Chattanooga Times Free Press

Congress passes highway aid patch

- BY JOAN LOWY

WASHINGTON — Congress sent President Barack Obama a threemonth bill to keep highway and transit money flowing to states on Thursday, one day before the deadline for a cutoff of funds.

Earlier in the day, the Senate passed a sweeping, long-term transporta­tion bill, setting up discussion­s with the House this fall on what the future course of transporta­tion policy should be and how to pay for programs.

The Senate approved the shortterm bill by vote of 91 to 4. The House passed the same bill a day earlier, and then left for its August recess.

Lawmakers said they hope the 3-month patch — the 34th short-term transporta­tion extension since 2009 — will be Congress’ last. It extends the government’s authority to process aid payments to states through Oct. 29. Without congressio­nal action, that authority would have expired at midnight Friday.

The bill also provides $8 billion to shore up the federal Highway Trust Fund through mid-December. The fund’s balance was forecast to drop below a $4 billion cushion necessary to prevent disruption­s in payments to states in early August.

The extension bill also fills a $3.4 billion hole in the Department of Veterans Affairs’ budget. The money gap threatened to force the closure of hospitals and clinics nationwide.

The $350 billion long-term bill, approved by vote of 65 to 34, would make changes to highway, transit, railroad and auto safety programs. However, its sponsors were only able to find enough money to pay for the first three years of the six-year bill. That’s not as long as many lawmakers and the White House wanted, nor as much money, but it was enough to win the support of many state and local officials, transporta­tion related industries and labor unions who have been imploring Congress for years to pass to bill that will provide states the certainty that they can count on federal aid as they plan major constructi­on projects.

The bill’s passage is “a win for our country,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. “Many thought we’d never get here, but we have.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell walks away from the podium after speaking Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell walks away from the podium after speaking Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States