No Clear Answers on Highway Bill
House passage of another 90-day extension of the highway program sets the stage for another nail-biter. Including today, there are 31 working days left before the current extension expires. The extension the House passed on Wednesday would give the House and Senate until the end of the fiscal year in September to negotiate the details of a highway bill that lasts longer than 90 days

The House extension contains a provision authorizing construction of the Keystone XL pipeline, which the Obama administration opposes until the project gets State Department clearance. (Photo courtesy of BP)
House passage of another 90-day extension of the highway program sets the stage for another nail-biter.
Including today, there are 31 working days left before the current extension expires. The extension the House passed on Wednesday would give the House and Senate until the end of the fiscal year in September to negotiate the details of a highway bill that lasts longer than 90 days.
The degree of difficulty for achieving this is quite high.
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, speaking at a conference hosted by Politico, said that although he wants a highway bill, he knows it won't pass.
First, both chambers must appoint conferees.
"The fact that the House voted to take a step forward on a surface transportation bill is encouraging, as long as they follow through and immediately appoint conferees," said Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., in a statement.
Boxer chairs the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. She and the ranking Republican on the committee, Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma, were the main authors of the two-year, $109 billion highway bill the Senate passed in a bipartisan vote last month.
Boxer said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has agreed to appoint conferees as soon as he can.
"The final bill must be truly bipartisan so it can pass both Houses of Congress," Boxer said.
Bipartisanship will be difficult to get.
The House extension contains a provision authorizing construction of the Keystone XL pipeline, which the Obama administration opposes until the project gets State Department clearance.
Also difficult is the all-important question of funding.
Both chambers want to keep highway funding at current levels, which requires more money than the Highway Trust Fund will produce. But neither chamber is willing to raise fuel taxes to cover the shortfall, and each has a different approach to how the difference should be made up.
The House has proposed collecting fees for new oil and gas drilling, and the Senate has proposed a bundle of funding transfers and offsets.
Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., is chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and main author of the five-year, $260 billion highway bill that the House has not been able to pass.
He said he intends to push for as many provisions of that bill as he can get into a House-Senate conference measure.
In fact, both Mica's bill and the two-year Senate bill contain reforms that would make big changes in the way the Department of Transportation does business. They both consolidate DOT programs, expedite project delivery, eliminate earmarks and give states more say in how to spend federal dollars.
If the conferees can overcome their differences over funding and the term of a highway bill, they just might be able to include substantive, long-sought reforms of the federal transportation program.
The alternative would be to extend the program until after the November election.
That would put it in line behind showdown issues such as the expiration of the Bush tax cuts at the end of the year, and the beginning of almost $1 trillion in spending cuts under the Budget Control Act of 2011.
More Drivers

Prime Inc. to Open $7.9M Flagship Used-Truck Dealership
A new driver-focused facility to sell Prime Inc's used trucks and trailers will be the first purpose-built location in the company's history.
Read More →Short Takes: Inside K&B’s Truck Safety Tech
Listen to learn how K&B Transportation uses cellphone-blocking technology, speed management systems, weather geofencing, bridge avoidance tools, and more to improve driver safety.
Read More →
Nussbaum Expands Driver Compensation with Pay Raises, Profit Sharing
Nussbaum Transportation said its latest compensation package could push first-year driver earnings above $90,000 in key hiring markets.
Read More →Listen: Inside Modern Fleet Safety: AI, Cameras & Speed Control at K&B Transportation
Fleet safety is evolving fast—and technology is at the center of it. Learn how a former commercial vehicle enforcement officer turned director of safety at K&B Transportation is embracing real-world safety technology.
Read More →
Maverick Announces 2026 Driver Pay Raises
New raises for Maverick Transportation drivers will take effect on May 31, 2026.
Read More →
Illinois Trucker Indicted for Nearly $22,000 in Ohio Turnpike Toll Evasion
Authorities say an Illinois trucker avoided paying tolls for two years, and now faces felony charges, possible prison time, and forfeiture of his Freightliner tractor.
Read More →
New Trojan Driver Cargo Theft Scam Bypasses Carrier Vetting Systems
Cargo theft rings plant operatives as drivers inside legitimate, fully vetted carriers, then execute coordinated thefts that look like a traditional straight theft from the outside.
Read More →
WIM, Trucker Path Name Top 3 Women-Friendly Truck Stops
ATA’s Women In Motion Council and Trucker Path highlight three truck stops that meet all seven safety-focused criteria and rank highest among female drivers.
Read More →
FMCSA Extends Paper Medical Card Exemption … Again
Five states still aren't ready to accept commercial driver medical exam information directly from the medical examiner's registry.
Read More →
Mack Launches Digital Driver Guide for Chassis-Specific Truck Info
Mack’s new, virtual owner’s manual delivers VIN-based, on-demand guidance for vehicle systems via web, app, and soon in-cab displays.
Read More →
