National Infrastructure Bank Act of 2007
A bill to establish the National Infrastructure Bank to provide funding for qualified infrastructure projects, and for other purposes.
previous 110th session of congress Other Bill Titles (2 more) 8/1/2007--Introduced.
National Infrastructure Bank Act of 2007 - Establishes an independent National Infrastructure Bank to:
(1) designate qualified transit, public housing, water, highway, bridge, or road infrastructure projects for loans, loan guarantees, and other finan... more
Committees
Amendments
This bill has no amendments.
Bill Status
| Introduced | ![]() | Voted on by Senate | ![]() | Voted on by House | ![]() | Considered By President | ![]() | Bill Becomes Law |
| August 01, 2007 |
Users tracking S.1926 (1) are also tracking:
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In the News
March 18, 2008 Dodd and Hagel lead a bipartisan push for transportation ...
The bipartisan legislation, entitled “S.1926, The National Infrastructure Bank Act of 2007,” was introduced last August by Senators Chris Dodd ...
Blog Coverage
December 11, 2008 Obama: Opportunity Lost, already? - PickensPlan
Senator Obama is a co-sponsor of a bill (S. 1926) to create a National Infrastructure Bank, funded through $60 billion over ten years in tax-exempt bonds, which would provide additional funding for infrastructure projects such as ...
Source: Latest Activity on PickensPlan
December 06, 2008 Obama: Opportunity Lost, already? - PickensPlan
Senator Obama is a co-sponsor of a bill (S. 1926) to create a National Infrastructure Bank, funded through $60 billion over ten years in tax-exempt bonds, which would provide additional funding for infrastructure projects such as ...
Source: Latest Activity on PickensPlan
November 07, 2008 Masking the redistribution of wealth with the transportation ...
The Bank, as initially proposed by Senators Christopher Dodd (D-CT) and Chuck Hagel in their bill, S.1926, has been resurrected in a fresh and more elaborate form by Everett Ehrlich and Felix Rohatyn in a recent article in The New York ...
Source: Washington Policy Center's Blog











