OREGON A8 — THE OBSERVER THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 2022 State panel: No new federal funds for highway enhancements It also excludes money for broadband, water and sewer line upgrades that will not go through ODOT. Transit agencies also will share $200 million they will get directly. Commission advises ODOT to revise options By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau Other uses SALEM — The Oregon Transportation Com- mission has decided that the state’s share of fl ex- ible funds from the fed- eral government should not go toward new highway “enhancements.” The commission directed the staff of the Oregon Department of Transportation to revise its options. About $400 million in transporta- tion money from the fed- eral infrastructure bill, which President Joe Biden signed on Nov. 15, will be divided among main- tenance projects for roads and bridges, safe routes to school and improvements on state highways that function as main streets in communities. The commission heard more comments at a meeting Thursday, March Other uses of the rest of the state’s $198 million in fl exible funds, as proposed by ODOT staff in all sce- narios, are: • $100 million for ODOT to carry out new access projects to comply with a 2017 settlement of a lawsuit under the Americans with Disabilities Act. • $40 million to help off set a projected shortfall in agency operations and maintenance. • $40 million to enable Oregon to compete with other states for a share of $100 billion that the U.S. Department of Transpor- tation will award for other projects. Possible Oregon contenders are two proj- ects on Interstate 5: Rose Quarter widening and par- tial capping, and a new bridge over the Columbia River to connect Portland with Vancouver, Wash- Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin, File A vehicle drives down an empty section of Highway 97 near the Wilson Avenue overpass in Bend on Thursday, April 9, 2020. 10, after which members refi ned what had been four scenarios for spending $214 million of the $412 million in fl exible funds. “We are committed to preserving the existing transportation network and investing in a range of improvements to reduce congestion and harmful emissions, and to sup- port improved safety, elec- tric vehicles, transit and local improvements,” com- mission Chairman Robert Van Brocklin said. “The proposed scenarios will allow ODOT to invest in Oregon’s transportation system in these and other important ways.” The commission will decide March 30 on the exact mix to be divided among the list of mainte- nance projects, known as Fix-It, plus safe routes to school and improved high- ways that function as main streets. It will decide on money afterward for spe- cifi c projects within these categories; some projects will start this summer. The $400 million-plus is part of Oregon’s $1.2 bil- lion that will come to the Department of Transpor- tation over the next fi ve years. This amount counts about $800 million that the federal law earmarks for specifi c purposes, such as bridge repairs, charging stations for electric vehicles and programs to reduce greenhouse gases. It excludes about $200 million that larger metro- politan areas will get for transportation directly from the federal government. ington. (The federal law has a separate fund for projects reconnecting com- munities, but it is just $1 billion nationally.) • $15 million to help communities with plan- ning for climate change, including the transportation planning rule that seeks to reduce the need for travel between home, work and other activities. The rule dates back to 1991 but was updated in 2012. • $3 million to boost business and the workforce required for construction projects. These numbers also could change as the com- mission makes its fi nal decisions. The amounts available to ODOT for new highway enhancements will drop off sharply after 2024, seven years after the Leg- islature approved its third major funding plan in two decades under House Bill 2017. The plan increased fuel taxes, which ODOT and local governments spend on maintenance, and raised some vehicle and license fees to repay bonds for construction. Rep. Cliff Bentz compares Ukraine war to Cuban Missile Crisis By PAT CALDWELL Malheur Enterprise ONTARIO — The Rus- sian invasion of Ukraine is an emergency on par with the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Oregon, said at the Ontario Area Chamber of Commerce luncheon Monday, March 14. “It is a horribly diffi - cult situation,” Bentz told the large crowd at the luncheon. While Bentz said “no one wants us to send sol- diers to the Ukraine,” the crisis showed that proper funding for the military is crucial. “(The Ukraine crisis) was probably a mistake,” should have alerted us he said. to the fact we have to be Bentz also discussed prepared, we have to be growing infl ation in the ready,” said Bentz. U.S., which he said is He said he believes triggered by a number sanctions imposed of diff erent factors, by the U.S. and including disruptions other nations are in the global supply “having an impact.” chain. “It is my hope “The supply situ- they will work,” ation is one that will said Bentz. take a while to fi x,” Bentz said mis- Bentz he said. takes were most Bentz reminded likely made by the U.S. the crowd he voted against and NATO — the North President Joe Biden’s mas- American Treaty Organi- sive $1.9 trillion infra- zation — in the run-up to structure bill last fall the Ukraine invasion. but said there were good “Holding out NATO things in the legislation, where anyone could join including money for mega projects, such as a pro- posal to upgrade the port of Coos Bay. Bentz recognized the price of fuel continues to climb but did not list the Ukraine invasion as the trigger for the higher costs. Bentz said the Biden administration wants to convert the nation to cleaner fuels, including a push for Americans to buy electric cars. The problem, he said, is there isn’t the infrastructure to build the cars nor are the prices of such vehicles at a reason- able level for the average American. “People can’t aff ord them and we don’t have a supply,” said Bentz. He said it can take up to 15 years to make such a profound shift. That’s why, he said, a transition time line must be built into such a plan. “The word transition was the one missing word in the Democrats’ vocabu- lary,” said Bentz. Bentz also touched on the ongoing immigration issue on the border and water issues across the West and, in particular, in the Klamath Basin. The ongoing drought in the West is also an issue he is watching. “Seventy million people face drought,” he said. Bentz said he was pleased the River Democ- racy Act — a piece of leg- islation sponsored by U.S. Sen Ron Wyden, D-Or- egon — was “headed off .” The legislation, intro- duced by Wyden and U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Or- egon, last year, aims to protect nearly 4,700 miles or rivers and streams in Oregon as part of the national Wild and Scenic Rivers System. “What Ron (Wyden) is trying to do is stop any activity on our forests. Why? I really don’t know,” said Bentz. Nationally-recognized care, right here in your backyard. Congratulations, Grande Ronde Hospital. Grande Ronde Hospital has always been committed to providing high-quality care to the people of Eastern Oregon. Now they’ve been honored for it. Grande Ronde Hospital named one of the top 100 critical access facilities. Based on factors like quality, outcomes, cost and patient perspective, the Chartis Center for Rural Health has named Grande Ronde Hospital a 2022 Top 100 Critical Access Hospital in the U.S. EOCCO and Summit Health congratulate everyone on the Grande Ronde team. We are proud that you are part of our network of providers in Eastern Oregon, and we thank you for your commitment to quality care. It’s made you one of the best.