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Bipartisanship brings zilch for bike-ped in Senate outline

Correction: This article, originally posted on Streetsblog yesterday, reported yesterday that the outline of the Senate bill appeared not to preserve dedicated funding for bicycle and pedestrian programs. It has come to Streetsblog's attention that the complete draft of the bill will include a hard commitment to bike-ped programs.

Senate staff tells Streetsbog that Sen. Barbara Boxer worked hard and was able to maintain her priorities in the bill, including dedicated federal support for bike infrastructure. More details will come out at tomorrow's hearing on transportation in Boxer's Environment and Public Works Committee, and we look forward to seeing a complete legislative draft soon.

The Senate Environment and Public Works committee just posted a transportation bill outline on their website, and despite previous assurances by committee chair Barbara Boxer (D-CA), there appears to be no dedicated funding for bicycling and pedestrian programs in the bill.


Chicago's new Kinzie Street bike lane. Will any federal support for such projects remain in the next bill? Photo by John Koonce on Flickr.

The outline focuses on the consolidation of programs and streamlining project delivery, much like the House bill.

The performance measures mentioned in the outlinewhile not necessarily a comprehensive listdon't include emissions reductions, undoubtedly at the insistence of climate-denier Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK), ranking member of the committee.

The outline confirms that the Senate is working on a two-year bill but does not include the dollar amount. "Consolidation" is the name of the game these days and the Senate plays along, making seven core surface transportation programs into five, including a new Transportation Mobility Program, which "sub-allocates" some funds to metropolitan areas, and a National Freight Program, which proponents of multi-modalism have long pushed for.

It preserves the Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program, which funds some bike and pedestrian programs. Transportation Enhancements, another major way such programs are funded, will probably now be under CMAQ. It's unclear whether the Recreational Trails Program will move to CMAQ as well.

But although bike and pedestrian projects will still be eligible for funding, there appear to be no explicit funding guarantees for bike-ped projects, and how funding levels will shake out in the final analysis is anybody's guess.

Like the House, the Senate bill offers states "the flexibility to fund these activities as they see fit"which amounts to a revocation of the federal commitment to funding this work. Many states, absent a federal mandate, will spend virtually nothing on bike/ped infrastructure.

Bicycling advocates had asked for dedicated funding that doesn't pit them against road projects, the same funding proportion as they had in SAFETEA-LU, and changes to Safe Routes to School. None of those features appear to be in this bill.

"It's hard to know without seeing the details, but at first blush it doesn't look good for bike and pedestrian issues," said Andy Clarke, president of the League of American Bicyclists. "Perhaps it's to be expected that there's nothing upfront in the language about protecting dedicated funding, given that it was a topic of some contention among the protagonists. But it's pretty troubling to see no reference to any of the issues that affect cyclists and pedestriansnothing about complete streets, nothing about dedicated funding."

The Senate bill expands and modifies the TIFIA loan program, as does the House bill, and does not mention an infrastructure bank. Boxer indicated in the fall that she was more friendly to an expansion of TIFIA than to a new entity, though more recently she has said that she supported the inclusion of an infrastructure bank in the bill.

On performance outcomes, the outline says:

MAP-21 focuses the highway program on key outcomes, such as reducing fatalities, improving bridges, fixing roads, and reducing congestion, in order to ensure that taxpayers are receiving the most for their money. States will set their own targets for improving safety, road and bridge condition, congestion, and freight movement.
Probably one of the greatest disappointments in the billor at least this outlineis the omission of emissions reductions as one of those performance goals. To set that as a national priority would elevate the importance of transit and active transportation programs. The emphasis here rests squarely with roads.

"Improving bridges" and "fixing roads" don't really sound like performance outcomes, and bicycling advocates fear that, while safety is an essential goal, the fact that there are about 60 times more car fatalities per year than bike fatalities will translate into a far greater focus on car safety than bicycle safety.

By contrast, the Bipartisan Policy Center has suggested setting national transportation goals such as economic growth, metropolitan accessibility, energy security and environmental protection.

The bill does seek to improve state and metro planning processes "to incorporate a more comprehensive performance-based approach to decision making."

The Banking Committee has not yet inserted its transit language, nor has the Commerce Committee come forward with its rail language, so this outline doesn't say anything about those elements.

