Tags: transportation
Tags: transportation
June 2, 2010
By Anthony Campisi
For PlanPhilly
As
the fallout settles on the state's infrastructure following of the failure to toll
Interstate 80, a loose coalition of transit advocates, labor unions
and businesses is forming to push for a solution. The question is
whether they will be able to fight against the existing political
currents to raise taxes or fees in an election year.
Transit
advocates aren't wildly optimistic about their chances.
Peter
Javsicas, executive director of PenTrans,
a statewide transit advocacy group, said he heard three powerful
lawmakers - Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi, House Transportation
Committee chairman Richard Geist and Senate Transportation Committee
chairman John Rafferty - discount the possibility of a fix during this
legislative session. They were speaking at a forum on the state's
infrastructure.
And Steve Wray, executive director of the
Economy League of Greater Philadelphia, said that advocates might focus
on a two-pronged solution: a short-term infusion of money to close out
Gov. Rendell's term and then a longer-term, stable source of funding
after the new governor takes office.
He said a short-term fix
might focus on getting temporary infusions of federal money or figuring
out how the state or Pennsylvania Turnpike could issue bonds to pay for
much needed road repair and mass transit improvements.
Act 44,
which established the current state transportation funding system,
relies in part on the Turnpike issuing bonds against future toll
collections. Pat Deon, a Turnpike Commission member and chairman of the
SEPTA Board, has said the Turnpike wouldn't be willing to issue more
bonds without having access to toll revenue from I-80.
Wray also
said that public-private partnerships might be the key to getting some
stalled projects funded.
At the same time, various stakeholders
are only just now beginning to develop and implement strategies for
getting legislation passed. As Barry Seymour, executive director of the
Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission, put it: Lots of groups
have a stake in transportation funding, but they haven't yet coalesced
into an organized political force.
That process may have begun
when the Keystone Transportation Funding Coalition - a collection of
transit advocates, unions and businesses - reasserted itself in a press
conference in Harrisburg last week. The coalition was instrumental in
pushing for Act 44's passage in 2007 and had been dormant since.
A
problem this time around, though, is there is no specific legislative
solution on which policymakers and advocates have settled.
The
ideas proposed in Act 44 came out of the report of the Transportation Funding and Reform Commission, which
was established by the governor in 2005 and included among its members
political and policy heavyweights.
This time around, there's no
similar report from which the legislature can readily draw
inspiration. In essence, Wray explained, it's harder to advocate for or
against legislation that hasn't yet been crafted. "Right now, there's
not a focal point on where you would put that action," he said, adding
that a recently released infrastructure report card of the state might
provide transportation advocates with some ammunition. The state's roads
and transit agencies received a D-minus.
Instead, groups like
the Economy League and the DVRPC are trying to pull together a fuller
picture of the ramifications of deferred road and transit maintenance
and provide lawmakers with a menu of funding options.
SEPTA and
the governor have also taken up this tactic, holding a press conference
several weeks ago at the aging Wayne Junction power substation to
demonstrate the precarious state of much of the region's critical but
aging infrastructure.
Still, much work needs to be done before
transportation spending becomes a high-profile issue for the average
voter, according to Andy Sharpe, spokesman for the Delaware Valley
Association of Rail Passengers, a rider advocacy group. DVARP has been
trying to get its members to raise the issue by writing letters to local
newspapers and to their state lawmakers, but Sharpe said there's no
"master strategy" that all the players in this effort are following.
SEPTA
also has to walk a fine line in its advocacy.
Though it's the
state's largest public transit agency, SEPTA officials have avoided
endorsing any of the plans put forward so far for fear of getting caught
up in the politics surrounding fee or tax increases. SEPTA spokesman
Andrew Busch also said that it's important to frame the debate in terms
of the state's wider infrastructure needs to build support for any
legislative fix - for instance, though few people in Central
Pennsylvania take public transit, they all rely on state-maintained
roads and bridges.
For now, much of the public effort around a
legislative fix seems focused on hearings the state House
Transportation Committee is holding throughout the state.
Regional
players - like SEPTA general manager Joe Casey and the DVRPC's Seymour -
will be testifying at a hearing at St. Joseph's University on Friday,
and transit groups will also be sending members as a show of support.
The
hearing is scheduled for 10 a.m. in the Teletorium of Mandeville Hall,
at 54th Street and City Avenue.
Contact the reporter at campisi.anthony@gmail.com
http://planphilly.com/stakeholders-tough-fight-infrastructure-funding