Trump administration's infrastructure plan taking shape
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[January 18, 2018]
By Ginger Gibson and David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration is finalizing its long-awaited infrastructure plan, which
would push most of the financing of projects to private investment and
state and local taxpayers, according to sources familiar with the
proposal taking shape.
President Donald Trump, who spoke frequently of improving U.S.
infrastructure during his 2016 campaign, may preview the plan in his
Jan. 30 State of the Union address, but details are not expected until
afterward, the sources said.
Two people briefed on it said it would likely recommend dividing $200
billion in federal funding over 10 years into four pools of funds. The
administration is structuring the plan to encourage $1.35 trillion in
state, local and private financing to build and repair the nation's
bridges, highways, waterworks and other infrastructure, one source said.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the largest business lobbying group in
Washington, is pushing for the administration to fund infrastructure
projects and is even backing a 25 cent increase in the federal gasoline
tax to make that happen, an official with the organization said.
It is unusual for a business group to call for a tax increase, but the
Chamber argues that it is necessary to fund critical infrastructure
projects. Tom Donohue, the Chamber's president, is expected to make four
recommendations in a speech on Thursday to reiterate its call for an
infrastructure deal.
The numbers in the Trump plan are still in flux and could change before
he unveils it. The prospects of winning approval in Congress are
uncertain given that Republicans have only a 51-49 majority in the
Senate.
Many Republicans want to use private-sector investment to finance
infrastructure projects to avoid increasing the national debt. Democrats
believe that government money is necessary to produce such a large
package.
COST-SHARING
Under the Trump plan being shaped, the largest share of the federal
money - $100 billion - is expected to go toward cost-sharing projects
with local governments, similar to grants.
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The goal would be to reduce the ratio of federal funding, which often now is 80
percent, by awarding funds only to projects that are able to provide more local
funding or leverage private investment, said a business lobbyist familiar with
the discussion.
Some $50 billion would be earmarked for rural projects, the lobbyist said. Those
funds would help governors on projects like roads, broadband access and
replacing aging lead pipes. Including a pool for rural infrastructure could also
reduce concerns among some Republican senators who fear rural areas may be
unable to attract private investments.
Twenty-five billion dollars would go toward existing federal infrastructure loan
programs that seek to spur private investment, the lobbyist said.
The final $25 billion would be designated for so-called transformative projects
- an effort being dubbed "American Spirit" projects. They could include
high-speed trains or the Gateway Tunnel, the stalled proposal to build a new
rail connection between New York City and New Jersey.
The plan may not deliver any additional federal money than in years past. The
proposal could take $200 billion from existing spending plans – although the
administration has not yet committed to whether it would come from existing
programs or whether the money would be found elsewhere.
The administration is unlikely to rule out any forms of funding - including
increasing the federal gas tax or creating a vehicle mileage tax, which would
put electric cars that now use the roads but do not consume much gasoline on the
same footing as cars with internal combustion engines, sources said.
Donohue, the Chamber of Commerce president, is also expected to recommend
expanding the ability of states to access private investment funds to complete
projects, reducing the federal permitting process and addressing state and local
permitting rules.
He will call for more federally backed workforce training - including creating
an apprenticeship task force. As part of that, Donohue will reiterate the
Chamber's call for passing comprehensive immigration reform, a proposal where
business has been at odds with the Trump administration.
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson and David Shepardson; Editing by Damon Darlin and
Peter Cooney)
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