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Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), most commonly known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL), (H.R. 3684), is a United States federal statute enacted by the 117th United States Congress and signed into law by President Joe Biden on November 15, 2021. It was originally introduced in the House as the INVEST in America Act, and was commonly known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill before it was signed into law.

Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act
Long titleAn act to authorize funds for Federal-aid highways, highway safety programs, and transit programs, and for other purposes.
Acronyms (colloquial)IIJA
NicknamesBipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL)
Enacted bythe 117th United States Congress
EffectiveNovember 15, 2021
Number of co-sponsors5
Citations
Public lawPub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 117–58 (text) (PDF)
Statutes at Large135 Stat. 429
Codification
Titles amended23 U.S.C. § 
Agencies affectedDepartment of Transportation (USDOT)
Legislative history
  • Introduced in the House as the "INVEST in America Act" (H.R. 3684) by Peter DeFazio (DOR) on June 4, 2021
  • Committee consideration by House Transportation and Infrastructure
  • Passed the House on July 1, 2021 (221–201)
  • Passed the Senate as the "Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act" on August 10, 2021 (69–30) with amendment
  • House agreed to Senate amendment on November 5, 2021 (228–206)
  • Signed into law by President Joe Biden on November 15, 2021

The act was initially a $547–715 billion infrastructure package that included provisions related to federal-aid highway, transit, highway safety, motor carrier, research, hazardous materials and rail programs of the Department of Transportation.[1][2] After congressional negotiations, it was amended and renamed to the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to include funding for broadband access, clean water and electric grid renewal in addition to the transportation and road proposals of the original House bill. This amended version included approximately $1.2 trillion in spending, with $550 billion being newly authorized spending on top of what Congress was planning to authorize regularly.[3][4]

The amended bill was passed 69–30 by the Senate on August 10, 2021. On November 5, it was passed 228–206 by the House, and ten days later was signed into law by President Biden.[5]

Background edit

On March 31, 2021,[6] President Joe Biden unveiled his $2.3 trillion American Jobs Plan (which, when combined with the American Families Plan, amounted to $4 trillion in infrastructure spending),[7] pitched by him as "a transformative effort to overhaul the nation's economy".[8] The detailed plan aimed to create millions of jobs, bolster labor unions, expand labor protections, and address climate change.[9][10]

Legislative history edit

Senate passage edit

In mid-April 2021, Republican lawmakers offered a $568 billion counterproposal to the American Jobs Plan.[11] On May 9, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said it should cost no more than $800 billion.[12] On May 21, the administration reduced the price tag to $1.7 trillion, which was quickly rejected by Republicans.[13] A day later, a bipartisan group within the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee announced that they had reached a deal for $304 billion in funding for U.S. highway funding.[14] This was approved unanimously by the committee on May 26.[15] On June 4, House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chair Peter DeFazio announced a $547 billion plan, called the INVEST in America Act, which would address parts of the American Jobs Plan.[16][a] On July 1, the House passed an amended $715 billion infrastructure bill focused on land transportation and water.[17]

On May 27, Republican senator Shelley Moore Capito presented a $928 billion plan,[18][b][c] and on June 4, increased it by about $50 billion; this was quickly rejected by the Biden administration.[19] On June 8, the administration shifted its focus to a bipartisan group of 20 senators, which had been working on a package tentatively priced around $900 billion.[20][d] On June 10, a bipartisan group of 10 senators reached a deal costing $974 billion over five years; or about $1.2 trillion if stretched over eight years.[22] On June 16, the plan was endorsed by a bipartisan group of 21 senators.[23] On June 24, the bipartisan group met with the president and reached a compromise deal costing $1.2 trillion over eight years, which focuses on physical infrastructure (notably roads, bridges, railways, water, sewage, broadband, electric vehicles). This was planned to be paid for through reinforced Internal Revenue Service (IRS) collection, unspent COVID-19 relief funds, and other sources.[24] By July 2021, the IRS portion of the funding had reportedly been scrapped.[25] Biden stipulated that a separate "human infrastructure" bill (notably child care, home care, and climate change) – later known as the Build Back Better Act – must also pass, whether through bipartisanship or reconciliation,[24] but later walked back this position.[26] House Speaker Nancy Pelosi similarly stated that the House would not vote on the physical infrastructure bill until the larger bill passes in the Senate,[27] despite the fact that reconciliation overrides much of the obstructive power of the filibuster.[27][28]

White House officials stated on July 7 that legislative text was nearing completion.[29] On July 14, the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee advanced an energy bill expected to be included in the bipartisan package.[30] On July 21, Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer put forward a "shell bill" for a vote to kick off debate in the Senate, intending to add the bipartisan text via an amendment.[31][e] On July 25, Republican senator Rob Portman stated that an agreement was "about 90%" complete, with mass transit being one remaining point of contention.[33] On July 30, Portman stated that this had been resolved.[34] On July 28, Senator Kyrsten Sinema stated that she did not support a reconciliation bill costing $3.5 trillion, breaking the stalemate and allowing the bipartisan bill to move forward.[35] That day, the Senate voted 67–32 to advance the bill,[36] and on July 30, voted 66–28 to proceed to its consideration.[37] The legislation text was completed and substituted into the bill on August 1.[38] On August 5, Schumer moved to truncate debate on the legislation, setting up a procedural vote on August 7,[39] which passed 67–27.[40] Fifteen or more amendments were expected to receive votes through the weekend.[40] On August 10, the bill was passed by the Senate 69–30.[41] It sets aside $550 billion in new spending.[42] A procedural vote on a House rule concerning passing both bills passed along party lines on August 24.[43]

House passage edit

 
President Biden signing the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act into law on November 15, 2021
 
House vote by congressional district November 5th
  Democratic yea (215)
  Republican yea (13)
  Democratic nay (6)
  Republican nay (200)

In early August, nine moderate Democrats called for an immediate House vote on the bill, citing a desire not to lose the momentum from the Senate passage of the bill. They committed to voting against taking up the reconciliation resolution until there was a vote on the bipartisan infrastructure bill.[44][45] While both Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have reversed earlier positions to support passing the bipartisan bill separately,[26][46] progressives including Congressional Progressive Caucus chairwoman Pramila Jayapal and Senator Bernie Sanders maintained that it be utilized as leverage to pass the most expensive reconciliation bill possible.[47][48][49] The lack of a deal caused a late September House vote to be postponed.[49] On October 2, Pelosi set a new deadline of October 31.[50] By October 28, Jayapal and other progressive leaders indicated that they were willing to vote on the bill separately,[51] but Sanders and others opposed this.[52][53] On October 31, a majority of progressives signaled that they would support both bills.[54]

Votes on both bills were considered on November 5, but the hesitation of several moderates to pass the reconciliation bill before it could be scored by the Congressional Budget Office made passing the bipartisan bill unlikely.[55] Negotiations between centrist and progressive Democrats concluded with the centrists committing to passing the Build Back Better Act.[56] The bill ultimately went to a vote, as did a rule to vote on the larger bill once it was scored, passing 228–206; 13 Republicans joined all but six Democrats (members of "the Squad") in supporting the legislation.[57][58][59] The six Democrats who voted 'No' stated that their opposition was because the legislation had been decoupled from the social-safety net provisions of the Build Back Better bill.[60][61] Biden signed the bill into law at a signing ceremony on November 15.[62]

Provisions edit

The final version restores the Superfund excise tax on certain chemicals[63] which expired in 1995.[64]

Overview edit

 
Investment categories ($ billion) in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, adding to about $550 billion over a decade[65]

According to NPR, the version which passed the Senate on July 28 is set to include:

  • $110 billion for roads, bridges and other major projects;
  • $11 billion for transportation safety programs;
  • $39 billion to modernize transit and improve accessibility;
  • $66 billion for passenger and freight rail;
  • $7.5 billion to build a national network of electric vehicle chargers;
  • $73 billion to overhaul the nation's power infrastructure, clean energy transmission, and overall energy policy;
  • $65 billion for broadband development.[35]

The law would also make the Minority Business Development Agency a permanent agency.[66] It authorizes the DOT to create an organization called the Advanced Research Projects Agency–Infrastructure (ARPA–I), with a broad remit over transportation research akin to DARPA, HSARPA, IARPA, ARPA-E, and ARPA-H,[67] with the first appropriations of $3.22 million being made in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023.[68][69][70]

Impact on environment and climate edit

An October 2021 report written by the REPEAT Project, a partnership between the Evolved Energy Research firm and Princeton University's ZERO Lab, said the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act alone will make only a small reduction in emissions, but as they say: "We lack modeling capabilities to reflect the net effect of surface transportation investments in highways (which tend to increase on-road vehicle and freight miles traveled) and rail and public transit (which tend to reduce on-road vehicle and freight miles traveled). These significant programs are therefore not modeled in this analysis, an important limitation of our assessment of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act".[71]

The Georgetown Climate Center tried to estimate how the $599 billion investment for surface transportation in the bill can impact emissions from transportation. It created two scenarios: "high emissions" and "low emissions". The main difference is that, from the money dedicated to highways in the first scenario, more money will go to building new highways, while in the second, more will go to repairing existing highways. The other spending areas' characteristics are not so different. The first scenario sees increased cumulative emissions over the years 2022-2040 by more than 200 million tons, while the second decreases them by around 250 million tons.[72]

The law includes the largest federal investment in public transit in history.[73] The law includes spending figures of $105 billion dollars in public transport. It also spends $110 billion on fixing roads and bridges and includes measures for climate change mitigation and improving access for cyclists and pedestrians.[74] Increasing use of public transport and related transit-oriented development can reduce transportation emissions in human settlements by 78% and overall US emissions by 15%.[75]

The law includes spending $21 billion for environmental projects, $50 billion for water storage, and $15 billion for electric vehicles.[76] It also includes $73 billion to overhaul the energy policy of the United States.[74][77] The law also gives $4.7 billion to cap orphan wells abandoned by oil and gas companies[78][79][80] and $1 billion to better connect neighborhoods separated by transport infrastructure as part of environmental justice efforts.[81] This $1 billion will be spent through the Reconnecting Communities Pilot (RCP) discretionary grant program[82] that, among other priorities, promotes: "New or improved, affordable transportation options to increase safe mobility and connectivity for all, including for people with disabilities, through lower-carbon travel like walking, cycling, rolling, and transit that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and promote active travel."[83]

