Bipartisan bill moves forward, but a bigger battle awaits  Senate Democrats voted Wednesday morning to advance a $3.5 trillion spending plan without Republican support, Jordain Carney reported for The Hill. That’s a partisan about-face from the bipartisan $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill the Senate passed yesterday. But that bill couldn’t fit everything that Democrats want, and they are trying to press ahead with both pieces of legislation. What’s in the first bill? The $1.2 trillion bipartisan bill includes traditional infrastructure such as roads and bridges, as well as improvements to the country’s energy, electric vehicle and water sectors. It also has five key sustainability components, as laid out by The Hill’s Rachel Frazin and Zack Budryk: 1. Transportation: $2.5 billion for zero-emissions school buses, $2.5 billion for buses running on “alternative fuels” and $2.5 billion for electric and “low-emitting ferries” 2. Cleaner power: $6 billion for nuclear upkeep; loans and grants to boost carbon capture 3. Grid updates: $1 billion to boost rural grid resilience 4. Energy efficiency: grants and loans for building energy upgrades 5. Toxin cleanups: $50 billion for forever chemical cleanup and lead pipe replacements The infrastructure bill now moves to the House, which will cut short its recess and return on Aug. 23 to consider the package, The Hill reported. A “test for environmental justice”: We still don’t know whether communities that “have historically been marginalized in large-scale government projects” would benefit from these funds, according to Bloomberg CityLab — describing the package as “a trillion-dollar test for environmental justice.” The White House has created the Justice40 Initiative, an environmental justice framework, to steer 40 percent of clean energy investments into such communities. “We’re leveraging every resource we can to use this moment as a rising tide for all communities,” Environmental Protection Agency administrator Michael Regan told Bloomberg. Democrats argue bill “falls short”: Not all Senate Democrats are satisfied with the bipartisan bill’s approach to climate change — heightening demands for a more comprehensive second bill. Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.), chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said the bill “falls short” on climate provisions, The Hill reported. DeFazio, whose $760 billion transportation and water infrastructure bill passed the House last month, said he would push for “transformational funding and policies” to curb pollution in the $3.5 trillion spending plan — also known as the “reconciliation plan.” The Congressional Progressive Caucus, meanwhile, had asked the House on Tuesday to “commit to withholding a yes vote on the bipartisan infrastructure deal” until the Senate passed the budget resolution. |
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