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S 2729 114th Congress Senate Transportation and Public Works Government trust funds Navigation, waterways, harbors Saint Lawrence Seaway Sales and excise taxes Tax administration and collection, taxpayers Transportation programs funding User charges and fees Water resources funding

Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund Reform Act of 2016

Introduced: March 17, 2016 Introduced by: Murray, Patty Democratic · Washington See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 2 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Mar 17, 2016
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works.
Mar 17, 2016
Introduced in Senate
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund Reform Act of 2016

This bill amends the Internal Revenue Code to make certain amounts in the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund available, without appropriation, for expenditures to pay:

  • 100% of the eligible operations and maintenance costs of specified portions of the Saint Lawrence Seaway as well as those assigned to commercial navigation of all U.S. harbors and inland harbors;
  • rebates of certain tolls or charges on the Seaway; and
  • all expenses of administration relating to harbor maintenance tax incurred by the Department of the Treasury, the Army Corps of Engineers, and the Department of Commerce.

The Water Resources Reform and Development Act of 2014 is amended to:

  • require allocation to certain donor ports and energy transfer ports of at least 20% of amounts made available each fiscal year from the Trust Fund, and
  • authorize the Department of the Army to make the allocations equally between these kinds of ports.

A "donor port" is a port, subject to the harbor maintenance fee, located in a state in which more than 2 million cargo containers were unloaded from or loaded on to vessels in FY2012, whose total amount of collected harbor maintenance taxes comes to less than $15 million annually, and which received less than 25% of the total amount of harbor maintenance taxes collected at that port in the previous five fiscal years.

An "energy transfer port" is one, also subject to the harbor maintenance fee, through which more than 40 million tons of cargo were transported in FY2012, and at which energy commodities constituted more than 25% of all commercial activity by tonnage in that fiscal year.

What's happening now March 17, 2016

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1