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News / Politics

Infrastructure funding not available until late 2018

By Lindsay Wise, McClatchy Washington Bureau
Published: May 22, 2017, 10:38pm

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump made rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure a major job-creating campaign pledge. But while his first big federal budget proposal has $200 billion for that purpose, most of it won’t be available until late 2018 and beyond.

And there are likely to be few specifics on the plan until fall.

White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney on Monday reiterated Trump’s idea that every taxpayer dollar spent on infrastructure should spur on average at least $5 in investment at the state and local level. That would mean a $1 trillion investment on infrastructure over the next decade.

“There are ways to leverage federal spending in order to drive infrastructure programs at the state and local level that would not have taken place but for federal spending,” Mulvaney said.

But he did not say exactly how any of this might work, whether as public-private partnerships, tax credits, federal grants or loan programs.

Mulvaney acknowledged that some projects like ports, airports and electric transmission lines will be easy to leverage. Others, such as flood prevention, will not.

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