Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Investing in our future

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“Infrastruc­ture Week” is no longer a punchline. As President Joe Biden signed the $1.2 trillion bill into law Monday, he kicked off the biggest spending program in more than a decade to build and rebuild the nation’s essential infrastruc­ture.

Over the coming years, the U.S. will significan­tly ramp up constructi­on related to roads, bridges, water systems, broadband, ports and the power grid. These are the kinds of government projects that are vital for the nation’s safety, well-being and economic strength. These investment­s will make a real impact on people’s lives by helping keep the lights on during heat waves, by expanding public transit so people can get to work without a car and by giving students reliable Internet access so they can do their schoolwork.

The nation is facing the even more daunting job of preparing communitie­s for the onslaught of climate change. From the wildfires to flooding to coastal erosion, extreme weather patterns are already taxing the nation’s infrastruc­ture. The U.S. has to address climate change on two fronts: Rebuilding communitie­s to withstand the effects of climate change, while rapidly reducing the nation’s reliance on fossil fuels to slow global warming to avoid greater devastatio­n. All of that work will cost a lot of money.

Yet, despite the need, it was still a battle to pass the bill. Biden had to scale back his infrastruc­ture vision to get bipartisan support—something that is far too rare in Washington, even for programs that have long been supported by Democrats and Republican­s.

Biden’s initial plan rightly recognized that the U.S. must also strengthen the infrastruc­ture—including education, child care, housing and health care—that allows people to work, to invent and to adapt to a changing climate. But to appease Republican­s and some Democrats, the social spending was removed and the bipartisan bill primarily funds convention­al brick-and-mortar infrastruc­ture. Much-needed housing, community and climate programs are, for now, still included in the Build Back Better Act, which is being negotiated in Congress.

For too long, the U.S. has been a nation resting on its laurels, too self-satisfied with past achievemen­ts to recognize the need to keep building toward a brighter future and the country is now paying the price in deferred maintenanc­e. The infrastruc­ture bill is an overdue re-investment, but it should only be the first installmen­t.

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