Click here or the image above to watch Ranking Member Capito’s
questions for Secretary Buttigieg.
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.),
Ranking Member of the Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee,
questioned U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) Secretary Pete Buttigieg in
a hearing
about the department’s implementation of the bipartisan infrastructure law, the
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA).
Following a December
16, 2021 memorandum issued by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA)
that outlined several policies contradicting those negotiated and agreed to in
the IIJA, Senator Capito and Republican Leader Senator Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.)
sent a letter to
governors across the country reaffirming their commitment to ensuring the
proper implementation of the law.
In February,
Senator Capito—along with Senators Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) and Deb Fischer
(R-Neb.)—led more than half of the Republican conference in a letter
requesting that Secretary Buttigieg direct FHWA to rescind or substantially
revise the memorandum to ensure the agency intends proper implementation of the
IIJA as enacted.
HIGHLIGHTS:
USING REJECTED, PARTISAN LANGUAGE: “As you can see this language from the memo is lifted from the bill
that was sent over here to the Senate as the shell bill that we rejected here
in the United States Senate. The Surface Transportation Reauthorization Act,
which passed this committee, had no such language in there. I’ve said many
times, this is a bipartisan bill, the project of careful negotiations and
reflective of the will of the committee unanimously…I’m really troubled that
a memo coming from your department has language in it that was rejected from
the House bill—basically verbatim.”
COPY/PASTE JOB: “So from your
explanation, would I assume that the fact that they’re verbatim from the
DeFazio bill into the memo that came from your department—word for word—is just
because? So are you in the habit of lifting language from unpassed bills and
putting them into regulations that you’re putting forward—that obviously
had been negotiated out of bills?”
BUILD, BUT…: “Now we have an
opportunity with the bipartisan infrastructure package to really build more in
areas that need that. But in your memo, you say, ‘More capacity, BUT…’ There’s
a big ‘BUT’ in there. You have to consider all these other things. You should
consider all these other things.”
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