journalist, March 14, 2012, NBC Washington, “Morning Read: O'Malley To Pitch Unpopular Gas Tax In House And Senate”, http://www.nbcwashington.com/blogs/first-read-dmv/Morning-Read-OMalley-To-Pitch-Unpopular-Gas-Tax-In-House-And-Senate-142611796.html)

Gov. Martin O’Malley will appear in front of House and Senate committees today to make a personal pitch for his widely unpopular proposal to increase gas tax. O’Malley knows that the gas tax won’t be an easy sell, according to The Baltimore Sun. With gas prices on the rise, many people don’t see why more gas taxes are needed and are wary of O’Malley increasing the gas tax when his budget also calls for increased income taxes. Maryland needs to maintain decent roads and transportation infrastructure or its businesses and citizens suffer. From the Port of Baltimore to Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport and the highways, tunnels, bridges and rail networks, the state's economy depends on maintaining and expanding these vital connections to the rest of the country and the world.

Waterways unpopular—taxpayers see no need and empirically have required large efforts by supporters


Roode, May 2012

(Benjamin Roode, staff writer, May 2012, PE Magazine, “Infrastructure: How We Got Here”, http://www.nspe.org/PEmagazine/12/pe_0512_How.html)



The country's roads, sewers, and dams are the best designed and best performing in the world. That's one of the main reasons they're crumbling, infrastructure experts say. When taxpayers drive the same roads day-in and day-out, turn on the faucet for automatic water, and flip a switch for light, it gets easier to take for granted the infrastructure making those amenities possible. Why spend tax money when there's no problem apparent to a public that lacks infrastructure engineering knowledge and perspective? Other major projects—the Golden Gate Bridge, New Deal dam projects, and various major metropolitan water systems—secured public funding as the need for such construction was presented and justified to the public, whether for transportation, power, or health and safety reasons. Money to upgrade or repair such systems is sometimes hard to come by, however, especially when neither voters nor the politicians they elect recognize the limits of infrastructure nor will commit to long-term solutions. Why spend public money on a system that currently works, voters ask.

Ports popular - Congress

Ports popular—bipartisan caucus and acts prove


Abbott, 12—editor of AAPA Seaports

(Paul Scott Abbott, editor of AAPA Seaports, April 6, 2012, American Journal of Transportation, “Port leaders push support for infrastructure funding”, http://ajot.com/article_SpecialFeatures.asp?ArticleId=14237)

Mica-sponsored House transportation reauthorization measure H.R. 7 calls for investing all available resources in the $7 billion Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund in harbor projects, while a similar objective is sought by H.R. 104, the Realize America’s Maritime Promise (RAMP) Act, which, since its January 2011 introduction by U.S. Rep. Dr. Charles W. Boustany Jr., R-La., has gained a total of 187 co-sponsors. Two of the RAMP Act’s co-sponsors, U.S. Rep. Janice Hahn, D-Calif., and U.S. Rep. Ted Poe, R-Texas, launched March 20 business sessions by explaining that they co-founded the bipartisan Congressional Ports Opportunity, Renewal, Trade and Security (PORTS) Caucus in October to help underscore the significance of funding for U.S. ports, which support 13.3 mil- lion jobs and account for $3.15 trillion in annual economic activity.

Ports and waterways popular—House and Senate budget appropriations


Reuters, 12

(Reuters, Press Release, April 25, 2012, “Realize America's Maritime Promise, the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund Coalition Statement on Passage of H. Con. Res. 112, the House FY-2013 Budget Resolution”, http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/05/idUS193512+05-Apr-2012+PRN20120405)

