Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer is ripping President Donald Trump’s infrastructure plans, as the White House kicks off a week-long focus on rebuilding roads, airports and waterways.

New York Democrat Schumer said in a statement that the president’s overall infrastructure plan would benefit financiers and stick average citizens with the bill for projects.

The proposal “means Trump tolls from one end of America to the other, and huge profits for financiers who, when they put up the money, want to be repaid by the average driver, worker and citizen,” Schumer said.

When it released its budget proposal in May the White House included plans to lift tolling restrictions on interstate highways. Trump proposed spending $200 billion over 10 years with the goal of attracting $1 trillion in new investments.

Democrats are critical of the public-private partnerships envisioned by Trump’s plan and wary of getting big companies involved.

“Trump’s ideas for privatizing air traffic control — which recycle a tired Republican plan that both sides of the aisle have rejected — would hand control of one of our nation’s most important assets to special interests and the big airlines,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.

Also read: Progressives try to one-up Trump with infrastructure proposal

Trump sent his air traffic control principles to Congress Monday, saying at the White House that if they are enacted Americans can look forward to “cheaper, faster and safer travel.”

Democrats’ cooperation could make or break parts of Trump’s agenda, as Republicans narrowly control the Senate and have little margin for error on legislation. Reed Cordish, who is assistant to Trump for intragovernmental and technology initiatives, told reporters on Monday that the administration is aiming to see an infrastructure package enacted this year.

That push, meanwhile, is competing with a health-care overhaul and tax reform, two big-ticket items that are only slowly moving.

In addition to Monday’s air traffic control announcement, Trump is planning to visit Ohio on Wednesday to discuss improving inland waterways. Thursday, he meets with governors at the White House to discuss infrastructure plans. And on Friday, he will visit the Department of Transportation to talk about permitting reform.