by Ben Adler |
COMMENTARY
Mitt Romney hasn’t been shy lately about criticizing President Obama over high gas prices. Last month, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee even accused Obama of deliberately trying to “drive up the cost of energy” in order to encourage the use of renewable sources.
And yet, with the summer driving season nearly upon us, Romney and his party are showing no interest whatsoever in one surefire way to ease the burden of high gas prices: mass transit.
According to a new report by the American Public Transportation Association (APTA) and a coalition of elected officials that supports more infrastructure spending, increases or volatility in gas prices cause mass transit ridership – already on the rise in recent years — to spike, as people look for cheaper ways to get around. But the report also notes that most transit systems are already stretched thin, after cash-strapped state and local governments cut funding in recent years .
Congress is currently considering reauthorizing a major transportation funding bill. But instead of boosting spending on mass transit to deal with the coming crunch – as well as to help fix our infrastructure deficit and perhaps even stimulate the economy — House Republicans want to move in the other direction. They’ve proposed cutting funding for mass transit and for other alternatives to driving, like sidewalks and bike lanes. For good measure, they also want to eliminate environmental safeguards, and tack on an irrelevant approval of the Keystone XL oil pipeline.
Transportation policy was once a fairly bipartisan process. But in recent years, it’s been politicized by congressional Republicans, and has become another area of partisan gridlock. The result is that the transportation bill – whose renewal used to be fairly routine — has been temporarily extended, rather than passed outright, eight times since it expired in 2009.








