AWO — A Legislative Report
by the House Public Works and
Transportation Committee in Aug.
1983.
Four other House committees—
Merchant Marine and Fisheries,
Agriculture, Interior and Insular
Affairs, and Judiciary—also acted
on various portions of the measure.
Under H.R. 3678, the federal
government, through the estab-
lishment of a Port Infrastructure
Trust Fund, would be responsible
for construction and operation and
maintenance (O&M) of ports with
channel depths between 14-^45 feet
("general cargo ports"). For ports
deeper than 45 feet, ("deep-draft
ports"), non-federal interests would
be required to pay 50 percent of
construction costs, as well as 50
percent of incremental O&M costs.
Ports wishing to impose user fees
to recover their non-federal share
would be permitted to impose such
fees only on vessels requiring a
channel greater than 45 feet. This
latter provision is extremely im-
portant to AWO members operat-
ing shallow-draft vessels, with no
need for deeper channels.
Also important to AWO is the
bill's establishment of new cost
sharing formulas of seven priority
lock and dam projects: a second
lock at Lock and Dam 26, Upper
Mississippi River; replacement
of Gallipolis Locks, Ohio River;
Bonneville Lock, Columbia River;
Oliver Lock, Black Warrior
River; Locks 7 and 8, Mononga-
hela River; and Winfield Lock,
Kanawha River, all authorized in
H.R. 3678. Under this provision,
one-third of the cost of construc-
tion for these seven projects would
be financed from the Inland
Waterways Trust Fund. No in-
crease in the currently-mandated
schedule of waterway user taxes
(continued on page 22)
The Barge And Towing Industry
— A Legislative Review —
Dena L. Wilson, Director— Legislative Affairs
Congress left Washington, D.C.
for the first part of its summer re-
cess after passing omnibus water
resources legislation, H.R. 3678,
on June 29, by a vote of 259-33.
House passage of this legislation,
which contains new comprehen-
sive policy reforms, has been a
major priority of The American
Waterways Operators, Inc. in the
98th Congress.
Following almost two years of
intensive hearings and individual
meetings, Rep. Robert A. Roe (D-
NJ), House Water Resources Sub-
committee chairman, introduced
H.R. 3678 in July 1983. This bill
was then approved unanimously Dena Wilson
20 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News
Digital Wave Publishing