Energy edit

$73 billion will be spent on overhauling the energy policy of the United States. $11 billion of that amount will be invested in the electrical grid's adjustment to renewable energy, with some of the money going to new loans for electric power transmission lines and required studies for future transmission needs.[84][85][86] $6 billion of that $73 billion will go to domestic nuclear power. Also of that $73 billion, the IIJA invests $45 billion in innovation and industrial policy for key emerging technologies in energy; $430 million[87]–$21 billion in new demonstration projects at the DOE; and nearly $24 billion in onshoring, supply chain resilience, and bolstering U.S.-held competitive advantages in energy; the latter amount will be divided into an $8.6 billion investment in carbon capture and storage, $3 billion in battery material reprocessing, $3 billion in battery recycling, $1 billion in rare-earth minerals stockpiling, and $8 billion in new research hubs for green hydrogen.[77] The DOE has imposed grant requirements on $7 billion of the IIJA's battery and transportation spending, which are meant to promote community benefits agreements, social justice, and formation of trade unions.[88] Finally, the law gives $4.7 billion to cap orphan wells abandoned by oil and gas companies.[78][79][80]

Water edit

To support safe drinking water programs, the law provides:

For surface water programs, such as watershed management and pollution control, the law provides:

Bridges edit

Prior to the enactment of the infrastructure law in 2021, no dedicated federal bridge funding had existed since fiscal year 2013. The law created two new programs specifically to fund bridge projects:[92]

Bridge Formula Program (BFP) edit

With $27.5 billion over five years, the BFP distributes funds to every state, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico based on a formula that accounts for each state's cost to replace or rehabilitate its poor or fair condition bridges. Each state is guaranteed a minimum of $45 million per year from this program. At least 15% of each state's funds must be spent on off-system bridges (i.e., public bridges that are not on federal-aid highways), and 3% is set aside each year for bridges on tribal lands. Off-system and tribal bridge projects may be funded with a 100% federal share (as opposed to the standard 80% federal share).[93]

Bridge Investment Program (BIP) edit

With $12.5 billion over five years, the BIP is a competitive grant program to replace, rehabilitate, preserve, or make resiliency improvements to bridges. Half of the funding is reserved for large bridge projects, which are defined as projects that cost over $100 million. Large projects are funded at a maximum 50% federal share, while other projects are funded at a maximum 80% federal share.[94]

Passenger rail edit

The infrastructure law is the largest investment in passenger rail since the 1971 creation of Amtrak (which under the law will receive $22 billion in advance appropriations and $19 billion in fully authorized funds).[95][96] It directly appropriated $66 billion for rail over a five-year period (including the Amtrak appropriations), of which at least $18 billion is designated for expanding passenger rail service to new corridors, and it authorized an additional $36 billion.[96] Most of this funding for new passenger rail lines is implemented through the Federal-State Partnership for Intercity Passenger Rail program, which will receive $36 billion in advance appropriations and $7.5 billion in fully authorized funds.[96] The Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements program will receive $5 billion in advance appropriations and $5 billion in fully authorized funds, while programs for grade separation replacing level crossings will receive $3 billion in advance appropriations and $2.5 billion in fully authorized funds, and the Restoration and Enhancement Grant program intended to revive discontinued passenger rail services will receive $250 million in advance appropriations and $250 million in fully authorized funds.[96] Per the law's requirements, at least $12 billion is available and $3.4–4.1 billion authorized for expanding service outside of the Northeast Corridor, and $24 billion is available and $3.4–4.1 billion authorized to partially rebuild the Corridor.[97]

To help plan and guide the expansion of passenger rail service beyond the Northeast Corridor, the infrastructure law also created a $1.8 billion Corridor Identification and Development Program.[98] The law also expands eligibility for a potential $23 billion in transit funding to these corridors and changes the allocation methods for state government-supported passenger rail shorter than 750 miles, to encourage states to implement more such service.

Highway removal and complete streets edit

The law includes $1 billion over five years for Reconnecting Communities planning and construction grants, the first of which were awarded in February 2023.[99]

Transit station accessibility edit

The law established and authorized $1.75 billion over five years for a new All Stations Accessibility Program (ASAP).[100] This program is designed to improve the accessibility of rail system stations that were built before the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA). At the time of the infrastructure law's passage, over 900 transit stations were not fully ADA-compliant.[101]

Wildlife crossings and conservation edit

The infrastructure law created the Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program with $350 million in funding over five years. This is a competitive grant program that funds planning and construction projects that prevent wildlife vehicle collisions and improve the connectivity of animal habitats.[102]

The law also allocated $1 billion to create the National Culvert Removal, Replacement, and Restoration Grant program to improve the passage of anadromous fish such as salmon.[103]

Transportation safety edit

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act requires the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to develop a safety mechanism to prevent drunk driving, which causes about 10,000 deaths each year in the United States as of 2021, which will be rolled out in phases for retroactive fitting,[104][105] and will become mandatory for all new vehicles in 2027.[106] The technology, which is being developed by NHTSA in cooperation with the Automotive Coalition for Traffic Safety and Swedish automobile safety company Autoliv, consists of a breath-based and a touch-based sensor that stops the car if the driver is above the legal blood alcohol content, and will be open-sourced to automobile manufacturers.[107]

Under the law, the United States Department of Transportation (DOT) will be required to develop regulations for a system that can detect distracted, fatigued, or impaired drivers.[104] The NHTSA has recommended implementing a camera-based warning system for the former, similar to a technology mandated by the European Union in July 2022.[107]

The law also requires the NHTSA's New Car Assessment Program to test collision avoidance systems in preparation for new federal regulations; new DOT reporting requirements for statistical data on crashes involving motorized scooters and electric bicycles; new federal regulations on headlamps; research directives on technology to protect pedestrians and cyclists, advanced driver-assistance systems, federal hood and bumper regulations, smart city infrastructure, and self-driving cars; and a new Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) office specializing in cybersecurity.[104]

Implementation and results edit

 
A sign for a road project funded by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act in Avon, Connecticut

According to the New Democrat-linked think tank Center for American Progress, the Act, the CHIPS and Science Act, and the Inflation Reduction Act have together catalyzed over 35,000 public and private investments.[108] The Biden administration itself claimed that as of November 29, 2023, the IIJA, CaSA, and IRA together catalyzed over $628 billion in private investment (including $232 billion in electronics and semiconductors, $152 billion in electric vehicles and batteries, and $132 billion in clean energy generators) and over $392.2 billion in public infrastructure spending (including $35.7 billion in energy aside from tax credits in the IRA).[109]

Energy edit

In November 2022, the Biden administration announced it would furnish $550 million for the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant program for clean energy generators for low-income and minority communities, the first such appropriation since the Recovery Act in 2009.[110][111] The administration announced the competitive portion would award $8.8 million to 12 communities on October 12, 2023, with the next award applications due in April 2024.[112][113]

On October 24, 2023, the administration announced the first $3.46 billion in grants from the Act's $11 billion grid rebuilding authorization, would go to 58 projects in 44 states. 16 projects are categorized as for improving grid resilience, 34 are categorized as for building smart grids, and eight are categorized as pursing grid innovation. The investment is the largest in the American grid since the Recovery Act 14 years earlier. According to Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, the projects could enable 35 gigawatts of renewable energy to come online by 2030 and 400 microgrids to be built.[114][115]

On October 30, the DOE announced the results of a mandated triennial study that, for the first time in its history, included anticipation of future grid transmission needs.[85] The DOE also announced the first three recipients of a new $2.5 billion loan program it called the Transmission Facilitation Program, created to provide funding to help build up the interstate power grid. They are the 1.2-gigawatt Twin States Clean Energy Link between Quebec, New Hampshire and Vermont, the 1.5-gigawatt Cross-Tie Transmission Line between Utah and Nevada; and the 1-gigawatt Southline Transmission Project between Arizona and New Mexico.[86][84]

On November 15, the Biden administration announced a funding opportunity for the second investment from the grid rebuilding authorization, which would total $3.9 billion, beating the October 24 investment. Grid developers have a deadline of January 12, 2024 to apply. [116][117]

On November 16, 2023, the Biden administration announced the first recipients of $40.8 million in grants from a workforce training program the Act created, which will provide skills for industrial technology, the building trades and energy auditing.[118][119]

Hydrogen hubs edit

The Biden administration awarded $7 billion of the $8 billion appropriation to seven hydrogen research hubs, based in California, eastern Washington, southeastern Pennsylvania, southeastern Texas, Illinois, Minnesota, and West Virginia and affecting projects there and in eight more states, on October 13, 2023. The remaining $1 billion will be used for demand-side economic policies to drive growth in hydrogen use.[120][121]

Several criticisms of the hubs emerged. Jeff St. John, editor in chief of Canary Media, noted while it does mandate that the DOE create a clean hydrogen definitional standard (which as of October 2023 the DOE had not published), and that the DOE selected applicants who pledged community benefits agreements, the Act does not prescribe metrics or guidelines for measuring emissions from these hubs.[122] Researcher Hannah Story Brown of the watchdog group Revolving Door Project noted that the majority of hub projects announced are powered by fossil fuels, not renewable energy.[123]

Transportation edit

The bill contains $27 billion in funding for specific, concrete programs within the Federal Highway Administration that are already implemented to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the transportation sector, all of which was allotted in November 2023. For example, $7.2 billion is allocated to the "Transportation Alternatives Set-Aside Program" (creating more possibilities for biking and walking), $6.4 billion to the "Carbon Reduction Program" (reducing emissions from highways), $69 million to the "Transit-Oriented Development Program" (enhancing transit-oriented development and improving land use) and more.[124]

Colorado River edit

In 2023 an agreement between seven states was achieved, aiming to preserve the Colorado River water system from collapse due to poor management and climate change. The United States is heavily dependent on the river for power generation, drinking water, agriculture, wildlands restoration, and native cultural practices. Some states will reduce water use, receiving compensation for it (totaling $1.2 billion) from the federal government. Many other projects for preserving the river such as water recycling and rainwater harvesting, are advanced. The funding comes from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act.[125][126]

Climate adaptation edit

The bill provides around $7 billion to the Federal Emergency Management Agency for helping communities adapt to different climate-related disasters such as hurricanes, droughts, and heat waves. In August 2023, $3 billion was allocated to different related projects, including 124 projects related to resilient infrastructure and communities (located in "38 states, one tribe and the District of Columbia") and 149 projects related to protection from flooding (located in "28 states and the District of Columbia"). From the projects related to infrastructure, 64 use nature-based solutions. Some of the most vulnerable communities will receive help for free.[127]

