 
    America’s  federal highway trust fund faces running out of money in 2015: a move  that will have a “devastating impact” on states that rely heavily on  federal funds for their road maintenance and construction needs,  transportation officials warned the US Congress this week. Highway  contractors, state transportation officials and the U.S. Chamber of  Commerce all went to Washington this week to lobby Congress, arguing for  a rise in the rate of federal gasoline tax to help boost the coffers.  If the lawmakers agree, it would be the first federal fuel tax hike in  the USA for 20 years.
 
The crisis  in US transportation funding has brought the Democrat and Republican  parties together in the past, but today they are deeply divided over  fiscal policy, especially on the issue of using higher taxes to fund  infrastructure. The problems go deeper than party politics however for  Senator Barbara Boxer from California, chair of the Senate Environment  and Public Works Committee. “We have to act,” she told reports in  Washington last week. “The country is counting on us.”
 
Normally,  the fund spends about $40 billion a year on highway and transit  programs across the states. But, today, the Congressional Budget Office  is predicting no money will be left at all by 2015. “We are facing an  epic crisis,” Greg Cohen, president and CEO of the American Highway  Users Alliance, told the Senate committee. California, for example,  could lose all but $18 million of the $3.5 billion a year it counts on.
 
According  to the American Association of Highway and Transportation Officials,  such a reduction would stop work on hundreds of state-sponsored road  projects, including a $95 million pavement rehabilitation on Interstate  80 in Sacramento County. And without those federal funds, the group  said, California’s own highway fund could go broke soon after. Congress  hasn’t touched the 18.4-cents-a-gallon federal gasoline tax that  supports the highway trust fund since 1993.
 
Inflation  has eroded the fund’s buying power over time and the recession has  forced drivers off the roads, leading to a further fall taxes collected  at the pump. The national fund “will go bankrupt a year from now,” said  Michael Lewis, director of the Rhode Island Department of Transportation  and president of the American Association of State Highway and  Transportation Officials. To prevent this happening, the lobbyists want  the fuel tax to be increased by at least 10 cents a gallon and indexed  to inflation. “We all agree that we have to pay more,” Cohen told the  senate committee.
 
 
     
         
        


