CLEVELAND Biden: Spend on infrastructure


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President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden are traveling the country saying the nation needs to invest billions of federal dollars in highways and bridges, but some Ohio city officials are left to wonder: Where’s the money to fix our streets?

Associated Press

CLEVELAND

President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden are traveling the country saying the nation needs to invest billions of federal dollars in highways and bridges, but some Ohio city officials are left to wonder: Where’s the money to fix our streets?

Making the pitch Wednesday at a rail-car repair shop in Cleveland, Biden said such investment is necessary for the United States to remain a pre-eminent economic force.

“Those in Congress who lack vision say we can’t afford to make these investments,” he said. “How can we not afford to make these investments?”

He said one study shows the U.S. needs $3.6 trillion in infrastructure investment by 2020 but spends only 1 percent of its gross domestic product on infrastructure and ranks 18th in the world for the quality of its roads.

Biden was in Cleveland to highlight federal investment in a $17.5 million new light-rail station that will open in 2015. The president was in New York City, where the federal government has provided a $1.6 billion loan to rebuild the Tappan Zee Bridge. Their message is that more money needs to be spent on infrastructure.

In response, Republican National Committee spokesman Michael Short issued a statement Wednesday that said the Obama administration should stop what he called its obstruction of the Keystone XL pipeline, “which has bipartisan support and would create good-paying Ohio jobs.”

City officials in Ohio wish that a small share of those billions would trickle down to them for maintenance. Some Ohio cities are operating on the thinnest of margins as costs rise, tax receipts fall and state funding is reduced. Federal and state governments pay the lion’s share of big road and interstate projects, but routine maintenance of surface streets is typically left to cities to pay.

Police and firefighters must continue to be paid, so budget items such as street resurfacing are the first to be trimmed, said Paul Barnett, public-works manager for the city of Akron.

Akron will spend about $2 million on street resurfacing this year but needs to spend at least $8 million to keep pace, Barnett said.

The booming city of Columbus will spend $33.5 million on street resurfacing this year. Cleveland will spend $4.4 million. Toledo has upped its resurfacing budget to $1 million compared with $600,000 in 2013.

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