Los Angeles Times

A pitch in North Carolina for Biden infrastruc­ture, jobs plan

- By Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — Vice President Kamala Harris traveled to North Carolina on Monday to talk about economic opportunit­ies and electric school buses as part of the Biden administra­tion’s stepped-up efforts to promote its roughly $2-trillion infrastruc­ture, clean energy and jobs spending proposal.

“The American Jobs Plan is not just about fixing what has been,” Harris said. “It’s about building what can be.”

Harris’ advisors portrayed her 15-minute speech at Guilford Technical Community College in Greensboro, one of her three stops in North Carolina, as her first address on the nation’s economy since she took office, and an opportunit­y to preview the administra­tion’s message as it nears the 100-day mark.

On a factory-style floor surrounded by machines and flags, Harris said the country had administer­ed nearly 200 million COVID-19 vaccine shots, double President Biden’s initial goal, and created a historic number of jobs as the economy begins to rebound from the pandemic’s impact.

“The president and I are ready to keep going and we are not going to take it slow,” she said.

The administra­tion aspires to create “good jobs,” Harris added, defining such jobs as safe, close to home and paying enough to allow Americans to provide for their families without needing a second one.

She said the majority of jobs the spending plan would create would not require more than six months of training. The plan would also fund projects to provide safe drinking water, more accessible broadband service and child care, Harris noted.

The trip underscore­d her role as a top pitch person for the administra­tion’s agenda, even if her role in shaping policy has not yet been clearly defined.

Biden, meanwhile, met at the White House with a small group of lawmakers from both parties, as he has done previously to try to build bipartisan support. His expansive spending plan has yet to draw any Republican support, however.

Critics say the bill includes too many Democratic policy initiative­s that do not relate directly to roads, bridges and other traditiona­l forms of infrastruc­ture, and Republican­s oppose raising taxes on corporatio­ns to help pay for the programs.

Harris also made an unannounce­d stop at the Internatio­nal Civil Rights Center & Museum in Greensboro, built in the former Woolworth’s department store where the sit-in protests of the civil rights movement began after a group of Black students insisted on sitting at the “whites only” lunch counter.

Harris, the first woman of color to become vice president, sat in one of the swivel chairs at the former diner as photograph­ers snapped pictures.

She also toured an electric school bus plant in High Point, showcasing part of the administra­tion’s infrastruc­ture package that connects with her previous work as a senator. In 2019, then Sen. Harris introduced a bill to electrify the nation’s school bus fleet.

The infrastruc­ture package includes $20 billion toward converting a fifth of the nation’s 475,000 yellow school buses from diesel to electric, which advocates say will help meet national emissions standards, add manufactur­ing jobs and better safeguard the health of children. About 95% of the nation’s school buses run on diesel fuel, according to the administra­tion.

The California Energy Commission awarded $70 million toward the same purpose in 2019. A 2016 report by the California Air Resources Board estimated that more than 55% of the 25,400 buses were diesel, with only about one-third powered by gas, natural gas, propane, hybrid or electric motors. A 2020 report said only 1% of the fleet was electric.

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