METRO

Rep. Davis's Plan to Increase Funding Has a Long Way to Go

By Tim Craig
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 20, 2006; Page B06

The effort by Rep. Thomas M. Davis III (R-Va.) to boost federal and regional support for the Metro transit system faces an uncertain future in the U.S. Senate and state capitals, despite his victory in the House of Representatives.

Much of Metrorail's system and equipment must be refurbished or replaced. At the same time, ridership is surging. More people took Metrorail last month than during any other month in the system's 30-year history. The average weekday ridership last month was 747,329, compared with 734,582 the previous June.


Metro is facing major expenses to maintain the region's transit system.
Metro is facing major expenses to maintain the region's transit system. (By Robert A. Reeder -- The Washington Post)

On Monday, the House narrowly approved legislation that would commit $1.5 billion over 10 years to improve Metro service if the region's governments match the money. The federal funds would come from federal revenue from offshore drilling operations. The District has agreed to provide a portion of its sales tax to Metro, but Maryland and Virginia have not acted.

Conservative groups, including the Club for Growth, say the proposed spending would be wasteful. And some senators might be eyeing the drilling proceeds for their states.

The federal and state funding, which together would add $300 million a year over 10 years, would pay for 340 rail cars and 275 buses and for station improvements.

Davis said it is up to the region's senators -- Virginia Republicans George Allen and John W. Warner and Maryland Democrats Barbara A. Mikulski and Paul S. Sarbanes -- to get the federal funding approved.

"We got it moving in the House. It was a huge hurdle," Davis said. "It's now up to Allen, Warner, Mikulski and Sarbanes."

Mikulski said through a spokeswoman that she is reviewing the legislation but is supportive of the concept. Sarbanes did not respond to a request for comment.

The support of Warner and Allen could be critical, because they can influence the Republican leadership. Allen sits on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, which is likely to handle the offshore drilling legislation. Warner is a member of the Committee on Homeland Security, which would also have a say.

Warner said through a spokesman that he supports the legislation. "The transit system is critical for the transportation needs of the nation's capital," he said in a statement.

Allen, who is facing reelection this year and might run for president in 2008, has not taken a public position. "He will certainly know where we stand," said John Taylor, president of the Virginia Institute for Public Policy, a conservative think tank.

Taylor and other fiscal conservatives said the funding is little more than a subsidy for well-paid Washington commuters.


CONTINUED     1        >

© 2007 The Washington Post Company