Skip to main content

US highway bill finally receives approval by government

After a long series of delays, the US Government has finally managed to agree the latest highway reauthorisation bill. This comes after numerous short term extensions of the previous bill, due to political stalemate. The short term extensions were not sufficient to allow firms to invest and this situation stunted construction activity in the country. With the bill now in place, contractors will be able to look forward to some transport spending, and will likely increase spending on replacing old constructio
September 27, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
After a long series of delays, the 908 US Government has finally managed to agree the latest highway reauthorisation bill. This comes after numerous short term extensions of the previous bill, due to political stalemate. The short term extensions were not sufficient to allow firms to invest and this situation stunted construction activity in the country. With the bill now in place, contractors will be able to look forward to some transport spending, and will likely increase spending on replacing old construction equipment.

Speaking after the announcement, US transportation secretary Ray LaHood said, “This is a good, bipartisan bill that will create jobs, strengthen our transportation system and grow our economy. It builds on our safety efforts. The bill also provides states and communities with two years of steady funding to build the roads, bridges and transit systems they need.”

The funds for transportation projects will come from the Highway Trust Fund as well as general taxation. The highway bill also gives various states greater freedom to use the federal highway funds as they wish, allowing them to opt out of non-road items and focus on highway projects.

However industry figures have been cautious in response to the bill. President and CEO of the 0 American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA), Pete Ruane, explained that in the short term, the bill will provide stability in federal funding for state and local transportation projects. He added that allowing the states greater freedom to use funds as they see fit will also lead to better targeting of investment for road projects. But Ruane pointed out that for all the positive words of the new bill, there is no additional funding. He said, “even with their federal funds, we are now in a situation where 28 states have invested less in highway and bridge projects over the past 12 months than they did in pre-recession 2008, even when adjusted for inflation.”

Ruane said that the bill provides the first step in making the policy reforms needed to ensure transportation is a priority. However he said that sufficient sources of funding will still have to be found for the transport infrastructure investment required. US transportation expert Ken Orski backed up Ruane and said, “The overall bill failed to address the widening gap between federal highway and transit spending and the user-tax revenues that support the Highway Trust Fund.”

Until this issue is addressed, progress on infrastructure development, including the expansion of the Interstate system, will be limited.

The same problems can be seen throughout most of the world’s developed nations. No new funds are available for road investment, and the on going financial problems mean that this shortfall will not soon disappear. Even in countries such as France, with extensive networks of tolled highways, there is a massive shortfall with regard to spending for trunk and urban roads. Speaking at the recent Eurobitume conference in Istanbul, Andre Broto, vice president of French highway firm 6031 Cofiroute, said that his country’s 12,000km of state-owned national roads require €6 billion just for maintenance and a further €22 billion for necessary expansion, “The problem is how to find €28 billion for national roads.” And he added that France’s rural and urban roads also require investment. He said, “Our main transportation systems: airports, rail, motorways, are nothing without ordinary roads and we need to find some way of investing in them.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bridge safety should become a key US concern
    May 14, 2018
    Bridge safety is a key concern in the US, where so many structures are deficient - *Mary Scott Nabers. There are more than 54,000 structurally deficient bridges in the US. That designation does not mean the bridges are in imminent danger of collapsing, but it does mean that they need immediate attention. That fact becomes more alarming when one realises that every day more than 174 million motorists drive over the nation’s structurally deficient bridges. And, there are no plans for repairing the majority of
  • America: on the brink of better road asset management
    February 23, 2015
    It’s make or break time for highways maintenance in the United States, according to Greg Cohen, head of the American Highways Users’ Alliance, speaking at the Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit in Paris today. What happens in the next year will make the difference between a decade of continuing crumbling road infrastructure or a renaissance in America’s highways, he told delegates attending the first day’s afternoon plenary session. All state governments must submit a road asset management plan to t
  • ARTBA concern over US construction
    February 23, 2012
    The latest survey from the American Road & Transportation Builders Association's (ARTBA) suggests a worrying trend for US road and bridge construction in 2011.
  • New US toll road regulation criticised
    April 10, 2012
    High road toll increases bring threat of new regulation in US - *Bob Poole reports. Large toll rate increases have been implemented recently by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, justified in part to help pay for its World Trade Center project. In response, a bill was introduced in Congress that would allow the Secretary of Transportation to regulate tolls on every bridge on the country's Interstates and other federally aided highways.