The Oversight and Government Reform Committee unanimously approved the Transit Benefits Modernization Act to let federal employees in the D.C. metro area user ...
House lawmakers are pushing a bill to further alleviate the pain Washington, D.C. metro area commuters are facing because of the SafeTrack program to fix problems with the subway system.
The Oversight and Government Reform Committee unanimously approved the Transit Benefits Modernization Act (H.R. 6008) to let federal employees in the D.C. metro area user “digital transportation companies” such as Uber or Lyft, to get to work during the subway repair effort.
The benefits modernization act was one of 16 bills the committee approved Sept. 15.
The committee says about 40 percent of all riders of the Washington Metro system are federal employees during rush hour and they want to offer alternative means to get to work. Federal News Radio has been asking agencies for updates on plans to help their employees during the SafeTrack maintenance initiative.
The legislation would let agencies provide transit benefits to their employees who use the digital transportation network company’s services “in the same manner as such agency provides transit benefits to employees who use public transportation services within the Washington Metropolitan Area.”
Employees would have to sign an agreement not to accept other transit or parking benefits from the agency.
The amount of benefits would be based on how much the employee received on average over previous six months.
The program would be in place through Dec. 31, 2018.
Reps. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) and Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) introduced the bill July 6.
The Senate has not introduced a similar bill as of yet.
Additionally, the committee approved a bill that would let federal employees get reimbursed for using ride sharing services for official federal travel.
The Modernizing Government Travel Act (H.R. 5625) would require the General Services Administration to develop regulations within 90 days of the bill becoming law for federal employees to receive payment for using Uber or Lyft or similar services while on official travel.
Sens. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), Tom Carper (D-Del.), Mike Lee (R-Utah), Bill Cassidy (R-La.), and Cory Booker (D-N.J.) introduced on Sept. 15 a companion bill that mirrors the House version.
“This legislation will help our government keep pace with the innovative technologies that drive our lives,” Carper said in a release. “By modernizing the way that federal employees travel, this commonsense and bipartisan bill will make the operations of government more efficient, while also ensuring that we are being good stewards of taxpayer dollars.”
Increases in federal transit benefits have been stuck in neutral for many agencies. Even though Congress approved $255 a month for both transit and parking, several agencies have yet to apply the new amounts yet.
Along with these two transportation related bills, the committee also approved:
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