MAP-21: What's in it for my business? presented by Jack Schenendorf

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A discussion of the new surface transportation legislation with a focus on the funding, program reforms and streamlining provisions.

Transcript of MAP-21: What's in it for my business? presented by Jack Schenendorf

MAP-21 Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act

NSSGA Webinar—August 6, 2012

Presentation

• Post-Enactment Takeaways

• MAP-21

– Funding/Financing

– Policy

• Future

2

Post-Enactment Takeaways

• Lack of support

– New members

– Even members with history of support

• Devolution

– More interest than ever

– Growing concern

– MAP-21 referred to as “devolution lite”

• Why?

3

Loss of Credibility

• Earmarks

– Thousands of earmarks; “bridge to nowhere”

• Enhancements

– Museums; bike paths

• No clear Federal mission

• Project delivery

– 12 to 15 years

– States avoid using Federal dollars on complex projects

• “There is plenty of money to meet legitimate transportation needs if

you just stopped wasting it on bad or low priority projects”

4

Are we……

Handing Out Pork? Building America’s Future?

5

Financing Problems

• HTF being sustained by general fund infusions

– $35 billion prior to MAP-21

• No appetite for user fee increase

– Real source of the discontent?

• Opposition to further general fund bailout – “At time of large deficits, we cannot afford a general fund bailout”

– “HTF should live within its means”

• Offsets – “Offsets, if available, should be used to reduce deficit”

– Spending should be offset in same year—”shouldn’t use 10 years of

offsets to pay for 2 years of spending”

6

Tortured—But Ultimately Successful--Process

• SAFETEA-LU expired September 30, 2009

– Ten short-term extensions

– Great uncertainty

– Stakeholders kept pressure on

• Key compromises made

– Keystone XL Pipeline dropped

– Coal ash dropped

– Student loan interest fix added

• House and Senate pass MAP-21 Conference Report

– House: 372 - 52

– Senate: 74 - 19

• President Obama signs MAP-21 into law on July 5, 2012

7

MAP-21*

Funding / Financing

Policy

* Effective Date: 10/1/2012 8

Funding / Financing

• Length of bill

• Funding

• HTF Financing

• Additional financing

9

Length of Bill

• House: December 31, 2012

• Senate: September 30, 2013

• MAP-21: September 30, 2014

– Remainder of FY 2012

– FY 2013

– FY 2014

10

MAP-21 Funding

• MAP-21 extends funding for the remaining

three months of FY 2012

• MAP-21 authorizes a total of about $105

billion for highways, highway safety, and

transit for FYs 2013 and 2014

• Funding for FY 2013 and 2014 is—

– Slightly higher than FY 2012, BUT

– Slightly below the SAFETEA-LU FY 2009 level

11

MAP-21 Funding (cont’d)

Source: Chamber of Commerce MAP-21 Summary 12

MAP-21 Highway Funding

Fiscal Year

Actual/Estimated

Obligations

($ billions)

2011

40.8

2012

38.9

2013

39.4

2014

40.0

Source: AASHTO 13

HTF Financing

• Revenue provisions:

– Extends HTF taxes

• Motor fuel to 9/30/2016

• Heavy vehicle use tax to 9/30/2017

– Transfers $2.4 billion from LUSTTF to HTF

– Infuses $18.8 billion in general funds into HTF

• $16.6 billion into Highway Account

• $2.2 billion into Transit Account

• Offsets ($20.4 billion over ten years)

– Pension funding stabilization--$20.3 billion over 10 years

– Roll your own cigarette tax--$0.1 billion over 10 years

14

New HTF

Revenues Offsets

Pension Reform

$20.3 billion

Rolled Cigarettes

$0.1 billion

LUST Xfer

$2.4 billion

GF Infusion

$18.8 billion

Additional Resources

• Projects of National and Regional Significance

• TIFIA Program

• Expanded Interstate Tolling

15

Projects of National and Regional Significance

• Continues SAFETEA-LU discretionary grant program, with

modifications, for one year

– Broadens entities eligible to apply

– Adds congressional disapproval process

• Authorizations from general funds:

– FY 2013: $500 million

– FY 2014: $0

• No funding unless appropriated

• DOT report in two years

16

TIFIA Program

• Big increase in resources

– FY 2012: $122 million

– FY 2013: $750 million

– FY 2014: $1 billion

• Loans, loan guarantees, other credit enhancements

• DOT rule of thumb: every $1 dollar leverages about $10

• Some claim these TIFIA funds will leverage $50 billion in investment

– Assumption: TIFIA supports about 20 percent of overall project

• Typically requires revenue stream to guarantee payback

17

Expanded Interstate Tolling

• States may now construct new toll lanes on existing

Interstates provided that the number of toll-free lanes

remains the same

• Authorized uses of revenue broadened

– Troubling: “any other purpose for which Federal funds may

be obligated by a State”

