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GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

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Page 1: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEOAMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE

View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges 

Page 2: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Thank You to SC&RA!

What it the American Highway Users Alliance? Road Users: AAA, ABA, ATA, OOIDA, RVIA, AMA Businesses: Safety Companies, Farmers, Auto

Dealers, Engineers, Suppliers, Manufacturers of Cars and Trucks, Energy Companies, Tire Companies, Truck & Bus Companies

Non-Profits: Safety Advocates, Trade Groups, Chambers

SC&RA is a member. Thank you!We are here to represent the complex

landscape of pro-highway Americans who support dedicating their highway user fees to improved roads.

Page 3: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

American Highways: Background

~4 million miles of roads in the USA~47,000 miles are on the Interstate System,

carrying about 25% of traffic.~220,000 miles are on the National

Highway System (including the Interstates), carrying about 50% of all traffic

~1 million miles are considered to be on the “federal-aid” network, carrying about 80% of traffic

All 4 million miles are eligible for safety improvement / hazard elimination funds.

Page 4: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

American Highways: Background

Local governments own 77% of roads.States own about 19% of roads (800,000

miles).Feds own only 3% of roads.74% of roads and bridges are in rural areas

but carry only 33% of traffic26% of roads and bridges are in urban

areas, carrying 67% of traffic.

Page 5: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Current Bridge Conditions

Structurally Deficient Bridges: 11.2% nationwide

Best: Nevada @ 2.2%Worst: Pennsylvaia @ 24.9%

Posted Bridges: 10.7% nationwideBest: Nevada @ 0.8%Worst: Kansas @ 27.2%

Source: FHWA National Bridge Inventory

Page 6: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

American Highways: Funding

About 50% of all funding is capital expenditures

25% is maintenanceThe rest is bonds, interest, highway patrol,

and administration22-24% of all spending on roads is federal42-45% of all capital spending on roads is

federal.Federal user fee revenue is about $36B-

$37B / yearExpenditures (including non-highway) ~$51

B / yr.Annual deficits of about $15 B / year

Page 7: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

American Highways: Federal Funding

Bailouts are not sustainable into the future.

Page 8: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

American Highways: Federal Funding

At flat spending, trust fund deficits exceed $100 B over ten years.

Page 9: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

How much do you pay the Fed. Govt. for roads?

Average vehicle driven 11,489 miles Hybrid: 40 mpg pays $53 / year Sedan: 22 mpg pays $96 / year SUV: 16 mpg pays $132 / year

Single unit truck (8 mpg / 13,469 miles) = $411

Combination truck (5 mpg / 68,907 miles) = $3363

Not a bad deal for access to 4 million miles of roads.

In fact, too good a deal to last. Infrastructure needs are compounded with system aging.

Page 10: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Major Highway Bills

1916: Beginning of federal-aid program1956: Interstate authorization, creation of

Highway Trust Fund1982: Increase of gas tax from 4-cents to 9

cents; 1 cent goes to transit1990 and 1993; gas tax increases – deficit

reduction1998: “TEA-21” – 6 year $217 Billion bill

increases funding 40%, full utilization of trust fund

2005: “SAFETEA-LU” – 6 year $286.5 billion, known for “Bridge to Nowhere”. Spends down all funds in the Trust Fund.

Page 11: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

MAP-21 in Perspective

MAP-21 was signed into law in July 2012 after a nearly 3 year delay.

Passed Congress with strong bipartisan majorities.

Funds highways through September 30, 2014

Goals of MAP-21 Establish Priorities (NHS, HSIP – big winners) Reform Programs to Restore Public Trust

Eliminate Earmarks Consolidated and Eliminated Programs Established “Performance-Based” Programs (inc. asset

mgmt) Streamlined Environmental Reviews & Red Tape

Page 12: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Priorities

Congressional Priorities except funding largely achieved in MAP-21. Reform Consolidation of Programs Streamlined Environmental Reviews

Administration Priorities NOT generally reflected in MAP-21. May attempt through regulation.

“Livable Communities” “Complete Streets” More hwy money for non-highway modes, particularly

rail & bike Turn the Highway Trust Fund into a “Transportation”

Trust Fund.

Page 13: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

After MAP-21: Priorities for 2014-2020

Reauthorization will most likely avoid re-litigating all of the fights for reform under MAP-21

However, the Obama Adminstration has and may continue to interpret the law in ways that Congress disagrees with.

There is particular interest in how the Administration will interpret the various performance goals.

Congress may make adjustments in response to Administration regulations.

Page 14: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Funding Issues

MAP-21 only “found” two years worth of revenue

Outlays exceed revenues by $10-15 billion / year

To prevent funding cuts, Congress put $20 billion in non-user revenue into the Trust Fund (FY12-14)

This $20 billion “bailout” was on top of $35 billion transferred into the HTF between 2008-2011.

Additional Sustainable Sources of Revenue Critical to continue program beyond 9/30/14.

Page 15: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Funding Factors Now & Into the Future

Purchasing Power of the Gas Tax down 40% since 1993.

Future Issue: Fuel economy standards could reduce revenues 21% by 2022.

Truck sales tax hit due to recession and expensive regulations.

