Chicago Sun-Times

Lightfoot and Pritzker at the White House on Monday for Biden’s infrastruc­ture bill signing

- LYNN SWEET D.C. DECODER lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Gov. J.B. Pritzker are among those invited to President Joe Biden’s Monday White House large signing ceremony for the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill.

The bill will pump at least $17 billion to Illinois for a sweeping variety of projects. Every region of the state will be impacted by the bill, which has funds for highways, public transit, airport terminal renovation­s, electric vehicle charging stations, Amtrak improvemen­ts, broadband, lead water pipe replacemen­t and more.

According to Lightfoot, money from the bill will fund “huge improvemen­ts to our CTA without any change in cost to consumers while delivering the same service they expect.”

The CTA system will “become 100% accessible with the addition and improvemen­t of elevators and other ADA enhancemen­ts,” Lightfoot said, and “the Red Line will finally be extended to 130th Street.” Also, she said “the bus system will become fully electric,” and lead pipe replacemen­t will be faster.

Pritzker was at the White House last July 14 to help bolster the case for the infrastruc­ture legislatio­n.

Some of the federal funds the state of Illinois government will receive will be used to piggyback on Pritzker’s existing Rebuild Illinois, the largest infrastruc­ture program in the history of Illinois.

“The Land of Lincoln is prepped and ready for federal dollars to jumpstart our projects ahead of schedule,” Pritzker said in a statement.

Lawmakers were told the White House invited at least 200 to the bill ceremony, enough to include almost all yes votes. Illinois Democratic Reps. Marie Newman, Bobby Rush and Cheri Bustos are among those who will attend the White House signing.

It remains to be seen if Republican­s who voted yes will show up to help Biden take a victory lap.

The bill passed the Senate with 19 Republican yes votes. Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., was one of 13 Republican­s voting for the infrastruc­ture bill — earning him the wrath of former President Donald Trump and some of his House GOP colleagues whose districts will benefit from the bill.

Freshman Rep. Mary Miller, R-Ill., who is strongly allied with Trump, and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., said in a tweet after the vote, “NO Republican­s should be voting for Pelosi’s fake ‘Infrastruc­ture’ bill.” The infrastruc­ture bill is not “fake.” It should not be confused with Biden’s “Build Back Better” $1.75 trillion legislativ­e proposal currently stalled in Congress.

No Republican­s will vote for the BBB measure because it contains major Biden agenda items — climate change, expansion of health care, child care and immigratio­n with provisions Republican­s find objectiona­ble to too expensive. There is also disagreeme­nt among moderate and progressiv­e Democrats over the BBB legislatio­n.

Since the Senate vote in August, Trump and his allies have stepped up attacks on Republican­s who voted yes on the infrastruc­ture bill.

Kinzinger will not be at the signing, his spokeswoma­n said Sunday.

In a briefing with reporters last week, Polly Trottenber­g, the deputy secretary at the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion, said, “This legislatio­n represents the most ambitious investment in jobs and infrastruc­ture in most of our lifetimes and with bipartisan support something we’re all very proud of. This bill is an investment in communitie­s across the country, large and small, urban and rural.

“It’s also an important policy bill, with provisions to achieve key policy goals, including safer vehicle technology, making our infrastruc­ture more resilient,” she said.

The infrastruc­ture bill, a major Biden agenda item, “marks the largest investment­s in roads, bridges and highways since the creation of the Interstate Highway System,” Trottenber­g said.

The Federal Highway Act, which funded the creation of the interstate system, was signed into law by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956, at the time, the largest public works program in the nation’s history.

 ?? LYNN SWEET/SUN-TIMES ?? Gov. J.B. Pritzker is among those invited to Monday’s White House signing ceremony for the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill. The bill will pump at least $17 billion to Illinois for a sweeping variety of projects.
LYNN SWEET/SUN-TIMES Gov. J.B. Pritzker is among those invited to Monday’s White House signing ceremony for the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill. The bill will pump at least $17 billion to Illinois for a sweeping variety of projects.
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Mayor Lightfoot

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