The Columbus Dispatch

Trump set to tout $1T plan for rebuilding

- By Jessica Wehrman

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s trip to Cincinnati today to highlight the nation’s infrastruc­ture needs echoes President Barack Obama’s 2011 visit to the city’s Brent Spence Bridge.

But the similarity ends at the photo op.

While both used the city to highlight the nation’s vast infrastruc­ture needs — Obama the bridge and Trump, who speaks at 1

p.m. at Rivertowne Marina, focusing on inland waterways — how they would pay to meet those needs is vastly different.

Obama would have funded his infrastruc­ture plan with an injection of federal dollars. Trump — whose plan is still being formulated but who campaigned on the promise of a $1 trillion infusion — would rely far more on private investment.

According to his budget, he’d invest $200 billion over 10 years in the nation’s roads, bridges, airports and inland waterways. His plan to privatize the nation’s air traffic control — announced Monday — is an example of how he might approach efforts to rebuild the nation: emphasizin­g private funding over federal funding.

By leveraging private investment, relying on state and city taxes and divesting from some transporta­tion functions, his administra­tion says he can do more with less tax revenue.

It is an idea that some say could work in a small setting but that may be harder on a broader scale.

“This is not a magical silver bullet that will solve all of our infrastruc­ture problems,” said Steve Davis of Transporta­tion for America, an alliance devoted to improved transporta­tion policy.

“You can’t have a toll booth lined up at every intersecti­on,” said Chris Runyan of the Ohio Contractor­s Associatio­n. “Yes, it has a place, but is it going to be a solve-all for a $1 trillion program? No.”

Runyan said that while privatizat­ion has worked in some cases — he called Gov. John Kasich’s turnpike bond leveraging relatively successful — there’s simply no way it can be done on many city roads and rural highways. While it might be a good answer for lane additions or bridges, “I don’t think privatizat­ion is the tool necessaril­y to do the baseline maintenanc­e of our system.”

“Without a revenue stream that goes back to the investors, who wants to invest in that?” he asked.

The needs are vast. According to the American Society of Civil Engineers, driving on roads in need of repair in Ohio costs each driver $475 per year, and 6.9 percent of the state’s bridges are considered structural­ly deficient. Drinking water needs in Ohio will cost an estimated $12.2 billion, and wastewater needs total $14.58 billion. And 362 dams are considered to have high hazard potential.

Matt Bruning, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of Transporta­tion, said the state has been creative in generating money for roads and bridges.

“By finding efficienci­es, leveraging the Ohio Turnpike, and using other innovative sources of funding, we’ve been able to put an unpreceden­ted $14 billion to work on nearly 7,000 projects to improve travel in our state” since Kasich took office, he said.

Infrastruc­ture is one of those rare political issues that everyone can agree on: build or improve roads and bridges, and economic improvemen­ts follow, through building the roads and through easing commercial activity.

“It doesn’t matter who you are — whether you are farmer in the Midwest, or a mother driving your kids to and from school, or a worker or a college kid flying back and forth to school — you’re affected by infrastruc­ture,” said White House economic adviser Gary Cohn in a conference call with reporters.

He said the nation was “falling behind, and falling behind is affecting economic growth in the United States. The president wants to fix the problems, and he doesn’t want to push these liabilitie­s into the future.”

But Casey Dinges, a senior managing director of public affairs for the American Society of Civil Engineers, said that ultimately, taxpayers pay for infrastruc­ture.

“You can pay taxes or tolls,” he said. “When people think privatizat­ion or publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps, they think it’s free or easy money coming from somewhere. That’s not the case. You’re going to pay either way.”

But there are some advantages to privatizat­ion, too, Dinges acknowledg­ed. “Things can move a little faster if you’ve got a private entity involved.”

For decades, the federal government has paid for infrastruc­ture improvemen­t through the Highway Trust Fund — a pot of money paid for through the federal gasoline tax, which, at 18.4 cents a gallon, has not increased since Bill Clinton’s first term.

During the Obama administra­tion, Democrats called for repatriati­ng corporate profits made overseas to pay for infrastruc­ture. Congress ultimately paid for the last $130.9 million million highway bill with a series of budget gimmicks.

And in the meantime, at least 22 states have increased their own gas tax since 2013. Ohio last increased its gas tax in 2003.

Democrats, meanwhile, have pushed for far more federal dollars than Trump is considerin­g, with the Progressiv­e Caucus suggesting $2 trillion in infrastruc­ture investment over 10 years.

Davis, of Transporta­tion for America, said Trump’s campaign promises to invest in infrastruc­ture “have just been continuall­y downgraded.”

“At the heart of this plan is the plan to require states and localities that are already cash-strapped and facing difficult budget circumstan­ces to shoulder more of the burden in order to reduce federal investment into infrastruc­ture,” he said. “That is not a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture plan.”

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