Washington, DC — Edward Wytkind, president of the Transportation Trades Department, AFL-CIO (TTD), issued this statement on the Comprehensive Transportation and Consumer Protection Act of 2015, introduced by Sen. John Thune (R – S.D.):
“At a time when our country’s transportation infrastructure is failing and disenfranchised Americans are desperate for work, bipartisan support is crucial to fund our nation’s highway and transit systems, and boost job creation.
“Instead of following a bipartisan model — as Senators James Inhofe (R-OK) and Barbara Boxer (D-CA) of the EPW Committee demonstrated last month — Commerce Committee Republicans are unwisely using their section of the surface transportation reauthorization bill to advance a partisan agenda that harms workers.
“The Thune bill includes a poorly veiled measure designed to blame workers and their unions for all port delays during a bargaining dispute. It also prematurely allows the use of hair specimens for drug testing of bus and truck drivers. These provisions have no place in any portion of the surface transportation reauthorization bill.
“Sen. Thune’s bill also fails to require rail carriers to provide emergency responders with information about the amount and type of hazardous materials moving through their localities — a commonsense measure that is critical to the efforts of first responders to save lives.
“The highway/transit reauthorization bill is one of the most important initiatives Congress will consider this year. Senate Commerce Committee Republicans must stop playing partisan politics with this already long-delayed transportation investment bill, and reject proposals that undermine the rights of employees and fail to support our transportation system.”
Related News
- SMART-TD AND CSX CELEBRATE 40 YEARS OF SUCCESS
- Boston rally tomorrow 10/23: Stand with Keolis commuter railroad workers
- SMART-TD Transit Union welcomes FTA’s historic directive to combat operator assaults
- Bus operator summons SWAT team in LA bus hijacking
- Amtrak agreement ratified by 3-to-1 margin
- De-escalation training helps conductors avert potential Amtrak disaster
- SMART-TD celebrates Arizona law that protects transit workers
- FRA denies railroads’ request to run without watchdog technology
- Amtrak general committees announce tentative agreement
- SMART Convention Day 1: DOT secretary headlines day one of SMART General Convention