Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Streetsblog

Fix-It-First Policy Must Tackle Road Expansions on Track for Federal Loans

On Tuesday, President Obama pledged during the State of the Union to adopt a "Fix it First" approach to infrastructure, which would focus on maintaining what's already built instead of building expensive, sprawl-inducing new roads.

false

But Yonah Freemark at the Transport Politic points out that federal financing is on track to accomplish the exact opposite -- expanding roads:

The projects the Administration is likely to begin financing through the TIFIA reduced-interest loan program are likely to take the opposite tack, for the most part supporting new construction over maintenance of the old. Of 28 projects that have submitted preliminary applications through the middle of last month for financing over the next two years, all but four are new construction or expansion of existing road, transit, or airport facilities. Moreover, road projects are likely to account for a large majority of infrastructure funded. Of the applications that have been received by the DOT, more than 70% are highway projects.

This is a troubling reflection of the state of federal transportation funding, for it suggests that there is still far too much funding going towards new roads construction, rather than renovations or public transportation infrastructure. It suggests that TIFIA — deemed an “innovative” federal infrastructure financing program — may simply replicate more of the same thinking about how to spend Washington’s money on transportation.

As Streetsblog reported last summer, TIFIA is on track to finance a lot of road construction in part because Congress wiped out almost all of the program's performance criteria when it wrote the new transportation bill, MAP-21.

Elsewhere on the Network today: Systemic Failure reports that Florida DOT Secretary Ananth Prasad raised the speed limit on a street to 45 mph after he was ticketed for speeding there. Alex Block says a recent post by the Urbanophile painted "urbanists" with too broad a brush. And Ride Solutions floats a theory that carpooling can improve the local economy through knowledge exchange.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

‘Goddamn Outrageous’: MTA Boss Blames Amtrak For Delaying ‘Penn Access’ Expansion

Janno Lieber lit into Amtrak for delays to Metro-North's Penn Station Access project: "The people in Co-op City are waiting for a goddamn train!"

October 7, 2025

Brooklyn Still Choked by Placard Elite Leaving Their Cars Everywhere With No Consequences

Drivers park illegally — often with city-issued placards — and virtually none ever gets ticketed by cops.

October 7, 2025

Tuesday’s Headlines: Rock and Roll Never Forgets Edition

Why was our house band, Jimmy and the Jaywalkers, snubbed from the journalists' "battle of the bands" on Wednesday night? Plus other news.

October 7, 2025

Likely Mayor Mamdani Supports Daylighting as DOT Digs In Heels

The next mayor will have to overcome a deeply entrenched bureaucracy opposed to the common-sense policy.

October 6, 2025

Under Pressure: Uber’s Navigation System Endangers the Public With Reckless Driving Directions

An Uber driver made an illegal u-turn and hit someone, but the in-app navigation told him to do it and the company won't give up the code.

October 6, 2025

Monday’s Headlines: Trump Games Continue Edition

Trump restored some security grant for New York, but billions of dollars in grants remain on ice. Plus more news.

October 6, 2025
See all posts