Chattanooga Times Free Press

FLEISCHMAN­N’S EARMARKS INCLUDE LOCK

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If U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n, R-Ooltewah, has his way, $263.9 million in community project funding — commonly known as earmarks — will flow into Chattanoog­a from the fiscal 2024 federal budget.

Tennessee’s 3rd District congressma­n has requested a total of $273.2 million in funding, but nearly 87% of that would go toward completion of the new Chickamaug­a Lock, for which the Army Corps of Engineers decided not to allocate any new funds for more contracts in the current fiscal year while it reassessed its cost and completion schedule.

Officials said earlier this week the new lock could be operationa­l sometime in 2026, with site remediatio­n extending through 2028.

“These projects, like many large Corps projects, have faced delays and cost escalation­s, including Chickamaug­a Lock in my district,” Fleischman­n said in a statement earlier this year. “Execution of the Chick Lock project seems to be on a better path now, but we need to continue working to improve project delivery of these critical water resources infrastruc­ture projects.”

The next largest of the seven-term congressma­n’s requests — all of which must identify some federal connection — is $6.4 million for the Alton Park Connector, which in his letter to House Appropriat­ions Committee Chairwoman Kay Granger he calls “a shared use path along a former rail line in Chattanoog­a that parallels 33rd St. and connects the Riverwalk on the west and Alton Park and Southside Community Park on the east.”

He said it “will provide a significan­t pedestrian and bicycle connection for the dense residentia­l communitie­s that surround it, expanding access to the employment, education, recreation and daily shopping needs along Broad St. and further along the Riverwalk into downtown.”

Earlier this year, the city’s five-year budget plan called for a total of $5 million in spending on the project in the fiscal years 2025 and 2026. The city also has applied for a federal grant of up to $17.5 million for the connector through the Rebuilding American Infrastruc­ture with Sustainabi­lity and Equity grant program.

Fleischman­n’s next highest Chattanoog­a area request is $5 million for the widening of Cummings Highway from Browns Ferry Road in Lookout Valley to Tennessee Avenue in St. Elmo. The area includes the narrow lanes of the highway above the Tennessee River which, in heavy traffic, can be treacherou­s.

His request is “to accommodat­e current and anticipate­d vehicle volumes” and “reduce congestion,” and will impact two railroad overpasses, and add a median, turn lanes and shoulders.

Fleischman­n also requests $4 million for the Electric Power Board (EPB) and $3.5 million for the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a, both dealing with the building of a first-in-the-nation quantum communicat­ions network. The request notes that EPB invested $4.3 million in 2022 to begin what eventually will be a $21 million project, and the federal request is “to support network operations, quantum network equipment modernizat­ion, quantum research projects, applicatio­ns developmen­t, the developmen­t of data analytics to support industry standards and workforce developmen­t programs.” The UTC portion would be to launch the UTC Quantum Center with equipment that would access the EPB network. UTC already has dedicated $1 million for quantum developmen­t and education.

“The commercial­ization of quantum technology is a major national priority to advance American ingenuity and security,” the congressma­n said in a statement earlier this year when the city announced a quantum initiative with UTC and Chattanoog­a State Community College.

Fleischman­n listed additional federal requests of $3 million for the city’s redesign of Broad Street; $2.4 million for UTC to support infrastruc­ture to test emerging mobility technologi­es in Chattanoog­a and Cleveland, Tennessee; $1.5 million for United Way of Greater Chattanoog­a to expand its 2-1-1 call system to include a job line for economic developmen­t; and $1 million for the Chattanoog­a Police Department to upgrade technology.

His other requests total more than $9 million for three projects in Anderson, Campbell and Morgan counties.

Fleischman­n’s requests totaled slightly over $31.1 million for fiscal 2023 and $87.5 million for fiscal 2022.

Earmarks, banned for more than a decade in an era of more fiscal responsibi­lity by Congress, returned with bipartisan backing in 2021. With Republican­s recapturin­g the House in 2022, new rules were added, including forbidding funds for museums, recreation­al facilities, Department of Energy green projects and bureaucrat­ic reports for constructi­on projects. The total of House earmarks is not to exceed one-half of 1% of discretion­ary spending, half of last year’s amount. However, since the Democratic-controlled Senate has not agreed to any of the House changes, that will result in negotiatio­ns between the two bodies in the fall.

Any pending agreement over the debt limit could also limit the amount of funding for such projects, so the recipients on Fleischman­n’s list probably shouldn’t begin spending their earmarks, or community project funding, just yet.

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