WASHINGTON, April 5, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Last week, the House of Representatives passed a Fiscal Year 2013 budget resolution (H. Con. Res. 112). Unlike the past several years, this year's budget debate included some discussion of the longstanding problem of underfunded harbor maintenance. This recognition of the harbor maintenance issue by the House Budget Committee is a positive small step forward. RAMP believes that enactment of H.R.104, the RAMP Act, or its Senate companion bill, S.412, the Harbor Maintenance Act, is essential to address this growing national problem. The text of H. Con. Res. 112 does not include any specific language related to the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund (HMTF). The Budget Committee report on this legislation includes the following text: "In addition, the budget acknowledges the importance of maintaining our ports and waterways to encourage commercial deep-draft navigation and economic competitiveness. In fiscal year 2012, a total of $898 million was appropriated from the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund [HMTF], an increase of $109 million over the administration's request. However, there continues to be a large balance in the fund and outstanding harbor maintenance needs." The H. Con. Res. 112 report language does not provide any authority or direction to the House Appropriations Committee to increase annual funding levels for harbor maintenance.

Ports Unpopular - Congress

Waterways unpopular—federal government doesn’t want responsibility of funding


Stern, 12—analyst in natural resources policy

(Charles V. Stern, Analyst in Natural Resources Policy, April 12, 2012, Congressional Research Service, “Inland Waterways: Recent Proposals and Issues for Congress”, http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R41430.pdf)



Previously the Bush and Obama administrations have recommended replacing the fuel tax with one or more user fees that would increase revenues beyond their current baseline. However, Congress and industry interests have rejected these proposals. In 2010, the Inland Waterways Users Board (IWUB), a federal advisory committee advising the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on inland waterways, endorsed an alternative proposal that is supported by many barge industry interests. The proposal would increase the fuel tax by $0.06-$0.08 per gallon, but would also require that the federal government handle the full cost for some projects that are currently cost- shared. The Obama Administration generally opposes this approach, and has previously submitted multiple proposals to increase trust fund revenues with new user fees, in addition to the fuel tax. Most recently, the Administration submitted, in its plan to the Joint Committee on Deficit Reduction, a proposal for new waterway user fees in 2011, and included new revenues from an unspecified new inland waterways fee in its FY2013 budget request. To date, none of these changes have been enacted. The user industry (including the barge industry and agricultural groups) argues that changes are necessary to shore up the trust fund, improve deteriorating inland waterway infrastructure, and distribute costs more equitably among those who benefit from the system (e.g., more funding by federal taxpayers for dams). They also note that waterways support jobs and are a vital component of the nation’s transportation mix. The Obama Administration generally agrees that major changes are needed to meet infrastructure needs, but argues against increased costs for the federal government. Some groups also argue that an increased share of waterway costs should be borne by users (i.e., a decreased share for the federal government), and have suggested that operations and maintenance costs (currently a 100% federal cost) should also be a user responsibility.

Waterway funding contentious—funding mechanism flaws and proposal rejections prove


Committee on Appropriations, 11

(Committee on Appropriations, September 7, 2011, “ENERGY AND WATER DEVELOPMENT APPROPRIATIONS BILL, 2012”, http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/cpquery/?&sid=cp112ncvda&r_n=sr075.112&dbname=cp112&&sel=TOC_28798&)