In November 2023, the Biden administration announced that $300 million from FEMA’s new Swift Current Initiative created by the Act would go to helping communities impacted by floods recover and grow their resiliency. [116] [128] It also announced that it would award “$50 million in project awards to improve the reliability of water resources and support ecosystem health in Western states, along with an additional $50 million funding opportunity for water conservation projects and hydropower upgrades.” [116]

Reactions edit

Congress edit

Republican senators balked at Biden's tandem plan to pass both a bipartisan plan and a separate Democratic-supported reconciliation bill.[129] McConnell criticized Biden for "caving" to his own party by issuing an "ultimatum" that he would not sign the bipartisan bill without a separate reconciliation package.[130] After Biden walked back his comments, Republican senators restated their confidence in the bipartisan bill.[26] A Yahoo! News/YouGov poll conducted in late June found that 60% of Republican voters favored the plan.[131]

On June 20, 2021, Senator Bernie Sanders stated that he would not support paying for the bill via a proposed gas tax or a surcharge on electric vehicles.[132]

On June 28, 2021, Sunrise Movement and several progressive representatives performed a protest at the White House in criticism of the size and scope of Biden's Civilian Climate Corps. Several protesters were arrested for blocking White House entrances.[133]

On July 6, the 58-member bipartisan House Problem Solvers Caucus stated their support for the bipartisan bill and called for an expeditious and independent House vote.[134] On July 21, a group of 65 former governors and mayors endorsed the plan.[135]

Ahead of a procedural vote on August 7, former president Donald Trump attacked the bill and said he would support Republican primary challengers of senators who vote for it.[40] He reiterated his criticisms following the bill's passage by Congress.[136]

Following the bill's passage by Congress in November, Trump criticized it as containing "only 11% for real Infrastructure", calling it "the Elect Democrats in 2022/24 Act", and attacked Republicans who had supported it, saying in particular that McConnell had lent "lifelines to those who are destroying" the country.[136] Various House Republicans also criticized the 13 Republican representatives who voted for the bill.[137] Lauren Boebert described them as "RINOS" (Republican in Name Only).[137] Mary Miller called them "spineless" and said they helped enact a "socialist takeover".[137] Marjorie Taylor Greene called them "traitors" and "American job & energy killers", who "are China-First and America-Last", because they "agree with Globalist Joe [Biden] that America must depend on China to drive" electric vehicles.[138] Gary Palmer was criticized for touting funding for the Birmingham Northern Beltline that he added to the bill, while neglecting to mention that he voted against the final bill.[139] Paul Gosar was also criticized for taking credit for the bill's funding for Kingman Airport despite voting against it.[140] Several Republican governors who condemned the bill, including Kristi Noem of South Dakota and Greg Gianforte of Montana, accepted the funding and directed it to various programs.[141]

Others edit

On June 22, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Business Roundtable and No Labels made a joint statement urging the president to consider a bipartisan bill.[142] The former two groups have lobbied for the plan not to raise corporate taxes, and to instead impose user fees and borrow from other federal funds.[142]

According to an early August Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey, about 72% of voters support the bill.[143]

On September 24, leaders from the U.S. Conference of Mayors, the National League of Cities, the National Urban League, and other Black American advocacy groups signaled their support for the bill.[66]

On September 25, Peter J. Wallison authored an opinion piece for The Hill in which he argued that Republicans should try to pass the bipartisan bill to prevent it from being used as further leverage to pass the reconciliation bill.[144] Subsequently, Republican House leaders formally opposed the bipartisan bill.[47]

"Historians, economists and engineers interviewed by The Associated Press welcomed Biden's efforts. But they stressed that $1 trillion was not nearly enough to overcome the government's failure for decades to maintain and upgrade the country's infrastructure."[145]

The think tank Transportation for America praised the House version of the bill,[146] but heavily criticized the Senate version for its shortcomings on safety, climate resilience, long-term transit and rail funding and transit-oriented development, and maintenance spending, though it later noted that the final version that became law made small steps to address them.[147][148][149][150]

The nuclear industry favored the legislation as it signaled continued federal government support.[151]

Polling from Third Way and Impact Research released in July 2022 showed that only 24% of voters were aware the bill was signed into law, despite House Democrats holding over 1,000 events to promote it.[152]

Reception to the drunk driver detection and distraction detection requirements have been mixed. Mothers Against Drunk Driving praised the requirement as "the beginning of the end of drunk driving".[153] In contrast, the American Civil Liberties Union has expressed concern that the technology developed could pose a severe privacy risk to drivers if it collects or stores unnecessary data.[154] Writing for Vice, Aaron Gordon also argued that the technology is likely to have an unacceptably high false-positive rate — existing ignition interlock devices that are sometimes installed after drunk driving convictions are prone to catastrophic failures.[155]

In October 2023, the Natural Resources Defense Council criticized the IIJA's hydrogen hubs program for its lack of transparency, emphasizing the need for detailed technical reports, public hearings to thwart local NIMBYism and skepticism of hydrogen, and incorporation of environmental justice advocates into project leadership.[156]

Earlier versions of the bill edit

The following is the bill summary authorized by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) for the INVEST in America Act, the original version which passed the House on July 1, 2021:

  • "extends FY2021 enacted levels through FY2022 for federal-aid highway, transit, and safety programs;
  • reauthorizes for FY2023-FY2026 several surface transportation programs, including the federal-aid highway program, transit programs, highway safety, motor carrier safety, and rail programs;
  • addresses climate change, including strategies to reduce the climate change impacts of the surface transportation system and a vulnerability assessment to identify opportunities to enhance the resilience of the surface transportation system and ensure the efficient use of federal resources;
  • revises Buy America Act procurement requirements for highways, mass transit, and rail;
  • establishes a rural bridge rebuilding program to improve the safety and state of good repair of bridges in rural communities;
  • implements new safety requirements across all transportation modes; and
  • directs the Department of Transportation to establish a pilot program to demonstrate a national motor vehicle per-mile user fee to restore and maintain the long-term solvency of the Highway Trust Fund and achieve and maintain a state of good repair in the surface transportation system."[157]

The specific amounts in surface transportation spending were $343 billion for roads, highways, bridges and motor safety, $109 billion for transit, and $95 billion for rail.[16] Provisions of the bill incentivized prioritizing maintenance and repair spending over spending on new infrastructure, holistically planning for all modes of transport when considering how to connect job centers to housing (including collecting data on reductions in vehicle miles traveled through transit-oriented development), and lowering speed limits to increase road safety and encourage building complete streets. The Senate version, and the final bill, de-emphasized these incentives.[2][146][148][147][149][150]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to CBS News, this "would dedicate:
    • $343 billion to roads, bridges and safety
    • $109 billion to public transit systems; and
    • $95 billion to passenger and freight rail."[16]
  2. ^ The week before, a spokeswoman for Capito had said Republicans seemed to be "further apart" from Democrats regarding the bill than they were at their previous meeting with the president.[13]
  3. ^ According to CNBC, the plan "includes:
    • $506 billion for roads, bridges and major infrastructure projects
    • $72 billion for water systems
    • $65 billion for broadband
    • $56 billion for airports
    • $46 billion for passenger and freight rail systems
    • $22 billion for ports and waterways
    • $22 billion for water storage
    • $21 billion for safety efforts [and]
    • $20 billion for infrastructure financing".[18]
  4. ^ On June 9, the House's 58-member bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus presented a plan which would cost $1.25 trillion over eight years. According to The Hill, the plan "calls for
    • more than $959 billion for traditional infrastructure, including highways, bridges, rail, airports and waterways
      • [including] $25 billion ... for electric vehicle infrastructure, including electric buses ...
    • $74 billion for drinking water and wastewater systems
    • $71 billion for the electric grid and clean-energy programs
    • $45 billion for broadband; and
    • $10 billion for veterans' housing."[21]
  5. ^ McConnell and some other Republicans indicated that they wished to see the text prior to voting on debating it.[31] The measure initially failed to pass along party lines, with Schumer switching his vote to 'no' so he could recall the vote on another day.[32]

References edit

  1. ^ "Industry associations applaud U.S. House passage of INVEST in America Act". Roads & Bridges. July 1, 2021. from the original on August 18, 2021. Retrieved July 2, 2021.
  2. ^ a b . The House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. US House of Representatives. June 4, 2021. Archived from the original on July 23, 2021. Retrieved July 23, 2021.
  3. ^ Sprunt, Barbara; Kim, Caitlyn; Shivaram, Deepa (November 6, 2021). "Biden says final passage of $1 trillion infrastructure plan is a big step forward". NPR. from the original on January 21, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2021.
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External links edit

  • Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act as amended (PDF/details) in the GPO Statute Compilations collection
  • Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act as enacted (PDF/details) in the US Statutes at Large
  • H.R.3684 - Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act bill information on Congress.gov
  • BIL Maps Dashboard, General Services Administration database displaying geographic information on IIJA projects as of May 26, 2023. Retrieved June 29, 2023.


