The state is going to play a major role in distributing some of the federal funds that would be appropriated under the president’s plan through agencies like PennVEST, which finances key environmental and infrastructure projects, and the Department of Community and Economic Development, which administers federal block grants devoted to community development. Our elected leaders in Harrisburg need to distribute any federal money with an eye toward maximizing job creation while ensuring equity.
While the American Jobs Plan will provide a one-time boost to our state’s struggling transit agencies, Harrisburg must step up with a comprehensive infrastructure plan that provides a stable, long-term stream of funding that gives SEPTA the resources to invest in service expansion and electric buses.
The state’s current transportation funding law, Act 89, has provided a decade of stability that has given SEPTA the resources to refurbish the antiquated City Hall station and increase bus and trolley service. But key provisions are set to sunset in 2022, threatening to bring us back to the bad old days of regular budget shortfalls, a downward spiral of service cuts, and plummeting ridership.
Gov. Tom Wolf has taken the first step toward addressing this problem by convening a Transportation Revenue Options Commission, which is due to release recommendations for closing this impending funding gap over the summer.
Our region, and our commonwealth, can’t afford to go backward. Instead, we need to follow the president’s lead by making bold new investments that make us more economically competitive and more environmentally sustainable.
Josh McNeil is executive director of Conservation Voters of Pennsylvania.
WHYY is one of over 20 news organizations producing Broke in Philly, a collaborative reporting project on solutions to poverty and the city’s push towards economic justice. Follow us at @BrokeInPhilly.