In the few weeks left
before Congress adjourns to campaign, it will consider the
appropriations bills needed to fund the federal government in
fiscal year 2007, which begins on October 1, as well as several
other costly spending bills that would benefit influential
constituencies. Chief among the latter are bills that would spend
$1.5 billion over ten years to bail out Washington, D.C.'s troubled
public transit system and $11.4 billion over six years to bail out
Amtrak. These bailouts would be fiscally irresponsible and
counterproductive to reform of the entities they ostensibly
benefit. President Bush and fiscal conservatives should make their
opposition to such wasteful spending clear.
The
Metro Bailout
On July 17, 2006, the
House of Representatives passed, by a one-vote margin,
Representative Tom Davis's (R-VA) H.R. 3496. The bill would divert
$1.5 billion of federal revenues earned through offshore drilling
to subsidize the troubled Metro transit system that serves
Washington, D.C., and Davis's congressional district in suburban
Virginia. The bill was sent to the Senate, where it has been
referred to the Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management,
the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia. The
subcommittee has taken no action yet, and one Senator has placed a
"hold" on it. While the bill is going nowhere for now, it could be
attached to any one of the must-pass bills that Congress will take
up over the next few weeks.
If ultimately enacted, the
Davis bill would be one of the largest earmarks ever passed-seven
times more expensive than Alaska's infamous Bridge to Nowhere
earmark and twice as expensive as Mississippi's Train to Nowhere.
Given the wealth of Davis's constituents-in 2004, the median
household in Fairfax County, Virginia, the most populous part of
Davis's district, enjoyed income of $88,133, compared to a national
median of $44,684-the earmark would be a costly exercise in
"trickle up" economics, forcing Americans across the country to
subsidize the transportation needs of a small slice of one of the
nation's most prosperous communities.
As troubling as this
inequitable transfer would be, Mr. Davis's proposal also requires
that, as a condition of Metro receiving the $1.5 billion federal
bailout, all communities in its service area establish a "dedicated
funding source" (a euphemism for a tax increase) to match the
federal subsidy. To date, the White House has been silent on this
costly proposal, and this silence may have contributed to the
bill's victory in the House last July. The President has an
opportunity to rectify this by issuing a statement expressing his
opposition to the Metro bailout.
The
Amtrak Bailout
The Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science and Transportation reported out Senator Trent
Lott's (R-MS) "Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of
2005" (S. 1516) on October 18, 2005. Senate leadership has promised
a vote on the bill before the Senate adjourns for the election.
Although there is no companion bill in the House, the Senate
version could be attached to must-pass legislation and sent to the
House or a House/Senate conference as part of a larger package.
As written, S. 1516 would
spend $11.3 billion on Amtrak over the next 6 years, including
nearly $1.8 billion in 2007 alone, which would double the $900
million the President proposed in his budget. The bill would also
substantially change the federal statutes governing Amtrak's
operations in ways that would hinder reform and interrupt the
modest operational reforms being implemented by Amtrak's new
management. In place of the real opportunities for reform it would
unravel, S. 1516 contains directives,
alterations, restructurings, subsidies, studies, reports, metrics,
five-year plans, transitions, and other methods of top-down
micromanagement designed to create the impression that spinning
wheels represent forward movement.
Accounting for less than one half of one
percent of intercity passenger traffic, Amtrak is a marginal but
costly player in the American transportation system. Whereas
commercial aviation received a federal subsidy of $6.18 per
thousand passenger miles in 2002 (the latest year calculated) and
no subsidy in the years just prior to the 9/11 terrorist attacks,
Amtrak's subsidy in 2002 amounted to $210.31 per 1,000 passenger
miles. Amtrak's losses in its most recent fiscal year exceeded $1
billion because ticket revenues cover only about half of its costs.
Most of its losses are attributable to its inefficient long
distance routes. Per-passenger subsidies on some of these routes
exceed $400.
As with the Metro bailout, the Bush
Administration has not expressed its views on this even more costly
bailout. Without any firm opposition from the President, S. 1516 is
more likely to be attached to other legislation and make its way
into law. To minimize the risk that taxpayers will have to shoulder
this heavy burden, the President should issue a Statement of
Administration Position promising to veto the bill if it is sent
for his signature.
Ronald D. Utt, Ph.D.,
is Herbert and Joyce Morgan Senior Research Fellow in the Thomas A.
Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.