The previous administration notified this Committee when they submitted the fiscal year 2008 budget (February 2007) that there was a looming problem with the amount of revenues available in the Inland Waterways Trust Fund and that a legislative proposal would be forthcoming to address the situation. That legislative proposal was not presented to Congress until April 2008. In the fiscal year 2009 budget (February 2008) the previous administration proposed a lockage user fee to replace the current fuel tax as a mechanism to enhance revenues in the trust fund. This lockage fee was roundly criticized as being developed without any input from navigation users and was rejected by Congress. Unfortunately the administration assumed these revenues as a part of their fiscal year 2009 budget request which overstated the amount of funding available for cost sharing with these projects. Budgeted items could not be funded without these assumed revenues leading to curtailment of the work planned for fiscal year 2009. For fiscal year 2010-2012, the current administration did not make that assumption. Rather they aligned their budget request to account for expected revenues to be generated by the trust fund in the given budget year. This severely curtailed the funding available for modernization of the system. However, the budget request has still discussed the lockage fee proposal as a way to enhance revenues in the trust fund. In fiscal year 2010 this Committee recommended that waterway users, the Corps and the appropriate authorizing committees should work together to find a solution to this funding issue. A working group consisting of a combination of Corps of Engineers navigation, economics and engineering experts and Inland Waterways User Board members from industry, worked diligently for over a year to develop a 20-year capital investment strategy for the Inland Waterways System. The proposal they developed not only enhanced revenues in the trust fund, but also provided a schedule to prioritize the work over a 20-year period. The plan was submitted to the Congress and the administration last year. In December 2010, the administration provided their views on the capital investment strategy. While the administration noted the efforts of the working group, it found fault with virtually every facet of the strategy. While the Committee recognizes that implementation of some of the proposals in the overall strategy would have been problematic, the Committee believes that the strategy could have been further modified to develop a plan that was acceptable to all parties. Unfortunately, the overall tone of the administration response was dismissive of the working group's efforts. This is especially disappointing since a number of members of the working group were employees of the administration. The administration's response to the strategy further decided to bring in extraneous issues to the Trust Fund discussion concerning operation and maintenance costs. Those issues may need to be addressed, but not in the scope of determining an investment strategy to recapitalize the Inland Waterways System.

Ports unpopular—legislation empirically avoided by Obama administration


Committee on Appropriations, 11

(Committee on Appropriations, September 7, 2011, “ENERGY AND WATER DEVELOPMENT APPROPRIATIONS BILL, 2012”, http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/cpquery/?&sid=cp112ncvda&r_n=sr075.112&dbname=cp112&&sel=TOC_28798&)



The administration has discussed a proposal as a part of the fiscal year 2012 budget request to expand the authorized uses of the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund [HMTF] so that its receipts are available to finance the Federal share of efforts carried out by several agencies in support of commercial navigation through the Nation's ports. No legislative proposal to provide for this expansion has been forthcoming from the administration. The administration asserts that work that other Federal agencies perform at our Nation's ports would be more appropriately charged to the HMTF rather than the general treasury. However current law limits funds in the HMTF to be used only for maintenance of waterways and harbors.

Port expansion unpopular—appropriation decisions


Edmonson, 10

(R.G. Edmonson, August 2010, Journal of Commerce, “SHIFTING TIDE FOR WATERWAYS FUNDING”, http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/52920781/shifting-tide-waterways-funding)

The article reports on the U.S. Congress Transportation and Infrastructure Committee's approval of the 2010 Water Resources Development Act (WRDA). It criticizes the bill's priority for environmental restoration over navigation projects. The author explains that WRDA authorized a total of 32 environmental restoration and protection projects and only four small navigation projects in New Jersey, New York, Michigan and Wisconsin.

Waterways unpopular—funding mechanism hurts consumers


Quinlan, 11-- Deputy Director of NC Sustainable Energy Association

(Paul Quinlan, Deputy Director of NC Sustainable Energy Association, October 3, 2011, The New York Times, “Industry, Obama Admin Wrestle Over Funding for Waterway Maintenance”, http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2011/10/03/03greenwire-industry-obama-admin-wrestle-over-funding-for-26677.html?pagewanted=all)



President Obama's plan that calls for shipping interests to pick up more of the tab for channel-deepening projects and repairing and upgrading locks and other infrastructure along waterways is facing fierce industry opposition. Michael Toohey, president and CEO of the Waterways Council, an industry group, decried the plan as a massive tax increase. "The proposed legislation would more than double the amount of taxes and fees on one beneficiary of our nation's waterways: commercial shippers," Toohey said in a statement. "These new economic burdens will disrupt the fragile economic recovery by unfairly disadvantaging consumers who will surely pay more for their goods and electricity."

