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Trump asks Congress to increase pensions for former GM Parts Company workers by $1 billion

The White House asked Congress for $1 billion on Wednesday to increase the pensions of former General Motors Auto Parts Unit Delphi workers that were reduced during a bankruptcy restructuring in 2009.

As part of a supplemental request, the?White?House also wants to raise $1 billion for reconstruction work at New York's Penn Station. It is also requesting $500 million to continue construction on Washington's World War II Memorial and Tidal Basin.

The White House wants Congress to allow the Federal Aviation Administration to reallocate funds from the $12.5 billion modernization of air traffic control effort approved last year, to any priority other than the spending plans for air traffic set by Congress last year.

Delphi cut pensions for over 20,000 retirees on a salary, including 5,000 in Ohio. Some suffered?pension cuts of up to 70 percent, and legislators have been pushing to restore these cuts for years.

The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation received the pensions for salaried employees as part of the $50 billion bailout that GM received in 2009 under the Obama administration.

GM has declined to comment.

The Transportation Department announced last month that it would provide another $200 million for construction to begin by the end next year of an $8 billion plan to redevelop Penn Station.

Amtrak, the U.S. passenger rail company, said that it plans to replace aging walkways and open modern concourses with newer ones. Penn Station is America's busiest transit hub, serving 10 million Amtrak riders annually and 100 millions total passengers including regional train systems.

New York has decided not to move Madison Square Garden. The Garden is located on top of Penn Station, and hosts the New York Knicks Basketball team, New York Rangers Hockey team, and various sporting events, concerts, and shows. (Reporting and editing by Sonali Paul; David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)