Skip to main content

US highway bill will create “much-needed growth engine,” says AEM president

A leading American manufacturing association figure claims Congress approval of the highway bill would create a “much-needed growth engine” for US jobs, infrastructure, and national and global domestic company trade.
March 19, 2012 Read time: 2 mins

A leading American manufacturing association figure claims Congress approval of the highway bill would create a “much-needed growth engine” for US jobs, infrastructure, and national and global domestic company trade.

Dennis Slater, president of the Association of Equipment Manufacturers (676 AEM), was speaking earlier this week ahead of the bill’s consideration by the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee on Thursday, February 2.

 "Our manufacturers believe H.R. 7 is one of the most important pieces of legislation before Congress this session for job growth and for our economic well-being,” said Mr Slater. “AEM urges the House to quickly consider and approve H.R. 7 and to move quickly to conference with the Senate prior to the March 31 deadline of the current stop-gap funding.

"Roads, highways and bridges require long-term project planning. The American Energy & Infrastructure Jobs Act (H.R. 7) provides the construction industry with the market certainty it needs to make capital investments in employees and in equipment with new technologies for improved air quality and operating efficiencies. And in a still tenuous economy, it provides a much-needed growth engine.”

Mr Slater, whose association includes more than 850 company members and more than 200 product lines in construction, agriculture, forestry, mining and utility sectors worldwide, noted that the highway bill maintains federal funding for infrastructure in one of the most difficult budget environments in recent years. If approved, the bill would reform and consolidate existing highway projects, accelerate project approval times, and eliminate earmarks.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Ride sharing could ease US transport congestion
    April 25, 2012
    Increased ridesharing is seen by some in the US as the best opportunity to improve the country's transportation system. However this concept is missing from the Senate's MAP-21 bill for reauthorisation of the transport budget.
  • ARTBA calls for change to air quality standard
    February 20, 2017
    The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) is calling for changes by which the federal Clean Air Act (CAA) sets National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS). The CAA was last amended in 1990 but ARTBA says that official data shows that there has been an increase in distances driven as well as a significant reduction in air pollutants since that time. In a statement submitted for a House Energy & Commerce Committee hearing on modernising environmental laws, ARTBA said: “Overall, th
  • US Tranportation Secretary pessimistic?
    March 15, 2012
    US Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood has expressed doubts that the reauthorisation bill will be passed in the current session of Congress, according to the Innovation Briefs report by Ken Orski.
  • Need for sustainability in infrastructure projects
    July 13, 2012
    What can contractors gain from a sustainability strategy and why is it now a vital business imperative? Abigroup, one of Australia's leading and most diverse national contractors, has developed a sustainability strategy suited to its industry, workforce and business. World Highways discusses this and other issues with Sarah Marshall, Abigroup's national environment and sustainability manager. In the past a responsible business was viewed as one that performed strongly within legal boundaries to maximise pro