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Infrastructure Week is here, and with it comes the “unofficial” start by Congress to write the next surface transportation and infrastructure law.
With so much attention by lawmakers—and the public—on budget reconciliation, it’s easy to forget that Congress is already hard at work on a new surface transportation and infrastructure law. This law will follow the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA)—the largest federal investment in American infrastructure in half a century—and already States and other transportation stakeholders are anxiously tracking the fate of potentially hundreds of billions of dollars for our nation’s roads, bridges, railways, transit systems, and ports as well as the future of the laws that govern the movement of our cars, trucks, railroads, and buses.
Each day, millions of American families and businesses rely on our nation’s infrastructure for their mobility needs and to get goods to market. Years of underinvestment in our nation’s infrastructure led to deferred maintenance and delays in projects critical to our nation’s competitiveness and economic growth. Thankfully, as outlined in the American Society of Civil Engineers’ “Report Card for America’s Infrastructure,” there has been recent improvement, underscoring the importance of continued progress.
Here are several priorities lawmakers must address in the next infrastructure bill to keep America’s economic growth and competitiveness on the right track.
America’s roads, bridges, railways, transit systems, and ports are essential to our economy, moving people and freight efficiently around the country. New infrastructure investments must advance the totality of this transportation network to boost economic growth and strengthen our quality of life.
To do so, Congress should maintain funding levels that build on the investments of the previous reauthorization. We’ve seen federal investments successfully help fix freight traffic bottlenecks, improve road safety and ease congestion, and give states and regions the ability to rebuild and reimagine their communities. Lawmakers must continue that momentum to deliver these benefits to more communities across the nation.
A substantial hurdle to building and improving infrastructure is the broken federal permitting process, which often adds years of delays and unnecessary costs. Lawmakers must prioritize streamlining and modernizing the permitting process, removing bureaucratic roadblocks that have stunted the building of infrastructure necessary to meet the needs of our modern society and compete globally.
The successful, fast-track completion of emergency projects like the I-95 rebuild in Philadelphia and Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge shows that we can streamline processes and work more efficiently. By cutting red tape, we can unlock faster construction, lower costs, and fund more projects that enhance the quality of life for more American workers and families.
Americans need dependable infrastructure that ensures safety and efficiency for communities, businesses, and the economy. That means investing in roads, bridges, ports, and transit systems that are reliable against weather-related and man-made disruptions. As technology evolves, it offers new ways to shore up our infrastructure with technology solutions that strengthen our system, reduce future risks, and are built with longevity in mind.
Stable funding from Washington, D.C., provides states with the confidence to plan infrastructure investments over the long term. Historically, the federal government’s contribution to these investments was generated by revenues from the gas tax—but the gas tax was last raised in 1993 despite rising construction costs and growing infrastructure needs. Increasingly, Congress is buying debt to make up the difference.
This is why we are calling on Congress to restore the “user fee” as the cornerstone of surface transportation funding. Congress must modernize the user fee to reflect the realities of rising construction costs, the improving fuel efficiency of gasoline-powered vehicles, and the growing share of electric vehicles traveling on our roads, which will ensure all users contribute meaningfully to maintaining and improving our nation’s roads, bridges, and transit systems.
The next infrastructure bill has the potential to be more than just a policy decision—it can be a defining moment for America’s future. Following these recommendations will ensure modern, efficient, and secure infrastructure and transportation systems that strengthen America’s global competitiveness, enhance national security, and spur a manufacturing renaissance.
]]>For the last several years, the Chamber and our Permit America to Build coalition of nearly 350 organizations from every corner of the country and every sector of our economy have been delivering the message that America cannot afford to wait any longer to modernize its broken permitting system. Businesses are ready and willing to innovate, invest, and build, but we need a permitting system that will help, not hinder, those efforts.
From highways and housing to energy, infrastructure, and broadband expansion, the ability to build is being stifled by a tangled and inefficient permitting process. Projects that should be approved in months are delayed for years, burdened by excessive reviews, interagency gridlock, and legal uncertainty. What used to be a low bureaucratic hurdle has now become a major barrier to economic growth, energy security, and environmental progress.
The Chamber’s Permit America to Build initiative calls for a comprehensive permitting reform package guided by four principles: predictability, efficiency, transparency, and stakeholder input.
The good news: These principles are not only nonpartisan but also realistic and practical. They reflect the urgent need to streamline permitting to address delays, reduce costs, and enable the timely construction of critical infrastructure, fostering economic growth while delivering community benefits.
Momentum is building. Bipartisan interest in reform is growing, with lawmakers from both sides recognizing that permitting delays hurt all sectors—from expanding ports and connecting clean energy to the grid, to improving safety and reducing congestion on highways.
Congress must enact durable, comprehensive reform that applies across sectors and withstands political shifts. This is a pivotal moment to address critical challenges, such as energy security, the global AI race, and economic competitiveness, building the infrastructure needed to accelerate our nation’s future, unlock opportunities, and drive economic growth.
We’re encouraged by Leader Scalise’s comments, and we are working with other Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle who share it. We will work with lawmakers to craft solutions that deliver results for businesses, communities, and the environment.
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