Senate Commerce Committee Debuts $78B Bill for Surface Transportation

Marybeth Luczak Jun 11, 2021

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  1. Marybeth Luczak

    Marybeth Luczak Guest

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    The Surface Transportation Investment Act of 2021 (download below) was introduced by Commerce Committee Chair Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) and Ranking Member Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) on June 10—the same day the House Transportation and Infrastructure (T&I) Committee advanced out of mark-up its $547 billion surface transportation reauthorization package (INVEST in America Act), which would succeed the current FAST (Fixing America’s Surface Transportation) Act.

    PAT21512Download

    The deadline for surface transportation reauthorization is Sept. 30, when Congress’ extension of the FAST Act expires. If no bill is passed and signed by President Joe Biden by the deadline, a continuing resolution will be needed to extend the current legislation. If history is any indication, it could be a year or longer before a new bill is enacted.

    The Senate Commerce Committee’s 569-page Act includes:

    $36 billion for rail. For passenger rail, it authorizes more than $25 billion for intercity passenger rail. According to the Committee, it “protects Amtrak’s critically important long-distance routes,” addresses the Northeast Corridor project backlog, and encourages expansion of passenger rail corridors with state support. The rail funding also includes more than $7.5 billion for rail safety and improvement projects, such as a new $500 million per year grant program to eliminate grade crossings as well as increased funding for the Consolidated Rail and Infrastructure Safety Improvement (CRISI) grant program. Additionally, it makes the Railroad Rehabilitation and Improvement Financing Program (RRIF) “more attractive and useful to potential borrowers,” authorizing $50 million per year for credit-risk premium assistance (similar to other U.S. Department of Transportation loan programs), expanding eligibility to transit-oriented development (TOD) projects and land-side port infrastructure, and codifying the RRIF express program that targets smaller and rural project applicants.

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    $28 billion for multi-modal freight investments. Included is an average of $1.2 billion a year for the Nationally Significant Multimodal Freight grant program (INFRA); resources for multi-state planning and research; authorization of the U.S. DOT’s BUILD/RAISE grant program at $1.5 billion annually; creation of a new program to fund at $2 billion annually projects of “national significance”; and resources and tools for rural and tribal communities to plan and compete for financial assistance. It also authorizes a new office of Multimodal Freight Infrastructure and Policy, updates the National Freight Strategic Plan, and improves coordination between the federal and state governments on freight planning.

    $13 billion for safety. Among the provisions: $6 billion for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA) highway safety programs; $4.6 billion for the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s (FMCSA) commercial vehicle programs; and $500 million to improve first responder planning and training for hazardous material incidents.

    • $1 billion for new and existing research and development programs.

    The legislation also reauthorizes and makes reforms to USDOT agencies such as the Office of the Secretary (OST); Federal Railroad Administration (FRA); FMCSA; NHTSA; and the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration’s (PHMSA) Hazardous Materials Programs.

    Download a section-by-section breakdown:

    STIA-Section-by-Section-FINALv2Download

    “With the economy rebounding, it’s imperative that our long-delayed transportation needs are addressed,” Chair Cantwell said.

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    Ranking Member Roger Wicker (R-Miss.)

    “This bill continues the Commerce Committee’s strong history of working across the aisle to find solutions that benefit all Americans,” Ranking Member Wicker said. “The legislation will grow the economy by increasing authorized funding and making improvements to our rail, freight, ports, research and safety programs. I thank Senator Cantwell for her dedication to these issues, and I look forward to working with my colleagues to pass a comprehensive infrastructure package through the Senate.”

    The American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association (ASLRRA) was among the first in the industry to express its support. President Chuck Baker on June 11 issued the following statement:

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    ASLRRA President Chuck Baker

    “The bill rises to the moment for our country. The proposed legislation recognizes and supports the key role that short lines can play in helping to grow the economy in every part of America, creating and sustaining career jobs at railroads and rail shippers alike, protecting the environment, improving transportation safety, and reducing the burden of heavy freight on overcrowded and expensive-to-maintain highways.

