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Transportation Industry Roundtable
1. Transportation Industry Roundtable New York Public Transit Association (NYPTA) Fall Conference & Expo Ron Epstein Chief Financial Officer New York State Department of Transportation November 19, 2009
5. SAFETEA-LU - Formula Program Share Program Breakdown of funds among programs TEA-21 SAFETEA-LU Urbanized Formula 91.23% 87.38% Non-Urbanized Formula 6.37% 9.79% Elderly & Disabled 2.40% 2.84%
6. SAFETEA-LU - Capital Investment Program Share Program Breakdown of funds among programs TEA-21 SAFETEA-LU New Starts 40% 41% Fixed Guideway 40% 37% Bus/Bus Facility 20% 22%
First we need to understand where we receive funds. 76.2% from 5307 and rail mod formulas. With SAS and ESA new start increasingly important â 18.9% Combined = 95%
6-YEAR IMPACT ($186.9m) uza; +48.7M 5310/5311. Net loss ($138.2m) 17% urban 4% rural 7% elderly
(-$201 MILLION) 5% bus program 30% of the rail mod
President Hoover. signed the first Federal gas tax into law The tax remained 4 cents a gallon until the Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982, which President Ronald Reagan approved The Act increased the tax to 9 cents, but the legislation created two separate accounts in the Highway Trust Fund. The Highway Account would receive 8 cents of the revenue while the new Mass Transit Account would receive 1 cent of the gas tax. On November 5, 1990, President George H. W. Bush approved the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990. The Act increased the Federal gas tax by 5 cents, with half the increase going to the Highway Trust Fund, the other half to deficit reduction. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, signed by President Bill Clinton on August 10, 1993, increased the gas tax by 4.3 cents, bringing the total tax to 18.4 cents per gallon. The increase was entirely for deficit reduction, with none credited to the Highway Trust Fund. However, the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, which President Clinton approved on August 5, 1997, redirected the 4.3-cents general fund gas tax increase to the Highway Trust Fund.
VMT
Cripple an essential part of our fragile transportation network. When one piece fails â the entire systems can collapse under the stress. Increased fares/service cuts threaten viability of many systems â especially those upstate. Loss of direct jobs â drivers/mechanics/administrative Loss of manufacturing/supplier/other indirect jobs.