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Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation www.reason.org/transportation [email protected]
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Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation ProgrambyRobert W. Poole, Jr.Director of Transportation Policy,Reason Foundationwww.reason.org/[email protected]

Page 2: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Overview of presentation

Need for increased highway investmentNear-term outlook for reauthorizationShortcomings of current proposalsNeed for a Plan BWhat a Plan B might consist of

Page 3: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

The need for increased highway investment is well-documented.

Major highways and bridges are wearing out and must be replaced.Cost of reconstructing Interstates has not been included in most estimates of “needs.”Locations of people and business are very different from when the Interstates were being planned.Many highways and bridges are under-sized for current—and projected—traffic.

Page 4: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

How large is the highway funding shortfall?

Estimates from AASHTO, Policy & Revenue Commission, Financing Commission, and FHWA C&P Report.Federal, state, and local capital investment.2008 FHWA C&P report (all roads)*:

“Sustain” scenario: $27B/year short“Improve” scenario: $59B/year short

*Using B/C>1.5; no tolling/pricing

Page 5: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Reauthorization prospects

Timing: Most observers say Spring 2011Slight chance of “lame-duck” attemptIf not next Spring, may be after 2012 presidential election.

Funding increase: chances close to zeroHence, need for a Plan B

Page 6: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

The Oberstar bill

Further centralizes control in DC, not states.Empowers MPOs at expense of state DOTs.Makes most highway funding “flexible.”Expands “livability” programs.Heavily regulates tolling and PPPs.

Page 7: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

DOT’s Draft Strategic PlanAlso highly centralized and pro-”livability.”Aims to force people out of cars and freight from trucks to trains.Spend highway money on repair, not capacity expansion.Seeks “transportation revenue” usable for all modes, discarding users-pay/users-benefit principle.

Page 8: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

What is “livability”?Attempt to reshape cities and infrastructure to let people live and work without cars.Shift ever-larger sums from HTF to transit, bike paths, sidewalks, etc.Aim is large mode-shift away from auto use.FTA now evaluating “New Starts” based on community development, not transportation.MPOs to be required to develop “smart-growth” land-use plans, to get federal transportation funds.

Page 9: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Problems with livability agendaDoubling density leads to only 4 to 5% reduction in VMT.Hence, smart growth is very costly way to reduce GHGs (e.g., $4,000/ton).Higher density leads to worse traffic congestion.Higher-density cities have more costly housing.Transit today typically handles 1.5% of urban travel; doubling it (at huge cost) would still leave over 95% of trips by car.

Page 10: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Problems with inter-city mode shifting

Goods movement will double by 2050.Most studies predict rail will retain or slightly expand mode share (in ton-miles).Truck volume will double; hence, large highway capacity expansion needed.Most HSR plans involve shared use of freight rail ROW; serious conflicts likely.Inter-city bus (coach) provides unsubsidized alternative to massively subsidized HSR.

Page 11: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

A digression on federal subsidies

Net federal subsidies, by mode, 1990-2002Passenger rail: $186/thousand pass-miUrban transit: $118/thousand pass-miAirlines: $ 6/thousand pass-miHighways: $ -2/thousand pass-mi

Source: “Federal Subsidies to Passenger Transportation,” USDOT Bureau of Transportation Statistics, Dec. 2004

Page 12: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

The need for a Plan B

Oberstar and DOT plans are bad for highways, drivers, and trucking.You can’t fight “something” with “nothing.”High likelihood of change in Congress.Opportunity to rethink entire federal program.

Page 13: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

The users-pay/users-benefit principle is sound—but at risk

Fairness: those who pay benefit.Proportionality: use more; pay more.Self-limiting: unlike Europe’s gas taxesPredictable: annual revenue stream.Investment signal: at least in the form of tolling.

Page 14: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

But diversion of Trust Fund monies is destroying this principle.

1956: Interstates only1970: other highways, bus facilities1973: rail facilities1982: Mass Transit Account1991: “flexible” STP and CMAQ can fund bikeways, sidewalks, trails, etc.1998 and 2005: even more flexibilityToday, 25% of Highway Trust Fund monies are used for non-highway purposes.Oberstar and DOT would make nearly all HTF “flexible,” no programs for new capacity.

Page 15: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Outline of a possible Plan BRestore the users-pay/users-benefit principle to the Highway Trust Fund.Refocus the federal program on Interstate reconstruction and modernization.Devolve other highways, transit, etc. to states—or fund non-highway modes out of general revenues, not HTF.Empower states to toll Interstates, both urban and rural.Don’t regulate state use of PPPs; instead, assist via expanded TIFIA and Private Activity Bonds.

Page 16: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Budgetary impact of refocused federal program (1)

Programs no longer funded by Highway Trust Fund:Urban transit: $8.0B/yearEnhancements/misc. 1.8B/yearSafety regulation: 1.1B/year

Total: $10.9B/year

Page 17: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Budgetary impact (2): Interstate 2.0

Rebuild 233 interchange bottlenecks: $128BAdd HOT networks in 19 most-

congested metro areas: $98BReconstruct and modernize long-haul Interstates, starting with key

truck routes: ???Net federal increase @ $10B/yr would be $200B over 20 years.

Page 18: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Political feasibility (1):Highway community

Increased funding for the most important highways, urban and rural.Addresses loss of trust in Trust Fund.Restores users-pay/users-benefit principle.But major break from 30-year status quo.

Page 19: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Political feasibility (2):Non-highway programs

“Social infrastructure” should be paid for out of general taxes.General fund: 2008 and 2009 bailouts of Trust Fund equal current Transit Account budget (≈$8B/yr). Plus $19.5B in 2010-11.State/local support is already 70-80% of transit funding.

Page 20: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Political feasibility (3):state highway budgets

Assumptions:Feds replace transit fundsStates don’t replicate all former highway programs.State $ worth more than federal $Increased use of tolling and PPPs Use of B/C screen of 1.2 or 1.5

46 states shortfall of only 4-11 cents/gallon; only 4 & DC greater.

Page 21: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Next steps:

Plan for changed make-up of next Congress.Work with new leadership on Plan B legislation.WPRI/Reason Foundation study on tolling Wisconsin’s Interstates.Fight hard against any lame-duck reauthorization bill.

Page 22: Rethinking the Federal Surface Transportation Program by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Director of Transportation Policy, Reason Foundation .

Questions?

Contact information:www.reason.org/[email protected]