Weak economy reduced VMT from 3.025 trillion miles to 2.925 trillion miles

Page 16: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Credit: AASHTO analysis of FHWA data

Page 17: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Credit: AASHTO analysis of DOL data

Page 18: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Volatile Truck Sales Tax (by quarter in thousands)

Page 19: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Credit: AASHTO analysis of CBO data

Page 20: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

What are States Doing?

More than 10 states considered revenue increases in 2012. None passed in 2012. VA, MD, VT, and WY have taken action in 2013. Except for WY all have changed the tax structure to include a % tax on wholesale fuel sales.

Leveraging existing funds: 10 states considered new bond issues or creating State Infrastructure Banks

33 States allow PPPs: Pennsylvania the latest. PPP enabling legislation failed in NJ, HI, and OK.

VMT legislation: CO, VT, WA (OR in phase 2 pilot)

Electric vehicle annual fees: VA & WA

Page 21: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

How Do We Fix the Fiscal Mess?

Option 1: Cut spending substantially in FY15 Cutting new spending from $40 billion to $5 billion

would, in theory, prevent shortfall. Spending in FY16-22 would ramp up from $33 to $38

billion

Option 2: Short-term bailouts that fund month-to-month “extensions” of MAP-21

Option 3: Raise additional revenue from current and/or traditional user fees and taxes.

Page 22: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Raising New Revenue: Senate Finance Committee Options Paper

Increase federal fuel tax 10-15 cents / gallonOr• Increase truck sales, tire, and use taxesOr• Move to a percent sales tax instead of a per

gallon tax---New Fees:Oil barrel, VMT fees, drivers license surcharges, hybrid car fees, bicycle taxes.

Page 23: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Raising New Revenue: Senate Finance Committee Options Paper

Other potential sources Dedicate more revenue from oil and gas lease

sales to the HTF Authorize more private activity bonds, direct

subsidy bonds, tax credit bonds, National Infrastructure Bank,

Reduce taxes on foreign investment in US infrastructure

• New idea (Delaney): encourage repatriation of corporate holdings in foreign countries by creating incentives to invest those funds in US infrastructure bonds.

Page 24: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Challenges to Getting to Option 3?

Political challenge requires bipartisanship. Shuster and Boxer seem committed to this. But both believe Congress needs help to make the

public case.Challenge is “Outside-The-Beltway”

Combating misconceptions Most people are unaware of reforms in MAP-21 Most people think they pay much more than they do in

fuel taxes. Average gas tax is $96 per year. “If it seems like a deal is too good to be true, it probably isn’t.”

Many people do not consider needs to be dire To many government crises – is this a “real” one?

Page 25: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Opportunities for Solutions

Tax reform is the best opportunity to deal with the ailing Highway Trust Fund.

Finance Chairman Baucus (D-Mont) not running for re-election

Ways & Means Chairman Dave Camp (R-Mich) term-limited from keeping chairmanship beyond 2014

Both would like a bipartisan deal before they leave their posts.

Other opportunities could come on tax bills, “Grand Bargain” debt-ceiling (if we hit it), etc.

Best to solve revenue problem before reauthorization.

Page 26: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

HwyUsers Campaign Effort

In addition to traditional lobbying efforts, the HwyUsers is putting together a major campaign called “Keep America Moving”. 2012 Congressional Scorecard was a start Target: Important States and Congressional Districts Focus on Tax Writing Committees (Ways and Means in

the House & Finance in the Senate). Coordinate with Members to avoid blind-siding them. Media & Social Network Effort: Op-Eds, Facebook &

Twitter teams Presentation to State & Local Chambers and Service

Orgs.

Page 27: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

What Could Work in 2013?

Establish credibility by recruiting leaders at the national, state, and local level. Bipartisan & Diverse. Use broad businesses & community leaders to deliver

messages.

National Vision: Possibly a Rebranding of the NHS? 4% of the roads.

90% of the freight.

Page 28: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

“Convoys” for 2013

Road tour with the right leaders (WH official, Shuster, Rahall, Boxer, Vitter) could still help get state leaders, mayors, and volunteers on board.

How to take advantage of the many more forms of communication that exist in 2013? Teams of Facebook & Twitter users on offense and

defense. Video promotions Billboards Speakers’ bureaus Op-ed writing teams from lots of different

organizations

Page 29: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Funding

Hard to get Funding without the Credibility, Vision & Plan

MAP-21 prioritized the NHS and established performance concept. The Act improved credibility but earmark and program reforms need to be communicated to media & public.

More credibility requires leadership. Who are the people Americans trust most?

Fund the plan – do not work off the current, inadequate spending baseline.

Tout the benefits of the user fee / trust fund concept and make the case for raising fees to fund the plan.

Page 30: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

What Can You Do to Help?

Participate in the Campaign Contact me about ways to get involved. Support a convoy stop in your State. Support politicians who support highway users. Do

not support those who don’t. Talk with business leaders in your state about

getting a briefing on the campaign. Offer to write or put your name on a campaign op-ed

or letter to the editor. Talk to AHUA staff about how you can use social

media to promote the campaign.

Page 31: GREG COHEN, PRESIDENT & CEO AMERICAN HIGHWAY USERS ALLIANCE View from Capitol Hill: Federal Highway Funding and Policy Challenges

Thank You!

Gregory M. Cohen, P.E.President & CEO

American Highway Users [email protected]

202-857-1200www.highways.org

www.facebook.com/highwayusers