Two More Weeks for Congress to Work on Highway Bill
Congress has another two weeks to work on finishing up a highway bill, as President Obama Friday signed a bill extending federal transportation funding through Dec. 4. It was due to expire Friday night.
by Staff
November 20, 2015
HDT file photo
1 min to read
HDT file photo
Congress has another two weeks to work on finishing up a highway bill, as President Obama Friday signed a bill extending federal transportation funding through Dec. 4. It was due to expire Friday night.
The House on Monday passed a bipartisan bill to extend the authorization for federal highway and transit programs – the 36th such road-funding stopgap since 2009. The Senate passed companion legislation later in the week.
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The House measure was put forward by GOP leaders to provide more time for Congress to complete the conferencing process that will forge a compromise from the long-term highway bills that have separately been passed by the House and Senate.
“The House and Senate are making good progress in resolving differences between their respective multi-year surface transportation reauthorization proposals,” Rep. Shuster said in a statement when the House passed its extension. “The conference committee needs the time necessary to meet in public, complete negotiations, and produce a final measure that helps improve America’s infrastructure.”
The full conference committee is set to meet after the Congressional Thanksgiving recess to reconcile the discrepancies between the long-term House and Senate transportation bills.
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