Manufacturing Association Calls on Trump to Fund Infrastructure

The National Association of Manufacturers sent Trump a letter insisting that he follow up on campaign promises to find money for repairing the countries infrastructure.

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(TNS) — WASHINGTON — America’s manufacturers are urging President Donald Trump to make good on a campaign promise to find money to repair the nation’s highways, airports, dams and bridges.

The National Association of Manufacturers, which represents 12 million people, sent Trump a letter Monday asking him to move forward on a bipartisan proposal.

“The infrastructure investments of the 1950s and 1960s brought tremendous economic benefits, built strong communities, improved productivity and competitiveness and allowed manufacturing to grow and put people to work in solid middle-class jobs,” said Jay Timmons, NAM’s president and CEO, in the letter, which was obtained by McClatchy. “Today, however, as more and more of our infrastructure crumbles, it is not keeping up with modern demands for safety and innovation, nor is it giving American workers the tools they need to compete with the rest of the world.”

The letter comes after Trump hosted Republican leaders at Camp David to discuss the party’s legislative priorities before the midterm elections, which could include action on an infrastructure plan as well as welfare reform.

While campaigning for president, Trump promised a job-creating $1 trillion infrastructure bill within his first 100 days in office. But that aggressive goal was not met. His first budget proposal did include $200 billion for infrastructure.

Now, manufacturers who praised Trump for the tax reform bill that Republicans passed late last year want the president and GOP leaders to take up infrastructure.

But Trump may find opposition among some Republicans who may oppose new government spending and Democrats who may not want to work with Trump, especially after the success of the GOP tax bill. Last year, Senate Democrats proposed their own $1 trillion plan to fund infrastructure projects over a 10-year period. Democrats say their proposal would create more than 15 million jobs.

The spending plans are similar but Trump talked of paying for the plan with tax credits and public-private partnerships, while Democrats suggested using federal dollars.

NAM’s proposal, Building to Win, calls for ending funding uncertainty and streamlining the permitting process, as well as other goals:

  • Shore up the Highway Trust Fund with a reliable, user-based, long-term funding stream.
  • Spend the $9 billion balance in the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund to deepen ports and harbors.
  • Quickly upgrade aging locks and dams.
  • Eliminate the maintenance backlog of transit and passenger rail systems.
  • Develop a plan to accelerate the implementation of NextGen air traffic management technology.
  • Find incentives to continue record levels of private capital reinvestment into railroad infrastructure.
  • Promote new pipeline investments.
  • Upgrade and modernize drinking and wastewater infrastructure.
  • Develop broadband infrastructure.
Trump reportedly told Republican leaders at Camp David that using public-private partnerships is not an effective way to fund infrastructure projects, despite urging them to do so during the campaign.

On Friday, Trump tweeted his support for a proposal by Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., to pay for infrastructure projects with foreign aid withheld from Pakistan.

NAM is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states.

©2018 McClatchy Washington Bureau Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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