infrastructure, investment, jobs, iija, most, commonly, known, bipartisan, infrastructure, 3684, united, states, federal, statute, enacted, 117th, united, states, congress, signed, into, president, biden, november, 2021, originally, introduced, house, invest, . The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act IIJA most commonly known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law BIL H R 3684 is a United States federal statute enacted by the 117th United States Congress and signed into law by President Joe Biden on November 15 2021 It was originally introduced in the House as the INVEST in America Act and was commonly known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill before it was signed into law Infrastructure Investment and Jobs ActLong titleAn act to authorize funds for Federal aid highways highway safety programs and transit programs and for other purposes Acronyms colloquial IIJANicknamesBipartisan Infrastructure Law BIL Enacted bythe 117th United States CongressEffectiveNovember 15 2021Number of co sponsors5CitationsPublic lawPub L Tooltip Public Law United States 117 58 text PDF Statutes at Large135 Stat 429CodificationTitles amended23 U S C Agencies affectedDepartment of Transportation USDOT Legislative historyIntroduced in the House as the INVEST in America Act H R 3684 by Peter DeFazio D OR on June 4 2021Committee consideration by House Transportation and InfrastructurePassed the House on July 1 2021 221 201 Passed the Senate as the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act on August 10 2021 69 30 with amendmentHouse agreed to Senate amendment on November 5 2021 228 206 Signed into law by President Joe Biden on November 15 2021The act was initially a 547 715 billion infrastructure package that included provisions related to federal aid highway transit highway safety motor carrier research hazardous materials and rail programs of the Department of Transportation 1 2 After congressional negotiations it was amended and renamed to the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to include funding for broadband access clean water and electric grid renewal in addition to the transportation and road proposals of the original House bill This amended version included approximately 1 2 trillion in spending with 550 billion being newly authorized spending on top of what Congress was planning to authorize regularly 3 4 The amended bill was passed 69 30 by the Senate on August 10 2021 On November 5 it was passed 228 206 by the House and ten days later was signed into law by President Biden 5 Contents 1 Background 2 Legislative history 2 1 Senate passage 2 2 House passage 3 Provisions 3 1 Overview 3 2 Impact on environment and climate 3 3 Energy 3 4 Water 3 5 Bridges 3 5 1 Bridge Formula Program BFP 3 5 2 Bridge Investment Program BIP 3 6 Passenger rail 3 7 Highway removal and complete streets 3 8 Transit station accessibility 3 9 Wildlife crossings and conservation 3 10 Transportation safety 4 Implementation and results 4 1 Energy 4 2 Hydrogen hubs 4 3 Transportation 4 4 Colorado River 4 5 Climate adaptation 5 Reactions 5 1 Congress 5 2 Others 6 Earlier versions of the bill 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksBackground editFurther information Build Back Better Plan On March 31 2021 6 President Joe Biden unveiled his 2 3 trillion American Jobs Plan which when combined with the American Families Plan amounted to 4 trillion in infrastructure spending 7 pitched by him as a transformative effort to overhaul the nation s economy 8 The detailed plan aimed to create millions of jobs bolster labor unions expand labor protections and address climate change 9 10 Legislative history editSenate passage edit In mid April 2021 Republican lawmakers offered a 568 billion counterproposal to the American Jobs Plan 11 On May 9 Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said it should cost no more than 800 billion 12 On May 21 the administration reduced the price tag to 1 7 trillion which was quickly rejected by Republicans 13 A day later a bipartisan group within the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee announced that they had reached a deal for 304 billion in funding for U S highway funding 14 This was approved unanimously by the committee on May 26 15 On June 4 House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chair Peter DeFazio announced a 547 billion plan called the INVEST in America Act which would address parts of the American Jobs Plan 16 a On July 1 the House passed an amended 715 billion infrastructure bill focused on land transportation and water 17 On May 27 Republican senator Shelley Moore Capito presented a 928 billion plan 18 b c and on June 4 increased it by about 50 billion this was quickly rejected by the Biden administration 19 On June 8 the administration shifted its focus to a bipartisan group of 20 senators which had been working on a package tentatively priced around 900 billion 20 d On June 10 a bipartisan group of 10 senators reached a deal costing 974 billion over five years or about 1 2 trillion if stretched over eight years 22 On June 16 the plan was endorsed by a bipartisan group of 21 senators 23 On June 24 the bipartisan group met with the president and reached a compromise deal costing 1 2 trillion over eight years which focuses on physical infrastructure notably roads bridges railways water sewage broadband electric vehicles This was planned to be paid for through reinforced Internal Revenue Service IRS collection unspent COVID 19 relief funds and other sources 24 By July 2021 the IRS portion of the funding had reportedly been scrapped 25 Biden stipulated that a separate human infrastructure bill notably child care home care and climate change later known as the Build Back Better Act must also pass whether through bipartisanship or reconciliation 24 but later walked back this position 26 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi similarly stated that the House would not vote on the physical infrastructure bill until the larger bill passes in the Senate 27 despite the fact that reconciliation overrides much of the obstructive power of the filibuster 27 28 White House officials stated on July 7 that legislative text was nearing completion 29 On July 14 the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee advanced an energy bill expected to be included in the bipartisan package 30 On July 21 Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer put forward a shell bill for a vote to kick off debate in the Senate intending to add the bipartisan text via an amendment 31 e On July 25 Republican senator Rob Portman stated that an agreement was about 90 complete with mass transit being one remaining point of contention 33 On July 30 Portman stated that this had been resolved 34 On July 28 Senator Kyrsten Sinema stated that she did not support a reconciliation bill costing 3 5 trillion breaking the stalemate and allowing the bipartisan bill to move forward 35 That day the Senate voted 67 32 to advance the bill 36 and on July 30 voted 66 28 to proceed to its consideration 37 The legislation text was completed and substituted into the bill on August 1 38 On August 5 Schumer moved to truncate debate on the legislation setting up a procedural vote on August 7 39 which passed 67 27 40 Fifteen or more amendments were expected to receive votes through the weekend 40 On August 10 the bill was passed by the Senate 69 30 41 It sets aside 550 billion in new spending 42 A procedural vote on a House rule concerning passing both bills passed along party lines on August 24 43 House passage edit nbsp President Biden signing the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act into law on November 15 2021 nbsp House vote by congressional district November 5th Democratic yea 215 Republican yea 13 Democratic nay 6 Republican nay 200 In early August nine moderate Democrats called for an immediate House vote on the bill citing a desire not to lose the momentum from the Senate passage of the bill They committed to voting against taking up the reconciliation resolution until there was a vote on the bipartisan infrastructure bill 44 45 While both Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have reversed earlier positions to support passing the bipartisan bill separately 26 46 progressives including Congressional Progressive Caucus chairwoman Pramila Jayapal and Senator Bernie Sanders maintained that it be utilized as leverage to pass the most expensive reconciliation bill possible 47 48 49 The lack of a deal caused a late September House vote to be postponed 49 On October 2 Pelosi set a new deadline of October 31 50 By October 28 Jayapal and other progressive leaders indicated that they were willing to vote on the bill separately 51 but Sanders and others opposed this 52 53 On October 31 a majority of progressives signaled that they would support both bills 54 Votes on both bills were considered on November 5 but the hesitation of several moderates to pass the reconciliation bill before it could be scored by the Congressional Budget Office made passing the bipartisan bill unlikely 55 Negotiations between centrist and progressive Democrats concluded with the centrists committing to passing the Build Back Better Act 56 The bill ultimately went to a vote as did a rule to vote on the larger bill once it was scored passing 228 206 13 Republicans joined all but six Democrats members of the Squad in supporting the legislation 57 58 59 The six Democrats who voted No stated that their opposition was because the legislation had been decoupled from the social safety net provisions of the Build Back Better bill 60 61 Biden signed the bill into law at a signing ceremony on November 15 62 Provisions editThe final version restores the Superfund excise tax on certain chemicals 63 which expired in 1995 64 Overview edit nbsp Investment categories billion in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 adding to about 550 billion over a decade 65 According to NPR the version which passed the Senate on July 28 is set to include 110 billion for roads bridges and other major projects 11 billion for transportation safety programs 39 billion to modernize transit and improve accessibility 66 billion for passenger and freight rail 7 5 billion to build a national network of electric vehicle chargers 73 billion to overhaul the nation s power infrastructure clean energy transmission and overall energy policy 65 billion for broadband development 35 The law would also make the Minority Business Development Agency a permanent agency 66 It authorizes the DOT to create an organization called the Advanced Research Projects Agency Infrastructure ARPA I with a broad remit over transportation research akin to DARPA HSARPA IARPA ARPA E and ARPA H 67 with the first appropriations of 3 22 million being made in the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2023 68 69 70 Impact on environment and climate edit An October 2021 report written by the REPEAT Project a partnership between the Evolved Energy Research firm and Princeton University s ZERO Lab said the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act alone will make only a small reduction in emissions but as they say We lack modeling capabilities to reflect the net effect of surface transportation investments in highways which tend to increase on road vehicle and freight miles traveled and rail and public transit which tend to reduce on road vehicle and freight miles traveled These significant programs are therefore not modeled in this analysis an important limitation of our assessment of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act 71 The Georgetown Climate Center tried to estimate how the 599 billion investment for surface transportation in the bill can impact emissions from transportation It created two scenarios high emissions and low emissions The main difference is that from the money dedicated to highways in the first scenario more money will go to building new highways while in the second more will go to repairing existing highways The other spending areas characteristics are not so different The first scenario sees increased cumulative emissions over the years 2022 2040 by more than 200 million tons while the second decreases them by around 250 million tons 72 The law includes the largest federal investment in public transit in history 73 The law includes spending figures of 105 billion dollars in public transport It also spends 110 billion on fixing roads and bridges and includes measures for climate change mitigation and improving access for cyclists and pedestrians 74 Increasing use of public transport and related transit oriented development can reduce transportation emissions in human settlements by 78 and overall US emissions by 15 75 The law includes spending 21 billion for environmental projects 50 billion for water storage and 15 billion for electric vehicles 76 It also includes 73 billion to overhaul the energy policy of the United States 74 77 The law also gives 4 7 billion to cap orphan wells abandoned by oil and gas companies 78 79 80 and 1 billion to better connect neighborhoods separated by