Letter, Robert Merriam to President Dwight D. Eisenhower Regarding the Highway Act
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EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
BUREAU OF THE BUDGET
4/16/58
WASHINGTON 25, D. c.
APR 10 1958
My dear Mr. President:
On April 4, 1958, the Executive Clerk notified this office that
H. R. 9821 "To amend and supplement the Federal-Aid Road Act approved
July 11, 1916 (39 Stat. 355), as amended and supplemented, and the
Act approved June 29, 1956, 1956 (70 Stat. 374), to authorize appropria-
tions for continuing the construction of highways, and for other purposes, "
had been received at the White House and requested reports and recom-
mendations thereon.
The bill provides appropriation authorizations and advance contract
authority for the Federal-aid primary, secondary, and urban highways,
the
D.
for the Interstate System of National and Defense Highways, and for
highways and roads on the public domain. It also contains provisions
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for the control of outdoor advertising on the Interstate System. The
attached analysis describes in detail the provisions of the bill and
compares them with the recommendations of the administration.
The bill contains provisions which it is essential to enact into law
in this session of Congress. First, it provides the contract author-
ization necessary to continue the construction of the Federal-aid primary,
secondary and urban highways in fiscal years 1960 and 1961. Second, it
approves the estimate of the Secretary of Commerce of the cost of comple-
tion of the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways. This
approval is required by law before the existing 1960 authorization can
be made available to the States. Third, it would waive for 1960 the
requirement that highway trust fund receipts must equal expenditures in
each year and thus allow the apportionment of the full 1960 authoriza-
tion; and fourth, it provides a start in controlling highway advertising.
We are convinced, however, that the provisions in the bill which
purport to use the highway program as a method of stimulating economic
recovery are so unwise as to justify disapproval of the bill. Therefore,
for the reasons stated in the attached draft veto message, we join the
Department of Commerce in recommending that the bill be disapproved.
In addition, there are other undesirable provisions in the bill
which we believe we should bring to your attention. First, the bill con-
tinues the Congressional policy of increasing the annual authorization
for the Federal-aid primary, secondary and urban highways by $25 million
each year. The Department of Commerce recommended to the Congress that
the authorization for these programs for fiscal years 1960 and 1961
should be at a $900 million level in order to maintain a balanced highway
program.