APTA: Congress needs to act on public transit funding due to Hurricane Sandy

More than two months after Hurricane Sandy hit the Northeast, three of the largest public transit systems in the United States -- the New York MTA, Port Authority – Trans Hudson (PATH), and NJ TRANSIT – along with those included in Presidential disaster declarations in 11 states and the District of Columbia, are still waiting for the federal government to come to their aid.

“As has been noted by others, federal aid has always been available to communities where natural disasters occurred,” said American Public Transportation Association (APTA) President and CEO Michael Melaniphy. “The time to act is now. The public transit systems in the Northeast that were severely impacted by Hurricane Sandy need emergency federal funds to address the unprecedented destruction in their transit systems.”

This week the U.S. House of Representatives plans to vote on emergency aid, which will include federal funds to restore affected public transportation systems. In the last Congress, the U.S. Senate voted in favor of a $60 billion aid package, which would have included $10.8 billion for public transportation systems and mitigation activities that would prevent similar destruction from natural disasters in the future.

In the new 113th Congress, the U.S. House of Representatives is beginning the legislative process on this issue with a vote later this week. APTA is urging House Members to vote for the Frelinghuysen amendment to H.R. 152, which will bring the federal funding for public transportation restoration and mitigation activities to $10.9 billion. Without the Frelinghuysen amendment, the House bill includes $5.4 billion in funding for public transportation.

“It is vitally important that Congress vote for the Frelinghuysen amendment,” said Melaniphy. “The New York and New Jersey region is the top economic area in our country. The millions of people in this region who depend on public transportation deserve the same assistance that other areas of the country have received when natural disasters have occurred.”

In conclusion, Melaniphy said, “The damage incurred by Hurricane Sandy was devastating. The cost of bringing systems to their pre-storm condition cannot be achieved by the public transit agencies and local governments alone. Congress needs to make this legislation a top priority.”

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, Minneapolis Workplace Examiner

Matt Krumrie is a Twin Cities-based freelance writer who has 15 years experience covering news for newspapers, magazines and websites. You may contact Matt with your comments and questions.

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