Senior Reporter
US Chamber's Donohue Discusses Infrastructure Bill, NAFTA at Global Summit

WASHINGTONÌęâ U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Thomas Donohue said the Trump administrationâs $1 trillion infrastructure bill should attempt to mitigate highway bottlenecks, promote long-term economic growth and update regulations to make private investment more attractive.
âSupplies can only be sourced and shipped as quickly as the infrastructure allows,â Donohue said at a Chamber Infrastructure Week event on May 17. âOne outdated corridor or inefficient border can create bottlenecks that are very significant.â
Those bottlenecks do not occur only on roads and bridges, but also at airports, intermodal connectors, computers, information and money â all issues that can make the United States less competitive, Donohue told industry leaders at the Chamberâs Fifth Annual Global Supply Chain Summit.
Donohue was reacting to a plan by President Donald Trump to introduce a massive infrastructure bill that he has yet toÌęoutline.
However, a blueprint of the presidentâs plans could come soon, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao said in a speech earlier this week.
COMING MAY 19: LiveOnWeb Infrastructure Week Reporter Roundtable
âTwenty-first-century infrastructure needs to account for 21st-century technology,â Donohue said. âOne big problem [is that] even if today we got that trillion dollars, we couldnât use it on infrastructure. We have to fix the permitting process, and more than that, weâve got to find out where weâre going to find the workers.â
Donohue added, âRight now, weâre a country of people without jobs and massive numbers of jobs without people.â
Donohue also expressed concerns about plans by the Trump administration to renegotiate the North America Free Trade Agreement. He said the Chamber has hired a trade rep to represent the organizationâs view in any discussions.
âAmend it, donât end it,â Donohue said.
âWe donât simply trade with Canada and Mexico, we make things together. Our supply chains are highly integrated and our economies are interdependent,â Donohue said.ÌęâIs there room for NAFTA to be modernized? You bet.â
RELATED: Trump rules out swift NAFTA exit in favor of renegotiation
But he said the conversation on how to fix NAFTA has to begin in recognition of just how important it is.
âFirst, do no harm,â Donohue said.ÌęâWe canât disrupt the 14 million jobs in this country that depend on the trade with Mexico and Canada, or the $1.3 trillion in trade that crosses our borders annually.â
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