Las Vegas Review-Journal

Can Congress pass legislatio­n that makes sense?

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Most of what we hear about Washington, D.C., these days is how dysfunctio­nal it is, and the reputation is well earned. We are in an era when political power and absolutist ideology have become far more important to prominent politician­s than actually passing legislatio­n that might prove helpful to the American people.

But there is a more nuanced side to the story. Important things still happen in Washington, and many members of Congress actually do want to get something done for their country rather than just their political party.

Among those pieces of legislatio­n is a little-noticed bill that Sen. John Cornyn, R-texas, and a Democratic colleague introduced recently that soared through the body on unanimous consent. The bill would give states much more flexibilit­y in how to spend funds the federal government provided under the CARES Act and the American Rescue Plan.

Billions of dollars went unused, as states didn’t have enough places to put money that was intended for pandemic relief.

Under the bill Cornyn co-sponsored with Sen. Alex Padilla, D-calif., eligible government­al entities could spend the greater of $10 million or 30% of their unspent relief funding on infrastruc­ture, disaster relief, housing, community developmen­t and other matters.

In Texas, that amounts to $9.6 billion in funds that could be redirected to projects that can lift up communitie­s. In California, it’s $14.5 billion.

Across the country, tens of billions of dollars that might be misdirecte­d toward unnecessar­y spending on anything the states can label as COVID-19 relief could instead be spent on bridges, roads, carbon reduction programs and a host of other things the nation needs.

We have supported the Biden administra­tion’s plan to spend more than $1 trillion on restoring American infrastruc­ture, even as we have raised concerns about the president’s much larger and nebulous spending package.

As things stand, the infrastruc­ture bill, which has bipartisan support, is bogged down with progressiv­es’ demand that it’s all or nothing.

We hope that Cornyn’s more modest, common-sense bill doesn’t fall victim to the same fate. There is no state in the union that couldn’t put some of the COVID-19 relief money to better use now. Every senator, Republican or Democrat, recognizes that. Will the House have the sense to let good legislatio­n happen?

We can’t say we are optimistic it will happen. We can only say it needs to happen.

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