The Mercury News Weekend

Trump’s failing to make America’s infrastruc­ture great

The state of the union is crumbling. The need to invest in infrastruc­ture is one of the few issues on which even President Trump and California Gov. Jerry Brown agree.

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During the presidenti­al campaign Trump pledged to invest $1 trillion in infrastruc­ture projects that would have made America safer and more competitiv­e in the global marketplac­e. But he didn’t offer details about how it would be funded. He also missed a golden opportunit­y for a bipartisan deal during his first 100 days in office that could have dramatical­ly changed the trajectory of his presidency.

The president did say during his State of the Union address Tuesday that “We will build gleaming new roads, bridges, highways, railways and waterways across our land.” And now his overall plan calls for a $1.5 trillion investment over 10 years. But only $200 billion would come from the federal government. The rest of the $1.3 trillion would have to come from private investment and local and state funding.

It’s a non- starter. State and local government­s simply don’t have that kind of money. The federal government has historical­ly contribute­d 50 percent of the funding for infrastruc­ture projects. Trump is proposing that the federal investment would be only 20 percent. He also wants to get the money by cutting an equal amount from the federal budget. Good luck getting bipartisan support for cuts of that magnitude.

California’s share of the $200 billion wouldn’t begin to cover the state’s needs, even in the unlikely event that the president offers up a generous proportion of the funding to a state he routinely trashes.

Less than a month after Trump took office, the governor submitted a $100 billion wish list of infrastruc­ture projects for Trump to consider that would work in conjunctio­n with the state’s 10year transporta­tion investment plan.

Several high-priority Bay Area investment­s were included in the list of 51 projects, some of which are already in the works but could use additional federal funding to complete:

• Constructi­ng a multicount­y express lane network to relieve Bay Area congestion for freight and major job centers along Interstate­s 80 and 680 and Highways 101, 85 and 237.

• Improving highway interchang­e and truck scales at the I- 80/I- 680 interchang­e.

• Building four express lanes on Highway 156, a major freight and regional connector in Monterey and San Benito counties.

• Extending BART to San Jose. Electrify Caltrain on the Peninsula. Expand and replace BART and Muni rail fleets.

The quality of U. S. infrastruc­ture is falling behind other developing countries because of the failure to update systems that were considered state of the art 50 years ago. Our economic success depends on the efficiency and quality of our transporta­tion, water and energy systems.

Bay Area counties are doing their part to raise funding for maintainin­g and improving our transporta­tion systems. Brown and the Legislatur­e have made moves to generate infrastruc­ture funding. Trump needs to back up his campaign pledge and make the necessary investment to keep America from falling apart.

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