Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Update on Surface Transportation Bill

Public-Private Partnerships, Highway Tolls Key Issues in Conference
By Nathan Hurst, CQ Staff

As conferees resume work this week on a highway bill, stakeholder groups are in a final push for public-private partnerships, a key element used to stretch federal transportation dollars.
At issue is whether states should be allowed to introduce tolls on existing interstate highways and whether highways leased to private investors should be counted in formulas that determine each state’s share of federal surface transportation aid.
The two-year, $109 billion surface transportation measure (S 1813) passed by the Senate in March includes a major expansion of the Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act program, which gives states and localities access to federal dollars up front for projects that are eventually financed through public-private partnerships. The Senate bill is expected to be the basis for most of what the conference committee agrees to.
Sen. Barbara Boxer, the California Democrat who is chairing the conference committee, called the expansion of TIFIA funding from $100 million currently to $1 billion under her bill a “big step forward” in leveraging federal dollars to go further for highway projects, claiming it will create 1 million jobs in the process.
But other financing language has created a rift among transportation interest groups.
Transportation advocates at the motor club AAA, the American Trucking Associations and the American Highway Users Alliance have banded together in support of Senate language that would remove from highway funding formulas portions of highway mileage that states have privatized.
The coalition supports the language, which was added to the bill through an amendment by Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., contending “states that remove highways from their balance sheet through long-term lease agreements (and with it the cost of maintaining those roads) should have those costs covered through the lease terms.”
Their prime example is the Chicago Skyway, a stretch of freeway leading into the Windy City from nearby Indiana. It was leased for 99 years to foreign investors for a one-time $3.5 billion payment, which Illinois then spent to pay down debt.
Other groups, including the libertarian Reason Foundation and the Bipartisan Policy Center, argued in favor of another amendment, offered but ultimately withdrawn by Sen. Thomas R. Carper, D-Del., that would have expanded the ability of states to impose tolls on existing stretches of interstate highways. Carper’s amendment was withdrawn along with a proposal by Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas,, that would have restricted the imposition of new tolls on existing freeways.
In a letter to conferees last week, the Reason Foundation-led coalition argued that flexibility with tolling expansion would “greatly enhance the capacity of states and metropolitan regions to leverage additional private capital for investment in the restoration, rehabilitation, and expansion of major transportation facilities.”
The disagreement about tolls is among the unresolved questions facing the 47-member conference committee, which is racing to reach an agreement before the current extension of surface transportation authorization (PL 112-102) expires on June 30.
After House Republicans were unable to bring their five-year, $260 billion highway bill (HR 7) to the floor because the caucus was divided, the House passed an extension (HR 4348) that also included oil and gas drilling provisions and a mandate for executive branch approval of the Keystone XL pipeline project.
Last week, Boxer remained optimistic that conferees would be able to produce a conference report by early to mid-June, providing both chambers with enough time to vote on the measure and send it to President Obama.
Though several significant policy disagreements remain, Boxer predicted there were “no sticking points” that would hold up a conference report. She also was upbeat about the financing of the bill, which will need more than $10 billion in revenue offsets to cover the difference between its cost and the amount expected to be available in the Highway Trust Fund, which relies mostly on slumping fuel tax receipts.
Boxer said Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., and House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp, R-Mich., had found a “very sweet spot” for financing the bill, though several Republican aides said Boxer’s assessment was “overblown.”
Baucus struggled for months to identify enough offsets to fund the Senate bill, which Boxer eventually moved ahead without a fully formed financing plan.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

NH Construction Career Day

New Hampshire Construction Career Day has become a yearly event. High School student from across the state are invited to the Hopkinton State Fairgrounds for a day of hands on construction activities, heavy equipment demonstrations, career counseling, and one-on-one discussions with practitioners. This year's event will be held September 20th and 21st (identical sessions) from 8:00am until noon. Students are bused from their schools to the site. Last year 35 schools and 946 students participated with an appearance by Governor John lynch.

