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Tuesday’s Headlines as the NCAA’s March Madness Ends

When a president proposes a $1.9-trillion infrastructure plan, expect it to dominate the headlines for days. And today is no exception. Enjoy, America.
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It’s another Biden day in our headlines:

  • The U.S. typically spends four times as much on roads and bridges as transit, but President Biden’s infrastructure plan flips the script. (New York Times)
  • The plan not only funds transit, but it focuses investment on communities that have historically been underserved. (Politico)
  • In an issue that relates to transportation because zoning policies often tend to encourage sprawl and gentrification, Biden’s plan also offers incentives to cities to build more housing. (NBC News)
  • The National Resource Defense Council says the plan will prioritize inequality and create jobs.
  • The Brookings Institute likes its direct aid to cities and states.
  • Senate Democrats could use reconciliation again to pass the infrastructure bill, or try to do as part of a bipartisan transportation bill. (Vox)
  • One talking point that’s emerging among Republicans is that only 6 percent of the plan’s $1.9 trillion goes to roads and bridges — but that’s just the GOP trying to limit the definition of infrastructure. (Newsweek)
  • West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin is already causing trouble for the plan, threatening to withhold his crucial 50th vote if the bill raises corporate income taxes too high. (CNN)
  • The Biden plan could fund Amtrak service to Phoenix 25 years after the last train left the station (Arizona Republic), as well as three round-trips per day between Cincinnati, Columbus and Cleveland (Ohio Capital Journal). Another new route could connect Biden’s hometown of Scranton to New York City (Citizens’ Voice).

In other news:

  • A new GAO report found that commuter rail improves quality of life in non-urban areas. (Eno Center for Transportation)
  • For many, access to transit also means access to healthy food. (Civil Eats)
  • South Bend, where Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg was once mayor, has a chance to be Indiana’s first transit-oriented community. (SB Tribune)
  • A driver killed a 4-year-old in Washington, D.C., showing once again that its streets are not safe. (Greater Greater Washington)
  • Two years after a driver killed a popular San Antonio bike-shop owner, his family is still fighting for safer streets. (Fox 29)
  • A Florida Today columnist complains that jaywalkers make driving on A1A feel like “a deadly video game.” Well, how do you think the people crossing the road feel?
Photo of Blake Aued
Blake Aued has been doing Streetsblog's daily national news digest for years. He's also an Atlanta Braves fan, which enrages his editor in New York.

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