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House Passes $151-Billion Highway, Mass Transit Bill : Legislation: The six-year package, approved 343-83, would give states right to shift funds to rail, bus projects.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

The House on Wednesday overwhelmingly approved a landmark $151-billion transportation bill that would give states unprecedented authority to spend federal highway aid on mass transit projects.

The controversial six-year package, approved 343 to 83, received broad bipartisan support despite some lawmakers’ objections to provisions that would extend a gasoline tax surcharge and earmark $5.2 billion for more than 470 “demonstration” projects across the country.

The sweeping legislation would set the course for national highway and mass transit policy into the 21st Century and, for the first time in 35 years, restructure the way the federal government hands out aid for roads, bridges, bus systems and rail lines.

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The Senate already has approved a similar measure calling for $123 billion in spending over five years. Differences in the two bills--as well as a threatened presidential veto of the House legislation--will be addressed by a House-Senate conference committee.

To help pay for the massive public works program, the House bill would extend for four years, until Sept. 30, 1999, a 2.5-cent-a-gallon surcharge on the federal gasoline tax that was enacted last year. The tax currently is 14 cents a gallon.

The bill also calls for drastically reducing the $11.4-billion balance in the federal Highway Trust Fund’s highway account over the next six years.

An earlier version of the bill foundered in the House in late July after members balked at approving a proposed nickel-a-gallon increase in the gasoline tax.

Congressional supporters praised the House bill, known as the Intermodal Surface Transportation Infrastructure Act of 1991, as a vital investment in the country’s future in an increasingly competitive international environment.

“In the next century . . . the security of our nation will depend less on how fast an ICBM travels to the Soviet Union and more on how fast our commerce travels through our transportation network,” said Rep. Norman Y. Mineta (D-San Jose), one of the bill’s principal authors and chairman of the Public Works Committee’s surface transportation subcommittee.

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But opponents, largely Republicans, attacked the proposed gasoline tax extension and what they characterized as the bill’s emphasis on mass transit at the expense of highway construction. They also assailed $5.2 billion in funds earmarked for specially designated “congressional projects of national significance.”

Those so-called demonstration projects, which often bypass state planning processes, have been widely criticized by the Bush Administration and others as pork-barrel spending intended to boost the popularity at home of House members.

The President’s senior advisers, including Transportation Secretary Samuel K. Skinner, have said they will recommend a veto of the bill on several grounds, including the overall spending levels, the demonstration projects and the gas tax extension. The Administration also objects to the bill’s proposed 80%-20% federal-state matching ratio for highway and transit projects. Skinner had sought to double the state contribution to 40%.

“We have a $400-billion deficit staring us in the face,” said Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.), one of the bill’s chief opponents, “and yet we still allow many, many pork-barrel projects. . . .. We have to get the pork out.”

“What I . . . have a quarrel with is the incredible change in policy in this bill, moving away from building highways toward mass transit,” said Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Tex.), referring to mass transit programs as “a failure.”

The House legislation largely would replace programs put in place in 1956 that were designed to finance construction of the 43,000-mile interstate highway network, which is now all but complete. Nevertheless, the bill includes $8 billion to complete the remaining interstate threads, including the Century Freeway in Los Angeles. The current federal aid programs expired on Sept. 30, the end of the 1991 fiscal year.

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The bill would authorize $119 billion in spending on a variety of highway and bridge programs through the 1997 fiscal year and $32 billion for mass transit, more than double the amount of transit spending proposed by the Administration. It also would give states the authority to shift up to $51 billion of the highway funds into transit programs. Under current law, states are penalized for shifting any transportation aid from one account to another.

The Senate in June approved its own transportation bill that calls for spending $123 billion over five years, including at least $21 billion on transit projects. The Senate bill would permit even more flexibility than the House legislation, creating a $45-billion surface transportation program that could be used either for highway or transit projects.

The House bill would radically rewrite the formulas that have been used for years to apportion federal aid to the states under various transportation programs. The Senate legislation largely keeps the old formulas in place.

While funds must be appropriated separately to pay costs of the programs in the transportation legislation, nearly all of the money is raised through gasoline tax receipts. Thus, congressional aides said, they do not anticipate unusually bruising battles in the House and Senate Appropriations committees when funding legislation is considered.

The House bill would provide California with at least $11.7 billion in transportation aid over the next six years. It would earmark at least $10.4 billion for the state under formula programs, $351 million in special highway demonstration projects and $1.4 billion in set-asides for mass transit projects.

The transit projects include $568.5 million for extension of the Bay Area Rapid Transit system in the San Francisco area and $695 million for the third segment of Los Angeles’ Metro Rail system. The Metro Rail money would pay for extending one rail line northwest from the Hollywood and Vine station to North Hollywood, another line west from the Wilshire station to San Vicente Boulevard and a third line east from Union Station into East Los Angeles.

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