Biden team readies wider economic package after virus relief

Looking beyond the $1.9 trillion COVID relief bill, President Joe Biden and lawmakers are laying the groundwork for another top legislative priority — a long-sought boost to the nation’s roads, bridges and other infrastructure that could run into Republican resistance to a hefty price tag.
Biden and his team have begun
discussions on the possible outlines of an infrastructure package with members
of Congress, particularly mindful that Texas’ recent struggles with power
outages and water shortages after a brutal winter storm present an opportunity
for agreement on sustained spending on infrastructure.
Gina McCarthy, Biden’s national
climate adviser, told The Associated Press that the deadly winter storm in
Texas should be a “wake-up call” for the need for energy systems and other
infrastructure that are more reliable and resilient.
“The infrastructure is not built to withstand
these extreme weather conditions,” said Liz Sherwood-Randall, a homeland
security aide to the president. “We know that we can’t just react to extreme
weather events. We need to plan for them and prepare for them.”
A White House proposal could come
out in March.
“Now is the time to be aggressive,” said
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, a former South Bend, Indiana, mayor
who knows potholes.
At a conference with state and
local highway officials Thursday, he referred to the often-promised,
never-achieved mega-initiative on roads, bridges and the like from the Trump
administration.
“I know you are among those who are working and
waiting most patiently, or maybe impatiently, for the moment when
Infrastructure Week will no longer be a kind of Groundhog’s Day promise — but
actually be something that delivers generational investments,” he said.
Much of America’s infrastructure —
roads, bridges, public drinking and water systems, dams, airports, mass transit
systems and more — is in need of major restoration after years of underfunding,
according to the American Society of Civil Engineers. In its 2017
Infrastructure Report Card, it gave the national infrastructure an overall
grade of D+.
Both chambers of Congress will use
as starting points their unsuccessful efforts to get infrastructure bills
through the last session.
Democrats passed a $1.5 trillion
package in the House last year, but it went nowhere with the Trump
administration and the Republican-led Senate. A Senate panel approved narrower
bipartisan legislation in 2019 focused on reauthorizing federal transportation
programs. It, too, flamed out as the U.S. turned its focus to elections and
COVID-19.
Biden has talked bigger numbers,
and some Democrats are now urging him to bypass Republicans in the closely
divided Congress to address a broader range of priorities urged by interest
groups.
During the presidential campaign,
Biden pledged to deploy $2 trillion on infrastructure and clean energy, but the
White House has not ruled out an even higher price tag. McCarthy said Biden’s
upcoming plan will specifically aim at job creation, such as with investments
to boost “workers that have been left behind” by closed coal mines or power
plants, as well as communities located near polluting refineries and other
hazards.
“He’s been a long fan of investing in
infrastructure — long outdated — long overdue, I should say,” White House press
secretary Jen Psaki said Thursday. “But he also wants to do more on caregiving,
help our manufacturing sector, do more to strengthen access to affordable
health care. So the size — the package — the components of it, the order, that
has not yet been determined.”
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.,
chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, recently told the White House that
he’s ready to use the budget maneuver known as reconciliation to pass a broad
economic recovery package with only Democratic votes. That drew stern warnings
from Republicans who have already closed ranks against Democrats’ COVID-19
relief bill.
West Virginia Sen. Shelley Moore
Capito, the top Republican on the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee, said there’s bipartisan support for ambitious steps on
infrastructure. But that “should not extend to a multitrillion-dollar package
that is stocked full with other ideologically driven, one-size-fits-all
policies that tie the hands of our states and our communities,” she said.
Capito will be helping to craft
bipartisan legislation on the Senate side.
Rep. Peter DeFazio, chairman of
the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, told the AP that he
foresees a comprehensive House package that will go beyond roads, bridges and
public transit.
He also expects it to have money
for water systems, broadband and the power grid — addressing a weak
infrastructure laid bare after the crippling blackouts in Texas.
He’s not ready to talk overall
costs yet. DeFazio, D-Ore., said it will be up to the Biden administration and
the House Ways and Means Committee to figure out how to pay for it.
DeFazio said General Motors’
recently announced goal of going largely electric by 2035 demonstrates the need
for massive spending on charging stations across the country. Biden campaigned
on a plan to install 500,000 charging stations by the end of 2030.
“I’m totally willing to work with (Republicans)
if they’re willing to recognize climate change,” DeFazio said, “or if they
don’t want to recognize climate change, they can just recognize that electric
semis and electric vehicles are a flood on the horizon and we’ve got to get
ahead of it.”
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, D-Mich.,
expressed a similar sentiment, urging strong action on carbon emissions and the
vehicle charging stations to help achieve a “full transition to electric.” She
also wants states to have more federal grants for infrastructure repairs after
natural disasters and extreme weather.
At the Senate hearing where she
spoke, Republican Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland said there’s bipartisan support
among governors for relieving congestion, cutting red tape, leveraging private
sector investment and ensuring projects can better withstand cyber attacks and
natural disasters.
Democratic Sen. Tom Carper of
Delaware, the new chairman of the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee, said his goal is for his committee to pass an infrastructure bill by
Memorial Day.
In the House, Rep. Sam Graves, the
top Republican on the transportation panel, said Republicans would be open to a
larger package as long as it didn’t greatly add to the national debt.
But many lawmakers oppose an
increase in the federal gas tax, one way to help pay for the spending, while
groups such as the Chamber of Commerce argue against increasing taxes on
companies during a pandemic.
White House aide Cedric Richmond,
a former congressman from Louisiana, told state transportation officials the
president intends for most of the spending to be paid for, not added to the
debt. In part, this would be by reversing some of the Trump administration tax
cuts.
Ed Mortimer, a vice president at
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said removing items in last year’s infrastructure
bill for renovating schools and low-income housing could lower the price tag,
because the COVID relief measure passed by the House already has hundreds of
billions of dollars for those purposes.
“Affordable housing, school
construction, very meritorious, but we’re not sure that that’s a key focus
that’s going to get a bill signed into law,” Mortimer said.