Senate Committee Passes Transportation Reauthorization Bill
On November 9, the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee unanimously passed S. 1813, “Moving Head for Progress in the 21st Century Act,” or “MAP-21” (Boxer, D-CA), a two-year surface transportation bill that will allow greater flexibility for state spending and tighter accountability measures for state Departments of Transportation (DOT) and Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPO).
MAP-21 will maintain current baseline surface transportation spending, plus inflation, for two years. The EPW committee’s portion of the bill covers the “highways” section, while the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs is responsible for writing the “transit” section, and the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation is responsible for writing the sections pertaining to “rail” and “safety.” Banking and Commerce have not yet released their portions of the bill. Funding for the highway programs will be drawn from the Highway Trust Fund, and EPW is waiting for the Senate Committee on Finance to identify sources to pay for the bill. Another $12 billion must be identified for the bill to be fully funded.
MAP-21 makes several changes to existing surface transportation programs, including increasing funding for the Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Program (TIFIA) and authorizing a program to fund major projects of national and regional significance. Of particular significance to the states are the reduction of the number of core highway programs from seven to five, and the incorporation of performance measures that would track progress toward specific targets.
Five Core Programs
-
National Highway Performance Program: This new core program consolidates the Interstate Maintenance, National Highway System, and Highway Bridge programs. The new program will require states to develop asset management plans and establish performance targets in response to nationally set performance measures that will assess the condition of roads and bridges, and the performance of the system. This program will provide states with more flexibility to apply funds to the most needed projects by eliminating barriers between existing programs. However, the bill also requires that states spend a certain amount of funding on the repair of interstate pavement and national highway system bridges if they fall below minimum standards established by U.S. Department of Transportation.
-
Transportation Mobility Program: This new core program replaces the Surface Transportation Program, and will continue to provide states and localities with flexibility to fund projects that fit their needs. The program will allow states and regions to invest in highways, transit projects, freight rail projects, and bicycle and pedestrian projects, in addition to other activities.
-
National Freight Program: This new core program will provide funding to states by formula for projects to improve regional and national freight movements on highways, including intermodal connectors. This program will make it easier for freight mobility improvement projects to receive funding since they will compete in their own program, and not against all highway projects.
-
Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program: CMAQ is an existing program that provides funds to states for transportation projects designed to reduce traffic congestion and improve air quality. MAP-21 will expand the program by including particulate matter as one of the pollutants addressed and requiring large metropolitan areas to develop performance plans. In addition, MAP-21 will reform the Transportation Enhancements (TE) program by consolidating Transportation Enhancements, Safe Routes to School, Recreational Trails, environmental mitigation, and certain types of road projects into a “reserved” pot. While this consolidation will provide states with greater spending flexibility, it may result in a decrease in bicycle and pedestrian projects that had previously received their own dedicated funding source.
- Highway Safety Improvement Program: MAP-21 will substantially increase the amount of funding for this existing core program, and will require states to develop and implement a safety plan that identifies highway safety programs and a strategy to address them. In addition, states will be required to create a database containing information on safety issues for all public roads, and will be required to develop performance targets on fatalities and serious injuries. States will also be required to develop a strategic highway safety plan within a year, and are required to spend additional funding on safety projects if they do not meet this deadline.
Performance Measures: As mentioned above, MAP-21 will establish performance measures related to the National Highway System, NHS performance, safety, freight, congestion mitigation and air quality. In response to these performance measures, states and MPOs will establish performance targets which will be incorporated into transportation plans. Statewide transportation improvement programs (STIP) and metropolitan transportation improvement programs (TIP) must include performance measures and targets as well, and a system performance report must include progress toward achieving each state’s performance targets. These performance targets will assist states and MPOs in targeting limited resources on projects that will improve their transportation system.
The EPW committee also adopted 18 amendments. Senator Mike Crapo’s third amendment allows states with policy plans to continue to follow their current approach, rather than creating a new long-range transportation plan. Several other amendments affect states, including an amendment that provides for the timely provision by Department of Energy of state requests for data and technical support, and an amendment that would provide states ample time to comment on a DOT regulation establishing minimum standards for states to use in developing and operating pavement and bridge systems.
