Senator Tom Carper
January 24, 2002
Committee on Environment and Public Works
“Partners for America’s Transportation Future”
Opening Statement
I’m
happy to be here today as this committee begins its work on the
re-authorization of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st
Century (TEA-21). In the ten years
since that bill, and its predecessor, the Intermodal Surface Transportation Act
(ISTEA) have been in place, I believe we have made strides in the way we fund
and plan for our transportation needs.
ISTEA
for the first time allowed state and local transportation officials to work
together with their regional partners and with states to develop truly regional
transportation systems. It also allowed
these new regional transportation entities and to use federal transportation
dollars for the most pressing transportation projects in their region,
regardless of whether those federal dollars were originally designated for
highway or transit. When ISTEA was up
for re-authorization five years ago, I was Governor of Delaware and headed up a
group called ISTEA Works along with John Rowland, my colleague from
Connecticut. Our goal at the time was
to urge Congress to preserve and build on what we were able to accomplish in ISTEA. Our efforts, along with the work of a number
of my new colleagues here in Congress, lead to TEA-21, which maintained the
flexibility granted to state and local officials and greatly expanded the
funding available for transportation improvements each year. Whereas, before TEA-21, Congressional
appropriators could set caps on the amount of the Highway Trust Fund that could
be spent in a given year, states can now spend the full amount that users pay
into the Fund every year.
As
we sit down now to re-evaluate our national transportation policy, I again call
on my colleagues to build on what has worked so well in the past. First, we should expand the flexibility
built into ISTEA to allow states to spend their Trust Fund money on inter-city
rail projects. Back in Delaware,
commuters set out every day on Interstate 95 in Wilmington to head for jobs in
Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington.
Commuters up and down the northeast corridor make similar commutes every
day, tying up our highways in frustrating, wasteful gridlock. Delaware can spend as much as it wants to
improve its piece of 95. It can’t do
much with its Trust Fund money to improve rail links to major northeast cities,
however. I hope we can work this year
to allow states to use their federal Trust Fund dollars to create regional high-speed
rail systems if they choose to do so.
Second,
we should continue to improve the way we fund our transportation priorities and
examine whether our current funding levels are adequate. TEA-21’s budgetary firewalls, along with
Revenue Aligned Budget Authority (RABA), have led to dramatic increases in
transportation spending in recent years, but we could see reductions in 2003
for the first time. I hope we can work
this year to fix RABA and also to look for other revenue sources so that we can
effectively fund our transportation needs.
As we begin to take a closer look at what has and hasn’t worked in ISTEA and TEA-21 over the years, I think we’ll see that most of what we were able to accomplish has had a positive impact on our nation’s transportation system. I hope we can build on that success in our re-authorization of TEA-21.