Skip to main content

AEM proposes highway funding solutions

The Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) is offering a novel solution to funding sources for the US Highway Bill.
February 15, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Dennis Slater of AEM

The Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) is offering a novel solution to funding sources for the US Highway Bill.

This system will allow the US to rebuild and modernise the interstate system without raising fuel taxation. The proposal, advanced by AEM represents an on-going effort to reinvigorate the stalled debate on infrastructure investment financing. The proposed system was developed jointly by Jack Schenendorf, former vice chairman of the 2598 National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission, of Counsel, Covington & Burling LLP, and Elizabeth Bell, Associate, Covington & Burling LLP.

As the deadline looms to reauthorise the US surface transportation policy by September 30, Schenendorf unveiled two alternative solutions to supplement current federal transportation revenues in a policy paper published by The 2680 Bureau of National Affairs. Realising that the current highway trust fund provides insufficient federal funding to rebuild roads, bridges and highways, Schenendorf has proposed an alternative source of finances.

"Our manufacturers and farmers are at a competitive disadvantage with other countries because of aging infrastructure that has suffered decades of neglect. We risk losing manufacturing and agriculture jobs to overseas markets if Congress further reduces highway spending, as has been proposed in the House. With no political will by policy makers to increase the gas tax, we must look for other practical solutions that ensure the nation's transportation needs are satisfied," said Dennis Slater, president of the 1100 Association of Equipment Manufacturers.

"Both Congress and the President have recognised the severity of our infrastructure problem and the need to fix it. But neither has been able to come up with a funding solution to pay for the increased investments. This proposal will provide the critically needed funding to modernise our surface transportation system, and allows Congress to increase transportation investment without raising motor fuel or diesel fuel taxes and with no increase to the debt or the deficit," asserted Schenendorf. The revenue-neutral transportation funding proposal offers two alternative solutions: a Federal Interstate User Fee (FIUF) and a Federal Motor Carrier User Fee (FMCUF). The Federal Interstate User Fee would work by requiring all vehicles using the Interstate Highway System to pay a user fee. This would be collected through an EZ Pass-like system, which would be entirely electronic. There would be no tollbooths. All of the revenues generated by the fee would be deposited in a special account in the Highway Trust Fund. The revenues would be used exclusively to restore the Interstate Highway System to a state of good repair and to expand to meet the challenges of the 21st century. The fee structure would be set annually, by an independent group of experts, at the level necessary to reimburse the states in accordance with policies established by Congress for the federal share of these improvements. These fees would not however be designed to control the level of traffic or to price out drivers from using the Interstate.

Meanwhile the Federal Motor Carrier User Fee would be imposed on commercial trucks using roads and would be collected through GPS-like systems currently being used by many trucking companies. Importantly, trucks would not be double-charged for distances travelled on the Interstate; rather, those journeys would be recorded through the Federal Interstate User Fee programme. All of the revenues generated by this fee would be deposited in a special account in the Highway Trust Fund and would be used exclusively for freight-related improvements. The same independent entity discussed above would set the fee structure at the level necessary to reimburse the states in accordance with policies established by Congress for the Federal share of these freight improvements.

Related Content

  • Funding: a global issue
    June 23, 2015
    User-pays is crystallising as the preferred option by governments and taxpayers around the world, said Jack Opiola, managing partner of international road usage charging consultancy, D’Artagnan Consulting. Opiola, who chaired a session at the inaugural IRF - Roads Australia Regional Conference for Asia and Australasia in Sydney earlier this month, has been working with several US states which are wrestling with the ‘who pays’ issue. “Some states are propping up their transportation funding with portio
  • US transportation bill wins committee approval
    March 19, 2012
    The American Energy & Infrastructure Jobs Act, a bill introduced in the House by Transportation Committee Chairman John L. Mica and Highways and Transit Subcommittee Chairman John J. Duncan, Jr. has been approved.
  • New international trade crossing linking Canada and US
    June 9, 2015
    The Detroit River is short, only 45km, and narrow in places, less than 1km. Around a quarter of the annual $658 billion Canada-US trade crosses over the river. That’s $160 billion worth of goods trucked each year between Detroit in the US state of Michigan and the Canadian city of Windsor in the province of Ontario - the Windsor-Detroit Corridor. There are several types of crossings, but the vast majority of commercial traffic must use the 2.3km Ambassador Bridge (see box). A new bridge was initially prop
  • EU budget dispute?
    February 28, 2012
    There is both praise and concern in Europe over plans for a new fund to cover transport, energy and telecoms infrastructure projects.