transport infrastructure as part of environmental justice efforts 81 This 1 billion will be spent through the Reconnecting Communities Pilot RCP discretionary grant program 82 that among other priorities promotes New or improved affordable transportation options to increase safe mobility and connectivity for all including for people with disabilities through lower carbon travel like walking cycling rolling and transit that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and promote active travel 83 Energy edit 73 billion will be spent on overhauling the energy policy of the United States 11 billion of that amount will be invested in the electrical grid s adjustment to renewable energy with some of the money going to new loans for electric power transmission lines and required studies for future transmission needs 84 85 86 6 billion of that 73 billion will go to domestic nuclear power Also of that 73 billion the IIJA invests 45 billion in innovation and industrial policy for key emerging technologies in energy 430 million 87 21 billion in new demonstration projects at the DOE and nearly 24 billion in onshoring supply chain resilience and bolstering U S held competitive advantages in energy the latter amount will be divided into an 8 6 billion investment in carbon capture and storage 3 billion in battery material reprocessing 3 billion in battery recycling 1 billion in rare earth minerals stockpiling and 8 billion in new research hubs for green hydrogen 77 The DOE has imposed grant requirements on 7 billion of the IIJA s battery and transportation spending which are meant to promote community benefits agreements social justice and formation of trade unions 88 Finally the law gives 4 7 billion to cap orphan wells abandoned by oil and gas companies 78 79 80 Water edit To support safe drinking water programs the law provides 11 7 billion for the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund SRF 15 billion to local water systems for lead service line replacement 9 billion to address emerging contaminants such as PFAS 4 billion through the SRF and 5 billion through grants to water utilities 3 5 billion to build water and sewer systems for the Indian Health Service 89 90 For surface water programs such as watershed management and pollution control the law provides 12 7 billion for the Clean Water State Revolving Fund to support state and local government water quality programs 1 7 billion for geographic based programs including the National Estuary Program the Great Lakes program and the Chesapeake Bay Program 91 Bridges edit Prior to the enactment of the infrastructure law in 2021 no dedicated federal bridge funding had existed since fiscal year 2013 The law created two new programs specifically to fund bridge projects 92 Bridge Formula Program BFP edit With 27 5 billion over five years the BFP distributes funds to every state the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico based on a formula that accounts for each state s cost to replace or rehabilitate its poor or fair condition bridges Each state is guaranteed a minimum of 45 million per year from this program At least 15 of each state s funds must be spent on off system bridges i e public bridges that are not on federal aid highways and 3 is set aside each year for bridges on tribal lands Off system and tribal bridge projects may be funded with a 100 federal share as opposed to the standard 80 federal share 93 Bridge Investment Program BIP edit With 12 5 billion over five years the BIP is a competitive grant program to replace rehabilitate preserve or make resiliency improvements to bridges Half of the funding is reserved for large bridge projects which are defined as projects that cost over 100 million Large projects are funded at a maximum 50 federal share while other projects are funded at a maximum 80 federal share 94 Passenger rail edit The infrastructure law is the largest investment in passenger rail since the 1971 creation of Amtrak which under the law will receive 22 billion in advance appropriations and 19 billion in fully authorized funds 95 96 It directly appropriated 66 billion for rail over a five year period including the Amtrak appropriations of which at least 18 billion is designated for expanding passenger rail service to new corridors and it authorized an additional 36 billion 96 Most of this funding for new passenger rail lines is implemented through the Federal State Partnership for Intercity Passenger Rail program which will receive 36 billion in advance appropriations and 7 5 billion in fully authorized funds 96 The Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements program will receive 5 billion in advance appropriations and 5 billion in fully authorized funds while programs for grade separation replacing level crossings will receive 3 billion in advance appropriations and 2 5 billion in fully authorized funds and the Restoration and Enhancement Grant program intended to revive discontinued passenger rail services will receive 250 million in advance appropriations and 250 million in fully authorized funds 96 Per the law s requirements at least 12 billion is available and 3 4 4 1 billion authorized for expanding service outside of the Northeast Corridor and 24 billion is available and 3 4 4 1 billion authorized to partially rebuild the Corridor 97 To help plan and guide the expansion of passenger rail service beyond the Northeast Corridor the infrastructure law also created a 1 8 billion Corridor Identification and Development Program 98 The law also expands eligibility for a potential 23 billion in transit funding to these corridors and changes the allocation methods for state government supported passenger rail shorter than 750 miles to encourage states to implement more such service Highway removal and complete streets edit The law includes 1 billion over five years for Reconnecting Communities planning and construction grants the first of which were awarded in February 2023 99 Transit station accessibility edit The law established and authorized 1 75 billion over five years for a new All Stations Accessibility Program ASAP 100 This program is designed to improve the accessibility of rail system stations that were built before the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 ADA At the time of the infrastructure law s passage over 900 transit stations were not fully ADA compliant 101 Wildlife crossings and conservation edit The infrastructure law created the Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program with 350 million in funding over five years This is a competitive grant program that funds planning and construction projects that prevent wildlife vehicle collisions and improve the connectivity of animal habitats 102 The law also allocated 1 billion to create the National Culvert Removal Replacement and Restoration Grant program to improve the passage of anadromous fish such as salmon 103 Transportation safety edit The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act requires the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA to develop a safety mechanism to prevent drunk driving which causes about 10 000 deaths each year in the United States as of 2021 which will be rolled out in phases for retroactive fitting 104 105 and will become mandatory for all new vehicles in 2027 106 The technology which is being developed by NHTSA in cooperation with the Automotive Coalition for Traffic Safety and Swedish automobile safety company Autoliv consists of a breath based and a touch based sensor that stops the car if the driver is above the legal blood alcohol content and will be open sourced to automobile manufacturers 107 Under the law the United States Department of Transportation DOT will be required to develop regulations for a system that can detect distracted fatigued or impaired drivers 104 The NHTSA has recommended implementing a camera based warning system for the former similar to a technology mandated by the European Union in July 2022 107 The law also requires the NHTSA s New Car Assessment Program to test collision avoidance systems in preparation for new federal regulations new DOT reporting requirements for statistical data on crashes involving motorized scooters and electric bicycles new federal regulations on headlamps research directives on technology to protect pedestrians and cyclists advanced driver assistance systems federal hood and bumper regulations smart city infrastructure and self driving cars and a new Federal Highway Administration FHWA office specializing in cybersecurity 104 Implementation and results edit nbsp A sign for a road project funded by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act in Avon ConnecticutAccording to the New Democrat linked think tank Center for American Progress the Act the CHIPS and Science Act and the Inflation Reduction Act have together catalyzed over 35 000 public and private investments 108 The Biden administration itself claimed that as of November 29 2023 update the IIJA CaSA and IRA together catalyzed over 628 billion in private investment including 232 billion in electronics and semiconductors 152 billion in electric vehicles and batteries and 132 billion in clean energy generators and over 392 2 billion in public infrastructure spending including 35 7 billion in energy aside from tax credits in the IRA 109 Energy edit In November 2022 the Biden administration announced it would furnish 550 million for the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant program for clean energy generators for low income and minority communities the first such appropriation since the Recovery Act in 2009 110 111 The administration announced the competitive portion would award 8 8 million to 12 communities on October 12 2023 with the next award applications due in April 2024 112 113 On October 24 2023 the administration announced the first 3 46 billion in grants from the Act s 11 billion grid rebuilding authorization would go to 58 projects in 44 states 16 projects are categorized as for improving grid resilience 34 are categorized as for building smart grids and eight are categorized as pursing grid innovation The investment is the largest in the American grid since the Recovery Act 14 years earlier According to Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm the projects could enable 35 gigawatts of renewable energy to come online by 2030 and 400 microgrids to be built 114 115 On October 30 the DOE announced the results of a mandated triennial study that for the first time in its history included anticipation of future grid transmission needs 85 The DOE also announced the first three recipients of a new 2 5 billion loan program it called the Transmission Facilitation Program created to provide funding to help build up the interstate power grid They are the 1 2 gigawatt Twin States Clean Energy Link between Quebec New Hampshire and Vermont the 1 5 gigawatt Cross Tie Transmission Line between Utah and Nevada and the 1 gigawatt Southline Transmission Project between Arizona and New Mexico 86 84 On November 15 the Biden administration announced a funding opportunity for the second investment from the grid rebuilding authorization which would total 3 9 billion beating the October 24 investment Grid developers have a deadline of January 12 2024 to apply 116 117 On November 16 2023 the Biden administration announced the first recipients of 40 8 million in grants from a workforce training program the Act created which will provide skills for industrial technology the building trades and energy auditing 118 119 Hydrogen hubs edit The Biden administration awarded 7 billion of the 8 billion appropriation to seven hydrogen research hubs based in California eastern Washington southeastern Pennsylvania southeastern Texas Illinois Minnesota and West Virginia and affecting projects there and in eight more states on October 13 2023 The remaining 1 billion will be used for demand side economic policies to drive growth in hydrogen use 120 121 Several criticisms of the hubs emerged Jeff St John editor in chief of Canary Media noted while it does mandate that the DOE create a clean hydrogen definitional standard which as of October 2023 update the DOE had not published and that the DOE selected applicants who pledged community benefits agreements the Act does not prescribe metrics or guidelines for measuring emissions from these hubs 122 Researcher Hannah Story Brown of the watchdog group Revolving Door Project noted that the majority of hub projects announced are powered by fossil fuels not renewable energy 123 Transportation edit The bill contains 27 billion in funding for specific concrete programs within the Federal Highway Administration that are already implemented to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the transportation sector all of which was allotted in November 2023 For example 7 2 billion is allocated to the Transportation Alternatives Set Aside Program creating more possibilities for biking and walking 6 4 billion to the Carbon Reduction Program reducing emissions from highways 69 million to the Transit Oriented Development Program enhancing transit oriented development and