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Rendell Pushes For National Infrastructure Bank
By R.G. Edmonson, The Journal of Commerce
Online
Pennsylvania governor urges focus
on improving economic
security
Scott Brown's election
victory in Massachusetts was a clear signal to
Washington that Americans want politicians to
focus their attention on job creation,
Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell said
Thursday.
Rendell, a founder of the
Building America's Future coalition, told a
small audience at the Center for National
Policy that one sure-fire way to create jobs is
through rehabilitating the nation's
infrastructure. Creation of a national
infrastructure bank was a major part of the
solution, Rendell said.
Rebuilding
infrastructure – from water systems and
electrical grids to seaports – will cost the
nation $4 trillion over 10 years, but "the
deficit makes it harder to invest at the levels
that are needed," he said.
Rendell said
the infrastructure bank would concentrate
federal funds and private sector investment,
and focus them toward projects of the greatest
national and regional
significance.
Rendell and CNP President
Stephen Flynn said that improving national
infrastructure was the key to economic
security, and economic security equates to
national security.
Flynn questioned if
Washington had the political will to undertake
a large-scale and costly program. Even before
the Jan. 19 election, infrastructure was pushed
off the congressional agenda by everything from
health care reform to reaction to the attempted
terrorist attack on an airliner in Detroit on
Christmas Day. The approaching mid-term
elections give Congress even less time to take
action.
Rendell said it will require the
participation of corporate America to get
congressional attention back on
infrastructure.
"American politics is
driven by the business community," Rendell
said.
Contact R.G. Edmonson at bedmonson@joc.com.