    “The bill provides multiple excellent competitive funding and financing opportunities for short line freight railroads and our public partners through improvements to the CRISI grant program, the RAISE/BUILD/TIGER program (identified in the bill as the Local and Regional Project Assistance program), the INFRA/Nationally Significant Multimodal Freight Projects program, the Railroad Crossing Elimination Program, and the RRIF loan program.

    “While the bill does address quite a few regulations and creates some additional regulatory oversight, overall it does so in a balanced and reasonable fashion, does not include any overly burdensome and unnecessary operational mandates, and is a legislative product that short lines can enthusiastically support.

    “The bill is bipartisan and is the result of extensive negotiation and robust stakeholder input. It certainly has our strong support, and seems likely to garner widespread public support. We very much look forward to supporting the bill as it advances through the Senate Commerce Committee, is combined with other necessary pieces of surface transportation legislation, and is eventually signed into public law.”

    INVEST in America Act Moves to Full House

    The Democrat-led House T&I Committee approved in a party-line vote (38-26) the INVEST in America Act, which was introduced June 4 by Reps. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.), Chair of the T&I Committee; Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.), Chair of the Subcommittee on Highways and Transit; and Donald M. Payne, Jr. (D-N.J.), Chair of the Subcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines, and Hazardous Materials. It now moves to the full House of Representatives.

    “Infrastructure is calling, and we are answering with bold legislation that invests in American workers and communities and lays the groundwork for the president’s visionary Americans Jobs Plan,” Chair DeFazio said on June 10, as he announced the advancement of INVEST in America Act as well as the Water Quality Protection and Job Creation Act of 2021. His intention, he said, is “to pass this surface bill through the House and have a formal conference with the Senate, in regular order, before the end of September.”

    There are more than 60 bill supporters.

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    APTA President and CEO Paul P. Skoutelas

    Upon its debut, American Public Transportation Association (APTA) President and CEO Paul P. Skoutelas expressed appreciation for the provision of $109 billion for transit and $95 billion for commuter rail, Amtrak and other high-performance rail. He said: “This once-in-a-generation, forward-thinking investment will help our communities meet growing mobility demands, create family-wage jobs, expand U.S. manufacturing and supply chains, and grow the economy.

    The ASLRRA was among those supporting the bill as a “first step.” President Chuck Baker noted that it also included a “host of troubling and unnecessary operational mandates and multiple missed funding opportunities where short lines could help achieve the goals of a program, but are not included as eligible recipients.”

    Upon the bill’s advancement, the Association of American Railroads (AAR) stated: “The privately owned freight rail industry urges the House to turn away from partisan policy riders and instead embrace meaningful, overdue investments that can garner widespread support.”

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    AAR President and CEO Ian Jefferies

    AAR President and CEO Ian Jefferies noted: “Right now, we have strong agreement—across party lines and countless stakeholders—around the strategic value of smart investments to modernize our nation’s public infrastructure. Instead of working to drive bipartisan consensus and building on recent momentum in the Senate, the House Committee majority has cast its lot on backwards-looking, divisive policies that will stand in the way of a successful reauthorization. Today’s [June 10] partisan exercise is a wasted opportunity to craft legislation all should be able to embrace.”

    For more details, download the bill’s section-by-section document below, and see the Rail Title (starting on p. 49):

    HR-__-INVEST-in-America-Act-Section-by-Section_Final-1Download

    Not surprisingly, T&I Committee Republican leaders do not support the Act.

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    Rep. Sam Graves (R-Mo.)

    In his opening remarks before the mark-up, Ranking Member Sam Graves (R-Mo.) said: “The Senate EPW Committee was able to successfully find common ground that resulted in unanimous approval, including from Committee Members on both ends of the political spectrum such as Bernie Sanders and Jim Inhofe.

    “But the House Majority is doubling down on last year’s failed process. We’re following the same roadmap to nowhere—it’s ‘My Way or the Highway’ 2.0.”


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