improving land use and more 124 Colorado River edit In 2023 an agreement between seven states was achieved aiming to preserve the Colorado River water system from collapse due to poor management and climate change The United States is heavily dependent on the river for power generation drinking water agriculture wildlands restoration and native cultural practices Some states will reduce water use receiving compensation for it totaling 1 2 billion from the federal government Many other projects for preserving the river such as water recycling and rainwater harvesting are advanced The funding comes from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act 125 126 Climate adaptation edit The bill provides around 7 billion to the Federal Emergency Management Agency for helping communities adapt to different climate related disasters such as hurricanes droughts and heat waves In August 2023 3 billion was allocated to different related projects including 124 projects related to resilient infrastructure and communities located in 38 states one tribe and the District of Columbia and 149 projects related to protection from flooding located in 28 states and the District of Columbia From the projects related to infrastructure 64 use nature based solutions Some of the most vulnerable communities will receive help for free 127 In November 2023 the Biden administration announced that 300 million from FEMA s new Swift Current Initiative created by the Act would go to helping communities impacted by floods recover and grow their resiliency 116 128 It also announced that it would award 50 million in project awards to improve the reliability of water resources and support ecosystem health in Western states along with an additional 50 million funding opportunity for water conservation projects and hydropower upgrades 116 Reactions editCongress edit Republican senators balked at Biden s tandem plan to pass both a bipartisan plan and a separate Democratic supported reconciliation bill 129 McConnell criticized Biden for caving to his own party by issuing an ultimatum that he would not sign the bipartisan bill without a separate reconciliation package 130 After Biden walked back his comments Republican senators restated their confidence in the bipartisan bill 26 A Yahoo News YouGov poll conducted in late June found that 60 of Republican voters favored the plan 131 On June 20 2021 Senator Bernie Sanders stated that he would not support paying for the bill via a proposed gas tax or a surcharge on electric vehicles 132 On June 28 2021 Sunrise Movement and several progressive representatives performed a protest at the White House in criticism of the size and scope of Biden s Civilian Climate Corps Several protesters were arrested for blocking White House entrances 133 On July 6 the 58 member bipartisan House Problem Solvers Caucus stated their support for the bipartisan bill and called for an expeditious and independent House vote 134 On July 21 a group of 65 former governors and mayors endorsed the plan 135 Ahead of a procedural vote on August 7 former president Donald Trump attacked the bill and said he would support Republican primary challengers of senators who vote for it 40 He reiterated his criticisms following the bill s passage by Congress 136 Following the bill s passage by Congress in November Trump criticized it as containing only 11 for real Infrastructure calling it the Elect Democrats in 2022 24 Act and attacked Republicans who had supported it saying in particular that McConnell had lent lifelines to those who are destroying the country 136 Various House Republicans also criticized the 13 Republican representatives who voted for the bill 137 Lauren Boebert described them as RINOS Republican in Name Only 137 Mary Miller called them spineless and said they helped enact a socialist takeover 137 Marjorie Taylor Greene called them traitors and American job amp energy killers who are China First and America Last because they agree with Globalist Joe Biden that America must depend on China to drive electric vehicles 138 Gary Palmer was criticized for touting funding for the Birmingham Northern Beltline that he added to the bill while neglecting to mention that he voted against the final bill 139 Paul Gosar was also criticized for taking credit for the bill s funding for Kingman Airport despite voting against it 140 Several Republican governors who condemned the bill including Kristi Noem of South Dakota and Greg Gianforte of Montana accepted the funding and directed it to various programs 141 Others edit On June 22 the U S Chamber of Commerce Business Roundtable and No Labels made a joint statement urging the president to consider a bipartisan bill 142 The former two groups have lobbied for the plan not to raise corporate taxes and to instead impose user fees and borrow from other federal funds 142 According to an early August Harvard CAPS Harris Poll survey about 72 of voters support the bill 143 On September 24 leaders from the U S Conference of Mayors the National League of Cities the National Urban League and other Black American advocacy groups signaled their support for the bill 66 On September 25 Peter J Wallison authored an opinion piece for The Hill in which he argued that Republicans should try to pass the bipartisan bill to prevent it from being used as further leverage to pass the reconciliation bill 144 Subsequently Republican House leaders formally opposed the bipartisan bill 47 Historians economists and engineers interviewed by The Associated Press welcomed Biden s efforts But they stressed that 1 trillion was not nearly enough to overcome the government s failure for decades to maintain and upgrade the country s infrastructure 145 The think tank Transportation for America praised the House version of the bill 146 but heavily criticized the Senate version for its shortcomings on safety climate resilience long term transit and rail funding and transit oriented development and maintenance spending though it later noted that the final version that became law made small steps to address them 147 148 149 150 The nuclear industry favored the legislation as it signaled continued federal government support 151 Polling from Third Way and Impact Research released in July 2022 showed that only 24 of voters were aware the bill was signed into law despite House Democrats holding over 1 000 events to promote it 152 Reception to the drunk driver detection and distraction detection requirements have been mixed Mothers Against Drunk Driving praised the requirement as the beginning of the end of drunk driving 153 In contrast the American Civil Liberties Union has expressed concern that the technology developed could pose a severe privacy risk to drivers if it collects or stores unnecessary data 154 Writing for Vice Aaron Gordon also argued that the technology is likely to have an unacceptably high false positive rate existing ignition interlock devices that are sometimes installed after drunk driving convictions are prone to catastrophic failures 155 In October 2023 the Natural Resources Defense Council criticized the IIJA s hydrogen hubs program for its lack of transparency emphasizing the need for detailed technical reports public hearings to thwart local NIMBYism and skepticism of hydrogen and incorporation of environmental justice advocates into project leadership 156 Earlier versions of the bill editThe following is the bill summary authorized by the Congressional Research Service CRS for the INVEST in America Act the original version which passed the House on July 1 2021 extends FY2021 enacted levels through FY2022 for federal aid highway transit and safety programs reauthorizes for FY2023 FY2026 several surface transportation programs including the federal aid highway program transit programs highway safety motor carrier safety and rail programs addresses climate change including strategies to reduce the climate change impacts of the surface transportation system and a vulnerability assessment to identify opportunities to enhance the resilience of the surface transportation system and ensure the efficient use of federal resources revises Buy America Act procurement requirements for highways mass transit and rail establishes a rural bridge rebuilding program to improve the safety and state of good repair of bridges in rural communities implements new safety requirements across all transportation modes and directs the Department of Transportation to establish a pilot program to demonstrate a national motor vehicle per mile user fee to restore and maintain the long term solvency of the Highway Trust Fund and achieve and maintain a state of good repair in the surface transportation system 157 The specific amounts in surface transportation spending were 343 billion for roads highways bridges and motor safety 109 billion for transit and 95 billion for rail 16 Provisions of the bill incentivized prioritizing maintenance and repair spending over spending on new infrastructure holistically planning for all modes of transport when considering how to connect job centers to housing including collecting data on reductions in vehicle miles traveled through transit oriented development and lowering speed limits to increase road safety and encourage building complete streets The Senate version and the final bill de emphasized these incentives 2 146 148 147 149 150 See also editCHIPS and Science Act and Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 two other major industrial policy bills signed by BidenNotes edit According to CBS News this would dedicate 343 billion to roads bridges and safety 109 billion to public transit systems and 95 billion to passenger and freight rail 16 The week before a spokeswoman for Capito had said Republicans seemed to be further apart from Democrats regarding the bill than they were at their previous meeting with the president 13 According to CNBC the plan includes 506 billion for roads bridges and major infrastructure projects including 4 billion for electric vehicles 72 billion for water systems 65 billion for broadband 56 billion for airports 46 billion for passenger and freight rail systems 22 billion for ports and waterways 22 billion for water storage 21 billion for safety efforts and 20 billion for infrastructure financing 18 On June 9 the House s 58 member bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus presented a plan which would cost 1 25 trillion over eight years According to The Hill the plan calls for more than 959 billion for traditional infrastructure including highways bridges rail airports and waterways including 25 billion for electric vehicle infrastructure including electric buses 74 billion for drinking water and wastewater systems 71 billion for the electric grid and clean energy programs 45 billion for broadband and 10 billion for veterans housing 21 McConnell and some other Republicans indicated that they wished to see the text prior to voting on debating it 31 The measure initially failed to pass along party lines with Schumer switching his vote to no so he could recall the vote on another day 32 References edit Industry associations applaud U S House passage of INVEST in America Act Roads amp Bridges July 1 2021 Archived from the original on August 18 2021 Retrieved July 2 2021 a b Chairs DeFazio Norton and Payne Introduce the INVEST in America Act to Create Millions of Jobs Bringing Our Infrastructure into the Modern Era The House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure US House of Representatives June 4 2021 Archived from the original on July 23 2021 Retrieved July 23 2021 Sprunt Barbara Kim Caitlyn Shivaram Deepa November 6 2021 Biden says final passage of 1 trillion infrastructure plan is a big step forward NPR Archived from the original on January 21 2022 Retrieved November 14 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill Passes What Happens Next Investopedia Archived from the original on November 13 2021 Retrieved November 14 2021 Biden signs 1 2 trillion infrastructure bill fulfilling campaign promise and notching achievement that eluded Trump The Washington Post November 15 2021 Archived from the original on November 16 2021 Retrieved November 15 2021 Siegel Rachel March 31 2021 What s in Biden s 2 trillion jobs and infrastructure plan The Washington Post Archived from the original on April 1 2021 Retrieved June 23 2021 Everett Burgess Levine Marianne May 24 2021 Time to move on Infrastructure talks near collapse Politico Archived from the original on May 24 2021 Retrieved May 25 2021 Stein Jeff Eilperin Juliet Laris Michael Romm Tony April 1 2021 White House unveils 2 trillion infrastructure and climate plan setting up giant battle over size and cost of government The Washington Post Archived from the original on March 31 2021 Retrieved October 25 2021 Davidson Kate Omeokwe Amara April 3 2021 Biden s Infrastructure Package Is Designed to Boost Unions The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on April 3 2021 Retrieved October 25 2021 Nilsen Ella March 31 2021 Joe Biden s 2 trillion infrastructure and jobs plan explained Vox Archived from the original on March 31 2021 Retrieved October 25 2021 Smith