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Infrastructure Bill: What Gets Funded?

Infrastructure week, month and year have finally arrived.

All the haggling on one of the two major funding bills is finally done. On Friday the House passed the Senate version of the bill that was sent over months ago.

See the one highlighted item on disaster resilience!

WASHINGTON, Oct. 1 (Reuters) - The Democratic-controlled U.S. House of Representatives are discussing whether to vote on Friday on a roughly $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill to update America's roads, bridges and broadband networks, passed by the Senate in August.

The legislation is one of President Joe Biden's top domestic priorities and includes $550 billion in new spending, while the rest of the $1 trillion is previously approved funding.

Here are some of the details of the bipartisan bill:

NEW SPENDING

* Roads, bridges and major projects: $110 billion
* Passenger and freight rail: $66 billion
* Broadband infrastructure: $65 billion
* Water infrastructure, such as eliminating lead pipes: $55 billion
* Public transit: $39.2 billion
* Resiliency, including flood and wildfire mitigation, ecosystem restoration, weatherization and cybersecurity: $47.2 billion
* Electric vehicle infrastructure, including chargers: $7.5 billion
* Addressing legacy pollution including cleaning up brownfield and Superfund sites, reclaiming abandoned mine lands, plugging orphan oil and gas wells: $21 billion

NEW FINANCING

The plan has a number of proposals to finance the spending, including the following items and the revenue gains from each over the next decade, as estimated by Congress' nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation and Congressional Budget Office.

* Repurposing unused COVID-19 relief funds: $210 billion
* Sales of future spectrum auctions and proceeds of February 2021 c-band auction: $87 billion
* Economic growth: $56 billion
* Return of unemployment insurance funds from some states: $53 billion
* Delaying Medicare Part D rebate rule: $51 billion
* Applying information reporting requirements to cryptocurrency: $28 billion
* Reinstating Superfund fees: $14.5 billion
Disaster Zone by Eric Holdeman is dedicated to sharing information about the world of emergency management and homeland security.