Skip to main content

ARTBA warns of shortfall in funding for US highways

According to the American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA), fixing the Highway Trust Fund (HTF) without generating any new revenue will be highly challenging. ARTBA president Pete Ruane told a Senate panel that such a move would require the equivalent of the US Congress passing and the president signing a 2013-level Murray-Ryan budget deal every year. And this would be sufficient just to maintain current highway and transit programme investment levels. According to a new Congressional Bud
February 14, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
According to the 920 American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA), fixing the Highway Trust Fund (HTF) without generating any new revenue will be highly challenging. ARTBA president Pete Ruane told a Senate panel that such a move would require the equivalent of the US Congress passing and the president signing a 2013-level Murray-Ryan budget deal every year. And this would be sufficient just to maintain current highway and transit programme investment levels.

According to a new Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report, the HTF will be unable to support any investments in new projects come September, and will require, on average, US$16.3 billion/year just to preserve the current transportation programme.  

Ruane warned the Senate Environment & Public Works Committee that if the HTF shortfall is not addressed, more than 12,000 highway, bridge and safety capital projects across the US could be lost. He added that many of these lie on routes vital to the US economy. Ruane noted that trucks carry freight worth more than $11 trillion over the nation’s roads and bridges every year, and nearly 75% of that travel takes place on the federal-aid system. Ruane explained ARTBA’s economics team set about to research how the public’s federal fuel taxes were put to use in 2012. Unfortunately, it took a Freedom of Information Act request and sophisticated computer analysis of millions of data points to get answers. Among the highlights he said the public deserves to hear:  the federal program helped fund 12,546 capital improvement projects (7,335 road, 2,407 bridge, and 2,804 road safety)—all focused primarily on the system that moves most of that $11 trillion. “There are projects in every state.  Every one of them can be identified by name, and location, and by how much was invested in them,” he said, acknowledging that more transparency is needed so the public understands where its tax dollars are invested.  

“We believe one of the federal program’s biggest problems is that government at all levels does a poor job of telling the American public how their federal gas and diesel tax dollars are invested each year,” Ruane said. “We believe the public would be impressed and widely support this federal programme if they knew the full story. If the public was asked to invest each month as much as they willingly spend on cell and landline phone service, we would not be here talking about the Highway Trust Fund problem. We would be providing Americans with the first-class transportation network they deserve,” Ruane concluded

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ARTBA announces winners of its student video contest
    September 19, 2012
    The American Road and Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) has announced the winners of its annual student video contest. A group of 18 high school students from North Carolina and three graduate and post-graduate students from New England were named winners. Sponsored by ARTBA’s Research and Education Division (RED), the contest challenges grade school and post-secondary students to develop a brief video that explores issues relating to America’s transportation network. Students were asked to addres
  • Colombia’s ANI agency is driving forward the 4G PPP programme
    April 4, 2016
    Andrade Moreno is a man on a mission. The head of Colombia's infrastructure agency ANI explains how the organisation is giving foreign companies increasing confidence to invest time and money in the country. David Arminas reports Change, especially when it touches the highest levels of South American business and politics, can bring with it personal danger. Luis Fernando Andrade Moreno, president of Colombia's National Infrastructure Agency - ANI - was aware of this when he took on the role in 2011. B
  • ARTBA sees growth for US transport construction
    December 5, 2017
    Steady growth in the US market for transport infrastructure construction in 2018. This prediction comes from a new report by the American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA). The report suggests that the US transportation infrastructure market will rebound slightly next year, following a 2.8% drop in 2017.
  • Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) anger over East West Link
    August 6, 2013
    The Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) fear the design of the proposed multi-billion dollar East West Link highway in Melbourne will have a “substantial visual, environmental and amenity” impact on peoples quality of and the open spaces they enjoy. Kirsten Bauer, president of the AILA Victorian Chapter, has attacked the plans for the 18km tolled motorway, set to run from the western suburbs to the Eastern Freeway, after she and other Victorian AILA members had reviewed the “so called detai