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Fw: [SCVTARU] Update on Transit Funding in the Gov't Stim. Package



      
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The stimulus bill status - and this update - affect transit agencies
like VTA.  The bill's passage - or failure - marks the difference
between another round of fare hikes and service cuts at VTA.  

I want to write a support letter to Senators Boxer & Feinstein in the
next 48 hours urging them to pass the stimulus package with funding
for transit operations and transparency.  Draft letter will come this
evening.

Please enjoy and discuss.  This and more issues to consider this
evening.  

--eugene

========== FORWARDED ARTICLE ==========

Senate GOP blocks extra $25B in stimulus package

By ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press Writer Andrew Taylor, Associated
Press Writer

WASHINGTON ? Senate Republicans on Tuesday blocked Democrats from
adding $25 billion 
for highways, mass transit, and water projects to President Barack
Obama's economic 
recovery program. Already unhappy over the size of the measure,
Republicans insisted 
additional infrastructure projects be paid for with cuts elsewhere in
the bill.

But the Democratic amendment garnered 58 votes, just shy of the
supermajority needed 
under Senate budget rules, and many more efforts to increase the
measure's size are 
sure to follow.

"We can't add to the size of this bill," said Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla.
"The amount 
is just inconceivable to most people."

At issue was a plan by Sens. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Dianne
Feinstein, D-Calif., 
to increase the highway funding in the bill to $40 billion, which
reflected 
complaints from lawmakers in both parties that Obama's plan doesn't do
enough to 
relieve a backlog of unfinished projects. The duo also wanted to
increase mass 
transit programs by $5 billion boost and water projects by $7 billion.

"Our highways are jammed. People go to work in gridlock," Feinstein
said Tuesday.

Just two Republicans supported the move, Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania
and Christopher 
Bond of Missouri. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and Judd Gregg, R-N.H.,
named Tuesday 
morning to become Commerce secretary, did not vote.

Senate debate unfolded as Obama issued another call for swift action
on the measure, 
urging lawmakers to act "with the same sense of urgency Americans feel
every day."

Republicans, for their part, readied a plan to lower mortgage costs to
try to jolt 
the housing market out of its slump.

The $885 billion Senate economic plan faces assaults from both
Democrats and 
Republicans during debate this week, as lawmakers in both parties aim
to kill ideas 
that won't jolt the economy right away.

"The goal is to shape a package that is more targeted, that would be
smaller in size 
and that would be truly focused on saving or creating jobs and turning
the economy 
around," said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine. She said ideas like $870
million to combat 
bird flu should be dumped.

Others, such as Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., have complained about items
such as health 
research being in the bill. But Specter ? a moderate whose vote is
sought by Obama ? 
is instead proposing to add $6.5 billion for the National Institutes
of Health.

Democrats already are under pressure from moderates in their own party
to scale back 
spending in the $885 billion bill, and Obama met with party leaders at
the White 
House late Monday to discuss strategy.

"What we can't do is let very modest differences get in the way" of
swift enactment 
of the legislation, Obama said several hours earlier as new layoffs
rippled through 
the economy and the Commerce Department reported an unexpectedly large
sixth straight 
drop in personal spending.

In the Capitol, Republicans said their goal was to change the bill,
not to block it. 
"Nobody that I know of is trying to keep a package from passing," said
Sen. Mitch 
McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader.

"We need to fix housing first," he said. Republicans are expected to
seek a vote on 
their proposals this week as part of the debate on the overall
stimulus measure.

Officials said the GOP was uniting behind a proposal designed to give
banks an 
incentive to make loans at rates currently estimated at 4 percent to
4.5 percent. 
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were seized by the federal
government in September, 
would be required to purchase the mortgages once banks have made them
to consumers.

Officials said loans to creditworthy borrowers on primary residences
with a 
mortgage of up to $625,000 would qualify, including those seeking to
refinance their 
current loans.

Separately, Republican officials said they intended to press for a
$15,000 tax 
credit for home buyers through the end of the year. Current law
permits a $7,500 tax 
break and limits it to first-time home buyers.

Nineteen Democratic and Republican governors, meanwhile, cited frozen
credit markets 
and rising unemployment in urging lawmakers to resolve their
differences and asking 
Obama to sign the bill as soon as it reaches his desk. The governors
said the money 
it provides for public education, health care and rebuilding the nation's 
infrastructure will create and preserve jobs while making a sound
investment in the 
country's long-term economic interests.

"While we all believe in the importance of free markets, we believe
that the markets 
today need stimulating," the governors told Obama in a letter dated
Monday. Among 
the signers are Democrats Deval Patrick of Ma and Tim Kaine
of Virginia, 
and Republicans Arnold Schwarzenegger of Ca and Charlie Crist
of Florida.

========== END FORWARDED ARTICLE ========== 

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