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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 2:35 p.m., Monday, December 8, 2008

MUFI PUSHES STIMULUS PLAN IN D.C.
Hannemann, mayors push projects costing $73B

By LEDYARD KING
Gannett News Service

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Honolulu Mayor Mufi Hannemann addressed a Washington news conference today in the Capitol. Mayors from cities across the country converged on Washington to discuss the economic recovery of Main Street. Hannemann is flanked by Mayors Douglas Palmer of Trenton, N.J., left, and Donald Plusquellic of Akron, Ohio.

JOE BRIER | Gannett News Service

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On the Web:

www.usmayors.org, United States Conference of Mayors. Click on “’Ready to Go’ Report” for city-by-city list of projects along with each project’s cost and the number of jobs it would create.

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WASHINGTON — America's mayors are urging Congress to provide billions for public works projects they say will not only help rebuild cities but put money into the pockets of struggling Americans.

The United States Conference of Mayors released a list today of 11,391 projects spread among 427 cities. Work on the projects, which would cost about $73 billion, could start soon if lawmakers approve the money as part of a sweeping economic recovery plan.

Honolulu's Mufi Hannemann is among the mayors who met in Washington today.

The mayors say the projects, including street repairs, sewer system upgrades and school renovations, would generate more than 800,000 jobs over the next two years.

"We need to invest where we can get the biggest return," Miami Mayor Manny Diaz, who chairs the conference, said Monday at a Capitol Hill news conference. "We are not here for a bailout."

President-elect Barack Obama has made spending on public works projects a key element of his plan to revive the moribund economy. In his Saturday radio address to the nation, Obama said he wants to "create millions of jobs by making the single largest new investment in our national infrastructure since the creation of the federal highway system in the 1950s."

The mayors say their list contains "ready-to-go" projects that could start within weeks.

"The mayors have been saying for eight months that not only do we have to fix Wall Street, we have to fix Main Street," said J. Christian Bollwage, mayor of Elizabeth, N.J. "Unless the mayors play a role in the economic recovery, it's not going to happen as quickly as we hope."

Key lawmakers stood with the mayors.

"We can't run away from our schools. We can't run away from our hospitals. We can't run away from our transit systems," said Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., who chairs the House Ways and Means Committee. "These are everybody's problems."

Governors also have been lobbying Congress and the incoming administration for financial assistance. But several mayors said direct aid to cities offers the quickest road to recovery.

Evoking President Franklin Roosevelt's response to the Great Depression, they said municipal projects provide a strategic solution to two pressing problems: crumbling infrastructure and increasing unemployment.

"We're closest to the people and our people want to go back to work," Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley said. "This will be good for America."

Contact Ledge King at lking@gns.gannett.com.