GOP Targets “Double Dippers” to Pay for Highway Bill
Short-term Highway Bill Sets Stage for Congressional Collision · The Fiscal Times

The fate of a multi-billion dollar emergency package to avert a nationwide shutdown of highway and bridge projects this summer may hinge on the outcome of a political tug of war over how to pay for it.

Senate Democrats are seeking creative ways to raise additional tax revenue without boosting rates while Republicans are pressing to reduce spending – including funds for Social Security disability payments and unemployment insurance.

The Republicans’ Social Security disability and unemployment insurance proposal reflects a mounting concern about the cost of people “double dipping” in the two programs. While there is no law against it, Republican policy makers say that it’s time to reexamine the programs in light of an explosion in the number of Americans collecting both unemployment compensation and disability insurance.

Related: 117,000 Americans Get Jobless and Disability Benefits

The idea has been trotted out before, as part of the ongoing debate over helping the long-term unemployed, and President Obama included a version of a plan to discourage double-dipping in his fiscal 2014 budget.

Some critics warn that implementation and enforcement of the proposed new policy by the Social Security, which handles disability and state governments responsible for distributing unemployment insurance, could be complicated and difficult.

“It’s not a simple administrative matter,” said Paul N. Van de Water, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and an expert on federal government spending. “And it’s a major administrative cost coming at a time when the Social Security Administration is already straining to administer its programs with shrinking appropriations.”

House and Senate leaders have abandoned hope of passing comprehensive legislation this summer that would extend highway and transit spending for the next six years roughly along the lines of current spending levels.

Instead, there is widespread agreement that Congress must pass a short-term, six month extension of spending authority to prevent the Highway Trust fund from going bankrupt in late July or early August, as the Department of Transportation has projected.

Related: Why You’ll Need a Tank to Drive America’s Highways

The highway trust fund has operated on an 18.4-cents-per-gallon federal gasoline tax that hasn’t been raised since 1993. Currently, the tax generates about $39 billion a year, but the trust fund faces annual shortfalls of roughly $20 billion as owners of more fuel-efficient vehicles pay less into the fund while construction costs rise.