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Federal highway system needs mid-life correction
By Sen. Jim DeMint
This year we celebrate the 50th birthday of our interstate highway system. When President Dwight D. Eisenhower envisioned a national system of interstate highways, his generals mind was understandably frustrated by the many weeks it took to travel from sea to shining sea.
Now, with an interstate highway system that is complete, it is hard to imagine life without this vital network that weaves America together into a seamless tapestry of commerce and vacation travel.
But now our federal highway program is facing a mid-life crisis, having fallen victim to special interest carve-outs, which have left the program with scattered priorities that lack a clear, unified mission.
Currently, gas taxes the federal government takes from the states are supposed to be designated for highway maintenance, but instead are used to fund a Congressional earmark feeding-frenzy. From bridges to nowhere, to bike paths and walking trails, fewer of these funds are actually being spent to build critical infrastructure and instead appear as pork-barrel spending for politicians pet projects.
Congress has become addicted to this broken system, and politicians are forced to play along or allow their states to lose out on vital funds.
We decry run-away government spending all the while basking in the kudos received while announcing that weve brought home the bacon as we travel the ribbon-cutting circuit.
We consistently trump the on-the-ground assessments of community leaders, instead making cities and counties bend over backwards to find ways to target their funding requests to fit whatever new program Washington has determined is a top priority.
And many communities spend even more money to hire expensive lobbyists, hoping to get some of their tax dollars back.
To further complicate the problem, many states continue to see their gas tax dollars go to fund roads in other regions due to outdated funding formulas.
While we in South Carolina, as a donor state, had to fight to increase our rate of return from 78 cents to 92 cents for each gas tax dollar we send to Washington, donee states, especially in the northern and western parts of the nation, continue to enjoy anywhere from a 100 to 600% return on the same money.
The current system that allows Congress to decide where to build neighborhood sidewalks and countless other local projects is failing taxpayers.
But we can have a highway program that addresses infrastructure needs while returning dollars and decisions to the state and local communities where they belong.
Funding the upkeep of the interstate highway system is a clear Constitutionally supported role that the federal government must maintain. It also makes perfect sense for Washington to continue to provide for roads on federally owned land, like in our national parks.
However, the federal role should stop there. South Carolinians have the best understanding of needs in our state, and our state officials are far better suited to address local infrastructure needs than bureaucrats or politicians in Washington.
That is why I introduced a bill that turns control of the majority of federal highway programs to individual states starting in 2010 when the current program expires.
My bill reduces the federal gas tax from 18.3 cents to 3.7 cents in order to fund only a limited number of programs that serve a clear national purpose. In return, states can adjust their state gas tax to prevent consumers from being unfairly penalized and keep most of the gas tax revenue to pay for local priorities.
This idea injects some common sense into the current pork-barrel process and eliminates the waste of both time and resources each state currently expends fighting with 49 others to get back a fair share of their own money.
My bill also proposes ways to finance roads and gives new authority to states that allows them to partner with other states to undertake multi-state projects.
Theres no reason why a group of states shouldnt be able to find ways to work together to fund roads without interference from the federal government.
The bottom line: This legislation would leave many regulatory decisions up to the states, allowing them to decide what works best within their borders as opposed to a Washington-knows-best solution that cant possibly account for local priorities.
It is high time we addressed our highway systems mid-life crisis. We must take a hard look at what is working and, more importantly, what is not.
The current program doesnt make sense for the nation, and it doesnt make sense for states where the rubber actually meets the road.
Only by stopping Washingtons micromanagement of these critical infrastructure dollars will we be able to guarantee a legacy of continued economic growth and opportunity for the next 50 years.
Jim DeMint is a South Carolina U.S. Senator from Greenville.
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