Allan Pettypiece Shannon April 22 2021 Republicans unveil 568 billion counterproposal to Biden s infrastructure plan NBC News Archived from the original on May 22 2021 Retrieved May 22 2021 Pramuk Jacob May 10 2021 Infrastructure plan should cost up to 800 billion McConnell says ahead of Biden meeting CNBC Archived from the original on May 21 2021 Retrieved May 22 2021 a b Garrison Joey May 21 2021 Infrastructure talks hit snag as Republicans reject Biden s reduced 1 7 trillion counteroffer USA Today Archived from the original on May 21 2021 Retrieved May 22 2021 McLaughlin David May 22 2021 Senators Reach Bipartisan Deal on U S Highway Funding Package Bloomberg L P Archived from the original on May 24 2021 Retrieved May 25 2021 Adragna Anthony May 26 2021 Bipartisan highway bill advances in Senate offering a path through infrastructure morass Politico Archived from the original on June 5 2021 Retrieved June 5 2021 a b c Segers Grace June 4 2021 House Democrats announce infrastructure bill amid Biden negotiations CBS News Archived from the original on June 4 2021 Retrieved June 5 2021 Morgan David July 1 2021 U S House approves 715 bln infrastructure bill Reuters Archived from the original on July 2 2021 Retrieved July 2 2021 a b Pramuk Jacob May 27 2021 Senate GOP unveils its 928 billion infrastructure counteroffer to Biden here s what s in it CNBC Archived from the original on May 27 2021 Retrieved May 27 2021 Hoffman Jason Vazquez Maegan June 4 2021 White House rejects GOP infrastructure counteroffer saying it does not meet Biden s objectives CNN Archived from the original on October 24 2021 Retrieved June 5 2021 Everett Burgess June 8 2021 Biden ends infrastructure talks with Senate GOP starts engaging bipartisan group Politico Archived from the original on October 24 2021 Retrieved June 8 2021 Wong Scott Lillis Mike June 9 2021 House moderates unveil 1 25T infrastructure plan The Hill Archived from the original on October 24 2021 Retrieved June 9 2021 Romm Tony Kim Seung Min June 10 2021 Ten Senate Democrats and Republicans say they reached five year nearly 1 trillion infrastructure deal The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on October 9 2021 Retrieved June 10 2021 Pramuk Jacob June 16 2021 11 GOP senators back bipartisan infrastructure plan boosting its chances of moving forward CNBC Archived from the original on October 24 2021 Retrieved June 17 2021 a b Garrison Joey King Ledyard June 24 2021 We have a deal Biden reaches 1 2 trillion infrastructure compromise with bipartisan group of senators USA Today Archived from the original on June 24 2021 Retrieved June 24 2021 Foran Clare Fox Lauren July 19 2021 Infrastructure push on rocky ground as key Senate test vote looms CNN Archived from the original on October 24 2021 Retrieved July 19 2021 a b c Newburger Emma June 27 2021 Republican senators say bipartisan infrastructure deal can move forward after Biden clarifies position CNBC Archived from the original on December 1 2021 Retrieved June 28 2021 a b Marcos Cristina June 24 2021 Pelosi vows no vote on bipartisan deal without Senate action on reconciliation The Hill Archived from the original on June 24 2021 Retrieved June 24 2021 Wong Scott Lillis Mike August 11 2021 Pelosi breaks bad news to moderates No vote on infrastructure this month The Hill Archived from the original on August 11 2021 Retrieved August 12 2021 Barron Lopez Laura Everett Burgess July 7 2021 Democrats race to push bipartisan infrastructure bill through Senate Politico Archived from the original on October 27 2021 Retrieved July 8 2021 Frazin Rachel July 14 2021 Senate committee advances bipartisan energy infrastructure bill The Hill Archived from the original on July 14 2021 Retrieved July 16 2021 a b Kapur Sahil Thorp V Frank Caldwell Leigh Ann July 19 2021 Schumer sets Wednesday vote to begin Senate debate on infrastructure deal NBC News Archived from the original on July 20 2021 Retrieved July 20 2021 Kapur Sahil Tsirkin Julie Thorp V Frank July 21 2021 Senate Republicans rebuff consideration of bipartisan infrastructure bill NBC News Archived from the original on July 21 2021 Retrieved July 22 2021 Senators race to overcome final snags in infrastructure deal AP News July 25 2021 Archived from the original on July 25 2021 Retrieved July 26 2021 Carney Jordain July 31 2021 Biden s bipartisan deal faces Senate gauntlet The Hill Archived from the original on July 31 2021 Retrieved July 31 2021 a b Walsh Deirdre July 28 2021 Bipartisan Senate Negotiators Say They Reach A Deal On Infrastructure After Hiccups NPR Archived from the original on July 28 2021 Retrieved July 28 2021 Pramuk Jacob July 28 2021 Senate votes to advance bipartisan infrastructure bill as Democrats forge ahead with ambitious economic agenda CNBC Archived from the original on October 27 2021 Retrieved July 29 2021 Freking Kevin Mascaro Lisa July 30 2021 Senate advances nearly 1 trillion infrastructure plan ABC News Archived from the original on October 27 2021 Retrieved July 31 2021 Zaslav Ali Diaz Daniella August 1 2021 Schumer announces bipartisan group has finalized legislative text on infrastructure bill CNN Archived from the original on August 2 2021 Retrieved August 1 2021 Zaslav Ali Foran Clare Raju Manu August 6 2021 Schumer moves to shut down debate on infrastructure bill in key step toward final vote CNN Archived from the original on August 6 2021 Retrieved August 6 2021 a b c Zeballos Roig Joseph August 7 2021 Senate advances 1 2 trillion infrastructure bill bringing it closer to final passage with McConnell s support Business Insider Archived from the original on August 7 2021 Retrieved August 7 2021 Romm Tony August 10 2021 Senate approves bipartisan 1 trillion infrastructure bill bringing major Biden goal one step closer The Washington Post Archived from the original on August 10 2021 Retrieved August 10 2021 Donovan Smith Orion August 5 2021 Senate nears vote on 550 billion bipartisan infrastructure package The Spokesman Review The Spokesman Review Archived from the original on October 28 2021 Retrieved October 28 2021 Pramuk Jacob August 24 2021 House Democrats clear path toward passing 3 5 trillion budget bill and infrastructure plan after breaking stalemate CNBC Archived from the original on October 26 2021 Retrieved August 24 2021 Moderate House Dems say they won t support budget vote until infrastructure bill passes NBC News August 13 2021 Archived from the original on August 16 2021 Retrieved August 16 2021 Weisman Jonathan August 13 2021 House Moderates Say They Won t Back Budget Vote Until Infrastructure Bill Passes The New York Times Archived from the original on August 16 2021 Retrieved August 16 2021 Kapur Sahil September 27 2021 Pelosi says Biden s infrastructure bill can t wait for social safety net bill NBC News Archived from the original on September 28 2021 Retrieved September 28 2021 a b Ferris Sarah Wu Nicholas Caygle Heather September 30 2021 Pelosi mounts eleventh hour push for infrastructure vote Politico Archived from the original on September 30 2021 Retrieved September 30 2021 Schnell Mychael September 28 2021 Sanders urges House Democrats to vote against infrastructure bill before reconciliation The Hill Archived from the original on September 29 2021 Retrieved September 30 2021 a b Pamuk Humeyra September 26 2021 Pelosi sets Thursday vote on infrastructure eyes smaller social spending bill Yahoo News Archived from the original on September 27 2021 Retrieved September 27 2021 Aratani Lauren October 2 2021 Pelosi shifts infrastructure bill deadline to 31 October amid Biden frustration The Guardian Archived from the original on October 2 2021 Retrieved October 3 2021 Mucha Sarah October 27 2021 Progressives now open to bipartisan infrastructure for social spending promise Yahoo News Archived from the original on October 28 2021 Retrieved October 28 2021 Bolton Alexander October 28 2021 Sanders signals House should hold off on infrastructure vote The Hill Archived from the original on October 29 2021 Retrieved October 29 2021 Lillis Mike Wong Scott October 28 2021 Liberals defy Pelosi say they ll block infrastructure bill The Hill Archived from the original on October 28 2021 Retrieved October 29 2021 Diaz Daniella Grayer Annie Raju Manu October 31 2021 Progressives signal they ll back both economic bills ahead of likely vote later this week CNN Archived from the original on November 1 2021 Retrieved November 1 2021 Shabad Rebecca Caldwell Leigh Ann Kapur Sahil November 5 2021 Democrats set Friday vote on infrastructure bill further delay massive spending bill NBC News Archived from the original on November 5 2021 Retrieved November 5 2021 Kapur Sahil November 8 2021 Centrist Democrats gain upper hand on progressives as infrastructure bill heads to Biden s desk NBC News Archived from the original on November 13 2021 Retrieved November 14 2021 Lillis Mike Folley Aris Marcos Cristina Wong Scott November 5 2021 Liberals moderates strike deal on Biden agenda clearing way for votes The Hill Archived from the original on November 6 2021 Retrieved November 5 2021 Pramuk Jacob November 5 2021 House passes 1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill that includes transport broadband and utility funding sends it to Biden CNBC Archived from the original on November 6 2021 Retrieved November 5 2021 Roll Call 369 Bill Number H R 3684 117th Congress 1st Session Office of the Clerk U S House of Representatives November 5 2021 Archived from the original on November 6 2021 Retrieved November 10 2021 Nakamura Rachel Looker and Amy Who are the 6 House Democrats who voted against the infrastructure bill USA Today Archived from the original on November 13 2021 Retrieved November 16 2021 Annie Grayer November 6 2021 These 6 House Democrats voted against the infrastructure bill These 13 Republicans voted for it CNN Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Retrieved November 16 2021 Pettypiece Shannon November 15 2021 Biden signs infrastructure bill marking victory in hard fought legislative battle NBC News Archived from the original on November 15 2021 Retrieved November 15 2021 IRS issues Superfund Chemical Excise Taxes FAQs Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved March 4 2023 Chemical tax to clean up toxic sites gets new life as part of infrastructure deal July 2 2021 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved March 4 2023 Biden says final passage of 1 trillion infrastructure plan is a big step forward NPR November 6 2021 Archived from the original on January 21 2022 Retrieved November 7 2021 a b Johnson Marty September 24 2021 US mayors Black leaders push for passage of bipartisan infrastructure bill The Hill Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 26 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Title V Section No 25012 of November 15 2021 United States Congress Retrieved June 7 2023 Page 636 Consolidated Appropriations Act 2023 Division L Title No II of December 29 2022 PDF United States Congress Retrieved July 1 2023 Applying ARPA I A Proven Model for Transportation Infrastructure Federation of American Scientists June 7 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 Advanced Research Projects Agency Infrastructure ARPA I US Department of Transportation December 7 2022 Retrieved June 7 2023 Preliminary Report The Climate Impact of Congressional Infrastructure and Budget Bills PDF Rapid Energy Policy Evaluation and Analysis Toolkit October 20 2021 p 9 Archived PDF from the original on October 20 2021 Retrieved January 26 2022 Issue Brief Estimating the Greenhouse Gas Impact of Federal Infrastructure Investments in the IIJA Georgetown climate center October 16 2021 Retrieved November 27 2023 Fact Sheet The Bipartisan Infrastructure Deal The White House November 6 2021 Archived from the original on January 26 2022 Retrieved January 26 2022 a b Sprunt Barbara August 10 2021 Here s What s Included In The Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill NPR Archived from the original on August 12 2021 Retrieved August 11 2021 Public Transportation s Role in Responding to Climate Change PDF U S Department of Transportation Federal Transit Administration 2010 p 5 Archived PDF from the original on September 1 2022 Retrieved April 1 2022 Snell Kelsey August 10 2021 The Senate Approves The 1 Trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill In A Historic Vote NPR Archived from the original on August 12 2021 Retrieved August 11 2021 a b Higman Morgan August 18 2021 The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Will Do More to Reach 2050 Climate Targets than Those of 2030 Center for Strategic and International Studies Archived from the original on January 29 2023 Retrieved March 30 2023 a b Interior Department Releases Implementation Guidance to States on Infrastructure Law Efforts to Address Legacy Pollution U S Department of the Interior December 17 2021 Archived from the original on December 30 2022 Retrieved December 30 2022 a b Bertrand Savannah August 12 2021 Plugging Orphaned Oil and Gas Wells Provides Climate and Jobs Benefits Article EESI Archived from the original on December 30 2022 Retrieved December 