Albany Times Union

4,300 projects are under way

Roads, bridges, other work are laying “a foundation for tremendous growth” in U.S.

- By Josh Boak Washington

Six months after the signing of President Joe Biden’s $1 trillion infrastruc­ture package, the government said Monday there are 4,300 projects under way with more than $110 billion in funding announced — milestones the administra­tion is publicly heralding as midterm politics intensify.

White House senior adviser Mitch Landrieu, the former mayor of New Orleans,

said the roads, bridges and other projects are laying “a foundation for tremendous growth into the future.” Landrieu said Biden and members of his administra­tion have made more than 125 trips to highlight the bipartisan investment­s in infrastruc­ture. He declined to predict how much the storytelli­ng will resonate with voters as constructi­on starts.

“I think that if Americans step back, we will all have to admit that for the last 50 years we’ve had the need to do this and we haven’t found the will or the way to get it done,” Landrieu told reporters. He added that this is a “wonderful down payment” on infrastruc­ture needs in the country that total roughly $7 trillion.

The administra­tion made a strategic calculatio­n that delivering results would help Democrats retain control of the House and the Senate in this year’s elections. Infrastruc­ture was a rare source of bipartisan unity as Biden struck a deal that attracted several Republican senators. The law contains money to expand internet access and replace lead water pipes and for rail and public transit projects and investment­s to address climate change.

When Biden signed the law on Nov. 15, he pledged to voters that “America is moving again and your life is going to change for the better.”

Six months later, the stock market is down, inflation is near a 40-year peak, Russia’s war in Ukraine is pushing up energy costs and many Americans feel

pessimisti­c about the economy’s health. There is an open question whether voters will reward infrastruc­ture projects in which the benefits are years away as part of what Biden has portrayed as an “infrastruc­ture decade.”

“All we can do is tell the story about what we do, and the impact that it has on the midterms will be whatever it’s going to be,” Landrieu said.

Of the $110 billion announced so far, $52.5 billion is for federal highway funding this fiscal year and $20.5 billion for public transit. There is another $27 billion over five years for bridges, as well as money for safety, rural highways, airports, ports, drought resilience and other programs.

The infrastruc­ture spending is also one area where political leaders will have to share credit with each other. Governors and mayors are responsibl­e for 90 percent of the expenditur­es in the law, while the federal government accounts for 10 percent of the spending. The administra­tion has actively tried to help state and local government­s compete for the money, with Landrieu noting that even Republican critics are generally eager to receive the funding.

“Some really smart person said, you know, even those people that voted no want the dough,” he said. “This is as close to consensus in my political life that I have seen.”

The Commerce Department last week called on states to begin the process of submitting their plans for universal access to high-speed internet. Biden has also taken steps to maximize the likelihood that constructi­on materials are made domestical­ly, as the money has started to go out.

Landrieu said the two biggest challenges of coordinati­ng the spending have involved offering technical assistance to smaller government­s and enabling workforce developmen­t to fill the jobs being created. There are 7.6 million constructi­on jobs in the U.S., with employers advertisin­g 400,000 openings in the sector.

Landrieu said those challenges are also “an unbelievab­le opportunit­y to get right something that we actually haven’t been collective­ly very good at in the country.”

 ?? Susan Walsh / Associated Press ?? White House infrastruc­ture coordinato­r Mitch Landrieu, center, speaks Monday during a briefing on the six-month anniversar­y of the law.
Susan Walsh / Associated Press White House infrastruc­ture coordinato­r Mitch Landrieu, center, speaks Monday during a briefing on the six-month anniversar­y of the law.

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