
As the legislators begin the development process of the next superficial transport re -authorization project for several years, the United States Transportation Secretary, Sean Duffy, exposed its objectives to build infrastructure with less regulatory obstacles and increase security rules during a United States Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works on April 2.
The Investment and Infrastructure Job Law of 2021 included a five -year re -authorization and added about $ 550 million on the initial levels for various motorway, bridge, railway, traffic, airport and port and interiors projects. Authorization will expire at the end of September 2026. Neither the Senators of the Committee or Duffy went into dollars for the next Restaurant Bill, but the Secretary of Transportation said that it will do so as the Congress instructs when it comes to the financing infrastructure.
“I’m not going to celebrate any project,” said Duffy.
Several senators interrogated Duffy about the funding state of their projects in their states of origin. The executive orders of President Donald Trump aimed at diversity, capital programs and inclusion and environmental efforts have raised concerns about the federal money that was granted. And Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-Ri), a member of the Committee, wondered if the search for “Maga Hobgoblains and Heresies” in subsidy agreements and project documents as a result of the president’s orders could delay the work.
Duffy said that the money they have been forced to do is continue to leave. However, he emphasized that the United States Department of Transport has a decline of 3,200 grants it has given, but it has not yet been completed. The grant awards were announced until 2022, and hundreds of them were announced in the last months of the Biden administration, according to Duffy.
“The fun part was the ad,” he said. “We need to do the task of making the grant agreement with the states and we will work -as quickly as possible. But it is a historically large number.”
Duffy did not say if any unintended grant prize could be terminated. Dot has already made the language in warnings about the opportunity to finance what Duffy called “green and social justice requirements” because they came from the Biden administration, instead of the congress.
“I actually fulfill the will of the congress, removing it, because it will take longer and it will cost more” with the requirements of the Biden administration, said Duffy.
Duffy expressed his support for moving more regulatory power of the federal government to states “to streamline the process.” From questions from senators, which may include environmental reviews.
Duffy also highlighted an example of a successful accelerated project, with the ongoing repairs at Interstate 40 in North Carolina and Tennessee after Hurricane Helene last year.
“We have found creative ways of organizing materials closer to the workplace, saving taxpayers both time and money,” he said. “It is this type of innovation and problem solving that moves projects faster and more efficiently.”
Movement of people and goods
Senator Shelley Moore Capito (RW.VA.), the chairman of the Committee, presented his own vision on the Bill of Restorization “to improve the movement of people and goods” during the hearing. He identified three principles in which he wants to focus on the legislation, which seems to be aligned with Duffy’s goals.
Capito said that he first wants to improve the security and reliability of the country’s surface transport network, and indicated that he would include optimization of the impact of federal funding by removing duplicate programs and increasing funding for formula programs for the financing of state roads.
The next priority for Captain is to modernize federal programs and policies to increase efficiency. He emphasized the procedures for planning and contracting, environmental reviews and requirements for discretionary aid and loans as areas to be reformed. And the final principle of the captain for the bill is to address the variety of surface transport needs in different states.
“I would not expect Virginia from the west, with our mountain peaks and valleys, prioritized the same transport projects in other states and other parts of the country,” said Capito. “Avoid mandates from top to bottom from Washington and give states flexibility to deal with individual improvements, I think that’s what we need to look.”