There is a broad group of partners for the event, but exhibitors, volunteers and sponsors are always needed. To get more involved visit the website www.NHCCD.weebly.com

Creation of NH Chapter of Environmental & Water Resources Institute

The Environmental & Water Resources Institute (EWRI) of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) and the NH Chapter of ASCE are finalizing an agreement to authorize the creation of the Granite State Chapter of EWRI.

EWRI is dedicated to the advancement of the environmental and water resources professional community through a collaborative and mutually beneficial affiliation.

Special thanks to Paul Pepler of GZA GeoEnvironmental, Inc. who has been the driving force to founding the New Hampshire Chapter.

Nothing but a trail of trouble in Manchester | New Hampshire NEWS

Nothing but a trail of trouble in Manchester | New Hampshire NEWS

N.H. delegation presses EPA on wastewater cleanup | SeacoastOnline.com

N.H. delegation presses EPA on wastewater cleanup | SeacoastOnline.com

All structural steel from Memorial Bridge has been removed

Fosters.com, Dover NH, Rochester NH, Portsmouth NH, Laconia NH, Sanford ME

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

States agree on $172M for Long Bridge | SeacoastOnline.com

States agree on $172M for Long Bridge | SeacoastOnline.com

Deroy Murdock: Why does ‘fairness' mean bringing down rich, not lifting poor? | New Hampshire OPINION02

Deroy Murdock: Why does ‘fairness' mean bringing down rich, not lifting poor? | New Hampshire OPINION02

PSNH's Bow power plant shuts down | New Hampshire NEWS05

PSNH's Bow power plant shuts down | New Hampshire NEWS05

Milford's revitalization invites broader prosperity | New Hampshire NEWS02

Milford's revitalization invites broader prosperity | New Hampshire NEWS02

New Loon Mountain Bridge eyed in 2013 | New Hampshire NEWS

New Loon Mountain Bridge eyed in 2013 | New Hampshire NEWS

Bow: Grappone dealerships to treat water | Concord Monitor

Bow: Grappone dealerships to treat water | Concord Monitor

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Shea-Porter slams Guinta over shipyard remark | SeacoastOnline.com

Shea-Porter slams Guinta over shipyard remark | SeacoastOnline.com

EPA approves additional field work at Fletcher’s paint superfund site in Milford, N.H. on Environmental Expert

EPA approves additional field work at Fletcher’s paint superfund site in Milford, N.H. on Environmental Expert

Concord: Construction on Route 3 resumes | Concord Monitor

Concord: Construction on Route 3 resumes | Concord Monitor

Crash that killed 7 revives fears city roadways unsafe | Concord Monitor

Crash that killed 7 revives fears city roadways unsafe | Concord Monitor

Georgia: Civil War wreck blocks port project | Concord Monitor

Georgia: Civil War wreck blocks port project | Concord Monitor

Some better options for pension reform | Concord Monitor

Some better options for pension reform | Concord Monitor

Portsmouth: Maine water taxi may offer a connection | Concord Monitor

Portsmouth: Maine water taxi may offer a connection | Concord Monitor

Concord: Digging into the history of S. Main | Concord Monitor

Concord: Digging into the history of S. Main | Concord Monitor

Saturday, May 5, 2012

As federal dollars dry up, Green Launching Pad looks to reinvent itself

As federal dollars dry up, Green Launching Pad looks to reinvent itself

Atkinson Tests show well water woes spread EPA, NHDES Applauded for Response

Tests show well water woes spread » Latest News » EagleTribune.com, North Andover, MA

Nashua takes on tannery cleanup | New Hampshire NEWS07

Nashua takes on tannery cleanup | New Hampshire NEWS07

Concord: Repaving projects to get under way | Concord Monitor

Concord: Repaving projects to get under way | Concord Monitor

ASCE: Failure to Act-Electricity Report Published

http://www.asce.org/Infrastructure/Failure-to-Act/Electricity/#.T6T_dQNJYjw.blogger