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Trump Travels To Ohio To Pitch Infrastructure Plan

President Trump, speaking in Richfield at training facility for construction equipment operators. [Adrian Ma / ideastream]
President Trump, speaking in Richfield at training facility for construction equipment operators. [Adrian Ma / ideastream]

President Trump was in Ohio Thursday to pitch Americans on his $1.5 trillion infrastructure plan. In front of a crowd of builders at a training facility for construction equipment operators in Richfield, Ohio, Trump began in typical fashion—with a boast.

“I was always very good at building,” he said. “It was always my best thing. I think better than being President, I was maybe good at building.”

The President is asking Congress to put up $200 billion in hopes of spurring local governments and private entities to spend another $1.3 trillion on highways, airports, and other public projects.

Rick DiGeronimo, Vice President of a construction firm called Independence Excavating, Inc. [Adrian Ma / ideastream]

During the approximately 50-minute speech, Trump said his proposal, which includes provisions to streamline the process for obtaining federal building permits, would “transform our roads and bridges from a source of endless frustration into a source of absolutely incredible pride.”

“And we're going to do it all under budget and ahead of schedule,” he said.

Critics of Trump’s infrastructure proposal say it puts too much of the financial burden on local governments and loosens important environmental regulations.

Rick DiGeronimo, Vice President of a construction firm called Independence Excavating, said he voted for Trump, and he’s hopeful the infrastructure plan will bring in some steady business. DiGeronimo added that it would also be good for the region, which has lots of old roads and bridges in need of repair.

Under Trump’s blueprint, however, local governments and private companies would pay for about 87 percent of the $1.5 trillion total on new infrastructure spending.

If that’s the plan, DiGeronimo said, “I would be skeptical of how that would be possible. I mean, I don’t see the cities and local governments being able to come up with that money.”

But, he added, any investment is better than none. 

Correction: An earlier version of this article misstated that Trump won Summit County by eight points in the 2016 election. In fact, it was Hillary Clinton who won over Trump by eight points.