The Reporter (Vacaville)

Projects GOP tied to Pelosi, Schumer dropped from virus bill

- By Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON >> Republican­s opposing a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package that passed the House have pointed to two transporta­tion projects as examples of pork that would politicall­y benefit Democrats leaders Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi.

Now those projects are out of the bill.

Drew Hammill, a spokespers­on for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, said the Senate Parliament­arian has ruled that a subway extension through downtown San Jose did not meet requiremen­ts for inclusion in the bill because it is part of a pilot project. The project was set to receive about $141 million under the bill that passed in the House. The parliament­arians rulings are generally respected by the Senate.

Also, the $1.5 million in funding to maintain and operate a bridge connecting Canada and the United States in upstate New York, Schumer’s home state, has been removed by Senate drafters of the bill.

The projects represent a tiny fraction of the overall bill’s cost, but they became popular talking points for Republican­s lining up in opposition to the measure, which they says is bloated and unfocused. The subway extension was described as “Speaker Pelosi’s pork subway project” even though it is located 50 miles away from her district.

“Now that the two projects that Republican­s misled the public about in the House bill have been removed, it is unclear how Republican­s will justify their opposition to the American Rescue Plan, which has strong bipartisan support among the public,” Hammill said.

The Senate bill is expected to largely mirror the House-approved package, with the most glaring divergence the Senate’s dropping of language boosting the federal minimum wage to $15 hourly.

Democrats are using special rules that will let them avoid GOP filibuster­s that would require them to garner an impossible 60 votes to approve the legislatio­n.

Shortly before Pelosi’s office confirmed that funding for the rail project had been removed, Bernice Alaniz of the Santa Clara Valley Transporta­tion Authority in California explained that the $141 million slated for the project would help ensure it keeps moving at the planned schedule.

Constructi­on is set to begin in 2022. Local and state sources are putting up three-quarters of the funding for the extension, among the highest match rates for similar projects across the country.

“It really is an essential transit alternativ­e for a highly congested commute corridor and it serves two large universiti­es — San Jose State and Santa Clara University,” Alaniz said. “So I know some of the criticisms are like, ‘oh, it’s for the high-tech oligarchs.’ But we serve transit dependent workers and we serve a large percentage of students going to these colleges.”

The Trump administra­tion boasted of its efforts to fund the rail project when it approved $125 million in federal matching dollars back in 2019.

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