Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

How to spend $1 trillion? This guy wants a say.

- By Zolan Kanno-youngs

ELM CITY, N.C. — Inside this brick-walled town hall just feet away from a freight train line, a crowd of Black, white and Indigenous small-town leaders sat eager to hear how President Joe Biden’s $1 trillion infrastruc­ture plan would help their communitie­s.

The mayor of the town of Bear Grass asked how the administra­tion would ensure that the money trickled down to her roughly 100 residents. Another wondered if the funding meant schoolchil­dren would no longer rely on a bookstore for access to broadband internet. The mayor of Lewiston Woodville asked if her community would finally have a grocery store.

Sitting in front of the crowd was Mitch Landrieu, the former

New Orleans mayor now tasked with making sure the huge injection of federal funds reaches those who need the money most.

“It’s our job on the implementa­tion side to stay on it like a dog on a bone and make sure the execution is as close to what the president’s vision is,” Landrieu said in an interview during a recent trip. “If we’re going to have a fight, we have a fight and we can get it resolved sooner rather than later.”

Over the past year, Landrieu has been on a national tour of sorts for Biden’s infrastruc­ture package, hopping commercial flights around the country to pitch the funds for roads, bridges, broadband and clean energy. And while the decisions about how to spend the money largely fall to state leaders, Landrieu is out promoting the plan, sometimes even negotiatin­g with local officials who disagree with the president’s ideas about how best to repair the nation’s crumbling infrastruc­ture in an equitable way.

Biden has said he wanted the money to help repair the damage from the United States’ history of racial disparitie­s in how the government builds roads, highways and other physical infrastruc­ture. State and local officials have often steered roads through Black communitie­s, isolating them from parks or economic gain and destroying neighborho­ods.

Before the midterm elections, Landrieu had traveled to 37 cities and spoken to every governor except Ron Desantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas, both of whom have openly clashed with the Biden administra­tion.

Landrieu discussed the pack

age with the governors’ chiefs of staff instead.

“And they all want the money,” Landrieu said, adding that both states have followed the administra­tion’s recommenda­tion of appointing a local infrastruc­ture coordinato­r.

Traveling the country with the keys to a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture package is also an effective way to build alliances for a future presidenti­al run. Landrieu is often mentioned as a possible candidate — a path he dismisses when pressed.

“I’m focused on getting this money to the ground,” he said.

A native of the Broadmoor neighborho­od of New Orleans, Landrieu helped the city rebound after Hurricane Katrina in part by securing millions of dollars in federal funding. He followed in the footsteps of his father, Moon Landrieu, who helped defend federal civil rights mandates and advocated integratio­n as New Orleans’ mayor. The younger Landrieu confronted the nation’s history of racism himself when he spearheade­d the removal of four confederat­e monuments in New Orleans in 2017.

Landrieu is now responsibl­e for ensuring that equity is at the center of Biden’s infrastruc­ture investment­s. He said one way to make sure that happens was by pushing states to repair existing roads and bridges — or connect them to underserve­d communitie­s — rather than just extending them through neighborho­ods that had been splintered by the highway expansion of the 1950s.

The bulk of the package is distribute­d directly to the states, although local leaders must submit to the federal government plans on how they will spend the funds. Any additional funding from discretion­ary grants is dependent in part on whether the states design projects with a focus on underserve­d communitie­s and the environmen­t, Landrieu said.

At least 6,000 projects funded by the infrastruc­ture package were underway at the start of the fiscal year that began Oct. 1, according to the White House, and roughly $185 billion from the package had been distribute­d to states.

Some Republican­s have said states should be given even more leeway over the funding.

“Excessive considerat­ion of equity, union membership­s or climate as lenses to view suitable projects would be counterpro­ductive,” 16 Republican governors wrote in a letter to Biden and Landrieu this year. “Your administra­tion should not attempt to push a social agenda through hard infrastruc­ture investment­s.”

After receiving the letter, Landrieu’s team set up meetings with some of those governors to hear out their frustratio­ns, his aides said. Some pushed back on the administra­tion’s call for installing electric vehicle charging stations every 50 miles on interstate highways.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas and Gov. Henry Mcmaster of South Carolina were particular­ly frustrated over guidance that said states should prioritize repairing highways rather than extending them. Mcmaster even brought it up with Biden directly, according to

a senior White House official.

