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Cap-and-Trade Money Would Go To Affordable Housing and Transit Under Proposal

Senate President pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) talks with reporters after an event in Sacramento
Ben Adler
/
Capital Public Radio
Senate President pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) talks with reporters after an event in Sacramento

Money generated from California’s cap-and-trade program would go to mass transit, sustainable affordable housing and high speed rail under a proposal by Senate leader Darrell Steinberg. As Amy Quinton reports from Sacramento, Steinberg is backtracking from his previous proposal.

In February, Steinberg called for a carbon tax on fuel, something critics argued would hurt consumers at the gas pump. He says his new proposal has many allies and fewer opponents. Steinberg says in 2015, the state’s greenhouse gas reduction program could generate up to five billion dollars a year. He wants 40-percent of the funds to go to affordable housing, 30-percent to mass transit, and 20 percent for high speed rail.

Steinberg: “We can put forward a comprehensive approach to climate change, and to clean infrastructure, and together with cap-and-trade a permanent source for rapid transit, that to me is the coin of the realm here.”

A spokesman for the Senate Republican Caucus says some of the goals are laudable but any proposal that invests in high speed rail is problematic.

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