Sec. 7005. Inland waterways system revenues
263 words·~1 min read·
/bill/113/s/601/rs/section-7005A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
Congress finds that— there are approximately 12,000 miles of Federal waterways, known as the inland waterways system, that are supported by user fees and managed by the Corps of Engineers; the inland waterways system spans 38 States and handles approximately one-half of all inland waterway freight; according to the final report of the Inland Marine Transportation System Capital Projects Business Model, freight traffic on the Federal fuel-taxed inland waterways system accounts for 546,000,000 tons of freight each year; expenditures for construction and major rehabilitation projects on the inland waterways system are equally cost-shared between the Federal Government and the Inland Waterways Trust Fund; the Inland Waterways Trust Fund is financed through a fee of $0.20 per gallon on fuel used by commercial barges; the balance of the Inland Waterways Trust Fund has declined significantly in recent years; according to the final report of the Inland Marine Transportation System Capital Projects Business Model, the estimated financial need for construction and major rehabilitation projects on the inland waterways system for fiscal years 2011 through 2030 is approximately $18,000,000,000; and users of the inland waterways system are supportive of an increase in the existing revenue sources for inland waterways system construction and major rehabilitation activities to expedite the most critical of those construction and major rehabilitation projects.
It is the sense of Congress that— the existing revenue sources for inland waterways system construction and rehabilitation activities are insufficient to cover the costs of non-Federal interests of construction and major rehabilitation projects on the inland waterways system; and the issue described in paragraph
(1)should be addressed.