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Bipartisan Infrastructure bill’s working class agenda


A crew works on a cell tower in Lake Havasu City, Ariz.

Bill Clark | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

If good policy is good politics, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is both. It’s good for the country, which barely has a passing grade on our infrastructure, C-, and good for the American worker.

The COVID-19 pandemic and its lockdowns brought our economy to a temporary standstill. How someone fared, depended on their circumstances.

If someone could make a living through online video calls with access to high-speed internet in the comfort of their home, they often did quite well.

If someone worked with their hands, things were often quite different. Employment levels and opportunities have not returned to those in the lower quintiles of our economy to the levels achieved before the pandemic. This is where the bipartisan infrastructure bill would come into play.

 Non-college educated Americans often work in construction, manufacturing, service, and the oil and gas industry. Any economic program which predominantly stimulates these sectors, disproportionately benefits these working families.

This is precisely what the bipartisan infrastructure bill does. Making critical investments in roads, bridges, highways, broadband, coastal resiliency, ports, and waterways creates jobs, opportunities and improves the lives of all Americans.

For families and small businesses who do not have access to high-speed internet, the bipartisan infrastructure bill allocates billions to ensure that all Americans gain such access. For communities experiencing severe flooding, it gives FEMA and the Army Corps of Engineers billions for efforts to decrease the risk of flooding.

 For towns and cities plagued by power outage following storms like we are seeing in southeast Louisiana, the bipartisan infrastructure bill allocates billions to harden the electrical grid and make it more reliable. Doing these things creates jobs and provides real solutions to real problems Americans are facing every day.

Now is our opportunity to show working Americans that Washington is ready to invest in them. Each aspect of this bill will provide a job opportunity to those Americans who have felt left behind for far too long. This bill is a once-in-a-generation opportunity for the American worker.

TC Williams High School Geometry teacher Danielle Thorne conducts a Zoom class on the first day of school from her dining room table September 08, 2020 in Alexandria, VA.

Katherine Frey | The Washington Post | Getty Images

There’s a lot of lip service and platitudes given to American workers. But this is more than a talking point. This is a commitment to invest in their futures and the future of this country. This is reflected in our policy decisions and the text of the bipartisan infrastructure bill. It overwhelmingly passed the U.S. Senate by a vote of 69-30 in last month and now awaits a vote in the U.S. House of Representatives next week.

The bipartisan infrastructure bill provides $550 billion…



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