• Promotes interoperability between states

18

Policy Reforms

• Programmatic Reform

– Consolidation

– Formulas

– Earmarks

– Enhancements

– Freight

• Performance Management

• Streamlining

19

Program Reform: Consolidation

• Establishes four core programs plus planning

– National Highway Performance System

– Surface Transportation Program

– Highway Safety Improvement Program

– CMAQ Program

– Metropolitan Planning

• Reduces # programs by 2/3’s

– E.g., Interstate Maintenance, Bridge, Safer Routes

to Schools, Recreational Trails

20

Source: AASHTO 21

Program Reform:

Freight

• Does NOT establish a new freight program as many had advocated

• Establishes national freight policy

• Requires Secretary to establish a “national freight network” and a

“national freight strategic plan”

• Encourages states to establish “state freight advisory committees” and

“state freight plans”

• Authorizes Secretary to increase federal share on freight projects if

state meets certain requirements

22

Program Reform: Formulas

• 1. Authorize lump sum for core programs

• 2. Calculate each state’s share

– FY 2013: virtually same as FY 2012

– FY 2014: virtually same as FY 2012 except adjusted to assure 95

percent rate of return

• 3. For each state, divide the total amount among programs

– Distribute planning and CMAQ amounts (FY 2009 levels) off top

– Each state divides remainder as follows: • NHPP: 63.7 %

• STP: 29.3 %

• HSIP: 7%

– States can transfer up to 50% between categories 23

Program Reform: Earmarks

• No earmarks in MAP-21

• Will this policy be revisited?

24

Reform: Transportation Enhancements

25

• “Transportation alternatives”

– 2% set-aside

– 50% states; 50% locals

• Some estimate funding reduced by 33%

or more

• Reduced eligibility

– E.g., museums, landscaping

• New eligibility

– E.g., safer routes to schools, overlooks

• Options included to allow state flexibility

in use of these funds and opt-out

Reform: Performance Management

26

• MAP-21 requires DOT to

establish performance

standards for—

– Safety

– Infrastructure condition

– Congestion reduction

– System reliability

– Freight movement

– Environmental

sustainability

– Reduced project delivery

delays

Reform: Performance Management

• DOT must establish performance standards within 18 months

– Must consult with states, MPOs, transit agencies, and stakeholders

• States must establish performance targets within one year after

DOT establishes performance standards

– Must coordinate with MPOs and transit agencies

• MPOs must establish performance targets within 180 days after

state adopts performance targets

– Must coordinate with state and transit agencies

• Performance measures and targets must be incorporated into

long-range planning and short-term programming processes

27

Reform: Streamlining

• Wide array of initiatives

• Declaration of Policy

– “Substantially reduce” time

– Does not waive 45+ environmental laws

• Expands number of categorical exclusions

– Emergency projects

– Projects w/i “operational rights-of-way”

– Projects with limited Federal assistance

• Less than $5 million

• Total cost > $30 million and Federal funding < 15%

– Certain multi-modal projects

28

Reform: Streamlining (cont’d)

• Expands flexibility to undertake activities prior to the

completion of NEPA

– Acquisition of real property

– Design

– Enter into CM/GC two-phased contracts

• Expanded delegation

– Makes five-state pilot a permanent program

– Expands to include rail, transit and multi-modal projects

29

Reform: Streamlining (cont’d)

• Encourages programmatic approaches

– Allows states or MPOs to develop programmatic

mitigation plans

– DOT must conduct rulemaking to allow

programmatic approaches to the environmental

review process

30

Reform: Streamlining (cont’d)

• Other Process Reforms

– New issue resolution procedures that allow for

elevation

– Resource agency deadlines for review

– Program to complete some ongoing EISs for

complex projects within 4 years (only available for

EISs that have been under way for at least 2 years

– Resource agency financial penalties for failure to

meet deadlines

31

Miscellaneous

• Veterans employment

– Requires states, to the extent practicable, to encourage

contractors to make best faith effort to hire veterans on

federally-assisted projects

• Buy America

– MAP-21 provides that if a road or bridge project is split into

multiple contracts and at least one of those contracts

receives federal funding, all contracts on that project must

abide by "Buy America" mandates

32

The Future: Implementation

• Contract authority

• Budget sequestration

• DOT regulation

– Obama? Romney?

33

The Future: Reauthorization

• Right around the corner……

– Program expires September 30, 2014

• Have reforms worked?

• Significant challenges

34

Source: AASHTO

35

36 Source: AASHTO

The Future: Reauthorization

• We know what must be done…

• New strategy? Innovative thinking?

• Opportunities

– Tax reform?

– Grand bargain?

– Stand alone?

37