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2 Guvs Press For
Infrastructure
Pennsylvania Gov. Edward G. Rendell, New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg and
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, co-chairs of the Building America’s
Future coalition, have urged the Republican and Democratic National Committees
to adopt pro-infrastructure planks in their party platforms when the national
party conventions convene in Denver and Minneapolis-Saint Paul.
“America’s highways, bridges, tunnels, and mass transit have fallen behind. The
same is true for our levees, schools, ports, courthouses and water delivery
systems. Our economy and environment are suffering because we cannot move goods
and people efficiently – we need a strong federal commitment to tackle this
problem,” said Schwarzenegger. “We have always come together as a nation to
solve our biggest problems and I am confident that if both parties make
infrastructure a top priority we will rebuild America with the pride and
ambition that reflects the unlimited potential of our people.”
“The principles we are advocating will help our nation be more competitive in
the global economy, ensure our environmental sustainability, enhance our
citizens’ quality of life and improve public safety,” said Bloomberg. “They are
good public policy and make sound business sense. We need to invest more in our
infrastructure and those investment decisions need to be based on merit, not
politics.”
“The Association of Civil Engineers estimated the nation’s total infrastructure
shortfall at a staggering $1.6 trillion,” Rendell said. “If we don’t act
quickly, that deficit will continue to grow and we will see our infrastructure
fall further into disrepair, threatening the lives of our citizens and our
ability to move goods to market. With the Federal government contributing only
25% of infrastructure funding and the rest coming from financially-strapped
state and local governments, Washington needs to step up its commitment of
resources. The time to act is now.”
The co-chairs recommended both parties adopt the coalition’s five guiding
principles in their platforms. The co-chairs proposed, given the importance of
the issue and the growing level of support for federal leadership, a town hall
meeting on infrastructure and invited both major parties’ Presidential nominees
to participate.
Joining the co-chairs were Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak and St. Paul Mayor Chris
Coleman. The mayors are some of the first state and local elected officials to
join Building America’s Future.
“As mayors, we know how important basic public infrastructure is to our
communities,” Rybak said. “Whether it is our streets and highways, mass transit,
wastewater, or airport, our ability to make our region competitive for business
and a great place to live for our residents depends on the quality of our basic
infrastructure — our common ground.”
“We also recognize only the Federal government has the resources to partner with
state and local governments to fully fund our regional and national
infrastructure priorities,” Coleman said.
The event in Minneapolis-St. Paul caps a two-day infrastructure tour that had
taken Rendell and Bloomberg to New Orleans earlier. In an address to the
National Conference of State Legislatures, or Rendell and Bloomberg unveiled
Building America’s Future’s statement of principles, which will guide policy
makers as they chart a new course for national infrastructure policy. The
co-chairs also held a press conference announcing 20 more state legislators from
across the country joined the coalition.
In recent weeks, the coalition’s leaders addressed the National Governors
Association summer meeting in Philadelphia, the US Conference of Mayors annual
meeting in Miami, and the National Association of Counties summer meeting in
Kansas City as it continues recruiting state and local elected officials to join
its ranks.
State and local elected officials who wish to join Building America’s Future can
register at www.InvestInInfrastructure.org.
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