We understand that the full bill has not even been circulated to Democratic committee members yet, indicating that, despite the false hopes of last week, a formal bill introduction is not yet on the horizon. The committee is holding a hearing this Thursday on "issues" for the reauthorization.

Boxer has promised to hold a hearing before marking up the bill, but the bill would have to be introduced a week in advance if the hearing were going to discuss actual bill text, and there is no longer time for that if the committee is going to mark up the bill before the August recess. So Thursday's hearing will likely be a more general discussion of transportation issues, using this brief outline as a guide.

Cross-postd at Streetsblog Capitol Hill.

Tanya Snyder is editor of Streetsblog Capitol Hill, which covers issues of national transportation policy. She previously covered Congress for Pacifica and public radio. She lives car-free in a transit-oriented and bike-friendly neighborhood of Washington, DC. 

Comments

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And you're surprised? It's a real shame that Pres. Obama didn't push for the reauthorization of the transpo bill in the 2009 Congressional session. We're f*ed now as it relates to sustainable transportation.

by Richard Layman on Jul 20, 2011 12:17 pm  (link)

""Improving bridges" and "fixing roads" don't really sound like performance outcomes, and bicycling advocates fear that, while safety is an essential goal, the fact that there are about 60 times more car fatalities per year than bike fatalities will translate into a far greater focus on car safety than bicycle safety."

That sounds like a win for everyone.

I don't give a rats ass about "reducing emissions" - whatever that might mean. Having something in the transport bill saying "reduce imported oil and gasoline" would be much stronger.

Another obama failure. can't say anyone is shocked here. Why doesn't he take the leftover TARP money and turn that into an infrastructure bank?

by charlie on Jul 20, 2011 12:23 pm  (link)

All I need to do is to see that ocean of asphalt surface parking all around the Capitol building and it tells me that very very few of the US Congress cares about anyone who lives w/o a car or lives in a city. Thus none of this comes as any surprise to me. They will automatically regard any highway monies as absolutely essential but anything essential for how I get around is not important at all.

by w on Jul 20, 2011 1:07 pm  (link)

So if we're to believe the update, the entire premise of this article is wrong too.

by HogWash on Jul 20, 2011 1:26 pm  (link)

Honestly, once a week I find myself looking forward to the day boomers are all dead and gone.

by anon on Jul 20, 2011 1:32 pm  (link)

@HogWash; yep, you nailed it.

This entire series by Tanya reads like a bad email campaign from an advocacy group. Zero analysis and even less relation to the facts.

by charlie on Jul 20, 2011 1:37 pm  (link)

Honestly, once a week I find myself looking forward to the day boomers are all dead and gone.

Or better yet, sell the house, downsize, and more to a condo in the city.

:)

by oboe on Jul 20, 2011 1:44 pm  (link)

Honestly, once a week I find myself looking forward to the day boomers are all dead and gone.

WOW! Wishing that a group of people die? Really?

@Charlie, I hope the facts later back up the assertions in this article because I'm beginning to question the due diligence here and whether there's a real committment to the truth.

by HogWash on Jul 20, 2011 2:18 pm  (link)

@HogWash
I'm beginning to question the due diligence here and whether there's a real committment to the truth.

Oh please. The document that EPW released made no reference to the bike/ped portion of transportation funding, and a lot of people saw that as a place they were going to make cuts.

Then, after LOTS of sites had posted about this, they came out and said "oh no, we're not cutting that, you'll see at the press conference."

And hey, if you don't think you're reading the truth here, then maybe you should just stop reading!

by MLD on Jul 20, 2011 2:35 pm  (link)

"MAP-21 focuses the highway program on key outcomes, such as reducing fatalities, improving bridges, fixing roads, and reducing congestion, in order to ensure that taxpayers are receiving the most for their money."

Ironically, it's been shown that bike and pedestrian infrastructure actually does get taxpayers the most for their money, in terms of cost per impact. Bicycle-related construction actually produces twice as many jobs as that for cars, as documented on the DOT's own blog. Similarly, the health and societal costs of highways are vastly under-estimated even without climate change, as I describe on my blog.

by Shannon on Jul 20, 2011 7:15 pm  (link)

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