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By: JULIA CONLEY
February 29, 2024
“If we want to tackle congestion and the climate crisis, instead of offering platitudes, the next transportation bill needs to offer clean mobility options, like transit, car share, active modes, and electrification,” said one analyst.
The law that the Biden administration has heralded as “a once-in-a-generation investment in America’s infrastructure” that would help to “build a clean energy economy” has led to an explosion in state-level spending on highway expansion, leading one transportation advocacy group to project on Wednesday that the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law will result in more emissions from transport than if it hadn’t passed.
The law, officially known as the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), gave state transportation officials discretion over how to spend money distributed by the $1.2 trillion package, but Transportation for America warned in a new analysis of 57,000 projects that the law has revealed itself to be a “climate time bomb,” with more than half of the funds—about $70 billion—so far spent on resurfacing and expanding highways.
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