30 2022 a b Hoffman Elisia Jurich Kirsten Argento McCurdy Hannah Chyung Chris Ricketts Sam November 18 2022 How States Can Lead on Reducing Harms From Methane Center for American Progress Archived from the original on December 30 2022 Retrieved December 30 2022 Breuninger Kevin Newburger Emma July 28 2021 Here s what s in the 550 billion bipartisan infrastructure deal CNBC Archived from the original on May 11 2022 Retrieved August 11 2021 Reconnecting Communities Pilot Program Planning Grants and Capital Construction Grants U S DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Archived from the original on September 29 2022 Retrieved September 29 2022 Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Reconnecting Communities Pilot RCP Discretionary Grant Program PDF DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Archived PDF from the original on September 26 2022 Retrieved September 29 2022 a b Three big transmission projects win 1 3B in DOE loans Canary Media October 30 2023 Retrieved October 31 2023 a b National Transmission Needs Study Energy gov October 30 2023 Retrieved October 31 2023 a b Transmission Facilitation Program Energy gov October 30 2023 Retrieved October 31 2023 Biden Harris Administration Announces 6 Billion To Drastically Reduce Industrial Emissions and Create Healthier Communities Energy gov March 8 2023 Retrieved May 26 2023 Kuttner Robert March 27 2023 Using Industrial Policy to Promote Social Justice The American Prospect Archived from the original on March 29 2023 Retrieved March 29 2023 Murrin Suzanne September 30 2022 Initial Observations of IHS Capacity to Manage Supplemental 3 5 Billion Appropriated to Sanitation Facilities Construction Projects Office of Inspector General Government Oversight division U S Department of Health and Human Services Retrieved May 24 2023 Tanana Heather and Nielsen Miriam May 24 2023 What s going on with the Inflation Reduction Act YouTube video New York NY Zentouro Event occurs at 11 minutes 19 seconds Retrieved May 24 2023 EPA amp The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Fact Sheet Washington D C U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA November 16 2022 Archived from the original on April 15 2023 Retrieved April 15 2023 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Highway Bridges PDF Congressional Research Service May 6 2022 Archived PDF from the original on April 16 2023 Retrieved April 16 2023 Bridge Formula Program BFP Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on April 13 2023 Retrieved April 16 2023 Bridge Investment Program BIP Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on April 16 2023 Retrieved April 16 2023 Fact Sheet The Bipartisan Infrastructure Deal The White House November 6 2021 Archived from the original on January 26 2022 Retrieved April 14 2023 a b c d Refer to infographic PNG FRA Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Information from FRA November 15 2021 Retrieved July 11 2023 Passenger Rail Expansion in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act IIJA Congressional Research Service February 10 2022 Archived from the original on April 14 2023 Retrieved April 14 2023 FRA Announces New Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Program to Guide Nationwide Expansion and Enhancement of Intercity Passenger Rail Service U S Department of Transportation May 13 2022 Archived from the original on April 15 2023 Retrieved April 14 2023 Biden Harris Administration Announces First Ever Awards from Program to Reconnect Communities February 28 2023 Archived from the original on February 28 2023 Retrieved February 28 2023 Fact Sheet All Stations Accessibility Program Federal Transit Administration Archived from the original on April 14 2023 Retrieved April 14 2023 Biden Administration Announces Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Funding to Make Public Transportation Rail Stations Accessible for All Federal Transit Administration July 26 2022 Archived from the original on April 14 2023 Retrieved April 14 2023 Wildlife Crossings Program Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on April 14 2023 Retrieved April 14 2023 National Culvert Removal Replacement and Restoration Grants Culvert AOP Program Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on April 15 2023 Retrieved April 14 2023 a b c Gitlin Jonathan M November 8 2021 Here s what the infrastructure bill means for road safety and EVs Ars Technica It s helping save lives Vehicles will soon have built in sensors to prevent drunk driving wthr com July 26 2021 Gordon Aaron August 3 2021 Every Car Made After 2027 May Have Drunk Driving Monitoring System Vice a b Cosse Clay September 28 2022 Products Liability and Regulatory Implications of the NTSB s Recent Recommendations on Blood Alcohol Monitoring and Intelligent Speed Assistance Part I The Open Road Automotive Law Blog Ragland Will Koronowski Ryan Simhoni Shanee June 20 2023 Biden Administration Investment Tracker Center for American Progress Retrieved June 29 2023 Investing In America The White House November 29 2023 Archived from the original on December 1 2023 Retrieved December 1 2023 What You Need to Know About the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant National League of Cities December 3 2021 Retrieved October 25 2023 Biden Harris Administration Announces 550 Million in Clean Energy Funding to Benefit and Lower Costs for More than 250 Million Americans Energy gov November 22 2022 Retrieved November 24 2022 Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant EECBG Program Competitive Awards Energy gov October 12 2023 Retrieved October 25 2023 EECBG Program Formula Grant Application Hub Energy gov Retrieved October 25 2023 St John Jeff October 18 2023 The US just made its biggest ever investment in the grid Canary Media Retrieved October 24 2023 Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships GRIP Program Energy gov October 24 2023 Retrieved 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Billion For America s First Clean Hydrogen Hubs Driving Clean Manufacturing and Delivering New Economic Opportunities Nationwide Energy gov October 13 2023 Retrieved October 24 2023 Biden admin picks 7 clean hydrogen hubs for 7 billion federal boost Canary Media October 13 2023 Retrieved November 1 2023 Story Brown Hannah Marsano Emma October 16 2023 RELEASE Energy Department s Embrace Of Fossil Fuel Powered Hydrogen Hubs A Win For Manchin Loss For Climate Revolving Door Project Retrieved November 1 2023 Biden Harris Administration Finalizes Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Tool Moves Climate Change Performance Measure Forward U S DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Highway Administration United States government Retrieved November 27 2023 Biden Harris Administration Announces Historic Consensus System Conservation Proposal to Protect the Colorado River Basin U S Department of the Interior May 22 2023 Retrieved June 20 2023 Jones Benji May 23 2023 Why the new Colorado River agreement is a big deal even if you don t live out West Vox Retrieved June 20 2023 Biden Harris Administration Announces Nearly 3 Billion in Project Selections to Help Communities Build Resilience to Climate Change and Extreme Weather Events FEMA gov United States federal government August 28 2023 Retrieved September 4 2023 Swift Current FEMA gov November 15 2023 Retrieved November 15 2023 Mascaro Lisa June 26 2021 Key GOP senators balk at terms of Biden infrastructure bill Associated Press News Archived from the original on June 26 2021 Retrieved June 26 2021 Bolton Alexander June 24 2021 McConnell slams Biden for already caving to left on infrastructure deal The Hill Archived from the original on June 25 2021 Retrieved June 26 2021 Romano Andrew June 28 2021 Poll 6 in 10 GOP voters favor new 1 2 trillion infrastructure plan boosting Biden s hopes of a big bipartisan win Yahoo News Archived from the original on June 28 2021 Retrieved June 29 2021 Carrasco Maria June 20 2021 Sanders won t back infrastructure deal with more gas taxes electric vehicle fees Politico Archived from the original on June 20 2021 Retrieved June 21 2021 Mcauliff Michael June 28 2021 AOC Bowman join protesters at White House demanding climate action in Biden infrastructure plan Daily News New York Archived from the original on July 3 2021 Retrieved July 4 2021 Pramuk Jacob July 6 2021 Bipartisan House group s endorsement of Senate infrastructure plan could trip up Pelosi s strategy CNBC Archived from the original on July 7 2021 Retrieved July 7 2021 Schnell Mychael July 21 2021 65 former governors mayors back bipartisan infrastructure deal The Hill Archived from the original on July 22 2021 Retrieved July 22 2021 a b Lonas Lexi November 13 2021 Trump slams McConnell says senator should attend Biden signing ceremony The Hill Archived from the original on November 14 2021 Retrieved November 14 2021 a b c Elbeshbishi Sarah November 8 2021 House GOP members who voted for infrastructure bill face backlash from Republican colleagues USA Today Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Retrieved November 10 2021 Jenkins Cameron November 9 2021 GOP rep shares threatening voicemail after infrastructure vote The Hill Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Retrieved November 10 2021 Koplowitz Howard November 16 2021 Palmer roasted for hypocrisy of securing Northern Beltline funding voting against it AL com Archived from the original on November 17 2021 Retrieved November 16 2021 Wade Peter December 13 2021 Paul Gosar Takes Credit for Covid Funding He Bashed as a Democrat Spending Bonanza Rolling Stone Archived from the original on December 14 2021 Retrieved December 14 2021 Rappeport Alan December 15 2021 Republicans Who Assailed Biden s Stimulus Bill Are Embracing the Money The New York Times Archived from the original on December 15 2021 Retrieved December 15 2021 a b Evers Hillstrom Karl June 22 2021 Business groups urge Biden to embrace bipartisan infrastructure package The Hill Archived from the original on June 22 2021 Retrieved June 23 2021 Greenwood Max August 2 2021 Poll shows broad support for bipartisan infrastructure bill The Hill Archived from the original on August 2 2021 Retrieved August 6 2021 Wallison Peter J September 25 2021 GOP should grab the chance to upend Pelosi s plan on reconciliation The Hill Archived from the original on September 27 2021 Retrieved September 28 2021 Boak Josh Long Colleen November 15 2021 Biden signs 1T infrastructure deal with bipartisan crowd Associated Press News Archived from the original on November 16 2021 Retrieved November 15 2021 a b Davis Steve June 7 2021 New House transportation bill goes 3 for 3 on T4America s core principles Transportation For America Archived from the original on October 6 2022 Retrieved October 6 2022 a b Osborne Beth May 26 2021 Release Transportation for America on the Surface Transportation Reauthorization Act of 2021 Transportation For America Archived from the original on October 6 2022 Retrieved October 6 2022 a b Perez Benito June 29 2021 The bipartisan infrastructure deal What we know and don t know Transportation For America Archived from the original on October 6 2022 Retrieved October 6 2022 a b Grimminger Abigail August 12 2021 The bipartisan infrastructure deal s passage More money for more of the same Transportation For America Archived from the original on October 6 2022 Retrieved October 6 2022 a b Perez Benito December 2 2021 Lemonade from lemons Improvements worth celebrating within flawed infrastructure bill Transportation For America Archived from the original on October 6 2022 Retrieved October 6 2022 Staff November 16 2021 Nuclear supporting infrastructure bill becomes US law World Nuclear News website Archived December 22 2021 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 14 2022 Democrats have another infrastructure problem POLITICO July 22 2022 Archived from the original on September 5 2022 Retrieved September 5 2022 Domonoske Camila December 31 2021 What if cars could stop you from driving drunk A peek at the latest tech Stanley Jay November 22 2021 Congressional Drunk Driver Detection Mandate Raises Privacy Questions ACLU American Civil Liberties Union Gordon Aaron August 3 2021 Every Car Made After 2027 May Have Drunk Driving Monitoring System Vice Kamrath Erik Budden Pete October 1 2023 Success of Hydrogen Hubs Requires a Step Increase in Transparency NRDC Retrieved October 24 2023 H R 3684 at Congress govExternal links editInfrastructure Investment and Jobs Act as amended PDF details in the GPO Statute Compilations collection Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act as enacted PDF details in the US Statutes at Large H R 3684 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act bill information on Congress gov BIL Maps Dashboard General Services Administration database displaying geographic information on IIJA projects as of May 26 2023 update Retrieved June 29 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act amp oldid 1188702878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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