Waterways unpopular—both House and Senate dislike funding Army Corps


Quinlan, 11-- Deputy Director of NC Sustainable Energy Association

(Paul Quinlan, Deputy Director of NC Sustainable Energy Association, October 3, 2011, The New York Times, “Industry, Obama Admin Wrestle Over Funding for Waterway Maintenance”, http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2011/10/03/03greenwire-industry-obama-admin-wrestle-over-funding-for-26677.html?pagewanted=all)

"If they really want to spend a lot more money on the inland waterway system, a lot more of that money has to come for the inland waterway users," said Steve Ellis, vice president of the nonpartisan Taxpayers for Common Sense. "Otherwise, it's going to come from every other corps constituency." At issue is an Army Corps budget that has taken a pounding on Capitol Hill. Both the House and Senate are proposing to roll the corps' civil works budget back to 2005 levels next year, effectively making competition for project funding a zero-sum game.

Sustainable Transportation Drain Capital

Sustainable transportation policies drain capital – The House will block based on voting demographics.


Freemark ‘12

(Yonah – Master of Science in Transportation from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Bachelor of Arts in Architecture, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Yale University with Distinction. Also a freelance journalist who has been published in Planning Magazine; Next American City Magazine; Dissent; The Atlantic Cities; Next American City Online; and The Infrastructurist – He created and continues to write for the website The Transport Politic – The Transport Politic – February 6th, 2012 – http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2012/02/06/time-to-fight/)

The strange and laudable part of the Senate side of the story — at least as compared to the House — is the bipartisan nature of decision-making there. Why are Republicans in the Senate promoting a transportation bill that explicitly would promote multimodalism as a goal, in a contrast to the highway focus of their peers in the House? Why are they accepting environmental criteria as appropriate measures of quality in transportation policy? Perhaps the Democratic Party’s control of the Senate makes fighting such ideas a waste of time. Or perhaps longer Senate terms in office allow clearer, more reasonable thinking. Whatever the reason, in the long-term, it is hard to envision reversing the continued growth of the GOP’s strident opposition to sustainable transportation investments in the House. As I have documented, density of population correlates strongly and positively with the Democratic Party vote share in Congressional elections; the result has been that the House Republicans have few electoral reasons to articulate policies that benefit cities. Those who believe in the importance of a sane transportation policy need to make more of an effort to advance a sane transportation politics to residents of suburban and rural areas, who also benefit from efforts to improve environmental quality, mobility alternatives, and congestion relief, but perhaps are not yet convinced of that fact. Doing so would encourage politicians hoping for votes outside of the city core — Democratic or Republican — to promote alternatives to the all-highways meme that currently rules the GOP in the House.

Tiger –extensions cost capital

White House would have to get involved in Tiger-extensions


Freemark ‘10

(Yonah – Master of Science in Transportation from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Bachelor of Arts in Architecture, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Yale University with Distinction. Also a freelance journalist who has been published in Planning Magazine; Next American City Magazine; Dissent; The Atlantic Cities; Next American City Online; and The Infrastructurist – He created and continues to write for the website The Transport Politic – The Transport Politic – “After Two Years of Democratic Control in Washington, A Transportation Roundup” –

December 29th, 2010 -- http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2010/12/29/after-two-years-of-democratic-control-in-washington-a-transportation-roundup/)

Two years of Democratic Party power in Washington, then, meant quite a few improvements to the nation’s transportation policy-making, bringing to the fore projects that have been largely ignored by the government for decades. The Obama Administration and its allies in Congress have made clear their collective interest in funding projects that are founded on the idea that transportation can be an important element in the creation of livable cities. This represents a significant and positive change from past federal policy. But there is more work to be done. Republican control of the House of Representatives is unlikely to simplify the extension of many of the new programs undertaken over the past two years — from high-speed rail to TIGER. Though these programs have faced some controversy and should be made more transparent, they have been well-managed, largely fair in their distribution of grants, and, crucially, have spread funding to cities across the country, in both Red and Blue states. In order to assure their future, President Obama will have to articulate their positive effects nationwide and advance ways to fund them that appear bipartisan and consensus-worthy. Will he make the effort to do so when the nation has so many other pressing needs? Is there enough political support on either side of the aisle to maintain a major federal commitment to transport policies that do not revolve around the construction of highways?


