HR-3209-118
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 229.
Sponsored by Jodey Arrington (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would officially assign Interstate Route numbers to future interstate highway segments along the Ports-to-Plains Corridor in Texas and New Mexico. Specifically, it would designate certain stretches of existing U.S. and state routes — including U.S. Route 87, Texas Routes 158 and 349, and U.S. Route 287 — as Interstate Routes I-27, I-27E, I-27W, and I-127N. The bill does not fund construction or authorize new spending; it only assigns official Interstate System route numbers to planned future segments.
Who benefits
Trucking companies and freight operators along the Ports-to-Plains Corridor who would gain clearer, standardized route designations. State and local transportation agencies in Texas and New Mexico that would benefit from official Interstate numbering for planning and signage purposes. Communities along the corridor — including Sterling City, Lamesa, and Dumas, Texas — that could see increased visibility and potential future federal highway funding eligibility tied to Interstate status.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct, immediate negative effect from a route numbering designation alone. Competing freight corridors or communities not included in the designation would not gain the same planning visibility. Taxpayers could face future costs if the numbering designation accelerates pressure for federally funded construction upgrades to bring the routes to Interstate standards, though this bill does not itself authorize such spending.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that officially numbering these segments as Interstate routes is a necessary and low-cost step toward completing a critical freight corridor connecting Gulf Coast ports to the Great Plains. They contend that a consistent Interstate designation would improve navigation for commercial truckers, streamline long-term transportation planning across Texas and New Mexico, and signal federal commitment to a corridor that supports agricultural exports, energy transport, and regional economic activity. Proponents note the bill carries no direct spending, making it a fiscally minimal action with meaningful logistical benefits for a multi-state region.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that assigning an Interstate route number to roads not yet built or upgraded to Interstate standards creates a misleading designation that could generate public confusion and premature expectations of federal funding. They contend that numbering future segments before construction is complete or funded may lock in a particular corridor alignment before full environmental, community, and cost-benefit review is complete. Critics may also argue that the bill's exclusion of U.S. Route 287 from the main I-27 designation — routing it instead as I-127N — reflects arbitrary geographic choices that disadvantage communities along that stretch of the corridor.