Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
DC Streetsblog

House Passes Seventh Extension of Transportation Bill

Just in the nick of time, the House has passed an extension of the current transportation law. The sixth extension of SAFETEA-LU was set to expire this Friday.

false

The extension is not expected to face any problems in the Senate.

Although the House has been cutting every expenditure it can get its hands on, it can’t get its hands on the bulk of the surface transportation program, since it’s funded out of the dedicated Highway Trust Fund (in the process of being renamed the Transportation Trust Fund). This extension passed the House 421-4.

Transportation Committee Chair John Mica (R-FL) and other committee leaders on both sides of the aisle introduced the extension, which will keep the transportation system funded at current levels until the end of the fiscal year on September 30. Mica says constant short-term extensions have created too many headaches for the industry, which can’t plan amidst such uncertainty.

Top committee Democrat Nick Rahall warned of the repercussions of any failure to pass the transportation extension. “A delay in enactment of this extension will shut down more than $800 million next week in highway reimbursements and transit grants to States and urban areas, endangering more than 28,000 jobs and multi-million dollar construction projects across the country,” said Rahall in a statement. “To keep pace with India, China, and our other international competitors, we need to invest more, not less, in America’s infrastructure.”

A government shutdown could still jeopardize transportation funding, since this bill simply authorizes money, which still must be appropriated and disbursed. Lawmakers are cautiously optimistic that a two-week budget extension, which has now been passed by both houses, will give them enough time to hammer out a compromise on the controversial spending cuts passed by the House.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

What’s Next for Measure HLA, in the Face of Metro Opposition?

This is probably something a judge would need to decide at some point

March 21, 2025

Metro Lawyers Up Against Measure HLA, Tells L.A. City that Metro Projects Don’t Require Planned Bus/Bike/Walk Improvements

Metro: "any attempt to enforce [Measure HLA] against Metro is beyond the City's legal authority, and Metro will challenge any such attempt."

March 19, 2025

Metro Tests Foothill A Line Extension, Authority Prepares to Construct Next Segment

Emergency drills are being practiced and vital systems double checked while a final price tag and start date are being worked out for Pomona to Montclair.

March 19, 2025
See all posts