TIGERs Controversial – Congress fighting


Szakonyi 4/5

(Mark, Associate Editor for The Journal of Commerce,



http://www.joc.com/infrastructure/tiger-grant-demand-outpaces-supply-20-1)

We simply cannot make the investments we need to build the nation we want without a long-term transportation plan, and it is up to Congress to pass such a plan,” LaHood wrote. “But Congress has failed to come together on what has traditionally been an issue with bipartisan support.”

Democrats like TIGER grant


Coil 6/20,

(Kate, writer for Bluefield Daily Telegraph,

http://bdtonline.com/local/x651523273/King-Coal-Highway-officials-await-word-on-fed-funds)

Rahall, who serves as the top Democrat on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said funding like TIGER grants are essential with the lack of a long-term federal highway bill.

“In a funding desert, with the House Republican leadership unable to produce a long term highway authorization bill, a misguided Congressional ban on earmarks, and competition for TIGER grants at an all-time high, this funding is a sweet oasis,” Rahall said. “Mark my word, this federal commitment recognizes the long-term investment benefits of the Coalfields Expressway. It underscores the projects’ importance to our economy and builds on the funding Senators Byrd and Rockefeller and I have secured over the years. It is a clear signal to our state partners, that if they were to pony up some of their federal discretionary money, it would move the project even further along and it sets the stage for future investment from administrations on the federal level.”

U.S. Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., said projects like the Coalfields Expressway are vital to economic development in southern West Virginia.

“This is a vital project and it’s great news that it will receive this essential funding to upgrade this highway, improve safety for the cars that use it, and create jobs,” Rockefeller said.  “For our businesses and communities to grow and thrive, we need reliable, efficient roads to connect the various parts of our state and to connect West Virginia to other states. This road is doing that and this funding will help continue that goal forward.”

Republicans hate TIGER Grant


Marinucci 6/22,

(Carla, is The San Francisco Chronicle's senior political writer

http://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/Pelosi-scolds-GOP-for-inaction-on-transportation-3656988.php)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, in her hometown Friday, slammed House Republicans for focusing on Attorney General Eric Holder while failing to deliver key transportation legislation as she touted a federal grant for the Mission Bay neighborhood that she said would deliver what Americans want most: "jobs, jobs, jobs." Pelosi made the comments in response to reporters' questions as she stood with San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee to introduce a $10 million Department of Transportation grant for infrastructure at the Mission Bay biotech cluster and its UCSF hospital. The grant toward a $46.5 million project will help build pedestrian, rail and highway infrastructures and was awarded on a competitive basis. Pelosi scolded House Republicans for their lack of action on transportation issues while voting to hold Holder in contempt for failing to provide documents to a House investigative committee. "We need jobs now, and what do we have? No transportation bill, 100 days after it passed in the United States Senate, on a bipartisan basis," she said. Pelosi laughed when asked about GOP critics including Karl Rove, who referred to her as "the Mad Red Queen" this week. The comments were made after Pelosi said House Republicans, led by California Rep. Darrel Issa, R-Vista (San Diego County), cited Holder for contempt of Congress in the "Fast and Furious" guns investigation as a cover to quash his efforts to stop voter suppression. Pelosi said the Tiger grant - which stands for Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery - provided a contrast with the lack of actions by Republicans in Washington. "The Golden Gate Bridge and the Bay Bridge were built when times were tough," she said, adding that President Eisenhower, "a great Republican president," initiated the federal highway system. But House Speaker John Boehner, she said, "bless his heart, has never voted for a transportation bill, even when everyone else was voting for a transportation bill."