Spokespeop­le for the governors did not respond to requests for comment.

Landrieu and his team assured the governors that they had the discretion to spend the federal funds on projects they deemed beneficial to their states. But if the states followed the administra­tion’s priorities, including its guidance on reducing environmen­tal harm, it may increase the chances of receiving additional federal grants.

“We don’t have to OK their plans unless we think those plans meet with our criteria. Now there will necessaril­y be a conflict because not every state wants to do the same thing and then we have to work with them,” Landrieu said. “And then there’s

a negotiatio­n that goes on in every one of the programs.”

While speaking to residents and public officials across the nation, Landrieu often goes out of his way to say that Biden’s focus on equity is not just a matter of race but also ensuring small rural towns receive as much federal support as big cities.

“When we talk about equity, we’re talking about everyone that was left out, and it involves rural,” he said. “It involves white folk and Black folk and brown folk who live in rural communitie­s and have been left out.”

He has also heard from skeptical residents who have gotten promises from public officials before, only to find that their children have suffered the consequenc­es of contaminat­ed

water from lead pipes. But with persistent labor shortages and supply chain issues, it could take years before voters see the result of the infrastruc­ture funding.

Rep. Deborah K. Ross, D-N.C., who joined Landrieu at a round table on the infrastruc­ture package’s investment­s in broadband internet in Raleigh, said the bill was an investment in the future.

“It is an injection into our economy,” she said.

During the event in Raleigh, Landrieu tried to focus the audience on how the funding could address internet disparitie­s.

“A little girl does not need to be sitting in the back of her mom’s car outside of a Chickfil-a or a Mcdonald’s or some other place just trying to do her homework because she doesn’t

have access to high-speed internet,” he said.

A day before, while announcing investment­s in solar-paneled school buses at John Lewis Elementary School in Washington, D.C., Landrieu knelt down to hear an animated fourth-grader showcase his knowledge of how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Landrieu responded by reminding the child that the money for electric school buses “is coming from President Biden and Vice President Harris.”

“I’m a politician, so I want to get credit for everything that I do,” Landrieu later said. “But at the end of the day, what makes a great leader is saying that I’m going to invest deep, foundation­al money so that the public can benefit later on.”

 ?? ANNA ROSE LAYDEN / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mitch Landrieu, a senior adviser and infrastruc­ture coordinato­r for the White House, visits John Lewis Elementary School in Washington on Oct. 26. The former New Orleans mayor, who helped the city rebound after Hurricane Katrina, has been tasked with making sure the money from President Joe Biden’s infrastruc­ture bill reaches those who need it most — and spent according to terms laid out by the White House.
ANNA ROSE LAYDEN / THE NEW YORK TIMES Mitch Landrieu, a senior adviser and infrastruc­ture coordinato­r for the White House, visits John Lewis Elementary School in Washington on Oct. 26. The former New Orleans mayor, who helped the city rebound after Hurricane Katrina, has been tasked with making sure the money from President Joe Biden’s infrastruc­ture bill reaches those who need it most — and spent according to terms laid out by the White House.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ANNA ROSE LAYDEN / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mitch Landrieu, center, a senior adviser and infrastruc­ture coordinato­r for the White House, visits with schoolchil­dren and staffers Oct. 26 at John Lewis Elementary School in Washington. The former New Orleans mayor is now responsibl­e for ensuring that equity is at the center of President Joe Biden’s $1 trillion infrastruc­ture investment­s.
PHOTOS BY ANNA ROSE LAYDEN / THE NEW YORK TIMES Mitch Landrieu, center, a senior adviser and infrastruc­ture coordinato­r for the White House, visits with schoolchil­dren and staffers Oct. 26 at John Lewis Elementary School in Washington. The former New Orleans mayor is now responsibl­e for ensuring that equity is at the center of President Joe Biden’s $1 trillion infrastruc­ture investment­s.
 ?? ?? Landrieu, right, speaks with U.S. Secretary of Agricultur­e Tom Vilsack after arriving Oct. 27 in Raleigh, N.C. Before the midterm elections, Landrieu had traveled to 37 cities and spoken to every governor except Ron Desantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas.
Landrieu, right, speaks with U.S. Secretary of Agricultur­e Tom Vilsack after arriving Oct. 27 in Raleigh, N.C. Before the midterm elections, Landrieu had traveled to 37 cities and spoken to every governor except Ron Desantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas.

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