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Opinion
The following is presented as part of The Columbian’s Opinion content, which offers a point of view in order to provoke thought and debate of civic issues. Opinions represent the viewpoint of the author. Unsigned editorials represent the consensus opinion of The Columbian’s editorial board, which operates independently of the news department.
News / Opinion / Columns

Other Papers say: RECOMPETE Act would empower growth

By The following editorial originally appeared in The Seattle Times:
Published: August 15, 2021, 6:01am

State and federal government failed to stem the deepening economic challenges confronting many Washington communities long before COVID-19 cut into lives and livelihoods. Old timber towns with shuttered mills, flood-soaked cities and rural areas without high-speed broadband suffered dearths of economic opportunity.

Federal legislation to help inject these communities with new opportunities and investment ought to become part of the infrastructure funding intended to put America on stronger economic footing.

The RECOMPETE Act led by Reps. Jaime Herrera Beutler, R-Battle Ground, and Derek Kilmer, D-Gig Harbor, is a thoughtful approach to helping economically strapped communities reassert themselves as great places to build livelihoods. It would create 10-year economic aid and grant programs for places that need jobs the most.

This new initiative would expand broadband, reconstruct infrastructure, clean up brownfields where pollution inhibits development, and provide other help for communities mired in economic stagnation.

Kilmer, who grew up in Port Angeles, designed the RECOMPETE Act to focus on targeting federal resources on intensely local problems and empower a community-by-community resurgence. The national landscape is rife with places that face challenges such as the flood control needs of Aberdeen and Hoquiam, Kilmer said in an interview with The Seattle Times.

The prescription for Hoquiam and Aberdeen is to set them up to succeed by leveraging short-term flood management construction projects — and the jobs they provide — to empower long-term growth.

“Right now, in the absence of those investments, you’re not really seeing any sort of economic development or housing development,” Kilmer said. “Their housing stock is really old. And yet if you’re a housing developer, you’re not really investing in new homes in the flood plain.”

The bill has deservedly drawn bipartisan support in the state and nationally. Four Washington representatives are among the 50 House co-sponsors of the bill, HR 4651.

The proposal is scalable, but the approach should not cheap out when the needs run so deep. Kilmer said full funding would put $17 billion a year into RECOMPETE grants for a 10-year program.

That’s a heavy lift, even by federal standards, but must be given serious consideration in the ongoing debate about how the federal government can rebuild aging American infrastructure.

About one-sixth of Americans live in “distressed communities,” according to the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research. If renewing those hometowns’ prospects to provide better economic opportunities isn’t “building back better,” as President Joe Biden often repeats, what is?

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