Urban Planning—Public Likes

Majority of Americans like urban planning, poll shows


Benfield 6/18

(Kaid, Director, Sustainable Communities, NRDC; co-founder, LEED for Neighborhood Development rating system; co-founder, Smart Growth America coalition; “Poll shows that Americans like planning, after all. But the details are messy.” (June 18, 2012, http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/kbenfield/poll_shows_that_americans_like.html)

If you’re reading this blog, you may know that the American Planning Association last week released the findings of a major public opinion poll showing that “two-thirds of Americans believe their community needs more planning to promote economic recovery,” to lift a phrase from APA’s press release. That’s good news for those of us who believe a more thoughtful and forward-looking approach is needed to guide issues such as land use, education and economic development to secure a more sustainable future for our cities and towns. But, in a world where almost two-thirds of Republicans and two-fifths of all voters told pollsters “the government should stay out of Medicare,” what do survey results mean, exactly? In a poll where community planning was defined as "a process that seeks to engage all members of a community to create more prosperous, convenient, equitable, healthy and attractive places for present and future generations," it is almost inconceivable that anyone would be opposed. So, is two-thirds a strong number or a weak one? What if planning had been defined more neutrally as “a process where local government works with citizens to chart future directions for the community’s land use, economic development, and services”? I like to think that planning still would have claimed a majority of those who expressed an opinion. In the actual poll, 66 percent said that their communities need planning as defined above; 17 percent said they didn’t know; and only 17 percent actually opposed engaging citizens in the process of creating more prosperous, convenient, equitable, healthy and attractive places. Discounting the “I don’t know” respondents, four-fifths of those who expressed an opinion came out in favor of community process for a better future. I suspect that, with the adjectives removed from the definition, the portion of “don’t know” respondents would go up, as might the “process is not needed” group. But I still think most Americans really do believe in community planning and probably wish their community had benefited from more of it in recent decades. In fact, in another part of the poll, 72 percent of respondents said that the word “planning” has a “very” or “mostly” positive meaning. Half the respondents indicated that they would like to be involved in community planning, “including majorities of nearly all of the demographic sub-segments.”

Urban Planning—Congress Likes

Congress likes urban planning, voted down funding cuts to transportation and planning


The American Planning Association 6/27

(“UPDATE: House Rejects Amendments Attacking CDBG, HOME” June 27, 2012, http://blogs.planning.org/policy/)



Strong, bipartisan majorities in the House defeated a series of amendments targeting funding for HUD’s Community Development Block Grant and HOME programs. The amendments came as the House considers the annual funding bill for the Departments of Transportation and Housing and Urban Development. Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Cal.) proposed an amendment to completely eliminate all CDBG funds. An amendment from Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) would have cut nearly $400 million from CDBG keeping it at FY 2012 levels. Similarly, Rep. Jeff Flake proposed cutting $200 million from HUD’s HOME program. The final votes demonstrated broad support for these programs: McClintock amendment defeated, 80 – 342 Chaffetz amendment defeated, 157 – 267 Flake amendment defeated, 178 – 242 A number of House members spoke in support of CDBG and HOME on the floor. Several pointed out the economic benefits of the programs and noted that both programs had already experienced deep cuts in recent years.

Congress interested in promoting urban planning and transportation, recent decision shows


Jordan 12

(Jason, APA Director of Policy and Government Affairs, “Senate Passes Transportation Bill, Next Stop Uncertain.” March 14, 2012, http://blogs.planning.org/policy/page/2/)



A strong, bipartisan majority in the U.S. Senate has voted for a 2-year, $109 billion surface transportation bill. The measure, S. 1813, was approved 74 to 22 following several days of amendment votes. Find out how your Senators voted. The Senate bill maintains existing funding levels for key transportation programs with a slight inflation adjustment. After the inclusion of some important amendments, the measure also maintains support for bike, pedestrian, and safety programs. The bill would also promote new performance measures in planning, encourage transit oriented development, expand the federal TIFIA program, and restore the transit commuter tax benefit. Senate passage was hailed by transportation advocacy groups across the political spectrum.

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