Highways and Highway Transportation by George R. Chatburn
1916. Illinois voted $60,000,000 in 1920 eventually to be paid from
838 words | Chapter 61
automobile licenses. Maryland authorized a bond issue of $5,000,000
for trunkline roads; additional issues were made in 1910, $1,000,000;
in 1912, $3,170,000; in 1914, $6,600,000; and in 1916, $2,700,000.
Missouri authorized a $60,000,000 bond issue in 1921 and so on for
other states. On January 1, 1914[153] there were outstanding highway
and bridge bonds in the United States to the amount of $445,147,073;
of which $158,590,000 had been voted by the States and $286,557,073
by counties and townships. After the war increased interest in road
building became manifest. Between November 1, 1918, and December 31,
1919,[154] state highway bonds amounting to $234,000,000 were voted:
Illinois, $60,000,000; Pennsylvania $50,000,000; Michigan, $50,000,000;
Missouri, $60,000,000 and many other states smaller amounts. There is
pending legislation for nearly $300,000,000 additional bonds, among
which are Minnesota, $75,000,000; Texas, $75,000,000; West Virginia,
$40,000,000; Washington, $30,000,000; Alabama, $25,000,000. Funds
are otherwise raised by direct taxation, property and special, by
appropriations from the general fund, by automobile licenses, and from
court fines. The grand total for road construction expended in the
United States from 1910 to 1920 is over $2,500,000,000.
=Federal Aid.=--The real road building age in the United States was
ushered in by the enactment of the law providing that “the Secretary of
Agriculture shall on behalf of the United States in certain cases aid
the States in the construction and maintenance of rural post roads.”
From the time Representative Brownlow startled the country in 1904
by introducing a bill to appropriate $24,000,000 for road building,
not a session of Congress passed without several such bills being
introduced. Most of these took the form of creating a commission to
administer any fund for national aid that might be appropriated, and
many feared such large appropriations would result in “pork barrels”
all over the country. In 1915 one such bill passed the House but did
not become a law. However, the leaven continued to work. The influence
of the automobile was making thousands of new road enthusiasts every
day. Many petitions were being rained upon Congress and scores of bills
introduced for national aid both for specific roads and of a general
nature. During the 63d Congress, forty-nine bills were introduced, 10
in the Senate and 39 in the House. A report had been submitted by a
joint congressional committee on January 21, 1915[155] embodying data
from foreign countries showing systems in effect, the mileage and cost
of roads constructed; similar data from the several states; extracts
from state constitutions showing limitations of state debts; statistics
on tonnage transported over rural roads; statistics on length,
character and condition of rural routes; transportation rates on road
materials by rail; comparative statistics embodying possible factors in
apportionment of Federal aid; statistics of wealth, debt, and highway
expenditures; comparative statistics on the cost of road construction,
historical sketches of national roads, work of the Office of Public
Roads; and a synopsis on congressional action on Federal aid to road
improvement.
The report speaks of the economic importance of good roads, the
constitutionality of Federal aid and gives data to show the public
sentiment in favor of Federal aid. Of 10,000 replies to inquiries
received from every state in the Union, 97 per cent favored Federal aid
and 3 per cent opposed.
On January 6, 1916, Representative Shackleford of Missouri, chairman
of the committee on roads, introduced the bill which later became a
law. The bill ran the usual course and created a great deal of interest
and was freely debated in both House and Senate. The discussion on it
comprises more than 300 pages of the Congressional Record[156] and
cover practically every reason for and objection to the betterment of
highways and the use thereon of national money. The bill finally passed
the house January 25, 1916, by a vote of 283 Yeas, 81 Nays and 70 not
voting; and the Senate as amended, May 8, 1916, by a unanimous vote.
The bill went to conference, the Senate agreed to the conference report
June 27, and the House June 28, 1916. President Wilson approved the
bill July 11, 1916, and it became Public Law, No. 156, 64th Congress.
The title of the bill as amended is “An Act to provide that the
United States shall aid the States in the Construction of rural post
roads, and for other purposes.” In brief it authorizes the Secretary
of Agriculture to coöperate with the states through their respective
highway departments in the construction of rural post roads. In order
to keep state sovereignty intact no money apportioned under the act
could be expended in any state until the legislature of that state
shall have assented to the provisions of the Act. The Secretary of
Agriculture and the State Highway department agree upon the roads to be
constructed therein and the character and method of construction. By
providing that all roads constructed under the provisions of the act
shall be free from tolls of all kinds Congress avoided the objection
raised by President Monroe in his veto of the National Road bill in
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